Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF MYSORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. N. VIJENDRA RAO
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/10/1975
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 477 1976 SCR (2) 321
1976 SCC (1) 286
ACT:
Civil Servant-Suspension and continuance in service
beyond date of superannuation-No misconduct proved-Order of
Government deeming him to have retired on attaining
superannuation-Validity.
HEADNOTE:
Under r. 95(b) of the Mysore Civil Service Rules, a
Government servant under suspension on a charge of
misconduct shall not be required or permitted to retire on
reaching the age of superannuation but shall be retained in
service till the enquiry into the charge is conducted and a
final order is passed. Rule 95(b) was repeated on March 2,
1965.
The respondent was placed under suspension in February,
1961, and though he was due to retire on January 24, 1962,
he was continued in service by reason of r. 95 (b) to
facilitate a departmental enquiry. No departmental action
was, however, taken against him, but he was prosecuted. He
was acquitted in June, 1966. On January 24, 1967, the State
Government passed an order that he should be deemed to have
retired from service on January 24, 1962. The High Court
allowed his writ petition holding that he was entitled to
draw his salary till March 2, 1965.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court.
^
HELD : (1) There is no finding of misconduct nor is
there a verdict of guilt against the respondent. Since the
order of suspension was a bar to his compulsory retirement,
he continued in service till January 24, 1967. The
Government cannot go back on that position and retire him
retrospectively with effect from the date on which he
attained the age of 55. [322 H-323 B]
(2) The repeal of the rule has no retrospective effect.
Whatever action was taken by the Government under r. 95(b)
while that rule was on the statute book, would continue to
be valid. The physical fact of the respondent’s lawful
continuance in service cannot be wiped out by imagining a
putative state of affairs. [323 C-E]
(3) But, the respondent’s contention that he was
entitled to draw salary, not till the date of the repeal of
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the rule, but till January, 1967, cannot be upheld because,
he had not filed a cross-appeal against the judgment
repelling his claim. [323 F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 167 of
1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 24th June, 1968 of the Karnataka High Court at
Bangalore in Writ Petition No. 1096/67.
Narayan Nettar for the Appellant.
B. R. G. K. Anchar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, J. On January 27, 1961 the Chief
Conservator of Forests, Mysore, sent a letter to the
Government of Mysore stating that large-scale illicit
cutting of sandalwood trees in the Forests of Sandur
322
Range had caused a huge loss to the Government and that such
devastation of forests could not have been possible without
the connivance of the respondent, C. N. Vijedra Rao, who was
working as the Divisional Forest Officer. By an order dated
February 16, 1961 the Government of Mysore placed the
respondent under suspension ‘pending inquiry’, in order that
he may not interfere with the conduct of the inquiry or
tamper with the documentary evidence.
The respondent was later prosecuted under section 120-B
of the Penal Code on the charge that he, along with others,
had conspired to smuggle sandalwood. On June 17, 1966 the
First Class Magistrate, Bellary, acquitted the respondent.
On January 24, 1967 the Government of Mysore passed an
order that the respondent should be deemed to have been
retired from service on January 24, 1962 being the date on
which, on his completion of the 55th year, he had attained
the age of superannuation. On May 23, 1967 the respondent
filed a writ petition in the High Court of Mysore
challenging the validity of the aforesaid order. The writ
petition was substantially allowed by the High Court on June
24, 1968. This appeal by special leave is filed by the State
of Mysore against the judgment of the High Court.
Rule 95(b) of the Mysore Civil Services, which was in
operation at the relevant time, provided that "a Government
servant under suspension on a charge of misconduct shall not
be required or permitted to retire on reaching the date of
compulsory retirement, but shall be retained in service till
the enquiry into the charge is concluded and a final order
is passed thereon by a competent authority." The period of
such retention in service after the date of compulsory
retirement was not to count for pension. The respondent was
placed under suspension on February 16, 1961 and though he
was due to retire on January 24, 1962 he was continued in
service by reason of Rule 95(b). That rule was repealed on
March 2, 1965 and it would appear that the Government of
Mysore came to pass the impugned order on the supposition
that the repeal of the Rule was enough to lend validity to
the order.
We are unable to appreciate how the deletion of Rule
95(b) could confer upon the Government any right or
authority to direct that the respondent should be deemed to
have retired on the date when he attained the age of
superannuation. The respondent, perhaps, would have been too
willing to retire on completing his 55th year because that
was some means, though dubious, of avoiding the proposed
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inquiry into his conduct. Relying on Rule 95(b), the
Government retained him in service even after the date of
superannuation and directed that he would be entitled to
draw subsistence allowance until the expiry of a certain
period or till the completion of the proposed inquiry,
whichever was earlier. The prosecution ended in favour of
the respondent and we might mention that the judgment of the
learned Magistrate, was confirmed by the Mysore High Court
on July 22, 1968. Never did the Government initiate a
departmental inquiry against the respondent with the result
that there is neither a finding of misconduct nor a verdict
of guilt against him. Under Rule 95(a) it was competent to
the
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Government to continue the respondent in service after the
date of superannuation, though for special reasons, and Rule
95(b) forbade the respondent from retiring from service
during the period of suspension, even on reaching the date
of superannuation. The order of suspension which was passed
against the respondent in order to facilitate the
departmental inquiry (which, however, was never held) was,
in a manner of speaking, a bar to his compulsory retirement.
Thus, the respondent under the order passed by the State
Government, continued to be in its services until January
24, 1967. The Government cannot go back on that position and
retire the respondent retrospectively with effect from the
date on which he attained the age of 55.
It was contended by the learned counsel for the
appellant, the State of Mysore, that the repeal of Rule
95(b) must be deemed to have retrospective effect and we
must proceed on the basis that the particular rule did not
ever exist. In the first place, such an argument was not
made in the High Court. But assuming that it raises a pure
question of law and may therefore be permitted to be taken
for the first time now, we find it impossible to read even
the semblance of retrospectively in the repeal of the Rule.
It does not behove the appellant to say that though the
respondent was continued in its service under its specific
orders, the court should hold that, fictionally, he ceased
to be in service. Besides, whatever action was taken by the
Government under Rule 95(b) while that rule was on the
statute book, would continue to be valid. The physical fact
of the respondent’s continuance in service, and lawful
continuance at that, cannot be wiped out by imagining a
putative state of affairs.
The High Court was therefore right in allowing the writ
petition and granting the necessary relief to the
respondent. The High Court did not allow the respondent to
draw his salary till the date of the impugned order but
limited his right in that behalf to the date that Rule 95(b)
was repealed. Respondent’s counsel attempted to argue for
the enlargement of the relief awarded by the High Court but
in the absence of a cross-appeal, no further relief can be
awarded to the respondent. A respondent may certainly
support the decree or order in his favour on grounds other
than those on which the decree or order is founded but he
cannot ask for a larger relief in the absence of an appeal
against the partial rejection of his claim.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with
costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
324