Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
V. B. RAJU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/09/1980
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1671 1981 SCR (1) 599
ACT:
High Court Judges (Conditions of Service) Act, 1954,
second proviso to section 14 and clause (a) of section 15
read with Part II of First Schedule, validity of-Whether an
I.C.S. Officer drawn to the judicial side, continued in
service under section 10(2) of the Independence Act, 1947
and Article 314 of the Constitution and later on appointed
as a High Court Judge entitled to double pension, one for
the service as an I.C.S. Officer and the other for the
service as a High Court Judge.
HEADNOTE:
Dismissing the appeal by certificate, the Court
^
HELD: (1) The trichotomy originating with the
Government of India (High Court Judges) Order, 1937,
continued under section 10(2) of the Independence Act, 1947
and finally adopted by the High Court Judges (Conditions of
Service) Act, 1954 does not suffer from any legal or
constitutional infirmity and, on the other hand, has the
sanction of the Constitution itself. [612 F]
(2) The trichotomy is good not only because it was
adopted by the Constitution till legislation was enacted
under Article 221(2) thereof, but also because it was
necessitated by reason of High Court Judges being drawn from
three different sources, namely, Indian Civil Service, State
Judicial Services and directly from the Bar. All the High
Court Judges though holding equivalent posts are thus not
similarly situated, particularly in regard to the payment of
pension and other retirement benefits. The classification so
made is a reasonable classification based on intelligible
differentia having a proper nexus to the object to be
achieved and there is thus no question of any violation of
Articles 14, 221 and 314 of the Constitution. [610 H-611 A,
C; 612F]
(3) It is a cardinal principle of interpretation of
statutes that the legislature does not use meaningless
language and that every word used by it must be presumed to
have some meaning even though the phraseology employed may
sometimes be obscure or ambiguous. [608 F]
The expression "who is a member of the Indian Civil
Service" appearing in clause (a) of section 15 of the 1954
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Act cannot be just ignored as being inapplicable to an
existing situation and thus rendered otiose. What was meant
was to describe as a class High Court Judges who had earlier
been members of the Indian Civil Service so that they could
be distinguished from High Court Judges who had not been
such members. Although the Indian Civil Service ceased to
function as a Service of the Secretary of State for India
after the 15th of August 1947 when the 1947 Act was
enforced, its members were automatically appointed to
corresponding posts under the Crown in connection with the
affairs of the Dominion of India or of a Province by virtue
of the provisions of sub-clause (1) of clause 7 of the India
(Provisional Constitution) Order,
600
1947. The Indian Civil Service was not abolished in so many
words and on the other hand, its members were given the
right to continue in service on and after the 15th August,
1947 under the same conditions of service as were applicable
to them immediately before that date as made out by sub-
sections (1) and (2) of section 10 of the 1947 Act. [608 G-
609A, C-D]
All that sub-section (1) enacted was that the
provisions of the Government of India Act, 1935 ceased to
operate in relation to appointments to the civil services
of, and civil posts under, the Crown in India, by the
Secretary of State but sub-section (2) fully preserved the
rights of and conditions of service applicable to holders of
appointments already made by the Secretary of State, the
only difference being that in place of the Secretary of
State the employers of the incumbents became the respective
Governments concerned. [610 B-C]
(4) The second proviso to section 14 of the 1954 Act
has no application to the appellant inasmuch as he was not
in actual receipt of a pension for his services in the
Indian Civil Service under proviso to para 10 of Part D of
second Schedule to the Constitution as added by the
Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956. The appellant
having accepted appointment as a High Court Judge in
continuation of his service as a District Judge, he never
became entitled to pension for the period preceding his
elevation to the Bench. Further he did not claim such a
pension until the Accountant General requested him to
indicate his option in accordance with the proviso to
section 15 of the 1954 Act. The claim to two pensions,
therefore, is inadmissible. [611E, H, 612D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 278 of
1972.
