THE MINES ACT, 1952
An Act to amend and consolidate the law
relating to the Regulation of labour and safety in mines
Be it enacted by Parliament as follows :-
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
1.
Short title, extent
and commencement – (1) This Act may be called the Mines Act, 1952. (2)It
extends to whole of India
(3)It shall come into
force on sub date or dates as the Central Government may, by notification in
the official Gazette, appoint, and different dates may be appointed for
different provisions of this Act and for different states but not later than 31st December, 1953.
2.
Definitions : - (1) In
this Act, unless the context otherwise requires :
(a) omitted
(b) “adult” means a person who has completed his eighteenth
year.
(c) “agent”, when used in relation to a mine, means every
person, whether appointed as such or not, who, acting or purporting to act on
behalf of the owner, takes part in the management, control, supervision or
direction of the mine or of any part thereof:
(d) “Chief Inspector” means the Chief Inspector of Mines
appointed under this Act;
(e) “Committee” means a committee constituted under section
12:
(f) “day” means a period of twenty-four hours beginning at
mid-night;
(g) “district magistrate” means, in a presidency-town, the
person appointed by the Central Government to perform the duties of a district
magistrate under this Act in that town;
(h) a person is said to be “employed” in a mine who works as
the manager or who works under appointment by the owner, agent or manager of
the mine or with knowledge of the manager, whether for wages or not.
(i) in any mining operation (including the concomitant
operations of handing and transport of minerals up to the point of despatch and
of gathering sand and transport thereof to the mine)
(ii) in operations or services relating to the development of
the mine including construction of plant therein but excluding construction of
buildings, roads, wells and any building work not directly connected with any
existing or future mining operations:
(iii) in operating, servicing, maintaining or repairing any
part or any machinery used in or about the mine;
(iv) in operations,
within the premises of the mine of loading for despatch of minerals;
(v) in any office of the mine:
(vi) in any welfare,
health, sanitary or conservancy services required to be provided under this
Act, or watch and ward, within the premises of the mine excluding residential
area; or
(vii) in any kind of
work whatsoever which is preparatory or incidental to, or connected with mining
operations;
(i) “Inspector” means an Inspector of Mines appointed under
this Act, and includes a district magistrate when exercising any power or
performing any duty of an Inspector which is empowered by this Act to exercise
or perform;
(i) “mine” means any excavation where any operation for the
purpose of searching for or obtaining minerals has been or is being carried on
and includes -
(i) all borings, bore holes, oil wells and accessory crude
conditioning plants, including the pipe conveying mineral oil within the
oilfields:
(ii) all shafts, in or adjacent to and belonging to a mine,
where in the course of being sunk or not:
(iii) all levels and inclined planes in the course of being
driven;
(iv) all opencast workings;
(v) all conveyors or
aerial ropeways provided for the bringing into or removal from a mine of
minerals or other articles or for the removal of refuse therefrom;
(vi)all adits, livels,
planes, machinery works, railways, tramways and sidings in or adjacent to and
belonging to a mine;
(vii) all protective works being carried out in or adjacent to
a mine;
(viii) all workshop and store situated within the precincts of a
mine and the same management and used primarily for the purposes connected with
that mine or a number of mines under the same management;
(ix) all power stations, transformer sub-stations converter
stations : rectifier stations and accumulator storage stations for supplying
electricity solely or mainly for the purpose of working the mine or a number of
mines under the same management;
(x) any premises for the time being used for depositing sand
or other material for use in a mine or for depositing refuse from a mine or in
which any operations in connection with such and refuse or other material is
being carried on, being premises exclusively occupied by the owner of the mine:
(xi) any premises in or adjacent to and belonging to a mine or
which any process ancillary to the getting, dressing or operation for sale of
minerals or of coke is being carried on;
(jj) “minerals” means
all substances which can be obtained from the earth by mining, digging,
drilling, dredging, hydraulicing, quarrying, or by any other operation and
includes mineral oils (which in turn include natural gas and petroleum):
(jjj)
(k) “office of the
mine” means any office at the surface of the mine concerned;
(kk) “Open cast
working” means a quarry, that is to say an excavation where any operation for
the purpose of searching for or obtaining minerals has been or is being carried
on, not being a shaft or an excavation which extends below superjacent ground.
(i) “owner” when used, in relation to a mine, means any
person who is the immediate proprietor or lessee or occupier of the mine or of
any part thereof and in the case of a mine the business whereof is being
carried on by liquidator or receiver, such liquidator or receiver but does not
include a person who merely receives a royalty rent or fine from the mine,
subject to any lease grant or licence for the working thereof, or is merely the
owner of the soil and not interested in the minerals of the mine; but (any
contractor or sub-lessee for the working of a mine or any part thereof shall be
subject to this Act in like manner as if he were an owner, but not so as to
exempt the owner from any liability;
(m) “Prescribed” means
prescribed by rules, regulation or byelaws, as the case may ;
(n) “qualified medical
practitioner” means a medical practitioner who possesses any recognised medical
qualification as defined in clause (h) of section 2 of the Indian Medical
Council Act, 1959 and who is enrolled on a state medical register as defined in
clause (k) of that section:)
(o) “regulations”
“rules” and “bye-laws” means respectively regulations, rules and bye-laws made
under this Act;
(p) where work of the
same kind is carried out by two or more sets of persons working during
different periods of the day each of such sets is called a “relay” (and each of
such periods is called a “shift”,)
(pp)”reportable
injury” means any injury other than a serious bodily injury which involves, or
in all probability will involve, the enforced absence of the injured persons
from work for a period of seventy-two hours or more.
(q) “serious bodily
injury” means any injury which involves; or in probability will involve the
permanent loss of any part or section of a body or the use of any part or
section of a body, or the permanent loss of or injury to the sight or hearing
or any permanent physical incapacity or the fracture of any bone or one or more
joints or bones of any phalanges of hand or foot.
(r) “week” means a
period of seven days beginning at midnight on Saturday night or such other
night as may be approved in writing for a particular area by the Chief
Inspector or an Inspector.
(2) A person working
or employed or employed in or in connection with a mine is said to be working
or employed –
(a) “below ground” if
he is working or employed –
(i)
in a shaft which has
been or is in the course of being sunk; or
(ii)
in any excavation
which extends below superjacent ground; and
(b) “above ground” if
he is working in open cast working or any other manner not specified in clause
(a)
3. (1) Act not apply
in certain cases – The provisions of this Act, except those contained in
sections 7,8,9, 40,45 and 46 shall not apply
to –
(b) any mine or part
thereof in which excavation is being made for prospecting purposes only and not
for the purpose of obtaining minerals for use or sale :
Provided that –
(i)not more than
twenty persons are employed on any one day in connection with any such
excavation.
(ii)the depth of the
excavation measured from its highest to its lowest point nowhere exceeds six,
metres or, in the case of an excavation for coal fifteen metres: and
(iii) no part of such excavation extends
below superjacent ground; or
(b) any mine engaged
in the extraction of kankar, murrum laterite, boulder, gravel, shingle,
ordinary sand (excluding moulding sand, glass sand and other mineral sands), ordinary
clay (excluding kaolin, china clay, white clay or fire clay), building stone,
slate, road metal, earthy fullers earth, marl chalk and lime stone.
Provided that –
(i)
the working do not extend below superjacent ground: or (ii)where it is an open cast
working –
(a)the depth of the
excavation measured from its highest to its lowest point nowhere exceeds six
metres;
(b)the number of
persons employed on any one day does not exceed fifty; and
(c)explosives are not used in connection with
the excavation.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) the
Central Government may, if it is satisfied that, having regard to the
circumstances obtaining in relation to mine or part thereof or ground or class
of mines, it is necessary or desirable so to do by notification in the official
Gazette, declare that any of the provisions of this Act, not set out in
sub-section (10, shall apply to any such mine or part thereof or group of class
of mines or any class of persons employed therein.
(3) Without prejudice to the provisions contained in
sub-section (2), if at any time any of the conditions specified in the
provision to clause (a) or clause (b) of sub-section (1) is not fulfilled in
relation to any mine referred to in that sub-section the provisions of this Act
not get out in sub-section (1), shall become immediately applicable, and it
shall be the duty of the owner, agent or manager of the mine to inform the
prescribed authority in the prescribed manner and within the prescribed time
about the non-fulfilment.
(4) Reference to time of day – In this Act, reference to time
of day are reference to Indian standard time, being five and a half hours ahead
of Green which mean time:
Provided that, for any
area in Indian standard time is not ordinarily observed, the Central Government
may make rules –
(a) specifying the area;
(b) defining the local mean time ordinarily observed therein;
and
(c) permitting such time to be observed in all or any of the
mines situated in the area.
------
CHAPTER - II
INSPECTORS AND CERTIFYING SURGEONS
5.
(1) Chief Inspector
and Inspector - The Central Government may, by notification in the official
Gazette, appoint such a person as possesses the prescribed qualifications to be
Chief Inspector of mines for all the territories to which this Act extends and
such persons as possess the prescribed qualifications to be Inspectors of Mines
subordinate to the Chief Inspector.
(2) No person shall be appointed to be Chief Inspector or an
Inspector, or having been appointed shall continue to hold such office, who is
or becomes directly or indirectly interested in any mine or mining rights in
India.
(3) The District Magistrate may exercise the powers and
perform the duties of an Inspector subject to the general or special orders of
the Central Government:
Provided that nothing
in this sub-section shall be deemed to empower a District Magistrate to
exercise any of the Powers conferred by section 22 or section 22A or section
61,
(4) The Chief Inspector and all Inspectors shall be deemed to
be public servant within the meaning of the Indian Penal Code.
6.
(a) Functions of
inspectors - The Chief Inspector may, with the approval of the Central
Government and subject to such restrictions or conditions as he may think fit
to impose, by order in writing: authorise any Inspector named or any class of
Inspectors specified in the order to exercise such of the powers of the Chief
Inspector under this Act (other than those relating to appeals) as he may
specify.
(2) The Chief Inspector may by order in writing, prohibit or
restrict the exercise by any Inspector named or any class of Inspectors
specified in the order of any power conferred on Inspectors under this Act.
(3) Subject to the other provisions contained in this section,
the Chief Inspector shall declare the local area or areas within which or the
group or class of mines with respect to which Inspector shall exercise their
respective powers.
7.
(1) Powers of
Inspectors of Mines – The Chief Inspector and any Inspector may – (a)make such
examination and inquiry as he thinks fit, in order to ascertain whether the
provisions of this Act and of the regulations, rules and bye-laws and of any
orders made there under are observed in the case of any mine;
(b) with such assistants,
if any, as he thinks fit, inspect and examine any mine or any part thereof at
any time by day or night:
Provided that the
power conferred by this clause shall not be exercise in such a manner as
unreasonably to impede or obstruct the working of mine.
(c) examine into, and
make inquiry respecting, the state and condition of any mine, or any part
thereof, the ventilation of the mine, the sufficiency of the bye-laws for the
time being in force relating to the mine and all matters and things connected
with or relating to the health, safety and welfare of the persons employed in
the mine, and take whether on the precincts of the mine or elsewhere statements
of any person which he may consider necessary for carrying out the purpose of
this Act;
(d) exercise such
other powers as may be prescribed by regulation made by the Central Government
in this behalf.
