Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAO SOMASHEKARA & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/09/1997
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, M. JAGANNADHA RAO
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
W I T H
(Writ Petition Nos. 827/90, 822, 416 & 718/91)
J U D G M E N T
M. JAGANNADHA RAO, J.
These five writ petitions filed under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India are all connected and raise the same
questions. The petitioners are Secondary School Teachers in
the State of Karnataka serving in Government and Government
aided Secondary Schools.
Certain Secondary grade teachers in the former State of
Hyderabad which were allotted to the State of Karnataka as
on 1.11.1956. After reorganisation, the corresponding posts
in former State of Mysore were equate with the posts of the
allotted personnel. There was revision of pay scale on
1.1.1957 and again on 1.1.1961 but the disparity in pay
scales was allowed to continue. This anomaly was continued
till 1.1.1970 - for nearly fourteen years, when for the
first time under the concerned Karnataka Civil Services
(Revised Pay Rules), 1970 which came into force on 1.1.1970,
based on the report of the pay Commission headed by Justice
Tukol, the scales were brought on par with scales of
allotted Hyderabad officers prospectively by enhancing the
scales of the all Karnataka teachers w.e.f. 1.1.1970. But
the grievance of the Secondary School teachers of Government
of Karnataka for the period from 1.1.1957 to 31.12.1969
continued and has not been removed. That is the subject of
these writ petitions.
It is stated that, so far as disparities in pay among
Mysore and Karnataka Primary school teachers on the one had
and allotted Hyderabad primary school teachers are
concerned, Government orders as late as 1986 showed that
those grievance also arise out of the States Reorganisation
Act, 1956 in respect of pay scale disparities and have been
removed by the Government of Karnataka. On that basis,
petitioners, Secondary school teachers of Mysore and
Karnataka claim that distance of time is no bar to relieve
their legitimate grievance for the period 1.1.57 to
31.12.69.
In support of this contention, reliance is placed on
two sets of facts.
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Firstly the non-allottee primary school teachers of
Karnataka filed Writ Petition No.2801 of 1971 in the
Karnataka High Court for equating their pay scale with the
Hyderabad area primary school teachers. The High Court
dismissed the said writ petition on 10.1.1975 on the ground
of laches after however holding that the denial of equal pay
was discriminatory. In SLP No.908 of 1975 preferred by the
Writ petitioners therein to this Court in Sri Raghuram Hegde
& others vs. State of Mysore, a compromise was arrived at
with prospective effect from 1.1.1978 stating that 50% of
the difference between the pay scales will be given. The
pay as on 1.1.1978 of the Karnataka Primary School teachers
was to be increased by 50% prospectively w.e.f. 1.1.78. The
scales were increased only for purpose of computation and
fixation of pay but not for payment of arrears upto
31.12.77. Various details as contained in the compromise so
arrived at were incorporated in the proceedings of the
Government of Karnataka dated 10.8.1979. Again, when the
above compromise was being implemented, the Government
stopped the benefit of this compromise from accruing to
primary school teachers recruited in the State of Karnataka
after 1.11.56. This was challenged successfully in B.T.
Ramaswamy vs. State of Karnataka (W.P. 54/82 and batch)
before the High Court of Karnataka by judgment dated 6.12
1985. Thereafter Government issued an order as late as
8.7.1986. extending the benefit of its order dated 19.8.1979
by giving increased scales of pay to all primary school
teachers i.e. not only to those of erstwhile Mysore State
but also to the primary teachers recruited after 1.11.1956.
This was restricted to primary teachers who were recruited
upto 31.12.1969. The Government directed the payment of the
higher pay scale as per their earlier order dated 10.8.1979
and arrears for the period 1.1.78 to 31.4.1986 were to be
credited to the General Provident Fund Account and the
difference payable after 1.1.1986 to the primary school
teachers was to be paid in cash. Thus as late as 8.7.96 the
state of Karnataka removed grievances of primary teachers in
regard to pay etc. as compared to erstwhile Hyderabad
primary teachers allotted to Karnataka.
Secondly, the Karnataka High Court by judgment dated
7.9.1975 extended the benefits of the Government order dated
10.8.79 to primary school teachers in grant-in-aid schemes.
This was not interfered with by this Court in State of
Karnataka vs. A Venkatappayya (CA No.13757/96 dated
28.10.97). In that judgment this Court also referred to the
dismissal of SLPs (C) 21003-113 etc. of 1993 dated 22.8.94
whereby this Court refused to interfere with the order of
the State Administrative Tribunal extending the benefits of
the order dated 10.8.79 to the primary school teachers under
the local authorities of Karnataka.
In view of the above said two positive developments in
favour of primary school teachers, the Secondary school
teachers approached the Karnataka Administrative Tribunal in
OA 2205 and 2206 of 1987 contending that they should get pay
scale equalisation for the period from 1.1.1957 to
31.12.1969 also. The Tribunal rejected the petition the
ground of laches on 14.12.1989. Thereafter, the present
Writ petitions have been filed by other Karnataka Secondary
Grade Teacher in this Court claiming eqalisation of pay
scales from 1.1.1957 to 31.12.1969 and payment of arrears
for that period. That is how these writ petitions have
arisen.
