The Regional Director, Esi Corporation vs M/S. L & T Tech Park Ltd on 20 August, 2025

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Kerala High Court

The Regional Director, Esi Corporation vs M/S. L & T Tech Park Ltd on 20 August, 2025

                                                              2025:KER:62281
INS.APP NO. 3 OF 2014


                                       1




                                                                   CR

                  IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                                    PRESENT

                THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE M.A.ABDUL HAKHIM

         WEDNESDAY, THE 20TH DAY OF AUGUST 2025 / 29TH SRAVANA, 1947

                            INS.APP NO. 3 OF 2014

           AGAINST THE JUDGMENT DATED 30.08.2013 IN IC NO.67 OF 2011 OF

                   EMPLOYEES' INSURANCE COURT, ALAPPUZHA




APPELLANTS/1ST & 2ND RESPONDENTS:



     1       THE REGIONAL DIRECTOR, ESI CORPORATION
             PANCHADEEP BHAVAN, N.S.ROUND, THRISSUR -20.

     2       THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR
             ESI CORPORATION, MALU'S COMPLEX, ST.FRANCIS CHURCH ROAD,
             KALOOR, KOCHI-17.


             BY ADVS.
             SHRI.T.V.AJAYAKUMAR
             KUM.RIMJU P.H.




RESPONDENTS/APPLICANT/3RD RESPONDENT:

     1       M/S. L & T TECH PARK LTD
             INFOPARK SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE,IST FLOOR, REJOMAYA,
             KUSUMAGIRI PO, KAKKANAD, KOCHI-30.
                                                            2025:KER:62281
INS.APP NO. 3 OF 2014


                                    2


     2     MS.TATA CONSULTANCY SERVICE LIMITED
           VISMAYA BUILDING, INFO PARK, KUSUMAGIRI PO, KAKKANAD,
           KOCHI-30.


           BY ADVS.
           SRI.V.ABRAHAM MARKOS
           SHRI.ABRAHAM JOSEPH MARKOS
           SHRI.BENNY P. THOMAS (SR.)
           SRI.BINU MATHEW
           SRI.D.PREM KAMATH
           SHRI.TERRY V.JAMES
           SRI.TOM THOMAS (KAKKUZHIYIL)



     THIS INSURANCE APPEAL HAVING COME UP FOR ADMISSION ON 20.08.2025,
THE COURT ON THE SAME DAY DELIVERED THE FOLLOWING:
                                                                    2025:KER:62281
INS.APP NO. 3 OF 2014


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                                                                             CR

                                    JUDGMENT

1. Appellants are the Respondents Nos.1 and 2 before the E.I.

Court, Alappuzha in I.C. No.67/2011 filed under Sections 75 and

77 of the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948 (E.S.I. Act, for

short). They are the Regional Director and the Deputy Director

of E.S.I. Corporation. The Respondents are the Applicant and

the Respondent No.3 before the E.I. Court. The Appellants are

challenging the Order by which the refund of the ESI

contribution was ordered by the E.I. Court.

2. This Court formulated the following substantial question of law

in this Appeal as per the Order dated 20.11.2024:

“Whether Section 2(9) of the E.S.I. Act covers the workers

engaged for pre-operative fit-out works by the employer requiring

contribution to be paid as per the aforesaid Act?”

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3. The parties are referred to according to their status before the

E.I. Court.

4. The Corporate office of the Respondent No.3 at Mumbai was an

establishment covered under the ESI Act during the relevant

period. The Applicant was not an establishment covered under

the ESI Act. The Applicant owns a building by the name,

Thejomaya, constructed for I.T. business, I.T. enabled services

and other related services and amenities pursuant to Sanction

Order dated 05.04.2007 issued by the Development

Commissioner, Infopark Special Economic Zone, Kochi. The

building was constructed within the Special Economic Zone at

Infopark, Kakkanad. The Respondent No.3 took lease of the 7th,

8th & 9th floors of the said building from the Applicant for starting

a new unit as per Ext.D1 Lease Deed dated 21.10.2007. As per

Ext.D1 Lease Deed, the lease commencement date is

21.10.2007 or the date of actual handover of the premises by
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the Lessor to the Lessee to start the fit-out works. Even before

the execution of the Ext.D1 Lease Deed, the Respondent No.3

awarded a contract in favour of the Applicant to do the interior

fit-out works in the premises as per Exhibit A1 Contract/Work

Order dated 08.10.2007. For the purpose of executing the pre-

operative fit-out works, 90 days rent-free period was allowed to

the Respondent No.3 by the Applicant. The interior fit-out works

were completed on 11.01.2008, and the premises were

entrusted to the Respondent No.3 on 11.03.2008. The

Respondent No.3 started its operations of the new unit in the

leased premises on 02.04.2008 by issuing Ext.A4 Letter of

Intimation to the Development Commissioner (Sez-IT & ITES),

Thiruvananthapuram. Since the burden to meet the ESI

contribution was on the Applicant as per Ext.A1 Contract, the

Respondent No.3 deducted an amount of Rs.23,68,366/- from

the value of the contract payable to the Applicant and remitted
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the same to the E.S.I. Corporation on 29.03.2008. Ext.A1

