Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G.C. GUPTA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N K. PANDEY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/12/1987
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 654 1988 SCR (2) 185
1988 SCC (1) 316 JT 1987 (4) 593
1987 SCALE (2)1314
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1989 SC 278 (21)
ACT:
United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and
Roads Branch) Class Il Rules 1936: Rules 3(b). 5(ii), 17 and
13-Engineers-Seniority and promotion-’Member of service’-Who
is-Seniority to be determined from date employee becomes
’member of service’.
Constitution of lndia 1950: Articles 226 and 136-
Service matters-Inordinate and unexplained delay-Relief not
to be granted-Division Bench deciding that case was barred
by laches and delay-Such decision cannot be reversed by
another Division Bench of same High Court treating the
matter as res integra-Doctrine of stare decisis-
Applicability of.
HEADNOTE:
%
From the year 1942-43, two vacancies in the United
Provinces Service of Engineers, both in the Buildings and
Roads as well as in the Irrigation Department, were reserved
for students of the Thomson College of Civil Engineering,
Roorkee who stood first and second in order of merit in the
final examination of the degree course. These two guaranteed
posts were reserved by a Notification dated August 31, 1942
issued by the then Provincial Government under Rule 6 of the
United Provinces of Engineers Buildings and Roads Branch
Class II Rules, 1936. This reserved quota of two guaranteed
posts was later on increased by the Government to four posts
each year in each of the two branches. This system of direct
recruitment of merit scholars was, however, discontinued by
another Notification dated June 22, 1950.
By a G.O. dated April 19, 1950 the State Government
settled the principle that persons appointed to the
guaranteed posts every year as Engineer students would take
their seniority over persons appointed as temporary
Assistant Engineers in that year. By a subse-
186
quent G.O. dated June 22, 1950 the Government intimated the
Chief Engineer, Building and Roads, that engineer students
who were appointed to the guaranteed posts of temporary
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Assistant Engineers and working in the Buildings and Roads
Branch be absorbed. In the existing permanent vacancies or
those which might arise in the future. By an office
Memorandum dated December 7, 1961 the State Government
brought a change in the method of recruitment of Assistant
Engineers in the U.P. Service of Engineers Building and
Roads Branch, i.e. direct recruitment by competitive
examination through a Public Service Commission from the
year 1961.
The respondents in the appeal (petitioners in the writ
petition) were initially appointed as temporary Assistant
Engineers in the U.P. Service of Engineers (Buildings and
Roads Branch) by the Chief Engineer, PWD between 1947-48
subject to the final approval of the Government. These were
subsequently approved by the Government during 1948-49 in
accordance-with the provisions of Rule 5(i) of the Rules.
Thereafter, on January 20, 1950 the Government in
consultation with the Public Service Commission confirmed
these provisional appointments and these respondents also
passed the requisite test held by the Government. They were
confirmed as permanent Assistant Engineers in permanent
posts in the cadre during 1956-58 and the date of their
confirmation was fixed as April 1, 1956.
The appellants in the appeal (respondent Nos. 3-5 and
7 in the writ petition) were appointed between 1951-52 as
temporary Assistant Engineers against the guaranteed posts
and after completion of the probationary period were
confirmed in 1955, vide Gazette Notification dated October
11, 1955.
Seniority of Appellants 1 to 4 was fixed earlier from
April 1, 1955 whereas seniority of Respondents 1 to 12 was
fixed below them from 1956 treating the date of confirmation
in the service as the date of their becoming members of the
service.
The respondents filed representations before the
Government in 1959-60 for re-determination of the
confirmation as well as conseqential determination of
seniority of the petitioners vis-a-vis the respondents.
Their claim was they having been appointed as Assis-
187
tant Engineers. though temporarily, they became ’members of
the Service’ earlier than the appellants and as such they
were entitled to be placed above the appellants in the
seniority list. In 1960-61 the appellants had been promoted
as appellants Executive Engineers on the basis of seniority
and record of service. However, respondents Nos. 1 to 12 who
later on were also promoted as Officiating Executive
Engineers never filed any representations qua Executive
Engineers and the seniority of the appellants as Executive
Engineers remained unchallenged.
It was only on May 4, 1970 after a lapse of 15 years
that the respondents filed a petition under Art. 226
challenging the order dated October l l, 1955 by which the
appellants were confirmed with effect from April 1, 1955 and
the consequential determination of the inter se seniority
between direct recruits and promotees by the orders dated
July 20, 1956 and May 29, 1961.
A Single Judge of the High Court dismissed the petition
holding that the petitioners were guilty of laches and this
was upheld by a Division Bench in appeal by its Judgment
dated October 26, 1971. The Division Bench, however, under
an impression that the representations made by the
petitioners in regard to their seniority were still pending,
observed that there was no reason to think that the
Government will not decide them fairly and in accodance with
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law.
Factually there was no representations except one (by
D.K. Laraiya a temporary Assistant Engineer appointed to a
guaranteed post) that was pending but pursuant to the
observations of the Division Bench, the Government invited
representations from all the aggrieved persons.
The petitioners accordingly made representations in the
matter of refixation of their inter se seniority and the
Government by its order dated June 29, 1973 rejected all the
representations stating that the question of inter se
seniority of Assistant Engineers had been finally settled
and could not be reopened.
The respondents thereupon filed a fresh writ petition
before the
188
High Court and a Division Bench of the High Court this time
by its judgment dated May 6, 1981 directed issuance of a
writ in the nature of certiorari quashing the impugned
seniority list and a writ in the nature of mandamus
directing the State Government to redetermine the inter se
seniority of Assistant Engineers in the U.P. Service of
Engineers Buildings and Roads Branch Class II.
Allowing the Appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: [Per A.P. Sen, J. Concurring] Temporary Assistant
Engineers were entitled to the benefit of their seniority
reckoned according to the date of the order of appointment
to the Service in terms of r. 23 of the United Provinces
Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Rules,
1936, w.e.f. the date of their absorption into the Service
by the Government in consultation with the Public Service
Commission i.e. from the date from which they became
’Members of the Service’ within the meaning of r. 3(b) of
the Rules. [221 C-D]
Ashok Gulati v. B.S. Jain, [1986] Supp. SCC 597
followed. Baleshwar Das v. State of U.P. [1981] 1 SCR 44
1980 4 CC 226; N.K. Chauhan c. State of Gujarat, [1977] 1 SC
R 1037 and S.B. Patvardhan v. State of Maharashtra, [1977]3
SCR 775, referred to.
2(a) When the decision of the earlier Division Bench
was arrived at keeping in view all the aspects and it was
held that the claim for re-determination of inter se
seniority between direct recruits and promotees could not be
agitated after a lapse of 16 years the later Division Bench
erred in proceeding upon the basis that the matter was still
res integra. 1230F
2(b) Inordinate delay is not merely a factor for the
Court to refuse appropriate relief but also a relevant
consideration for not unsettling settled things. [231B]
Malcom Lawrence Cecil D’Souza v. Union of India & Ors.
[1975] Supp. SCR 409; R.S. Makashi & Ors. v. I.M. Menon &
Ors. [1982] 2 SCR 69; K.R. Mudgal v. R.P. Singh, 1986 4 SCC
531 and
189
Rabindra Nath Bose v. Union of lndia, [19701 2 SCR 697,
referred A to.
3. Respondents Nos. 1 to 12 were disentitled to any
relief under Art. 226 of the Constitution due to inordinate
delay and laches. If the judgment of the High Court were to
be sustained after a lapse of nearly 32 years, it cannot be
gainsaid that the entire structure of the administrative
set-up of the U.P. Service of Engineers, Buildings & Roads
Branch would be upset. [232E]
4. It is still open to the Government to grant the
necessary relief to the sole respondent at present in the
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service others having retired. If he is found suitable for
promotion to a higher post, without disturbing the
appointment, promotion and confirmation of the appellants,
by creation of a supernumerary post. [232G-Hl
5. In legal matters, some degree of certainty is as
valuable a part of justice as perfection. One reason for
consistency is that people often regulate their conduct with
reference to existing rules, which makes it important for
Judges to abide by them. Innovations can be unsettling and
lead to a loss of confidence. [230E]
Dias Jurisprudence 4th Edition p. 286.
6. An earlier decision may be over ruled if the Court
comes to the conclusion that it is manifestly wrong and not
upon a mere suggestion that if the matter was res integra,
the Court on a later occasion would come to a different
conclusion.[230E]
7. It cannot be doubted that an unlimited and perpetual
threat of litigation leads to disorder, sense of insecurity
and uncertainty. May be, there may have been isolated cases
of hardship, but there must be some reservations about
limitation on the Court’s power in the public interest.
Obvious considerations of public policy make it a first
importance that the person aggrieved must take action
requisite effectively to assert his right to that end so
that if the contention can be justified, the Government
service may be disturbed as little as possible.[230H;231A-B]
190
Per B.C. Ray, J: The date of confirmation of the
petitioners Nos. 1 to 12 as permanent Assistant Engineers in
the permanent posts of Assistant Engineer in the United
Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Koads Branchl,
Class 11, was fixed at 1.4.1956. Vide G.O.. dated 29.5.1961,
the orders for inter se seniority exclusively of the
petitioners Nos. l to 12 vis-a-vis 39 others including the
opposite parties Nos. 8 to 13 who were all confirmed as
permanent Assistant Engineers, were issued by the
Government. [198A-B]
The Government, by a Gazette Notification dated
11.10.1955, confirmed the appointments of the opposite
parties Nos. 3 to 5 and 7 in the permanent posts of
Assistant Engineer with effect from April 1, 1955. By office
memorandum dated 20.7.1956, the Government fixed the inter
se seniority of opposite parties Nos. 2 to 7 alongwith 18
other officers who were confirmed as Assistant
Engineers.[199E-F]
Aggrieved by the order of confirmation of the
respondents Nos. 2 to 7, petitioners Nos. 1, 4, 6, 7 and 11
made representations to the Government for re-determination
of the confirmation and consequential determination of the
seniority of the petitioners vis-a-vis the respondents. As
no action was taken by the Government on the representations
above-said, the petitioners Nos. 6, 7 and 11 filed a writ
petition in the High Court in 1970, challenging the order of
confirmation of the respondents and consequential fixation
of seniority on its basis. The writ petition was dismissed
on the sole ground of inordinate delay and laches. Special
Appeal against the order of the High Court filed before a
Division Bench of the High Court was also dismissed with
observations and a direction to the Government to dispose of
the representations of the petitioners. The Government by
its order dated 29.6.1973, rejected, on the ground of delay
and laches, all the representations against fixation of
seniority, whereupon the petitioners filed another writ
petition, claiming relief of re-determination of their
seniority in accordance with the rules, governing the
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services of the United Provinces Service of Engineers Class
II (Buildings and Roads Branch), as there had been no
determination of inter se seniority of the petitioners and
the respondents according to rule 23 of the United Provinces
Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class II
Rules, 1936. The High Court, by its judgment and order dated
May 6, 1981, allowed
191
the writ petition in part, issuing a writ in the nature of
Certiorari quashing the gradation or seniority lists
(annexures 1, 2 and 28 to the writ petition), and a writ in
the nature of mundane,tc commanding the opposite party No.
1, the State (Government to prepare a fresh seniority list
in accordance with law in the light of the observations made
in the judgment, and to take consequential steps thereafter.
