Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S. L. SACHDEV & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/10/1980
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 411 1981 SCR (1) 971
1980 SCC (4) 562
CITATOR INFO :
D 1989 SC1624 (11)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Articles 16, 309 and 32 & The
Indian Posts & Telegraphs (Clerks in Savings Bank Control
and Internal Check Organisation) Recruitment Rules 1969,
Rule 4 and Item 3, Column 10 of Schedule-Provision that UDCs
drawn from Audit offices being eligible for promotion to
selection Grade on basis of 15% of Posts Head Clerks on
basis of 20% of posts held by them in SBCO-ICO-Validity of.
Director-General in exercise of powers-Rules made by
the president under Article 309-Whether can issue direction
which is inconsistent with the recruitment rules.
HEADNOTE:
The Government of India created the Savings Bank
Control Organisation and Savings Bank Check Organisation
(SBCO-ICO). Amongst those who were invited to opt for
service in the said organisation were UDCs in the Audit
Offices, LDCs who had qualified for promotion to the UDC
cadre in the Audit Offices, employees under the Post Master
General and those from amongst the Time Scale Clerks in the
P & T Accounts Organisation.
By a letter dated May 15, 1964 the P & T Board informed
all the Heads of the Circles that the sanction of the
President of India was obtained to the conversion of 10%
posts in the cadre of UDCs in the SBCO-ICO into Selection
Grade UDCs. But, by his letter dated May 29, 1965 addressed
to all Heads of P & T Circles, the Director-General, Post &
Telegraphs modified the policy of reservation of 10% of the
post in the cadre of UDCs in the Selection Grade by
directing, that the total number of Selection Grade Posts
available for the UDCs who came from the Audit offices
should be 10 of the total number Audit officer UDCs working
in any particular circle of the Organisation.
On January 22, 1968, the Indian Posts & Telegraphs
(Clerks in Savings Bank Control and Internal Check
Organisation) Recruitment Rules, 1969 were framed regulating
the recruitment to the cadre of UDCs and other posts in the
SBCO-ICO. Col. 10 of Item 3 of the Schedule to the Rules
provides that the appointment to the Selection Grade will be
made from amongst UDCs with 10 years of service in that
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grade in case of Audit Office Staff, or with five years’
service in that grade in case of other UDCs. Later, the
Supervisory Cadre in the SBCO-ICO was recognised. Creating a
cadre of Head Clerks in place of the Selection Grade posts
and fixing the number of posts in the said cadre at 20% of
the posts of UDCs. By letter dated May 16, 1965, the
Director General however, clarified the position by saying
that "under the new scheme the audit office UDCs will get
the post of Head Clerks to the extent of 20% of their
strength instead of 10% as at present. The remaining posts
of Head Clerks will go to the non-audit UDCs".
972
The two petitioners who belonged to the P & T Audit
Offices and had qualified the departmental examination for
promotion as UDCs, joined the SBCO-ICO as UDCs. They
challenged the classification of UDCs for the purposes of
promotion to the Selection Grade/Head Clerks cadre on the
basis of the sources from which they were drawn and the
limiting of the promotional posts available to them to 10%
in the case of Selection Grade post and 20% in the case of
Head Clerk posts thereby resulting in promotion of their
Juniors who had joined the organisation from the P & T
Offices, as discriminatory, arbitrary and unreasonable.
According to them the only criterion for promotion from
amongst the UDCs in the SBCO-ICO could be the length of
service in the cadre of UDCs, subject to fitness. The
provision in Column 10 of Item 3 of the Schedule to the
Recruitment Rules of 1969 was also challenged.
The respondents argued that persons drawn from
different sources were not integrated into a common service
and therefore different rules of promotion could be applied
to the two classes and that the directive of the Director-
General was aimed at further and better implementation of
the Recruitment Rules.
Partly allowing the petition.
^
HELD 1. The Directions issued by Respondent 2 by his
letters dated May 16, 1975 and May 29, 1965 that UDCs drawn
from the Audit offices will be eligible for promotion to the
Selection Grade on the basis of 10% of the posts or to the
Head Clerks cadre on the basis of 20% of the posts, held by
them in SBCO-ICO are quashed. [979 E-F]
The petitioners and the other UDCs will be entitled
equality to promotional opportunities. They and others
similarly situated as them shall be promoted to the
Selection Grade/Head Clerks Cadre with effect from the dates
on which they were due for promotion by applying the test of
seniority-cum-fitness. [979 F-G]
2. The policy adopted by respondent 2 is discriminatory
and unreasonable. Apart from the injustice in specific cases
where UDCs drawn from the Audit Offices are attached to
comparatively smaller circles, the classification made for
the purpose of determining the promotional opportunities
seems unreasonable and arbitrary. Since under the impugned
directions, the number of Selection Grade/Head Clerks has to
be 10% of the number of UDCs drawn from the Audit Offices,
no promotional opportunities at all would be available to
them in certain circles in which less than 10 UDCs drawn
from the Audit Offices are working. These persons, for a
purely fortuitous reason. will be denied for ever all
promotional opportunities. That seems wholly indefensible.
