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Shankar Vs. the Assistant Executive Engineer, Grbc, Sub-division 7 and Another

Shankar vs The Assistant Executive Engineer, Grbc, Sub-division 7 and Another

Type Court Judgment Court Karnataka Decided Mar 06, 2000
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/383510

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Citation
Court
Karnataka High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Miscellaneous First Appeal No. 2466 of 1994
Subject
Labour and Industrial

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

- KARNATAKA LAND REFORMS ACT, 1961.[K.A. No. 10/1962]. Section 17: [N.K. Patil, J] Abolition of Appellate Tribunal - Abolition of Appellate Authority pending appeal - Civil Petition - When matter came up before Land Tribunal petitioners husband withdrew the claim - Held, Question of reopening is not justifiable. - ...

Key legal issue
Labour and Industrial
Acts & sections
Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923 - Sections 28(1)

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Shankar

Advocate Sri Anand Kumar for Sri Jagadish Patil, Adv.

Respondent

The Assistant Executive Engineer, Grbc, Sub-division 7 and Another

Advocate Sri D.L. Shivakumar, Government Advocate

Legal References

Acts
Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923 - Sections 28(1)
Reported In
2001ACJ1119; [2000(86)FLR871]; ILR2000KAR2632; 2000(5)KarLJ577

Excerpt

- karnataka land reforms act, 1961.[k.a. no. 10/1962]. section 17: [n.k. patil, j] abolition of appellate tribunal - abolition of appellate authority pending appeal - civil petition - when matter came up before land tribunal petitioners husband withdrew the claim - held, question of reopening is not justifiable. - anand kumar, learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the learned commissioner has not followed the mandatory provision as per section 28(1) of the workmen's compensation act, 1923. on the other hand the learned government pleader submitted that there was a compromise and the memorandum was sent to the commissioner who registered it on being satisfied that there was no undue influence, fraud, much less any coercion and inadequacy.b.k. sangalad1. the appellant is the applicant who has filed the application for the compensation on 21-1-1992 stating that he was working as a coolie under the respondent 2. on 12-6-1991 when he was working, the soil block and the stones fell on his head and legs, as such he sustained injuries especially the toes. hence he claimed the compensation of rs. l,00,000/-.2. mr. anand kumar, learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the learned commissioner has not followed the mandatory provision as per section 28(1) of the workmen's compensation act, 1923. on the other hand the learned government pleader submitted that there was a compromise and the memorandum was sent to the commissioner who registered it on being satisfied that there was no undue influence, fraud, much less any coercion and inadequacy. hence the memorandum has to be accepted. 3. in view of these rival submissions, the award of the learned commissioner is perused. according to section 28(1) of the workmen's compensation act after receipt of the memorandum, the commissioner has to issue the notice to the applicant and further has to register it not before the expiry of 7 days. in this case, it is not done so. on page no. 9 of the award itself, it is mentioned that it is not done. hence it goes to show that there is a non-compliance of the mandatory provision. therefore, the impugned award is liable to be set aside and the following order is passed: in the result, the appeal is allowed. the award dated 9-3-1994 is set aside. the matter is remitted to the commissioner for workmen's compensation, belgaum for holding fresh enquiry in accordance with law.

Full Judgment

B.K. Sangalad

1. The appellant is the applicant who has filed the application for the compensation on 21-1-1992 stating that he was working as a Coolie under the respondent 2. On 12-6-1991 when he was working, the soil block and the stones fell on his head and legs, as such he sustained injuries especially the toes. Hence he claimed the compensation of Rs. l,00,000/-.

2. Mr. Anand Kumar, learned Counsel for the appellant submitted that the learned Commissioner has not followed the mandatory provision as per Section 28(1) of the Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923. On the other hand the learned Government Pleader submitted that there was a compromise and the memorandum was sent to the Commissioner who registered it on being satisfied that there was no undue influence, fraud, much less any coercion and inadequacy. Hence the memorandum has to be accepted.

3. In view of these rival submissions, the award of the learned Commissioner is perused. According to Section 28(1) of the Workmen's Compensation Act after receipt of the memorandum, the Commissioner has to issue the notice to the applicant and further has to register it not before the expiry of 7 days. In this case, it is not done so. On page No. 9 of the award itself, it is mentioned that it is not done. Hence it goes to show that there is a non-compliance of the mandatory provision. Therefore, the impugned award is liable to be set aside and the following order is passed:

In the result, the appeal is allowed. The award dated 9-3-1994 is set aside. The matter is remitted to the Commissioner for Workmen's Compensation, Belgaum for holding fresh enquiry in accordance with law.

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