Aggrieved by the decision of the High Court, the appellants
appealed to this Court by special leave. [199G-H; 200A-G]
The vital question that required to be considered in
this appeal was what was the yardstick or standard or norm
for determination of the seniority of the respondents who
had been appointed temporary or officiating Assistant
Engineers against temporary posts of the United Provinces
Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class II,
as well as toppers from the Thomson College of Civil
Engineering who were directly appointed some time in 1950
and 1951 on probation against the reserved temporary posts
and confirmed immediately after the expiry of the period of
probation against the permanent posts before the
confirmation of the temporary Assistant Engineers recruited
from the Thomson College of Engineering some time between
1948 and 1950 [205B-D)
The petitioners in the writ petition who were
respondents in the appeal, were initially appointed
temporary Assistant Engineers subject to the final approval
of the Government by the Chief Engineer, P.W.D., between
1947 and 1948. Undoubtedly, these appointments were approved
by the Government between 1948 and 1949 in accordance with
the provisions of Rule S(i) of the United Provinces Service
of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class 11 Rules
1936. Thereafter, the Government, in consultation with the
Public Service Commission, confirmed the provisional
appointments of the petitioners as temporary Assistant
Engineers and these petitioners had also passed the
requisite tests held by the Government. They were confirmed
vide notifications dated 7.11.1956, 19.4.1957 and 14.5.1958.
The date of confirmation of all these petitioners was fixed
as 1.4.1956. The respondents Nos. 3 to 5 and 7, appellants
in the appeal, were appointed between 1951 and 1952 as
temporary Assistant Engineers against guaranteed posts on
probation and after completion of the probationary period
they were confirmed in 1955.
192
Seniority of these appellants Nos. 1 to 4 was fixed earlier
from 1.4.1955, whereas the seniority of the respondents Nos.
1 to 12 was fixed below them from 1956, treating the date of
confirmation in the service as the date of their becoming
members of the service. [206FH; 207A-C]
On a consideration of the letters of provisional
appointments issued by the Chief Engineer, P.W.D., as well
as the sanctions accorded to such appointments by the
Government thereafter and confirmation of the service of the
temporary Assistant Engineers in 1950 after obtaining the
approval of the Public Service Commission and also after the
passing of the tests by the respondents as provided in Rule
18 of the said Rules, it could not but be held that they had
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become appointed in a substantive capacity against temporary
posts of the cadre of Assistant Engineers and as such they
had become members of the service since that date in
accordance with the provisions of Rule 3(b) of the said
Rules. The argument that their appointment being made
against temporary posts and not against permanent posts and
not on probation as well as their not being confirmed and
their confirmation not being notified in the United
Provisions Gazette before 1956, they were not entitled to be
treated as members of the service, being appointed in the
substantive capacity, could not be sustained under any
circumstances. Rule 4 of the Service Rules clearly states
that the cadre of Assistant Engineers will comprise both
permanent and temporary posts and as such the argument that
unless and until the respondents were appointed on probation
against permanent posts and unless they were confirmed, they
could not be treated as members of the service, is wholly
untenable. One can be a member of the service if one is
appointed in a substantive capacity as distinguished from a
fortuitous appointment or on appointment for a fixed tenure
or on a purely temporary basis against a temporary post of
an Assistant Engineer in the cadre. Rule 4 of the Rules
provides that the Government may, subject to the provisions
of Rule 40 of the Civil Services (classification, Control
and Appeal) Rules 1930, increase the strength of the cadre
by creating permanent or temporary posts from time to time
as may be found necessary. So, a cadre post may be either
permanent or temporary and if an engineer is appointed
substantively to a temporary post or a permanent post, he
becomes a member of the service. Therefore, merely because a
Government servant has been appointed to a temporary post
after fulfilment of all the requirements of the Rules for
regular appointment, including consultation with the Public
Service Commission, he
193
cannot be said to be appointed substantively in the
temporary post of the cadre and he cannot be said to be
treated to be not a member of the service under Rule 3(b) of
the Rules for the purpose of determination of seniority
under Rule 23 of the Rules on the mere plea that he has not
been appointed against a permanent post on probation; such a
contention is not tenable. In this case, as already stated,
though initially the appointments of these respondents were
not appointments in accordance with the Rules as they were
appointed not by the Government but by the Chief Engineer,
yet, after the approval of their appointments by the
Government, and also confirmation of their provisional
appointments by the Government after the respondents had
passed all the requisite tests for confirmation, it could
not be questioned that these respondents had not been
appointed in a substantive capacity as they had not been
confirmed by the Government prior to 1961 and their
confirmations had not been published in the U.P. Gazette. It
is pertinent to mention that for an appointment to be an
appointment in a substantive capacity, it is not necessary
that the appointment should be made to a permanent post. If
the appointment is made to a temporary post of long duration
in a department, having both permanent and temporary posts
of a quasi-permanent nature, there is nothing to distinguish
the quality of service between the two. [208F-H; 209A-C;
210B-H; 211A-Bl
There was no rational or legal justification for
preventing the respondents from having their services,
rendered from the date they were appointed in the cadre of
Assistant Engineers in a substantive capacity, reckoned for
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determination of their seniority in service, on the mere
ground that no order of confirmation had been issued by the
Government, as required under Rule 19 of the Rules even
though all the essential requirements for being confirmed
had been clearly fulfilled by the respondents; the
respondents had been duly appointed in a substantive
capacity in the cadre of the service by the Government in
consultation with the United Provinces Public Service
Commission, as required under Rule 5(iii) of the said Rules
as well as after fulfilling the other requirements
stipulated in Rule 19 of the Rules in 1950. The point from
which service is to be counted is the commencement of the
service by the Assistant Engineer which might not have been
a permanent appointment in the beginning, and, in that
sense, might still be temporary but for all other purposes
has been regularised and is fit to be absorbed into
permanent post as and when it is vacant. [211G-H; 212A, D-E]
194
The cadre of the service of the Engineers, as already
held, consisted of both temporary and permanent posts and as
such there can be substantive appointment against a
temporary post of the cadre in accordance with provisions of
the Service Rules. Once a Government servant is appointed in
a substantive capacity against a temporary post of the cadre
after due observance of the requirements as provided in the
Rules, he will be deemed to be a member of the Service in
accordance with the provisions of Rule 3(b) and his
seniority in service shall be determined from the date of
the order of appointment to the service notwithstanding that
no order of confirmation has been made and there has been no
publication of the order of confirmation in the official
gazette. The respondents had been appointed temporarily in
an officiating capacity as Assistant Engineers against
temporary posts and those temporary posts had been continued
for years together and the Government had duly sanctioned
their appointments. The respondents had thus become members
of the United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and
Roads Branch) Class II at least from the date they had been
confirmed in the service by the Government order issued in
May, 1950, and they were entitled to have their seniority
reckoned from that date when they had become regular members
of the service after fulfilling all the requirements of
Rules 18 and 19 of the said Rules. There is the specific
Rule 23, said to be the "mariner’s compass" in determining
the seniority of the members of the service, which provides
for determination of seniority from the date a person has
been substantively appointed and has become a member of the
cadre of service of Assistant Engineers in the United
Provinces Engineering Service (Buildings and Roads Branch)
Class II.[214B-G; 217F-G]
on a due consideration of the relevant Rules,
particularly, Rules 3 (b) and 23 of the Rules, it has
already been held that when an employee has been appointed
substantively to a temporary post in the cadre of service
and has become a member of the service of the Assistant
Engineers in the United Provinces Engineers Service under
the United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and
Roads Branch) Class II Rules, his seniority will be counted
from the date of his becoming a member of the service. It
does not matter whether he has been appointed against the
permanent post and has been duly confirmed in that post.
However the respondents (Petitioners in the writ petition)
could not be given any relief by directing, redetermination
of the seniority of the respondents as well as the
195
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appellants on The ground of unusual laches and delay. The
appellants Nos. 1 to 4 were confirmed in 1955 and their
seniority was determined by the Government order of July 20,
1956, The writ petition which gave rise to this appeal was
moved in 1973, challenging the determination of the
seniority of the appellants. At that time, the appellants
Nos. 1 to 4 were officiating as Superintending Engineers and
the respondents Nos. 2 and 3 were officiating as
Superintending Engineers but were junior to all the four
appellants, and respondents 1 and 4 to 12 were then
Executive Engineers. At present, the appellants Nos. 1, 2
and 3 are permanent Superintending Engineers and officiating
as Additional Chief Engineers. The Appellant No. 4 is also a
permanent Superintending Engineer. At this juncture, if the
seniority of these appellants vis-a-vis the respondents in
the appeal is directed to be determined, it will create much
administrative difficulties and would amount to depriving
the appellants of their valuable rights which have accrued
to them. This Court in Rabindra Nath Bose and Ors. v. Union
of India and Ors.J [1970] 2 SCR 697 observed that the attack
on the seniority list prepared on the basis of the 1952
rules 15 years after the rules were promulgated and effect
given to the seniority list prepared on August 1, 1953,
should not be allowed because of the inordinate delay and
laches in challenging the rules. Similar observations have
been made by this Court in many other cases. [1218B-H;
219A-Dl]
The challenge to the seniority of the appellants in
this case, determined by order dated July 20, 1956, was made
and relief sought of re-determination of the seniority in
1973 i.e. after nearly 17 years. This could not be permitted
as it would amount to unjust deprivation of the rights of
the appellants which have accrued to them in the meantime.
Considering all the aspects, it would be just and proper not
to give any relief to the respondents on the ground of
inordinate delay and laches in challenging in 1973 the
seniority list made in July, 1956. Out of the 12
respondents, 11 were reported to have already retired. Only
one respondent was in service. In these circumstances, the
cause of justice would be served if the authorities
considered the case of the said remaining respondent for
promotion in accordance with law. [220C-D,E,F-G]
Henceforth, the seniority of the employees in the
service in question would be determined from the date when
an employee became a member of the service being appointed
substantively to a post in the cadre of service, no matter
whether the said post was perma-
196
nent or temporary, as held in this case. Appeal allowed.
Judgment of the High Court set aside. [220H; 221A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURlSDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1717 of
1981.
From the Judgment and order dated 6.5.1981 of the
Allahabad High Court in W.P. No. 1080 of 1973.
S.N. Kacker, G.L. Sanghi and R.B. Mehrotra for the
Appellants.
Shanti Bhushan, A.K. Gupta, Brij Bhushan, K.C. Dua,
Gopal Subramaniam, Pradeep Misra, Mrs. S. Dikshit and Sudhir
Kulshreshtha.for the Respondents.
S.S. Khanduja, S.K. Passi, Yashpal Dhingra and Mrs.
Urmiia Kapoor for the Interveners.
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The following Judgments were delivered:
RAY, J. This appeal by special leave arises out of the
judgment and order passed in Civil Miscellaneous Writ
Petition No. 1080 of 1973 by the High Court of Allahabad
delivered on 6th May, 1981. While the writ petition was
allowed in part a writ in the nature of certiorari quashing
the gradation or seniority list annexures 1, 2 and 28 to the
writ petition, was directed to be issued. There was a
further direction for the issue of a writ of mandamus
commanding the opposite party No. 1, the State Government to
prepare a fresh seniority list in accordance with law in the
light of the observations made in the said judgment, within
a period of three months and thereafter to take other
consequential steps.
