Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
G.N. TIWARI, K.L. JAIN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/11/1985
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 348 1985 SCR Supl. (3) 744
1986 SCC (1) 89 1985 SCALE (2)1081
ACT:
Indian Administrative Service (Regulation of Seniority)
Rules, 1954, Rule 3(3) (b) - Year of allotment, reckoning of
- Whether a member of the State Civil Service(Executive) on
his temporary appointment by the State Government under rule
9 of the Indian Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules, 1954,
for a period exceeding six months, is entitled to have his
continuous period of officiation in a senior post for the
purposes of computation of the "year of allotment" and
fixation of seniority - Indian Administrative Service
(Cadre) Rules, 1954, Rule 9, scope of - Clause (1) of
Section III of Schedule II of the Indian Administrative
Service (Pay) Rules, 1954.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, in CA 5045 of 1985 was a substantive
member of the State Civil Service (Executive) in the State
of Madhya Pradesh. He was, on November 7, 1975, temporarily
appointed by the State Government to the post of a collector
which is a senior post on the cadre under rule 9 of the
Indian Administrative Service (Cadre) Rule, 1954 and had
been continuously officiating on such post with effect from
November 10, 1975 till the Central Government accorded its
approval on October 1, 1976 for his appointment in the
Indian Administrative Service. The promotion quota of non-
cadre officers to cadre posts which was 50 prior to October
1, 1976 was on that date increased to 56. The respondent was
formally appointed to the Indian Administrative Service by
the Central Government on December 7, 1976. The State
Government of Madhya Pradesh by its letter dated February 3,
1979 informed him that he was assigned 1972 as the year of
allotment by the Central Government. The respondent,
therefore, filed a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution for an appropriate writ or direction directing
the appellants to assign him, 1971 as the year of allotment,
fix his seniority accordingly and allow all consequential
reliefs.
The High Court, held: (a) that though there was no
specific approval of the Central Government to the
appointment of the respondent, such prior approval was not a
condition precedent
745
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for valid appointment to a cadre under rule 9 of the Cadre
Rules and, therefore, the continuous officiation by the
respondent as the Collector for the period from November 10,
1975 to September 30, 1976 could not be ignored on the
ground that the appointment was not specifically approved by
the Central Government: (b) the existence of a vacancy in
the promotion quota of cadre officers was not a condition
pre-requisite for making an appointment of a non-cadre
officer to a cadre post under rule 9 of the Cadre Rules and
therefore, the fact that there was over utilization of the
State Deputation Reserve Quota had no bearing on the
question of the validity of the appointment of the
respondent on a cadre post; (c) that the condition of
approval by the Central Government required by the proviso
to clause (I) of Section III of Schedule II of the Indian
Administrative Service (Pay) Rules, 1954 was only for pay
fixation and it had nothing to do with the validity of the
officiation of a non-cadre officer in a cadre post under
Rule 9 of the Cadre Rules; and (d) that his continuous
officiation in a senior post of Collector from November 10,
1975 was in accordance with Rule 9 of the Cadre Rules and
the same must enure for his benefit to give him seniority
under Rule 3(3) (b) of the Seniority Rules. The High Court
thus allowed the petition.
Following the said case reported as K.L. Jain v. Union
of India, (1984) MPLJ 284, the High Court of Madhya Pradesh
in the connected cases out of which the present Civil
Appeals Nos. 5040-5044 of 1985 arise held that the
respondents therein also be assigned years 1966, 1967 and
1971 as their "years of allotment" respectively under rule
3(3) (b) of the Seniority Rules and their placement in the
seniority list be accordingly revised.
