Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHITRA VENKATA RAO
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1975
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 2151 1976 SCR (1) 521
1975 SCC (2) 557
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1070 (6)
RF 1991 SC2251 (8)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, 226-Scope of High Court’s
power in relation to departmental enquiries to guilt of
government servants.
HEADNOTE:
(1) The jurisdiction of the High Court to issue a writ
of certiorari under Art. 226 is a supervisory jurisdiction,
and not as an appellate court. The findings of fact reached
by an inferior court or tribunal as result of the
appreciation of evidence are not reopened or questioned in
these proceedings. An error of law which is apparent on the
face of record can be corrected but not an error of fact,
however grave it may be. In regard to a finding of fact
recorded by a tribunal a writ can be issued if it is shown
that the tribunal had erroneously refuged to admit
admissible and material evidence or had erroneously admitted
inadmissible evidence which has influenced the impugned
finding. Again, if a finding of fact is based on the
evidence, that would be regarded as an error of law which
can be corrected be a writ of’ certiorari, but if there is
some evidence which may reasonably support the conclusion,
its adequacy or sufficiency and the inference of’ fact
drawn, are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the
tribunal. The Court is concerned to determine whether the
inquiry is held by an authority competent in that behalf,
and according to the procedure prescribed in that behalf,
and whether the rules of natural justice are not violated.
Therefore, in departmental enquires relating to the guilt of
delinquent officers, the High Court may interfere only where
the departmental authorities have held tax proceedings
against the delinquent officer in a manner inconsistent with
the rules of natural justice or in violation of the
statutory rules prescribing the mode of inquiry or where the
authorities have disabled themselves from reaching a fair
decision by some considerations extraneous to the evidence
and the merits of the case, or by allowing themselves to be
influenced by irrelevant considerations or where the
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conclusion, on the very face of it, is so wholly arbitrary
and capricious that no reasonable person could ever have
arrived at that conclusion.
[525-E-527B]
State of Andhra Pradesh v. S. Sree Rama Rao [1963] 3
S.C.R. 25; Railway Board, representing the Union of India
New Delhi & Anr. v. Niranjan Singh [1969] 3 S.C.R. 548 and
Syed Yakoob v. K. S. Radhakrishnan & Ors. [1964] 5 S.C.R.
64, referred to.
(2) There is no warrant for the view that in
considering whether a public officer is guilty of misconduct
charged against him the rule followed in criminal trials,
namely, that an offence is not established unless proved
beyond reason able doubt, must be applied. [525F G]
In the present case, charges that the respondent
fraudulently claimed travelling allowance were inquired into
by the Disciplinary Proceedings Tribunal. The Tribunal found
him guilty and recommended dismissal. The Government accept
ed the recommendation and dismissed the respondent. In a
writ petition challenging the order of dismissal, the High
Court equated the charge of mis conduct to a charge under
s.5(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947
discussed the evidence and findings of the Tribunal on that
basis and held that the prosecution did not adduce material
and essential evidence namely; the conductor’s chart which
would show whether the respondent travelled on a particular
day, that a statement made by the respondent during
investigation was not admissible in evidence, that it was
not safe to rely on it and set aside the order of dismissal.
Allowing the appeal to this Court.
^
HELD . (a) The High Court was not correct in holding
that the domestic inquiry before the Tribunal was the same
as prosecution is a criminal case.
[525C-D]
3-L925SupCI/75
522
(b) The respondent was given full opportunity to
explain the statement A made by him during investigation.
Further, the Tribunal did not base its findings only on that
statement. It had given its reasons for its conclusion and
it is not possible for the High Court to say that no
reasonable person could have arrived at that conclusion. The
High Court had accepted the explanation that the conductors’
charts were destroyed and therefore could not be Produced.
Moreover, the conductor’s chart would not show the names of
the persons paying the money. The High Court reviewed and
re-assessed the evidence and then rejected evidence as no
evidence, and this is precisely what the High Court, in
exercising jurisdiction under Art 226, should not do.
[525SC; 527B-D]
(c) The respondent’s contention that the Tribunal
relied upon certain reports which were not available to the
respondent is not correct. A reference to the inquiry report
of the Tribunal shows that the Tribunal had not relied upon
those documents for finding the respondent guilty. [527G-
528B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2040 of
1974.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 13th June, 1974 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court
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in W.P. No. 2145 of 1972.
Niren De, Attorney-General of India and P. P. Rao, for
the appellant. r
A. Subba Rao for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAY, C.J. This appeal is by special leave from the
judgment dated 13 June, 19?4 of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court quashing an order of dismissal. The principal question
canvassed by the Attorney General is that the High Court
should not have interfered with the findings of the
Tribunal.