The crucial question of controversy in this appeal
relates to the determination of seniority between the
respondents i.e. petitioners in writ petition who are all
appointed as temporary Assistant Engineers in the United
Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings & Roads Branch)
and subsequently made permanent therein and the appellants
appointed on probation in the permanent posts of Assistant
Engineers reserved for toppers of the Thomson College of
Civil Engineering later incorporated in Roorkee University
and made permanent after expiry of period of probation. The
respon-
197
dents Nos. 2 and 3 who passed the final Civil Engineering
Examination of Thomson College, Roorkee in 1946 were
appointed as temporary and officiating Assistant Engineers
by the Chief Engineer subject to final approval of the
Government vide CE-P/ W/D/ C.M. No. 2736-E/8E-1917 dated
2.6.1947. This provisional appointment as temporary
Assistant Engineers was approved by the Government vide G.O.
No. 89-EBR/2-1947 dated 20.2.1948. Thereafter on the advice
of the Public Service Commission the Government confirmed
their provisional appointment as temporary Assistant
Engineers vide o. No 1427/EBR 2 EBR-1947 dated 16.10.1948.
The petitioners Nos 1 and 4 to 12 passed the final
Civil Engineering Examination of the Thomson College,
Roorkee in the year 1948. They were appointed by Chief
Engineer as temporary Assistant Engineers subject to the
final approval of the Government vide Chief Engineer, P.W D.
O.M. dated 10.8.1949 These appointments were made subject to
the final approval of the Government and on their being
declared medically fit by the Medical Board. The appointment
of these temporary Assistant Engineers was sanctioned by the
government by its order dated 15.10.1949. These appointments
were made in accordance with Rule 5(i)of the United
Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch),
Class Il Rules, 1936. Thereafter on 20th January, 1950, vide
G.O. No 3968 EBR/2-1949 the Government on the advice of the
Public Service Commission confirmed the provisional
appointments of the said petitioners as temporary Assistant
Engineers in the Buildings and Roads Branch of United
Provinces Service of Engineers. The petitioners were
examined by the State Medical Board and all of them were
declared fit By Gazette Notification dated 7.11.1956 the
Government was pleased to issue orders of confirmation of
the appointment of petitioners Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8 as
permanent Assistant Engineers in permanent posts, in the
cadre of United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings
and Roads Branch), Class II. By this Notification the
Government reserved the right to determine the seniority
subsequently. Similarly, the petitioners Nos. 5, 6, 9 and 10
were confirmed as permanent Assistant Engineers in permanent
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posts by Gazette Notification dated 9.4.1957. The
petitioners Nos. 11 and 12 were also confirmed as permanent
Assistant Engineers in permanent posts in the cadre of
United Provinces Service of engineers (Buildings and Roads
Branch) Class II by Notification dated 14 5.1958. It is
specifically
198
mentioned therein that the government reserved the right to
determine the seniority subsequently. Thus the date of
confirmation of the petitioners Nos. 1 to 12 as permanent
Assistant Engineers in the permanent posts of Assistant
Engineers in United Provinces Service of Engineers
(Buildings and Roads Branch), Class II was fixed at
1.4.1956. Vide G.O. dated 29.5.1961 the orders for inter se
seniority exclusively of petitioners Nos. 1 to 12 vis-a-vis
39 others including opposite parties Nos. 8 to 13 who were
all confirmed as permanent Assistant Engineers, were issued
by the Government.
Rule 6 of the said Rules i.e. United Provinces Service
of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch), Class II Rules,
1936 empowers the Government to decide in each case the
source from which the vacancy in the cadre has to be filled
up. Under these powers the Government by G.o. dated
31.8.1942 provided that with effect from 1942-43, two
vacancies in the Provincial Service of Engineers shall be
reserved for the two students of Thomson College of Civil
Engineering, Roorkee who passed out highest in the order of
merit in the final examination of the civil engineering.
This quota was increased by G.o. dated 1.7.1944 from two to
four posts each year (two for the P W.D. (Buildings and
Roads Branch) and two for the Irrigation Branch). This
reservation was also guaranteed each year to the top
students. The Government however by G.o. dated 22.6.1950
abolished the system of guaranteed posts with effect from
the batch which was to enter the civil engineering class of
the Roorkee University in October 1950. It was specifically
mentioned therein that no reservations were to be made in
the cadre of the U.P.S.E. (Junior Scale) B & R and
Irrigation Branches for students who passed out highest in
the final examination of the Civil Engineering Class in 1953
and subsequent years. It was also mentioned therein that the
guaranteed Civil Engineer students who passed from Thomson
College of Engineering, Roorkee/Roorkee University and who
had been working in the Buildings and Roads Branch should be
absorbed in the existing permanent vacancies which might
arise in future. In accordance with the Government orders
the opposite parties Nos. 2 and 3 who passed out from the
Roorkee University in the year 1949 securing top positions
were appointed in January 1951 as Temporary Assistant
Engineers. The opposite parties Nos. 4 and 5 namely Shri
G.C. Gupta and Shri S.P. Goel who passed out from the
Roorkee University in 1950 were appointed in 1951 as
temporary Assistant Engineers in two tem
199
porary posts. The opposite party No. 6 namely Shri S.K. Ojha
who was one of the toppers passing out from Roorkee
University in 1952 was appointed in October 1953 as a
temporary Assistant Engineer. The opposite party No. 7
namely Shri Brijendra Singh who passed out from Roorkee
University Civil Engineering Examination in 1952 was first
appointed as a temporary Assistant Engineer on a provisional
basis but subsequently as he secured Fourth position in
Civil Engineering final examination in 1952 from the Roorkee
University he was appointed to the guaranteed post of
temporary Assistant Engineer in 1954. The opposite party No.
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8 who passed the departmental qualifying examination for
promotion to the Service was appointed to a temporary post
of Assistant Engineer on 16.4. 1949. Similarly, the opposite
parties Nos. 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 who passed the qualifying
departmental examination were appointed under Rule 5(IV) and
6(a) to the temporary post of Assistant Engineers in 1955.
In accordance with the provisions of regulation 3(i) of
the United Provinces Public Service Commission (Limitation
of Function) Regulations, 1941 made by the Provisional
Government. The appointment of opposite parties Nos. 3 to 5
and 7 (appellants in this appeal) who had been appointed to
the guaranteed posts reserved for toppers of Thomson
Engineering College, Roorkee did not require consultation
with the Public Service Commission. The Government by
Gazette Notification No. 2205-EBR/XXIII-PWD16EB-53 dated
11.10.1955 confirmed the appointment of the opposite parties
Nos. 3 to 5 and 7 in the permanent post of Assistant
Engineers with effect from April 1,1955. By office
Memorandum No. 1933 EBR/XXIII-PWD/55 dated 20.7.1956, the
Government fixed the inter se seniority of opposite parties
Nos. 2 to 7 alongwith 18 other officers who were confirmed
as Assistant Engineers.
Aggrieved by the order of confirmation of the
respondents Nos. 2 to 7, the petitioner No. 4 made
representation to the Government for re-determination of the
confirmation as well as consequential determination of
seniority of the petitioner vis-a-vis the respondents. This
representation was made on 15.7.1959 and a reminder was also
given on 9.8.1960. Similarly, petitioner Nos. 6, 7 and 11
also made representations on 19.8.1959, 5.8.1959 and
23.7.1959 respectively. The petitioner No. 6 gave reminder
in June 1965 and April, 1970. The petitioner No. 7 also sent
reminders on
200
2.3.1960 and 3.7.1960. The petitioner No. I also sent a
representation on 12.9.1963. As no steps were taken to
consider the representations and to re-determine the date of
confirmation of the petitioners, the petitioners Nos. 6, 7
and 11 filed writ petition No. 2254 of 1970 in the Allahabad
High Court challenging the order of confirmation of the
respondents and also the consequential fixation of seniority
on its basis. The said petition was dismissed by order dated
16.4.1971 on the sole ground that the petition was highly
belated and the petitioners were guilty of laches and delay
in challenging the impugned notification dated 11.10.1955
and 20.7. 1956 regarding confirmation and fixation of
seniority. Against the said order Special Appeal No. 287 of
1971 was filed before the Division Bench of Allahabad High
Court. The said appeal was also dismissed. It was observed
that though the petitioners could not be permitted to
question the propriety of confirmation orders yet they were
entitled to claim seniority over the rcspondents as per
rules regulating the service of engineers. The claim of the
petitioners was that they being appointed as Assistant
Engineers though temporarily became members of the Service
earlier than the respondents and as such they were entitled
to claim seniority over the respondents. The representations
made by the petitioners as far back as in 1959 were still
pending and as such the relief regarding determination of
seniority in accordance with rules was not barred by delay.
It was observed further that the Government would consider
and dispose of the representations fairly and in accordance
with law.
The Government by their order dated 29.6.1973 rejected
all the representations against fixation of seniority as
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permanent Assistant Engineers. Hence the writ petition was
filed by the petitioners claiming the relief of re-
determination of their seniority in accordance with the
rules governing the services of United Provinces Service of
Engineers Class II (Buildings and Roads Branch) as there had
been no determination of inter se seniority of the
petitioners and the respondents according to Rule 23 of the
said Rules.
It is pertinent to note in this connection that in
spite of the observations of the Division Bench of the
Allahabad High Court in special appeal No. 287 of 1971 that
so far as the claim of the appellants for consideration of
their representations regarding determination seniority in
accordance with the Service Rules, was not
201
barred by the rejection of the writ petition on the ground
of delay and observations were made for consideration of
those representations by the opposite party No. 1, i.e. the
Government instead of considering and disposing of the said
representations in accordance with law dismissed the same
merely on the ground of delay and laches.
Before proceeding to consider the merits of the
controversy raised in this case, it is pertinent to refer to
the relevant rules i.e. United Provinces Service of
Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class II Rules, 1936
which regulate the appointment and conditions of service of
United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads
Branch). The relevant Rules are quoted herein below:-
Rule 3(b)"Members of the Service" means a
Government appointed in a substantive
capacity, under the provision of these
rules or of rules in force previous to
the introduction of these rules, to a
post in the cadre of the service.
Rule 4 The sanctioned strength of the cadre is
24 assistant engineers, provided that
subject to the provisions of rule 40 of
the Civil Services (Classification,
Control and Appeal) Rules, 1930, the
Government may
.............
.............
(ii) increase the cadre by creating
permanent or temporary posts from time
to time as may be found necessary.
Rule 5 Recruitment to the Services shall by
made by the Government
(i) by direct appointment from amongst
engineer students who have passed out of
the Thomson Civil Engineering College,
Roorkee, and who
202
have completed a course of training in
the Buildings and Roads Branch as
Engineer Students after consulting the
Public Service Commission, U. P.
(ii) by direct appointment after
advertisement and after consulting the
Public Service Commission, U.P.
(iii) by the appointment of officers in
the temporary service of the United
Provinces Public Works Department
(Buildings and Roads Branch), after
consulting the Public Service
Commission, U.P.:
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provided that it will not be
necessary to consult the Commission in
the case of appointed appointment of a
temporary officer to a permanent vacancy
if he has already been appointed to a
temporary post in the cadre of the
service after consultation with the
Commission.
(iv) by promotion of members of the
United Provinces Subordinate Engineering
Service or of Upper Subordinates in the
Public Works Department, Buildings and
Roads Branch, who have shown exceptional
merit.
(v) by promotion of computors in the
Public Works Department, Buildings and
Roads Branch, who have shown exceptional
merit and who are technically qualified.
Rule 16 TRAINING AND PROBATION
Engineer students who pass from the
Thomson College shall be required to
undergo a course of training for one
year. This period may be extended by the
Government for one more year in the case
of candidates who are not selected for
appointment at the end of their first
year of training, but who are considered
to have
203
justified their retention in training
for one more year.