From the Judgment Order dated 29-6-1970 of the Gujarat
High Court in SCA No. 46/68.
Appellant in person.
M. M. Abdul Khader, J. L. Jain and Miss A. Subhashini
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KOSHAL, J.-This is an appeal by certificate granted by
the High Court of Gujarat under article 133(1)(c) of the
Constitution of India and is directed against its judgment
dated 29th June 1970 dismissing a petition under article 226
of the Constitution in which the appellant, who began his
career as a member of the Indian Civil and was ultimately
appointed a High Court Judge, prayed for the issuance of
appropriate writs to ensure that he was granted two pensions
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independently of each other, one in relation to his service
as a High Court Judge and the other for the service rendered
by him prior to his appointment as such.
2. The facts leading to the petition decided by the
impugned judgment are not in dispute and may be shortly
stated. On the 6th October 1932 the appellant was appointed
by the Secretary of State for India to the Indian Civil
Service and was allotted to its Bombay
601
cadre. On the 15th August 1947, he was serving as a District
Judge in the Province of Bombay and thereafter continued in
service in accordance with the provisions of section 10(2)
of the Indian Independence Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred
to as the 1947 Act) and article 314 of the Constitution. He
was appointed Additional Judge of the Bombay High Court on
the 12th June 1959 and on bifurcation of the State of Bombay
on the 1st May 1960 became an Additional Judge of the High
Court of Gujarat wherein he was made a permanent Judge on
the 5th April 1961 and continued to serve as such till 10th
February 1969 on which date he submitted his resignation
from and relinquished charge of his office
Through a letter dated 28th May 1966 addressed to the
Registrar of the High Court of Gujarat, the Accountant
General, Gujarat requested the appellant to exercise his
option in accordance with the proviso to section 15th of the
high Court Judges (Conditions of Service) Act, 1954
(hereinafter called the 1954 Act) and to intimate whether he
would receive his pension under Part I or Part II of the
First Schedule to that Act. The stand taken by the appellant
was that he was not bound to exercise any option and that
pension in relation to his service as a High Court Judge was
payable to him under section 14 of the 1954 Act read with
Part I of the said First Schedule. The Government of India
not having agreed with the stand taken by the appellant, he
moved the High Court as stated above and in his petition
challenged the validity of the second proviso to section 14
of the 1954 Act as also of clause (a) of section 15 thereof
read with Part II of the said First Schedule.
3. The relevant provisions of law may with advantage be
noticed here. Prior to 1947 a High Court Judge was entitled
to pension in accordance with paragraphs 17, 18 and 19 of
the Government of India (High Court Judges) order, 1937 (for
short the 1937 order) promulgated by His Majesty in Council
under the provisions of section 221 of the Government of
India Act, 1935. Those paragraphs classified High Court
Judges for purposes of pension into three categories
according as (1) they were members of the Indian Civil
Service, (2) members of services other than Indian Civil
Service or (3) were not drawn from any of the civil
services, and provided a different scale of pension for each
category.
By virtue of section 10(2) of the 1947 Act, the 1937
order continued to be in force right up to the commencement
of the Constitution, article 221(2) of which provided, inter
alia:
"Every Judge shall be entitled to such allowances
and to such rights in respect of leave of absence and
pension as may from
602
time to time be determined by or under law made by
Parliament and, until so determined, to such allowances
and rights as are specified in the Second Schedule."
Sub-paragraphs (1) & (4) of paragraph 10 of Part D of the
Second Schedule to the Constitution provided:
"(1) There shall be paid to the Judges of the High
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Court of each State specified in Part A of the First
Schedule, in respect of time spent on actual service,
salary at the following rates per mensem, that is to
say:-
The Chief Justice 4,000 rupees
Any other Judge 3,500 rupees"
"(4) The rights in respect of leave of absence
(including leave allowances) and pension of the Judges
of the High Court of any State shall be governed by the
provisions which immediately before the commencement of
this Constitution, were applicable to the Judges of the
High Court in the corresponding Province."