Contract contained a clause that it is the Applicant who has to

comply with all the labour laws such as E.S.I., P.F. and Contract

Labour Act. The Applicant submitted Exhibit A5 Request dated

12.01.2010 to the Respondent No.1 seeking a refund of the

amount remitted by the Respondent No.3 on the ground that, as

per Exhibit A9 Instruction No.4/99 dated 14.06.1999 of the E.S.I.

Corporation, New Delhi, the workers engaged in construction

sites are exempted from the provisions of the ESI Act and that

the contribution was paid by mistake and hence the Applicant is

eligible to get a refund of the amounts paid by the Respondent

No.3 with respect to Exhibits A1 & A2 Contracts. The

Respondent No.3 also submitted Exhibit A8 Letter dated

11.03.2010 to the Respondent No.1 stating that since

construction activity is exempted, the payment of contribution

was made by mistake, and the Respondent No.3 had no
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objection to refunding the amount to the Applicant. Since the

Respondent No.1 did not consider Ext.A5 Request, the

Applicant approached this Court by filing W.P.(C)

No.20763/2010, and this Court, as per Exhibit A10 judgment

dated 26.07.2010, directed the Respondent No.1 to pass orders

on Ext.A5 Request within a period of three months. The

Respondent No.2 obtained Exhibits A11, A12 & A13 Reports

dated 29.10.2010, 02.11.2010 & 06.12.2010 from its Social

Security Officer and passed Ext.A14 Order dated 16.03.2011

rejecting Ext.A5 Request for refund submitted by the Applicant.

After issuing Ext.A14 Order, the Respondent No.2 issued a

Communication dated 17.03.2011 to the Respondent No.3

demanding the balance contribution of Rs.2,76,354/-. The

Respondent No.3 paid the said additional contribution

demanded on 19.05.2011 as per Ext.A15 Challan. Thereafter,

the Applicant filed the present I.C. before the E.I. Court seeking
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a declaration that the work executed by the Applicant for the

Respondent No.3 pursuant to Ext.A1 for interior fit-out works to

set up a new facility at the Infopark is exempted from

contribution under the E.S.I. Act, to set aside Ext.A14 Order of

the Respondent No.2 and Notice dated 17.03.2011 and to

declare that the Applicant is eligible for refund of Rs.23,68,366/-

and Rs.2,76,354/- with interest at the rate of 12% per annum

and to direct the Respondent Nos.1 & 2 to grant the same.

5. The Respondent Nos.1 & 2 filed an Objection in the I.C.

contending, inter alia, that the Respondent No.3 is a covered

establishment. The Respondent No.3 took lease of three floors

in the building belonging to the Applicant for expanding their

business at Kochi on 21.10.2007. The Respondent No.3 is the

principal employer defined under Section 2(17) and the

Applicant is the immediate employer defined under Section

2(13) of the ESI Act with respect to the contract works awarded
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as per Exts.A1 and A2. The Respondent No.3 remitted E.S.I.

contribution on the wage element involved in the contract work

after deducting the same from the amount due to the Applicant.

As the leased premises had been occupied by the Respondent

No.3 from 21.10.2007 onwards, any work executed for and on

behalf of the Respondent No.3 in its premises would form part

of the activities carried out in the establishment and is coverable

under the ESI Act. Ext.A9 Instruction dated 14.06.1999 issued

to exclude certain classes of workers engaged by construction

agencies who belonged to the unorganised sector due to the

peculiar characteristics of the construction industry and the

peculiar nature of the employment of workers engaged in it is

not applicable to the present case. As per Clause No.3 of

Ext.A9, construction workers who are engaged directly in a

covered factory by the principal employer or through an

immediate employer are covered under Section 2(9) of the
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E.S.I. Act. All the employees employed by the Applicant are