Allowing the appeals, the Court
^
HELD : 1.1 For the purposes of appointment of a non-
cadre officer to a cadre post under Rule 9 of the Indian
Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules, 1954, neither the
prior approval of the Central Government to such appointment
nor the existence of a vacancy in the promotion quota is a
condition precedent. [754 G]
1.2 It is plain upon a construction of Rule 9 of the
Indian Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules, 1954, that
under sub-rule (1) the State Government can direct that a
cadre post may be filled by a person who is not a cadre
officer. If it is satisfied that the vacancy is not likely
to last for more than three months or that there is no
suitable cadre officer available for filling
746
the vacancy. Under sub-rule (2), where in any State a person
than a cadre officer is appointed to a cadre post for a
period exceeding three months, the State Government is
required to forthwith report the fact to the Central
Government together with the reasons for making the
appointment. Under rule 3, on receipt of a report under sub-
rule (2) or otherwise, the Central Government may direct
that the State Government shall terminate the appointment of
such person and appoint thereto a cadre officer, and where
any direction is so issued, the State Government shall
accordingly give effect thereto. Under sub-rule (4), where a
cadre post is likely to be filled by a person who is not a
cadre officer for a period exceeding six months, the Central
Government is required to report the full facts to the Union
Public Service Commission with the reasons for holding that
no suitable officer is available for filling the post and
may, in the light of the advice given by the Union Public
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Service Commission, give suitable direction to the State
Government concerned in that behalf. [753 E-H; 754 A-D]
1.3 The power of the Central Government under sub-rule
(3) to direct termination of appointment of a person other
than a cadre officer to a cadre post for a period exceeding
three months or more cannot be said to be a larger power and
carried with it the power to direct curtailment of the
period of officiation of such person. The power to direct
termination of the appointment of a non-cadre officer in a
senior post is distinct from the power to direct curtailment
of his period of officiation. In the absence of a provision
made in the Cadre Rules empowering the Central Government to
direct the curtailment of the period of officiation of a
non-cadre officer on a cadre post for purposes of reckoning
his year of allotment under rule 3(3)(b) of the Seniority
Rules and since such a power cannot be spelled out from sub-
rule (3) of rule 9 of the Cadre Rules which confers power on
the Central Government to direct termination of appointment
of a non-cadre officer to a cadre post, the orders passed by
the Central Government fixing different dates as the date
from which the period of officiation of each of the
respondents is to be reckoned for determining the year of
allotment under rule 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules are
wholly arbitrary and capricious. Further the failure of the
Central Government to give a direction under sub-rule (3) of
rule 9 to terminate the appointment of the respondents
implies that their continuous officiation on a cadre post
had the tacit approval of the Central Government. [756 G-H;
757 A-D]
2. In these cases, the respondents as non-cadre
officers could not be denied the benefit of continuous
officiations in a senior post merely because the State
Deputation Reserve Quota was over utilised. [757 D-E]
747
Barjeet Singh v. Union of India & Ors., [1980] 3 S.C.R.
459; and Amrik Singh & Ors. V. Union of India & Ors......
[1980] 3 S.C.R. 485 followed.
2.2 The respondents who were appointed to the Service
by promotion in accordance with sub-rule 1 of Rule 8 the
Recruitment Rules are entitled under Explanation 1 to Rule
3(3)(b) of the Indian Administrative Service (Regulation of
Seniority) Rules, 1954 to have the entire period of their
continuous officiation in a senior post, for the purpose of
determination of their seniority, counted from the date of
their officiating appointment to such senior post whichever
was later. They are also entitled by reason of the legal
fiction contained in Explanation 2 to have the entire period
of their continuous officiation without a break in a senior
post from the date of their officiating appointment to such
senior post till the date of their appointment into the
service, counted for purposes of determining their year of
allotment under rule 3(3)(b) of the Indian Administrative
Services (Regulation of Seniority) Rules 1954. It cannot be
said that their officiation in a senior post on the cadre
for the periods in question was merely fortuitous or stop-
gap. [756 C-F]
2.3 Where a person other than a cadre officer is
appointed to the service by promotion in accordance with
sub-rule (1) of Rule 8 of the Recruitment Rules, the year of
allotment of the junior most amongst the officers recruited
to the service in accordance with rule 7 of the Rules who
officiated continuously in a senior post from a date earlier
than the commencement of such officiation by the former, is
the determinative factor in allocation of the "year of
allotment" under rule 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules. [755
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G-H; 756 A]
K.L. Jain v. Union of India, [1984] M.P.L.J. 284
affirmed and approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 5040-
5044 of 1985.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.12.1983 of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition Nos. 297, 142,
830, 891 and 1520 of 1982.