The State Government in the year 1964 received certain
complaints alleging misconduct against the respondent. The
Director of Anti Corruption Bureau was asked to inquire and
make a report. The Government in the light of advice
tendered by the Vigilance Commission referred the matter to
the Tribunal constituted under Andhra Pradesh Civil Services
(Disciplinary Proceedings Tribunal) Act, 1960.
Three charges were framed against the respondent.
Broadly stated the charges were that the respondent claimed
false travelling allowance on certain days in the months of
January, April and September, 1964. The respondent denied
the charges and submitted a written statement on 4 November,
1968. The Tribunal made inquiries and on 9 December, 1968
recommended dismissal of the respondent from the service.
The Government thereafter gave a notice to the
respondent on 22 February, 1969 to show cause why the
penalty of dismissal from service should not be imposed on
him. On 20 March, 1969 the respondent submitted his written
explanation. The Government after considering the
explanation of the respondent, by an order dated 24 May,
1969 dismissed the respondent from service.
523
The respondent challenged the order of dismissal in the
Andhra Pradesh High Court. The High Court by judgment dated
27 July, 1970 set aside the order of dismissal on the ground
that the recommendations of the tribunal were not
communicated to the respondent alongwith the notice
regarding the proposed punishment of dismissal. The High
Court observed that it was open to the punishing authority
to issue a fresh show cause notice regarding the proposed
punishment after communicating the enquiry report and the
recommendations of the Tribunal The Government thereafter
complied with the directions of the High Court. The
Government cancelled the order of dismissal dated 24 May,
1969. The Government, however, ordered that the respondent
shall be deemed to have been under suspension from service
from 21 May, 1969 until further orders. The order of
suspension was challenged by the respondent and set aside by
the Andhra Pradesh High Court on 22 March, 1970.
The Government then issued fresh notices dated 16
September, 1970 and 25 September, 1970 to the resplendent
and communicated the report of the Tribunal and the
recommendations of the Tribunal and the Vigilance Commission
regarding the proposed penalty. The respondent submitted his
explanation on 6 and 23 October, 1970. The Government
considered the same. The Commerce Department thereafter by
an order dated S May, 1972 dismissed the respondent from
service.
The charges against the respondent were that he made
three false claims for travelling allowance for three
journeys. The first journey was on 3 January, 1969 from
Rajahmundry to Hyderabad The second journey was on 19 April,
1964 from Rajamundry to Hyderabad and Hyderabad to
Rajahmundry on 24 April, 1964. The third journey was from
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Rajahmundry to Guntur on 13 September, 1964 and Guntur to
Rajahmundry on 16 September, ]964.
The respondent in his written statement filed before
the Tribunal denied the charges and maintained that he
travelled by first class on the days mentioned in the claim
for travelling allowance. He stated that he travelled by
first class from Rajahmundry to Hyderabad on 3 January, 1964
in accordance with his tour programme and claimed the
travelling allowance. He also said that he travelled by
first class from Rajahmundry to Hyderabad on 19 April, 1964
and from Hyderabad to Rajahmundry on 24 April, 1964 and
claimed travelling allowance.
In Exhibit P-45 which was his signed statement dated 8
January, 1967, he stated that on 3 January, 1964 he went
with his Joint Director from Vijayorgram from Rajahmundry in
a car. In that statement he said that he went from Hyderabad
to Waltair on 7 January, 1964 and he claimed travelling
allowance from Vijayawada to Hyderabad. In Exhibit P-45 he
said that on 19 April, 1964 he travelled from Rajahmundry to
Vijayawada by first class and he went to Hyderabad by first
class on 19 April, 1964. In Exhibit P-45 he said that he did
not
524
travel on 24 April, 1964 from Hyderabad to Rajahmundry
because. A there was no accommodation. He waited at
Hyderabad. On 28 April, 1964 he got reservation and
travelled to Rajahmundry.
The Tribunal on enquiry found the respondent guilty of
charges 1 and 2. In the Enquiry Report dated 9 December,
1968, the Tribunal recommended dismissal of the respondent.
The respondent in the High Court challenged the order
of dismissal. The High Court set aside the order of
dismissal on the grounds that the prosecution did not adduce
every material and essential evidence to make out the
charges and that the conclusion reached by the Tribunal was
not based on evidence. The High Court held that Exhibit P-45
was not admissible in evidence according to the Evidence Act
and it was not safe to rely on such a statement as a matter
of prudence.