Provided that no
person shall be compelled under this sub-section to answer any question or make
any statement tending to incriminate himself,
(2) The Chief Inspector and any Inspector may, if he has
reason to believe as a result of any inspection examination or inquiry under
this section, that an offence under this Act has been or is being committed,
search any place and take possession of any material or any plane section
register other records appertaining to the mine and the provisions of the Code
of Criminal Procedure 1973 shall, so far as may be applicable, applied to any
search or seizure made under this Act as to apply to any search or seizure made
under the authority of a warrant issued under section 94 of the code.
8.
Powers of special
officers to enter, measure, etc. –
Any person in the
service of Government duly authorised in this behalf by a special order in
writing of the Chief Inspector or of an Inspector may, for the purpose of
surveying leveling or measuring any mine; or any output therefrom after giving
not less than three days’ notice to the manager of such mine, enter the mine
and may survey, level or measure, the mine or any part thereof or any output
therefrom after giving not less than three days’ notice to the manager of such
mine, enter the mine and may survey, level or measure, the mine or any part
thereof or any output therefrom at any time by day or night:
Provided that, where
in the opinion of the Chief Inspector or of an Inspector an emergency exists,
he may by order in writing, authorise any such person to enter the mine for any
of the aforesaid purpose without giving any such notice.
9.
Facilities to be afforded
to inspectors – Every owner, agent and manager of a mine shall afford the Chief
Inspector and every Inspector and every person authorised under section 8 all
reasonable facilities for making any entry, Inspection; survey, measurement,
examination or inquiry under this Act.
“6A. Facilities to be
provided for occupational health survey-
(i) The Chief
Inspector or an Inspector or other officer authorised by him in writing in this
behalf, may at any time during the normal working hours of the mine or at any
time by day or night as may be necessary undertake safety and occupational
health survey in a mine after giving notice in writing to the manager of the
mines and the owner, agent or manager of the mine shall afford all necessary
facilities (including facilities for the examination and testing of plant and
machinery for the collection of samples and other data pertaining to the survey
and for the transport and examination of any persons employed in the mine
chosen for the survey) to such Inspector or officer.
(2) Every person
employed in a mine who is chosen for examination in any safety and occupational
health survey under sub-section (10 shall present himself for such examination
and at such place as may be necessary and shall furnish all information
regarding his work and health in connection with the said survey.
(3) The time spent by
any person employed in a mine who is chosen for examination in the safety and
occupational health survey, shall be counted towards his working time, so
however that any overtime shall be paid at the ordinary rate of wages.
Explantion:
For the purpose of this sub-section, “ordinary rate of wages” means the basic
wages plus any dearness allowance and underground allowance and compensation in
case including such compensation, if any accruing through the free issue of
foodgrains and edible oils as persons employed in a mine may, for the time
being, be entitled to, but does not include a bonus (other than a bonus given
as incentive for production) or any compensation accruing through the provision
of amenities such as free housing, free supply of coal, medical and educational
facilities, sickness allowance, supply of kerosen oil baskets, tools and
uniforms.
(4) Any person who, on examination under sub-section (2) is
found medically unfit to discharge the duty which he was discharging in a mine
immediately before such presentation shall be entitled to undergo medical
treatment at the cost of the owner, agent and manager with full wages during the
period of such treatment.
(5) If, after the medical treatment, the person referred to
in sub-section (4) is declared medically unfit to discharge the duty which he
was discharging in a mine immediately before absenting himself from the said
examination and such unfitness is directly describable to his employment in the
mine before such presentation, the owner, agent and manager shall provide such
person with an alternative employment in the mine for which he is medically fit
:
Provided that where no such
alternative employment is immediately available, such person shall be paid by
the owner, agent and manager disability allowance determined in accordance with
the rates prescribed in this behalf;
Provided
further that where such person decides to leave his employment in the mine, he
shall be paid by the owner, agent and manager a lump sum amount by way of
disability compensation determined in accordance with the rates prescribed in
this behalf.
(6) The rates under the provision sub-section (5) shall be
determined having regard to the monthly wages of the employees, the nature of
disabilities and other related factors.”
10.
Secrecy information
obtained :--
(1) All copies of, and extracts from registers or other record
appertaining to any mi9ne and all other information acquired by the Chief
Inspector or an Inspector or by any one assisting him, in the course of the
inspection or survey of any mine under this Act or acquired by any person
authorised under section 8 or section 9A in the exercise of his duties
thereunder, shall be regarded as confidential and shall not be disclosed to any
person or authority unless the Chief Inspector or the Inspector considers
disclosure necessary to ensure the health, safety or welfare of any person
employed in the mine or any other mine adjacent thereof.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall apply to the disclosure
of any such information (if so required) to –
“(a) any court;
(b)
a Committee or court of inquiry constituted or appointed under section 12 or
section 24, as the case may be:
(c) an official
supervisor or the owner, agent or manager of the concerned mine:
(d)
a Commissioner for workmen’s compensation appointed under the Workmen’s
Compensation Act, 1923;
(e) the Controller
Indian Bureau of Mines.
(f) any registered or recognised trade union;
(g) such other officer, authority and organisation as may be
specified in this behalf by the Central Government.”
(3) If the Chief Inspector, or an Inspector
or any other person referred to in sub-section
(1) discloses contrary
to the provisions of this section, any such information as aforesaid without
the consent of the Central Government, he shall be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.
(4) No court shall proceed to the trial of any offence under
this section except with the previous sanction of the General Government.
11.
Certifying Surgeons
:--
(1) The Central Government may appoint qualified medical
practitioners to be certifying surgeons for the purpose of this Act within such
local limits or for such mine or class or description of mines as it may assign
to them respectively.
(2) Subject to such conditions as the Central Government may
think fit to impose, a certifying surgeon may, with the approval of the Central
Government, authorise any qualified medical practitioner to exercise all or any
of his powers under this Act for such period as the certifying surgeon may
specify, and references to a certifying surgeon shall be deemed to include
references to any qualified medical practitioner when so authorise.
(3) No person shall be appointed to be or authorised to
exercise the powers of certifying surgeon, or, having been so appointed or
authorised, continue to exercise such powers, who is or becomes the owner,
agent or manager of a mine, or is or becomes directly or indirectly interested
therein, or in any process or business carried on therein or in any patent or
machinery connected therewith, or is otherwise in the employment of the mine.
(4) The certifying surgeon shall carry out such duties as may
be prescribed in connection with --
(a) ***
(b) the examination of persons engaged in a mine in such
dangerous occupations or processes as may be prescribed:
(c) the exercise of such medical supervision as may be
prescribed for any mine or class or description of mines where-
(i) cases of illness have occurred which it is reasonable to
believe are due to the nature of any process carried on or other conditions of
work prevailing in the mine.
(ii) ***
-----
CHAPTER – III
‘COMMITTEES’
12.
Committees :-
(1) The Central
Government shall, with effect from such date as that Government may by
notification in the official Gazette, specify in this behalf constitute for the
purposes of this
Act, a Committee consisting of -
(a)
a person in the
service of the Government, not being the Chief Inspector or an Inspector,
appointed by the Central Government to as Chairman:
(b)
the Chief Inspector of
mines;
(c)
two persons to
represent the interests of miners appointed by the Central Government;
(d)
two persons to
represent the interests of owners of mines appointed by the Central Government;
(e)
two qualified mining
engineers not directly employed in the mining industry, appointed by Central
Government :
Provided that one at
least of the persons appointed under clause (c) shall be for representing the
interests of workers in coal mines and one at least of the persons appointed
under clause (d) shall be for representing the interests of owners of coal mines.
(2) Without prejudice to generality of sub-section(1), the
Central Government may constitute one or more Committees to deal with specific
matters relating to any part of the territories to which this Act extends or to
a mine or a group of mines and may appoint members thereof and the provisions
of sub-section(1) (except the provision thereto) shall apply for the
constitution of any Committee under this sub-section as they apply for the
constitution of a Committee under that sub-section.
(3) No act or proceeding of a Committee shall be invalid by
reason only of the existence of any vacancy among its members or any defect in
the constitution thereof.
13.
Functions of the
committee –
(1) The Committee constituted under sub-section (1) of
section 12 shall –
(a) consider proposal for making rules and regulations under
this Act and make appropriate recommendations to the Central Government;
(b) enquiry into such accidents or other matters as may be
referred to it by the Central Government from time to time and make reports
thereon; and
(c) subject to the provisions of such-section(2), hear and
decide any appeals or objections against notices or orders under this Act or
the regulations, rules or bye-laws thereunder as are required to be referred to
it by this Act or as may be prescribed.
(2) The Chief Inspector shall not take part in the
proceedings of the Committee with respect to any appeal or objection against an
order on notice made or issued by him or act in relation to any matter
pertaining to such appeal or objection as a member of the Committee.
14.
Powers, etc. of the
Committees –
(1) A Committee constituted under section 12 may exercise
such of the powers of an Inspector under this Act as it thinks necessary or
expedient to exercise for the purposes of discharging its functions under this
Act.
(2) A committee constituted under section 12 shall, for the
purposes of discharge its functions have the same powers as are vested in a
court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 when trying a suit in respect of
the following matters, namely :--
(a) discovery and inspections;
(b) enforcing the attendance of any person and examining him
on oath;
(c) compelling the production of documents; and
(d) such other matters as may be prescribed.”
15.
Recovery of expenses –
The Central Government
may direct that the expenses of any inquiry conducted by a committee
constituted under section 12 shall be borne in whole or in part by the owner or
agent of the mine concerned, and the amount so directed to be paid may, on
application by the Chief Inspector or an Inspector or to a magistrate having
jurisdiction at the place where the mine is situated or where such owner or
agent is for the time being resident, be recovered by the distress and sale of
any movable property within the limits of the magistrates jurisdiction
belonging to such owner or agent.
Provided that the
owner or his agent has not paid the amount within six weeks from the date of
receiving the notice from the Central Government or the Chief Inspector of
Mines.
-------
CHAPTER - IV
MINING OPERATIONS AND MANAGEMENT OF MINES
16.
Notice to be given of
mining operations –
(1) The owner, agent or manager of a mine shall, before the
commencement of any mining operation, give to the Chief Inspector, the
Controller, Indian Bureau of Mines and the District Magistrate of the district
in which the mine is situated, notice in writing in such form and containing
such particulars relating to the mine, as may be prescribed.
(2) Any notice given under sub-section (1) shall be so given
as to reach the persons concerned at least one month before the commencement of
any noting operation.
17.
(1) Managers- Save as
may be otherwise prescribed, every mine shall be under a sole manager who shall
have the prescribed qualifications and the owner or agent of every mine shall
appoint a person having such qualifications to be the manager:
Provided that the
owner or agent may appoint himself as manager if he possesses the prescribed
qualifications.
(2) Subject to any instruction given to him by or on behalf
of the owner or agent of the mine, the manager shall be responsible for the
overall management, control, supervision and direction of the mine and all such
instructions when given by the owner or agent shall be confirmed in writing
forthwith.
(3) Except in case of an emergency, the owner or agent of a
mine or anyone on his behalf shall not give otherwise than through the manager,
instructions affecting the fulfilment of his statutory duties, to a persons,
employed in a mine, who is responsible to the manager.
