(1.) The appeal, preferred by writ-petitioner/appellant against judgment dated 09.02.2017 of learned Single Judge dismissing the writ petition, has been filed with inordinate delay of 752 days. Challenge in this writ petitioner is made to the award dated 07.04.2015 of the Labour Court in LCR No.181/1989. The writ- petitioner/appellant has also filed an application under Section 5 of the Limitation Act for condonation of the delay on the ground that after his removal from service he was living in grave conditions of poverty and that in the meantime his first son died on 22.04.2015 and second son got seriously injured in an accident took place on 27.11.2017, on whose treatment he had to spend a huge money and it also took long time and therefore he could not contact his Advocate looking after his matter in this Court and he was not aware of the decision of the Single Bench and he came thereabout only in the month of January, 2019. We are not convinced with the grounds taken by the writ-petitioner/appellant for condonation of inordinate delay in filing this appeal, even then we have looked into the facts as also merits of the case.
(2.) Mr. G.S. Gill, learned counsel for the writ-petitioner/appellant, argued that learned Single Judge has erred in law in confining the challenge only to examine the award with regard to Section 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (for short, 'the ID Act') and did not examine the award on the question whether or not Section 25G of the ID Act has been complied with.
(3.) Learned counsel for the writ-petitioner/appellant argued that the provisions enumerated in Sections 9A, 25G and 25H of the ID Act, which have not been considered by the learned Labour Court and the learned Single Judge also committed the same illegality in the impugned order. Reliance is placed on the judgment of this court in Oriental Bank of Commerce Vs. P.O., Central Government Industrial and Another - 1994 (2) LLJ 770 (Raj.), to argue that Sections 25G and 25H of the ID Act are attracted even in cases where workman has worked not less than 240 days. He also relied on the judgment of this court in Surya Prakash Sharma Vs. Rajasthan Text Board, Jaipur and Others - 1994 (69) FLR 22 (Raj.), wherein it was held that continuous service for the prescribed period was not necessary for the applicability of Sections 25G and 25H of the ID Act. He also relied on the judgment of Delhi High Court in Government of N.C.T. of Delhi Vs. Balbir Singh - 1997 (76) FLR 569.