AND
Civil Appeal No. 5045 of 1985.
748
From the Judgment and Order dated 9.9.1983 of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 1186 of
1981.
V. C. Mahajan, R.N. Poddar and Mrs. K. Kumarmanglam for
the Appellants.
V. Bobde, C.L. Sahu and Miss Bina Gupta for the
Respondents in C.A. Nos. 5040-5044 of 1985.
K.K. Venugopal, C.L. Sahu for the Respondent in C.A.
No. 5045 of 1985.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. After hearing learned counsel for the parties
we had by our order dated October 11, 1985 dismissed these
appeals. We now proceed to give the reasons therefor.
These appeals by special leave directed against the
judgments and orders of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dated
September 9, 1983 and December 16, 1983 raise a question as
to whether a member of the State Civil Service (Executive)
on his temporary appointment by the State Government under
r. 9 of the Indian Administrative Service. (Cadre) Rules,
1954 for a period exceeding six months, is entitled to have
his continuous period of officiation in a senior post, to be
taken into account in reckoning the ’year of allotment’
under r.3 (3)(b) of the Indian Administrative Service
(Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954. That depends on
whether prior approval of the Central Government or the
Union Public Service Commission to such appointment under
sub-r.(2) of r.9 of the Cadre Rules for the appointment of a
non-cadre officer to a cadre post by the State Government is
a condition precedent for a valid appointment under r.9 of
the Cadre Rules. Further, the question is whether the
existence of a vacancy in the cadre strength of promotees,
i.e. over-utilization of the State Deputation Reserve Quota
is a relevant factor to be taken into consideration in
determining the period of continuous officiation in a senior
post on the cadre till the Central Government accords its
approval to such appointment under r.9 of the Cadre Rules in
assigning the year of allotment under r. 3(3)(b) of the
Seniority Rules.
Facts in these cases are more or less similar. It will
suffice for our purposes first to state the facts in K.L.
Jain’s case. The respondent was a substantive member of the
State Civil
749
Service (Executive) in the State of Madhya Pradesh. He was
on November 7, 1975 temporarily appointed by the State
Government to the post of a collector which is a senior post
on the Cadre under r. 9 of the Indian Administrative Service
(Cadre) Rules, 1954 and had been continuously officiating on
such post w.e.f. November 10, 1975 till the Central
Government accorded its approval on October 1, 1976, for his
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appointment in the Indian Administrative Service. The
promotion quota of non-cadre officers to cadre posts was 50
prior to October 1, 1976 but was on that date increased to
56. The respondent was formally appointed to the Indian
Administrative Service by the Central Government on December
7, 1976. The State Government of Madhya Pradesh by letter
dated February 3, 1979 informed the respondent that he was
assigned 1972 as the year of allotment by the Central
Government. Feeling aggrieved, the respondent filed a
petition before the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for an appropriate writ, direction or order,
directing that he should instead be assigned 1971 as his
year of allotment under r. 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules
and his seniority should be fixed on that basis, and that on
refixation of his seniority, he be allowed the consequential
reliefs to which he may be entitled.
The appellant contested the respondent’s claim on three
grounds, namely : (i) he was not entitled to count his
continuous officiation in the senior post of Collector from
November 10, 1975 as his appointment to such post in the
cadre was not approved by the Central Government till
October 1, 1976 i.e., for any period prior to October 1,
1976; (ii) there was no vacancy in the cadre strength of
promotees for any period prior to October 1, 1976 and
therefore the appointment of the respondent to the post of
Collector for the period from November 10, 1975 to September
30, 1976 had to be ignored; and (iii) there was over-
utilization of the State Deputation Reserve Quota and for
this reason also his continuous officiation on the senior
post of a Collector could not be taken into account.