18.
Duties and
responsibilities of owners, agents and managers :-
(1) the owner and agent of every mine shall each be
responsible for making financial and other provisions and for taking such other
steps as may be necessary for compliance with the provisions of this Act and
the regulations, rules, bye-laws and orders made thereunder.
(2) The responsibility in respect of matters provided for in
the rules made under clauses (d), (e) and (p) of section 58 shall be
exclusively carried out by the owner and agent of the mine and by such person
(other than the manager) whom the owner or agent may appoint for securing
compliance with the aforesaid provisions.
(3) If the carrying out of any instructions given under
sub-section (2) or given otherwise than through the manager under
sub-section(3) of section 17 results in the contravention of the provisions of
this Act or of the regulations, rules, bye-laws or orders made thereunder,
every person giving such instructions shall also be liable for the
contravention of the provision concerned.
(4) Subject to the provisions of sub-sections(1), (2) and (3)
the owner, agent and manager of every mine shall each be responsible to see
that all operations carried on in connection with the mine are conducted in
accordance with the provisions of this Act and of the regulations, rules,
bye-laws and orders made thereunder.
(5) In the event of any contravention by any person whosoever
of any of the provisions of this Act or of the regulations; rules, bye-laws or
orders made thereunder except those which specifically require any person to do
any act or thing, or prohibit any person from doing an act or thing, besides
the person who contravenes, each of the following persons shall also be deemed
to be guilty of such contravention unless he proves that he had used bue
diligence to secure compliance with the provisions and had taken reasonable
means to prevent such contravention:
(i) the official or officials appointed to perform duties of
supervision in respect of the provisions contravened;
(ii) the manager of the mine;
(iii) the owner and agent of the mine;
(iv) the person appointed, if any, to carry out the
responsibility under sub-section (2). Provided that any of the persons
aforesaid may not be proceeded against if it appears on enquiry and
investigation that he is not prima facieliable.
(6) It shall not be a defence in any proceedings brought
against the owner or agent of a mine under this section that the manager and
other official have been appointed in accordance with the provisions of this
Act or that a person to carry the responsibility under sub-section (2) has been
appointed."
------
CHAPTER – V
PROVISION AS TO HEALTH AND SAFETY
19.
Drinking water ---
(1)
In every mine
effective arrangement shall be made to provide and maintain at suitable points
conveniently situated a sufficient supply of coal and wholesome drinking water
for all persons employed therein:
Provided that in case
of persons employed below ground the Chief Inspector may, in lieu of drinking
water being provided and maintained at suitable points, permit any other
effective arrangements to be made for such supply.
(2)
All such points shall
be legibly marked ‘DRINKING WATER’ in a language understood by a majority of
the persons employed in the mine and no such point shall be situated withi9n
six metres of any washing place, urinal or latrine, unless a shorter distances
is approved in writing by the Chief Inspector.
(3)
In respect of all
mines or any class or description of mines, the Central Government may make
rules for securing compliance with the provisions of sub-sections
(1) and (2) and for the examination by prescribed authorities
of the supply and distribution of drinking water.
20.
Conservancy –
(1) There shall be provided, separately for males and females
in every mine, a sufficient number of latrines and urinals of prescribed types
so situated as to be convenient and accessible to persons employed in the mine
at all times.
(2) All latrines and urinals provided under sub-section (1)
shall be adequately lighted, ventilated and at all times maintained in a clean
and sanitary condition.
(3) The Central Government may specify the number of latrines
and urinals to be provided in any mine, in proportion to the number of males
and females employed in the mine and provide for such other matters in respect
of sanitation in mines (including the obligations in this regard of persons
employed in the mine) as it may consider necessary in the interests of the
health of the persons employed,
21.
Medical appliance :
(1) In every mine there shall be provided and maintained so
as to be readily accessible during all working hours such number of first-aid
boxes or cupboards equipped with such contents as may be prescribed.
(2) Nothing except the prescribed contents shall be kept in a
first-aid box or cupboard or room.
(3) Every first-aid box or cupboard shall be kept in the
charge of a responsible person who is trained in such first-aid treatment as
may be prescribed and who shall always be readily available during the working
hours of the mine.
(4) In every mine there shall be mades to as to be readily
available such arrangements as may be prescribed for the conveyance to
hospitals or dispensaries of persons who, while employed in the mine suffer
bodily injury or become ill.
(5) In every mine wherein more than one hundred and fifty
persons are employed there shall be provided and maintained a first-aid room of
such size with such equipment and in the charge of such medical and nursing staff
as may be prescribed.
22.
Powers of Inspectors
when causes of danger not expressly provided against exist or when employment
of persons is dangerous:-
(1)If, in respect of
any matter for which no express provision is made by or under this Act, it appears
to the Chief Inspector or an Inspector that any mine or part thereof or any
matter, thing or practice in or connected with the mine, or with the control,
supervision, management or defective so as to threaten, or tend to, the bodily
injury of any person, he may give notice, in writing thereof to the owner,
agent or manager of the mine and shall state in the notice the particulars in
respect of which he considers the mine or part thereof or the matter, thing or
practice to be dangerous or defective and require the same to be remedied
within such time and in such manner as he may specify in the notice.
(1A) Where the owner,
agent or manager of amine fails to comply with the terms of a notice given
under sub-section (1) within the period specified therein, the Chief Inspector
or the Inspector, as the case may be, may by order in writing, prohibit the
employment in or about the mine or any part thereof any person whose employment
is not in his opinion reasonably necessary for securing compliance with the
terms of the notice.
(1)Without prejudice
to the provisions contained in sub-section(10 the Chief Inspector or the
Inspector as the case may be, by order in writing addressed to the owner, agent
or manager of a mine prohibit the extraction or reduction of pillars or blocks
of minerals in any mine or part thereof, if, in his opinion such operation is
likely to cause the crushing of pillars or blocks of minerals or the premature
collapse of any part of the working or otherwise endanger the mine or the life
or safety of persons employed therein or if, in his opinion, adequate provision
against the outbreak of fire or flooding has not been made by providing for the
sealing off and isolation of the part of the mine in which such operation is
contemplated and for restricting the area that might be affected by fire or
flooding.
(3)If the Chief
Inspector, or an Inspector authorised in this behalf by general or special
order in writing by the Chief Inspector, is of opinion that there is urgent and
immediate danger to the life or safety of any person employed in any mine or
part thereof, he may, by order in writing containing a statement of the grounds
of his opinion, prohibit, until he is satisfied that the danger is removed the
employment in or about the mine or any part thereof of any person whose
employment is not in his opinion reasonably necessary for the purpose of
removing the danger.
(3A) Every person
whose employment is prohibited under sub-section (1A) of sub-section
(3) shall be entitled to payment of full wages for the period
for which he would have been, but for the prohibition in employment and the
owner agent or manager shall be liable for payment of such full wages of that
person:
Provided that the
owner, agent or manager may instead of paying such full provide such person
with an alternative employment at the same wages which such person was
receiving in the employment which was prohibited.”
(4) Where notice has been given under sub-section (1) or an
order made under sub-section (1A), sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) by an
Inspector, the owner, agent or manager of the mine may within ten days after
the receipt of the notice or order, as the case may be appeal against the same
to the Chief Inspector who may confirm, modify or cancel the notice or order.
(5) The Chief Inspector or the Inspector sending a notice
under sub-section (1) or making an order under sub-section (1A), sub-section(2)
or sub-section (3) and the Chief Inspector making an order (other than an order
of cancellation in appeal) under sub-section (4) shall forthwith report the
same to the Central Government.
(6) If the owner, agent or manager of the mine objects to a
notice sent under sub-section(1) by the Chief Inspector or to an order made by
the Chief Inspector under sub-
section (1A) or
sub-section(2) or sub-section (3) or sub-section (4), he may, within twenty
days after the receipt of the notice containing the requisition or of the order
or after the date of the decision on appeal, as the case may be, send his
objection in writing stating the grounds thereof to the Central Government
which shall, ordinarily within a period of two months from the date of receipt
of the objection, refer the same to a Committee.
(7) Every notice under sub-section(1) or order under
sub-section (1A), sub-section(2) or sub-section(3) or sub-section (4) to which
objection is made under sub-section(6) shall be complied with, pending the
receipt at the mine of the decision of the Committee.
Provided that the
Committee may, on the application of the owner, agent or manager, suspend the
operation of a notice under sub-section (1) pending its decision on the
objection.
(8) Nothing in this section shall affect the powers of a
magistrate under section 144 of the Code of Criminal procedure 1896. Act V of
1898).
22A Power to prohibit employment in certain cases:
(1)Where in respect of
any matter relating to safety for which express provision is made by or under
this Act, the owner, agent or manager of mine fails to comply with such
provisions, the Chief Inspector may give notice in writing requiring some to be
complied with within such time as he, may specify in the notice or within such
extended period of time as he may, from time to time, specify thereafter.
(2)Where the owner,
agent or manager fails to comply with the terms of a notice given under
sub-section(1) within the period specified in such notice or, as the case may
be, within the extended period of time specified under that sub-section, the
Chief Inspector may, by order in writing, prohibit the employment in or about
the mine or any part thereof of any person whose employment is not, in his
opinion reasonably necessary for securing compliance with the terms of the
notice.
(3)Every person whose
employment is prohibited under sub-section(2), shall be entitled to payment of
full wages for the period for which he would have been, but for the
prohibition, in employment, and the owner, agent or manager shall be liable for
payment of such full wages of that person.
Provided that the
owner, agent or manager may, instead of paying such full wages, provide such
person with an alternative employment at the same wages which such person was
receiving in the employment which was prohibited under sub-section(2).
(4) The provisions of sub-section (5), (6) and (7) of section
22 shall apply in relation to a notice issued under sub-section (1) or an order
made under sub-section(2) of this section as they apply in relation to a notice
under sub-section (1) or an order under sub-section (1A) of that section.”
23.
Notice to be given of
accidents :-
(1) Whenever there occurs in or about a mine:-
(a) an accident causing loss of life or serious bodily
injury, or
(b) an explosion, ignition, spontaneous heating, outbreak of
fire or irruption or inrush of water or other liquid matter, or
(c) an influx of inflammable or noxious gases, or
(d) a breakage of ropes, chains or other gear by which
persons or materials are lowered or raised in a shaft or an incline, or
(e) an overwinding of cages of other means of conveyance in
any shaft while persons or materials are being lowered or raised, or
(f) a premature collapse of any part of the workings, or
(g) any other accident which may be prescribed, the owner,
agent or manager of the mine shall give notice of the occurrence to such
authority in such form and within such time as may be prescribed, and he shall
simultaneously post one copy of the notice on a special notice-board in the prescribed
manner at a place where it may be inspected by trade union officials, and shall
ensure that the notice is kept on the board for not less than fourteen days
from the date of such posting.
(1A) Whenever there
occurs in about a mine an accident causing reportable injury to any person, the
owner, agent or manager of the mine shall enter in a register such occurrence
in the prescribed form and copies of such entries shall be furnished to the
Chief Inspector once in quarter.”
(2) Where a notice
given under sub-section(1) relates to an accident causing loss of life, the
authority shall make an inquiry into the occurrence within two months of the
receipt of the notice and, if the authority is not the Inspector, he shall
cause the Inspector to make an inquiry within the said period.
