Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S.P. SAMPATH KUMAR ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/12/1986
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
KHALID, V. (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 386 1987 SCR (1) 435
1987 SCC (1) 124 JT 1986 996
1986 SCALE (2)960
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC 357 (2)
F 1987 SC 663 (2)
APL 1989 SC 44 (4)
RF 1989 SC 653 (11)
F 1989 SC1185 (8)
R 1989 SC1933 (7)
RF 1990 SC1137 (3)
ACT:
Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985: ss. 4, 5, 6 &
28--Exclusion of the jurisdiction of the High Court under
Arts. 226 and 227 in service matters-Constitutional validity
of--Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members-Qualifications and
mode of appointment to make the Tribunal equally efficacious
and effective alternative to the High Court-- Benches and
Circuits of Tribunal-Setting up of.
Constitution of India, Arts. 226, 227, 32, 136, 323A and
368--Judicial review-- Exclusion of-- When permissible.
HEADNOTE:
Clause (1) of Art. 323-A, brought in by Constitution
(42nd Amendment) Act, 1976, authorised Parliament to provide
by law for the adjudication or trial by administrative
tribunals of disputes and complaints with respect to re-
cruitment and conditions of service of persons appointed to
public services. Clause (2)(d) of that Article envisaged
exclusion of the jurisdiction of all courts, except the
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under Art. 136 with re-
spect to the disputes or complaints referred to in cl. (1).
Section 28 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985
originally enacted within the ambit of Art. 323-A, provided
for exclusion of jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under
Art. 32. The Act as amended by the Administrative Tribunals
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1986, replaced by Act No. 19 of 1987
now saves the jurisdiction of Supreme Court both under Art.
32 in respect of original proceedings as also under Art. 136
for entertaining appeals. Section 6(1)of the Act which lays
down qualifications of Chairman, states that he should be or
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have been (a) a Judge of a High Court, or (b) has for at
least two years held office of Vice-Chairman, or (c) has for
at least two years held the post of Secretary to the Govern-
ment of India. Sub-section (2) provides that a Vice-Chairman
should be or have been (a) a Judge of a High Court, or (b)
for at least two years held the post of a Secretary to the
Government of India, or (bb) for at least five years held
the post of Additional Secretary to the Government of India,
or (c) for a period of not less than three years held office
as a Judicial Member of an Administrative Tribunal. Sub-
section (3) states that the Judicial Member (a) should or
should have been qualified to be a Judge of a High
436
Court, or (b) has been a member of the Indian Legal Service,
Grade 1, for at least three years. Sub-section (3A) provides
that a person to be appointed as Administrative Member (a)
should have for at least two years held the post of Addi-
tional Secretary to the Government of India, or (b) has for
at least three years held the post of a Joint Secretary to
the Government of India.
The petitioners in these writ petitions and transfer
petitions challenged the vires of the 1985 Act. It was
contended that the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the High
Court under Arts. 226 and 227 in service matters specified
in s.28 of the Act was unconstitutional and void, and that
the composition of the Tribunal and mode of appointment of
Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members was outside the scope of
the power conferred on Parliament under Art. 323-A.
Allowing the petitions in part, the Court,
By the Court
HELD: It is the High Court which is being supplanted by
Administrative Tribunal. The office of Chairman of the
Tribunal, therefore, for all practical purposes should be
equated with the office of the Chief Justice of a High
Court. Judicial discipline generated by experience and
training in an adequate dose is a necessary qualification
for that post. It is thus essential that he should have been
a Judge of the High Court or he should have for at least two
years held office as Vice-Chairman. A person who has merely
held the post of Secretary to the Government of India and
who has no legal and judicial experience if appointed Chair-
man would not only fail to inspire confidence in the public
mind but would also render the Administrative Tribunal a
much less effective and efficacious mechanism than the High
Court. Clause (c) of s.6(1) of the Act, therefore, must be
struck down as invalid. [445 C, 455 DE, 445 ABE]
Per Bhagwati, CJ.
1.1 Judicial review is a basic and essential feature of
the Constitution and no law passed by Parliament in exercise
of its constituent power can abrogate it or take it away. It
is, however, within the competence of Parliament to amend
the Constitution so as to substitute in place of the High
Court another alternative institutional mechanism or ar-
rangement for judicial review without in any way violating
the basic structure doctrine, provided it is no less effica-
cious than the High Court. Then it would be another authori-
ty which would be exercising the power of judicial review
with a view to enforcing the constitutional limitations and
maintaining the rule of law. [441 B, 443 BC]
437
Minerva Mills Ltd. & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.
[1981]1 SCR 206, referred to.
1.2 Clause (2Xd) of Art. 323-A specifically authorises
the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the High Court under
Arts. 226 and 227 by any law made by Parliament under
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cl.(1). If this constitutional amendment were to permit a
law to exclude the jurisdiction of the High Court under Art.
226 and 227 without sating up an effective alternative
institutional mechanism or arrangement for judicial review
it would be violative of the basic structure doctrine and
hence outside the constitutent power of Parliament. It must,
therefore, be read as implicit in the amendment that such a
law to be coustitutionally valid must not leave a void but
it must set up another equally effective alternative author-
ity and vest the power of judicial review in it. [443 F, H,
44 A B]
2.1 What is needed in a judicial tribunal which is
intended to supplant the High Court is legal training and
experience. Service matters which are removed from the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Arts. 226 and 227 and
entrusted to the Administrative Tribunal invariably involve
questions of interpretation and applicability of Arts. 14,
15, 16 and 311 which require for their determination not
only judicial approach but also knowledge and expertise in
this particular branch of constitutional law. [445 D, 444 D]
2.2 The Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal should
be or should have been a Judge of a High Court or he should
have for at least two years held office as Vice-Chairman. It
is the High Court which is being supplanted by the Adminis-
trative Tribunal. Substituting the Chief Justice of a High
Court by a Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal who has
merely held the post of a Secretary to the Government of
India and who has no legal or judicial experience would not
only fall to inspire confidence in the public mind but would
also render the Administrative Tribunal a much less effec-
tive and efficacious mechanism than the High Court. Clause
(c) of s.6(1) of the Act, therefore, must be struck down as
invalid. [445 A, C, B, E]
3. Since the Administrative Tribunal has been created in
substitution of the High Court, its Vice-Chairman would be
in the position of a High Court Judge. Therefore, a District
Judge or an advocate who is qualified to be a Judge of the
High Court should be regarded as digible for being Vice-
Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal. The provisions of
the Act in regard to the composition of the Administrative
Tribunal are weighted in favour of members of the Services.
