Difference Between Permanent Disability & General Physical Debility Can't Be Blurred To Deny Jobs To Coal Workers Kin: Telangana High Court
The Telangana High Court has held that specific, measurable and permanent disabilities arising from injury or disease cannot be pushed into the residual category of “general physical debility” (a state of weakness or infirmity) under Clause 9.4.0 of the National Coal Wage Agreement (NCWA)-VI.In doing so the court granted relief to five medically invalidated Singareni workers and held...
The Telangana High Court has held that specific, measurable and permanent disabilities arising from injury or disease cannot be pushed into the residual category of “general physical debility” (a state of weakness or infirmity) under Clause 9.4.0 of the National Coal Wage Agreement (NCWA)-VI.
In doing so the court granted relief to five medically invalidated Singareni workers and held that they must be treated under Clause 9.4.0(i), which carries entitlement to dependent employment. Clause 9.4.0(i) grants employment to one dependent of a worker who is permanently disabled in his place.
For context, NCWA is a wage agreement for coal industry employees governing wage structures, service conditions, and welfare benefits for employees of Coal India Limited (CIL) and Singareni Collieries Company Limited (SCCL).
A Division Bench of Chief Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh and Justice G.M. Mohiuddin observed that if workmen suffering from such grave injuries or diseases are still brought under Clause 9.4.0(ii), it would amount to perversity and would “effectively deny the benefits of the social welfare scheme.”
The Bench said, “The distinction between permanent disablement arising from injury or disease under Clause (i) and general physical debility under Clause (ii) is substantive and cannot be blurred without defeating the object of the settlement.”
The appeals arose from a common judgment of a Single Judge directing reconsideration of the medical categorization of a batch of Singareni workers under Clause 9.4.0 of NCWA-VI by referring the matter back to Gandhi Medical Hospital, Secunderabad. The workers had sought dependent employment for their family members after being medically invalidated during service in mining operations.
Clause 9.4.0 of NCWA-VI provides employment to one dependent of a worker who is permanently disabled in his place. It draws a distinction between permanent disablement arising from injury or disease resulting in loss of employment under Clause 9.4.0(i), and disablement arising out of “general physical debility” under Clause 9.4.0(ii), the latter being subject to an age cap of 58 years.
SCCL's stand was that most of the workers were rightly placed under Clause 9.4.0(ii), and since many were above 58 years or had less than two years of service left, they were not entitled to dependent employment and could only be given monetary compensation. The Company also argued that the cases had already gone through repeated medical scrutiny, including by the Corporate Medical Board and by an independent Board of Gandhi Medical Hospital.
The workmen, on the other hand, argued that the Company and the medical boards had conflated “debility” with “disability.” They contended that conditions like amputation, stroke with neurological deficit, seizure disorder, severe cardiac disease, renal failure, loss of vision and orthopaedic incapacity were specific permanent disabilities arising from injury or disease, and not instances of generalized weakness or age-related decline.
Accepting that distinction, the Division Bench held that the word “general” in the phrase “general physical debility” is significant, and denotes a broad-based state of weakness or infirmity. Clause 9.4.0(i), by contrast, specifically deals with disablement arising from injury or disease “of a permanent nature.” The Court observed that in medical jurisprudence, “debility” signifies generalized weakness or systemic decline, whereas “disability” refers to a defined, often irreversible impairment such as orthopaedic, neurological, cardiac or ophthalmic disability.
The Court found serious infirmity in the near-uniform classification of 121 out of 127 workers under Clause 9.4.0(ii), despite the presence of grave conditions on record. It closely examined five illustrative cases and found that they had been wrongly categorized. These included a worker who suffered post-traumatic amputation with 94% disability, another with old CVA and hemiparesis with seizure disorder, one with glaucomatous optic atrophy, one with cervical fusion and recovering quadriparesis, and one with serious spinal and orthopaedic conditions. The Court held that these were not cases of generalized weakness, but of specific and permanent disablement.
Accordingly, the Bench held that the workmen at serial numbers 1, 8, 16, 24 and 32 in the table extracted in paragraph 25 of the judgment must be placed under Clause 9.4.0(i) of NCWA-VI. As for the remaining workmen, the Court held that their categorization under Clause 9.4.0(ii) did not suffer from such perversity or unreasonableness as would warrant interference in judicial review.
The Court also rejected SCCL's attempt to rely on the age bar of 58 years and the condition of residual service of less than two years as a disqualification in these five cases, making it clear that such considerations are relevant only if the employee legitimately falls under Clause 9.4.0(ii). If the case falls under Clause 9.4.0(i), age and leftover service do not operate as a bar.
In strong observations, the Bench said the litigation was not merely about service rules, but about workers who had spent their lives in hazardous coal mines and suffered life-altering disabilities. It expressed “deep anguish” at the resistance shown in implementation of a welfare measure embodied in a bipartite settlement, and said the prolonged litigation had caused further suffering to aged and ailing workmen.
Disposing of the appeals, the Court directed that any monetary compensation already paid to the five workmen be adjusted or recovered from admissible post-retirement dues in accordance with law. No order as to costs was passed.
Case Title: The Singareni Collieries Company Limited & Ors. v. Madurakavi Kistaiah & Anr. and connected matters
Case No.: Writ Appeal Nos.39 and others of 2025
Appearance: Sri E. Madan Mohan Rao, Senior Counsel representing Sri P. Sri Harsha Reddy, Standing Counsel for SCCL, and Sri S. Rahul Reddy, Special Government Pleader, for the appellants; Sri L. Ravichander, Senior Counsel representing Sri Ch. Venkat Raman, for the workmen in W.A. No.40 of 2025 and batch except W.A. No.39 of 2025; Sri P.S. Rajasekhar representing Sri Ch. Venkat Raman for the respondents in W.A. No.39 of 2025.