G.P. Singh, CJ speaking for himself and Faizanuddin, J
in K.L. Jain v. Union of India, (1984) MPLJ 284 held that
though there was no specific approval of the Central
Government to the appointment of the respondent, such prior
approval was not a condition precedent for a valid
appointment to a cadre under r.9 of the Cadre Rules and
therefore the continuous officiation by the respondent as
the Collector for period from November 10, 1975 to September
30, 1976 could not be ignored on the ground that the
appointment was not specifically approved by the Central
Government. Further, it was held that the existence of a
vacancy
750
in the promotion quota of cadre officers was not a condition
pre-requisite for making an appointment of a non-cadre
officer to a cadre post under r.9 of the Cadre Rules and
therefore, merely because there was over-utilization of the
State Deputation Reserve Quota had no bearing on the
question of the validity of the appointment of the
respondent on a cadre post. It also held that the condition
of approval by the Central Government required by the
proviso to cl.(1) of s.III of Schedule II of the Indian
Administrative Service (Pay) Rules, 1954 was only for any
fixation and it had nothing to do with the validity of the
officiation of a non-cadre cadre officer in a cadre post
under r.9 of the Cadre Rules. It, accordingly, allowed the
writ petition filed by the respondent and held that his
continuous officiation in a senior post of Collector from
November 10, 1975 was in accordance with r.9 of the Cadre
Rules and the same must enure for his benefit to give him
seniority under r.3 (3)(b) of the Seniority Rules.
In the connected case, G.N. Tiwari and 19 other members
of the Madhya Pradesh cadre of the Indian Administrative
Service who had similarly been deprived of the benefit of
their continuous officiation on their temporary appointment
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to the cadre post of a Collector by the State Government
under r.9 of the Cadre Rules and had been assigned the year
1967 instead of 1966, the year 1968 instead of 1967, or the
year 1972 instead of 1971 as the year of allotment under r.
3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules also moved the High Court by
a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution based on the
same grounds, and prayed for the grant of similar relief. A
Division Bench consisting of J.S. Verma and C.P. Sen, JJ
following the decision in K.L.Jain’s case allowed the writ
petition filed by the aforesaid respondents and directed
that they be assigned the years 1966, 1967 and 1971 as their
years of allotment respectively under r. 3(3)(b) of the
Seniority Rules, as claimed by them, and their placement in
the seniority list be accordingly revised. It expressed the
hope that the State Government and the Central Government
would give them all the consequential reliefs to which they
may be entitled on re-fixation of their seniority. Against
the two judgments, the Union of India has preferred these
appeals by special leave.
In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant advanced two contentions, namely : (1) The
respondents were not entitled to have their entire period of
continuous officiation in a senior post under r.9 of the
Cadre Rules taken into account in assigning the years of
allotment under r. 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules as their
temporary appointment to such senior
751
post in the cadre was subject to the prior approval of the
Central Government under sub-r.(2) of r.9 of the Cadre
Rules, and (2) They as non-cadre officers were not entitled
to appointment to the cadre post of a Collector because
there was no actual vacancy in the cadre strength of
promotees. It is urged that the power of the Central
Government under sub-r.(3) of r.9 of the Cadre Rules to
direct termination of appointment of a person other than a
cadre officer appointed for a period exceeding three months
is a larger power and necessarily carries within its ambit,
the lessor power to direct curtailment of the period of
officiation. It is further urged that the respondents were
not entitled to the benefit of continuous officiation in a
senior post to be taken into account in reckoning their year
of allotment because there was no vacancy in the cadre
strength of promotees. In fact, there was over-utilization
of State Deputation Reserve Quota. We are afraid, we cannot
accept this line of reasoning.
