Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 743 of 2007
PETITIONER:
State Bank of India & Anr
RESPONDENT:
Somvir Singh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/02/2007
BENCH:
H.K. Sema & B. Sudershan Reddy
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP(c) No. 802 of 2006)
B.SUDERSHAN REDDY,J.
Leave granted.
The sole respondent is the son of Zile Singh who died while in
harness on May 5, 1998. He was serving as an Assistant (typist/clerk)
in the appellants-State Bank of India (hereinafter referred to as
appellant-Bank). The respondent’s mother submitted an application
requesting the appellant-Bank for appointment of respondent by way
of compassionate appointment. The respondent at the relevant time
was studying in his matriculation examination. The Zonal Office of the
appellant-Bank at Chandigarh required the family of the deceased
employee to furnish the details of assets/pension/loan/income and
other details as are required in order to consider the compassionate
appointment. The same were furnished by the respondent. The
Deputy General Manager of the Bank submitted the proposal for the
consideration of the Competent Authority in the printed format inter
alia indicating the details regarding the deceased employee, terminal
benefits, details of immovable property left behind him, investments
and liabilities as well as pension paid. The Deputy General Manager
while forwarding the request for consideration of the Chief General
Manager observed that the family of late Zile Singh has reasonable
source of income to sustain itself and therefore, the request for
appointment on compassionate ground does not qualify for favourable
consideration. No doubt, the Branch Manager where the deceased
employee was working recommended the case for appointment on
compassionate ground. The Chief General Manager having regard to
the financial condition of the family found that the resources of the
family are adequate to meet its basic needs and accordingly rejected
the request for appointment on compassionate grounds. The
Competent Authority found that the financial condition of the family
does not justify any such appointment on compassionate grounds.
The order of the Chief General Manager in detail reveals that the
deceased employee was entitled to Rs. 03.15 lacs towards terminal
benefits and investments out of which Rs. 02.52 lacs were deducted
towards the liabilities leaving net surplus of Rs. 00.63 lacs. The
monthly family income included family pension drawn from the Bank
at Rs. 2,214/- and income on agricultural land being Rs. 584/-. The
family members are living in their own house. The value of the
agricultural land possessed by the family has been fixed at Rs. 7 lacs.
It is under those circumstances the Bank found that the family of the
deceased employee had not been left in penury or without any means
of livelihood.
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Challenging the order of rejection, the respondent filed a writ
petition in Punjab and Haryana High Court. The Division Bench held
that the income of Rs. 2,798/- "could not be treated to be an
amount for the family which could be termed as such amount to take
out the family from penury." The High Court accordingly directed the
appellant-Bank to reconsider the claim of the petitioner for
compassionate appointment keeping in view the entire facts and
circumstances of the case and the observations made in the order.
The order of the High Court is challenged in this appeal.
In this appeal Shri Mukul Rohtagi, learned senior counsel for the
appellant-Bank submitted that the High Court has committed error in
directing the appellant-Bank to reconsider the case of the respondent
on compassionate ground. The High Court ought to have appreciated
that the provisions of the Scheme viz. compassionate appointment
applies only in cases wherein the deceased employee left the family in
penury and without any means of livelihood. The monthly income
derived by the family and the immovable properties owned by it do not
justify any appointment on compassionate ground. The
compassionate appointment can be made only in accordance with the
scheme and there is no right to claim any appointment de hors the
scheme. The view taken by the appellant-Bank according to the
learned senior counsel to reject the claim of the respondent is in
conformity with the scheme.
Responding to the submissions made by the learned senior
counsel, the learned counsel for the respondent submitted that the
amount paid towards the terminal benefits and investments and the
family pension cannot be taken into consideration for the purposes of
assessing as to whether dependants of deceased employee are left
without any means of livelihood.
We have given our earnest consideration to the rival submission
made during the course of hearing of this appeal.
Article 16(1) of the Constitution of India guarantees to all its
citizens equality of opportunity in matters relating to employment or
appointment to any office under the State. Article 16(2) protects
citizens against discrimination in respect of any employment or office
under the State on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, descent.
It is so well settled and needs no restatement at our ends that
appointment on compassionate grounds is an exception carved out to
the general rule that recruitment to public services is to be made in a
transparent and accountable manner providing opportunity to all
eligible persons to compete and participate in the selection process.
Such appointments are required to be made on the basis of open
invitation of applications and merit. Dependants of employees died in
harness do not have any special or additional claim to public services
other than the one conferred, if any, by the employer.