The High Court said that corruption or misconduct under
rule 2(b) of the Andhra Pradesh Civil Service (Disciplinary
Proceedings Tribunal) Rules, has the same meaning as
criminal misconduct in the discharge of official duties in
section 5(1) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. The
High Court in that background discussed the evidence and
findings of the Tribunal as to whether the prosecution
placed evidence in respect of the ingredients of the charge
under section 5(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act,
1947
The High Court referred to these features in regard to
the finding of the Tribunal. Four years elapsed between the
journeys forming subject matter of the charge and the
framing of the charge. The respondent in his evidence said
that he secured accommodation through the Conductor incharge
of the first class compartment after the arrival of the
train. It was possible that the respondent might have
converted his ticket to first class one once he found that
first class accommodation was available on the train even
though he had purchased a ticket of lower denomination. The
conductor’s chart is the only basis for showing whether a
particular person travelled by first class by a particular
train and not by a copy of the reservation chart kept at the
starting station. Though the prosecution produced evidence
to show that the respondent did not purchase or reserve
first class accommodation in advance, the prosecution failed
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to produce the Conductor’s charts relating to the trains in
question. According to the High Court "The prosecution
utterly failed to adduce any evidence to exclude these
possibilities".
The High Court said that it was doubtful whether
Exhibit P-45 was admissible in evidence. It was said to be
taken during the course of investigation. The High Court
said that even if the statement is accepted, it only shows
that the respondent did not actually travel on the days
mentioned in the tour programme according to which
travelling allowance was paid.
The respondent made the statement marked Exhibit P-45
on 8 January, 1967. The charge-sheet was framed on 17
November,
525
1967. The respondent filed the written statement on 2
August, 1968. He filed an additional written statement on 4
November, 1968. It is apparent that the charge-sheets were
framed after investigation.
It transpired on evidence before the Tribunal that one
first class ticket bearing No.03834 was collected at
Hyderabad on 4 January" 1964. The further evidence about
ticket No. 03834 was that it was issued to one P.
Ramachandra Raju who travelled from Rajahmundry to Hyderabad
on the night of 3 January, 1964. The further evidence before
the Tribunal was that one first class ticket bearing No.
04049 for the journey from Rajahmundry to Hyderabad was sold
to one A. S. Murty for the journey an 19 April, 1964.
The Tribunal examined the respondent. The respondent
was given full opportunity to deal with Exhibit P-45.
The High Court was not correct in holding that the
domestic enquiry before the Tribunal was the same as
prosecution in a criminal case. The High Court was also in
error in holding that Conductor’s chart would show whether
the respondent travelled or not. The High Court accepted the
explanation that Conductor’s charts were burnt and,
therefore, they could not be produced. Further, Conductor’s.
chart could not show the name of the persons paying the
money. There was positive evidence before the Tribunal of
tickets being purchased by persons other than respondent on
3 January, 1964 and 19 April, 1964. These features figured
prominently before the Tribunal.
The High Court all throughout treated the enquiry
before the Tribunal as a criminal prosecution.
The scope of Article 226 in dealing with departmental
inquiries has come up before this Court. Two propositions
were laid down by this Court in State of Andhra Pradesh v.
S. Sree Rama Rao(1). First, there is no warrant for the view
that in considering whether a public officer is guilty of
misconduct charged against him,. the rule followed in
criminal trials that an offence is not established unless
proved by evidence beyond reasonable doubt to the
satisfaction of the Court must be applied. If that rule be
not applied by a domestic Tribunal o Inquiry the High Court
in a petition under Article-226 of the Constitution is not
competent to declare the order of the authorities holding a
departmental inquiry invalid. The High Court is not a Court
of Appeal under Article 226 over the decision of the
authorities holding a departmental enquiry against a public
servant. The Court is concern ed to determine whether the
enquiry is held by an authority competent in that behalf and
according to the procedure prescribed in that behalf, and
whether the rules of natural justice are not violated.
Second, where there is some evidence which the authorities
entrusted with the duty to hold the enquiry has accepted and
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which evidence may reason ably support the conclusion that
the delinquent officer is guilty of the charge, it is not
the function of the High Court to review the evidence
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 25.
526
and to arrive at an independent finding on the evidence. The
High A Court may interfere where the departmental
authorities have held the proceedings against the delinquent
in a manner inconsistent with the rules of natural justice
or in violation of the statutory rules prescribing the mode
of enquiry or where the authorities have disabled themselves
from reaching a fair decision by some considerations
extraneous to the evidence and the merits of the case or by
allowing themselves to be influenced by irrelevant
considerations or where the conclusion on the very face of
it is so wholly arbitrary and capricious that no reasonable
person could ever have arrived at that conclusion. The
departmental authorities are, if the enquiry is otherwise
properly held, the sole judges of facts and if there is some
legal evidence on which their findings can be based, the
adequacy or reliability of that evidence is not a matter
which can be permitted to be canvassed before the High Court
in a proceeding for a writ under Article 226.
