Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WEST BENGAL STATE ELECTRICITY BOARD & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DESH BANDHU GHOSH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/02/1985
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MISRA, R.B. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 722 1985 SCR (2)1014
1985 SCC (3) 116 1985 SCALE (1)297
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1571 (61,98,109,110)
R 1987 SC 111 (4)
F 1988 SC 286 (5)
F 1991 SC 101 (6,20,45,48,84,172,182,223,263
ACT:
Administrative Law-
West Bengal State Electricity Board Regulation
34-Regulation conferred full power on employer to
terminate services of permanent employee by serving 3 months
notice or salary In thereof No guidelines provided for the
exercise of such power-Held. Regulation is arbitrary and
offends Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
First Paragraph of Regulation 34 of West Bengal State
Electricity Board Regulations provides that in case of a
permanents employee his services may be terminated by
serving 3 months notice or on payment of salary for the
corresponding Period in lieu thereof.
The Secretary of the appellant-Board
terminated the services of first respondent,
a permanent employee with immediate effect on payment of
three months’ salary in lieu of three months notice without
giving any reasons under Regulation 34 of the Board’s
Regulations. There was nothing in the order which could
possibly be said to attach any stigma to the respondent The
respondent filed a writ petition in the High Court for
quashing the impugned order. The High Court came to the
conclusion that Regulation 34 was arbitrary in nature and
suffered from the vice of enabling discrimination and
therefore it struck down the first paragraph of Regulation
34 and as a consequence quashed the order terminating the
services of the first respondent.
In an appeal to this Court, the appellant contended
that section 18A and 19 of the Electricity Supply Act laid
down sufficient guidelines for the exercise of the power
under Regulation 34 and in any case the power to terminate
the services of a permanent employee was vested in higher
ranking officials and might be expected to be exercised in a
reasonable way and therefore Regulation 34 did not offend
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Article 14 of the Constitution.
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Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: Article 14 has been interpreted in several
decisions of the Court and conferment and exercise of
arbitrary power on and by the State or its instrumentalities
have been frowned upon and struck down by this Court as
offending Article 14. [1017G]
In the instant case, on the face of it the Regulation
is totally arbitrary and confers on the Board a power which
is capable of vicious discrimination. It is a naked ’hire
and fire’ rule, the time for banishing which altogether from
employer-employee relationship is fast approaching Its only
parallel is to be found in the Henry VIII class so familiar
to administrative lawyers.
[10 1017E-F]
Workman, Hindustan Steel Ltd. v. Hindustan Steel Ltd.,
AIR 1985 SC 251. followed
S. S. Muley v. J. R. D. Tata and Ors., [1979] 2 S. L.
R. 438, approved.
Moti Ram Deka v. North East frontier Railway, AIR
1964, SC 600, referred to.
Manohar p. Kharkhar v. Raghuraj, [1981] II L- L- J.
459, overruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL Appellate JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 562 of
1985 From the Judgment and Order dated the 28th January,
1985 of the Calcutta High Court in F. M. A. T. No. 970 of
1984.
Somnath Chatterjee, H. K Puri for the Appellants.
S. N. Kacker, ,4. K Ganguli for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by:
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J Special leave granted.
The West Bengal State Electricity Board is the
principal appellant in this appeal by special leave which we
have just now granted. The first respondent, a permanent
employee of the West Bengal State Electricity Board, filed
the writ petition out of which the appeal arises in the
Calcutta High Court to quash an order dated march 22, 1984
of the Secretary, West Bengal State Electricity
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Board terminating his services as Deputy Secretary with
immediate effect on payment of three month’s salary in lieu
of three month’s notice. The order gave no reasons for
terminating the services of the respondent and there was
nothing in the order which could possibly be said to attach
any stigma to the respondent. Apparently the order was made
under Regulation 34 of the Board’s regulations which enables
the Board to terminate the services of any permanent
employee ’by serving three months’ notice or on payment of
salary for the corresponding period in lieu there-of’. The
High Court contrasted Regulation 34 with Regulation 33 which
provides for the termination of services of both permanent
and temporary employees of the Board on attaining the age of
superannuation, as a result of the disciplinary action etc.