(3)The Central
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, direct that accidents
other than those specified in sub-sections(1) and (1A) which cause bodily
injury resulting in the enforced absence from work of the person injured for a
period exceeding twenty-four hours shall be entered in a register in the
prescribed form or shall be subject to the provision of sub-section(1) or
sub-section (1A), as the case may be.”
(4) A copy of the entries in the register referred to in sub
section (3) shall be sent by the owner, agent or manager of the mine, on or
before the 20th day of January in the year following that to which the
entries relate to the Chief Inspector.
(5) Whenever there occurs in or about a mine an accident
causing loss of life or serious bodily injury to any person, the place of
accident shall not be disturbed or altered before the arrival or without the
consent of the Chief Inspector or the Inspector to who notice of the accident
is required to be given under sub-section(1) of section 23, unless such
disturbances of alteration is necessary to prevent any further accident to
remove bodies of the deceases; or to rescue any person from danger, or unless
discontinuance of work at the place of accident would seriously impede the
working of the mine;
Provided
that where the Chief Inspector or the said Inspector fails to inspect the place
of accident, within seventy-two hours of the time of the accident, work may be
resumed at the place of the accident.”
24.
Power of Government to
appoint court of enquiry in cases of accidents:-
(1) When any accident of the nature referred to in any of the
clauses of sub-section(1) of sections 23 occurs in or about a mine, the Central
Government may if it is of opinion that a formal inquiry into the causes of and
circumstances attending the accident ought to be held, appoint a competent
person to hold such inquiry and may also appoint one or more persons possessing
legal or special knowledge to act as assessor or assessors in holding the
inquiry.
(2) The person appointed to hold such an inquiry shall have
all the powers of a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 (Act V
of 1908), for the purpose of enforcing the attendance of witnesses and
compelling the production of documents and material objects.
(3) Any person holding an inquiry under this section may
exercise such of the powers of an Inspector under this Act as he may think it
necessary or expedient to exercise for the purposes of the inquiry.
(4) The person holding an inquiry under this section shall
make a report to the Central Government stating the causes of the accident and
its circumstances, and adding any observations which he or any of the assessors
may think fit to make.
25.
Notice of certain diseases
:-
(1) Where any person employed in a mine contacts any disease
notified by the Central Government in the official Gazette as a disease
connected with mining operations the owner , agent or manager of the mine, as
the case may be, shall send notice thereof to the Chief Inspector and to such
other authorities in such form and within such time as may be prescribed.
(2) If any medical practitioner attends on a person who is or
has been employed in a mine and who is or is believed by the medical
practitioner to be suffereing from any disease notified under sub-section(1)
the medical practitioner shall without delay send a report in writing to the
Chief Inspector stating --
(a) the name and address of the patient.
(b) The disease from which the patient is or is believed to
be suffering, and
(c) The name and address of the mine in which the patient is
or was last employed.
(3) Where the report under sub-section(2) is confirmed to the
satisfaction of the Chief Inspector by the certificate of a certifying surgeon
or otherwise that the person is suffering from a disease notified under
sub-section (1), the Chief Inspector shall pay to the medical practitioner such
fee as may be prescribed, and the fee so paid shall be recoverable as an arrear
of land revenue from the owner, agent or manager of the mine in which the
person contracted the disease.
(4) If any medical practitioner fails to comply with the
provisions of sub-section(2), he shall be punishable with fine which may extend
to fifty rupees.
26.
Power to direct
investigation of causes of diseases :--
(1) The Central Government may, if it considers it expedient
to do so, appoint a competent person to inquire into and report it on any case
where a disease notified under sub-section(1) of section 25 has been or
suspected to have been contracted in a mine, and may also appoint one or more
persons possessing legal or special knowledge to act as assessors in such
inquiry.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (2) and (3) of section 24
shall apply to an inquiry under this section in the same manner as they apply
to any inquiry under that section.
27.
Publication of reports
:-
The Central Government
may cause any report submitted by a Committee under section 12 or any report or
extracts from report submitted to it under section 26, and shall cause every
report submitted by a Court of Inquiry under section 14 to be published at such
time and in such manner as it may think fit.
-----
CHAPTER – VI
HOURS AND LIMITATION OF EMPLOYMENT
28.
Weekly day of rest :-
No person shall be
allowed to work in a mine for more than six days in any one week.
29.
Compensatory days of
rest :-
(1) Where in pursuance of action under section 38 or as a
result of exempting any mine or the persons employed therein is from the
provisions of section 28, any person employed therein deprived of any of the
weekly days of rest for which provision is made in section 28, he shall be
allowed, within the month in which such days of rest was due to him or within
the two months immediately following that month, compensatory days of rest
equal in number to the days of rest of which he has been deprived.
(2) The Central Government may prescribe the manner in which
the days of rest for which provision is made in sub-section (1) shall be
allowed.
30.
(1) No adult employed
above ground in a mine shall be required or allowed to work for more than
forty-eight hours in any week or for more than nine hours in any day:
Provided
that, subject to the previous approval of the Chief Inspector, the daily
maximum hours specified to this sub-section may exceed in order to facilitate
the change of shifts.
(2) The periods or
work of any such adult shall be so arranged that along with his interval for
rest, they shall not in any day spread over more than twelve hours, and that he
shall
not work for more than
five hours continuously before he has had an interval for rest of at least half
an hour:
Provided
that the Chief Inspector may, for reasons to be recorded in writing and subject
to such conditions as he may deem fit to impose, permit the spread over to
extend over a period not exceeding fourteen hours in any day.
(3) Persons belonging
to two or more shifts shall not be allowed to do work of the same kind above
ground as the same time:
Provided
that, for the purpose of this sub-section persons shall not be deemed to belong
to separate shifts by reason only of the fact that they receive their intervals
for rest at different times,
31.
Hours of work below
grounds:-
(1) No person employed below ground in a mine shall be
allowed to work for more than forty-eight hours in any week or for more than
eight hours in any day;
Provided that, subject
to the previous approval of the Chief Inspector, the daily maximum hours
specified in this sub-section may be exceeded in order to facilitate the change
of shifts.
(2) No work shall be carried on below ground in any mine
except by a system of Shifts so arranged that the period of work for each
shifts is not spread-over more than the daily maximum hours stipulated in
sub-section (1)
(3) No person employed in a mine shall be allowed to be
present in any part of a mine below ground except during the periods of work
shown in respect of him in the register maintained under sub-section (4) of
section 48.
32.
Night shifts :-
Where a person
employed in a mine works on a shift which extends beyond midnight –
(a)
for the purposes of sections 28 and 29, a weekly day of rest shall mean in his
case a period of twenty-four consecutive hours beginning when his shift ends.
(b)
the following day for him shall be deemed to be the period of twenty four hours
beginning when such shifts ends, and the hours he khas worked after midnight
shall be counted in the previous day.
33.
Extra wages for
overtime:-
(1) Where in a mine a person works above ground for more than
nine hours in any day or works below ground for more than eight hours in any
day or works for more than forty-eight hours in any week. Whether above ground
or below ground, he shall in respect of such overtime work be entitled to wages
at the rate of twice his ordinary rate of wages the period of overtime work being
calculated on a daily basis or weekly basis whichever is more favourable to
him.
(2) Where any person employed in a mine is paid on piece rate
basis, the time-rate shall be taken as equivalent to the daily average of his
full-time earning for the days on which he actually worked during the week
immediately preceeding the week in which overtime work has been done, exclusive
of any overtime, and such time-rate shall be deemed to be the ordinary rate of
wages of such person;
Provided that if such
person has not worked in the preceeding week on the same or identical job, the
time rate shall be based on the average for the day he had worked in the same
week excluding the overtime or on the daily average of his earnings in any
preceding week whichever is higher.
Explanation - For the
purpose of this section. “ordinary rate of wages” shall have the same meaning
as in the Explanation to sub-section (3) of section 8A.”
(3)
(4) The Central Government may prescribed the register to be
maintained in a mine for the purpose of securing compliance with provisions of
this section.
34.
Prohibition of
employment of certain persons :
No person shall be
required or allowed to work in a mine if he has already been working in any
other mine within the preceding twelve hours.
35.
Limitation of daily
hours of work including over-time work:
Save in respect of
cases failing within clause (a) and clause (e) of section 39 no person employed
in a mine shall be required or allowed to work in the mine for more than ten
hours in any day inclusive of overtime
36.
Notices regarding
hours of work:
(1) The manager of every mine shall cause to be posted
outside the office of the mine a notice in the prescribed form standing the
time of the commencement and of the end of work at the mine and, if it is
proposed to work by a system of relays, the time of the commencement and of the
end of work for each relay.
(2) In the case of a mine at which mining operations commence
after the commencement of this Act, the notice referred to in sub-section(1)
shall be posted not less than seven days before the commencement of work.
(3) The notice referred to in sub-section(1) shall also state
the time of the commencement and of the intervals for rest for persons employed
above ground and a copy thereof shall be sent to the Chief Inspector, if he so
requires.
(4) Where it is proposed to make any alteration in the time
fixed for the commencement or for the end of work in the mine generally or for
any relay or in the rest intervals fixed for persons employed above ground, an
amended notice in the prescribed form shall be posted outside the office of the
mine not less than seven days before the change is made, and a copy of such
notice shall be sent to the Chief Inspector not less than seven days before
such change.
(5) No person shall be allowed to work in a mine otherwise
than in accordance with the notice required by sub-section (1).
37.
Supervising staff :-
Nothing in section 28,
section 30, section 31, section 34 or sub-section (5) of section 6 shall apply
to persons who may by rules be defined to be persons holding positions of
supervision or management or employed in a confidential capacity.
38.
Exemption from
provisions regarding employment:-
(1) In case of an emergency involving serious risk to the
safety of the mine or of persons employed therein or in case of an accident,
where actual or apprehended, of in case of any act of God or in case of any
urgent work to be done to machinery, plant or equipment of the mine as the
result of break-down of such machinery, plant or equipment, the manager may,
subject to the provisions of section 22 and section 22A and in accordance with
the rules under section 39, permit persons to be employed in contravention of
section 28, section 30, section 31, section 34 or sub-section(5) of section 36,
work as may be necessary to protect the safety of the mine or of the persons
employed therein:
Provided that in case of any
urgent work to be done to machinery, plant or equipment under this section, the
manager may take the action permitted by this section, although the production
of mineral would thereby be incidentally affected, but any action
so taken shall not exceed
the limits necessary for the purpose of avoiding serious interference with the
ordinary working of the mine.
(2) Every case in
which action has been taken by the manager under sub-section(1), shall be
recorded together with the circumstances relating thereto and a report thereof
shall also be made to the Chief Inspector or the Inspector.
39.
Power to make
exempting rules:-
The
Central Government may make rules providing for the exemption to such extent,
in such circumstances and subject to such conditions as may be specified from
(5) the provisions of sections 28, 30, 31, 34 or sub-section 50 of section 36 -
(a)
of all or any of the
persons employed in a mine, where an emergency involving serious risk to the
safety of the mine or of the persons employed therein is apprehended;
(b)
of all or any of the
persons so employed in case of an accident, actual or apprehended.