This value discounting of the judicial members does have the
effect of making the Administrative Tribunal less effective
and efficacious than the High Court. Unless an amendment to
that effect is carried out on or before 31st March, 1987 the
Act would have to be declared to be invalid because the
438
provision in regard to the composition of the Administrative
Tribunal cannot be severed from the other provisions con-
tained in the Act. [445 F, 446 A, 445 G, 446 B]
4.1 Under the Act the sole and exclusive power to make
appointment of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Administrative
Members is conferred on the Government. No obligation is
cast on the Government to consult the Chief Justice of India
or to follow any particular selection procedure in this
behalf. Total insulation of the judiciary from all forms of
interference from the coordinate branches of Government is a
basic essential feature of the Constitution. In case of High
Court Judges the President cannot make any appointment
without consultation with the Chief Justice of the High
Court and the Chief Justice of India. This check or safe-
guard is totally absent in the case of appointment of the
Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Administrative Members of the
Administrative Tribunal. If the Tribunal is created in
substitution of the High Court and the jurisdiction of the
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High Court under Arts. 226 and 227 is taken away and vested
in it, it is but essential that the same independence from
possibility of executive pressure or influence must also be
ensured to the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members of the
Tribunal. [446 D, 447 D, B, E]
4.2 The appointment o[ Chairman, Vice-Chairman and
Administrative Members, therefore, should be made by the
concerned Government only after consultation with the Chief
Justice of India and such consultation must be meaningful
and effective. Alternatively, a High Powered Selection
Committee headed by the Chief Justice of India or a sitting
Judge of the Supreme Court or concerned High Court nominated
by the Chief Justice of India may be set up for making these
appointments. If either of these two modes of appointment is
adopted, it would save the impunged Act from invalidation.
Otherwise, it will be outside the scope of the power con-
ferred on Parliament under Art. 323-A. [447 F, G, 448 B]
5. The Government should set up a permanent bench and if
that is not feasible having regard to the volume of work,
then at least a circuit bench of the Administrative Tribunal
wherever there is a seat of the High Court on or before 31st
March 1987 so that the provisions of the Act could be sus-
tained. [448 D]
6. Judgment to operate only prospectively and not to
invalidate appointments already made. [448 B]
Per Ranganath Misra, J.
1. The Administrative Tribunal Act, 1985, as amended by
Act No. 19 of 1986 saves jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
both under Article 32 in respect of original proceedings as
also under Article 136 for entertaining appeals. There is
thus a forum where matters of importance and grave injustice
can be brought
439
for determination or rectification. The exclusion of the
jurisdiction of the High Court, therefore, does not totally
bar judicial review. [451 C, 453 A]
2.1 It is open to Parliament to make effective alterna-
tive institutional mechanisms or arrangements in place of
the High Court for providing judicial review. But such an
authority or tribunal must be a worthy successor and real
substitute of the High Court--not only in form and de jure
but in content and de facto so as to be effective and effi-
cient as also capable of upholding the constitutional limi-
tations enshrined in Articles 14, 15 and 16 of the Constitu-
tion. [453 B, 454 C, 453 E]
2.2 The Tribunal under the scheme of the Act has been
contemplated as a substitute and not as supplemental to the
High Court. It is not designed as an additional froum from
where parties could go to the High Court. Under ss. 14 and
15 of the Act all the powers of the Courts, except those of
the Supreme Court, in regard to matters specified therein
vest in the Tribunal--either Central or State. Barring of
the jurisdiction of the High Court under Arts. 226 and 227
cannot, therefore, be said to be ultra vires the Constitu-
tion. [443 CD, FG, 449 A]
Minerva Mills Ltd. & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1981] 1 SCR 206, 287 and K.K. Dutta v. Union of India,
[1980] 3 SCR 811, referred to.
3.1 The Office of Chairman of the Tribunal should for
all practical purposes be equated with the office of Chief
Justice of a High Court. Judicial discipline generated by
experience and training in an adequate dose being a neces-
sary qualification for that post, ordinarily a retiring or
retired Chief Justice of a High Court or when such a person
is not available, a senior Judge of proved ability, either
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in office or retired should be appointed. In order that the
Tribunal may be acceptable to the litigants, who are them-
selves members of the various Services, therefore, s.6(1)(c)
of the Act, which makes a Secretary to the Government of
India also eligible for the post of Chairman, should be
omitted. [455 D-F]
3.2 The selection of Vice-Chairman and Members, when it
is not of a sitting Judge or retired Judge of a High Court,
should be done by a high powered committee with a sitting
Judge of the Supreme Court, to be nominated by the Chief
Justice of India, as its Chairman. This will ensure selec-
tion of proper and competent people to man these high of-
fices of trust and help to build up reputation and accept-
ability. The Central Government to bring the provisions of
the Act in accord within a reasonable time not beyond March
31, 1987. Or else, the constitution of Tribunal as a substi-
tute of the High Court would be open to challenge. [455 G,
456 A, H]
3.3 The judgment to operate prospectively and not to affect
the
440
appointments already made to the office of Vice-Chairman and
Members. [456 B]
4. The term of five years prescribed under s.8 of the
Act for Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members of the Tribunal
requiting them to retire at the end of it is too short,
which is neither convenient to the person selected for the
job nor expedient to the scheme. When amendments to the Act
are undertaken this aspect of the matter deserves to be
considered. [456 C, F, G]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 12437 of 1985 etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Raju Ramachandra, Mukul Mudgal, Mrs. R. Ramachandran,
N.J. Mehta, P.H. Parekh, D. Krishnamurthy, K.N. Rai, K.R.
Nagaraja, Ms. Malinio Poduval, N.N. Verma, S.K. Bhardwaj and
P.D. Sharma for the Petitioners.
K. Parasaran, Attorney General, V.P. Sarthy and Ms. A.
Subhashini for the Respondents.