For the sake of convenience we extract below Regulation 33
and the first paragraph (which alone is relevant) of
Regulation 34:
"33 (1) Unless otherwise specified in the
appointment order in any particular case, the services
of a permanent employee of the Board may be terminated
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without notice- (i) On his attaining the age of
retirement or by reason of a declaration by the
competent medical authority that he is unfit for
further service; or
(ii) as a result of disciplinary action;
(iii) if he remains absent from duty, on leave or
other wise, for a continuous period exceeding 2 years.
(2) In the case of a temporary employee, his service
may be terminated by serving of-
(a) one month’s notice on other side or on payment of‘
a month’s salary in lieu thereof; or
(b) notice on either side for the period specified in
the appointment order or contract or on payment of salary in
lieu thereof, as the case may be.
(c) the service of a temporary employee shall also be
deemed to have been terminated automatically if the period
of extraordinary leave without pay and/or of unauthorized
absence from duties exceeding(s) a maximum period of 90
days.
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"34. in case of a permanent employees, his
services A may be terminated by serving three months’
notice or on payment of salary for the corresponding
period in lieu thereof."
Contrasting Regulations 33 and 34 the High Court came
to the conclusion that Regulation 34 was arbitrary in nature
and suffered from the vice of enabling discrimination. The
High Court, therefore, struck down the first paragraph of
Regulation 34 and as a consequence quashed the order
terminating the services of the first respondent.
The learned counsel for the West Bengal State
Electricity Board submitted that Regulation 34 did not
offend Art. 14 of the Constitution, that sec. 18A and 19 of
the Electricity Supply Act laid down sufficient guidelines
for the exercise of the power under Regulation 34 and in any
case the power to terminate the services of a permanent
employee was vested in higher ranking officials and might be
expected to be exercised in a reasonable way.
We are not impressed with the submission of the
learned counsel for the Board- On the face of it, the
regulation is totally arbitrary and confers on the Board a
power which is capable of vicious discrimination- It is a
naked ’hire and fire’ rule, the time for banishing which
altogether from employer-employee relationship is fast
approaching. Its only parallel is to be found in the Henry
VIII class so familiar to administrative lawyers In Moti Ram
Deka v. North East frontier Railway(l) Rules 148 (3) and 149
(3) of the Indian Railway Establishment Code were challenged
on the ground that they were contrary to Art. 311 (2) of the
Constitution. The challenge was upheld though no opinion was
expressed on the question whether the rule offended art 14
of the Constitution. Since then Art. 14 has been interpreted
in several decisions of this Court and conferment and
exercise of arbitrary power on and by the State or its
instrumentalities have been frowned upon and struck down <
by this court as offending Art. 14. In S. S. Muley v. J.R.
D. T(Tata and Ors.(2) P. B- Sawant, J- of the Bombay High
Court considered at great length Regulation 48 (a) of the
Air India Employee’s Service Regulations which conferred
similar power on the Corporation
(1) AIR 1964, S C. 600.
(2) [1979] 2 S.L.R. 438.
1018
as Regulation 34 confers on the Board in the present case.
The learned judge struck down Regulation 48 (a) and we agree
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with his reasoning and conclusion. In Workman, Hindustan
Steel Ltd. v. Hindustan Steel Ltd.(l) this Court had
occasioned to hold that a Standing Order which conferred
such arbitrary, uncanalised and drastic power to enable the
employer to dispense with an inquiry and to dismiss an
employee, without assigning any reason, by merely stating
that it was expedient and against the interest of the
security to continue to employ the workman was violative of
the basic requirement of natural justice.
The learned counsel for the appellant relied upon
Manohar P. Kharkhar v. Raghuraj(2) to contend that
Regulation 48 of the Air India Employee’s Service
Regulations was valid. It is difficult to agree with the
reasoning of the Delhi High Court that because of the
complexities of modern administration and the unpredictable
exigencies arising in the course of such administration it
is necessary for an employer to be vested with such powers
as those under Regulation 48. We prefer the reasoning of
Sawant, J. Of the Bombay High Court and that of the Calcutta
High Court in the judgment under appeal to the reasoning of
the Delhi High Court. In the result the appeal is dismissed
with costs.
M. L. A. Appeal dismissed.
(1) A.I.R. 1985 S.C. 251
(2) [1981] II L.L.J. 459.
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