[976G, 977B-F]
3. The duties, functions and responsibilities of all
the UDCs being identical, there is no reason why different
tests should be prescribed for determining their respective
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promotional opportunities and that too solely in reference
to the source from which they are drawn. The test of
educational qualifications can conceivably be an
intelligible differentia bearing nexus with the object of
ensuring greater efficiency in public services. But once a
cadre is formed by recruiting persons drawn from different
departments of the Government, there would normally be no
justification for discriminating between them by subjecting
one class to more onerous terms in the matter of promotional
chances. The impugned directives are therefore
unconstitutional. [977G-H, 978A-B]
973
Balakrishnan v. Comptroller & Auditor General of India,
1976 Kerala Law Times 401 & C. K. Krishnamurthy v. Director
General P & T 1978 Karnataka Law Journal 355, affirmed.
V. Subramanyam v. The Director General of Posts and
Telegraphs, New Delhi WP 3935/75 decided on 18th November
1978 & V. S. Rajagopalan v. Post Master General WP 3796/75
decided on 24th November 1976, reversed.
4.No one can issue a direction which, in substance and
effect, amounts to an amendment of the Rules made by the
President under Article 309. The Recruitment Rules of 1969
do not provide for the kind of classification which is made
by the Director General by his letters to the Heads of
respective Circles of the new organisation. They only
provide for classification on the basis of length of service
in the new organisation. Any directive which goes beyond it
and superimposes a new criterion on the rules will be bad as
lacking in jurisdiction. [978B-E]
5. The distinction made between the two classes of
UDCs, in the context of the length of their service for the
purposes of promotion is not arbitrary or unreasonable. The
staff of the Audit Offices which was engaged in the Savings
Bank’s work might well have faced retrenchment. Instead of
subjecting them to that hardship, they were given the option
of joining the new organisation. Experience-wise also, there
would appear to be fair justification for requiring them to
put in longer service in the new organisation before they
are eligible for promotion to the higher grade. The
provision in Col.10 of Item 3 of Schedule to the Recruitment
Rules 1969 is therefore upheld. [979C-E]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 267 of 1979
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
E. X. Joseph and N. S. Das Bahl for the Petitioners.
L. N. Sinha, Att. Genl. of India and Hardayal Hardy for
RR 1 to 4.
S. L. Aneja for RR 5-10 and 13.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C. J.-This is a Writ Petition under
Article 32 of the Constitution by which the petitioners ask
for an appropriate writ quashing the orders dated May 29,
1965 and May 16, 1975 issued by Respondent 2, the Director
General of Posts and Telegraphs, New Delhi, and for striking
down the provisions in Col. 10 of the Schedule to the
Recruitment Rules, 1969.
Petitioner 1 joined the Posts and Telegraphs Audit
Office of the Government of India at Delhi on July 31, 1956
as a Lower Division Clerk. In 1961 he qualified in the
departmental examination for promotion as an Upper Division
Clerk. On May 4, 1962 he joined the Savings Bank Control
Organisation and Savings Bank Internal
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974
Check Organisation (SBCO-ICO), as an Upper Division Clerk.
Petitioner 2 joined the P and T Audit Office at Madras on
June 3, 1950 as a Lower Division Clerk. On passing the
departmental examination he was promoted as an Upper
Division Clerk on September 10, 1958. He joined SBCO-ICO on
April 1, 1963 in the same capacity. He is due to retire on
October 31, 1980.
Respondent 1 to the Writ Petition is the Union of
India, Respondent 2 is the Director General of P & T and
Respondents 3 and 4 are the Post Master Generals of the
Delhi Circle and the Tamil Nadu Circle respectively.
Respondents 5 to 13, though junior to Petitioner 1 in the
Delhi Circle, have been promoted as Selection Grade
Clerks/Head Clerks in supersession of him. Respondents 14 to
47, though junior to Petitioner 2 in the Tamil Nadu Circle,
have been promoted as Selection Grade Clerks/Head Clerks in
supersession of him. The petitioners, in effect challenge
their supersession to the post of Selection Grade
Clerks/Head Clerks.