It is contended by the learned counsel for the
petitioners Secondary School teachers that as late as 1986
and now 1994 and 1996 all pay-scale grievance of primary
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school teachers of almost all descriptions arising out of
States Reorganisation Act, have been favourably removed by
the State government, but the grievances of the Secondary
School teachers, also arising out of State Reorganisation
for the period 1.1.1957 to 31.12.1969 have not been
redressed and this is discriminatory It is pointed out that
this was done by even directing the arrears to be credited t
their P.F. account and extending all benefits to primary
teachers recruited after 1.11.1956 upto 31.12.1969. The
petitioners contend that the fixation of 31/12/96 as the
date from which the equality will be maintained is not based
on any rational criteria having nexus with the anomalies
arising out of the State Reorganisation Act. Learned counsel
for some of the petitioners Mr. S.R. Bhat argued that in
regard to the period for 1.1.57 to 31.12.69 the very
continuance of the grievance for 14 years after 1.11.1956
till 1.1.1970 was violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India. Learned counsel placed strong
reliance on the judgment of this Court in Motor General
Traders vs. State of A.P. [1984 (1) SCC 222] and other
cases.
On the other hand, counsel for the respondent submitted
that on account of State Reorganisation in 1956, difference
in scales of pay between allottee officers and Mysore
officers are bound to arise and are justified on account of
historical reasons attributable to different geographical
areas. It is also contended that the petitioners who are
Secondary School teachers, have the petitioners who are
Secondary School teachers, have opted for Karnataka Scales
after 1.11.1956 and cannot now raise these contention. it
is also stated that the case of primary teachers cannot be
relied upon to raise a plea of discrimination, even if the
grievances arise out of States Reorganisation. The State
has various options while clearing grievances and if it opts
for a particular formula or fixes a particular date upto
which alone the pay scales can be revised. It is not
permissible for the Court of judicial review to interfere
with such a choice. The finances of the State do not permit
grant of this benefit to the secondary school teachers.
This Court had occasion to go into the question of the
temporary nature of the continuance of existing laws under
Section 119 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 and
whether delays in rectifying the inequalities arising out of
the said Act should be rectified by the State within any
particular time frame. In State of Madhya Pradesh vs.
Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. [1964 (6) SCR 846 (852-854) it
was observed that though continuance of the laws of the old
region after the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 by section
119 of that Act was not by itself discriminatory even if it
resulted in differential reactant of persons, objects and
transactions in the new State because of historical reasons,
still ’passage of time’ could make the continuance
discriminatory. it was observed in the above case that:
"By the passage of time,
considerations of necessity and
expediency would be obliterated,
and the ground which justified
classification of geographical
regions for historical reasons may
cease to be valid. A purely
temporary provision which because
of compelling forces justified
differential treatment when the
Reorganisation Act was enacted
cannot obviously be permitted to
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assume permanency, so as to
perpetuate that treatment without a
rational basis to support it after
the initial expediency and
necessity have disappeared."
While accepting that continuance of existing laws in
the new State could not be continued without rational basis,
this Court pointed out further as follows:
"But whether the continuance of
unequal laws by itself sustained
the plea of unlawful discrimination
in view of changed circumstances
could only be ascertained after a
null and thorough enquiry into the
continuance of the grounds on which
the inequality could rationally be
founded, and the change of
circumstances, if any, which
obliterated the compulsion of
expediency and necessity existing
at the time when the Reorganisation
Act was enacted."
Similar principles were laid down by this Court in H.H.
Shri Swamiji of Shri Admar Mutt. etc. vs. The Commissioner.
Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments Department & Others
[1980 (1) SCR 368 (387-388)] wherein it was observed that
the "decision to withdraw the application of unequal laws to
equals cannot be delayed unreasonably because the relevance
of historical reasons .... is bound to wear out with the
passage of time". On the facts of the case, the Court
refrained from striking down the provision because the
period under consideration was just five or six years and
there was no adequate data available to decide the question
whether the continuance of the legislation amounted to
hostile discrimination. The above rulings were followed in
Motor General Traders vs. State of A.P. cited by the
petitioner’s counsel.
It is to be noticed that in these writ petitions, after
1.11.1956, the disparities in the scales of pay continued
till 1.1.970 and it was only from that date that, on the
basis of Justice Tukol Commission report, the scales of the
Mysore/Karnataka Secondary School teachers were brought on
par with those of the Secondary School teachers of the
erstwhile Hyderabad State allotted to the State of
Karnataka. In other words, the State took about fourteen
years to set right the disparities. As to whether any
inquiry is necessary for deciding about hostile
discrimination, the petitioners contend that there is no
dispute because the posts in the allotted areas of Hyderabad
State and of Karnataka were equated soon after 1956.
Question therefore is whether, in Writ petitions filed in
this Court in 1991, we are compelled to interfere?
We are of the view that the State Government had before
it the report of the Commission and on that basis it took a
decision that the disparities should stand eliminated
prospectively from 1.1.1970 and not retrospectively from
1.1.1957. The question as to whether the date from which
the scales ought to have been equated should be 1.1.1970 or
an anterior or a later date was a matter which had to be
arrived at by taking all factors into account. It will be
difficult for this Court to decide as to from what date the
continuance of the existing scales should be treated as
discriminatory or the continuance would loose its temporary
character arising out of section 119 of the States
Reorganisation Act. It may be that the State of Karnataka
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felt that the grievance of the non-allotted primary school
teachers whose salaries were lesser than the salaries of
non-allotted Secondary School teachers was a matter of
graver concern requiring redressal even as late as 1979 or
1986. Merely because the grievances of non-allotted primary
teachers were remedied even after considerable lapse of
time, we cannot say that grievances of secondary school
teachers - even if it was late - should have also been
redressed for the period 1.1.1957 to 31.12.1969. Above all,
the financial burden involved was also a matter of relevant
consideration. We are not therefore inclined to hold that
the cut-off dated of 1.1.1970 fixed after the report of
Justice Tukol Commission, in regard to Secondary School
teachers, is arbitrary or violative of Article 14. In any
event. principle of laches applies equally to application
under Article 32 of the Constitution o India [Rabindra Nath
vs. Union of India (1970 (2) SCR 1697].
For the aforesaid reasons, these writ petitions are
dismissed.