(c)
Of all or any of the
persons engaged in work of a preparatory or complementary nature, which must
necessarily be carried on for the purpose of avoiding serious interference with
the ordinary working of the mine.
(d)
Of all or any of the
persons engaged in urgent repairs and
(e)
Of all or any of the
persons employed in any work, which for technical reasons must be carried on
continuously.
40.
Employment of persons
below eighteen years of age :-
(1)
After the commencement of the Mine (Amendment) Act, 1983, no person below
eighteen years of age shall be allowed to work in any mine or part thereof.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), apprentices and other
trainees, not below sixteen years of age, may be allowed to work, under proper
supervision, in a mine or part thereof by the manager:
Provided that, in the
case of trainees, other than apprentices prior approval of the Chief Inspector
or an Inspector shall be obtained before they are allowed to work.
Explanation - In this
section and in section 43, “apprentice” means an apprentice as defined in
clause (a) of section 2 of the Apprentices Act, 1961.
41. ***
42. ***
43.
Power to require
medical examination :-
(1) Where an Inspector is of opinion that any person employed
in a mine otherwise than as apprentice or other trainee is not an adult or that
any person employed in a mine as an apprentice or other trainee is either below
sixteen years of age or is no longer fit to work, the Inspector may serve on
the manager of the mine a notice requiring that such person shall be examined
by a certifying surgeon and such person shall be examined by a certifying
surgeon and such person shall not, if the Inspector so directs, be employed or
permitted to work in any mine until this has been so examined and has been
certified that he is an adult or, if such person is an apprentice or trainee
that he is not below sixteen years of age and is fit to work.
(2) Every certificate granted by a certifying surgeon on a
reference under sub-section(1),
shall, for the purpose
of this Act, be conclusive evidence of the matters referred therein.
44.
45.
Prohibition of the
presence of persons below eighteen years of age in a mine :-
Subject to the provisions
of sub-section(2) of section 40, after such date as the Central Government may
by notification in the official Gazette, appoint in this behalf, no person
below eighteen years of age shall be allowed to be present in any part of a
mine above ground where any operation connected with or incidental to any
mining operation is being carried on”
46.
Employment of women :-
(1) No woman shall, notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law, be employed-
(a) in any part of a mine which is below-ground.
(b) In any mine above ground except between the hours 6 am
and 7 am.
(2) Every woman employed in a mine above ground shall be
allowed an interval of not less than eleven hours between the termination of
employment on any one day and the commencement of the next period of
employment.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section(1) the
Central Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, very the hours
of employment above ground of women in respect of any mine or class or
description of mine, so however that no employment of any woman between the
hours 10 am and 5 am is permitted thereby.
47.
Disputes as to age
Rep. By the Mine (Amendment) Act 1959 (62 of 1959), S.28.
48.
Register of persons
employed:-
(1) For every mine there shall be kept in the prescribed form
and place Register of all persons employed in the mine showing in respect of
each such person –
(a) the name of the employee with the name of his father or,
of her husband, as the case may be, and such other particulars may be necessary
for purpose of identification,
(b) the age and sex of the employee;
(c) the nature of employment (whether above ground or below
ground, and if above
ground, whether in
opencast working or otherwise) and date of commencement thereof;
(d)
(e) Such other particulars as may be prescribed, and the
relevant entries shall be authenticated by the signature or the thumb
impression of the person concerned,
(2) The entries in the register prescribed by sub-section(1)
shall be such that workers working in accordance there with would not be
working in contravention of any of the provisions of this Chapter.
(3) No person shall be employed in a mine until the particulars
required by sub-section
(1) have been recorded
in the register in respect of such person and no person shall be employed
except during the period of work shown in respect of him in register.
(4) For every mine other than a mine which for any special
reason to be recorded, is exempted by the Central Government by general or
special order, there shall be kept in the prescribed form and place separate
registers showing in respect of each person employed in the mine:-
(a) below ground
(b) above ground in opencast workings, and
(c) above ground in other cases :-(i)the name of the
employees;
(ii)the class or kind
of his employment
(iii)where work is
carried on by a system of relays, the shift to which he belongs and the hours
of the shift.
(5) The register of persons employed below ground referred to
in-sub section (4) shall show at any moment the name of every person who is
then present below ground in the mine.
(6) No person shall enter any opencast working or any working
below ground unless he has been permitted by the manager or is authorised under
this Act or any other law to do so.
CHAPTER – VII
LEAVE WITH WAGES
49.
Application of Chapter
–
The provisions of this
Chapter shall not operate to the prejudice of any right to which a person
employed in a mine may be entitled under any other law or under the terms of
any award, agreement or contract of service.
Provided that if such
award, agreement or contract of service, provides for a longer annual leave
with wages than that provided in this Chapter, the quantum of leave, which the
person employed shall be entitled to, shall be in accordance with such award,
agreement or contract of service but leave shall be regulated in accordance
with the provisions of section 50 to 56 (both inclusive) with respect of
matters not provided for in such award, agreement or contract of service.”
50.
Leave defined :
For the purposes of
this Chapter leave shall not include weekly days of rest or holidays or
festivals or other similar occasions whether occurring during or at either end
of the period.
51.
Calendar year defined
:
For the purpose of
this Chapter a calendar year shall mean the period of twelve months beginning
with the first day of January in any year.
52.
Annual leave wages :-
(1) Every person employed in a mine who has completed a
calendar year’s service therein shall be allowed, during the subsequent
calendar year leave with wages, calculated –
(a) in the case of a person employed below ground, at the
rate of one day for every fifteen days of work performed by him, and
(b) in any other case, at the rate of one day for every
twenty days of work performed by him.
(2) A calendar year’s service referred to in sub-section(1)
shall be deemed to have completed:-
(a) in the case of a person employed below ground in a mine,
if he has during the calendar year put in not less than one hundred and ninety
attendances at the mine; and
(b) in the case of any other person, if he has during the
calendar year put in not less than two hundred and forty attendances at the
mine.
Explanation – For the
purpose of this sub-section :-
(a) any days of lay-off by agreement or contact or as per
missible under the standing order:
(b) in the case of a female employee, maternity leave for any
number of days not exceeding twelve weeks; and
(c) the leave earned in the year prior to that in which the
leave is enjoyed:
shall be deemed to be
the days on which the employee has worked in mine for the purpose of
computation of the attendances but he shall not earn leave for these days.
(3) A person whose service commences otherwise than on the
first day of January shall be entitled to leave with wages in the subsequent
calendar year at the rates specified in sub-section(1), if –
(a) in the case of a person employed below ground in a mine,
he has put in attendances for not less than one half of the total number of
days during the remainder of the calendar year: and
(b) in any other case, he has put in attendances for not less
than two-thirds of the total number of days during the remainder of the
calendar year.
(4) Any leave not taken by a person to which he is entitled
in any one calendar year under sub-section(1) or sub-section(3) shall be added
to the leave to be allowed to him under sub-section(1) during the succeeding
calendar year.
Provided that the
total number of days of leave which may be accumulated by any such person shall
not at any one time exceed thirty days in all.
Provided further than
any such person who has applied for leave with wages but has not been given
such leave in accordance with sub-section(6) shall be entitled to carry forward
the unavailed leave without any limit.
(5) Any such person may apply in writing to the manager of
the mine not less than fifteen days before the day on which he wishes his leave
to begin, for all leave or any portion thereof then allowable to him under
sub-section (1), (3) and (4).
Provided that the
number of times in which leave may be taken during any one calendar year shall
not exceed three.
(6) An application for such leave made in accordance with
sub-section (5) shall not be refused unless the authority empowered to grant
the leave is of opinion that owing to the exigencies of the situation the leave
should be refused.
(7) If a person employed in a mine wants to avail himself of
the leave with wages due to him to cover a period of illness he shall be
granted such leave even if the application for leave is not made within the
time specified in sub-section(5).
(8) If the employment of a person employed in a mine is
terminated by the owner, agent or manager of the mine before he has taken the
entire leave to which he is entitled up to the day of termination of his
employment, or if such person having applied for and having not been granted
such leave, quits his employment before he has taken the leave, the owner,
agent or manager of the mine shall pay him the amount payable under section 53
in respect of the leave not taken and such payment shall be made where the
employment of the person is terminated by the owner, agent or manager, before
the expiry of the second working day after such termination, and where a person
himself quits his employment, on or before the next pay day.
(9) The unavailed leave of a person employed in mine shall
not be taken into consideration in computing the period of any notice required
to be given before the
termination of his employment.
(10)
Where the person employed in a mine is discharged or dismissed from service or
quits his employment or is superannuated or dies while in service, he or his
heirs or wages in lieu of leave due to him calculated at the rate specified in
sub-section (1), if-
(a) in the case of a person employed below ground in a mine,
he has put in attendance for not less than one-half of the total number of days
from the date of his employment to the date of his discharge or dismissal or
quitting of employment or superannuation or death, and
(b) in any other case, he has put in attendance for not less
than two thirds of the total number of days from the date of his employment to
the date of his discharge or dismissal or quitting of employment of
superannuation or death, and payment of such wages shall be made by the owner,
agent or manager of the mine at the rate specified in section 53, where the
person is discharged or dismissed from service or quits employment or is
superannuated, before the expiry of the second working day after such discharge
dismissal, quitting of employment or superannuation, as the case may be and
where the person employed dies while in service within a period of two months
of his death.”
Explanation – For the
purpose of sub-section (1), and (10), any fracatioin of leave of half day or
more, half a day shall be omitted.
53.
Wages during leave
period :-
For the leave allowed
to a person employed in a mine under section 52, he shall be paid at a rate
equal to the daily average of his total full-time earnings for the days on
which he was employed during the month immediately preceeding his leave,
exclusive of any overtime wages and bonus but inclusive of any dearness
allowance and compensation in cash including such compensation, if any accruing
through the free issue of foodgrains and other articles as persons employed in
the mine may, for the time being, be entitled to:
Provided that if no
such average earning are available, then the average shall be computed on the
basis of the daily average of the total full time earnings of all persons
similarly employed for the same months.
54.
Payment in advance in
certain cases:-
Any person employed in
a mine who has been allowed leave for not less than four days shall before his
leave begins be paid the wages due for the period of the leave allowed.
55.
Mode of recovery of
unpaid wages –
Any sum required to be
paid by the owner, agent or manager of a mine under this Chapter but not paid
by him shall be recoverable as delayed wages under the provisions of the
payment of Wages Act. 1936.
56.
Power to exempt
mines:-
Where the Central
Government is satisfied that the leave rules applicable to persons employed in
any mine provide benefits which in its opinion are not less favourable than
those provided for in this Chapter it may, by order in writing and subject to
such conditions as may be specified therein exempt the mine from all or any of
the provisions of the Chapter.
CHAPTER – VIII
REGULATIONS, RULES AND BYE-LAWS
57.
Power of Central
Government to make regulations:-
The Central Government
may, by notification in the official Gazette make regulations consistent with
this Act for all or any of the following purposes, namely:
(a) for prescribing the qualifications required for
appointment as Chief Inspector or Inspector;
(b) for prescribing and regulating the duties and powers of
the Chief Inspector and of Inspectors in regard to the inspection of mines
under this Act;
(c) for prescribing the duties of owners, agents and managers
of mines and persons acting under them and for prescribing the qualifications
9including age) of agents and managers of mines and of persons acting under
them.