their own employees and those employees are not employed

for the construction or building construction of the

establishment, and hence, exemption as per Ext.A9 will not be

available in the present case. The works carried out are

preliminary to the works carried on in the establishment. The

Applicant carried out the works as per the specification,

supervision and control of the Respondent No.3, which is the

principal employer. The terms and conditions, such as the scope

of work, acceptance/rejection clause incorporated in Ext.A1

Work Contract, will support the case of the ESI Corporation. The

new premises are only an expansion of the existing business of

the Respondent No.3. The construction activities carried out on

the premises are after the occupation of the premises by the

Respondent No.3, who is already covered under the Act. The

question of exemption of pre-operative construction activity from
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ESI coverage does not arise in the matter of expansion of an

existing covered establishment. It applies only when a new shop

or factory is started. Respondent No.3, who is the principal

employer, did not submit any Application for refund, and hence

the application for refund submitted by the Applicant is not

maintainable. The Application for refund is not filed within the

period specified under Regulation 40 of the E.S.I. (General)

Regulations, 1950. Thus, in any view of the matter, the request

for the refund of the contribution is not sustainable. The claim

for refund is liable to be rejected. The EI Court illegally ordered

the refund of the contribution as per the impugned order and it

is liable to be set aside.

6. The Respondent No.3 supported the case of the Applicant by

contending that Respondent No.3 is engaged in the software

development and related activities. The fit-out works carried on

by the Applicant in its own premises before the commencement
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of operation by Respondent No.3 cannot be treated as

preliminary or incidental to the ordinary part of the works of the

establishment of Respondent No.3. The Respondent No.3 will

not come within the purview of the principal employer.

7. On the side of the Applicant, its Project in Charge was examined

as PW1 and Exts.A1 to A16 were marked in evidence. On the

side of the Respondent Nos.1 & 2, its former Deputy Director

(Legal) was examined as DW1 and Exts.D1 to D4 were marked.

8. The E.I. Court passed the impugned order declaring that the

workers employed by the Applicant for executing pre-operative

fit-out works of the Respondent No.3 are not employees under

S.2(9) of the Act and hence no contribution is payable on their

behalf; directing E.S.I. Corporation to refund Rs.23,68,366/-

remitted on 29.03.2008 and Rs.2,76,354/- remitted on

16.05.2011 to the Applicant within one month from the date of

the judgment and directing that thereafter, the above amounts
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will carry interest at the rate of 12% per annum from the date of

Ext.A14 Order and setting aside Ext.A14 Order to the contrary.

9. I heard the learned counsel for the Appellants, Sri. T.V.

Ajayakumar, learned counsel for the Respondent No.1, Sri.

Terry V. James and the learned Senior Counsel for the

Respondent No.2, Sri. Benny P. Thomas, instructed by Adv. Sri.

Prem Kanth.

10. The learned counsel for the Appellants contended that the

Respondent No.3 is the principal employer of the establishment

as defined under Section 2(17) of the E.S.I. Act and the

Applicant is the immediate employer as defined under Section

2(13) of the E.S.I. Act. Admittedly, the Respondent No.3 took

possession of the leased premises from the Applicant on

21.10.2007. Admittedly, the Respondent No.3 is an

establishment covered under the E.S.I. Act. In such a case,

workers employed by the Applicant to do the fit-out works in the
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establishment of the Respondent No.3 will come under the

definition of employees defined under Section 2(9)(ii) of the ESI

Act. Exts.A1 & A2 would reveal that the works were done under

the supervision of the Respondent No.3. The Respondent No.3

correctly understood the legal status of the parties and the law

on the point and hence collected the E.S.I. contribution from the

Applicant with respect to the wage element involved in the

contract and remitted the same to the E.S.I. Corporation. Ext.A9

Instruction of the E.S.I. Corporation is not applicable to the facts

and circumstances of the present case. It is meant for avoiding

coverage of workers engaged in construction work, as they

belonged to the unorganised sector and could not be identified,

and hence no benefit under the ESI Act could be extended to

them. In Ext.A9, the peculiar nature of the construction workers

is specifically referred to as mobile and migratory in nature. In

the case on hand, the employees of the Applicant are identified
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persons. They are not construction workers. They are employed

for the purpose of doing the fit-out works in order to make the

premises ready for occupation of the Respondent No.3. The

said fit-out works are preliminary to the ordinary work of the

Respondent No.3 and incidental to the same. Clause 3 of

Ext.A9 specifically provides that construction workers who are

engaged directly in a covered factory by the principal employer

or through an immediate employer are to be taken into

consideration for coverage under Section 2(9) of the E.S.I. Act.