The provisions relating to pension contained in the
1937 Order thus continued to apply to High Court Judges till
the 20th May 1954 when the 1954 Act came into force, after
having been enacted by Parliament in exercise of its
legislative power under article 221(2) of the Constitution.
Section 14 of the 1954 Act then stood as follows;
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, every
Judge shall, on his retirement, be paid a pension in
accordance with the scale and provisions in Part I of
the First Schedule:
"Provided that no such pension shall be payable to
a Judge unless-
(a) he has completed not less than twelve
years of service for pension; or
(b) he has attained the age of sixty-two
years, and in the case of a Judge holding office
on the 5th day of October, 1963, sixty years; or
(c) his retirement is medically certified to
be necessitated by ill-health."
The following proviso was added to sub-paragraph (1) of
paragraph 10 of Part D of the Second Schedule to the
Constitution by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act,
1956 (the 1956 Act, for brevity) with effect from the 1st
November, 1956:
"Provided that if a Judge of a High Court at the
time of his appointment is in receipt of a pension
(other than a disability
603
or wound pension) in respect of any previous service
under the Government of India or any of its predecessor
Governments or under the Government of a State or any
of its predecessor Governments, his salary in respect
of service in the High Court shall be reduced-
(a) by the amount of that pension, and
(b) if he has, before such appointment,
received in lieu of a portion of the pension due
to him in respect of such previous service the
commuted value thereof, by the amount of that
portion of the pension, and
(c) if he has, before such appointment,
received a retirement gratuity in respect of such
previous service, by the pension equivalent of
that gratuity."
The 1956 Act also deleted sub-paragraph (4) above extracted.
A second proviso was added to section 14 of the 1954
Act by section 6 of the High Court Judges (Conditions of
Service) Amendment Act, 1958 (for short the 1958 Act) with
effect from the 1st November, 1956 and stated:
"Provided further that if a Judge at the time
of his appointment is in receipt of a pension
(other than a disability or wound pension) in
respect of any previous service in the Union or a
State, the pension payable under this Act shall be
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in lieu of, and not in addition to, that pension."
Section 15 of and the relevant portions of Parts I, II
and III of the First Schedule to the 1954 Act as amended by
the 1958 Act with effect from the 1st November, 1956, may
also be set out in extenso:
"15. Every Judge-
(a) who is a member of the Indian Civil
Service shall, on his retirement, be paid a
pension in accordance with the scale and
provisions in Part II of the First Schedule;
(b) who is not a member of the Indian Civil
Service but has held any other pensionable Civil
Post under the Union or a State, shall, on his
retirement, be paid a pension in accordance with
the scale and provisions in Part III of the First
Schedule:
"Provided that every such Judge shall elect to
receive the pension payable to him either under Part I
of the First Schedule or, as the case may be, Part II
or Part III of the First Schedule, and the pension
payable to him shall be calculated accordingly."
604
"THE FIRST SCHEDULE
"PENSION OF JUDGES
"PART I
"1. The provisions of this Part apply to a Judge
who is not a member of the Indian Civil Service or has
not held any other pensionable civil post under the
Union or a State and also apply to a Judge who, being a
member of the Indian Civil Service or having held any
other pensionable civil post under the Union or a
State, has elected to receive the pension payable under
this Part.
"2. Subject to the other provisions of this Part,
the pension payable to a Judge to whom this Part
applies and who has completed not less than seven years
of service for pension shall be the basic pension
specified in paragraph 3 increased by the additional
pension, if any, to which he is entitled under
paragraph 5.
"3. The basic pension to which such a Judge shall
be entitled shall be-
(a) for the first seven completed years of
service for pension, Rs. 5000 per annum; and
(b) for each subsequent completed year of
service for pension, a further sum of Rs. 1,000
per annum:
"Provided that the basic pension shall in no case
exceed Rs. 10,000 per annum.