Rule 17 All persons appointed to the Service,
who are not already in the permanent
employ of the Buildings and Roads Branch
of the United Provinces Government,
shall be placed on probation for four
years, provided that such of them as
have undergone training as Engineer
students, or have served as temporary
engineers in the Buildings and Roads
Branch of the United Provinces
Government, may be permitted to count
the period of such training and service
respectively towards this period of
probation. The Government may extend the
period of probation fixed in any case.
At any time during the probationary
period the Government may dispense with
the services of an officer at one
month’s notice.
Rule 19 (i) A probationer shall be confirmed in
his appointment when-
(a) he has completed the prescribed
period of probation;
(b) he has passed all the tests
prescribed in the last preceding rule;
and
(c) the Government are satisfied that he
is fit for confirmation.
(ii) All confirmations under the rule
shall be notified in the United
Provinces Gazette.
Rule 23 Seniority in the service shall be
determined according to the date of the
order of appointment to it, provided
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that if the order of appointment of two
or more candidates bears the same date,
their seniority inter-se shall be
determined according to the order in
which their appointment has been
notified.
204
Two preliminary objections were raised on behalf of the
petitioners about the maintainability of the writ petition
before the High Court. The first objection was regarding the
delay in making the application challenging the
determination of seniority of the petitioners vis-a-vis the
respondents which were determined as early as in 1956, in
1973 i.e. after 17 years. This objection was duly considered
by the Court below and it was over-ruled. In 1959 re
presentations had been made against the determination of
seniority in contravention of the provisions of Rule 23 of
the United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and
Roads Branch), Class II Rules, 1936. These representations
were kept pending by the government and they were not
disposed of. Secondly, in 1970 a challenge was thrown in
writ petition No. 2254 of 1970 by Shri R.C. Mangal and two
others i.e. respondent Nos. 6, 7 and 11 challenging the
order of confirmation of the petitioners Nos. 1 to 4 who
were appointed long after the appointment of the petitioners
and the con sequent determination of seniority. This writ
petition, however, was unsuccessful as the writ petition as
well as the Special Appeal were dismissed on the ground of
inordinate delay and laches in moving the Court for redress
against the order of confirmation of the petitioner Nos. 1
to 4 which was made by the Government vide notification
dated 11.10.1955. But in that case the question of
determination of seniority in derogation of the provisions
of Rules did not arise nor it was considered and determined.
It was further observed that the Government would decide
these representations fairly and in accordance with law.
These observations were made in the Special Appeal No. 287
of 1971 decided in October 1971. The High Court while
disposing of the civil Writ Petition No. 1080 of 1973
observed that the petition did not suffer from delay and
laches and the question of determination of seniority was
required to be considered by the Court. It was further
observed that the plea of wrong fixation in the cadre was
not raised in the earlier writ petition. As such there was
no determination on the question of seniority in the cadre
itself in the said writ petition and the principles of res
judicata were not attracted.
The other preliminary objection raised was that if the
question of seniority was considered it might seriously
prejudice the rights of the opposite parties. On this point
it was observed by the High Court that the matter of
seniority of the opposite parties vis-a-vis the petitioners
was never settled and as such no question arises as to the
accrual of any right legal or equitable in favour of the
opposite
205
parties because of lapse of time.
It is a well established principle that where there are
no specific rules for determination of seniority in service
the length of continuous service is the yardstick for
determining the seniority of the members of service. The
vital question that requires to be considered in this appeal
is what is the yardstick or standard or norm for
determination of seniority of the respondents who have been
appointed as temporary or officiating Assistant Engineers
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against temporary posts of United Provinces Service of
Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class 11, as well as
the toppers from Thomson College of Civil Engineering who
were directly appointed sometime in 1950 and 1951 on
probation against reserved temporary posts and confirmed
immediately after the expiry of the period of probation
against permanent posts before the confirmation of the
temporary Assistant Engineers recruited from the Thomson
College of Engineering sometime between 1948 to 1950. To
decide this question it is very relevant to consider the
Service rules as in the instant case there are admittedly
the Service Rules namely United Provinces Service of
Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class Il rules, 1936
which regulate the appointments and conditions of service of
United Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads
Branch). Rule 23 of the said Rules which is said to be the
mariners’ compass in determining the seniority of the
members of the service provides that seniority in service
shall be determined "according to the date of order of
appointment to it" provided that if the order of appointment
of two or more candidates bears the same date their
seniority inter-se shall be determined according to the
order in which their appointment has been notified.
Therefore, it is evident from this Rule that the touchstone
of determination of seniority in service is the date of
order of appointment to the service or in other words the
date when an appointee becomes a member of the service after
fulfilling all the necessary requirements provided in the
various provisions of the said Rules. Rule 3(b) defines
further that "Member of the Service" means a Government
servant appointed in a substantive capacity under the
provisions of these rules or of rules in force prior to the
introduction of these rules to a post in the cadre of this
service. In other words, it states categorically that an
appointee to be a member of the service has to be appointed
in a substantive capacity in the cadre of the service. The
cadre of the service in Rule 4(ii) clearly provides that it
consists of both permanent and temporary posts and the
strength of the cadre
206
may be increased by the Government by creating permanent and
temporary posts from time to time as may be found necessary.
The sanctioned strength of the cadre of Assistant Engineers
though originally was 24 yet the said strength of the cadre
could be increased by creation of both permanent and
temporary posts. Rule 5 specifically lays down the sources
of recruitment to the service. There are five sources for
recruitment to the service. These sources have been stated
hereinbefore and as such it is not necessary to reiterate
them once again here. Rule 16 enjoins that engineer students
who pass from the Thomson College are to undergo a course of
training for one year. This period of training may be
extended by the Government by one more year in the case of
candidates who are not selected for appointment at the end
of their first year of training but who are considered to
have justified their retention in training for one more
year. Rule 17 provides that all persons appointed to the
service who are already in the permanent employment of
Buildings and Roads Branch of the United Provinces
Government shall be placed on probation for four years
provided that such of them as have undergone training as
engineer students, or have served as temporary engineers in
the Buildings and Roads Branch of United Provinces
Government, may be permitted to count the period of such
training and service respectively towards the period of
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probation. Rule 19 deals with confirmation of a probationer
when the requirements provided therein have been fulfilled
or completed namely the completion of the prescribed
probation period, the passing of all the tests prescribed in
Rule 18 and the Government is satisfied that the probationer
is fit for confirmation. It has also been provided therein
that all confirmations under the Rules shall be notified in
the United Provinces Gazette.
The petitioners in the writ petition who are
respondents in this appeal were initially appointed as
temporary Assistant engineers subject to the final approval
of the Government by the Chief Engineer, P.W.D. between 1947
and 1948. Undoubtedly, these appointments were subsequently
approved by the Government between 1948 and 1949 in
accordance with the provisions of Rule 5(i) of the United
Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch)
Class II Rules, 1936. Thereafter on January 20, 1950 the
Government in consultation with the Public Service
Commission confirmed the provisional appointments of the
petitioners as temporary Assistant Engineers and these
petitioners have also passed the requisite tests held by the
government. They were con-
207
firmed vide Gazette Notifications dated 7.11.1956, 19.4.1957
and 14.5.1958. The date of confirmation of all these
petitioners was fixed as 1.4.1956 (vide G.O. dated
29.5.1961). The respondents Nos. 3 to 5 and 7 who are
appellants in this appeal were appointed between 1951 and
1952 as temporary Assistant Engineers against guaranteed
posts on probation and after competition of the probationary
period they were confirmed in 1955 vide Gazette Notification
dated 11.10.1955. Seniority of these appellants Nos. 1 to 4
was fixed earlier from 1.4.1955 whereas the seniority of the
Respondents Nos. 1 to 12 of this appeal was fixed below them
from 1956 treating the date of confirmation in the service
as the date of their becoming member of the service.
It has been urged on behalf of the appellants as well
as by the State that unless a person is appointed as
temporary Assistant Engineer against a permanent post on
probation and thereafter unless he becomes confirmed after
successful completion of the period of probation and passing
of all the tests mentioned in Rule 19(b) of the said rules
and he is considered to be fit for confirmation by
government he cannot be considered to be appointed to the
service and he does not become a member of the service. The
seniority of an Assistant Engineer will be reckoned only
from the date when an Assistant Engineer is substantively
appointed against a permanent post and duly confirmed in the
post in accordance with provisions of Rule 19 and thereby
becomes a member of the service. In other words, it was
tried to be contended before this Court that the
provisional, fortuitous, temporary or officiating
appointment of the respondents as Assistant Engineers will
not be taken into consideration in determining their
seniority in service unless and until they are duly
appointed against permanent posts on probation and are
confirmed after the successful completion of the probation
period and on passing of the requisite tests and after their
confirmation is notified by the Government in the United
Provinces Gazette. Relying on these contentions it has been
urged that the services of the respondent Nos. 1 to 12 were
confirmed and duly notified in the Gazette in 1961 and
accordingly by office memo dated May 29, 1961 their inter-se
seniority was fixed. As they were confirmed much later than
the appellants so their seniority was fixed below that of
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the appellants.
It was on the other hand, urged on behalf of the
respondents who passed civil engineering examination from
Thomson College of
208
Engineering between 1947 and 1948 that the appellants did
not enter into the Thomson College of Engineering when they
were appointed as officiating temporary Assistant Engineers
subject to final approval of the Government by the Chief
Engineer, P.W.D. between 1947 and 1948. Thereafter the
Government duly sanctioned their appointment by order made
between 1948 and 1949,subject to the final approval of the
United Provinces Public Service Commission. These
provisional appointments were ultimately made final by the
Government after the receipt of the approval of the U.P.
Public Service Commission in 1950 . It has been urged on
behalf of the respondents that from 1950 at least these
respondents should be deemed or treated to be substantively
appointed in accordance with the provisions of Rule 3(b) of
the said Service Rules. As they have become members of the
service in as much as their appointments have been duly
approved by the Government and the Public Service Commission
and on their passing the medical test and other tests the
Government has confirmed their provisional appointments and
the period of service these temporary Assistant Engineers
rendered previously was counted towards their probation in
accordance with the provisions of Rule 17 of these Rules,
they are entitled to have their seniority reckoned at least
from the date of their confirmation in the service by the
Government in 1950 i.e. from the date of their substantive
appointment in the service The seniority list that has been
published is wholly arbitrary, illegal and in utter
contravention of the provisions of Rule 23 of the Rules.
On a consideration of the letters of provisional
appointment issued by the Chief Engineer, P.W.D. (Buildings
and Roads Branch) as well as the sanctions accorded to such
appointments by the Government thereafter and the
confirmation of the service of the temporary Assistant
Engineers in 1950 after obtaining the approval of the Public
Service Commission and also after passing of the tests by
the respondents as provided in Rule 18 of the said Rules, I
cannot but hold that they have become appointed in a
substantive capacity against temporary posts of the cadre of
Assistant Engineers and as such they have become members of
the service since that date in accordance with the
provisions of Rule 3(b) of the said Rules. The argument that
their appointment being made against temporary posts and not
against permanent posts and not on probation as well as they
being not confirmed and their confirmation being not
notified in the United Provinces Gazette before 1956,
209
they are not entitled to be treated as members of the
service being appointed in the substantive capacity, cannot
be sustained under any circumstances. Rule 4 of the Service
Rules clearly states that the cadre of Assistant Engineers
will comprise of both permanent and temporary posts and as
such the argument that unless and until the respondents are
appointed on probation against permanent posts and unless
they are confirmed they cannot be treated as members of the
service is wholly untenable. One can be a member of service
if he is appointed in a substantive capacity as
distinguished from a fortuitous appointment or an
appointment for a fixed tenure or on a purely temporary
basis against a temporary post of Assistant Engineer in the
cadre. This Court in the case of Parshotam Lal Dhingra v.