Until the year 1961, the Savings Bank work of the post
office was under the supervision and control of the Indian
Audit and Accounts Department of which the Comptroller and
Auditor General of India is the Head. The branches of the
Indian Audit and Accounts Department doing the Savings Bank
work and the work of auditing P & T accounts were called P &
T Audit Offices.
The Government of India having decided that the Savings
Bank work should be taken over by the P & T Department, the
audit offices were relieved of that responsibility by stages
during the years 1961 to 1964 and a new Organisation called
the Savings Bank Control Organisation and Savings Bank
Internal Check Organisation (SBCO-ICO) was created on May 4,
1962. With the setting up of that organisation, volunteers
were given the option of joining it. Amongst those who were
thus invited to opt for service in the new Organisation were
Upper Division Clerks in the Audit Offices, Lower Division
Clerks who had qualified for promotion to the Upper Division
Clerks’ cadre in the audit offices, employees under the Post
Master General and lastly those from amongst the time-scale
clerks in the P & T Accounts Organisation. Employees
belonging to the aforesaid departments who opted for service
in the new Organisation were transferred thereto in the
interest of public service.
In the audit department, 10% of the sanctioned strength
of the posts of Upper Division Clerks were in the Selection
Grade and promotion to those posts was made on the basis of
seniority-cum fitness. By a letter dated May 15, 1964 the P
& T Board informed all the Heads of Circles that the
sanction of the President was obtained
975
to the conversion of 10% posts in the cadre of UDCs in the
SBCO-ICO into Selection Grade UDCs. But, by the impugned
letter No. 56/4/65-SPB-I dated May 29, 1965 addressed to all
Heads of P & T Circles, the Director General, Posts and
Telegraphs modified the policy of reservation of 10% of the
posts in the cadre of UDCs in the Selection Grade by
directing, that the total number of Selection Grade posts
available for the UDCs who came from the Audit Offices
should be 10% of the total number of Audit office UDCs
working in any particular Circle of the organisation. Thus,
whereas, under the original intendment, if the total number
of posts in the cadre of UDCs in the new Organisation was
100, 10 posts were available in the Selection Grade for all
the UDCs, under the new policy if, out of the total strength
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of 100, 40 posts were occupied by UDCs who had come from the
Audit Offices, they would, as amongst themselves, be
entitled to four posts only in the Selection Grade. Under
the new dispensation, the test is how many UDCs from Audit
Offices are working in the Circle, not what is the total
strength of the UDC cadre in the Circle.
On January 22, 1968, the President of India, acting in
exercise of his powers under Article 309 of the
Constitution, framed rules regulating the recruitment to the
cadre of UDCs and other posts in the SBCO-ICO. The rules are
called "The Indian Posts & Telegraphs (Clerks in Savings
Bank Control and Internal Check Organisation) Recruitment
Rules, 1969". Brevity is obviously indicated and, for its
sake, we will refer to these rules as the Recruitment Rules,
1969. Rule 4 provides that the method of recruitment to the
various posts, the age limit, qualifications etc. shall be
as specified in Columns 4 to 12 of the Schedule provide to
the Rules. Column 4 of the Schedule provides that the post
of Selection Grade UDCs is a non-Selection post. Column 9
provides that recruitment of Selection Grade UDCs will be
exclusively by promotion. Column 10 provides that the
appointment to the Selection Grade will be made from amongst
Upper Division Clerks with 10 years of service in that grade
in case of Audit office Staff, or with five years service in
that grade in case of other Upper Division Clerks. This is
one of the provisions of the Rules which is challenged as
being discriminatory.
On the basis of the recommendations made by the Third
Pay Commission, the Supervisory Cadre in the SBCO-ICO was
reorganised with a view to providing better promotional
avenues to the members of the staff. Accordingly, the
Director Gerneral issued instructions by his letter dated
April 10, 1975 that the existing provision relating to the
Selection Grade Posts will be replaced by the creation of a
cadre of Head Clerks and that the number of posts in the
said
976
cadre of Head Clerks will be fixed at 20 per cent of the
posts of UDCs. By another letter dated May 16, 1975 the
Director General clarified this position by saying:
"Under the new scheme the audit office UDCs will
get the posts of Head Clerks to the extent of 20% of
their strength instead of 10% as at present. The
remaining posts of Head Clerks will go to the non-audit
UDCs."