"4. For the purpose of calculating additional
pensions, service as a Judge shall be classified as
follows:
"Grade I. Service as Chief Justice in any
High Court;
"Grade II.Service as any other Judge in any
High Court.
"5. For each completed year of service for pension
in either of the grades mentioned in paragraph 4, the
Judge who is eligible for a basic pension under this
Part shall be entitled to the additional pension
specified in relation to that grade in the second
column of the table annexed hereto:
"Provided that the aggregate amount of his basic
and additional pension shall not exceed the amount
specified in the third column of the said table in
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relation to the higher grade in which he has rendered
service for not less than one completed year.
605
"TABLE
"Service Additional pension Maximum aggregate
per annum pension per annum.
Rs. Rs.
"Grade I. 740 20,000
"Grade II. 470 16,000"
"PART II
"1. The provisions of this Part apply to a Judge
who is a member of the Indian Civil Service and who has
not elected to receive the pension payable under Part
I.
"2. The pension payable to such a Judge shall be-
(a) the pension to which he is entitled under
the ordinary rules of the Indian Civil Service if
he had not been appointed a Judge, his service as
a Judge being treated as service therein for the
purpose of calculating that pension; and
(b) the additional pension, if any, to which
he is entitled under paragraph 3.
"3. If such a Judge has completed not less than
seven years of service for pension in a High Court, he
shall be entitled to an additional pension in
accordance with the following scale:
Per annum
Rs.
"For seven completed years of service for pension 1,333
For eight completed years of service for pension 1,600
For nine completed years of service for pension 1,866
For ten completed years of service for pension 2,133
For eleven completed years of service for pension 2,400
For twelve or more completed years of service
for pension 2,666"
606
"PART III
"1. The provisions of this Part apply to a Judge
who has held any civil pensionable post under the Union
or a State (but is not a member of the Indian Civil
Service) and who has not elected to receive the pension
payable under Part I.
"2. The pension payable to such a Judge shall be-
(a) The pension to which he is entitled under
the ordinary rules of his service if he had not
been appointed a Judge, his service as a Judge
being treated as service therein for the purpose
of calculating that pension; and
(b) a special additional pension of Rs. 500
per annum in respect of each completed year of
service for pension but in no case such additional
pension together with the additional or special
pension, if any, to which he is entitled under the
ordinary rules of his service, shall exceed Rs.
2500 per annum."
4. The contentions raised on behalf of the appellant
before the High Court were:
A. The second proviso to section 14 of the 1954 Act
is violative of articles 221, 314 and 14 of the
Constitution and is, therefore, void. The
appellant is accordingly entitled to elect for
pension under Part I of the First Schedule to that
Act without being required to forego the benefit
of the pension earned by him prior to his
elevation to the Bench.
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B. Clause (a) of section 15 of the 1954 Act is
applicable only to a Judge who is a member of the
Indian Civil Service. That Service, however, came
to an end on the 15th of August, 1947 whereafter
there was no Judge who could be said to be a
member of that Service. The clause has, therefore,
no application to any situation prevailing after
the said date.
C. Clause (a) of section 15 of the 1954 Act read with
Part II of the First Schedule thereto is violative
of article 14 of the Constitution so that in case
the second proviso to section 14 of the 1954 Act
is held to be good, the appellant would be
entitled to pension under clause (b) of section 15
of that Act read with Part III of the said
Schedule.
5. In regard to contention A the High Court held that
the appellant having accepted appointment as a High Court
Judge in Continuation of his service as a District Judge, he
never became entitled to pension for the period preceding
his elevation to the Bench
607
so that the second proviso to section 14 of the 1954 Act
never became applicable to him and the validity or otherwise
of that proviso was irrelevant for the determination of his
claim.