The learned counsel cited the decisions of the Hon’ble Supreme

Court in the Associated Cement Companies Ltd., Chaibassa Cement

Works, Jhinkpani v. Workmen [AIR 1960 SC 56], Royal Talkies,

Hyderabad v. Employees State Insurance Corporation [AIR 1978 SC

1478], Regional Director, E.S.I. Corporation, Madras v. South India Flour

Mills Pvt. Ltd. [AIR 1986 SC 1686], Employee’s State Insurance

Corporation v. Harrison Malayalam Pvt. Ltd. [AIR 1993 SC 2655],
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Regional Provident Fund Commissioner, Jaipur v. Naraini Udyog and

Others [(1996) 5 SCC 522], Transport Corporation of India v. Employees’

State Insurance Corporation and Another [AIR 2000 SC 238], Saraswathi

Films v. Regional Director, E.S.I. Corporation [2003 (1) KLT 886],

Sumangali v. Regional Director, E.S.I. Corporation [(2008) 9 SCC 106],

Bombay Anand Bhavan Restaurant v. Deputy Director, E.S.I. Corporation

[2009 9 SCC 61], Torino Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India & Ors.

[2025 Supreme (SC) 1067] and the decisions of this Court in the

Regl. Director, E.S.I. Corporation v. Kerala Wheat Flour Roller Mill [1997

2 ILR (Ker.) 771] and the Director, E.S.I. Corporation v. M/s. Western

Marine Engineering [2019 (3) KHC 593] in support of his contentions.

11. On the other hand, the learned Senior Counsel for the

Respondent No.3 contended that the ESI Act covers only

factories under Section 1(4) and establishments notified under

Section 1(5) of the ESI Act. The registration under Section 2-A

of the ESI Act is with reference to the factory and establishment.

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It does not require the entity which owns the establishment to

be registered. Respondent No.3 is a limited company. It cannot

be treated as an establishment. Different establishments owned

by the Respondent No.3 could not be treated as a single

establishment only for the reason that they belong to the

Respondent No.3. The existing coverage of the establishment

is the establishment that belonged to the Respondent No.3 in

Mumbai. The establishment established by the Respondent

No.3 in Infopark, Kochi, could not be treated as an extension of

the already existing establishment. The establishment of the

Respondent No.3 at Kochi is a new establishment. It started

only on 02.04.2008. Respondent No.3 is engaged in providing

I.T. services. It does not have any technical know-how to

supervise the construction works. Any work done prior to

02.04.2008 for making the leased premises ready for the

occupation of the Respondent No.3 could not be treated as an
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ordinary part of the work of the establishment or preliminary to

the work or incidental to the purpose of the establishment. That

apart, construction work is clearly excluded from coverage as

per Ext.A9 Instruction of the E.S.I. Corporation itself. The

establishments of the Respondent No.3 in Thejomaya building

and in the neighbouring building, Vismaya, are distinct and

separate. They are registered under different schemes. One

could not be said to be an extension or a part of the other. Even

in the Report of the Inspector of the E.S.I. Corporation, it is

stated that the establishment in the Thejomaya building is not

an addition or modification of the existing covered unit of

Vismaya. Hence, the Respondent No.3 is not liable to pay E.S.I.

contribution in the capacity of principal employer with respect to

the fit-out works done by it through the employees of the

Applicant. The payment made by the Respondent No.3 towards

the contribution after deducting the same from the contract
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value due to the Applicant is not an erroneous payment. It is an

illegal collection of contribution by the E.S.I. Corporation and

hence Regulation 40 of the E.S.I. (General) Regulations, 1950,

is not applicable to the present case. The issue is covered by

the decision of this Court in Deputy Director v. B.P.L. Cellular Ltd.

[2005 (2) KLT 775]. Hence, the E.I. Court correctly understood the

law on the point and correctly decided the matter in favour of

the Applicant. No substantial question of law arises in the matter

to entertain the appeal at the instance of the E.S.I. Corporation.

12. The learned counsel for the Respondent No.1 also advanced

contentions substantially the same as those raised by the

Senior Counsel for Respondent No.2.

13. I have considered the rival contentions.

14. Section 2(9)(ii) of the ESI Act covers employees employed for

wages through an immediate employer on the premises of the

factory or establishment or under the supervision of the principal
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employer or his agent on work which is ordinarily a part of the

work of the factory or establishment which is preliminary to the

work carried on in or incidental to the purpose of the factory or

establishment. The workers engaged by the contractor of the

principal employer for doing works preliminary and incidental to

the purpose of the establishment are covered by the definition.

Here, the Respondent No.3 has employed workers through the

Applicant in the premises of the establishment to do the fit-out

works. Whether such fit-out work is a work preliminary or

incidental to the purpose of the establishment of the

Respondent No.3 or not is the question to be answered in this

case.