(d) for requiring facilities to be provided for enabling
managers of mines and other persons acting under them to efficiently discharge
their duties.
(e) for regulating the manager of ascertaining, by
examination or otherwise, the qualification of managers of mines and persons
acting under them and the granting and renewal of certificates of competency.
(f) for fixing the fees, if any, to be paid in respect of
such examinations and of the grant and renewal of such certificates.
(g) For determining the circumstances in which and the
conditions in respect to which it shall be lawful for more mines than one to be
under a single manager, or for any mine or mines to be under a manager not
having the prescribed qualifications.
(h) For
providing for inquiries to be made under this including any inquiry relating to
misconduct or incompetence on the part of any person holding a certificate
under this Act and for the suspension or cancellation of any such certificate
and for providing where ever necessary, that the person appointed to hold an
inquiry shall have all the powers of a civil court under the Code of Civil
Procedure 1908, (V of 1908) for the purpose of enforcing the attendance of
witnesses and compelling the production of documents and material objects.
(i) For regulating, subject to the provisions of the Indian
Explosives Act, 1884, (IV of 1884) and of any rules made thereunder, the
strong, conveyance and
use of explosive,
(j) For
prohibiting, restricting or regulating the employment of women in mines or in
any class of mines of on particular kind of labour which are attended by danger
to the life, safety, or health of such persons and for limiting the weight of
any single load that may be carried by any such person;
(k) For providing for the safety of the persons employed in a
mine, their means of entrance thereinto and exit therefrom the number of shafts
or outlets to be furnished; and the fencing of shafts, pits, outlets, pathway
and subsidences;
(l) For prohibiting the employment in a mine either as
manager or in any other specified capacity of any person except persons paid by
the owner of the mine and directly answerable to the owner or manager of the
mine;
(m) For providing for the safety of the roads and working
places in mines, including the sitting; maintenance and extraction or reduction
of pillars or blocks of minerals and the maintenance of sufficient barriers
between mine and mine;
(n) For the inspection of workings and sealed off fire-areas
in a mine, and for the restriction of workings in the vicinity of the sea or
any lake or river or any other body of surface water, whether natural or
artificial, or of any public road or building and for requiring due precaution
to be taken against the irruption or inrush of water or other matter into,
outbreak of fire in or premature collapse of any workings;
(o) For providing for the ventilation of mines and the action
to be taken in respect of dust fire, and inflammable and noxious gases,
including precautions against spontaneous combustion, under ground fire and
coal dust;
(p) For regulating subject to the provisions of the Indian
Electricity Act, 1910(X of 1910) and of any rules made thereunder, the
generation, storage, transformation transmission and use of electricity in
mines and for providing for the care and the regulation of the use of all
electrical apparatus and electrical cables in mines and of all other machinery
and plant therein.
(q) For regulating the use of machinery in mines, for
providing for the safety of persons employed on or near such machinery and on
haulage roads and for restricting the use of certain classes of locomotives
underground;
(r) For providing for proper lighting of mines and regulating
the use of safety lamps therein and for the search of persons entering a mine
in which safety lamps are in use;
(s) For providing against explosions or ignitions of
inflammable gas or dust or
irruption or
accumulations of water in mines and against danger arising therefrom and for
prohibiting restricting or regulating the extraction of minerals in
circumstances likely to result in the premature collapse of workings or to
result in or to aggravate collapse of workings or irruption of water or
ignitions in mines;
(t) For prescribing under clause(g) of sub-section(1) of
section 2, the types of accidents and for prescribing the notices of accidents
and dangerous occurrences and the notices reports and returns of mineral
output; persons employed and other matters provided for by regulations to be
furnished by owners, agents and managers of mines, and for prescribing the
forms of such notices, returns and reports, the persons and authorities to whom
they are to be furnished the particulars to be contained in them and the time
within which they are to be submitted;
(u) For requiring owners, agents and managers of mines to
have fixed boundaries for the mine, for prescribing the plans and sections and
field notes connected therewith to be kept by them and the manager and places
in which such plans, section and field notes are to be kept for purposes of
record for the submission of copies thereof to the Chief Inspector; and for
requiring making of fresh surveys and plans by them and in the event of
non-compliance, for having the survey made and plans prepared through and other
agency and for the recovery of expenses thereof in the same manner as an arrear
of land revenue:
(v) For regulating the procedure on the occurrence of
accidents or accidental explosions or ignitions in or about mines for dealing
effectively with the situation.
(w) For prescribing the form of, and the particulars to be
contained in the notice to be given by the owner, agent or manager of a mine
under section 16;
(x) For prescribing the notice to be given by the owner,
agent or manager of mining before mining operations are commenced at or
extended to any point within forty-five metres of any railway subject to the
provisions of the Indian Railways Act, 1890, (IX of 1890) of any public roads
or other works, as the case may be which are maintained by the Government or
any local authority.
(y) For the protection from injury, in respect of any mine
when the workings are discontinued, property vested in the Government or any
local authority or
railway company as defined in the Indian
Railways Act, 1890.
(yy) for requiring protective works to be constructed by the
owner, agent or manager or a mine before the mine is closed, and in the event
of non-
compliance, for getting such works executed by any other
agency, and for recovering the expenses, thereof from such owner in the same
manner as an arrear of land revenue;
(z) for providing for the appointment of Courts of Inquiry
under quarry, incline, shaft pit or outlet, whether the same is being worked or
not or any dangerous or prohibited area, subsidence haulage, tramline or
pathway, where such fencing is necessary for the protection of the public; and
(zz) any other matter which has to be or may be prescribed
58.
Power of Central
Government to make rules –
The Central Government
may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rule consistent with this
Act for all or any of the following purposes, namely -
(a) for providing the term of office and other conditions of
service of and the manner of filling vacancies among, the members of a
Committee and for regulating the procedure to be followed by a Committee for
transacting its business.”
(b) For prescribing the form of the register referred to in
sub-section (3) of section 23;
(c) For providing for the appointment of Courts of Inquiry
under section 24, for regulating the procedure and powers of such Courts for
the payment of travelling allowance to the members, and for the recovery of the
expenses of such courts including any other expenses connected with the inquiry
in the same manner as an area of land revenue from the manager, owner or agent
of the mine concerned;
(cc) for providing the
inspection of mines to be carried out on behalf of the persons employed therein
by a technical expert (not less than an overman in status) the facilities
therefore, the frequency at which and the manner in which such inspections are
to be carried out and the manner in which reports of such inspections are to be
made.
(d) for requiring the maintenance of the mines wherein any
women employed or were employed on any day of the preceding twelve months of
suitable rooms to be reserved for the use of children under the age of six
years belonging to such women, and for prescribing, either generally or with
particular reference to the number of women employed in the mine, the number of
standards of such rooms, and the nature and extent of the amenities to be
provided and the supervision to be exercised therein;
(e) for requiring the maintenance at or near pitheads of
bathing places equipped with shower baths and of locker rooms for the use of
men employed in mines and of similar and separate places and rooms for the use
of women in mines where women are employed and for prescribing either generally
or with particular reference to the numbers of men and women ordinarily
employed in a mine, the number and standards of such places and rooms.
(f) For prescribing the standard of sanitation to be
maintained and the scale of
latrine and urinal
accommodation to be provided at mines, the provision to be made for the supply
of drinking water.
(ff) for providing for
the supply and maintenance of medical appliances and comforts and for
prescribing the contents and number of first-aid boxes and cupboards, the
training in first-aid work, the size and equipment of first-aid rooms and staff
in charge thereof and the arrangements for conveyance of injured persons to
hospitals or dispensaries;
(fff)for requiring the
imparting of practical instruction to, or the training of, persons employed or
to be employed in mines otherwise than in a position of such instruction and
training;
(g) for prohibiting the possession or consumption of
intoxicating drinks or drugs in a mine and the entry or presence therein of any
person in a drunken state;
(h) for prescribing the form of notices required under
section 36, and for requiring such notices to be posted also in specified
languages;
(i) for defining the person who shall, for the purpose of
section 37, be deemed to be persons holding positions of supervision of
management employed in a confidential capacity;
(j) for prohibiting the employment in mines of persons or any
class of persons who have not been certified by a qualified medical
practitioner to have
completed their
fifteenth year, and for prescribing the manner and the circumstances in which
such certificates may be granted and revoked;
(k)
(kk) for requiring
persons employed or seeking employment at mines to submit themselves for
medical examination and for prohibiting on medical grounds the employment of
any person at a mine either absolutely or in a particular capacity or in
particular work;
(l) for prescribing the form of registers required by section
48 and the maintenance and form or registers for the purposes of Chapter VII;
(m) for prescribing abstracts of this Act and of the
regulations and rules and the language in which the abstracts and bye-laws
shall be posted as required by section 61 and 62;
(n) for requiring notices, returns and reports in connection
with any matters dealt with by rules to be furnished by owners; agents and
managers of mines and for prescribing the forms of such notices returns and
reports, the persons and authorities to whom they are to be furnished, the
particulars to be contained in them, and the times within which they are to be
submitted;
(o) for requiring the provision and maintenance in mines;
wherein more than fifty persons are ordinarily employed, of adequate and
suitable shelters for taking food with provisions for drinking water.
(p) For requiring the provision and maintenance in any mine
specified in this behalf by the Chief Inspector or Inspector wherein more than
two hundred and fifty persons are ordinarily employed of a canteen or canteen
for the use of such persons;
(q) For requiring the employment in every mine wherein five
hundred or more
persons are ordinarily
employed of such number of welfare officers as may be specified and for
prescribing the qualifications and the terms and conditions of, and the duties
to be performed by, such welfare officers;
(r) For requiring the establishment of rescue stations for
specified mines or groups of specified mines or for all mines in a specified
area and for prescribing how and by whom such stations shall be established;
(s) For providing for the management of rescue stations
(sa)for providing for
the standards of physical fitness and other qualifications of the persons
constituting rescue brigades;
(sb)prescribing the
places of residence of the persons constituting rescue brigades;
(t) for prescribing the position, equipment, control,
maintenance and functions of rescue stations;
(u) for providing for the levy and collection of a duty of
excise(at) a rate not exceeding twenty five paise per tonne) on coke and coal
produced in and despatched from mines specified under clause(r), the creation
of a rescue stations fund for such mines, the crediting to such fund of such
sums of money as the Central Government may, after due appropriation made by
Parliament by law in this behalf, provide from out of the proceeds of such cess
credited to the Consolidated Fund of India, the manner in which the money from
such fund shall be utilised and the administration of such fund;
(v) for providing for the formation, training composition and
duties of rescue brigades and generally for the conduct of rescue work in
mines;
(vv) for providing for
the constitution of safety Committees for specified mine or groups of specified
mines or for all mines in a specified area for promoting safety and for laying
down the composition, manner of formation and functions of such safety
Committees and, “
(w) generally to provide for any matter not provided for by
this Act or the regulations, provision for which is required in order to give
effect to this Act.
59.
Prior publication of
regulations and rules –
(1) The power to make regulations and rules conferred by section
57 and 58 is subject to the condition of the regulations and rules being made
after previous publication.