Contention B was negatived by the High Court on the
ground that the expression "who is a member of the Indian
Civil Service" appearing in clause (a) of section 15 of the
1954 Act had to be given some meaning in spite of the fact
that the Indian Civil Service had ceased to be alive as such
after August 15, 1947 and that the only reasonable way of
interpreting the expression was to hold that it meant a
person who had been a member of the Indian Civil Service
immediately before August 15, 1947.
The conclusions arrived at by the High Court as a
result of the consideration it gave to ground C may be
summarised thus:
(a) Under the Civil Service Regulations read with the
1937 Order a member of the Indian Civil Service
who was promoted from the post of a District Judge
to that of a High Court Judge was not entitled to
pension for the period prior to his elevation to
the Bench. His right to pension accrued only when
he relinquished the office of High Court Judge.
This position continued to obtain till the
enforcement of the Constitution by reason of
section 10(2) of the 1947 Act and after such
enforcement by reason of the provisions of the
Constitution, namely, articles 314 and 221(2) read
with sub-paragraph (4) of paragraph 10 of Part D
of the Second Schedule as that sub-paragraph stood
prior to its deletion by the 1956 Act. Thus the
Constitution itself through its provisions just
above mentioned provided that High Court Judges
who had earlier been members of the Indian Civil
Service would get pension according to the formula
contained in the 1937 Order which was a formula
different from the one applicable to High Court
Judges who had not been members of any of the
civil services.
(b) The 1954 Act preserved the trichotomy envisaged by
the 1937 Order but made an additional provision
that if a High Court Judge who had earlier been a
member of the Indian Civil Service felt that it
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would be more beneficial to him to receive pension
on the basis of the provisions set out in section
14 of the 1954 Act read with Part I of the First
Schedule thereto he could elect to do so. This
additional provision was obviously introduced for
the benefit of the erstwhile members of that
Service.
608
(c) The Constitution itself put its seal on the
trichotomy above detailed through articles 314 and
221(2) read with paragraph 10 of Part D of the
Second Schedule and the differentiation made by
the Constitution itself cannot be attacked as
discriminatory when it was adopted by Parliament
in the 1954 Act.
(d) The basis of calculating pension in clause (a) of
section 15 of the Act read with Part II of the
First Schedule thereto on the one hand and clause
(b) of section 15 of that Act read with Part III
of the said Schedule on the other, is continuity
of service. Service rendered by a person as High
Court Judge is tagged on with any earlier service
for the purpose of computation of basic pension;
for, otherwise High Court Judges who had earlier
been members of civil services would be deprived
of the pensionary benefit in respect of their
service rendered as such members. This was the
reason for the trichotomy which was adopted not
only by the 1937 Order but also by the 1947 Act
and later on by the Constitution as well as the
1954 Act for the benefit of such Judges. The
differentiation is not only not irrational but is
eminently desirable and is based on rational
criteria.
6. It was in the above premises that the High Court did
not find any substance in the petition dismissed by the
impugned order.
7. All the contentions raised before the High Court
have been reiterated before us but after hearing the
appellant in person at length we see no reason at all to
differ from the conclusions reached by the High Court.
8. We may first take up contention B which need not
detain us long. It is a cardinal principle of interpretation
of statutes that the legislature does not use meaningless
language and that every word used by it must be presumed to
have some meaning even though the phraseology employed may
some-times be obscure or ambiguous. The expression "who is a
member of the Indian Civil Service" appearing in clause (a)
of section 15 of the 1954 Act cannot be just ignored as
being inapplicable to an existing situation and thus
rendered otiose. As pointed out by the High Court what was
meant was to describe as a class High Court Judges who had
earlier been members of the Indian Civil Service so that
they could be distinguished from High Court Judges who had
not been such members. In this connection it is noteworthy
that although the Indian Civil Service ceased to function as
a Service of the Secretary of State for India after the 15th
of August 1947 when the 1947 Act was enforced, its members
were automatically appointed to corresponding posts under
the Crown in
609
connection with the affairs of the Dominion of India or of a
Province by virtue of the provisions of sub-clause (1) of
clause 7 of the India (Provisional Constitution) Order,
1947. That sub-clause runs thus:
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"7. (1) Subject to any general or special orders
or arrangements affecting his case, any person who
immediately before the appointed day is holding any
civil post under the Crown in connection with the
affairs of the Governor-General or Governor-General in
Council or of a Province other than Bengal or the
Punjab shall, as from that day, be deemed to have been
duly appointed to the corresponding post under the
Crown in connection with the affairs of the Dominion of
India or, as the case may be, of the Province."