S.K. Sinha and S.K. Verma for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, CJ. I am in entire agreement with the judgment
prepared by my learned brother Ranganath Misra, but since
the questions involved in these writ petitions are of semi-
nal importance affecting as they do, the structure of the
judicial system and the principle of independence of the
Judiciary, I think I would be failing in my duty if I did
not add a few words of my own.
There are two questions which arise for consideration in
these writ petitions and they have been succinctly set out
in the judgment of Ranganath Misra, J. The first question is
whether the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution in service
matters specified in section 218of the Administrative Tribu-
nals Act, 1985 (hereinafter referred to as the impugned Act)
and the vesting of exclusive jurisdiction in such service
matters in the Administrative Tribunal to be constituted
under the impugend Act, subject to an exception in favour of
the jurisdiction of this Court under Articles 32 and 136, is
unconstitutional and void and in any event, even if the
first question be answered against the petitioners and in
favour of
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441
the Government, the second question required to be consid-
ered is, whether the composition of the Administrative
Tribunal and the mode of appointment of Chairman, Vice-
Chairmen and members have the effect of introducing a con-
stitutional infirmity invalidating the provisions of the
impugned Act. I agreed with the answers given to these
questions in the judgment of Ranganath Misra, J. I would
articulate my reasons as follows:--
It is now well-settled as a result of the decision of
this Court in Minerva Mills Ltd. & Others v. Union of India
and Ors. [1981] 1 S.C.R. 206 that judicial review is a basic
and essential feature of the Constitution and no law passed
by Parliament in exercise of its constituent power can
abrogate it or take it away. If the power of judicial review
is abrogated or taken away the Constitution will cease to be
what it is. It is a fundamental principle of our constitu-
tional scheme that every organ of the State, every authority
under the Constitution, derives its power from the Constitu-
tion and has to act within the limits of such power. It is a
limited Government which we have under the Constitution and
both the executive and the legislature have to act within
the limits of the power conferred upon them under the Con-
stitution. Now a question may arise as to what are the
powers of the executive and whether the executive has acted
within the scope of its power. Such a question obviously
cannot be left to the executive to decide and for two very
good reasons. First, the decision of the question would
depend upon the interpretation of the Constitution and the
laws and this would pre-eminently be a matter fit to be
decided by the judiciary, because it is the judiciary which
alone would be possessed of expertise in this field and
secondly, the constitutional and legal protection afforded
to the citizen would become illusory, if it were left to the
executive to determine the legality of its own action. So
also if the legislature makes a law and a dispute arises
whether in making the law, the legislature has acted outside
the area of its legislative competence or the law is viola-
tive of the fundamental rights or of any other provisions of
the Constitution, its resolution cannot, for the same rea-
sons, be left to the determination of the legislature. The
Constitution has, therefore created an independent machinery
for resolving these disputes and this independent machinery
is the judiciary which is vested with the power of judicial
review to determine the legality of executive action and the
validity of legislation passed by the legislature. The
judiciary is constituted the ultimate interpreter of the
Constitution and to it is assigned the delicate task of
determining what is the extent and scope of the power con-
ferred on each branch of Government, what are the limits on
the exercise of such power under the Constitution and wheth-
er any action of any branch transgresses such limits. It is
also a basic principle of the rule of law which permeates
every provision of the Constitution and which forms its very
core and essence that the exercise of power by the executive
or any other authority must not only be conditioned by the
Constitution but also be in
442
accordance with law and it is the judiciary which has to
ensure that the law is observed and there is compliance with
the requirements of law on the part of the executive and
other authorities. This function is discharged by the judi-
ciary by exercise of the power of judicial review which is a
most potent weapon in the hands of the judiciary for mainte-
nance of the rule of law. The power of judicial review is an
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integral part of our constitutional system and without it,
there will be no Government of laws and the rule of law
would become a teasing illusion and a promise of unreality.
That is why I observed in my judgment in Minerva Mills’Ltd.
case (supra) at pages 287 and 288:---
"I am of the view that if there is one feature
of our Constitution which, more than any
other, is basic and fundamental to the mainte-
nance of democracy and the rule of law, it is
the power of judicial review and it is unques-
tionably, to my mind, part of the basic struc-
ture of the Constitution. Of course, when I
say this I should not be taken to suggest that
however effective alternative institutional
mechanisms or arrangements for judicial review
cannot be made by Parliament. But what I wish
to emphasise is that judicial review is a
vital principle of our Constitution and it
cannot be abrogated without affecting the
basic structure of the Constitution. If by a
Constitutional amendment, the power of judi-
cial review is taken away and it is provided
that the validity of any law made by the
legislature shall not be liable to be called
in question on any ground, even if it is
outside the legislative competence of the
legislature or is violative of any fundamental
rights, it would be nothing short of subver-
sion of the Constitution, for it would make a
mockery of the distribution of legislative
powers between the Union and the States and
render the fundamental rights meaningless and
futile. So also if a constitutional amendment
is made which has the effect of taking away
the power of judicial review and providing
that no amendment made in the Constitution
shall be liable to be.questioned on any
ground, even if such amendment is violative of
the basic structure and, therefore, outside
the amendatory power of Parliament, it would
be making Parliament sole judge of the consti-
tutional validity of what it has done and that
would, in effect and substance, nullify the
limitation on the amending power of Parliament
and affect the basic structure of the Consti-
tution. The conclusion must therefore inevita-
bly follow that clause (4) of the Article 368
is unconstitutional and void as damaging the
basic structure of the Constitution."
443
It is undoubtedly true that my judgment in Minerva Mills
Ltd. case (supra) was a minority judgment but so far as this
aspect is concerned, the majority Judges also took the same
view and held that judicial review is a basic and essential
feature of the Constitution and it cannot be abrogated
without affecting the basic structure of the Constitution
and it is equally clear from the same decision that though
judicial review cannot be altogether abrogated by Parliament
by amending the Constitution in exercise of its constituent
power, Parliament can certainly, without in any way violat-
ing the basic structure doctrine, set up effective alterna-
tive institutional mechanisms or arrangements for judicial
review. The basic and essential feature of judicial review
cannot be dispensed with but it would be within the compe-
tence of Parliament to amend the Constitution so as to
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substitute in place of the High Court, another alternative
institutional mechanism or arrangement for judicial review,
provided it is no less efficacious than the High Court.
Then, instead of the High Court, it would be another insti-
tutional mechanism or authority which would be exercising
the power of judicial review with a view to enforcing the
constitutional limitations and maintaining the rule of law.