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Union of India, [1958l S.C.R. 828 at 842 has held that an
appointment to a temporary post in Government service may be
substantive or on probation or on an officiating basis.
Similar observation has been made by this Court in the case
of Baleshwar Dass & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors., [1981] 1
S.C.R. 449 wherein this very rule came to be considered in
the case of a similar dispute regarding the seniority
amongst the engineers in the Irrigation Department of the
Uttar Pradesh Government. It has been observed as follows:-
"It is not correct to say that when Engineers are
appointed to temporary posts but after fulfilling
all the tests for regular appointment they are not
appointed in a substantive capacity
.............................. That is to say
although they are temporary appointees, if their
probation was completed and other formalities
fulfilled, they become members of the service.
Merely because the person is a temporary appointee
it cannot be said that he is not substantively
appointed if he fulfills the necessary conditions
for regular appointment such as probation and
consultation with the Public Service Commission. "
It has been further observed:
"Rule 23 is the relevant rule when a question of
seniority arises. The order of appointment in a
substantive capacity is the significant starting
point for reckoning seniority. The appointment in
a substantive capacity need not necessarily be to
a permanent post. It is
210
significant even if it is to a temporary post of
long duration . "
Rule 4 prescribes the sanctioned strength of a cadre.
It provides that the Government may subject to the
provisions of Rule 40 of the Civil Services (Classification,
Control and Appeal) Rules, 1930 increase the strength of the
cadre by creating permanent or temporary posts from time to
time as may be found necessary. So a cadre post may be
either permanent or temporary and if an engineer is
appointed substantively to a temporary post or permanent
post he becomes a member of the service. Therefore merely
because a Government servant has been appointed to a
temporary post after fulfilment of all the requirements of
the rules for regular appointment including consultation
with the Public Service Commission, he cannot be said to be
appointed substantively in the temporary post of the cadre
and he cannot be said to be treated to be not a member of
the service under Rule 3(b) of the Rules for the purpose of
determination of seniority under Rule 23 of the Rules on the
mere plea that he has not been appointed against a permanent
post on probation. Such a contention is not tenable. This
point has been very clearly settled by this Court in the
case of Baleshwar Dass & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
(supra). It has been observed in this case as follows:-
"We see no reason to hold that when engineers are
appointed to temporary posts but after fulfilment
of all the tests for regular appointments,
including consultation with the Public Service
Commission, they are not appointments in a
substantive capacity. "
In the instant case as I have stated hereinbefore that
though initially the appointments of these respondents were
not appointments in accordance with the Rules as they were
appointed not by the Government but by the Chief Engineer,
P.W.D. but after approval of their appointments by the
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Government and also confirmation of their provisonal
appointments by the Government in consultation with the
Public Service Commission and after the respondents had
passed all the requisite tests for confirmation, it cannot
be questioned that these respondents have not been appointed
in a substantive capacity as they were not confirmed by the
Government prior to 1961 and their confirmations were not
published in the U.P.
211
Gazette. It is pertinent to mention that for an appointment
in order to be an appointment in a substantive capacity it
is not necessary that the appointment should be made to a
permanent post. If the appointment is made to a temporary
post of long duration in a department having both permanent
and temporary posts of a quasi-permanent nature, there is
nothing to distinguish the quality of service as between the
two.
It is pertinent to refer in this connection the
observations of this Court in S.B.Patwardhan and Ors. v.
State of Maharashtra and Ors., AIR 1977 SC 2051=[1977] 3 SCR
775 where it has been observed:
"There is no universal rule either that a cadre
cannot consist of both permanent and temporary
employees or that it must consist of both. That is
primarily a matter of rules and regulations
governing the particular service in relation to
which the question regarding the composition of
the cadre arises."
It has been further observed that confirmation cannot
be the sole touchstone of seniority as that will be
indefensible. "Confirmation is one of the inglorious
uncertainties of Government service depending neither on
efficiency of the incumbent nor on the availability of the
substantive vacancies. "
It does not show that confirmation has to conform to
any set of rules and whether an employee should be confirmed
or not depends on the sweet will and pleasure of the
govenment. I do not find any rational or legal justification
for preventing the respondents to have their services
rendered from the date they are appointed in the cadre of
Assistant Engineers in a substantive capacity reckoned for
determination of their seniority in service on the mere
ground that no order of confirmation has been issued by the
Government as required under Rule 19 of the Rules even
though all the essential requirements for being confirmed
have been clearly fulfilled by the respondents. The
respondents, as has been stated herein before, have been
duly appointed in a substantive capacity in the cadre of the
Service by the Government in consulta-
212
tion with the United Provinces Public Service Commission as
required under Rule 5(iii) of the said Rules as well as
after fulfilling the other requirements as provided in Rule
19 of the said Rules in 1950. It will be relevant to mention
in this connection that this Court in the case of Baleshwar
Dass & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors., (supra) while
considering the identical rules so far as the determination
of seniority of the U.P. Engineers in the Irrigation
Department has observed that substantive capacity referred
to the capacity in which a person holds the post and not
necessarily to the nature and character of the post. A
person is said to hold a post in a substantive capacity when
he holds it for an indefinite period especially of long
duration, in contradistinction to a person who holds it for
a definite or temporary period or holds it on probation
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subject to confirmation. It has also been observed that an
official in service even before confirmation in service has
a relevancy to seniority if eventually no infirmities in the
way of confirmation exist. There is P nothing in the scheme
of rules contrary to that principle. Therefore the point
from which service is to be counted is the commencement of
the service by the Assistant Engineer which might not have
been permanent appointment in the beginning and in that
sense may still be temporary but for all other purposes has
been regularised and is fit to be absorbed into permanent
post as and when it is vacant.
The decision in the case of A.K. Subraman & Ors. v.
Union of India & Ors., AIR 1975 SC 483 which was cited
before us is not relevant in as much as in that case there
was no statutory rule for determination of seniority unlike
the instant case where there are specific rules for the
determination of seniority. The method of filling up of the
post of Executive Engineers Class I was by promotion of
Assistant Executive Engineers Class I as well as by
promotion on selection by Departmental Promotion Committee
of Assistant Engineers in Central Engineering Service Class
II according to prescribed quota. In the seniority list
published in 1971 the petitioners were shown junior to
respondents who were appointed to the service of Central
Engineers long after the petitioners were appointed in the
grade of Executive Engineer, Class I. The petitioners were
promoted to officiate as Executive Engineer Class I by the
Departmental Promotion Committee between December 1956
213
and September 1959 whereas respondents were promoted to the
posts of Executive Engineers Class I between March 1957 and
February 1966. It was held that once the Assistant Engineers
are regularly appointed to officiate as Executive Engineers
within their quota they will be entitled to consideration in
their own rights as Class I officers to further promotion.
It was also held therein that Assistant Engineers (Class II)
who are initially appointed in a regular manner in
accordance with the rules to officiate as Assistant
Engineers, their seniority in service in Grade I will count
from the date of their initial officiating appointment in
Class I provided their initial appointment as Assistant
Engineer was within their quota. Their seniority will not
count from the date of their future confirmation in the
service.
In G.P. Doval and Ors. v. Chief Secretary, Govt. Of
U.P. & Ors., AIR 1984 SC 1527 this Court has observed that
it is well settled that if there was no binding rule of
seniority, the length of continuous officiation prescribed a
valid principle of seniority.
Where officiating appointment is followed by
confirmation unless a contrary rule is shown, the service
rendered as officiating appointment cannot be ignored for
reckoning length of continuous officiation for determining
the place in the seniority list. This decision which runs
contrary to the decision cited herein is distinguishable as
this decision was rendered on the peculiar facts of that
case
Due to exigencies of service the Khandsari Inspectors
were recruited to that post pending regular selection
through Public Service Commission. A provisional seniority
list of the Khandsari Inspectors was drawn on the principle
of length of continuous officiation reckoned from the date
of selection/approval by Public Service Commission in
respect of each employee belonging to the cadre. All
officiating service rendered by the Inspectors prior to
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their confirmation by Public Service Commission was totally
ignored while determining seniority. It was held that
seniority list prepared of Khandsari Inspectors without
considering their officiating service prior to confirmation
by the Public Service Com-
214
mission was violative of Article 16 and the list drawn up on
this basis must be quashed. In that case there was no
specific statutory rule laying down the conditions of
service governing the cadre as well as for the determination
of seniority of the members of the service.
I have already held hereinbefore after due
consideration of the said Rules governing the appointment
and conditions of service of United Provinces Service of
Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class lI that the
cadre of the service of Engineers consists of both temporary
and permanent posts and as such there can be C; substantive
appointment against a temporary post of the cadre in
accordance with the provisions of the Service Rules. Once a
Government servant is appointed in a substantive capacity
against a temporary post of the cadre after due observance
of the requirements as provided in the Rules he will be
deemed to be a member of the service in accordance with the
provisions of Rule 3(b) and his seniority in service shall
be determined from the date of order of appointment to the
service notwithstanding that no order of confirmation has
been made and there has been no publication of order of
confirmation in the official Gazette. The respondents were
appointed temporarily in an officiating capacity as
Assistant Engineers against temporary posts and these
temporary appointments were continued for years together and
the Government duly sanctioned their appointment after
consultation with the Public Service Commission. The
respondents thus have become members of the United Provinces
Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch) Class Il
at least from the date when they have been confirmed in the
Service by the Government order issued in May 1950 after
complying with all the tests prescribed and they are
entitled to have their seniority reckoned from that date
when they have become regular Members of the Service after
fulfilling all the requirements provided in Rule 18 and 19
of the said Rules. The decisions in Baleshwar Dass & Ors. v.
State of U.P. & Ors., (supra) as well as in Ashok Gulati &
Ors. v. B.S. Jain & Ors., AIR 1987 SC 424 clearly go to
establish that as soon as a Government servant becomes a
member of the Service fulfilling all the requirements
specified under the Rules governing the terms and conditions
of service as well as of seniority in service, the seniority
of the Government servant has to
215
be computed and reckoned from the date when he becomes a
member of the Service. As l have held already that
confirmation has nothing to do with the Government servants
becoming a member of the Service eligible to have his
service reckoned for the purpose of determination of his
seniority in service in accordance with Rule 3(b) read with
Rule 23 of the said Rules. In Ashok Gulati’s case (in which
one of us Justice A.P. Sen-was a party) the following five
yardsticks have been laid down for reckoning seniority:-
"The date from which seniority is to be reckoned
may be laid down by rules or instructions
(i) on the basis of the date of appointment;
(ii) on the basis of confirmation;
(iii) on the basis of regularisation of service;
(iv) on the basis of length of service; or
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(v) on any other reasonable basis.
Apropos to mention in this connection that the decision
rendered by this Court in the case of N.K. Chauhan & Ors. v.
