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HIGH COURT OF DELHI
JUDGMENT
M/S. SIX DEE TELECOM SOLUTIONS PVT. LTD. …Petitioner
Through: Mr.Rajiv Arora, Advocate.
Through: Ms.Inderjeet Sidhu, Advocate.
1. The petitioner has challenged the order dated 01.06.2015 under Article 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India passed by Employees’ Provident Fund Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi (in short ‘the Tribunal’) in the appeal being ATA No.300(4)2015.
2. While considering the interim relief during the pendency of the appeal challenging the order dated 06.02.2015 issued against it under Section 14B & Section 7Q of the Employees’ Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 (in short ‘the EPF Act’), the Tribunal observed that the appeal is against the order under Section 14B and Section 7Q of the EPF Act and the 2018:DHC:3193 petitioner is supposed to deposit the assessed amount under Section 7Q of the EPF Act since the order under Section 7Q of the EPF Act is not appealable. The Tribunal stayed the impugned order dated 06.02.2015 subject to the petitioner/appellant depositing the amount assessed under Section 7-Q of the Act with the concerned authority within 30 days, failing which the stay order shall be vacated. In fact, the impugned order dated 06.02.2015 before the Tribunal is a composite order passed under Section 14B and 7Q of the EPF Act and in view of the judgment of the Apex Court in Arcot Textile Mills Ltd. vs. Regional Provident Fund Commissioner, AIR 2014 SC 295, such order impugned before the Tribunal is appealable. Since the order impugned before the Tribunal was under Section 14B and 7Q of the EPF Act, the petitioner was not required to pre-deposit any amount under Section 7-O of the EPF Act as assessed and determined by the EPFC.
3. A Division Bench of this court in Jai Balaji Security Services (Regd.) Vs. A.P.F.C. Delhi (North) in LPA No. 880/2015 decided on 16.12.2015 has dealt with the scope of power of the Tribunal to grant interim relief during pendency of the appeal. Para 15 and 19 of the judgment read as under:-
4. It is conveyed from the above said judgment that the Tribunal would be empowered to pass a conditional order of stay during the pendency of appeal where the demand raised under Section 14-B and 7-Q of the EPF Act has been challenged. Mere pendency of appeal would not prohibit the EPF Authority to effect recovery unless Tribunal stays the recovery by interim order during subsistence of appeal subject to certain conditions.
5. On a close scrutiny of the impugned order of the Tribunal, it appears that the Tribunal has directed the petitioner to deposit the amount as assessed under Section 7-Q of the EPF Act under a wrong impression that the part of the order under Section 7-Q of the EPF Act is not appealable whereas it is a composite order under Section 14B and 7Q of the EPF Act and hence appealable in view of the judgment of the Apex Court in Arcot Textile Mills Limited (supra). Therefore, the impugned order dated 01.06.2015 of the Tribunal is hereby set aside with the direction that the Tribunal shall decide the request of the petitioner for interim relief afresh on such terms and conditions as it may deem fit during the pendency of the appeal.
6. The petition is disposed of accordingly.
7. CM APPL. 10910/2015 is disposed of as infructuous.
JUDGE MAY 15th, 2018 dkb