The Indian Civil Service was not abolished in so many words
and, on the other hand, its members were given the right to
continue in service on and after the 15th August, 1947 under
the same conditions of service as were applicable to them
immediately before that date. This is clearly made out by
sub-sections (1) and (2) of section 10 of the 1947 Act which
are reproduced below:
"(1) The provisions of this Act keeping in force
provisions of the Government of India Act, 1935, shall
not continue in force the provisions of that Act
relating to appointments to the civil services of, and
civil posts under, the Crown in India by the Secretary
of State, or the provisions of that Act relating to the
reservation of posts.
"(2) Every person who-
(a) having been appointed by the Secretary of
State in Council, to a civil service of the Crown
in India continues on and after the appointed day
to serve under the Government of either of the new
Dominions or of any Province or part thereof; or
(b) having been appointed by His Majesty
before the appointed day to be a Judge of the
Federal Court or of any Court which is a High
Court within the meaning of the Government of
India Act, 1935, continues on and after the
appointed day to serve as a Judge in either of the
new Dominions:
shall be entitled to receive from the Government of the
Dominions and Provinces or parts which he is from time
to time serving or, as the case may be, which are
served by the courts in which he is from time to time a
Judge, the same conditions of service as respects
remuneration, leave and pension, and the same rights
610
as respects disciplinary matters or, as the case may
be, as respects the tenure of his office, or rights as
similar thereto as changed circumstances may permit, as
that person was entitled to immediately before the
appointed day."
All that sub-section (1) enacted was that the
provisions of the Government of India Act, 1935 ceased to
operate in relation to appointments to the civil services
of, and civil posts under, the Crown in India, by the
Secretary of State but sub-section (2) fully preserved the
rights of and conditions of service applicable to holders of
appointments already made by the Secretary of State, the
only difference being that in place of the Secretary of
State the employers of the incumbents became the respective
Governments concerned. In this situation it would not be
correct to say that the expression who is a member of the
Indian Civil Service" would be meaningless and wholly
inapplicable to any existing situation after the 15th August
1947; and when an Act of Parliament uses that expression
surely it must be given the meaning that the High Court says
it has, i.e., that it denotes persons who were members of
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the Indian Civil Service prior to the enforcement of the
1947 Act and were elevated to the Bench thereafter.
9. The other contentions raised by the appellant ignore
one basic reason which provides justification for the
trichotomy operating right from the enforcement of the 1937
Order. He does not (and of course cannot) challenge that
trichotomy for the period prior to the commencement of the
Constitution because his objection to it is based on
discrimination violative of article 14 thereof. But then he
has failed to realise what the Constitution itself enacted
in paragraph 10 of its Second Schedule both before and after
its amendment by the 1956 Act. Prior to the 1st November
1956 (which is the date on which the 1956 Act came into
force) sub-paragraph (4) of the said paragraph 10 provided
for pension of Judges of the High Court of any State being
governed by the provisions which were applicable to such
Judges before the commencement of the Constitution. Those
provisions were, as pointed out above, contained in the 1937
Order which initiated the trichotomy. The High Court was
thus right in holding that the Constitution itself adopted
that trichotomy.
Then came the 1954 Act which was brought on the statute
book by Parliament in exercise of its legislative powers
under article 221(2) of the Constitution. The trichotomy
introduced by the 1937 Order was repeated in the 1954 Act,
till when it had been kept alive by sub-paragraph (4) above
mentioned. And that trichotomy is good not only because it
was adopted by the Constitution till legislation
611
was enacted under article 221(2) thereof but also because it
was necessitated by reason of High Court Judges being drawn
from three different sources.
