Supreme Court reserves verdict on ambit of ‘industry’
Supreme Court Reserves Verdict on Ambit of 'Industry' — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- A nine-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court of India reserved its verdict (March 20, 2026) on whether educational institutions, hospitals, and sovereign functions of the government fall within the definition of 'industry' under the Industrial Disputes Act (IDA), 1947. [S1][S3]
- The core question revisits the landmark Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board v. A. Rajappa (1978) ruling — a seven-judge Bench verdict — which dramatically expanded the scope of 'industry'. [S2][S4]
- Critical for UPSC: sits at the intersection of labour law, constitutional law (GS-II), and industrial relations (GS-III); directly affects crores of employees in hospitals, universities, and government bodies.
- The verdict will also have implications for the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, which replaced the IDA, 1947. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- A nine-judge Supreme Court Bench, headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant, heard oral arguments over three days (March 17–20, 2026) and reserved judgment on March 20, 2026. [S1][S3]
- The Bench is reconsidering the 1978 Rajappa ruling after a referral from a smaller bench that found the question of law unresolved; several states (UP, Maharashtra, Punjab, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu) backed a restrictive reading of 'industry'. [S1][S3]
- Senior advocates including Indira Jaising, C.U. Singh, and Gopal Sankaranarayan argued to retain the 1978 ruling; ASG K.M. Nataraj and senior advocates Shekhar Naphade and Shadan Farasat argued for a narrower definition on behalf of states. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 enacted to provide machinery for investigation and settlement of industrial disputes; Section 2(j) defines 'industry' — the definition contains "words of wide import." [S2][S4]
- Pre-1978 confusion: Courts diverged on whether government bodies, hospitals, clubs, and universities were 'industries.' The definition was used restrictively in several High Court rulings.
- Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. A. Rajappa, AIR 1978 SC 553 (decided February 21, 1978, seven-judge Bench, majority opinion by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer):
- Laid down the Triple Test for determining 'industry.'
- Held that BWSSB was an industry; government/statutory character alone does not exclude an entity.
- Included hospitals, educational institutions, municipalities within the definition. [S2][S4][S5]
- UP State Brassware Corp. v. Uday Narain Pandey (2006): A two-judge Bench doubted the Rajappa ruling's correctness and referred the matter to a larger bench — this eventually led to constitution of the nine-judge Bench. [S3]
- Industrial Relations Code, 2020 (one of four Labour Codes) replaced the IDA, 1947, but the definitional controversy carried forward. [S3]
- Nine-judge Bench constituted in 2024–25 and hearings scheduled from March 17, 2026. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Statute | Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (now replaced by Industrial Relations Code, 2020) |
| Key Section | Section 2(j) — defines 'industry' |
| Landmark Case | Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. A. Rajappa, AIR 1978 SC 553 |
| Decided | February 21, 1978 |
| Bench (1978) | Seven-judge Constitution Bench; majority by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer |
| 2026 Bench | Nine-judge Bench (larger, to overrule/affirm a seven-judge Bench) |
| CJI heading 2026 Bench | Chief Justice Surya Kant |
| Other Justices (2026) | B.V. Nagarathna, P.S. Narasimha, Dipankar Datta, Ujjal Bhuyan, S.C. Sharma, Joymalya Bagchi, Alok Aradhe, Vipul M. Pancholi |
| Implementing Ministry | Ministry of Labour & Employment |
| Successor legislation | Industrial Relations Code, 2020 |
| States seeking restriction | UP, Maharashtra, Punjab, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu |
The Triple Test (Rajappa, 1978): 1. Systematic activity — organised, not casual 2. Cooperation between employer and employees — to produce goods/services 3. Satisfaction of material needs of the community — output must serve community needs [S2][S4][S5]
Entities included under 'industry' post-1978: - Hospitals, educational institutions, municipalities, statutory bodies, clubs, government welfare departments [S2][S3]
Entities potentially excluded (sovereign functions): - Legislative, judicial, and purely sovereign/governmental functions of the State (the exact scope is disputed) [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- A nine-judge Bench can overrule a seven-judge Bench ruling — a rare constitutional exercise demonstrating the hierarchy and self-correcting nature of Indian judicial review. [S1]
- The definition of 'industry' governs access to adjudication before Industrial Tribunals/Labour Courts, including disputes on wages, unfair dismissal, health & safety. [S1]
- Doctrine of Sovereign Immunity: States argue that sovereign/governmental functions must remain outside 'industry' to preserve executive discretion; petitioners counter that workers in these sectors need statutory protection regardless. [S3]
- The verdict will shape the application of the Industrial Relations Code, 2020 — which subsumes the IDA — to millions of workers. [S3]
Economic
- If the Court narrows 'industry', employees of hospitals, universities, and government departments lose access to IDA machinery for wage disputes and unfair dismissal remedies.
