Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P. JAGDISH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/12/1996
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
PATTANAIK, J .
Leave granted.
The short question that arises in this appeal is
whether the Tribunal to was justified in directing the
appellant to fix up the pay of respondents in the cadre of
Head Clerk by notionally holding that they are also eligible
to receive the special pay of Rs. 35/- pre month in the
lower post even though factually the respondents were not
getting the said special pay.
The short facts leading to the filing of the
application before the Tribunal by the respondents are that
they were working they were promoted to the post of Head
Clerks. Under the orders of the competent authority 10% of
the posts of Senior Clerks were identified to be the posts
involving arduous nature of work and those of the incumbents
who were being posted to those identified posts were getting
special pay of Rs. 35/- pre month. This was the state of
affairs prior to 1.1.1986. Usually on the basis of seniority
amongst the Senior Clerks, postings were being made to the
identified posts carrying a special pay of Rs. 35/- per
month. On account of restructuring of the cadre a large
number of vacancies occurred in the category of Head Clerk.
The respondents who were not working against the identified
posts of Senior Clerks were promoted as Head Clerks w.e.f.
1.1.1984 the date from which there had been upgradation to
the posts of Head Clerks and necessarily while fixing of the
pay the category of Head Clerks, the pay which they were
drawing as Senior Clerks was taken into account. While the
respondents were thus promoted to the post of Head Clerk,
their juniors who were posted against the identified posts
of Senior Clerks used to get Rs. 35/- as special pay until
they were promoted as Head Clerks. So far as those persons
are concerned on being promoted as Head Clerks, the special
pay which they are drawing in the category of Senior Clerks
was they into account in fixing their pay in the promoted
category of Head Clerks. Consequentially even though the
respondents were promoted to the post of Head Clerks
earlier, they were found to be getting less pay their
juniors who were promoted as Head Clerks later and who had
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been posed against the indentified posts of Senior Clerks
prior to their promotion. Some of these persons similarly
situated as the respondents who were promoted as Head Clerks
before, have not been posted against any identified post of
Senior Clerk and therefore were not getting the special pay
of Rs. 35/- per month, approached the Tribunal by filing OA
No. 162 of 1990 claiming that their pay should be refixed in
the cadre of Head Clerks on the notional basis that they
were drawing Rs. 35/- per month as special pay in the cadre
of Senior Clerk. The Tribunal, however, did not grant the
relief as claimed but taking into account the fact that when
persons junior to the applicants in the category of Senior
Clerks on being promoted were getting a higher salary than
those who had been promoted earlier, on equitable
consideration the salary of the earlier promoted Head Clerks
should be stepped up so that they would not get less than
what their juniors are getting. This judgment of the
Tribunal in OA No. 192/90 has become final as the special
leave petition against the same stood dismissed. When the
respondents in the present appeal made a similar claim
before the Tribunal, the Tribunal following its earlier
decision dated 4.3.1993 in OA No. 192/90 directed that the
salary of the respondents should be stepped up, so that,
they would not get less than their juniors in the category
of Senior Clerks are getting on being promoted to the cadre
of Head Clerk Challenging the aforesaid direction of the
Tribunal the present appeal has been preferred.
The learned counsel for the appellant contends that the
special pay of Rs. 35/- per month being attached to the
specified post in the cadre of Senior Clerk only those of
the Senior Clerks would get the same who were posted against
those specified posts. That being the position and the
respondents having not been posted on thous posts question
of Rs. 35/- per month on account of the fact that they had
been not posted against the identified posts of Senior
Clerks carrying Rs. 35/- as special pay would not be
entitled to get there pay fixed in the cadre of Head Clerks
by following the principle of stepping up when their juniors
who had been getting the special pay of Rs. 35/- per month
as Senior Clerks on being posted against the identified
posts on promotion gets a higher amount as Head Clerks and
the principle of stepping up will not be applicable of
stepping up will not be applicable. According to the learned
counsel the Tribunal committed serious error in directing
the stepping up of the salary of the respondents in the pay
scale meant Head Clerks solely on the ground their juninors
are getting a higher salary.