In Umesh Kumar Nagpal Vs. State of Haryana [(1994) 4
SCC 138 ] this Court held, "As a rule, appointments in the public
services should be made strictly on the basis of open invitation of
applications and merit. No other mode of appointment nor any other
consideration is permissible. Neither the Governments nor the public
authorities are at liberty to follow any other procedure or relax the
qualifications laid down by the rules for the post. However, to this
general rule which is to be followed strictly in every case, there are
some exceptions carved out in the interest of justice and to meet
certain contingencies. One such exception is in favour of the
dependants of an employee dying in harness and leaving his family in
penury and without any means of livelihood. In such cases, out of
pure humanitarian consideration taking into consideration the fact that
unless some source of livelihood is provided, the family would not be
able to make both ends meet, a provision is made in the rules to
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provide gainful employment to one of the dependants of the deceased
who may be eligible for such employment. The whole object of
granting compassionate employment is thus to enable the family to
tide over the sudden crisis. The object is not to give a member of
such family a post much less a post held by the deceased." (emphasis
added)
In Union Bank of India & Ors. Vs. M.T. Latheesh [ (2006)
7 SCC 350], this Court while dealing with the similar question
observed that indiscriminate grant of employment on compassionate
grounds would shut the door for employment to the ever-growing
population of unemployed youth.
There is no dispute whatsoever that the appellant-Bank is
required to consider the request for compassionate appointment only
in accordance with the scheme framed by it and no discretion as such
left with any of the authorities to make compassionate appointment
de hors the scheme. In our considered opinion the claim for
compassionate appointment and the right, if any, is traceable only to
the scheme, executive instructions, rules etc. framed by the employer
in the matter of providing employment on compassionate grounds.
There is no right of whatsoever nature to claim compassionate
appointment on any ground other than the one, if any, conferred by
the employer by way of scheme or instructions as the case may be.
The scheme for appointment of dependants of deceased
employee on compassionate grounds framed by the appellant-Bank
inter alia provides that in making assessment of the financial condition
of the family which is an important criterion for determining the
eligibility to compassionate appointment, the following factors are
required to be taken into consideration:
a) Family pension
b) Gratuity amount received
c) Employee’s/Employer’s contribution to Provident Fund
d) Any compensation paid by the Bank or its Welfare Fund
e) Proceeds of LIC Policy and other investments of the
deceased employee
f) Income for family from other sources
g) Income of other family members from employment or
otherwise
h) Size of the family and liabilities, if any.
The Competent Authority while considering the application had
taken into consideration each one of those factors and accordingly
found that the dependants of employee who died in harness are not in
penury and without any means of livelihood. The Authority did not
commit any error in taking the terminal benefits and the investments
and the monthly family income including the family pension paid by
the bank into consideration for the purposes of deciding as to whether
the family of late Zile Singh had been left in penury or without any
means of livelihood. The scheme framed by the appellant-Bank in fact
mandates the Authority to take those factors into consideration. The
Authority also did not commit any error in taking into consideration the
income of the family from other sources viz. the agricultural land.
In our considered opinion the High Court itself could not have
undertaken any exercise to decide as to what would be the reasonable
income which would be sufficient for the family for its survival and
whether it had been left in penury or without any means of livelihood.
The only question the High Court could have adverted itself is whether
the decision making process rejecting the claim of the respondent for
compassionate appointment is vitiated? Whether the order is not in
conformity with the scheme framed by the appellant-Bank? It is not
even urged that the order passed by the Competent Authority is not in
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accordance with the scheme. It is well settled that the hardship of the
dependant does not entitle one to compassionate appointment de hors
the scheme or the statutory provisions as the case may be. The
income of the family from all sources is required to be taken into
consideration according to scheme which the High Court altogether
ignored while remitting the matter for fresh consideration by the
appellant-Bank. It is not a case where the dependants of the
deceased employee are left ’without any means of livelihood’ and
unable to make both ends meet. The High Court ought not to have
disturbed the finding and the conclusion arrived at by the appellant-
Bank that the respondent was not living hand to mouth. As observed
by this Court in General Manager (D&PB) and others Vs Kunti
Tiwary and anr. [ (2004) 7 SCC 271], the High Court cannot dilute
the criteria ’of penury to one of’ "not very well-to-do". The view
taken by the Division Bench of the High Court may amount to varying
the existing scheme framed by the appellant-Bank. Such a course is
impermissible in law.
For all the aforesaid reasons, we allow the appeal filed by
the appellant-Bank and set aside the order passed by the Division
Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana. There shall be no
order as to costs.