📌 Case
Regional Director, E.S.I. Corporation, Goa vs. Farmacia Ananta, Goa
⚖️ Court and Date
Bombay High Court
Hon’ble Mrs. Justice R.P. Sondurbaldota
Date: 2nd May 2013
Appeal under ESI No. 2/2007
📜 Relevant Law
- Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948
- Section 2(9): Definition of “Employee”
- Section 45A: Determination of contributions
- Section 75: Matters to be decided by ESI Court
- Section 82: Appeals
🏢 Background
Farmacia Ananta, a partnership firm dealing in medicines, employed more than 31 workers during 1990–92.
- On inspection, the ESI Corporation demanded contribution for:
- Coolie/Freight Charges
- Repair & Maintenance Charges
The firm challenged this demand before the Employees’ Insurance Court (EI Court), which ruled in its favor. The ESI Corporation appealed the decision before the Bombay High Court.
❓ Legal Issue
Whether coolies/hamalies engaged for loading and unloading activities can be treated as “employees” under Section 2(9) of the ESI Act, thereby making the employer liable to pay ESI contributions.
🔑 Key Legal Findings
- Regular Business Activity:
- Loading and unloading of medicines was a regular and essential business activity of the respondent.
- It was carried out under the supervision and control of the employer.
- Coverage under Section 2(9):
- Even if coolies/hamalies were engaged through contractors or casually, they fell under the definition of “employee” if work was done under the employer’s control.
- Contribution Liability:
- The employer must pay ESI contributions for such workers.
- If exact details of labour/material costs are not available, the ESI authority can fairly determine contribution at 25% of the total amount as per memorandum dated 16.11.1981.
- Precedents Considered:
- Rajkamal Transport (Supreme Court, 1996): Held hamalies as employees when work is under employer’s control.
- Parle Bottling (Bombay HC, 1989): Distinguished; in that case coolies were casual helpers, not under continuous employer control.
- E.I.D. Parry (AP HC, 2002): Not applicable as facts were different.
🏛️ Judgment
- The appeal was partly allowed:
✅ Employer liable to pay ESI contributions on coolie/freight charges.
❌ Contribution demand on repair & maintenance charges set aside, with liberty to pass a fresh order considering the 1981 circular.
📌 Conclusion
The Court reaffirmed that:
- Casual or contract workers like hamalies/coolies are employees under ESIC if their work is part of regular business and done under employer’s supervision.
- Employers cannot escape liability merely by outsourcing or treating them as casual workers.
- ESI is a beneficial legislation meant to protect workers, and must be interpreted broadly.
💡 Key Learning
- Control & Supervision = Employee under ESIC, regardless of contract or casual status.
- Regular business activities (like loading/unloading) fall within ESIC coverage.
- Employers must maintain proper records of labour charges; otherwise, ESI authority can fix contribution at 25% of expenses.
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