The assignment of the year of allotment is governed by
r.3 of the Indian Administrative Service (Regulation of
Seniority) Rules, 1954. The relevant clause applicable to
the respondents is that contained in r. 3(3)(b) which reads
as follows:
"3(3). The year of allotment of an officer
appointed to the Service after the commencement of
these rules shall be -
(a) x x x x
(b) Where the officer is appointed to the Service
by promotion in accordance with sub-rule (1) of
rule 8 of the Recruitment Rules, the year of
allotment of the junior-most among the officers
recruited to the Service in accordance with rule 7
of these rules who officiated continuously in a
senior post from a date earlier than the date of
commencement of such officiation by the former :
Provided that the year of allotment of an officer
appointed to the Service in accordance with sub-
rule (1) of rule 8 of the Recruitment Rules who
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started officiating continuously in a senior post
from a date earlier than the date of which any of
the officer recruited to the Service in accordance
with rule 7 of these Rules so started officiating,
shall be determined ad hoc by the Central
Government in consultation with the State
Government concerned :
752
Explanation 1 - In respect of an officer appointed
to the Service by promotion in accordance with
sub-rule (1) of rule 8 of the Recruitment Rules,
the period of his continuous officiation in a
senior post shall, for the purposes of
determination of his seniority, count only from
the date of the inclusion of his name in the
Select List, or from the date of his officiating
appointment to such senior post, whichever is
latter :
Explanation 2 - An officer shall be deemed to have
officiated continuously in a senior post from a
certain date if during the period from that date
to the date of his confirmation in the senior
grade he continues to hold without any break or
reversion a senior post otherwise than as a purely
temporary or local arrangement."
It is common ground that the post of Collector is a
senior post. It is not disputed that the respondents were
continuously officiating in a senior post for long periods
prior to the date of their appointment to the Indian
Administrative Service. It is also not in dispute that if
the entire period of continuous officiation by the
respondents in the senior posts of Collectors were taken
into account, they would be entitled to the year 1966
instead of 1967, the year 1967 instead of 1968 and the year
1971 instead of 1972 as the ’year of allotment’ to them in
accordance with r. 3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules.
The appointment of the respondents to the senior post
of Collector was made in accordance with r.9 of the Indian
Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules, 1954. It is in these
terms:
"9. Temporary appointment of non-cadre officers to
cadre posts -
(1) A cadre post in a State may be filled by a
person who is not a cadre officer if the State
Government is satisfied -
(a) that the vacancy is not likely to last for
more than three months, or
(b) that there is no suitable cadre officer
available for filling the vacancy.
753
(2) Where in any State a person other than a cadre
officer is appointed to a cadre post for a period
exceeding three months, the State Government shall
forthwith report the fact to the Central
Government together with the reasons for making
the appointment.
(3) On receipt of a report under sub-rule (2) or
otherwise, the Central Government may direct that
the State Government shall terminate the
appointment of such person and appoint thereto a
cadre officer, and where any direction is so
issued, the State Government shall accordingly
give effect thereto.
(4) Where a cadre post is likely to be filled by a
person who is not a cadre officer for a period
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exceeding six months, the Central Government shall
report the full facts to the Union Public Service
Commission with the reasons for holding that no
suitable officer is available for filling the post
and may in the light of the advice given by the
Union Public Service Commission give suitable
direction to the State Government concerned."
It is plain upon a construction of r.9 that under sub-
r. (1) the State Government can direct that a cadre post may
be filled by a person who is not a cadre officer if it is
satisfied that the vacancy is not likely to last for more
than three months or that there is no suitable cadre officer
available for filling the vacancy. In these cases,
admittedly, the appointments of each of the respondents who
was a person other than a cadre officer to the senior post
of Collector in the cadre lasted for nearly a year or more
and therefore exceeded the period of three months
contemplated by sub-r.(1). Such an appointment could be made
by the State Government on being satisfied that there was no
suitable officer for filling the vacancy. It is not averred
in the returns filed by the State Government or the Central
Government in the High Court that this condition was not
satisfied when the respondents were so appointed. Under sub-
r.(2), where in any State a person other than a cadre
officer is appointed to a cadre post for a period exceeding
three months, the State Government is required to forthwith
report the fact to the Central Government together with the
reasons for making the appointment. From the documents filed
by the State Government in the High Court, it appears that
such a report was made by the State Government to the
Central Government on June 26, 1976. The Central Government
by letter dated February 19, 1977 asked for a consolidated
754
proposal for approval of officiation of non-cadre officers
on cadre posts for the half year ending September 30, 1976.