Therefore, if any constitutional amendment made by Parlia-
ment takes away from the High Court the power of judicial
review in any particular area and vests it in any other
institutional mechanism or authority, it would not be viola-
tive of the basic structure doctrine, so long as the essen-
tial condition is fulfilled, namely that the alternative
institutional mechanism or authority set up by the parlia-
mentary amendment is no less effective than the High Court.
Here, in the present case, the impugned Act has been
enacted by Parliament in exercise of the power conferred by
clause (1) of Article 323A which was introduced in the
Constitution by Constitution (42nd Amendemnt) Act, 1976.
Clause (2) (d) of this Article provides that a law made by
Parliament under clause (1) may exclude the jurisdiction of
courts, except the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under
Article 136, with respect to the disputes or complaints
referred to in clause (1). The exclusion of the jurisdiction
of the High Court under Articles 226 and 227 by any law made
by Parliament under clause (1 ) of Article 323A is, there-
fore, specifically authorised by the constitutional amend-
ment enacted in clause (2) (d) of that Article. It is dear
from the discussion in the preceding paragraph that this
constitutional amendment authorising exclusion of the juris-
diction of the High Court under Articles 226 and 227 postu-
lates for its validity that the law made under clause (1) of
Article 323A excluding the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Articles 226 and 227 must provide for an effective
alternative institutional mechanism or authority for judi-
cial review. If this constitutional amendment were to permit
a law made under clause (1) of Article 323A to exclude the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Articles 226 and 227
without setting up an effective alternative
444
institutional mechanism or arrangement for judicial review,
it would be violative of the basic structure doctrine and
hence outside the constituent power of Parliament. It must,
therefore, be read as implicit in this constitutional amend-
ment that the law excluding the jurisdiction of the High
Court under Articles 226 and 227 permissible under it must
not leave a void but it must set up another effective insti-
tutional mechanism or authority and vest the power of judi-
cial review in it. Consequently, the impugned Act excluding
the jurisdiction of the High Court under Articles 226 and
227 in respect of service matters and vesting such jurisdic-
tion in the Administrative Tribunal can pass the test of
constitutionality as being within the ambit and coverage of
clause (2) (d) of Article 323A, only if it can be shown that
the Administrative Tribunal set up under the impugned Act is
equally efficacious as the High Court, so far as the power
of judicial review over service matter is concerned. We
must, therefore, address ourselves to the question whether
the Administrative Tribunal established under the impugned
Act can be regarded as equally effective and efficacious in
exercising the power or judicial review as the High Court
acting under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution.
It is necessary to bear in mind that service matters
which are removed from the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution and entrusted
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to the Administrative Tribunal set up under the impugned Act
for adjudication involve questions of interpretation and
applicability of Articles 14, 15, 16 and 311 in quite a
large number of cases. These questions require for their
determination not only judicial approach but also knowledge
and expertise in this particular branch of constitutional
law. It is necessary that those who adjudicate upon these
questions should have same modicum of legal training and
judicial experience because we find that some of these
questions are so difficult and complex that they baffle the
minds of even trained Judges in the High Courts and the
Supreme Court. That is the reason why at the time of the
preliminary hearing of these writ petitions we insisted that
every bench of the Administrative Tribunal should consist of
one judicial member and one administrative member and there
should be no preponderance of administrative members on any
bench. Of course, the presence of the administrative member
would provide input of practical experience in the function-
ing of the services and add to the efficiency of the Admin-
istrative Tribunal but the legal input would undeniably be
more important and sacrificing the legal input or not giving
it sufficient weightage would definitely impair the efficacy
and effectiveness of the Administrative Tribunal as compared
to the High Court. Now section 6 provides that the Chairman
of the Administrative Tribunal should be or should have been
a Judge of the High Court or he should have for at least two
years held office of Vice-Chairman or he should have for at
least two years held the post of
445
Secretary to the Government of India or any other post under
the Central or State Government carrying a scale of pay
which is not less than that of a Secretary to the Government
of India. I entirely agree with Ranganath Misra, J. that the
Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal should be or should
have been a Judge of a High Court or he should have for at
least two years held office as Vice-Chairman. If he has held
office as Vice-Chairman for a period of at least two years
he would have gathered sufficient experience and also within
such period of two years, acquired reasonable familiarity
with the constitutional and legal questions involved in
service matters, But substituting the Chief Justice of a
High Court by a Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal who
has merely held the post of a Secretary to the Government
and who has no legal or judicial experience would not only
fail to inspire confidence in the public mind but would also
render the Administrative Tribunal a much less effective and
efficacious mechanism than the,High Court. We cannot afford
to forget that it is the High Court which is being supplant-
ed by the Administrative Tribunal and it must be so manned
as to inspire confidence in the public mind that it is a
highly competent and expert mechanism with judicial approach
and objectivity. Of course, I must make it clear that when I
say this, I do not wish to cast any reflection on the mem-
bers of the Civil Services because fortunately we have, in
our country, brilliant civil servants who possess tremendous
sincerity, drive and initiative and who have remarkable
capacity to resolve and overcome administrative problems of
great complexity. But what is needed in a judicial tribunal
which is intended to supplant the High Court is legal train-
ing and experience. I am, therefore, of the view, in agree-
ment with Ranganath Misra, J. that clause (c) of section 6
(1) must be struck down as invalid.
I also fail to see why a District Judge or an advocate
who is qualified to be a Judge of a High Court should not be
eligible to be considered for appointment as Vice-Chairman
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of the Administrative Tribunal. It may be noted that since
the Administrative Tribunal has been created in substitution
of the High Court, the Vice-Chairman of the Administrative
Tribunal would be in the position of a High Court Judge and
if a District Judge or an advocate qualified to be a Judge
of the High Court, is eligible to be a High Court Judge,
there is no reason why he should not equally be eligible to
be a Vice-Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal. Can the
position of a Vice-Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal
be considered higher than that of a High Court Judge so that
a person who is eligible to be a High Court Judge may yet be
regarded as ineligible for becoming a Vice-Chairman of the
Administrative Tribunal? It does appear that the provisions
of the impugned Act in regard to the composition of the
Administrative Tribunal are a little weighted in favour of
members of the Services. This weightage in favour of the
members of the Services and value-discounting of the judi-
cial members does have the effect of
446
making the Administrative Tribunal less effective and effi-
cacious than the High Court. I would therefore suggest that
a District Judge or an Advocate who is qualified to be a
Judge of the High Court should be regarded as eligible for
being Vice-Chairman of the Administrative Tribunal and
unless an amendment to that effect is carried out on or
before 31st March, 1987, the impugned Act would have to be
declared to be invalid, because the provision in regard to
composition of the Administrative Tribunal cannot be severed
from the other provisions contained in the impugned Act.