In so far as persons who had been members of the Indian
Civil Service or of a State Judicial Service before being
appointed as High Court Judges are concerned, the period of
service put in by them in such Service has to be taken into
account. On the other hand, High Court Judges recruited
directly from the Bar do not have any prior service to their
credit. All the High Court Judges, though holding equivalent
posts, are thus not similarly situated, particularly in
regard to the payment of pension and other retirement
benefits. That is why different provisions were considered
necessary in the case of each of the three categories in
regard to payment of pension. The classification so made is
a reasonable classification based on intelligible
differentia having a proper nexus to the object to be
achieved.
The matter may be viewed from another angle. According
to the proviso added to sub-paragraph (1) of the said
paragraph 10 by the 1956 Act (which proviso we have set out
above), the salary of a High Court Judge who "is in receipt
of a pension............ in respect of any previous service
under the Government of India or any of its predecessor
Governments or under the Government of a State or any of its
predecessor Governments,.................................
shall be reduced by the amount of that
pension..................... ....." That proviso would have
fully applied to the case of the appellant if he had
actually been in receipt of a pension prior to his elevation
to the Bench. That he was not in receipt of any such pension
is, however, admitted on all hands and, therefore, as held
by the High Court, the second proviso to section 14 of the
1954 Act has no application to him. But then his argument is
that he should be deemed to have been in receipt of a
pension according to his entitlement immediately before he
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took oath as a High Court Judge. Even if we assume this
argument to be correct, his case would not improve in any
manner; for, then his salary as a High Court Judge would
automatically come down to less than Rs. 3500 which is the
salary payable to Judges who have not been members of any of
the civil services earlier, and the difference would not be
merely marginal. It is the case of the appellant that if he
had retired from the Indian Civil Service immediately prior
to the 12th June 1959 when he was elevated to the Bench he
would have been entitled to receive a pension of Rs. 13350
per annum or about Rs. 1111 per mensem. On his elevation to
the Bench he would in that case be entitled to a salary of
less than Rs. 2400 as compared to Rs. 3500 payable to other
High Court Judges who had not belonged to any civil services
earlier. This difference in salary being substantial
612
is itself a good reason for treating the appellant and other
High Court Judges similarly situated in a manner different
from High Court Judges not so situated and the same
reasoning would apply to High Court Judges who had earlier
been members of civil services other than the Indian Civil
Service. It is of course not the case of the appellant that
the proviso to sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph 10 above
mentioned is itself not enforceable for one reason or the
other; and if that be so, the trichotomy of which he
complains becomes fully justifiable.
10. We may make it clear, however, that the appellant’s
plea that he must be held entitled to a separate pension for
his service immediately preceding his elevation to the Bench
cannot be accepted as correct in the face of the finding by
the High Court that he was entitled to pension only after
his retirement and, therefore, after his service as a High
Court Judge came to an end, and that too according to the
1937 Order. The appellant has failed to show how that
finding is erroneous. In this connection it may be stated
that it was only after the Accountant General had requested
him to indicate his option in accordance with the proviso to
section 15 of the 1954 Act that he claimed two pensions, one
in respect of the period prior to his elevation to the Bench
and one for that for which he was a High Court Judge. At no
time prior to that had he claimed any pension for his
service as a member of the Indian Civil Service or any of
the other civil services.
11. The trichotomy originating with the 1937 Order and
finally adopted by the 1954 Act having been found by us not
to suffer from any legal or constitutional infirmity and, on
the other hand, to have the sanction of the Constitution
itself, none of the three articles thereof,namely, 14, 221 &
314 on which the appellant banks, comes to his rescue. His
claim is accordingly held to be without force and the appeal
is dismissed but with no order as to costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
613