State of Gujarat & Ors., [1977] 1 SCR 1037 is not applicable
as the facts of that case are different from the facts of
this case. In that case the dispute arose regarding the
claim of the direct recruits to the posts of Deputy
Collectors to be declared senior to the appellants who were
promotees from Mamlatdars to the post of Deputy Collectors.
ln the State of Bombay prior to bifurcation the source of
recruitment to the post of Deputy Collector was two-fold
i.e. (1) by promotion from Mamlatdar and (2) by direct
recruitment to the post of Deputy Collector. A resolution
was adopted by the Bombay Government on 30.7.1959 laying
down the method of recruitment to the post of Deputy
Collectors. lt is in the following terms:-
"Appointment to the posts of Deputy Collector
shall be
216
m made either by nomination or by promotion of
suitable Mamlatdars:
Provided that the ratio of appointment by
nomination and by promotion shall, as far as
practicable, be 50:50".
The question arose whether the direct recruits who were
recruited subsequent to the promotees can claim seniority
over the promotees as the quota of direct recruits was not
fulfilled. It was held that since the rule was that as far
as possible the quota system must be kept and if not
practicable, promotees in the place of direct recruits or
direct recruits in the place of promotees may be inducted by
applying the regular procedure without suffering the seats
to lie indefinitely vacant. It was further held that the
quota rule does not, inevitably, invoke the application of
the rota rule. The impact of this position is that if
sufficient number of direct recruits have not been
forthcoming in the years since 1960 to fill in the ratio due
to them and those deficient vacancies have been filled up by
promotees, later direct recruits cannot claim ’deemed’ dates
of appointment for seniority in service with effect from the
time, according to the rota or turn the direct recruits’
vacancy arose. Seniority will depend on the length of
continuous officiating service and cannot be upset by later
arrivals from the open market save to the extent to which
any excess promotees may have to be pushed down as indicated
earlier. It was also held that normally seniority is
measured by length of continuous officiating service-
actually is easily acceptable as the legal. It does not
preclude a different prescription constitutional tests being
satisfied. It has also been observed that the decision in
the case of S. C. Jaisinghani v. Union of India, [1967] 2
S.C.R. 703 at 718 as well as the decision in the case of
B.S. Gupta v. Union of India [1975] 1 S.C.R. 104 cannot be
considered to hold the field in as much as in case where
recruitment is from two independent sources subject to
prescribed quota and power is conferred on the Government to
make recruitment in relaxation of the rules any recruitment
made contrary to the quota rule could not be held to be
invalid unless it is shown that the power of relaxation was
exercised mala fide. Similar observation has been made in
the case of A. Janardhana v. Union of India, [1983] 2 S.C.R.
936 at 956,
217
where it has been observed that in a system governed by rule
of law discretion when conferred upon executive authority
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must be confined within clearly defined limits. In this case
rule (3) of the Military Engineering Service (RTS) Rule
provides method of recruitment indicating the source from
which the recruitment can be made. There were two sources of
recruitment to the service one by direct recruitment another
by promotion, according to quota prescribed by the said
rule. The question arises whether promotees in excess of
quota provided for promotion on the basis of power of
relaxation rule can be pushed down as such filling up of the
quota by promotion would be illegal and the excess recruits
unless they find their place by adjustment in subsequent
years in the quota would not be members of the service. It
was held that even though the rule prescribed the method of
recruitment and quota and if the very rule simultaneously
confers power on the government to recruit in relaxation of
the rules unless malafide are alleged and attributed such
excess recruitments by promotion could not be illegal and
the said promotees cannot be pushed down where the rule
confers a discretion on the Government to relax rules to
meet exigencies of service. Any recruitment made contrary to
quota rule would not be invalid unless it is shown that the
power of relaxation was exercised mala fide. This decision
thus followed the observation made in the Chauhan’s case
referred to earlier. These two decisions, of course, have no
application to the instant case in as much as no such
question does arise for decision in this case.
In the instant case there is a specific rule i.e. Rule
23 providing for determination of seniority from the date a
person has been substantively appointed and has become a
member of the cadre of service of Assistant Engineer in the
United Provinces Engineering Service (Buildings and Roads
Branch) Class II. Therefore in this case there is no quota
for recruitment to the service and as such the decision in
Chauhan’s case is not applicable.
I have already decided hereinbefore that when an
employee has been appointed substantively to a temporary
post in the cadre of service and has become a member of
service of Assistant Engineers
218
in the United Provinces Engineers Service under the United
Provinces Service of Engineers (Buildings and Roads Branch)
Class II Rules, his seniority in service will be counted
from the date of his becoming member of the service. It does
not matter whether he has, been appointed against the
permanent post and has been duly confirmed in that post. l
have come to this finding on a due consideration of the
provisions of the aforesaid rules more particularly Rules
3(b) and 23 of the said rules which lay down the mode of
determination of seniority in service.
In the instant case, however, l am not inclined to give
any relief to the respondents (petitioners in the writ
petition) by directing redetermination of the seniority of
the respondents as well as the appellants on the ground of
unusual laches and delay. The appellant Nos. to 4 were
confirmed in 1955 and their seniority was determined by
Government order of 20th July, 1956. Out of the petitioners
of the writ petition, the petitioner Nos. 4 and 5 made
representations in 1959 against the aforesaid seniority
list. Subsequently, petitioner No. 6 filed another
representation. Petitioner Nos. 6, 7 and 4 made their
representation in 1959 and petitioner No. 6 gave a reminder
in June 1965 and April 1970. The other petitioner Nos. 2, 3,
9 and 10 did not make any representation in the matter of
seniority. It is only in 1970 that the writ petition No.
2254 of 1970 was moved challenging the confirmation of the
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petitioner Nos. 1 to 4 (appellants in the instant appeal).
This challenge was negatived on the ground of laches and
delay. An appeal being Special Appeal No. 287 of 1971 was
also dismissed on the ground of laches and delay as regards
the confirmation of the appellants was concerned. Of course,
it had been observed that the seniority in service of these
appellants was not questioned in the said writ petition and
the Government would consider the representation made by the
petitioners of the writ petition (appellants in the instant
appeal) as far back as in 1959, which were pending before
the Government. The writ petition No. 1080 of 1973 which
gave rise to the Civil Appeal was moved in 1973 challenging
the determination of seniority of the appellants in the
instant appeal. It appears from the affidavit-in-opposition
sworn by one of the appellants Shri G.C. Gupta that at the
time when the writ petition was moved the appellant Nos. 1
to 4 were officiating as Superintending Engineers and the
respondent Nos. 2 and 3 were officiating as Superintending
Engineers but junior to all the four appellants and the
respondent Nos. 1 and 4 to 12 were
219
then Executive Engineers. At present the appellant Nos. -1,
2 and 3 are permanent Superintending Engineers and
officiating as Additional Chief Engineers. The appellant No.
4 is also a permanent Superintending Engineer. At this
juncture if the seniority of these appellants vis a-vis the
respondents of this appeal is directed to he determined it
will create much administrative difficulties and would
amount to deprive the appellants of their valuable rights
which have accrued to them. It is pertinent to refer in this
connection to the observation made by this Court in the case
of Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1970] 2 SCR 697. It has been observed that the attack to
the seniority list prepared on the basis of 1952 rules 15
years after the rules were promulgated and effect given to
the seniority list prepared on August 1, 1953 should not be
allowed because of the inordinate delay and laches in
challenging the said rule.
Similar observations have been made by this Court in
the case of State of Orissa v. Pyarimohail Samantaray &
Ors., [1977] 3 SCC 396; State of M.P. & Ors. etc. etc. v.
Nandlal Jaiswal & Ors., AIR 1987 SC 251; Ramanna Dayaram
Shetty v. lnternational Airport Authority of India, [1979] 3
SCR 101 4; Ashok Kumar v. Collector, Raipur, AIR (1980) (SC)
112:1980 1 SCR 491; K.R. Mudgal v. R.P. Singh, [1986] 4 SCC
531 and R.S. Makashi & Ors. v. I.M. Menon & Ors., [1982] (1)
SCC 379 where relief was refused on the ground of laches in
moving the Court for redress of the grievances after lapse
of a period of years after the cause of action arose. lt has
been observed in State of M. P. & Ors., v. Nandlal Jaiswal &
Ors., (supra):-
"Now, it is well settled that the power of the High
Court to issue an appropriate writ under Article 226 of the
Constitution is discretionary and the High Court in the
exercise of its discretion does not ordinarily assist the
tardy and the indolent or the acquioscent and the
lethargbic. If there is inordinate delay on the part of the
petitioner in filing a writ petition and such delay is not
satisfactorily explained, the High Court may decline to
intervence and grant relief in the exercise of its writ
jurisdiction. The evolution of this rule of laches or delay
is premised upon a number of factors. The High Court does
not ordinarily permit a belated resort to the extraordinary
remedy under the writ jurisdiction because it is likely to
cause confusion and public inconvenience and bring in its
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train new injustices. The rights of third parties may
intervene and if the writ
220
jurisdiction is exercised on a writ petition filed after
unreasonable delay, it may have the effect of inflicting not
only hardship and inconvenience but also injustice on third
parties. When the writ jurisdiction of the High Court is
invoked, unexplained delay coupled with the creation of
third party rights in the meanwhile is an important factor
which always weighs with the High Court in deciding whether
or not to exercise such jurisdiction."
In this case the challenge to the seniority of the
appellants which was determined by order dated 20th July,
1956 was made in 1973 i.e. after nearly 17 years and they
have sought relief for redetermination of the seniority in
accordance with the provisions of the aforesaid service
rules. This cannot be permitted as it would amount to unjust
deprivation of the rights of the appellants which had
accrued to them in the meantime. The observation that ’Every
person ought to be entitled to sit back and consider that
his appointment and promotion effected a long time ago would
not be set aside after the lapse of a number of years’ as
made in the above case Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors. v. Union of
India & Ors. will be applicable to this case. Considering
all these aspects it would be just and proper not to give
any relief to the respondents on the ground of inordinate
laches and delay in challenging the seniority list made in
July, 1956. I have already mentioned hereinbefore that at
the time of moving the writ petition in 1973 all the
appellants had been confirmed as Superintending Engineers in
the United Provinces Service of Engineers and the appellant
Nos. 1 to 3 had been officiating as Additional Chief
Engineers. The appellant No. 4 who was also a permanent
Superintending Engineer we were told by the parties at the
time of hearing of this appeal, had been promoted and
appointed as Additional Chief Engineer. Whereas out of the
12 respondents 10 have already retired from services as it
appears from the affidavit sworn by appellant No. 1 Mr. G.C.
Gupta in accordance with the directions of this Court. We
are also told that out of the remaining 2 respondents, 1 has
already retired from service. So, only 1 respondent is at
present in service. In these circumstances I think that the
cause of justice will be served if the authorities concerned
consider the case of the said respondent for promotion in
accordance with law.
For the reasons aforesaid the appeal is allowed and the
judgment and order of the High Court is set aside. There
will be no order as to costs.
221
I also make it clear that henceforth seniority of the
employees in service in question will be determined from the
date when an employee has become a member of the service
being appointed substantively to a post in the cadre of
service, no matter whether the said post is permanent or
temporary as I have held hereinbefore.
SEN J. I have had the benefit of going through the
judgment prepared by my learned brother Ray, J. and I agree
with the order proposed to be made. In view of the
importance of the questions involved, I would however like
to add a few words.
I have no doubt in my mind that temporary Assistant
Engineers were entitled to the benefit of their seniority
reckoned according to the date of the order of appointment
to the Service in terms of r. 3 of the United Provinces
Service of Engineers (Buildings & Roads Branch) Rules, 1936,
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w.e.f. the date of their absorption into the Service by the
Government in consultation with the Public Service
Commission i.e. from the date from which they became
’Members of the Service’ within the meaning of r. 3(b) of
the Rules. I had expressed the same view in Ashok Gulati &
Ors. v. B.S. Jain & Ors., [1986] Suppl. SCC 597 and I still
adhere to it.
