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NCWA Benefits Are a Right, Not a Bounty; Employer's Delay Can't Defeat Claim: Calcutta HC - 2025-07-02

Subject : Service Law - Compassionate Appointment

NCWA Benefits Are a Right, Not a Bounty; Employer's Delay Can't Defeat Claim: Calcutta HC

Supreme Today News Desk

Calcutta HC: Employer's Delay and Apathy Can't Defeat Worker's Rights Under NCWA

Kolkata: In a significant ruling on employee rights, the Calcutta High Court has held that benefits under the National Coal Wage Agreement (NCWA), such as compassionate appointment or monetary compensation, are valuable rights and not a "bounty to be distributed" by the employer. A Division Bench of Chief Justice T.S. Sivagnanam and Justice Chaitali Chatterjee Das dismissed an appeal by Eastern Coalfields Limited (ECL), criticizing its "lackadaisical manner" and "apathy" in handling a widowed daughter's claim for over two decades.

The Court modified a single-judge order, directing ECL to pay Monthly Monetary Cash Compensation (MMCC) to the claimant, Mangali Mangala Bouri , from August 2001, the date a screening committee first affirmed the genuineness of her claim. It also enhanced the interest rate from 6% to 7.5% to compensate for the prolonged delay.


Background of the 24-Year Ordeal

The case originates from a claim initiated in 2000. Mangali Mangala Bouri , the widowed daughter of a deceased ECL employee, Tulsi Bouri , applied for compassionate employment following her mother's death on November 26, 2000. Tulsi Bouri herself had received compassionate appointment after her husband's demise.

For years, Ms. Bouri 's application languished. She initially sought employment, as was her right under the NCWA, and in 2003, she explicitly refused an offer of ₹3,000 per month as MMCC. ECL raised multiple issues, demanding clarifications on her dependency status and seeking "No Objection Certificates" from other relatives whose names appeared in service records. Despite Ms. Bouri appearing before screening committees and providing documents, including a succession certificate, her claim remained "under process" for over two decades. By 2024, having surpassed the age limit for employment, she was compelled to request MMCC, backdated to her mother's death.

A single-judge bench had previously ordered ECL to pay arrears of MMCC from the date of the mother's death with 6% interest. Both ECL and Ms. Bouri filed appeals against this order—ECL challenging the retrospective payment and interest, while Ms. Bouri sought a higher interest rate of 18%.


Arguments in Court

Eastern Coalfields Limited (Appellant): ECL argued that the delay was attributable to the claimant's failure to provide sufficient documents to clear up discrepancies regarding her status as the sole dependent. The company contended that paying arrears from 2000 would be a "wastage of public money" and cited a Supreme Court precedent ( Dukhini Bhuiya ) to argue that any back payment should be limited to three years preceding the writ petition.

Mangali Mangala Bouri (Respondent): The claimant's counsel argued that she, an illiterate woman, had complied with all of ECL's requests over 24 years. The delay was squarely on ECL, which kept her application pending indefinitely, denying her both employment and financial benefits. Her counsel emphasized that the NCWA gives the female dependant, not the employer, the option between employment and monetary compensation. They cited precedents, including Subhadra vs. Ministry of Coal , to assert that NCWA provisions are binding and not discretionary.


Court's Analysis: NCWA Benefits are a Right, Not a Bounty

The Division Bench meticulously analyzed the facts, noting that ECL's own screening committee had found Ms. Bouri 's claim "genuine" as early as August 27, 2001. The court found it "surprising" that despite this internal finding, the authority continued to raise queries and create a "stalemate situation."

In a pivotal observation, the Court stated:

"The monetary compensation or compassionate appointment in terms of NCWA is not a matter of any bounty to be distributed by the authorities, but valuable rights of the workmen attached to the company and any delay in settlement and disbursement should be viewed seriously, and dealt with severely by imposing penalty in the form of payment of interest."

The bench highlighted that the NCWA, a binding settlement under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, does not list delay as a disqualification. The court also drew upon the Supreme Court's decision in S.K. Mastan Bee , emphasizing the employer's obligation to assist an illiterate claimant rather than creating procedural hurdles.

Distinguishing the Dukhini Bhuiya case relied upon by ECL, the court noted that in the present matter, the claimant had been diligently pursuing her claim since her mother's death, unlike the 21-year inaction in the cited precedent.


Final Verdict

The High Court dismissed ECL's appeal and partly allowed Ms. Bouri 's, modifying the single judge's order with the following directions:

Arrears of MMCC are to be paid from September 2001 , the month following the screening committee's finding that her claim was authentic, instead of the date of her mother's death.

The arrears shall be paid with simple interest at the rate of 7.5% per annum .

The entire payment must be completed by July 15, 2025 .

The judgment serves as a strong reminder to public sector undertakings of their duties as model employers and reinforces the principle that procedural delays cannot be used to extinguish the vested rights of employees and their dependents under binding wage agreements.

#ServiceLaw #NCWA #CompassionateAppointment

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