That takes me to another serious infirmity in the provi-
sions of the impugned Act in regard to the mode of appoint-
ment of the Chairman, Vice Chairman and members of the
Administrative Tribunal. So far as the appointment of judi-
cial members of the Administrative Tribunal is concerned,
there is a provision introduced in the impugned Act by way
of amendment that the judicial members shall be appointed by
the Government concerned in consultation with the Chief
Justice of India. Obviously no exception can be taken to
this provision, because even so far as Judges of the High
Court are concerned, their appointment is required to be
made by the President inter alia in consultation with the
Chief Justice of India. But so far as the appointment of
Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and administrative members is con-
cerned, the sole and exclusive power to make such appoint-
ment is conferred on the Government under the impugned Act.
There is no obligation cast on the Government to consult the
Chief Justice of India or to follow any particular selection
procedure in this behalf. The result is that it is left to
the absolute unfettered discretion of the Government to
appoint such person or persons as it likes as Chairman,
Vice-Chairman and administrative members of the Administra-
tive Tribunal. Now it may be noted that almost all cases in
regard to service matters which come before the Administra-
tive Tribunal would be against the Government or any of its
officers and it would not at all be conducive to judicial
independence to leave unfettered and unrestricted discretion
in the executive to appoint the Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and
administrative members, if a judicial member or an adminis-
trative member is looking forward to promotion as Vice-
Chairman or Chairman, he would have to depend on the good-
will and favourable stance of the executive and that would
be likely to affect the independence and impartiality of the
members of the Tribunal. The same would be the position
vis-a-vis promotion to the office of Chairman of the’ Admin-
istrative Tribunal. The administrative members would also be
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likely to carry a sense of obligation to the executive for
having been appointed members of the Administrative Tribunal
and that would have a tendency to impair the independence
and objectivity of the members of the Tribunal. There can be
no doubt that the power of appointment and promotion vested
in the executive can have prejudicial effect on the
447
independence of the Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and members of
the Administrative Tribunal, if such power is absolute and
unfettered. If the members have to look to the executive for
advancement, it may tend, directly or indirectly, to influ-
ence their decision-making process particularly since the
Government would be a litigant in most of the cases coming
before the Administrative Tribunal and it is the action of
the Government which would be challenged in such cases. That
is the reason why in case of appointment of High Court
Judges, the power of appointment vested in the executive is
not an absolute unfettered power but it is hedged in by a
wholesome check and safeguard and the President cannot make
an appointment of a High Court Judge without consultation
with the Chief Justice of the High Court and the Chief
Justice of India and a healthy convention has grown up that
no appointment would be made by the Government which is not
approved by the Chief Justice of India. This check or safe-
guard is totally absent in the case of appointment of the
Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and administrative members of the
Administrative Tribunal and the possibility cannot be ruled
out-indeed the litigating public would certainly carry a
feeling--that the decisionmaking process of the Chairman,
Vice-Chairmen and members of the Administrative Tribunal
might be likely to be affected by reason of dependence on
the executive for appointment and promotion. It can no
longer be disputed that total insulation of the judiciary
from all forms of interference from the coordinate branches
of Government is a basic essential feature of the Constitu-
tion. The Constitution makers have made anxious provision to
secure total independence of the judiciary from executive
pressure or influence. Obviously, therefore if the Adminis-
trative Tribunal is created in substitution of the High
Court and the jurisdiction of the High Court under Articles
226 and 227 is taken away and vested in the Administrative
Tribunal, the same independence from possibility of execu-
tive pressure or influence must also be ensured to the
Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and members of the Administrative
Tribunal. Or else the Administrative Tribunal would cease to
be an equally effective and efficacious substitute for the
High Court and the provisions of the impugned Act would be
rendered invalid. I am, therefore, of the view that the
appointment of Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and administrative
members should be made by the concerned Government only
after consultation with the Chief Justice of India and such
consultation must be meaningful and effective and ordinarily
the recommendation of the Chief Justice of India must be
accepted unless there are cogent reasons, in which event the
reasons must be disclosed to the Chief Justice of India and
his response must be invited to such reasons. There is also
another alternative which may be adopted by the Government
for making appointments of Chairman, Vice Chairmen and mem-
bers and that may be by setting up a High Powered Selection
Committee headed by the Chief Justice of India or a sitting
Judge of the Supreme Court or concerned High Court nominated
by the Chief Justice of
448
India. Both these mOdes of appointment will ensure selection
of proper and competent persons to man the Administrative
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Tribunal and give it prestige and reputation which would
inspire confidence in the public mind in regard to the
competence, objectivity and impartiality of those manning
the Administrative Tribunal. If either of these two modes of
appointment is adopted, it would save the impugned Act from
invalidation. Otherwise, it will be outside the scope of the
power conferred on Parliament under Article 323-A. I would,
however hasten to add that this judgment will operate only
prospectively and will not invalidate appointments already
made to the Administrative Tribunal. But if any appointments
of Vice-Chairmen or administrative members are to be made
hereafter, the same shall be made by the Government in
accordance with either of the aforesaid two modes of ap-
pointment.
I may also add that if the Administrative Tribunal is to
be an equally effective and efficacious substitution for the
High Court on the basis of which alone the impugned Act can
be sustained, there must be a permanent or if there is not
sufficient work, then a Circuit Bench of the Administrative
Tribunal at every place where there is a seat of the High
Court. I would, therefore, direct the Government to set up a
permanent bench and if that is not feasible having regard to
the volume of work, then at least a Circuit Bench of the
Administrative Tribunal wherever there is a seat of the High
Court, on or before 31st March, 1987. That would be neces-
sary if the provisions of the impugned Act are to be sus-
tained. So far as rest of the points dealt with in the
judgment of Ranganath Misra, J. are concerned, I express my
entire agreement with the view taken by him.
