Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DAKSHA PRASAD DEKA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/10/1970
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 173 1971 SCR (2) 687
1970 SCC (3) 624
ACT:
Natural Justice-Application for correction of date of birth
in service record-Filed within three years of date of actual
superannuation-If could be entertained.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was appointed Assistant Sub-Inspector of
Police with effect from January 17, 1929, and on his own
representation his date of birth was entered in the service
record as July 1, 1910. Under F.R. 56(a) he was liable to
be compulsorily retired on July 1, 1965. ’In 1963 he
applied that the date of birth in the service record may be
corrected as. August 1, 1911. The application was rejected
without giving him an opportunity to support his case and he
was informed on June 26, 1965. that he would stand
superannuated on June 30, 1965. He filed a writ petition in
the High Court and the High Court quashed the order dated
June 26, 1965.
In appeal to this Court
HELD : Until the service record of a public servant is
corrected he cannot claim that he has been deprived of the
guarantee under Art. 311(2) of the Constitution by being
compulsorily retired on attaining the age of superannuation
on the basis of the service record. A public servant may
dispute the correctness of the date of birth as entered in
the service record and may apply for its correction, but in
view of S.R. 8 Note, which governed the employment of the
respondent, an application for such a correction could not
be entertained if it was made within three years before the
date of ’actual superannuation’. The words ’actual
superannuation’ mean the date of superannuation according to
the service record, and not according to the date of birth
claimed by the public servant. The respondent represented
that he had attained the age of majority on the date on
which he entered service. It was not open to him to contend
that under the appropriate service rule he could not have
been admitted to the service. [688 G-H, 689 A-B, F-G]
State of Orissa v. Dr. (Miss) Bimapani Dei, [1967] 2 S.C.R.
625 explained.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 265, of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 10, 1966 of the Assam and Nagaland High Court in
Civil Rule No. 266 of 1965.
Naunit Lal, for the appellants.
R. Gopalakrishnan, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. Daksha Prasad Deka-hereinafter called ’the res-
pondent’-was appointed Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police
with
688
effect from January 17, 1929. On a representation made by
the respondent the date of his birth was entered in the
service record as July 1, 1910. Under F.R. 56(a) the
respondent was liable to be compulsorily retired on July 1,
1965. In 1956 the respondent applied that the date of
birth entered in his service record ’be showing as August 1
191 1. That application was rejected. The respondent again
applied in 1963 for correction of his date of birth. The
application was, rejected and by order dated June 26, 1965,
the respondent was informed that he win stand superannuated
on June 30, 1965. His representation made to the Government
of Assam against that order was unsuccessful.
The respondent then applied to the High Court of Assam
praying for a writ in the nature of mandamus requiring the
State ,of Assam to forbear from giving effect to the order
dated June 26, 1965. The High Court quashed the order dated
June 26, 1965 and directed the State of Assam to give an
opportunity to the respondent to show cause against the
order directing compulsory retirement and an opportunity to
prove his true date of birth. Against that order, this
appeal is preferred with special leave.
In the opinion of the High Court if the true date of birth
of the respondent was August 1, 1 9 1 1, the order
compulsorily retiring- the respondent on June 30, 1965,
without giving him an opportunity to prove his true age,
infringed the guarantee of Art. 311(2) of the Constitution.
In our judgment, the High Court was wrong in holding that
there was any infringement of Art., 311(2) of the
Constitution.
In the service record of the respondent his date of birth
was recorded as July 1, 1910 and under F.R. 56(a) the
respondent was liable to be compulsorily retired on the date
on which he attained the age of 55 years. The date of
compulsory retirement under F.R. 56(a) must in our judgment,
be determined on the basis of the service record, and not on
what the respondent claimed to be his date of birth, unless
the service record is first corrected consistently with the
appropriate procedure. A public servant may dispute,.the
date of birth as entered, in the service record, and may
apply for correction of the record. But until the record is
corrected, he cannot, claim that he- has been deprived of
the guarantee under Art. 311(2) of the Constitution by being
compulsorily retired on attaining the age of’ superannuation
on the footing of the date of birth entered- in the service
record.
It. is true that the State authorities did not give to the
respondent an opportunity to support his case that he was
born on
689
August 1, 1911, and that the service record was erroneous.