Again, this Court in Railway Board, representing the
Union of India, New Delhi & Anr v. Niranjan Singh(1) said
that the High Court does not interfere with the conclusion
of the disciplinary authority unless the finding is not
supported by any evidence or it can be said that no
reasonable person could have reached such a finding. In
Niranjan Singh’s case (supra) this Court held that the High
Court exceeded its powers in interfering with the findings
of the disciplinary authority on the charge that the
respondent was instrumental in compelling the shut-down of
an air compressor at about 8.15 a.m. On 31 May, 1956. This
Court said that the Enquiry Committee felt that the evidence
of two persons that the respondent led a group of strikers
and compelled them to close down their compressor could not
be accepted at its face value. The General Manager did not
agree with the Enquiry Committee on that point. The General
Manager accepted the evidence. This Court said that it was
open to the General Manager to do so and he was not bound by
the conclusion reached by the Committee. This Court held
that the conclusion reached by the disciplinary authority
should prevail and the High Court should not have interfered
with the conclusion.
The jurisdiction to issue a writ of certiorari under
Article 226 is a supervisory jurisdiction. The Court
exercises it not as an Appellate Court. The findings of fact
reached by an inferior court or Tribunal as a result of the.
appreciation of evidence are not reopened or questioned in
writ proceedings. An error of law which is apparent on the
face of the record can be corrected by a writ, but not an
error of facts however grave it may appear to be. In regard
to a finding of fact recorded by a Tribunal, a writ can be
issued if it is shown that in recording the said finding,
the Tribunal had erroneously refused to admit admissible and
material evidence, or had erroneously admitted inadmissible
evidence which has influenced the impugned finding. Again if
a finding of fact is based on no evidence, that would be
regarded as an error of law which can be corrected by a writ
of certiorary. A finding of fact recorded by the Tribunal
cannot be chal
(1) [1969] 3 S.C.R. 548.
527
lenged on the ground that the relevant and material evidence
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adduced before the Tribunal is insufficient or inadequate to
sustain a finding. The adequacy or sufficiency of evidence
led on a point and the inference of fact to be drawn from
the said finding are within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Tribunal. See Syed Yakoob v. K. S. Radhakrishnan &
ors(1).
The High Court in the present case assessed the entire
evidence and came to its own conclusion. The High Court was
not justified to do so. Apart from the aspect that the High
Court does not correct a finding of fact on the ground that
the evidence is not sufficient or adequate, the evidence in
the present case which was considered by the Tribunal cannot
be scanned by the High Court to justify the conclusion that
there is no evidence which would justify the finding of the
Tribunal that the respondent did not make the journey. The
Tribunal gave reasons for its conclusions. It is not
possible for the High Court to say that no reasonable person
could have arrived at these conclusions. The High Court
reviewed the evidence, re-assessed the evidence and then
rejected the evidence as no evidence. That is precisely what
the High Court in exercising jurisdiction to issue a writ of
certiorari should not do.
The respondent raised another contention that the State
did not give the respondent a document described as ’B’
Report and Investigation Report of the Anti Corruption
Bureau. The ground advanced by the respondent in the
petition before the High Court was that ’B’ Report and
Investigation Report to which the reference is made by the
Tribunal in its report and which are relied on to support
the charges, were not made available to the respondent. The
High Court did not express any opinion on this question
because the High Court set aside the dismissal in the ground
that there was no evidence for the Tribunal to come to that
conclusion. The State in the affidavit filed in the High
Court in answer to the respondent’s petition said that ’B’
Report and Investigation Report are secret reports which are
intended for the reference of the Tribunal of Disciplinary
Proceedings and the Government and, therefore, these reports
are not supplied, to the officers. We need not express any
opinion on that answer of the State in the affidavit. The
respondent in answer to the affidavit of the State said that
the Tribunal used the ’B’ Report and the Investigation
Report against the respondent and did not supply copies. It
is because the respondent alleged in the writ petition that
the Tribunal relied on ’B’ Report and Investigation Report,
we looked into the Inquiry Report of the Tribunal to find
out whether that was a correct statement. We find that there
is a reference to ’B’ Report by the Tribunal only because
the respondent challenged the genuineness and authenticity
of Exhibit P-45. The respondent’s case was that if he made a
statement like Exhibit P-45, the Investigating Officer would
have sent it along with his report. The Inquiry Officer says
that the Investigating officer recorded the statement of the
respondent. The Tribunal has not relied on ’B’ Report or
Investigation Report. The
(1) [1964] 5 S.C.R 64.
528
respondent never demanded ’B’ Report and Investigation
Report. The A respondent was interested before the Tribunal
to displace Exhibit P-45 by doubting its genuineness. The
Tribunal found that Exhibit P-45 was genuine and was a
statement made and signed by the respondent in the presence
of the Investigating Officer. It does not appear that the
Tribunal based its finding only on Exhibit P-45.
For these reasons we are of opinion that the High Court
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was wrong in setting aside the dismissal order by reviewing
and re-assessing the evidence. The appeal is accepted. The
judgment of the High Court is set aside. Parties will pay
and bear their own costs.
V.P.S Appeal allowed.
529