Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR.BALIAR SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/11/1997
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, D.P. WADHWA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 25TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mrs.Justice Sujata V.Manohar
Hon’ble Mr.Justice D.P.Wadhwa
A.S.Nambiar, Sr.Adv., (Ms.Kanupriya Mittal, Ms.Sushma Suri)
Ads. for Arvind Kr.Sharma, Adv. with him for the appellants.
Janaranjan Das, Adv. for the Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
Delay Condoned.
Leave granted.
The respondent initially served under the Government of
Orissa from 14.4.1962 to 11.5.1972. Thereafter he served
with the Government of Chandigarh from 15.5.1972 to
29.12.75. The respondent joined the railways and was
appointed as plastic surgeon at Byculla Hospital, Central
Railway, on 31.12.1975. He sought voluntary retirement and
was allowed to voluntarily retire from his service with the
Central Railway on 1.4.1987. He would have retired on
superannuation on 26.11.1991. The respondent thus served as
followed:
------------------------------------------------------------
S.No. SERVICE RENDERED WITH YEARS MONTHS DAYS
------------------------------------------------------------
1. Service rendered in 10 years 0 28
Government of Orissa
------------------------------------------------------------
2. Service rendered in 3 years 7 14
the Government of
Chandigarh
------------------------------------------------------------
3. Service rendered in 11 years 2 9
the Railways
------------------------------------------------------------
Total 24 10 21
------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to his voluntary retirement, he had sought a
clarification as to whether his past services with the
Government of Orissa and the Government of Chandigarh would
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court for the purpose of pensionary benefits. By order dated
29.5.1985, the appellants informed the respondent that his
past services with the Governments of Orissa and Chandigarh
would count as qualifying service to pensionary benefits. He
would also get an additional five years’ service on account
of voluntary retirement; and as a result his total service
for pensionary benefits would be 29 years, !1 months and 9
days.
The respondent was accordingly granted retirement
benefits. He has, however, been denied complimentary railway
passes on retirement on the ground that his service with the
railways was of less than 20 years and hence he was not
eligible for complimentary railway passes on retirement. The
respondent moved the Central Administrative Tribunal by
filing O.A.No.530 of 1996 claiming a right to complimentary
railway passes. His application has been allowed by the
Central Administration Tribunal, Bombay Bench, Hence, the
Union of India through the General Manager, Central Railway,
has filed the present appeal.
Under Railway Services Pension Rules, Chapter III deals
with qualifying service. Under Rule 22, the service of a
railway servant which shall qualify for pensionary benefits
includes, inter alia, service rendered under the Central
Government in a Civil Ministry or Department or a civilian
employee under the Ministry of Defence including the
Ordanance Factories, or a state Government before transfer
to railways. In accordance with the provisions of Rule 27,
such service will count for the purpose of pension. Rule 27
prescribes the detail of such counting of service for
various kinds of pensionary benefits. Th e respondent has
been given the benefit of counting his previous service with
the State of Orissa sand with the Government of Chandigarh
as qualifying service for the purpose of his retirement
benefits under the said Pension Rules. Under the Scheme of
voluntary Retirement for railway employees which has been
set out in the Railway Board’s letter dated 9.11.1977 it si
provided that in respect of those employees who are allowed
to retire voluntarily under the terms of that scheme,
weightage of upto five years would be given as an addition
to the qualifying service in the case of those who are
governed by Railway Pension Rules. Accordingly, the
respondent has also been given an addition of five years’
service for the purpose of his retirement benefits.
It is the contention of the respondent that the service
which has been counted as a part of his qualifying service
and the weightage of five years’ service which has been
given to him on account of his voluntary retirement, should
also be taken into account for the purpose of giving him
complimentary railway passes after retirement. The Rules for
grant of complimentary railway passes are, however, a
completely different set of Rules unconnected with the Rules
relating to pension or voluntary retirement. Railway Servant
(Pass) Rules, 1986, have been framed in exercise of power
conferred by the proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution
and they were in force at the time when the respondent
retired. These Rules have undergone several amendments. At
the time when the respondent retired, the relevant
provisions of Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986 were as
follows:
"Rule 8: Post-retirement Pass:-
(1) A post-retirement pass may be
issued to a railway servant after
retirement of after he ceases to be
a railway servant.
(2) The category of railway
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servants, the circumstances and the
conditions subject to which a pass
under sub-rule (1) may be issued
shall be as specified in Schedule
IV.
Schedule IV which deals with post-retirement
complimentary pass is as follows:
-----------------------------------------------------------
Category Number of Conditions for Other
passes issue of post- facilities
admissi- retirement
ble in complimentary
one year pass
------------------------------------------------------------
Groups: 2 sets ..... .....
A & B
(a) With 20 years
service on
Railways and above
but less than 25
years.