- Conversely, retaining the 1978 definition preserves collective bargaining rights for a large segment of the organised workforce, including healthcare and education sectors.
- India's healthcare and education sectors together employ tens of millions — the verdict's economic reach is enormous.
Social
- Workers in hospitals and educational institutions are often from lower-middle income groups; their right to fair wages and job security depends on 'industry' classification. [S1]
- A restrictive ruling could weaken occupational safety and health protections for workers in these sectors, since IDA machinery provides a forum for such grievances. [S1]
- Implications for women workers (over-represented in healthcare and education) who rely on IDA protections for maternity benefits, equal pay, and anti-discrimination remedies.
Administrative / Governance
- State governments (represented by UP, Maharashtra, Punjab) argue that expanding 'industry' to cover sovereign functions hampers administrative flexibility and service delivery.
- Risk of judicial overload if government departments become 'industries': Industrial Tribunals could be flooded with disputes currently handled by administrative channels.
- The nine-judge Bench verdict will also guide lower courts and High Courts that have been producing contradictory rulings in the absence of authoritative guidance since 2006. [S3]
Historical
- Pre-1978: 'Industry' was narrowly interpreted; workers in government and service institutions had little recourse under the IDA.
- Post-1978 (Rajappa era): Broad inclusion dramatically expanded the welfare net but created friction between states and the Centre on sovereign functions.
- The 2026 hearing represents the longest-pending constitutional labour law question in India — unresolved for nearly five decades after the 1978 judgment.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 months)
- Early 2025: Supreme Court constitutes the nine-judge Constitution Bench and schedules hearing on the definition of 'industry.' [S3]
- February 2026: Business Standard reports nine-judge Bench set to hear case; Union and key states signal they favour a restrictive reading. [S4]
- March 17, 2026: Oral hearings commence before nine-judge Bench headed by CJI Surya Kant. [S3]
- March 19–20, 2026: Third and final day of oral arguments; senior advocates Indira Jaising, C.U. Singh, and Gopal Sankaranarayan argue to retain 1978 ruling; states push for narrower scope. [S1]
- March 20, 2026: Bench reserves verdict — judgment awaited. [S1][S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Section 2(j) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 defines 'industry'. [S2]
- The landmark Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. A. Rajappa was decided on February 21, 1978. [S2][S4]
- The 1978 majority opinion was authored by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer. [S2]
- The Triple Test (systematic activity + employer-employee cooperation + satisfaction of material community needs) was laid down in the Rajappa (1978) case. [S2][S4]
- The 1978 ruling was delivered by a seven-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court. [S1]
- The 2026 reconsideration Bench comprises nine judges — required to overrule a seven-judge Bench. [S1]
- The 2026 Bench is headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant. [S1]
- States arguing for restrictive reading include Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu. [S3]
- The Rajappa ruling brought hospitals, educational institutions, and municipalities within the ambit of 'industry'. [S2]
- The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 replaced the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, as part of consolidation of 29 labour laws into four codes.
- The Ministry of Labour & Employment is the nodal ministry for the Industrial Disputes Act / Industrial Relations Code.
