Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 857 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Punjab State Warehousing Corp. , Chandigarh
RESPONDENT:
Manmohan Singh & Anr
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 19496 of 2005)
S.B. Sinha, J.
Leave granted.
The State of Punjab formulated a scheme on 23.01.2001 for
regularisation of its employees.
The question which arises for consideration in this appeal arising out
of a judgment and order dated 25.04.2005 passed by a Division Bench of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. 10307 of 2004 is
as to whether the appellant herein was bound to invoke the said scheme in
respect of its own employees.
The validity or otherwise of the said Scheme came to be questioned
before this Court. This Court passed an interim order. Pursuant thereto or in
furtherance thereof, Respondent No. 1 herein was appointed on contract
basis as Restorer on a consolidated monthly salary. His services
indisputably were extended from time to time.
The contention of the appellant is that the contract of the respondent’s
service was not renewed as the services of Respondent No. 1 were not
required any further and, thus, by an order dated 24.12.2001 his services
were terminated. Questioning the validity of the said order, a writ petition
was filed by the Respondent before the High Court. The said writ petition
was disposed of directing the appellant herein to consider the case of
Respondent No. 1 in the backdrop of the said Scheme dated 23.01.2001.
Inter alia on the premise that in view of a clarification issued by the State
Government that the said scheme was not applicable to the case of contract
employees, the respondent’s claim for regularisation was rejected by an
order dated 17.06.2004. A fresh Writ Petition was filed which by reason of
the impugned judgment has been allowed.
The High Court, however, in its judgment opined that the case of
Respondent No. 1 was covered by the said policy decision and as such he
was entitled to the benefit thereof. The appellant is, thus, before us.
One of the questions which was raised for its consideration before the
High Court was as to whether the workmen engaged on contract basis were
covered by the Scheme dated 23.01.2001.
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The said purported scheme of the State was not made in terms of
Article 162 of the Constitution of India. It was by way of a circular letter
dated 23.01.2001. The State, without issuing any notification or without
even exercising its statutory power governing the constitution and
functioning of the statutory authorities like the appellant, sought to extend
the same to public sector undertakings, corporations, boards, local
authorities and other autonomous bodies which it could not do in law.
Therein, it was stated:
"iv. For accommodating work charged/ daily
wage/ other category workers as per the above
policy against the existing vacancies the existing
instructions requiring permission of the DOP and
FD for filling up the vacancies would not apply.
Wherever for the absorption/ regularization of
workers as per the above policy any Department’s
own Recruitment Rules come in the way, such
provisions of the Recruitment Rules will stand
relaxed."
However, a clarification was sought for from the State Government by
the Managing Director of the appellant by a letter dated 29.03.2001 as to
whether the staff not being charged against any project or work is to be
regularized or not; in response whereto, it was clarified:
" It is clarified that those employees who are working
in Corporation for the last more than three years
continuously apart from work charge/daily wages, are
to be regularized because these categories of workers
are covered under the policy instructions No.
11/34/2000-4 P. p.31301 dated 23.01.01. issued by the
Government of Punjab."
It is not the case of the parties hereto that Respondent No. 1 was
appointed upon compliance of the constitutional scheme as adumbrated in
Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India. It is also not the case of the
respondent that prior to his appointment either any advertisement was issued
or even the Employment Exchange was notified in regard to the then
existing vacancies. It is also not known whether there existed a sanctioned
post. It is furthermore neither in doubt nor in dispute that the terms and
conditions of the services of the employees of the appellant - Corporation
which is a body constituted and governed under the Punjab Warehousing
Corporation Act, 1957 are governed by the provisions thereof and the rules
framed thereunder.
The terms and conditions of employees of the appellant - Corporation
being governed by a statute and statutory rules could have been altered only
by reason of amendment of the rules only. The State as is well known had
no say in that behalf. We fail to understand as to under what circumstances
the State had issued the aforementioned circular letter dated 23.01.2001. A
policy made by a State would ordinarily apply only in respect of the
employees working under it. The policy decision of a State cannot be
extended to a statutory Corporation unless it is permitted to do so by the
statute. [See Pawan Alloys & Casting Pvt. Ltd., Meerut v. U.P. State
Electricity Board and Ors. (1997) 7 SCC 251]
Furthermore, when the terms and conditions of the services of an
employee are governed by the rules made under a statute or the proviso
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appended to Article 309 of the Constitution of India, laying down the mode
and manner in which the recruitment would be given effect to, even no order
under Article 162 of the Constitution of India can be made by way of
alterations or amendments of the said rules. A’fortiori if the recruitment
rules could not be amended even by issuing a notification under Article 162
of the Constitution of India; the same cannot be done by way of a circular
letter.
This aspect of the matter is covered by a decision of this Court in A.
Umarani v. Registrar, Cooperative Societies & Ors. [(2004) 7 SCC 112]
wherein the law was stated in the following terms:
"No regularisation is, thus, permissible in
exercise of the statutory power conferred under
Article 162 of the Constitution if the appointments
have been made in contravention of the statutory
rules."
A Constitution Bench of this Court in Secretary, State of Karnataka &
Ors. v. Umadevi & Ors. [(2006) 4 SCC 1] categorically held that any
appointment made in violation of the Constitutional scheme would be a
nullity.
Submission of Mr. Nidhesh Gupta, learned counsel appearing on
behalf of the respondent that having regard to the fact that the policy
decision was made as a one time measure, the scheme in question would
come within the protective umbrella of paragraph 53 of Umadevi (supra)
could be accepted for more than one reason. Firstly, because the High Court
did not proceed on that basis; secondly, if the scheme itself was not
applicable in case of Respondent No. 1, even in terms of the said policy
decision, as has been clarified by it, the question of invoking the said
paragraph in the instant case would not arise. Moreover, in view of series
of decisions of this Court explaining paragraph 53 Umadevi (supra), such a
Scheme could be made out only in respect of such employees whose
appointments were irregular and not illegal.
This aspect of the matter has recently been considered in Punjab
Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. Ranjodh Singh & Ors. [2006 (13)
SCALE 426] in the following terms:
"A combined reading of the aforementioned
paragraphs would clearly indicate that what the
Constitution Bench had in mind in directing
regularisation was in relation to such
appointments, which were irregular in nature and
not illegal ones."
[See also Municipal Corporation, Jabalpur v. Om Prakash Dubey \026 2006
(13) SCALE 266 : (2007) 1 SCC 373]
For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained which is set aside accordingly. The appeal is allowed. No costs.