As a matter of policy, the then Provincial Government
by a notification dated August 31, 1942 directed under r. 6
of the Rules that from the year 1942-43, two vacancies in
the United Provinces Service of Engineers, both in the
Buildings and Roads as well as in the Irrigation
Departments, shall be reserved for two students of Thomson
College of Civil Engineering, Roorkee who stood first and
second in order of merit in the final examination of the
Degree Course of Engineering i.e. to the guaranteed posts.
The reserved quota of guaranteed posts was later increased
by the Government from two to four posts each year in each
of the two Branches. The system of direct recruitment of
such Engineer Students to the two guaranteed posts was
however discontinued by its notification dated June 22,
1950, w.e.f. the year 1953 i.e. the system of direct
recruitment of merit scholars to the guaranteed posts was
abolished in respect of the batch of students who joined the
Thomson College of Civil Engineering, Roorkee University of
Roorkee from the month of October 1950, i.e. after the
inauguration of the Constitution.
Again, as a matter of policy, the State Government by
an office
222
memorandum dated December 7, 1961 brought about a change in
the method of recruitment of Assistant Engineers in the U.P.
Service of Engineers, Buildings & Roads Branch. It provided
for direct recruitment of such Assistant Engineers by
competitive examination through the Public Service
Commission from the year 1961. Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the
said memorandum read as follows:
The principles regulating selection for
recruitment to permanent and temporary posts of
Assistant Engineer in the various State
Engineering Services have been under the
consideration of Government for some time past and
after thorough consideration, the Governor is
pleased to order that in future direct recruitment
to both permanent and temporary vacancies of
Assistant Engineers (Civil, Electric and
Mechanical) in the Public Works, Irrigation and
Local Self Government Engineering Departments,
will be made on the results of competitive
examination to be conducted by the Public Service
Commission. Candidates possessing technical and
other qualifications prescribed in the rules for
the United Provinces Service of Engineers in the
Departments concerned will be eligible to apear at
the examination for that particular service."
"(2) Successful candidates in order of merit will
subject to the relevant rules regarding physical
fitness and other matters, be appointed directly
on probation against vacant permanent posts and
those following will be appointed against
temporary posts."
By a G.O. dated April 19, 1950, the State Government
settled the principle that persons appointed to the
guaranteed posts every year as Engineer Students would take
their seniority over persons appointed as temporary
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Assistant Engineers in that year. A person appointed to a
guaranteed post in a particular year however was made junior
to all those who were appointed as Assistant Engineers in
earlier years, irrespective of whether they were appointed
to guaranteed or to non-guaranteed posts. By a subsequent
G.O. dated June , 1950 the Government intimated the Chief
Engineer, Buildings & Roads that Engineer Students who were
appointed to the guaranteed posts of temporary Assistant
Engineers and working in
223
the Buildings & Roads Branch be absorbed in the existing
permanent vacancies or those which might arise in future.
Thus, the appellants who were appointed to the
guaranteed posts of temporary Assistant Engineers, as
reserved for the top students of Thomson College of Civil
Engineering, Roorkee/University of Roorkee, constituted a
class apart. One D.K. Laroiya who had been appointed as a
temporary Assistant Engineer to one of the guaranteed posts
in 1945 and confirmed in the year 1949 made a representation
dated April 15, 1955 claiming seniority over all the
Assistant Engineers appointed to guaranteed or non-
guaranteed posts, irrespective of the order of appointment.
While this representation was pending, the State Government
passed an order dated October 11, 1955 confirming the
appellants i.e. holders of guaranteed posts w.e.f. April 1,
1955 in the permanent posts of Assistant Engineers, and
later on by order dated July 20, 1956 determined their order
of seniority. Subsequently, the Government by orders dated
November 7, 1956, April 9, 1957 and May 14, 1958 confirmed
the temporary Assistant Engineers i.e. persons appointed to
non-guaranteed posts as permanent Assistant Engineers, all
w.e.f. April 1, 1956. By order dated May 29, 196’ the
Government determined the seniority of respondents nos. 1-12
and 39 others referable to the date of their substantive
appointment. On a combined reading of the impugned orders
dated July 20, 1956 and the subsequent order dated May 29,
1961, the appellants i.e. the directly recruited Engineer
Students who had passed out from the Thomson College of
Civil Engineering, Roorkee/University of Roorkee in order of
merit i.e. to the guaranteed posts, were placed above
respondents nos. 1-12 and 39 others i.e. the temporary
Assistant Engineers. On the basis of their seniority and in
view of their record of service, the appellants had in the
meanwhile been promoted as Offg. Executive Engineers in the
years 1960 and 1961. Admittedly, respondents nos. 1-12 who
later on were promoted as Offg. Executive Engineers never
filed any representation qua Executive Engineers and the
seniority of the appellants as Executive Engineers remained
unchallenged throughout the period of 14 years.
It was not till May 4, 1970 i.e. after a lapse of 15
years that respondents nos. 6,7, and 11 viz. I.P. Gupta,
R.C. Mangal and R.K. Mathur filed a petition under Art. 26
of the Constitution in the High Court challenging the
impugned order dated October 11, 1955 by
224
which the appellants were confirmed w.e.f. April 1, 1955 and
the consequential determination of the inter-se seniority
between direct recruits and promotees vide orders dated July
20, 1956 and May 29, 1961 assigning them higher seniority.
The writ petition came to be heard by Broome,J. and the
learned Judge by his judgment and order dated April 6, 1971
dismissed the writ petition holding that the petitioners
were guilty of laches. That judgment of his was upheld in
appeal by a Division Bench consisting of R.S. Pathak and
H.N. Seth, JJ. by its judgment dated October 26, 1971. The
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Division Bench following the decision of this Court in
Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors., [1970]
SCR 697 held that the learned Single Judge was fully
justified in holding that no relief could be granted to the
petitioners who, without any reasonable explanation,
approached the High Court under Art. 216 of the Constitution
after inordinate delay. It was also observed relying upon
the decision of this Court in S. G. Jaisinghani v. Union of
India & Ors., [1967] 2 SCR 703 that it would be highly
unjust to deprive the appellants of the rights which had
accrued to them as such. The learned Judges firmly repelled
the contention that even if the petitioners could not be
permitted to question the legality and propriety of the
impugned order of confirmation, they were still entitled to
claim seniority over the directly recruited Engineer
Students as per rules regulating seniority observing that:
"Since the petitioners cannot be allowed to re-
agitate and question the propriety of the
confirmation order passed long time back, it would
not be desirable to go into the question of
consequential determination of seniority either.
In the concluding part of the judgment, there is a
direction in the following terms:
"Moreover, representations made by the
petitioners, as admitted in the counter-affidavit
filed on behalf of the State Government, are still
pending. The State Government has taken up the
stand that these representations have not been
decided as writ petitions had been filed by Sri
K.C. Agarwal and the petitioners before this Court
and the matter became sub-judice. We have no
reason to
225
think that after disposal of the petitions the
State Government will not decide the
representations fairly and in accordance with law.
In the circumstances, we are not inclined to
examine the correctness of this submission made by
the petitioners in this petition."
If the sentence was read in the context, it meant ’Left
to themselves, they would not have interfered’.
Misconstruing this direction, the State Government afforded
an opportunity to the temporary Assistant Engineers to make
their representations, if any. Factually. there were no
representations pending except the one filed by Laroiya.
Eventually, the State Government realised the mistake and by
its order dated June 29, 1973 rejected the representation
stating that the question of inter-se seniority of Assistant
Engineers had been finally settled and could not be
reopened.
It is somewhat strange that the Division Bench (T.S.
Misra and U.S. Srivastava. JJ) by its judgement dated May 6,
1981 should have, after a lapse of nearly 26 years, thought
that merely because of the fact that the State Government
erroneously invited representations afresh, ’the matter of
inter-se seniority was still alive and not a closed chapter
. Upon that wrongful assumption, the High Court has fallen
into an error in directing the issuance of a writ in the
nature of certiorari quashing the impugned seniority list
and a writ in the nature of mandamus directing the State
government to re-determine the inter-se seniority of
Assistant Engineers in the U.P. Service of Engineers,
Buildings & Roads Branch, Class Il.
There can be no doubt whatever that it was not a proper
exercise of jurisdiction on the part of the High Court to
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have interfered with the impugned seniority list after
nearly three decades. When wayback in the year 1971 Broome,
J. had declined to interfere with the inter-se seniority
between the appellants i.e. the direct recruits and
respondents nos. 1-12 and 39 others i.e. the promotees on a
similar petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution on the
ground of inordinate delay and laches and that judgment of
his was upheld by a Division Bench which observed that it
would be unjust to deprive the appellants of the rights
which had accrued to them as they were entitled to consider
that their appointments to the promotional posts would not
be set aside after a lapse of so many
226
years, there was no occasion for the later Division Bench to
have interfered with the impugned orders and given a
direction to the State Government to re-determine the inter-
se seniority between the appellants and respondents nos. 1-
12 and 39 others under r. 23 of the Rules afresh, with
advertence to the observations made by it.
My learned brother Ray, J. has taken immense pain in
discerning the principles emerging from all the relevant
authorities on the subject, including those of N.K. Chauhan
v. State of Gujarat [1977] 1 SCR 1037; S.B. Patwardhan v.
State of Maharashtra, [1977] 3 SCR 775 and the subsequent
decision in Baleshwar Dass v. State of U.P. [1981] 1 SCR 449
and I do not wish to traverse the ground over again except
to touch upon certain aspects. The principle deducible from
the two well-known decisions of N.K. Chauhan and S.B.
Patwardhan is that in the absence of a seniority rule, the
promotees within the quota are entitled to the benefit of
the period of continuous officiation in reckoning their
seniority vis-a-vis direct recruits. The importance of the
decision in Baleshwar Dass’ case lies in the meaningful
interpretation of the words ’substantive capacity’.
The question must turn on a proper construction of the
unamended r. 3 of the Rules which provided:
"23. Seniority in the service shall be determined
according to the date of the order of appointment
to it, provided that if the order of appointment
of two or more candidates bears the same date,
their seniority inter-se shall be determined
according to the order in which their appointment
has been notified."
It is plain upon the language of r. 23 that it does not in
terms use the words substantive capacity’ but speaks of ’the
date of order of appointment to it’ i.e. the Service which
brings in the concept of ’substantive capacity’ as those
words are used in the definition of the expression ’Members
of the Service’ as contained in r. 3(b) of the Rules.
In Baleshwar Dass’ case, the seniority list challenged
before the High Court was the one relating to Assistant-
Engineers belonging to the Irrigation Department prepared in
December 1965 under r. 23 of the Rules prior to the
amendment, but after the issuance of the
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aforesaid memorandum dated December 7, 1961 by which a, new
method of recruitment was introduced. The Court referred to
Rules for recruitment in particular to rr. 5, 6, 17 and 19
as well as the aforesaid office memorandum dated December 7,
1961. The Court in Baleshwar Dass case firmly repelled the
contention that the aforesaid office memorandum
incorporating a change in the method of recruitment had no
statutory force, not being expressed in the name of the
Governor, on the ground that it had been published under
Government authority, acted upon for two decades when
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recruitments were made by the Public Service Commission and
universally accepted as binding. It held that the office
memorandum was relatable to a statutory source, namely, rr.