- Oral arguments in the 2026 hearing spanned three days (March 17–20, 2026). [S1]
- Senior advocate Indira Jaising argued in favour of retaining the 1978 Rajappa reasoning. [S1]
- ASG K.M. Nataraj represented states urging the court to re-examine the 1978 judgment. [S1]
- The referral to a larger bench was triggered partly by the UP State Brassware Corp. v. Uday Narain Pandey (2006) ruling, where a two-judge Bench doubted Rajappa. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| GS Paper | GS-II (Polity / Judiciary / Labour Laws), GS-III (Economy / Labour Market) |
| Syllabus headings | GS-II: Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; GS-III: Labour reforms; Industrial policy |
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"The Supreme Court's nine-judge Bench reconsideration of the Bangalore Water Supply case (1978) reflects the tension between workers' welfare and state sovereignty. Examine the legal and socio-economic implications of a possible narrowing of the 'industry' definition under the Industrial Disputes Act." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)
-
"What is the 'Triple Test' laid down by the Supreme Court in the Bangalore Water Supply case? Critically evaluate its relevance in the context of labour law reforms under the four Labour Codes." (GS-III, 10 marks)
-
"Discuss the significance of a nine-judge Constitution Bench in reconsidering an earlier seven-judge Bench ruling. What does this tell us about the evolution of constitutional adjudication in India?" (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Industrial Relations Code, 2020 | Directly replaces IDA, 1947; the 'industry' definition debate will shape its application |
| Labour Codes (4 codes consolidating 29 laws) | Broader reform context within which the IDA definition sits |
| Doctrine of Basic Structure | Another domain where Constitution Benches revisit and potentially overrule earlier larger Benches |
| Collective Bargaining & Trade Union Rights | 'Industry' classification is a gateway right for workers to form unions and bargain collectively |
| Article 19(1)(c) — Right to form Associations | Constitutional underpinning for trade union rights that the IDA gives effect to |
| Minimum Wages Act / Code on Wages, 2019 | Intersects with IDA in determining worker protections; subject to same definitional debates |
| Seventh Schedule — Entry 22, List III (Concurrent) | 'Labour and employment' is a Concurrent subject; central to federal tensions in this case |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing the Bench sizes: The 1978 Rajappa ruling was a seven-judge Bench; the 2026 reconsideration is a nine-judge Bench. Aspirants often reverse these or forget that a larger bench is required to overrule a smaller one.
- Wrong year for Rajappa: The case is frequently misquoted as "1977" or "1979" — it was decided February 21, 1978.
- Misattributing the Triple Test: The test is from the Rajappa (1978) case, NOT from any legislative provision of the IDA itself — Section 2(j) merely provides the statutory text; the courts interpreted it.
- Confusing IDA with IR Code: The Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 has been replaced by the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, but pending cases and the constitutional question still reference the IDA framework. Do not treat them as simultaneously operative statutes.
- Wrong ministry: Labour law falls under the Ministry of Labour & Employment — aspirants sometimes confuse this with the Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
11. Sources
- [S1] Supreme Court Reserves Verdict on Ambit of 'Industry' — The Hindu Bureau, March 20, 2026 — (Article content provided, Tier 4) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-20/
- [S2] Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. R. Rajappa & Others on 21 February, 1978 — Indian Kanoon — (Tier 3/legal database) — https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1149369/
- [S3] Definition of Industry | Nine-Judge Bench to hear arguments from 17 March 2026 — Supreme Court Observer — (Tier 4) — https://www.scobserver.in/reports/definition-of-industry-constitution-bench-to-hear-arguments-from-17-march-2026/
- [S4] Nine-judge Supreme Court Bench to look at definition of 'industry' — Business Standard, February 2026 — (Tier 4) — https://www.business-standard.com/industry/news/sc-industry-definition-nine-judge-bench-hearing-126021601147_1.html
- [S5] Definition of 'Industry' — Case Page — Supreme Court Observer — (Tier 4) — https://www.scobserver.in/cases/uttar-pradesh-jai-bir-singh-definition-of-industry-case-background/