In compliance therewith, the State Government sent the
required proposal on March 29, 1977. Under sub-r. (3), on
receipt of a report under sub-r.(2) or otherwise, the
Central Government may direct that the State Government
shall terminate the appointment of such person and appoint
thereto a cadre officer, and where any direction is so
issued, the State Government shall accordingly give effect
thereto. Under sub-r.(4), where a cadre post is likely to be
filled by a person who is not a cadre officer for a period
exceeding six months, the Central Government is required to
report the full facts to the Union Public Service Commission
with the reasons for holding that no suitable officer is
available for filling the post and may, in the light of the
advice given by the Union Public Service Commission, give
suitable direction to the State Government concerned in that
behalf.
Interpreting the provisions of sub-rules (2),(3) and
(4), the High Court in K.L. Jain’s case, rightly observed :
"In the instant case, the Central Government never
directed the State Government to terminate the
petitioner’s appointment. It is also not the case
that the U.P.S.C. tendered any advice to the
Central Government that the appointment be
terminated. It is true that there is a specific
approval of the Central Government to the
appointment of the petitioner but that is not a
condition precedent for a valid appointment under
Rule 9 and the petitioner’s officiation in a
senior cadre post from 10th November 1975 to 30th
September 1976 cannot be ignored on the ground
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that the appointment was not specifically approved
by the Central Government. The petitioner’s said
officiation cannot also be ignored on the ground
that there was no vacancy during this period in
the promotion quota of the cadre officers."
The High Court held that prior approval of the Central
Government was not a condition precedent to the appointment
of a non-cadre officer to a cadre post under r.9 of the
Cadre Rules. It further held that the existence of a vacancy
in the promotion quota was not a pre-requisite for making
such an appointment. The appointment of the respondent K.L.
Jain to the Indian Administrative Service made by the
Central Government on December 7, 1976 was on a post when
there was admittedly a vacancy in the promotion quota
755
of non-cadre officers, but his temporary appointment by the
State Government to the post of Collector which is a senior
post in the cadre under r.9 on November 7, 1975 was at a
time when there was no such vacancy in the promotion quota.
It appears that the promotion quota of non-cadre officers to
cadre posts was 50 prior to October 1, 1976 and was on that
date increased to 56. Since the existence of a vacancy was
not a condition precedent for making an appointment under r.
9 of a non-cadre officer to a cadre post, the High Court
held that the respondent’s officiation from November 10,
1975 to September 30, 1976, could not be held to be invalid
or ignored. On the same reasoning, it held that the fact
that the State Government had over-utilized the Deputation
Reserve Quota during the aforesaid period, could have no
bearing on the question of validity of his appointment on
the cadre post. It then added :
"It may be that if the Central Government thought
that the State Deputation Reserve Quota which gave
rise to a vacancy of a cadre post, it could have
directed the State Government to terminate the
petitioner’s appointment but such a course was
never adopted. As the Central Government did not
issue any direction to the State Government to
terminate the petitioner’s appointment, the
appointment has to be held to be valid and given
effect to."
In that view, the High Court held that the respondent’s
continuous officiation in a senior post from November 10,
1975 was in accordance with r.9 of the Cadre Rules and the
same must enure for his benefit for reckoning his seniority
under r.3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules. Further, it held
that the requirement of approval of the Central Government
as contained in the proviso to cl. I of s. III of Schedule
II of the Indian Administrative Service (Pay) Rules, 1954
cannot be imported into r.9 of the Cadre Rules or r.3(3)(b)
of the Seniority Rules. The view expressed by the High Court
in K.L. Jain’s case was followed with approval in the later
case of G.N. Tiwari & Ors. v. Union of India.
Where a person other than a cadre officer is appointed
to the Service by promotion in accordance with sub-r.(1) of
r.8 of the Recruitment Rules, the year of allotment of the
junior-most amongst the officers recruited to the Service in
accordance with r.7 of the Rules who officiated continuously
in a senior post from a date earlier than the commencement
of such officiation by the former, is the determinative
factor in allocation of the ’year of allotment’ under r.
3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules.