(2) The date to be specified in accordance with clause (3) of
section 23 of the General Clauses Act, 1897, (IX of 1897) as that after which a
draft of regulations or rules proposed to be made will be taken under
consideration, shall not be less than three months from the date on which the
draft of the proposed regulations or rules published for general information.
(3)
(4) no
regulation or rule shall be made unless the draft thereof has been referred to
the Committee constituted under-sub-section(1) of section 12 and unless that
Committee has had a reasonable opportunity of reporting as to the expediency of
making the same and as to the suitability of its provisions;
(5) Regulation and rules shall be published in the official
Gazette and, on such publication, shall have effect as if enacted in this Act.
(6) The provisions of sub-section (1), (2) and (4) shall not
apply to the first occasion on
which rules referred to in clause (d) or
clause (e) section 58 are made.
(7)
60.
Power to make
regulations without previous Publications –
Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section
(1), (2) and
(4) of section
59,
regulations under
section 57 may be made without previous publication and without reference to
the Committee, constituted under sub-section (1) of section 12, of the Central
Government is satisfied that for the prevention of apprehended danger or the
speedy remedy of conditions likely to cause danger it is necessary in making
such regulations to dispense with the delay that would result from such
publication and reference:
Provided that any
regulation so made shall be send to the said committee for information and
shall not remain in force for more than one year from the making thereof.
(1) The owner, agent or manager of a mine may, and shall, if
called upon to do so by the Chief Inspector or Inspector, frame and submit to
the Chief Inspector or Inspector a draft of such bye-laws, not being
inconsistent with this Act or any regulations or rules for the time being in
force, governing the use of any particular machinery or the such adoption of a
particular method of working the mine as owner, agent or manager may deem
necessary to prevent accidents and provide for the safety, convenience and
discipline of the persons employed in the mine.
(2) If any such owner, agent or manager –
(a) falls to submit within two months a draft of bye-laws
after being called upon to do so by the Chief Inspector or Inspector, or
(b) submits a draft of bye-laws which is not in the opinion
of the Chief Inspector or Inspector sufficient, the Chief Inspector or
Inspector may –
(i) propose a draft of such bye-laws as appear to him to be
sufficient, or (ii)propose such amendment in any draft submitted to him by the
owner, agent or manager as will, in his opinion, render it sufficient, and
shall send such draft or bye-laws or draft amendment to the owner agent or
manager as the case may be, for consideration.
(3) If within a period of two months from the date on which
any draft bye-laws or draft amendments are sent by the Chief Inspector or
Inspector to the owner, agent or manager under the provisions of
sub-section(2), the Chief Inspector or Inspector and the owner, agent or
manager are unable to agree as to the terms of the bye-laws to be made under
sub-section(1) the Chief Inspector or Inspector shall refer the draft bye-laws
for settlement to the Committee constituted under sub-section(1) of section 12,
(4) (a)When such draft bye-laws have been agreed to by the
owner, agent or manager and the Chief Inspector or Inspector or, which they are
unable to agree, have been settled by the Committee constituted under
sub-section (1) of section 12, a copy of the draft bye-laws shall be sent by
the Chief Inspector or Inspector to the Central Government for approval.
(b)The Central
Government may make such modification of the draft bye-laws as it thinks fit.
(c)Before the Central
Government approves the draft bye-laws, whether with or without modifications
there shall be published in such manner as the Central Government may think
best adopted for informing the persons affected, notice to the proposal to make
the bye-laws and of the place where copies of the draft bye-laws may be
obtained, and of the time (which shall not be less than thirty days within
which any objections with reference to the draft bye-laws, made by or on behalf
of persons affected should be sent in writing and shall state –
(d)Every objection
shall be in writing and shall state –
(i) the specific grounds of objections and
(ii) the omissions, additions or modifications asked for
(e)The Central
Government shall consider any objection made within the required time by or on
behalf of persons appearing to it to be affected and may approve the bye-laws
either in the form in which they were published or after making amendments
thereto as it thinks fit.
(5)The bye-laws, when
so approved by the Central Government shall have effect as if enacted in this
Act, and the owner, agent or manager of the mine shall cause a copy of the
bye-laws, in English and in such other language or languages as may be
prescribed, to be posted up in some conspicuous place at or near the mine,
where the bye laws may be conveniently read or seen by the persons employed; as
often as the same become defaced obliterated or destroyed, shall cause them to
be renewed with all reasonable despatch.
(6)The Central
Government may, order in writing rescind the whole or in part, any bye-laws so
made, and thereupon such bye-laws shall cease to have effect accordingly.
61
A. Laying of regulations, rules and
bye-laws before parliament.
Every regulation made
under section 57, every rule made under section 58 and every bye-law made under
section 61d shall be laid as soon as may be after it is made before each house
of parliament, while it is in session, for a total period of thirty days which
may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions, and if
before the expiry of the session aforesaid, both houses agree in making any
modification in the regulation, rule or bye-law should not be made, the
regulation, rule or bye-law shall thereafter have effect only in such modified
form or be of no effect, as the case may be; so however that any such
modification or amendment shall be without prejudice to the
validity of anything
previously done under that regulation, rule or bye-law, as the case may be.”
62.
Posting of abstracts
from Act, regulations etc.
There shall be kept
posted up at or near every mine in English and in such other language or
languages as may be prescribed, the prescribed abstracts of the Act and of the
regulations and rules.
CHAPTER – IX
PENALTIES AND KPROCEDURE
63.
Obstruction –
(1) Whoever obstructs the Chief Inspector and inspector or
any person authorised under section 8 in the discharge of his duties under this
Act. refuses of wilfully neglects to afford the Chief Inspector, Inspector or
such person any reasonable facility for making any entry, inspection,
examination or inquiry authorised by or under this Act in relation to any mine
shall be punishable with imprisonment of a term which may extend to three
months, or with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees, or both.
(2) Whoever refuses to produce on the demand of the Chief
Inspector or any registers or other documents kept in pursuance of this Act. or
prevents or attempts to prevent or does any thing which he has reason to believe
to be likely to prevent any person from appearing before or being examined by
an inspecting officer acting in pursuance of his duties under this Act, shall
be punishable with fine which may extend to three hundred rupees.
64. Falsification of records – Whoever –
(a) counterfoils, or knowingly makes a false statement in any
certificate, or any official copy of a certificate, granted under this Act, or
(b) knowingly uses as true any such counterfeit or false
certificate, or
(c) makes or produces or uses any false declaration,
statement or evidence knowing the same to be false for the purpose of obtaining
for himself or for any other person a certificate or the renewal of a
certificate under this Act, or any employment in a mine, or
(d) falsifies any plan, section, register or record, the
maintenance of which is required by or under this Act or produces before any
authority such false plan, section, register or record, knowing the same to be
false or;
(e) makes, gives or delivers any plan, return, notice, record
or report containing a statement, entry or detail which is not to the best of
his knowledge or belief true, shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three months or with fine which may extend to one thousand
rupees or with both.
65.
Use of false
certificates of fitness -
Whoever knowingly uses
or attempts to use as a certificate of fitness granted to himself under section
43 a certificate granted to another person under that section, or having been granted
a certificate of fitness to himself under that section, knowingly allows it to
be used, or allows an attempt to use it to be made by another person shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month, or with
fine which may extend to two hundred rupees, or with both.
66.
Omission to furnish
plans etc.
Any person who,
without reasonable excuse the burden of providing which shall lie upon him,
omits to make or furnish in the prescribed form or manner or at or within the
prescribed time any plan, section return, notice, register; record or report
required by or under this Act to be made or furnished shall be punishable with
fine which may extend to one thousand rupees.
67.
Contravention of
provisions regarding employment of labour -
Whoever, save as
permitted by section 38, contravenes any provision of this Act or of
any regulation rule, bye-law or of any order made
thereunder prohibiting retricting or regulating the employment or presence of
persons in or about a mine shall be punishable with imprisonment
for a term which may
extend to three months, or with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees,
or with both.
68.
Penalty for employment
of persons below eighteen years of age-
If a person below
eighteen years of age is employed in a mine in contravention of section 40, the
owner, agent or manager of such mine shall be kpunishable with fine which may
extend to five hundred rupees.
69.
Failure to appoint
manager -
Whoever, in
contravention of the provisions of section 17, fails to appoint a manager shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months or
with fine which may extend to two thousand and five hundred rupees, or both.
70.
Notice of accidents :
(1) Whoever in contravention of the provision of sub-section
(1) of section 23 fails to give notice of any accidental occurrence or to post
a copy of the notice on the special notice board referred to in that
sub-section and to keep in there for the period specified shall be punishable
with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months, or with fine
which may extend to five hundred rupee or with both.
(2) Whoever in contravention of a direction made by the
Central Government under sub-section (3) falls to record in the prescribed
register to give notice of any accidental occurrence shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months or with fine which may
extend to three months or with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees, or
with both.
71.
Owner etc. to report
to Chief Inspector in certain cases-
Where the owner, agent
or manager of a mine, as the case may be, has taken proceeding under this Act
against any person employed in or about a mine in respect of
an offence under this
Act, he shall within twenty-one days from the date of the judgement or order of
the court report the result thereof to the Chief Inspector.
72.
Obligations of persons
employed in a mine – No person employed in a mine shall --
(a) willfully interfere with or misuse any appliance
convenience of other thing provided in a mine for the purpose of securing the
health, safety or welfare of the person employed therein.
(b) willfully and without reasonable cause do any thing
likely to endanger himself of others;
(c) willfully neglect to make us of any appliance or other
thing provided in the mine for the purpose of securing the health or safety of
the persons employed therein.
72A. Special provision for contravention of certain
regulations -
Whoever contravenes
any provision of any regulations or of any bye-law or any order made
thereunder, relating to matters specified in clauses
(d),(I),(m),(n),(o),(p),(r), (s) and
(u) of section 7 shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months or
with fine which may extend to two thousand rupees or with both.
72B. Special provision of contravention of order under section
22.
Whoever continues to
work a mine in contravention of any order issued under sub-section (1A),
sub-section (2) or sub-section(3) of section 22 or under sub-section (2) of
section 22 shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
two years and shall also be liable to fine which may extend to two years and
shall also be liable to fine which may extend to five thousand rupees.
Provided that in the
absence of special and adequate reasons to the country to be recorded in
writing in the judgement of the court, such fine shall not be less than two
thousand rupees.
72C. Special provision for contravention of law with dangerous
results-
(1) Whoever
contravenes any provision of the Act or of regulation, rule or bye-law or of
any order made under (1A) or sub-section (2) of section (3) of section 22 for
under sub-section (2) of section 22A shall be punishable -
(a) If such contravention results in loss of life, with
imprisonment which may extend to two years, or with fine which may extend to
five thousand rupees, or with both, or
(b) If such contravention results in serious bodily injury
with imprisonment which may extend to one years, or with fine which may extend
to three thousand rupees, or with both; or
(c) If such contravention otherwise causes injury or danger
to persons employed in the mine or other persons in or about the mine, with
imprisonment which may extend to three months or with fine which may extend to
one thousand rupees, or with both.