15. The learned Counsel for the Appellants cited several decisions

of the Hon’ble Supreme Court and this Court to enlighten the

law on the point. Let me examine the decisions cited by the
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learned Counsel for the Appellants in order to have the correct

understanding of the law on the point.

16. The learned Counsel for the Appellants cited the decision of the

Hon’ble Supreme Court in Associated Cement Companies Ltd.

(supra) to explain the term establishment. The Hon’ble Supreme

Court interpreted the term ‘establishment’ with reference to the

Mines Act, 1952, and the Factories Act, 1948. In the E.S.I. Act,

the term ‘establishment’ is not defined. The Hon’ble Supreme

Court held that the real purpose is to find out the true relation

between the parts, branches, units etc.; that if in their true

relation they constitute one integrated whole, the establishment

is one and on the contrary they do not constitute one integrated

whole, each unit is then a separate unit; that the relation

between units will be judged and must depend on the facts

proved, having regard to the scheme and object of the statute;

that in one case the unity of ownership, management and
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control may be the important test, in another case, functional

integrality or general unity may be the important test and still in

another case the important test may be the unity of employment;

that in large number of cases several tests may fall for

consideration at the same time; that the difficulty of applying

these tests arises because of the complexity of modern

industrial organisation; many enterprises may have functional

integrality between the factories which are separately owned;

some may be integrated in part with units or factories having the

same ownership and in part with factories or plants which are

independently owned. The learned counsel cited this decision

to substantiate the point that the new unit of the Respondent

No.3 in Kochi is a part of the Corporate Office of the Respondent

No.3 at Mumbai which is a covered establishment.

17. The decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Royal Talkies

(supra) is one rendered under the ESI Act. In the said decision,
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the Hon’ble Supreme Court considered the scope of the

definition of ’employee’ under Section 2(9) of the ESI Act. It is

specifically held that the expression ‘in connection with the work

of an establishment’ ropes in a wide variety of workmen who

may not be employed in the establishment but may be engaged

only in connection with the work of the establishment; that it is

enough if the employee does some work which is ancillary,

incidental or has relevance to or link with the object of the

establishment. It is further held that the language used in

Section 2(9)(ii) is extensive and diffusive imaginatively

embracing all possible alternatives of employment by or through

an independent employer; that in such cases the principal

employer has no direct employment relationship since the

immediate employer of the employee concerned is someone

else; that even so, such an employee, if he works on the

premises of the establishment or under the supervision of the
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principal employer or his agent on work which is ordinary part of

the work of the establishment or which is preliminary to the work

carried on in or incidental to the purpose of the establishment

qualifies under Section 2(9)(ii); that the plurality of persons

engaged in various activities who are brought into the

definitional net is wide and considerable and all that is

necessary is that employee be on the premises or be under the

supervision of the employer or his agent; that all that the Statute

requires is that the work should not be irrelevant for the purpose

of establishment; that it is sufficient if it is incidental to it. In the

said case, it is held that keeping a cycle stand and running a

canteen are incidental or adjuncts to the primary purpose of the

theatre. In the said decision, the Hon’ble Supreme Court

considered the activities which were started after commencing

the operation of the establishment. Even though the general

principles laid down in the said decision give some guidance, it
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does not specifically deal with the construction works which

were done prior to the commencement of the establishment.

18. In South India Flour Mills (supra), the Hon’ble Supreme Court

considered the question whether the employment of workers for

the purpose of putting up additional buildings for the purpose of

commencing the manufacturing process would come within the

scope of work incidental or preliminary to or connected with the

work of the factory. The Division Bench of the Madras High

Court was of the view that such employees are not employees

within the meaning of Section 2(9) of the ESI Act. The Hon’ble

Supreme Court understood the question as whether the workers

employed for the purpose of additional buildings for the

expansion of the factories are employees within the meaning of

Section 2(9) of the Act. The Hon’ble Supreme Court found that

the definition of employee seems to be very wide and brings

within the purview of various types of employees; that as soon
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as the conditions under the definition of employee are fulfilled,

one becomes an employee within the meaning of the definition.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court specifically held that work of

construction of additional buildings required for the expansion

of the factory must be held to be ancillary, incidental or having

some relevance to or link with the object of the factory; that the

expression ‘work of the factory’ should also be understood in the

sense of any work necessary for the expansion of the factory or

establishment or for augmenting or increasing the work of the

factory or establishment, that such work is incidental or

preliminary to or connected with the factory or establishment.