------------------------------------------------------------
(b) With 25 years 3 sets ..... ......
service on Rail-
ways and above
------------------------------------------------------------
C 1 set ..... ......
(a) With 20
years service in
the Railways and
above but less
than 25 years.
------------------------------------------------------------
(b) With 25 years 2 sets .... ......
service with
Railways and
above
------------------------------------------------------------
D 1 set, in ..... ......
(a) With 25 years alternate
services in years
Railways and
above
------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Less than 25 NIL
years Services
------------------------------------------------------------
Under Schedule IV the category of persons who are
eligible for post-retirement complimentary pass consists of
those with 20 years of service on railway and above but less
than 25 years or with 25 years of service on railways and
above. Each of the categories must have the specified number
of years’ service on railways. There is no provision in the
Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986 for counting service in
any other organisation, the State Government or the Central
Government for the purpose of railway passes. a railways
servant under the Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986 is
defined under Rule 2(h) to mean "a person who is a member of
the service or holds a post under the administrative control
of Railway Board and includes a person who holds post in the
Railway Board. Persons lent from a service or a pst which is
not under the administrative control of the Railway Board to
a service or post which is under such administrative control
do not come within the scope of this definition......".
Under the Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986 the service
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which is counted for the purpose of grant of complimentary
passes on retirement of a railway servant is service on the
railways alone. The respondent who had served in the
railways only for 11 years, 2 months and 9 days, therefore,
pass not qualify for complimentary railway on retirement
since he has to his credit railway service of less than 20
years.
The respondent contended that the weightage of five
years’ service given to persons retiring voluntarily should
also be given for the purposes of complementary railway
passes after retirement. He has drawn our attention to
clause 9 of the Railway Board letter of 9.11.1977 which
provides that the weightage of five years given year the
voluntary retirement scheme will count towards post-
retirement passes. Unfortunately for the respondent, even if
he is given weightage of five years, his 11 years’ service
with the railways become sixteen years’ service. He still
ralls short of 20 years’. service which is required before
he can obtain complimentary railway passes after retirement.
The Tribunal has relied heavily upon a judgment of
Central Administrative Tribunal, Jodhpur Bench in the case
of Jagdishwer Bhatt v. Union of Indra ([1996] 34 ATC 92)
which was a similar case of a Divisional Medical Officer in
the railway who retired without completing 20 years of
service in the railways. While the Tribunal had granted him
the benefit of complimentary passes after retirement, in
appeal, this Court by its judgment and order dated 24.2.1997
(S.L.P.(C) NO.21339/96, Union of India v. Jagdishwer Bhatt)
has set aside the order of the Tribunal. This Court had held
that it is ncessary to have a minimum 20 years of actual
service in the railways before a person qualified for
complimentary passes on retirement. It has held that the
extension of length of service on the basis of Rule 2423-A
(C.S.R. 404-P) for the purpose of superannuation pension is
not available for counting service in the railways for
obtaining complimentary passes after retirement. What is
required to be counted is actual service in the railways.
Far from helping the respondent this judgment supports the
view which we have taken. The provisions of other Rules
cannot be imported into Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986
unless these Rules so provide or unless any of the other
Rules so provide.
It was also contended by the respondent that Railway
Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986 were not in existence when he
joined the railways and, therefore, these Rules cannot be
applied to him. However, when a pension joins a Government
service such as the railways, he knows that his service
conditions are liable to change either by amendment or
addition of statutory Rules and other administrative
instruction. He will be government by the Rules in force at
the time when he retires. He acquires no vested rights by
reason of the Rules which were in force at the time when he
joined the Government services.
The respondent also contended that in the case of other
officers who have retired with less than 20 years of railway
service, the Railway Board had relaxed the Rules in order to
grant complimentary railway passes to these officers after
retirement. His case was also similarly recommended but the
Railway Board has declined to relax the Rules in his favour.
Looking to the Railway Servant (Pass) Rules, 1986, and the
actual years of service rendered by the respondent with the
railways, this is not a fit case where one can recommend any
relaxation of Rules by the Railway Board assuming that the
Railway Board has such power to relax the Rules. Learned
counsel for the appellants has stated before us that in view
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of the fact that the respondent took voluntary retirement,
and the railways lost many years of service of the
respondent, the Railway Board did not consider this a fit
case for relaxation of Fuels. The respondent who retired
voluntarily on 1.4.1987 would have otherwise retired in the
year 1991. The Railway Board applied is mind to the request
and has refused to exercise its discretion, even if we
assume that the Railway Board had the power to relax the
Rules. Hence this submission also has no merit.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed and the impugned
order of the Tribunal is set aside. The application filed by
the respondent before the Tribunal is dismissed. There will,
however, be no order as to costs.