Provided that in the
absence of special and adequate reasons to the contrary to be recorded in
writing in the judgement of the court, such fine, in the case of a
contravention referred to in clause (a), shall not be less than three thousand
rupees.
(2) Where a person having been convicted under this section
is again convicted thereunder, shall be punishable with double the punishment
provided by sub-section (1).
(3) Any court imposing or confirming in appeal, revision or
otherwise a sentence of fine passed under this section may, when passing
judgement, order the whole or any part of the fine recovered to be paid as
compensation to the person injured or, in the case of his death, to his legal
representative;
Provided that if the
fine is imposed in a case which is subject to appeal no such payment shall be
made before the period allowed for presenting the appeal has elapsed of, if an
appeal has been presented, before the decision of the appeal.
73.
General provision of
disobedience of others.
Whoever contravenes
any provision of this Act or of any regulation, rule or bye-laws or of any
order made thereunder for the contravention of which no penalty is herein
before provided shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may
extend to three months, or with fine which may extend to one thousand rupees,
or with both.
74.
Enhanced penalty after
previous conviction -
If any person who has
been convicted for an offence punishable under any of the foregoing provisions
(other than section 72B and 72C) is again convicted for an offence committed
within two years of the previous conviction and involving a contravention of
the same provision, he shall be punishable for each subsequent conviction with
double the punishment to which he would have been liable for the first
contravention of such provision.
75.
Prosecution of owner,
agent or manager -
No prosecution shall
be instituted against any owner, agent or manager for any offence under this
Act except at the instance of the Chief Inspector or of the District Magistrate
or of an Inspector authorised in this behalf by general or special order in
writing by the Chief Inspector.
Provided that the
Chief Inspector or the District Magistrate or the Inspector as so authorised
shall, before instituting such prosecution, satisfy himself that the owner,
agent or manager had failed to exercise all due diligence to prevent the
commission of such offence.
Provided further that
in respect of an offence committed in the course of the technical direction and
management of a mine, the District Magistrate shall not institute any
prosecution against an owner, agent or manager without the approval of the
Chief Inspector.
76.
Determination of owner
in certain cases -
Where the owner of a
mine is firm or other association of individuals, all, or any of the partners
or members thereof or where the owner of a mine is a company; all or any of the
directors thereof where the owner of a mine is a Government or any local
authority, as the case may be, to manage the affair of the mine, may be
prosecuted and punished under this Act for any offence for which the owner of a
mine is punishable:
Provided that where a
firm, association or company has given notice in writing to the Chief Inspector
that it has nominated -
(a) in the case of a firm, any of its partners or managers:
(b) in the case of an association, any of its members or
managers;
(c) in the case of a company any of its directors or
managers.
Who is resident in
each case in any place to which this act extends and who is in each case either
in fact in charge of the management or holds the largest number of shares in
such firm, association or company, to assume the responsibility of the owner or
the mine for the purposes of this Act, such partner, member, director or
manager, as the case may be, shall, so long as he continues to so reside and be
in charge or hold the largest number of shares as aforesaid, be deemed to be
the owner of the purposes of this Act unless a notice in writing canceling his
nomination or stating that he has ceased to be a partner, member, director or
manager as the case may be, is received by the Chief Inspector.
Explanation :- Where
firm, association or company has different establishment or branches or
different units in any establishment or branch, different persons may be
nominated under this proviso in relation to different establishment or branches
or units and the person so nominated shall, with respect only to the
establishment, branch or unit in relation to which he has been nominated,
deemed to be the owner of the mine.
77.
Exemption of owner,
agent or manager in certain cases -
Where the owner, agent
or manager of a mine, accused of an offence under this Act, alleges that
another person is the actual offender, he shall be entitled, upon complaint
made by him in this behalf and on his furnishing the known address of the
actual offender and on giving to the prosecutor not less than three clear days
notice in writing of his intention to do so, to have that other persons brought
before the court on the date appointed for the hearing of the case; and if
after the commission of the offence has been proved, the owner, agent or
manager of the mine, as the case may be proves to the satisfaction of the court
-
(a) that he has used due diligence to enforce the execution
of the relevant provisions of this act, and
(b) that the owner person committed the offence in question
without his knowledge, consent or connivance, the said other person shall be
convicted of the offence and shall be liable to the like punishment as if he
were the owner, agent or manager of the mine and the owner, agent or manager,
as the case may be, shall be acquitted,
Provided that –
(a) the owner, agent or manager of the mine as the case may
be, may be examined on oath and his evidence and that of any witness who he
calls in support shall be subject to cross examination by or on behalf of the
person he alleges as the actual offender and by the prosecutor.
(b) If inspite of due diligence the person alleged as the,
actual offender cannot be brought before the court on the date appointed for
the hearing of the case, the court shall adjourn from the hearing thereof from
time to time so however that the total period of such adjournments does not
exceed three months, and if by the end of the said period the person alleged as
the actual offender cannot be brought before the court, the court shall proceed
to hear the case against the owner, agent or manager as the case may be.
79.
Power of court to make
orders -
(1) Where the owner, agent or manager of mine is convicted of
an offence punishable under this act, the court may in addition to awarding him
any punishment by order in writing require him within a period specified in the
order which may be extended by the court from time to time on application made
in this behalf to take such measures as may be so specified for remedying the
matters in respect of which the offence was committed.
(2) Where an order is made under sub-section(1), the owner,
agent or manager of the mine, as the case may be, shall not be the liable under
this Act in respect of the continuance of the offence during the period or
extended period, if any but if on the expiry of such period or extended period
the order of the court has not been fully complied with the owner, agent or
manager, as the case may be, shall be deemed to have committed a further
offence and shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend
to six months, or with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees for every
day after such expiry on which the order has not been complied with, or with
both.
80.
Limitation of
prosecutions -
No court shall take cognizance
of any offence under this Act, unless complaint thereof has been made –
(i) within six months
of the date on which the offence is alleged to have been committed, or
(ii) within six months
of the date on which the alleged commission of the offence came to the
knowledge of the Inspector, or
(iia) In any case in
which the accused is or was a public servant and previous sanction of the
Central Government or of the State Government or of any other authority is
necessary for taking cognizance of the offence under any law for the time being
in force, within three months of the date on which such sanction is received by
the Chief Inspector; or
(iii) in any case
where a Court of inquiry has been appointed by the Central Government under
section 24, within one year after the date of the publication of the report
referred to in sub-section(4) of that section, whichever is later.
Explanation - For the
purposes of this section –
(a)
In the case of continuing offence, the period of limitation shall be computed
with reference to every point of time during which the offence continues,
(b)
Where for the performance of any act time has been extended under this Act, the
period of limitation shall be computed from the expiry of the extended period.
81.
Cognizance of offences
–
No court inferior to
that of a Metropolitan Magistrate or Judicial Magistrate of the first class
shall try any offence under this Act which is alleged to have been committed by
any owner, agent or manager of a mine or any offence which is by this Act made
punishable with imprisonment.
80A.
82.
Reference to Committee
in lieu of prosecution in certain cases -
(1) If the court trying any case instituted at the instance
of the Chief Inspector or the District Magistrate or of an Inspector under this
Act is of opinion that the case is one which should, in lieu of a prosecution,
be referred to a Committee it may stay the criminal proceedings and report the
matter to the Central Government with a view to such reference being made.
(2) On receipt of a report under sub-section(1) the Central
Government may refer the case to a Committee or may direct the court to proceed
with the trial.
-----------
CHAPTER - X
MISCELLANEOUS
82.
Decision of question
whether a mine is under this Act –
If any question arises
as to whether any excavation or working or premises in or adjacent to and
belonging to a mine on which any process arcillary to the getting, dressing or
preparation for sale or minerals or of coke is being carried on in a mine
within the meaning of this Act, the Central Government may decide the question,
and a certificate signed by a Secretary to the Central Government shall be
conclusive on the point.
83.
Power to exempt from
operation of Act.
(1) The Central Government may by notification in the
official Gazette, exempt either absolutely or subject to any specified
conditions any local area or any mine or group or class of mines or any part of
a mine or any class of persons from the operation of all or any of the
provisions of this Act or the regulations, rules or bye-laws;
Provided that no local
area or mine or group or class of mines shall be exempted from the provisions
of section 40 and 45 unless it is also exempted from the operation of all the
other provisions of this Act.
(2) The Central Government may, by general or special order
and subject to such restrictions as it may think fit to impose authorise the
Chief Inspector or any other authority to exempt, subject to any specified
conditions, any mine or part thereof from the operation of any of the
provisions of the regulations, rules or bye-laws if the Chief Inspector or such
authority is of opinion that the conditions in any mine or part thereof are
such as to render compliance with such provision unnecessary or impracticable.
84.
Power to alter on
rescind any orders -
(1) The Central Government may reverse or modify any order
passed under this Act.
(2) The Chief Inspector may for reasons to be recorded in
writing, reverse or modify any order passed by him under this Act or under any
regulation, rule or bye-law.
(3) No order prejudicial to the owner, agent or manager of a
mine shall be made under this section unless such owner, agent or manager has
been given a reasonable opportunity of making representation.
85.
Application of Act to
mines belonging to Government -
This Act shall also
apply to mines belonging to the Government.
85A. Persons required to give notice etc. legally bound to do
so.
Every person required
to give any notice or to furnish any information to any authority under this
Act shall be legally bound to do so within the meaning of section 176 of the
Indian Penal Code. (Act 45 of 1860)
85B. Signing of returns, notices etc. –
All returns and
notices required to be furnished or given or communications sent by or on
behalf of the owner of a mine in connection with the provisions of this Act or
any regulation, rule, bye-law or any order made thereunder shall be signed by
the owner, agent or manager of the mine or by any person to whom power in this
behalf has been delegated by the owner by a power of attorney.
85C. No fee or charge to be realised for facilities and
conveniences -
No fee or charge shall
be realised from any person employed in a mine in respect of any protective
arrangements or facilities to be provided, or any equipment or appliances to be
supplied under the provisions of this Act.
86.
Application of certain
provision of Act 63 of 1948 to mines -
The Central Government
may by notification in the official Gazette, direct that the provisions of
Chapter III and IV of the Factories Act, 1948 (63 if 1948) shall specified in
the notification apply to all mines and the precincts thereof.
87.
Protection of action
taken in good faith -
No suit, prosecution
or other legal proceeding whatever shall lie against any person for
anything
which is in good faith done or intended to be done under this Act.
88. Repeal of Act 4 of 1923 Rep by the Repealing and
Amending Act. 1959 (36 of 1957) S.2 and Sch.1.
Transitory provision –
(1) As from the date of constitution of the Committee under
sub-section(1) of section 12 of the principal Act as amended by this Act –
(i) any Mining Board constituted under section 12 of the
principal Act and functioning as such on the aforesaid date shall stand
dissolved;
(ii) the Chairman and members of any such Board, who on the
aforesaid date are members of that Mining Board shall cease to hold office as
such;
(iii) all proceedings pending on the aforesaid date in any
Mining Board shall stand transferred to the said Committee which shall deal
with them as if they had been pending therein,
(2) Anything done or any action taken before the aforesaid
date by any Mining Board shall, so far as it is not inconsistent with any of
the provisions of the Principal Act as amended by this Act be as valid and
effective as if it had been done or taken by the Committee.
--------------`