The said decision answers the issue involved in this case to a

great extent. If the Respondent No.3 was having an already

existing establishment during the relevant time, the employees

engaged in the fit-out works through the Applicant in a new

premises for expanding the business in the existing
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establishment are covered under the ESI Act and an ESI

contribution is liable to be paid with respect to the wage element

in Exts.A1 and A2 contracts. It takes me to the next question of

whether the Corporate Office of the Respondent No.3, which is

a covered establishment, could be treated as an existing

establishment and the new unit is only an extension of the

existing unit. If the new unit of the Respondent No.3 at Infopark,

Kochi, is an independent unit, the employees engaged in the fit-

out works done before commencing operation of the unit could

not be treated as employees covered under Section 2(9) of the

ESI Act.

19. The learned counsel for the appellants cited the decision of the

Hon’ble Supreme Court in Naraini Udyog (supra) to contend that

even two units located at a distance of 3 KM from the

establishment therein were treated as one single unit, finding

functional unity and integrity between the two units.

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20. The learned Counsel cited the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme

Court in Transport Corporation of India (supra) to substantiate the

point that when the Head Office or registered office is covered

under the ESI Act, employees working in different branches

anywhere in India would get covered by the sweep of the Act.

In the said case, the Hon’ble Supreme Court found that the

employees of the Bombay branch of the principal employer,

which is stationed in Secunderabad in Andhra Pradesh, are the

employees of the principal employer. It is held by the Hon’ble

Supreme Court that the Bombay branch of the principal

employer facilitating and directly connected with the principal

office and working under its complete control and supervision

cannot be treated to be beyond the sweep of the Act once the

employees at Bombay branch are held to be employees of the

principal employer; that it could not be held on the facts of the

said case that Bombay branch was functioning as a separate
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and independent entity not being controlled or supervised by the

Secunderabad Principal Office so as to enable the employer to

contend that its Bombay branch was not its limb and was an

independent establishment by itself as if it was run by some

independent transport company. The learned counsel cited the

decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Sumangali (supra) in

which the Hon’ble Supreme Court relied on the factual findings

of the EI Court and the High Court that there was unity in

management, supervision and control, geographical proximity,

financial unity, general unity of purpose and functional integrality

between the different units and held that for the sake of ESI

coverage, the different units could be treated as one

establishment. In view of these two decisions, the employees of

the new unit of the Respondent No. 3 at Infopark, Kochi, are to

be treated as the employees of the Corporate office of the

Respondent No.3, which is a covered establishment, provided
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there is functional unity and integrity between the Corporate

Office and the new unit at Kochi.

21. The Hon’ble Supreme Court specifically observed in Paragraph

No.25 of the decision in Transport Corporation of India (supra) that

it is necessary to keep in view the salient fact that the Act is a

beneficial piece of legislation intended to provide benefits to

employees in case of sickness, maternity, employment injury

and for certain other matters in relation thereto; that it is enacted

with a view to ensuring social welfare and for providing safe

insurance cover to employees who were likely to suffer from

various physical illnesses during the course of their

employment; that such a beneficial piece of legislation has to be

construed in its correct perspective so as to fructify the

legislative intention underlying its enactment; that when two

views are possible on its applicability to a given set of

employees, that view which furthers the legislative intention
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should be preferred to the one which would frustrate it. The

learned counsel cited the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme

Court in Bombay Anand Bhavan Restaurant (supra), which deals with

the interpretation of the ESI Act. In the said decision it is held

that the ESI Act is a social security legislation and the canons

of interpreting a social legislation are different from

interpretation of taxation law; that the court must not

countenance any subterfuge which would defeat the provisions

of social legislation and the courts must even, if necessary,

strain the language of the Act in order to achieve the purpose

for which the legislature had in placing this legislation on the

statute book; that the Act, therefore, must receive a liberal

construction so as to promote its objects. Of course, the Courts

are to prefer the view which furthers the legislative intention

when two views are possible on interpretation. But when the

language of the provision is plain and clear and admits only one
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view, or there are well-considered precedents accepting one

view, there is no question of preferring another view.

22. The learned counsel cited the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme

Court in Torino Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. (supra), in which the Hon’ble

Supreme Court considered a question of clubbing of two units

of an establishment. The Hon’ble Supreme Court held that the

contention that once there are two separate juristic entities, the

theory of clubbing cannot be invoked is completely untenable

and it is stated to be rejected; that it is common knowledge that

artificial devices, subterfuges and facades are commonly

resorted to, to create a smokescreen of separate entities for a

variety of purposes; that the Court of law faced with such a

scenario has a duty to lift the veil and see behind applying the

well-established tests to determine whether the entities are

really separate entities or they are really a single entity; that

myriad fact situations may arise; that the contention that Section
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2A of the Act cannot be applied if ostensibly two separately

registered entities under the Companies Act are involved, has

only to be rejected. The learned counsel for the appellants, on

the strength of the decision, contended that even two entities

can be treated as one single establishment in light of the said

decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court.