The question for consideration, therefore, would be:
(1) whether the respondents who had not been posted against
the identified posts carrying a special pay of Rs. 35/- per
month can even claim fixation of their pay with Rs. 35/- per
month in the cadre of Senior Clerks even on notional basis.
(2) Whether the respondents can claim for stepping up of
their pay in the promoted cadre of Head Clerks when their
juniors who were later promoted were fixed up at a higher
slab in the cadre of Head Clerks taking into account the
special pay which they are drawing in the lower category of
Senior Clerks.
So far as the first question is concerned, it is to be
seen that a special pay of Rs. 35/- per month is attached to
certain identified posts in the category of Senior Clerks
and, therefore, only those who would be posted against those
identified posts can claim the said special pay. The
respondents who had already been promoted to the higher
category of Head Clerks cannot claim that special pay even
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on notional basis merely because their juniors in the cadre
of Senior Clerks were given that special pay. It is an
additional pay attached to the post and any incumbent who
occupies the post can only claim the same. The claim of the
respondents on this score, therefore, is not sustainable in
law and the Tribunal has rightly rejected the said claim of
the respondents.
So far as the second question is concerned, it depends
upon the applicability of the principle of stepping up.
Admittedly, the respondents had been promoted earlier
juniors who were continuing as Senior Clerks against the
identified posts carrying special pay of Rs. 35/- per month
on being promoted to the post of Head Clerks later than the
respondents got their pay fixed at a higher level than the
respondents. Under the provisions of Fundamental Rules to
remove the anamoly of a Government servant promoted or
appointed to a higher post earlier drawing a lower rate of
pay in that post then another Government servant junior to
him in the lower grade and promoted or appointed
subsequently to the higher post, the principle of steeping
up of the pay is applied. In such cases the pay of the
senior officer in the higher post is required to be stepped
up to a figure equal to the pay as fixed the junior officer
in that higher post. The stepping up is required to be done
with effect from the date of promotion or appointment of the
junior officer. On refixation of the pay of the senior
officer would be drawn on completion of the requisite
qualifying service with effect from the date of the
refixation of pay. This principle becomes applicble when the
junior officer and the senior officer belong to the same
category and the post from which they have been promoted and
the promoted cadre the junior officer on being promoted
later than the senior officer gets a higher pay. This being
the principle of stepping up contained in the Fundamental
Rules and admittedly the respondents being seniors to
several other Senior Clerks and the respondents having been
promoted earlier than many of their juniors who were
promoted later to the post of Head Clerks, the principle of
stepping up should be made applicable to the respondents
with effect from the data their juniors in the erstwhile
cadre of Senior Clerks get promoted to the cadre of Head
Clerks and their pay was fixed at a higher slab that of the
respondent. The stepping up should be done in such a way
that the anamoly of juniors getting higher salary then the
seniors in the promoted category of Head Clerk would be
removed and the pay of the seniors like the respondents
would be stepped up to a figure equal to the pay as fixed
for their junior officer in the higher post of Head Clerk.
In fact the Tribunal by the impugned order has directed to
apply to apply the principle of stepping up and we see no
infirmity with the same direction subject to the aforesaid
clarifications. This principle of stepping up which we have
upheld would prevent violation of equal pay for equal work
but grant of consequential benefit of the difference of
salary would not be correct for the reason that the
respondents had not worked in the post to which 35% special
pay was attached in the lower cader. But by reason of
promotion the promotee-juniors who worked on the said posts,
in fact, performed the hard duties and earned special pay.
Directions to pay arrears world be deleterious to
inculcation of efficiency in service. All persons who were
indolent to share higher responsibilities in lower posts, on
promotion would get accelerated arrears that would be
deleterious to efficiency of service. Therefore, though
direction to step up the pay on notional basis is consistent
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with Article 39(d) of the Constitution, it would be
applicable only perspectively from the data of the promotion
and the fixation of the scale stepping up of scale of pay
would be perspective to calculate future increments on the
scale of pay in promotional post only perspectively. The
appeal is dismissed but in the circumstances there would not
no order as to costs.