Case Law
Subject : Service Law - Absorption and Regularization
CUTTACK, ODISHA — In a significant ruling championing employee rights post-acquisition, the Orissa High Court has held the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) guilty of gross discrimination against teachers absorbed from the Talcher Thermal Power Station (TTPS). Justice Sashikanta Mishra quashed NTPC's disadvantageous service offers, including a "humiliating" proposal to redeploy teachers as stenographers, and ordered the public sector giant to grant the teachers pay, allowances, and retirement benefits at par with other absorbed employees from the date of the takeover in 1995.
The court found NTPC's actions to be a flagrant violation of the Talcher Thermal Power Station (Acquisition and Transfer) Act, 1994, which explicitly protected the service conditions of all employees.
The case originated from the acquisition of the state-owned Talcher Thermal Power Station (TTPS) by NTPC in 1995. The petitioners were teachers working in schools run by the erstwhile Odisha State Electricity Board (OSEB) for the children of TTPS employees. As per the 1994 Acquisition Act, all TTPS employees, including the teaching staff, were absorbed into NTPC's services.
Section 11 of the Act was a crucial safeguard, mandating that every absorbed employee would continue with the same service terms and conditions, and any alteration could only be to their advantage. However, the teachers alleged that NTPC engaged in "step-motherly" treatment, denying them the pay scales, benefits, and retirement age of 60 years that were extended to other absorbed employees, including non-teaching staff like clerks and peons.
Petitioners' Arguments: Led by Senior Advocate J.K. Rath, the petitioners argued that NTPC violated both the 1994 Act and previous High Court directions. They highlighted that under the former employer (OSEB), they were categorized at par with various grades of workmen (e.g., 'Skilled-B', 'Highly Skilled-A') for pay purposes. NTPC, they contended, should have used this equivalence to fit them into its pay structure. Instead, NTPC made a series of unacceptable offers:
NTPC's Defense: NTPC argued that teachers are not classified as 'workmen' under the Industrial Disputes Act and that the corporation does not have a departmental cadre for teachers. They maintained that the tripartite wage settlement applied only to workmen. NTPC claimed it made four separate offers to the teachers, all of which were rejected, and therefore, the teachers were estopped from making further claims.
Justice Sashikanta Mishra systematically dismantled NTPC's arguments, finding the discrimination "writ large and tell-tale on the face of the record."
On Section 11 of the 1994 Act: The Court emphasized that the Act applies to "every employee" without distinguishing between workmen and non-workmen. The judgment stated, "The mandate of Section 11 was to maintain the status as existing immediately prior to the date of vesting... by treating them otherwise, the terms and conditions on which the teachers were employed under the previous employer was never maintained." The Court ruled that NTPC's failure to use the teachers' prior classification as the basis for their new pay structure was a direct violation of the law.
On the "Unfair" Offers: The court found NTPC's offers to be disadvantageous and unreasonable, particularly the proposal to turn teachers into stenographers. Citing principles against unequal bargaining power, the judgment noted, "This Court is of the view that having assured the petitioners... it was obviously not open to the Management to come up with such an offer that had no bearing whatsoever with the service conditions." It termed the offer a "Hobson's Choice," meaning no real choice at all.
On NTPC as a Model Employer: The judgment invoked the principle that NTPC, as a state functionary, must act as a "model employer." The court stated, "As a model employer, NTPC has a social obligation to treat its employees in such manner that no employee feels left out from the benefits extended to other employees."
The High Court allowed the writ petitions and quashed the impugned orders from 2004 and 2005 that laid out the disadvantageous service conditions. The Court issued the following clear directives to the NTPC management:
The entire process is to be completed within three months from the date of the judgment.
#ServiceLaw #EqualPay #NTPC
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