23. The learned counsel cited the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme

Court in Saraswathi Films (supra) in which the aforesaid two

decisions of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Royal Talkies and

Transport Corporation of India are followed. The Division Bench

decision of this Court in Kerala Wheat Flour Roller Mill (supra) is

cited to point out that the construction of an office building or the

maintenance or repair of an existing building is a work incidental

to the purpose of the establishment. The Division Bench

Decision of this Court in M/s. Western Marine Engineering (supra) is

cited to contend that the employees who were appointed by the
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34

sub-contractor will also come under the definition of Employee

under Section 2(9) of the Act. The decision of the Hon’ble

Supreme Court in Harrison Malayalam Pvt. Ltd. (supra) is cited to

substantiate the point that it is the duty of the principal employer

to get the necessary details of the workmen employed by the

contractor at the commencement of the contract since the

primary responsibility of payment of the contribution is on the

principal employer and that such obligation ceases only when

the Act ceases to apply to the establishment.

24. On analysing the facts of the present case, the Respondent

No.3 is engaged in I.T. related services. It does not undertake

construction activities. It has no technical know-how to

supervise construction works. The checking and verification of

the work after completion of the work for processing the bill

could not be termed as an element of supervision. The right of

the principal employer to reject or accept the work after
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completion of the work cannot be treated as supervision of the

work. There could not be any implied supervision on account of

the approval by the Respondent No.3 with respect to the work

done after completion of the work. It is evident from Ext.A13

Report of the Social Security officer of the ESI Corporation that

the Applicant gave the work to its different sub-contractors and

the Applicant had only monitored the quality of work rendered

by its sub-contractors. Hence, whatever interior fit-out works are

done in the leased premises by the Applicant, it is done under

the supervision of the Applicant itself, and it is not done under

the supervision of the Respondent No.3.

25. The Corporate Office of the Respondent No.3 is a covered

establishment. Respondent No.3 obtained lease of the

premises from the Applicant for expanding their business in

Kochi on 21.10.2007. As per Ext.D1 Lease Deed, the lease

commencement date is 21.10.2007 or the date of actual
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36

handover of the premises by the Lessor to the Lessee to start

the fit-out works. Even before the execution of Ext.D1 Lease

Deed, the Respondent No.3 awarded a contract in favour of the

Applicant to do the interior fit-out works in the premises as per

Ext.A1 Contract/Work Order dated 08.10.2007. So the

commencement of the lease is from 08.10.2007. The interior fit-

out works were completed on 11.01.2008 and the premises

were entrusted to the Respondent No.3 on 11.03.2008.

Respondent No.3 started its operations of the new unit in the

leased premises on 02.04.2008. Even though Ext.A2 Amended

Work Order is dated subsequent to the date of starting

operations by the Respondent No.3, it is clear from it that it

relates to the additional works done on the basis of Ext.A1,

before starting operations by the Respondent No.3. Thus, the

fit-out works as per Exts.A1 and A2 were done before starting

business operations in the leased premises by the Respondent
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No.3. While doing the fit-out works in the premises, the

establishment was not existing and hence the fit-out

construction works cannot be termed as a preliminary or an

incidental one for the purpose of the establishment of the

Respondent No.3 at Kochi. In relation to the Corporate office of

the Respondent No.3 at Mumbai, which was a covered

establishment at the time of executing the fit-out works, the

works are outside the premises of such establishment. Only if

there is functional unity and integrity between the Corporate

Office and the new unit at Kochi, the ESI Corporation can rope

in the fit-out construction works in the new unit under ESI

coverage. The functional unity and integrity between two units

can be assessed only if both the units are existing. The

functional unity and integrity between two units of an

establishment could not be decided with reference to the pre-

operative fit-out construction works in a unit which is yet to be
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38

started. Since construction works are not the business of the

Respondent No.3, there could not be functional unity and

integrity between the two units of the Respondent No.3 with

reference to the construction fit-out works.