RANGANATH MISRA J: The challenge raised to the vires of
the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, (hereinafter re-
ferred to as ’the Act’) in an application under Article 32
of the Constitution and the other connected matters has been
referred to the Constitution Bench for adjudication. Indis-
putably the Act has been framed within the ambit of Article
323A which was brought into the Constitution by the Forty-
Second Amendment Act in 1976. In exercise of power vested
under Section 1(3) of the Act, the Central Government ap-
pointed 1.11.1985 as the date from which the Act would come
into force. Thereupon Sampat Kumar and others (W.P. 12460 of
1985) moved this Court and the connected matters were
brought before this Court or different High Courts which
have since been transferred’ to this Court to be analogously
heard. On 31.10. 1985 a Division Bench of this Court gave
certain interim directions including stay of transfer of the
pending applications under Article 32 which were liable to
be transferred to the Tribunal and also for continuance of
exercise of jurisdiction under Article 32 in regard to
disputes covered under the Act notwithstanding the bar
provided in Section 28.
449
In the writ applications as presented the main challenge
was to the abolition of the Jurisdiction of this Court under
Article 32 in respect of specified service disputes. Chal-
lenge was also raised against the taking away of the juris-
diction of the High Court under Articles 226 and 227. It was
further canvassed that establishment of benches of the
Tribunal at Allahabad, Bangalore, Bombay, Calcutta, Gauhati,
Madras. and Nagpur with the principal seat at Delhi would
still prejudice the parties whose cases were already pending
before the respective High Courts located at places other
than these places and unless at the seat of every High Court
facilities for presentation of applications and for hearing
thereof were provided the parties and their lawyers would be
adversely affected. The interim order made on October 31,
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1985, made provisions to meet the working difficulties.
Learned Attorney General on behalf of the Central Government
assured the Court that early steps would be taken to amend
the law so as to save the jurisdiction under Article 32,
remove other minor anomalies and set up a bench of the
Tribunal at the seat of every High Court. By the Administra-
tive Tribunals (Amendment) Ordinance, 1986, these amendments
were brought about and by now an appropriate Act of Parlia-
ment has replaced the Ordinance. Most of the original
grounds of attack thus do not survive and the contentions
that were canvassed at the hearing by the counsel appearing
for different parties are these
(1) Judicial review is a fundamental aspect of
the basic structure of our Constitution and
bar of the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Articles 226 and 227 as contained in
Section 28 of the Act cannot be sustained;
(2) Even if the bar of jurisdiction is upheld,
the Tribunal being a substitute of the High
Court, its constitution and set up should be
such that it would in fact function as such
substitute and become an institution in which
the parties could repose faith and trust;
(3) Benches of the Tribunal should not only be
established at the seat of every High Court
but should be available at every place where
the High Courts have permanent benches;
(4) So far as Tribunals set up or to
be set up by the Central or the State Govern-
ments are concerned, they should have no
jurisdiction in respect of employees of the
Supreme Court or members of the subordinate
judiciary and employees working in such estab-
lishments inasmuch as exercise of jurisdiction
of the Tribunal would interfere with the
control absolutely vested in
450
the respective High Courts in regard to the
judicial and other subordinate officers under
Article 235 of the Constitution.
After oral arguments were over, learned Attorney Gener-
al, after obtaining instructions from the Central Government
filed a memorandum to the effect that section 2(q) of the
Act would be suitably amended so as to exclude officers and
servants in the employment of the Supreme Court and members
and staff of the subordinate judiciary from the purview of
the Act. In the same memorandum it has also been said that
Government would arrange for sittings of the benches of the
Tribunal at the seat or seats of each High Court on the
basis that ’sittings’ will include ’circuit sittings’ and
the details thereof would be worked out by the Chairman or
the Vice-Chairman concerned.
With these concessions made by the learned Attorney
General, only two aspects remain to be dealt with by us,
namely, those covered by the first and the second conten-
tions.
Strong reliance was placed on the judgment of Bhagwati,
J (one of us---presently the learned Chief Justice) in
Minerva Mills Ltd. & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors., [1981] 1
SCR 206, 287 where it was said:
"The power of judicial review is an integral
part of our constitutional system and without
it, there will be no Government of laws and
the rule of law would become a teasing illu-
sion and a promise of unreality. I am of the
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view that if there is one feature of our
Constitution which, more than any other, is
basic and fundamental to the maintenance of
democracy and the rule of law, it is the power
of judicial review and it is unquestionably,
to my mind, part of the basic structure of the
Constitution. Of course, when 1 say this I
should not be taken to suggest that, however
effective alternative institutional mechanisms
or arrangements for judicial review cannot be
made by Parliament. But what I wish to empha-
sise is that judicial review is a vital prin-
ciple of our Constitution and it cannot be
abrogated without affecting the basic struc-
ture of the Constitution. If by a constitu-
tional amendment, the power of judicial review
is taken away and it is provided that the
validity of any law made by the Legislature
shall not be liable to be called in question
on any ground, even if it is outside the
legislative competence of the Legislature or
is violative of any
451
fundamental rights, it would be nothing short
of subversion of the Constitution, for it
would make a mockery of the distribution of
legislative powers between the Union and the
States and render the fundamental rights
meaningless and futile. So also if a constitu-
tional amendment is made which has the effect
of taking away the power of judicial review."
Article 32 was described by Dr. Ambedkar in course of
the debate in the Constituent Assembly as the ’soul’ and
’heart’ of the Constitution and it is in recognition of this
position that though Article 323A(2)(d) authorised exclusion
of jurisdiction under Article 32 and the original Act had in
Section 28 provided for it, by amendment jurisdiction under
Article 32 has been left untouched. The Act thus saves
jurisdiction of this Court both under Article 32 in respect
of original proceedings as also under Article 136 for enter-
taining appeals against decisions of the Tribunal on grant
of Special Leave. Judicial review by the apex court has thus
been left in tact.
