The Delhi High Court has ruled that airline pilots qualify as workmen under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, regardless of the level of salary they draw. The Court held that remuneration cannot be the sole criterion for denying pilots the statutory protections available to workmen under labour laws.
The judgment was delivered while examining a dispute involving airline pilots who had sought relief under the Industrial Disputes Act. The employer had argued that pilots, due to their high pay and specialised skills, fall outside the definition of “workman.” Rejecting this contention, the High Court observed that the nature of duties performed, rather than income, is the decisive factor in determining workman status.
The Court noted that pilots are engaged primarily in operational and technical functions essential to airline operations and do not exercise managerial or administrative control. Merely receiving a higher salary or possessing specialised qualifications, the Court said, does not automatically place an employee in a managerial or supervisory category excluded from the Act’s scope.
Emphasising the purpose of labour welfare legislation, the High Court stated that the Industrial Disputes Act is designed to protect employees involved in skilled, technical or operational roles. Excluding pilots from its coverage solely because of their earnings would defeat the objective of the statute.
With this ruling, the Court reaffirmed that airline pilots are entitled to seek remedies available under the Industrial Disputes Act, including raising industrial disputes and accessing conciliation and adjudication mechanisms, irrespective of their pay scale.
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