This is the other of the two impugned letters.
The petitioners contend that the classification of the
Upper Division Clerks for the purpose of promotion to the
Selection Grade/Head Clerks Cadre, on the basis of the
sources from which they are drawn and the limiting of the
promotional posts available to them to 10% in the case of
Selection Grade Posts and 20% in the case of the posts of
the Head Clerks has resulted in stagnation of the UDCs., who
joined the new organisation from the Audit Offices. The
petitioners’ grievance is that UDCs. who joined that
organisation from the P & T offices and who were junior to
them in terms of the length of service in the U.D.C. cadre
have been already promoted to the Selection Grade/Head
Clerks cadre. This classification of the U.D.Cs. of the
SBCO-ICO into two groups for the purpose of promotion on the
basis of the sources from which they are drawn is challenged
by the petitioners as discriminatory, arbitrary and
unreasonable. According to them, since the promotional post
is a non-selection post, the only criterion for promotion
from amongst the U.D.Cs. in the SBCO-ICO can be the length
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of service in the cadre of U.D.Cs., subject to fitness.
Shri E. X. Joseph, who appears on behalf of the
petitioners has made a very neat argument, focussing with
the help of telling illustrations the injustice which has
been done to the petitioners and to those similarly
situated. The learned Attorney General who appears for the
Union of India and Shri Aneja who appears for the U.D.Cs.
drawn from the other departments, have attempted to meet
Shri Joseph’s argument but we are left in no doubt that the
policy adopted by the Union of India is discriminatory and
unreasonable. Though it appears prima facie that U.D.Cs. in
SBCO-ICO were drawn from four different sources, the sources
are really two and not four. U.D.Cs. in that organisation
were appointed from amongst those who were previously
serving in the Audit Offices and secondly from amongst the
other employees of the P & T Department. The recruitment
rules of 1969 make a classification amongst the U.D.Cs. by
providing that in so far as the U.D.Cs. drawn from the
977
Audit Offices are concerned they will be eligible for
promotion to the Selection Grade/Head Clerks Cadre after
they put in a service of 10 years in the new organisation.
In regard to the U.D.Cs. drawn from the P and T Department,
the rules provide that they will be eligible for such
promotion on completing five years’ service only. Bearing in
mind that the posts in the Selection Grade/Head Clerks Cadre
are non-selection posts to which appointments are made by
the test of seniority-cum-fitness, that is the farthest
limit to which classification of the U.D.Cs. for the purpose
of promotion could be carried.
It is difficult to appreciate the logic or the
principle behind the direction that the Selection Grade
Posts or the posts of Head Clerks which will be available to
the U.D.Cs. drawn from the Audit offices will be determined
on the basis of the existing strength, at any given time, of
such Clerks in the particular circle. Since, under the
impugned directions, the number of Selection Grade
Posts/Head Clerks has to be 10% of the number of U.D.Cs.
drawn from the Audit Offices, no promotional opportunities
at all will be available to them in certain circles in which
less than 10 U.D.Cs. drawn from the Audit Offices are
working. It is indisputable that, according to the impugned
directive, there have to be at least ten persons drawn from
the Audit Offices in a Circle, in order that at least one
promotional post may become available to them. We are
informed, which again is not disputed, that in some small
Circles, less than 10 U.D.Cs. drawn from the Audit Offices
are working in the new organisation. These persons, for a
purely fortuitous reason, will be denied for ever all
promotional opportunities. That seems to us wholly
indefensible.
Apart from the injustice in specific cases where
U.D.Cs. drawn from the Audit Offices are attached to
comparatively smaller Circles, the classification made for
the purpose of determining the promotional opportunities
seems to us unreasonable and arbitrary. It is contended by
the learned Attorney General that persons drawn from
different sources were not integrated into a common service
in the instant case and therefore different rules of
promotion can be applied to the two classes. We are unable
to accept this contention. The duties, functions and
responsibilities of all the U.D.Cs. in the new organisation
are identical. They are all in the same cadre and they draw
the same pay in the same grade. There is no reason then why
different tests should be prescribed for determining their
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respective promotional opportunities, and that too solely in
reference to the source from which they are drawn. The test
of educational qualifications can conceivable be an
intelligible differentia bearing nexus
978
with the object of ensuring greater efficiency in public
services. But once a cadre is formed by recruiting persons
drawn from different departments of the Government, there
would normally be no justification for discriminating
between them by subjecting one class to more onerous terms
in the matter of promotional chances. The impugned
directives are therefore unconstitutional.