The question that arises, however, for consideration is
whether bar of jurisdiction under Articles 226 and 227
affects the provision for judicial review. The right to move
the High Court in its writ jurisdiction--unlike the one
under Article 32, is not a fundamental right. Yet, the High
Courts, as the working experience of three and a half dec-
ades shows have in exercise of the power of judicial review
played a definite and positive role in the matter of preser-
vation of fundamental and other rights and in keeping admin-
istrative action under reasonable control. In these thirty-
six years following the enforcement of the Constitution, not
only has India’s population been more than doubled but also
the number of litigations before the courts including the
High Courts has greatly increased. As the pendency in the
High Courts increased and soon became the pressing problem
of backlog, the nation’s attention came to be bestowed on
this aspect. Ways and means to relieve the High Courts of
the load began to engage the attention of the Government at
the Centre as also in the various States. As early as 1969,
a Committee was set up by the Central Government under the
chairmanship of Mr. Justice Shah of this Court to make
recommendations suggesting ways and means for effective,
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expeditious and satisfactory disposal of matters relating to
service disputes of Government servants as it Was found that
a sizable portion of pending litigations related to this
category. The Committee recommended the setting up of an
independent Tribunal to handle the pending cases before this
Court and the High Courts. While this report was still
engaging the attention of Government, the Administrative
Reforms Commission also took note of the situation and
recommended the setting up of Civil Services Tribunals to
deal with appeals of Government servants against discipli-
nary action. In certain States, Tribunals of this type came
into existence and started functioning. But the Central
452
Government looked into the matter further as it transpired
that the major chunk of service litigation related to mat-
ters other than disciplinary action. In May 1976, a Confer-
ence of Chief Secretaries of the States discussed this
problem. Then came the Forty-Second Amendment of the Consti-
tution bringing in Article 323A which authorised Parliament
to provide by law "for the adjudication or trial by adminis-
trative tribunals of disputes and complaints with respect to
recruitment and conditions of service of persons appointed
to public services and posts in connexion with the affairs
of the Union or of any State or of any local or other au-
thority within the territory of India or under the control
of the Government of India or of any Corporation owned or
controlled by the Government." As already stated this Arti-
cle envisaged exclusion of the jurisdiction of all courts,
except the jurisdiction of. the Supreme Court under Article
136, with respect to the disputes or complaints referred to
in clause (1). Though the Constitution now contained the
enabling power, no immediate steps were taken to set up any
Tribunal as contemplated by Article 323A. A Constitution
Bench of this Court in K.K. Dutta v. Union of India, [1980]
3 SCR 811 observed:
"There are few other litigative areas than
disputes between members of various services
inter se, where the principle that public
policy requires that all litigation must have
an end can apply with greater force. Public
servants ought not to be driven or required to
dissipate their time and energy in court-room
battles. Thereby their attention is diverted
from public to private affairs and their inter
se disputes affect their sense of oneness
without which no institution can function
effectively. The constitution of Service
Tribunals by State GOvernments with an apex
Tribunal at the Centre which in the generality
of the cases, should be the final arbiter of
controversies relating to conditions of serv-
ice, including the vexed question of seniori-
ty, may save the courts from the avalanche of
writ petitions and appeals in service matters.
The proceedings of such Tribunals can have the
merit Of informality and if they will not be
tied down to strict rules of evidence, they
might be able to produce solutions which will
satisfy many...."
In the meantime the problem of the backlog of cases in
the High Courts becomes more acute and pressing and came to
be further discussed in Parliament and in conferences and
seminars. Ultimately in January 1985, both Houses of Parlia-
ment passed the Bill and with the Presidential assent on
27th February, 1985, the law enabling the long awaited
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Tribunal to be constituted came into existence. As already
noticed, the Central Government notified the Act to come
into force with effect from 1.11.1985.
453
Exclusion of the jurisdiction of the High Courts in
service matters and its propriety as also validity have thus
to be examined in the background indicated above. We have
already seen that judicial review by this Court is left
wholly unaffected and thus there is a forum where matters of
importance and grave injustice can be brought for determina-
tion or rectification. Thus exclusion of the jurisdiction of
the High Court does not totally bar judicial review. This
Court in Minerva Mills’ case did point out that "effective
alternative institutional mechanisms or arrangements for
judicial review" can be made by Parliament. Thus it is
possible to set up an alternative institution in place of
the High Court for providing judicial review. The debates
and deliberations spread over almost two decades for explor-
ing ways and means for relieving the High Courts of the load
of backlog of cases and for assuring quick settlement of
service disputes in the interest of the public servants as
also the country cannot be lost sight of while considering
this aspect. It has not been disputed before us--and perhaps
could not..have been--that the Tribunal under the scheme of
the Act would take over a part of the existing backlog and a
share of the normal load of the High Courts. The Tribunal
has been contemplated as a substitute and not as supplemen-
tal to the High Court in the scheme of administration of
justice. To provide the Tribunal as an additional forum from
where parties could go to the High Court would certainly
have been a retrograde step considering the situation and
circumstances to meet which the innovation has been brought
about. Thus barring of the jurisdiction of the High Court
can indeed not be a valid ground of attack.
What, however, has to be kept in view is that the Tribu-
nal should be a real substitute of the High Court--not only
in form and de jure but in content and de facto. As was
pointed out in Minerva’s Mills, the alternative arrangement
has to be effective and efficient as also capable of uphold-
ing the constitutional limitations. Article 16 of the Con-
stitution guarantees equality of opportunity in matters of
public employment. Article 15 bars discrimination on grounds
of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth. The touch-
stone of equality enshrined in Article 14 is the greatest of
guarantees for the citizen. Centering around these articles
in the Constitution a service jurisprudence has already
grown in this country. Under Sections 14 and 15 of the Act
all the powers of the Courts except those of this Court in
regard to matters specified therein vest in the
Tribunal--either Central or State. Thus the Tribunal is the
substitute of the ’High Court and is entitled to exercise
the powers thereof.
The High Courts have been functioning over a century and
a quarter and until the Federal Court was established under
the Government of India Act, 1935, used to be the highest
courts within their respective jurisdiction subject to an
appeal to the Privy Council in a limited category of cases.
