Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BALBIR SINGH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/05/1998
BENCH:
G.T. NANAVATI, S.P. KURDUKAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mrs. Sujata v. Manohar, J.
The respondent was enrolled as Sub-Inspector in the
Delhi Police in the year 19167. In 1984 the respondent was
working as a Sub-Inspector in Special Security District, New
Delhi and was posted at the residence of the then Prime
Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi for security purposes. On 31st
of October, 1984 the then Prime Minister was assassinated by
two members of her security staff, namely, Sub-Inspector
Beant Singh and Constable Satwant Singh of the Delhi Police.
In connection with the murder a criminal case was registered
under Sections 307, 302 and 120-B of the Indian Penal Code
read with Section 25, 27, 54, and 59 of the Arms Act. The
respondent was arrested in connection with the said criminal
case. In view of his arrest on 8th of December, 1984 the
respondent was placed under suspension. The order of
suspension stated that a Departmental Enquiry will be
conducted against the respondent.
In the course of investigation in the said criminal
case certain material was received by the Intelligence
Bureau. In view of the material so received and the
information gathered by the Intelligence Bureau, a proposal
was mooted by the Delhi Police for dismissal of the
respondent from service on account of his being associated
with subversive activities affecting the security of the
State. In connection with action to be taken against
Government servants engaged in or associated with subversive
activities undermining security of the State Under proviso
(c) to Article 311(2) without holding a departmental
inquiry, the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India,
Department of Personnel and Administrative Reforms, has
formulated an Office Memorandum dated 26.7.1980. The
Memorandum inter alia, enumerates different kinds of
subversive activities. These include cases where Government
servants have engaged in activities of the following types
which may affect/endanger the security of the State such as:
(a) Membership of, or association with, any body or
organisation declared unlawful after it was so declared; (b)
participation in or association with any activity or
programme - (i) aimed at the subversion of the Constitution;
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or (ii) aimed at the organised breach or defiance of the law
involving violence; or (iii) prejudicial to the integrity of
India; or (iv) which promotes on grounds of religion, race,
language, caste or community, feelings of enmity or hatred
between different sections of the people; (c) association
with organisations engaged in subversive activities, in
secret organisations which while professing to work in a
democratic way in fact, engage in activities to overthrow
the present political system, or organisations which have
foreign inspiration and liaison for similar objectives. In
such type of cases the Office Memorandum provides that the
case should be referred to a Committee of Advisors together
with all relevant documents. The referral note should, inter
alia, give particulars of specific facts, incidents or
events which the department concerned feels, would justify
action under the proviso to Article 311(2) of the
Constitution and not under the normal disciplinary rules. It
should also contain the basis and reliability of the
evidence as also in what manner these facts, incidences or
events show that the official could be brought within the
meaning of the activities specified. In essence the brief
should contain material as would convince a reasonable
person of the guilt which could, but for the confidentiality
of the matter, be established in normal proceedings. The
Memorandum further provides that where the competent
authority is the Head of a Department, if he and the Deputy
Inspector General agree that sufficient grounds do not exist
for proceeding against the employee under proviso (c) to
Article 311(2) of the Constitution, the matter should be
dropped. But in every other case, the Head of the Department
should refer; the case to the Administrative
Ministry/Department with his recommendation. On receipt of
the recommendation the case should be placed before a
Committee of Advisors for its consideration. The Committee
shall examine the case and make its recommendations.
The Committee is a high-power Committee of Advisors
consisting of the Home Secretary; the Secretary, Department
of Personnel and Administrative Reforms; the Secretary,
Ministry of Law and Justice, the Secretary,
Ministry/Department concerned with the case and the
Director, Intelligence Bureau or his nominee who shall not
be below the rank of Deputy Director. The Committee of
Advisors is required to decide wh ether, inter alia, on
grounds of national security and the nature of the
allegations made against the suspect, it is or is not
advisable or necessary to disclose the allegations against
the suspect or to call for his replay thereto. The
Committee, after considering all the facts, is required to
recommend whether action should be taken for the dismissal
or removal of the Government servant from service under
proviso (c) to Article 311(2) of the Constitution without a
departmental inquiry. If the recommendation of the Committee
of Advisors is for taking such action, the recommendation is
required to be placed before the Minister in the Ministry of
Home Affairs for his order. It is only thereafter that the
order of dismissal under proviso (c) to Article 311(2) can
be issued. An order under proviso (c) to Article 311(2) so,
therefore, issued after a detailed examination of all
relevant facts by a committee of very senior and experienced
Administrators in various Ministries with the approval of
the ministries concerned.
In the present case, in view of the information and
documents in the possession of the Intelligence Bureau, the
entire matter was placed before the Committee of Advisors
Constituted as per the said Memorandum. The Committee of
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Advisors recommended that the respondent should be dismissed
from service under proviso (c) to Article 311(2) in view of
the material which was placed before it. On the basis of
this recommendation, an order was issued under proviso (c)
to Article 311(2) by the President of India dismissing the
respondent w.e.f. 16.3.1985. The order expressly stated that
a Departmental Enquiry ordered vide Office Order dated
8.12.1984 against the respondent was thereby dropped.
In the criminal trial, the respondent was convicted
along with two others and was sentenced to death. The appeal
of the accused was dismissed by the High Court which upheld
that conviction. However, on appeal to the Supreme Court the
respondent by an order of the Supreme Court dated 3.8.1988
was acquitted [Vide 1988 (3) SCC 609 paragraph 46 onwards,
Khar Singh and Ors. v. State (Delhi Administration)].
