Section 26: Penalty for Illegal Strikes and Lock-outs

Section 26 is the “teeth” of the Act regarding industrial peace. It operates on a simple premise: if a strike or lock-out is declared illegal under Section 24, those responsible must face criminal liability.

1. The Statutory Language

​Section 26 is divided into two distinct parts:

  • 26(1): Any workman who commences, continues, or otherwise acts in furtherance of a strike which is illegal under this Act, shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month, or with a fine which may extend to fifty rupees, or with both.
  • 26(2): Any employer who commences, continues, or otherwise acts in furtherance of a lock-out which is illegal under this Act, shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one month, or with a fine which may extend to one thousand rupees, or with both.

2. Deep-Dive Analysis of the Provisions

A. The Trigger: Section 24

​You cannot have a Section 26 penalty without a violation of Section 24. A strike is illegal if:

  1. ​It is in a Public Utility Service without notice (Section 22).
  2. ​It is during the pendency of conciliation or tribunal proceedings (Section 23).
  3. ​It continues despite a government prohibitory order (Section 10(3)).

B. The Disparity in Fines

​Note the heavy skew: a workman is fined ₹50, while an employer is fined ₹1,000.

  • Legal Logic: This reflects the 1947 economic reality. The fine was meant to be a deterrent relative to the individual’s earning capacity versus the corporate entity’s capacity.
  • Modern Critique: In 2026, these fines are virtually symbolic. A ₹50 fine doesn’t deter a strike, and ₹1,000 doesn’t stop a multi-million dollar factory lock-out.

C. “In Furtherance Of”

​The phrase “acts in furtherance of” is a broad legal net. It doesn’t just catch the person holding the protest sign; it catches the organizers, the union leaders who coordinated the timing, and the managers who executed the lock-out.

3. Judicial Interpretations (Case Law Foundations)

  • The “Vyre” Test: Courts have consistently held that the mere fact that a strike is illegal does not automatically mean the workman can be dismissed from service. Section 26 provides a criminal penalty, but disciplinary action is a separate labor law concept.
  • States of Mind (Mens Rea): Generally, in Section 26, the illegality is “strict liability.” If the strike is illegal under Section 24, the penalty applies regardless of whether the workers thought it was legal.
  • Gujarat Steel Tubes Ltd. v. Gujarat Steel Tubes Mazdoor Sabha: The Supreme Court clarified that while Section 26 imposes a penalty, the punishment must be proportionate. Collective punishment of every single worker is often struck down by courts unless specific “furtherance” is proven.

4. Procedural Requirements (The “How-To”)

​To prosecute under Section 26, one must look at Section 34 (Cognizance of Offenses):

  • ​No court shall take cognizance of any offense punishable under this Act except on a complaint made by or under the authority of the Appropriate Government.
  • ​This means an employer cannot simply sue a worker for an illegal strike; the Government must authorize the prosecution. This acts as a “buffer” to prevent victimization.

5. Intellectual Sparing: The Logic of “Illegal” vs. “Unjustified”

​Here is where we challenge the logic of the Act. The Judiciary has created a distinction between a strike that is Illegal and one that is Unjustified.

CategoryLegal StatusSection 26 Application
IllegalViolates Section 22/23Penalty applies immediately.
JustifiedNecessary due to employer crueltyPenalty may still technically apply if procedural rules were skipped.

The Counter-Point: Is Section 26 a relic of colonial “Command and Control” logic? If the goal of the ID Act is “Industrial Harmony,” why does it rely on criminal imprisonment (one month) to solve a socio-economic dispute?

The Truth over Agreement: In practice, Section 26 is almost never enforced by the Government. Governments prefer conciliation over putting 500 workers in jail for a month. This renders Section 26 a “Paper Tiger”—it exists to provide a threat of law, but its actual utility in modern industrial relations is negligible compared to Section 33C (Recovery of Money).

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