In this
454
long period of about six scores of years, the High Courts
have played their role effectively, efficiently as also
satisfactorily. The litigant in this country has seasoned
himself to look upto the High Court as the unfailing protec-
tor of his person, property and honour. The institution has
served its purpose very well and the common man has thus
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come to repose great confidence therein. Disciplined, inde-
pendent and trained Judges well-versed in law and working
with all openness in an unattached and objective manner have
ensured dispensation of justice over the years. Aggrieved
people approach the Court the social mechanism to act as the
arbiter--not under legal obligation but under the belief and
faith that justice shall be done to them and the State’s
authorities would implement the decision of the Court. It
is, therefore, of paramount importance that the substitute
institution--the Tribunal--must be a worthy successor of the
High Court in all respects. That is exactly what this Court
intended to convey when it spoke of an alternative mechanism
in Minerva Mills’ case.
Chapter II of the Act deals with establishment of Tribu-
nals and Benches thereof. Section 4 provides for establish-
ment while Section 5 deals with composition of the Tribunal
and Benches thereof. Section 6 lays down the qualifications
of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and members. So far as the Chair-
man is concerned, sub-section (1) requires that he should
be or have been--
(a) a Judge of a High Court; or
(b) has for at least two years, held office as
Vice-Chairman; or
(c) has, for at least two years, held the post
of a Secretary to the Government of India or
any other post under the Central or a State
Government carrying a scale of pay which is
not less than that of a Secretary to the
Government of India.
Sub-section (2) prescribing the qualification for Vice-
Chairman provides that he should be or have been-
(a) a Judge of a High Court; or
(b) for at least two years, held the post of a
Secretary to the Government of India or any
other post under the Central or a State Gov-
ernment carrying a scale of pay which is not
less than that of a Secretary to the Govern-
ment of India; or
(bb) for at least five years, held the post of
an Additional
455
Secretary to Government of India or any other
post carrying equivalent pay; or
(c) for a period of not less than three years
held office as a judicial member of an Admin-
istrative Tribunal.
Sub-section (3) prescribes the qualification of a judi-
cial member and requires that: (a) he should be or should
have been or qualified to be a Judge of a High Court; or (b)
has been a member of the Indian Legal Service and has held a
post in Grade I of that service for at least three years.
Sub-section (3-A) provides the qualification for ap-
pointment as administrative member and lays down that such
person should have, for at least two years, held the post of
an Additional Secretary to the Government of India or any
other post under the Central or a State Government carrying
a scale of pay not less than that of an Additional Secretary
to Government of India; or (b) has, for at least three
years, held the post of a Joint Secretary to the Government
of India or any other post under the Central or the State
Government carrying a scale of pay which is not less than
that of a Joint Secretary to Government of India. So far as
the Chairman is concerned, we are of the view that ordinari-
ly a retiring or retired Chief Justice of a High Court or
when such a person is not available, a Senior Judge of
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proved ability either in office or retired should be ap-
pointed. That office should for all practical purposes be
equated with the office of Chief Justice of a High Court. We
must immediately point out that we have no bias, in any
manner, against members of the Service. Some of them do
exhibit great candour, wisdom, capacity to deal with intri-
cate problems with understanding, detachment and objective-
ness but judicial discipline generated by experience and
training in an adequate dose is, in our opinion, a necessary
qualification for the post of Chairman. We agree that a
Vice-Chairman with these qualifications and experience of
two years may be considered for appointment as Chairman but
in order that the Tribunal may be acceptable to the liti-
gants who are themselves members of the various services,
section 6(1)(c) should be omitted. We do not want to say
anything about Vice-Chairman and members dealt with in sub-
sections (2), (3) or (3A) because so far as their selection
is concerned, we are of the view that such selection when it
is not of a sitting Judge or retired Judge of a High Court
should be done by a high powered committee with a sitting
Judge of the Supreme Court to be nominated by the Chief
Justice of India as its Chairman. This will ensure selection
of proper and competent people to man these high offices of
trust and help to build up reputation and acceptability.
Once the qualifications indicated for appointment of Chair-
man are adopted and the manner of selection of Vice-Chairman
and members is followed, we are inclined to think that the
manning of the Tribunal would be proper and conducive to
appropriate functioning. We
456
do not propose to strike down the prescriptions containing
different requirements but would commend to the Central
Government to take prompt steps to bring the provisions in
accord with what we have indicated. We must state that
unless the same be done, the constitution of the Tribunal as
a substitute of the High Court would be open to challenge.
We hasten to add that our judgment shall operate prospec-
tively and would not affect appointments already made to the
offices of Vice-Chairman and Member--both administrative
and judicial.
Section 8 of the Act prescribes the term of office and
provides that the term for Chairman, Vice-Chairman or mem-
bers shall be of five years from the date on which he enters
upon his office or until he attains the age of 65 in the
case of Chairman or Vice-Chairman and 62 in the case of
member, whichever is earlier. The retiring age of 62 or 65
for the different categories is in accord with the pattern
and fits into the scheme in comparable situations. We would,
however, like to indicate that appointment for a term of
five years may occasionally operate as a dis-incentive for
well-qualified people to accept the offer to join the Tribu-
nal. There may be competent people belonging to younger age
groups who would have more than five years to reach the
prevailing age of retirement. The fact that such people
would be required to go out on completing the five year
period but long before the superannuation age is reached is
bound to operate as a deterrent. Those who come to be Chair-
man, Vice-Chairman or members resign appointments, if any,
held by them before joining the Tribunal and, as such, there
would be no scope for their return to the place or places
from where they come. A five year period is not a long one.
Ordinarily some time would be taken for most of the members
to get used to the service-jurisprudence and when the period
is only five years, many would have to go out by the time
they are fully acquainted with the law and have good grip
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over the job. To require retirement at the end of five years
is thus neither convenient to the person selected for the
job nor expedient to the scheme. At the hearing, learned
Attorney-General referred to the case of a member of the
Public Service Commission who is appointed for a term and
even suffers the disqualification in the matter of further
employment. We do not think that is a comparable situation.
On the other hand, membership in other high-powered Tribu-
nals like the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal or the Tribunal
under the Customs Act can be referred to. When amendments to
the Act are undertaken, this aspect of the matter deserves
to be considered, particularly because the choice in that
event would be wide leaving scope for proper selection to be
made.
We hope and trust that within a reasonable period not beyond
31st
457
March, 1987, the amendments indicated shall be brought about
so as to remove the defects found in the Act.
Khalid, Oza and Dutt 3.3.
We have read both the Judgments just delivered--the main
judgment of learned Brother Ranganath Misra and the other of
Hon’ble the Chief Justice. We agree with both.
P.S.S.
458