Stipend Trainees Dodge PF Bullet, But Security Guards Foot the Bill: Calcutta HC Verdict

In a nuanced ruling on employee classifications under the Employees' Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 (EPF Act), the Calcutta High Court has exempted stipendiary graduate trainees from provident fund (PF) contributions while upholding liability for directly paid security and fire-fighting staff at West Bengal Power Development Corporation Ltd.'s (WBPDCL) Bakreswar Thermal Power Project. Justice Shampa Dutt (Paul) partly allowed writ petition WPA 9013 of 2011, modifying EPF orders dated 24.02.2011 and 12.05.2011 passed against WBPDCL by the Union of India and the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner.

Power Plant's PF Probe: From Inspections to Impugned Orders

The saga began in 2006 when EPF proceedings under Section 7A targeted WBPDCL's Bakreswar unit following memos and enforcement inspections in January 2008. Reports flagged non-coverage of PF for categories like trainees on stipends, retired teachers on honorarium at onsite schools (BKTPP Prabir Sengupta Vidyalaya and Holy Mother English Medium Primary School), fire fighters, security personnel, and contractor workers. WBPDCL contested these, submitting comments and documents asserting these were not "employees" under Section 2(f) of the EPF Act.

The Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC) ordered dues of Rs. 69,82,944 plus damages and interest, covering trainees, school staff, and security. WBPDCL's review under Section 7B was dismissed as repetitive. Challenging both as arbitrary violations of natural justice, WBPDCL sought to quash Sub-sections (3), (4), and (5) of Section 7B and the orders.

Employer's Arsenal: Trainees Aren't Employees, Honorarium Isn't Wages

WBPDCL argued trainees received stipends without employment guarantees, akin to apprentices excluded under Section 2(f). Retired teachers on "no work, no pay" honorarium (drawing state pensions) and school staff weren't under corporate control. Security/fire payments were misclassified; honorarium didn't qualify as "basic wages" under Section 2(b). Citing Supreme Court precedents like Regional Provident Fund Commissioner v. Central Arecanut & Cocoa Marketing (2006) 2 SCC 381 (trainees as apprentices) and Manipal Academy of Higher Education v. Provident Fund Commissioner (2008) 5 SCC 428 (honorarium query), they slammed the RPFC for mechanical orders ignoring documents and natural justice—same official in inquiry and decision.

EPFO's Stand: Direct Payments Seal PF Fate

EPFO defended the orders as evidence-based: inspections showed direct payments under "safety and security expenses" for fire fighters/security, no GPF/EPF extension for contractuals or trainees. Schools were under principal establishment control initially, though Holy Mother was later deemed separate. Review dismissal was apt—no new facts, prior participation without bias objection.

Judicial Scalpel: Supreme Court Clarity Cuts Trainee Liability

Justice Dutt (Paul) dissected the RPFC's reasoning. For trainees, the order was "prima facie erroneous," bound by the Supreme Court's Central Arecanut ruling: stipend recipients without employment rights are apprentices under Model Standing Orders (via uncertified standing orders), excluded from Section 2(f).

On security/fire staff, evidence of direct ledger payments prevailed: "the authority rightly held that the petitioner is liable for PF deductions for the fire fighters and security personnels being directly employed."

Holy Mother School liability was already dropped by RPFC, favoring WBPDCL. Review rejection stood—no new evidence, mere repetition barred under Section 7B. Other contractors deferred to code assessments.

Precedents like Noor Niwas Nursery Public School v. RPFC (AIR 2001 SC 277) reinforced school separations, while Hindustan Lever Ltd. v. APFC (2014 SCC OnLine Bom 1222) echoed pensioner coverage doubts—but facts here tipped against WBPDCL on security.

Key Observations from the Bench

"the authority’s finding that: 'As such, it is concluded that the respondents are liable to pay the dues calculated on the basis of available documents vis-à-vis the Graduate Trainees.' is prima facie erroneous considering the view of the Supreme Court in [Central Arecanut]..."

"Thus, the authority rightly held that the petitioner is liable for PF deductions for the fire fighters and security personnels being directly employed by the petitioner herein."

"In view of the findings above, the impugned orders dated 24.02.2011 and 12.05.2011 ... are modified to the extent as noted. The decision of the authority in respect of the 'graduate trainees' is set aside."

Relief with Reservations: Orders Modified, Broader Implications

The writ was disposed of with orders modified—trainee dues set aside, rest upheld sans interference. No declaration on Section 7B's vires. This clarifies EPF thresholds: stipends signal apprenticeships, direct payments trigger coverage, impacting power firms and industries with trainees/contractuals. As news reports note, it balances employer defenses against enforcement rigor, potentially easing trainee burdens while tightening security staffing compliance.