5 and 6 of the rules as ’filling up the gaps and not
flouting the provisions’. It was observed:
"Two vital factors must guide us in this
interpretative exercise. If a dated rule of
colonial times is to be applied today, that
meaning which sustains it as constitutionally
valid must be preferred to another which may be
appealing, going by officialise or literal sense.
We have to regard it as a case of ’new wine in old
bottle’. We must reinterpret the rules to comport
with Arts. 4 and 16 by constitutionally acceptable
construction, not rigid connotation given to
expressions in the vintage vocabulary of British
Indian days."
Acting upon the basis that the aforesaid office memorandum
dated December 7, 1961. was constitutionally valid, the
Court went into the intent and effect of rr. 23, 3, 4, 5, 6,
17 and 18 and their impact on r. 23 read in the context of
the memorandum of 1961 with a view to rationalise the scheme
of recruitment, classification, seniority and promotion and
held that there was nothing arbitrary in the 1961 memorandum
bringing about a change in the method of recruitment by
competitive examination through Public Service Commission,
and observed:
"(A)lthough in its application, we have to
remember the prior Rules and when the two are
woven into each other or, rather, when the later
1961 Memorandum is dovetailed to the .936 Rules
the results that may follow will have to be
ascertained with care and consistently with the
ratio of the decisions of this Court in cognate
situations."
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Further that:
"(T)he Government decided in 1961 to resort to
direct recruitment of Assistant Engineers through
competitive examinations held by the Public
Service Commission. It was, however, alive to the
fact that massive appointments had already been
made, in the years gone by, to the posts of
Assistant Engineers from among graduates in
engineering by direct selection and later approval
by the Public Service Commission.. "
The importance of the decision in Baleshwar Dass’ case
lies in the meaningful interpretation of the words
’substantive capacity’. Krishna Iyer, J. affirming the
principle in his own charismatic and picturesque language,
observed:
"We must emphasise that while temporary and
permanent posts have great relevancy in regard to
the career of government servants, keeping posts
temporary for long, sometimes by annual renewals
for several years, and denying the claims of the
incumbents on the score that their posts are
temporary makes no sense and strikes us as
arbitrary, especially when both temporary and
permanent appointees are functionally identified.
If, in the normal course, a post is temporary in
the real sense and the appointee knows that his
tenure cannot exceed the post in longevity, there
cannot be anything unfair or capricious in
clothing him with no rights. Not so, if the post
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is, for certain departmental or like purposes,
declared temporary, but it is within the ken of
both the government and the appointee that the
temporary posts are virtually long lived. It is
irrational to reject the claim of the ’temporary’
appointee on the nominal score of the terminology
of the post. We must also express emphatically
that the principle which has received the sanction
of this Court’s pronouncements is that officiating
service in a post is for all practical purposes of
seniority as good as service on a regular basis.
It may be permissible, within limits, for
government to ignore officiating service and count
only regular service when claims of seniority come
before it, provided the rules in that regard are
clear and categoric and do not admit of any
ambiguity and cruelly arbitrary cut-off of 1 long
years of service does not take place or there is
func-
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tionally and qualitatively, substantial difference
in the service rendered in two types of posts.
While rules regulating conditions of service are
within the executive power of the State or its
lagislative power under provision to Art. 309,
even so, such rules have to be reasonable, fair
and not grossly unjust if they are to survive the
test of Arts. 14 and 16."
Adverting to the oft-quoted observations of Chandrachud. CJ
in S. B. Pathwardhan’s case that ’seniority cannot depend on
the inglorious uncertainties of confirmation’ and to his own
in N. K. Chauhan’s case that ’seniority, normally, is
measured by length of continuous officiating service’ the
learned Judge observed that although an appointee to a
permanent post acquires certain rights which one who fills a
temporary post cannot claim, nevertheless. when the post is
not purely temporary or ad-hoc or of short duration or of an
adventitious nature, the holder of such temporary post
cannot be degraded to the position of one who by accident of
circumstances, or for a fugitive tenure occupies the
temporary post for a fleeting term. The learned Judge while
accepting that there was a distinction between permanent and
temporary posts inasmuch as permanency carries with it other
rights than mere seniority and promotion, brought out the
’propinquity in status’ of permanent and temporary Assistant
Engineers in the special conspectus of the facts before him
and found no justification to hold that when Engineers were
appointed to temporary posts but after fulfillment of the
tests for regular appointment, including consultation with
the Public Service Commission, they were not appointed in a
substantive capacity.
The ultimate ratio of the decision in Baleshwar Dass’
case is best brought out in the words of Krishna Iyer, J in
the following passage:
"Substantive capacity refers to the capacity in
which a person holds the post and not necessarily
to the nature or character of the post .. A person
is said to hold a post in a substantive capacity
when he holds it for an indefinite period
especially of long duration in contradistinction
to a person who holds it for a definite or
temporary period or holds it on probation subject
to confirmation ....... once we understand
’substantive capacity’ in the above sense, we may
be able to rationalise the situation. If the
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appointment is to a post and the capacity in which
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the appointment is made is of indefinite duration,
if the Public Service Commission has been
consulted and has approved, if the tests
prescribed have been taken and passed, if
probation has been prescribed and has been
approved, one may well say that the post was held
by the incumbent in a substantive capacity."
It is to be emphasised that the court in Baleshwar Dass’
case did not take upon itself the task of determining
whether the temporary Assistant Engineers were entitled to
have the benefit of their entire period of service in
reckoning seniority under r. 23 of the rules, but left it to
the Government to ascertain the facts and determine the
question in the light of the principles laid down whether
the capacity in which the posts had been held was
substantive or temporary. The emerging principle is that the
temporary Assistant Engineers were entitled to the benefit
of their seniority reckoned according to the date or order
of appointment to the Servce in terms of r. 23 of the rules
w.e.f. the date of their absorption into the Service by the
Government in consultation with the Public Service
Commission i.e. from the date from which they became
’Members of the Service’ within the meaning of r. 3(b) of
the Rules.
In legal matters, some degree of certainty is as
valuable a part of justice as perfection. One reason for
consistency is that people often regulate their conduct with
reference to existing rules, which makes it important for
Judges to abide by them. Innovations can be unsettling and
lead to a loss of confidence: Dias’ Jurisprudence, 4th edn.,
p. 286. In the present case, the High Court was obviously
wrong in proceeding upon the basis that the matter was still
res integra. The decision of the earlier Division Bench was
arrived at keeping in view all the aspects and it was held
that the claim for re-determination of inter-se seniority
between direct recruits and promotees could not be agitated
after a lapse of 16 years. It is sufficient for invoking the
rule of stare decisis that a certain decision was arrived at
on a question or was argued, no matter on what reason the
decision rests or what is the basis of the decision. In
other words, an earlier decision may be overruled if the
Court comes to the conclusion that it is manifestly wrong
and not upon a mere suggestion that if the matter was res
integra, the Court on a later occasion could come to a
different conclusion. It cannot be doubted that an unlimited
and perpetual threat of litigation leads to disorder, sense
of insecurity and uncertainty. May be, there may have been
isolated cases of hardship but there must be some
reservation about limitation
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on the Court’s power in the public interest. Obvious
considerations of public policy make it a first importance
that the person aggrieved must take action requisite
effectively to assert his right to that end so that if the
contention can be justified, the Government service may be
disturbed as little as possible.
Inordinate delay is not merely a factor for the Court
to refuse apropriate relief but also a relevant
consideration it be so minded not to unsettle settled
things. As observed by Khanna, J. in delivering the judgment
of the Court in Maloon Lawrence Cecil D’Souza v. Union of
India & Ors., [1975] Suppl. SCR 409:
"(B)y and large one of the essential requirements
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of contentment and efficiency in public service is
a feeling of security. It is difficult no doubt to
guarantee such security in all its varied aspects
it should at least be possible to ensure that
matters like one’s position in the seniority list
after having been settled for once should not be
liable to be reopened after lapse of many years at
the instance of a party who has during the
intervening period chosen to keep quiet. Raking up
old matters like seniority after a long time is
likely to result in administrative complications
and difficulties. It would, therefore, appear to
be in the interest of smoothness and efficiency of
service that such matter should be given a quietus
after lapse of some time.
So also in R.S. Makashi & Ors. v. I.M. Menon & Ors., [1982]
2 SCR 69; Eradi, J. speaking for a three-Judge Bench stated
that belated petitions cannot be entertained under Art. 32
of the Constitution. See also: K.R. Mudgal & Ors. v. R.P.
Singh & Ors., [1986] 4 SCC 531. It would clearly be unjust,
as observed by Sikri, J. in Rabindra Nath Bose’ case to
deprive the appellants of the rights which have accrued to
them. As a result of the G.O. Of April 19, 1950, although
initially the guarantee to the merit scholars who had passed
out from the Thomson College of Civil Engineering, Roorkee
in order of merit was in regard to appointment to the
guaranteed post, but later it was amplified into assuring to
the holders of such guaranteed posts like the appellants
preference in the matter of permanency and seniority. This
necessarily perpetuated some amount of injustice, as brought
out in the Report of Lal Committee, to the holders of non-
guaranteed posts i.e. the temporary Assistant Engineers, due
to permanent appointments having been given to the holders
of guaranteed posts
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i.e. directly recruited engineer students in preference to
them, though they joined service earlier. There is, however,
nothing that can be done for the Court is faced with a fait
accompli. At times, the court is overtaken by the events. As
a matter of policy, the Government of the day thought that
it would bring greater efficiency and merit to the Service
if certain number of posts were kept reserved for the merit
scholars graduating from the Thomson College of Civil
Engineering, Roorkee, which in those days was the most
prestigeous institution of its kind in the country and was
later incorporated into the University of Roorkee. The
evidence about relevant consideration which prompted the
then Government into taking such a policy decision a long
time back may have been lost by passage of time but there is
always a presumption that every official act is done in good
faith. Although Krishna Iyer, J. in Baleshwar Dass’s case
calls the directly recruited Engineer Students to be a
’relic of the Imperial days’, nevertheless the system of
reservation of posts for the engineer Students served its
own purpose in attracting persons of undoubted talent and
outstanding merit to the Service and thereby promoted
efficiency, and it has also withstood the test of time.
In view of these considerations, I agree with my
learned brother Ray, J. that respondents nos. 1-12 were
disentitled to any relief under Art. 226 of the Constitution
due to inordinate delay and laches. If the judgment of the
High Court were to be sustained after a lapse of nearly 32
years, it cannot be gainsaid that the entire structure of
the administrative set-up of the U.P. Service of Engineers,
Buildings & Roads Branch would be upset. We are informed
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that the four appellants before us by reason of their
seniority and record of service, have reached the higher
echelons of service. One of them has been the offg.
Engineer-in-Chief i.e. Head of the Public Works Department,
Buildings & Roads Branch, and the remaining three are offg.
Chief Engineers. As against this, eleven of the 12
respondents have since retired, leaving only one of them. It
is always open to the State Government to reconsider the
case of the remaining respondent in the light of the
principles settled by this judgment that the temporary
Assistant Engineers on absorption were entitled to the
benefit of their seniority from the date from which their
services were regularised i.e. the date from which they
became ’Members of the Service’ within the meaning of r.
3(b) of the Rules. It is still open to the Government to
grant him the necessary relief, if he is found suitable for
promotion to a higher post, without disturbing the
appointment, promotion and confirmation of the appellants,
by the creation of a supernumerary post.
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I would, for these reasons, allow the appeal and set
aside the A judgment and order passed by the High Court
quashing the seniority list. without any order as to costs.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed
S.L.
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