756
Proviso thereto enjoins that the year of allotment of an
officer appointed to the Service in accordance with sub-
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r.(1) of r.8 of the Recruitment Rules who started
officiating continuously in a senior post from a date
earlier than the date on which any of the officers recruited
to the Service in accordance with r.7 so started
officiating, shall be determined and hoc by the Central
Government in consultation with the State Government
concerned. Explanation 1 to r.3(3)(b) interdicts that in
respect of an officer appointed to the Service by promotion
in accordance with sub-r.(1) of r.8 of the Recruitment
Rules, the period of his continuous officiating in a senior
post shall, for purposes of determination of his seniority,
count only from the date of inclusion of his name in the
Select List, or from the date of his officiating appointment
to such senior post, whichever is later. Explanation
provides that an officer shall be deemed to have officiate
continuously in a senior post from a certain date if during
the period from the date of the date of his confirmation in
the senior post he continued to hold without any break or
reversion the senior post otherwise than as a purely
temporary or local arrangement. In these cases, the
respondents who were appointed to the service by promotion
in accordance with sub-r.(1) of r.8 of the Recruitment Rules
were entitled under Explanation I to have the entire period
of continuous officiation in a senior post, for the purpose
of determination of their seniority, counted from the date
of inclusion of their names in the Select List or from the
date of his officiating appointment to such senior post,
whichever was later. They were also entitled by reason of
the legal fiction contained in Explanation 2 to have the
entire period of their continuous officiation without a
break in a senior post from the date of their officiating
appointment to such senior post till the date of their
appointment into the Service, counted for purposes of
determining their year of allotment under r. 3(3)(b) of the
Seniority Rules. It cannot be said that their officiation in
a senior post on the cadre for the periods in question was
merely fortuitous or stop-gap.
We are not impressed with the submission that the power
of the Central Government under sub-r.(3) to direct
termination of appointment of a person other than a cadre
officer to a cadre post for a period exceeding three months
or more was a larger power and carried with it the power to
direct curtailment of the period of officiation of such
person. Obviously, the power to direct termination of the
appointment of a non-cadre officer in a senior post is
distinct from the power to direct curtailment of his period
of officiation. There is no such provision made in the Cadre
Rules empowering the Central Government to direct the
757
curtailment of the period of officiation of a non-cadre
officer on a cadre post for purposes of reckoning his year
of allotment under r.3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules. Such a
power cannot be spelled out from sub-r.(3) of r.9 of the
Cadre Rules which confers power on the Central Government to
direct termination of appointment of a non-cadre officer to
a cadre post. In the absence of such a provision, the
impugned order passed by the Central Government appointing
October 1, 1976 as the date from which the period of
officiation is to be reckoned for determining the year of
allotment under r.3(3)(b) of the Seniority Rules was wholly
arbitrary and capricious and therefore rightly struck down
by the High Court. The failure of the Central Government to
give a direction under sub-r.(3) of r.9 to terminate the
appointment of the respondents implies that their continuous
officiation on a cadre post had the tacit approval of the
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Central Government, particularly in view of the fact that
the Central Government by letter dated February 19, 1977
required the State Government to submit a consolidated
proposal for approval of officiation of non-cadre officer on
cadre posts for the half year ending September 30, 1976.
This was followed by a report of the State Government dated
March 29, 1977. The Central Government by order dated
October 1, 1976 accorded its approval to their appointment
in the Indian Administrative Service. Furthermore, the
respondents as non-cadre officers could not be denied the
benefit of continuous officiation in a senior post merely
because the State Deputation Reserve Quota was over
utilised: vide Harjeet Singh v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1980] 3 S.C.R. 459 and Amrik Singh & Ors. v. Union of India
& Ors., [1980] 3 S.C.R. 485.
The result therefore is that the appeals must fail and
are dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs.
We are constrained to observe that although the
judgment of the High Court in K.L. Jain’s case was rendered
as far back as September 9, 1983 and that in the case of
G.N. Tiwari on December 16, 1983, the directions issued by
the High Court have not been implemented so far. We hope and
trust that the Central Government will take steps to comply
with the directions issued by the High Court forthwith.
S.R. Appeals allowed.
758