Apart from this consideration, we are unable to
understand how the Director General could issue any
directive which is inconsistent with the Recruitment Rules
of 1969 framed by the President in the exercise of his
powers under Article 309 of the Constitution. Those rules do
not provide for the kind of classification which is made by
the Director General by his letters to the Heads of
respective Circles of the new organisation. It may be
recalled that the Recruitment Rules only provide for a
classification on the basis of the length of service in the
new organisation. Any directive which goes beyond it and
superimposes a new criterion on the Rules will be bad as
lacking in jurisdiction. No one can issue a direction which,
in substance and effect, amounts to an amendment of the
Rules made by the President under Article 309. That is
elementary. We are unable to accept the learned Attorney
General’s submission that the directive of the Director
General is aimed at further and better implementation of the
Recruitment Rules. Clearly, it introduces an amendment to
the Rules by prescribing one more test for determining
whether U.D.Cs. drawn from the Audit Offices are eligible
for promotion to the Selection grade/Head Clerks Cadre.
The High Court of Kerala in Balakrishnan v. Comptroller
& Auditor General of India and the High Court of Karnataka
in Krishnamurthy C.K. v. Director General, P & T have struck
down the impugned directions issued by the Director General
P & T on the ground that they are discriminatory and
therefore unconstitutional. These decisions of the Kerala
and the Karnataka High Courts are correct. In fact, it is
significant that the Union of India did not file any appeal
against those decisions and has acquiesced in them. The High
Court of Andhra Pradesh in V. Subramanyam v. The Director
General of Posts and Telegraphs, New Delhi and the High
Court of Madras in V. S. Rajagopalan v. post Master General
seem to have rejected the writ petitions filed before them
by persons similarly situated as the petitioners, by holding
that no
979
discrimination was involved in fixing separate quotas for
the purpose of promotion between the U.D.Cs. drawn from the
Audit Offices and the other U.D.Cs. With respect, we
consider the decisions of the High Courts of Andhra Pradesh
and Madras as incorrect.
The petitioners have also challenged the provision in
Column 10 of item 3 of the Schedule to the Recruitment Rules
of 1969 which provides that U.D.Cs. drawn from Audit Offices
must put in 10 years of service for acquiring eligibility
for promotion whereas other U.D.Cs. are eligible for
promotion after putting in 5 years’ service. We are not
inclined to entertain that challenge since the impugned
provision has been in force since 1969 and it was not until
the filing of this petition in 1979 that any objection was
taken to its legality. Besides, we are of the opinion that
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considering the history leading to the formation of the new
organisation, SBCO-ICO, the distinction made between the two
classes of U.D.Cs. in the context of the length of their
service for the purposes of promotion is not arbitrary or
unreasonable. The staff of the Audit Offices which was
engaged in the Savings Bank’s work might well have faced
retrenchment. Instead of subjecting them to that hardship,
they were given the option of joining the new organisation.
Experience-wise also, there would appear to be fair
justification for requiring them to put in longer service in
the new organisation before they are eligible for promotion
to the higher grade. That challenge has therefore to be
repelled.
In the result, we allow the writ petition partly and
quash the directions issued by respondent 2 by his letters
of May 16, 1975 and May 29,1965 to the effect that U.D.Cs.
drawn from the Audit Offices will be eligible for promotion
to the Selection Grade on the basis of 10 per cent of the
posts held by them or to the Head Clerks’ Cadre on the basis
of 20 per cent of the posts held by them in SBCO-ICO. They
and the other U.D.Cs. will accordingly be entitled equally
to promotional opportunities. We direct that the
petitioners, and others similarly situated as them, shall be
promoted to the Selection Grade/ Head Clerks Cadre with
effect from the dates on which they were due for promotion,
by applying the test of seniority-cum-fitness. Since we have
upheld the provision in Column 10 of item 3 of the Schedule
to the Recruitment Rules, 1969, the petitioners will have
become eligible for promotion after completing 10 years’
service in SBCO-ICO. Since the demotion of the respondents
or any of them is likely to lead to undue hardship to them
and to some administrative confusion, the Government may
create supernumerary posts to which the petitioners and
others similarly situated as them, may be promoted. We are
informed that consequent upon the judgments of the High
980
Courts of Kerala and Karnataka, the Government has adopted a
similar course in the Kerala and Karnataka Circles.
The Writ Petition thus succeeds partly. The petitioners
will be entitled to their costs from the first respondent,
the Union of India.
NKA Petition partly allowed.
981