A bench of Justices V Gopala Gowda and C Nagappan asked Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) which has filed a review plea on the issue of compliance with the direction, to reply within eight weeks as the workers concerned have been litigating for the past 25 years in various forums.
"Keeping in mind the immense financial burden this would cause to LIC, we deem it fit to modify the relief only with regard to the back wages payable and, therefore, we award 50 per cent of the back wages with consequential benefits.
The workers in the branches of LIC at various places in the country, have sought their absorption as regular and permanent service employees in their respective posts of the corporation.
They were working as "temporary, 'badli' and part-time workers" and have claimed that they had been appointed by the corporation management on daily wage basis against leave and other vacancies of its employees in Class III and IV posts in various branch offices and divisions of the company.
It said that ordinarily, the aspect of financial burden cannot be a sufficient ground to warrant the court's interference in review petition.
The apex court said that LIC has not submitted anything on
record to suggest that its judgement of last year suffers from any error in law and mere repetition of arguments is not sufficient to justify the exercise of review jurisdiction of the court.
Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, appearing for LIC, has said that the corporation till March 31, 2015 had 55,427 Class III employees and 5,190 Class IV employees.
Rohatgi had said that under the provisions of the LIC Act, the Centre does not allocate any fund for the insurance company, and the funds are generated from the payments made to it and that the Centre does not contribute towards the funding of LIC.
He had said that under the LIC Act, 95 per cent of the surplus of corporation is to be allocated to or reserved for its life insurance policy holders and the contention that the corporation has a huge surplus and is in a position to implement the order of this court, was misconceived.
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