But in view of S.R. 8 Note, which governed the employment of
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the respondent an application for correction of the service
record could not be entertained if it was made within three
years before the date of "actual supernuation". S,R. 8 Note
provides
"No alteration in the date of birth of a
Government servant should be allowed except in
very rare cases where a manifest mistake has
been made. Such- mistakes should be rectified
at the earliest opportunity in the course of-
(1) periodical re-attestation of the entries
in the first page of service book, and (2)
preparation of the annual detailed statement
of a permanent establishment (Financial Rule
Form No. 11) in which is noted the date of,
incumbent’s birth. In no case the request for
change in the date of birth of a Government
servant made on a date with three years of the
date of’ his actual. superannuation’ should be
entertain ed."
Validity of the Rule is not challenged by the respondent.
are unable to agree with the view of the High Court that the
date of "actual superannuation" within, the meaning. of S.R.
8 Note is the date of superannuation computed with reference
to the claim made by the public servant, and not with
reference to the date as entered-in the service record. If
such an interpretation be-accepted, S.R. 8 Note would prove
in a majority of cases of no practical utility. It is
intended by S.R. 8 Note that any error ’in the service
record shall be rectified at the, earliest opportunity and
in- no case should an application for rectification be
entertained within three years of the "date of actual super-
annuation". i.e. the date of superannuation according to the
service record.
Again, if the contention of the respondent were correct, on
the date on which he entered service he was a minor. If on
a representation that he had attained the age of majority on
the date on which he entered service, it would not be open
for him, after being admitted to the service, to contend
that under the appropriate service rules he could not have
been admitted to the service, but for the misrepresentation
made by him.
Counsel for the respondent relied upon the judgment of this
Court in State of Orissa v. Dr. (Miss) Binapani Dei & Ors.
(1) in support of the contention that a public servant must
be given an opportunity to prove his true date of birth
before he is superannuated, and any order passed without
such opportunity is illegal. In our judgment Dr. (Miss)
Binapani’s case(1) enunciates no such proposition. In that
case in the service record of a pub-
(1) 1967 2 S. C. R.- 625
2-L 694 Sup. C.I/171
690
lic servant, April 10, 1910 was entered as the date of ’her
An enquiry was, held and the public servant was required to
show cause why her date of birth should not be accepted as
April 1907. Thereafter the Government of Orissa determined
her of birth as April 16, 1907, and declared that she should
deemed to have been superannuated on April 16, 1962. order
was challenged by the public servant in a petition to High
Court of Orissa. The High Court held that the order the
State Government amounted to compulsory retirement before
she attained the age of superannuation and was contrary to
the rules governing her service conditions and amounted to
removal within the meaning of Art. 311 of the Constitution,
and since :she was not given a reasonable opportunity of
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showing cause against the action proposed to ’;be taken in
regard to her, the order was invalid. This Court confirmed
the order passed by the High Court of Orissa. It was
observed by this Court that ,even an administrative order
which involved civil consequences must be made consistently
with the rules of natural justice ’The person concerned must
be informed of the case of the State and the evidence in
support thereof and must be given a fair opportunity to meet
the case before an adverse decision is taken The public
servant, according to the service record, could not be
superannuated before April 10, 1965. But by an enquiry
which was not held in a manner consistent with the rules of
natural justice an order was made altering the date of
birth as entered in the service record, and declaring that
she was born in 1907 That was plainly an order passed to
the prejudice of the public servant without giving an
opportunity to meet the case of the State. In the present
case, however, the State did not seek to modify the service
record: it was the respondent who sought modification of the
service record and claimed that he declared only on the
basis of the rectification prayed for by him. It is true
that ordinarily when an application is made for
rectification of age by a public servant, the State should
give the applicant proper opportunity to prove his case and
should give due consideration to the evidence brought before
it. But in the present case, since the application for
rectification was made within three years of the date of
actual superannuation, according to S.R. 8 Note the
application could not be, entertained. The principle of Dr.
(Miss) Binapani’s case(1) has no application to this case.
The appeal is allowed and the order passed by the High
Court is set aside. The petition filed by the respondent
shall stand dismissed. There will be no order as to costs
throughout.
V.P.S. Appeal at
(1) [1967] S.C.R. 625.
691