On 23rd of April, 1990 the respondent filed an
application before the Central Administrative Tribunal,
Principal Bench, new Delhi, challenging his order of
dismissal dated 16th of March, 1985. He rayed for quashing
the order and for a direction to the appellant herein to
reinstate him in service with retrospective effect, with all
consequential benefits. The Tribunal, by its order dated
8.8.1994 dismissed the application on the ground of
limitation. This Court, however, granted a special leave
petition filed by the respondent and by its order dated
22.8.1995 directed the Tribunal to treat the application as
having been filed within time and to examine the validity of
the order of dismissal in the light of the decision of this
Court in A.K. Kaul and Anr. v. Union of India and Anr. (1995
(4) SCC page 73). The Tribunal thereafter examined the
application of the respondent on merit. By its impugned
order dated 14th December, 1995 the Tribunal allowed the
application of the respondent. Hence the present appeal has
been filed by the appellants challenging the order of the
Tribunal.
In the case of A.K. Kaul and Anr. v. Union of India and
Anr. (supra) this Court has examined the extent of judicial
review permissible in respect of an order of dismissal
passed under second proviso Clause (c) of Article 311(2) of
the Constitution. This Court has held that the satisfaction
of the President can be examined within the limits laid down
in S.R. Bommai and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors. (1994 (3)
SCC 1). The order of the President can be examined to
ascertain whether it is vitiated either by mala fides or is
based on wholly extraneous and/or irrelevant grounds. The
Court, however, cannot sit in appeal over the order, or
substitute its own satisfaction for the satisfaction of the
President. So long as there is material before the President
which is relevant for arriving at his satisfaction as to
action being taken under Clause (c) to the second proviso to
Article 311(2), the Court would b e bound by the order so
passed. This Court has enumerated the scope of judicial
review of the President’s satisfaction for passing an order
under Clause (c) of the second proviso to Article 311(2).
The Court has said, (1) that the order would be open to
challenge on the ground of mala fides or being based wholly
on extraneous and/or irrelevant grounds; (2) even if some of
the material on which the action is taken is found to be
irrelevant the Court would still not interfere so long as
there is some relevant material sustaining the action; (3)
the truth or correctness of the material cannot be
questioned by the Court nor will it go into the adequacy of
the material and it will also not substitute its opinion for
that of the President; (4) the ground of mala fides takes
in, inter alia, situations where the proclamation is found
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to be a clear case of abuse of power or what is sometimes
called fraud on power; (5) the Court will not lightly
presume abuse or misuse of power and will make allowance for
the fact that the President and the Council of Ministers are
the best judge of the situation and that they are also in
possession of information and material and Constitution has
trusted their judgment in the matter; (6) this does not mean
that the President and the Council of Ministers are the
final arbiters in the matter or that their opinion is
conclusive. (cf. Also Union Territory, Chandigarh & Ors. V.
Mohinder Singh [1997] 3 SCC 68).
If an order passed under Article 311(2) Proviso (c) is
assailed before a Court of law on the ground that the
satisfaction of the President or the Governor is not based
on circumstances which have a bearing on the security of
the State, the Court can examine the circumstances on which
the satisfaction of the President or the Governor is based;
and if it finds that the said circumstances have no bearing
whatsoever on the security of the State, the Court can hold
that the satisfaction of the President or the Governor which
is required for passing such an order has been vitiated by
wholly extraneous or irrelevant considerations.
In the present case, there is no material to infer any
mala fides. What is required to be seen is whether the order
is based on material which is wholly extraneous or
irrelevant, having no bearing whatsoever on the security of
the State. The Tribunal had called upon the appellants to
produce the entire confidential material on which the order
is based. The Tribunal h as held that at least two of the
files placed before it are highly confidential. They all
relate to the activities of the respondent which have a
bearing on the security of the State. This is not a case
where there is absolutely no material relating to the
activities of the respondent prejudicial to the security of
the State. The entire material gathered by the Intelligence
Bureau was placed before a very high level Committee of
Advisors under the procedure prescribed by the Government
Memorandum. This was precisely for the purpose of ensuring
that when a Government servant is dismissed without enquiry,
there should be cogent material to indicate that it is
necessary to do so in the interest of the security of the
State. The material was examined by the Advisory Committee.
Thereafter, it advised the dismissal of the respondent under
proviso (c) to Article 311(@). Therefore, the President has
issued an order under proviso (c) to Article 311(2).
In our view, this was not a case where there was no
relevant material. The Tribunal could not have substituted
its own judgment for the satisfaction of the President of
India. The Tribunal is under a misapprehension when it holds
that if the respondent could be criminally prosecuted a
Departmental Enquiry could have been held on the basis of
this same material. The respondent placed reliance on the
observations to this effect made by the Andhra Pradesh High
Court in B. Bhaskara Reddy v. Government of Andhra Pradesh
(1981 (1) SLR 249. The Tribunal has not noted that the
material which was placed by the Intelligence Bureau before
the Advisory Committee and the President did not relate
merely to the assassination of the Prime Minister. It
related to various other activities of the respondent as
well, which the authorities considered as prejudicial to the
security of the State. The fact that the respondent was
subsequently acquitted by this Court in the criminal trial
will not make any difference to the order which was passed
by the President on the totality of material which was
before the authorities long prior to the conclusion of the
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criminal trial.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed. The impunged order
of the Tribunal is set aside and the application filed by
the respondent before the Tribunal is dismissed. There will,
however, be no order as to costs.