26. There is a covered establishment of the Respondent No.3 in the

neighbouring building by the name ‘Vismaya’. The Respondents

Nos.1 and 2 contended that the new unit is an extension of the

said existing unit of the Respondent No.3. It is clear from the

said contention that separate coverage is for the Vismaya unit

and the Corporate office of the Respondent No.3, and both are

different establishments under the ESI Act. The EI Court relied

on Exts.A11 and A12 Reports of the Social Security officer of

the ESI Corporation to hold that the Thejomaya unit and the

Vismaya unit of the Respondent No.3 are independent and

separate entities and that the Thejomaya unit is not an

extension of the Vismaya unit. In Ext.A11, it is reported that the
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Vismaya unit and the Thejomaya unit are functioning under

different schemes of the Government of India and their

operations are independent of each other and that they are

situated in separate and distinct premises having no connection

with each other. This would also support the finding that there is

no functional unity and integrity between the Corporate Office

and the new unit in Thejomaya.

27. Another contention raised by the Applicant before the EI Court

was that construction workers are exempted from ESI coverage

during the relevant time as per Ext.A9 Instruction and hence the

ESI Corporation has no authority to collect contribution for them.

The EI Court found in favour of the Applicant. Ext.A9 Instruction

of the Head Office of the ESI Corporation is dated 14.06.1999

exempting construction site workers on the ground that they

belonged to the unorganised sector due to the peculiar

characteristics of the construction industry and the peculiar
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40

nature of the employment of workers engaged in it could not be

identified and that no benefit under the ESI Act could be

extended to them. Later, Ext.A9 Instruction was revisited, and

another Circular dated 03.01.2011 was issued by the ESI

Corporation extending the coverage and benefits to

construction site workers. The said Circular is extracted in the

impugned order.

28. Learned counsel for the Appellants invited my attention to

Clause 3 in Ext.A9, which acts as an exception to the exemption

of construction site workers. It reads as follows.

“Such construction workers are to be taken into consideration for

coverage under Section 2(9) as ’employee’ who are engaged

directly in a covered factory by the principal employer or through

an immediate employer.”

29. The premises of the Respondent No.3 are not a factory to attract

the said exception clause. Hence, the workers engaged by the
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41

Respondent No.3 through the Applicant to execute the interior

fit-out construction works are not liable to be covered as they

are exempted as per Ext.A9 Instruction during the relevant time.

30. Lastly, it is contended by the Counsel for the Appellant that the

Refund Application was not made before the commencement of

the benefit period corresponding to the contribution period in

which the contribution was paid as required under Regulation

40 of the ESI (General) Regulations, 1950. The contribution was

remitted by the Respondent No.3 on 29.03.2008, and the

additionally demanded contribution was remitted on 16.05.2011.

It is the Respondent No.3 who had remitted the contribution

using the amount belonging to the Applicant. The Applicant had

no control over the payment of the contribution made by the

Respondent No.3 to the ESI Corporation, as it is the liability of

the Applicant to meet the burden to pay ESI Corporation as per

the contract. If it were the Applicant who had to pay the
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42

contribution, the Applicant could have refused to pay the

contribution, disputing the liability, and could have instituted

litigation with respect to the same. The only remedy available to

the Applicant is to claim return of the amount to it after effecting

payment of the same by the Respondent No.3 as per the

contract. The refund is claimed by the Applicant and not the

Respondent No.3, who had remitted the contribution. In case

the Applicant proves that there is no liability to pay the

contribution under the provisions of the ESI Act, the Applicant is

entitled to get the said amount from the ESI Corporation.

Regulation 40 deals with the refund of the contribution to the

person who has made the contribution and does not deal with

the return of the remitted contribution to any person other than

who remitted the contribution. An Application for refund by a

person other than who has made the contribution does not

come under Regulation 40. Hence, the time limit prescribed
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43

under Regulation 40 is not applicable to the Application for

refund by a person other than who has made the contribution.

In B.P.L. Cellular Ltd. (supra), this Court held that the Act or the

Rules or the Regulation does not expect or intend that the ESI

Corporation should be benefited out of a mistaken payment

made by the employer or the employee; that if the Corporation

wants to gain or make money out of such mistakes committed

by the employer or the employee it will amount to unjust

enrichment and that therefore Regulation 40 need not be

liberally construed if it results in undue advantage or benefit to

the Corporation. In this case also, if the ESI Corporation is

allowed to keep the money belonging to the Applicant, which is

remitted by the Respondent No.3, it is an undue enrichment to

the ESI Corporation. ESI Corporation is liable to restore the

benefit of such undue enrichment back to the person eligible for

the said benefit.

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31. The substantial question of law is answered in the negative and

against the appellants.

32. In view of the answer to the substantial question of law, the

Appeal is dismissed without costs.

Sd/-

M.A.ABDUL HAKHIM
JUDGE
Shg/

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