Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHAM SUNDER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/07/1968
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 212 1969 SCR (1) 312
CITATOR INFO :
E 1971 SC1011 (3,4)
R 1974 SC1317 (12)
O 1976 SC 490 (180)
R 1981 SC1829 (32)
ACT:
Constitution of India Arts. 14 and 16-Reservation
supervisors posts in Railway Penal drawn up on the basis of
certain up-garding of posts-Railway Board holds irregular
and deletes-Validity-if violative of Arts. 14 and 16.
HEADNOTE:
The General Manager, Northern Railway published a panel of
38 enquiry-cum-reservation clerks for selection to the posts
of reservation supervisors. This panel was published after
considering 152 persons, i.e., four times the number -of
existing and anticipated vacancies plus 25% thereof for
unforeseen vacancies. The anticipated vacancies included 11
vacancies on account of promotions due to the upgrading of
11 posts in the next higher grade. Representations were
made against the constitution of the panel, and the Railway
Board decided that the panel should consist of 24 persons
only to coy& 18 upgraded vacancies, 1 vacancy on account of
retirement and 5 vacancies representing 25% for
contingencies and the field of selection should be
restricted to 24*4=96 and not 152 persons. So, the panel
already published was ordered to be operated only in respect
of the first 24 persons and the names of the remaining
persons be deleted. Accordingly, the General Manager by an
order implemented the decision. The petitioner, whose name
was at No. 33 in the panel, published earlier filed a writ
petition in this Court, challenging the orders as violating
his fundamental rights.
HELD :-The petition must be dismissed.
(i) Under the general direction issued by the Railway
Board in one of its letters, the General Manager was
competent to amend the panel with the approval of the
Railway Board [315 F-G]
Srivastava v. N.E. Railway, [1966] 3 S.C.R.61, 64, 65,
followed.
(ii) The Railway Board held that until the selection
was made, it could not be anticipated that 11 persons would
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be promoted creating 11 consequential vacancies in that
grade due to promotions to the higher grade. Acting upon
this view the Railway Board decided that the anticipated
vacancies would be less and the panel should be amended
accordingly and should be operated in respect of the first
24 persons only. The decision could not be said to be
perverse nor it could be quashed or set aside. [315 A-316 B]
(iii) All the 24 persons retained in the panel were
senior to, the petitioner. All of them would have been
selected and included in the panel, even if 96 persons were
originally called for selection. There was no fore in the
contention that the retention of the first 24 persons in th
panel without holding a fresh selection was discriminatory
or was violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution
[316-C]
(iv) It is said that panels of Class Ill selection posts of
station masters on the Northern, Railway and all class ill
selection posts on other Railways had been drawn up on the
footing that anticipated vacancies in the selection grade
include vacancies on promotion due to upgrading of posts in
the next higher grade and that the Railway Board had not
313
issued any direction for amendment of those panels. But
those panels relate to separate; classes of employees and
have no bearing on the question of equal opportunity in the
matter of promotion of enquiry-cum-reservation clerks on the
Northern Railway [316 D-F]
All Indian Station Masters’ and Assistant Station Masters’
Association v. General Manager Central Railways, [1960] 2
S.C.R. 311, 319, followed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 31 of 1967.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
Basudev Prasad and M. I. Khowaja, for the petitioner.
Naren De, Solicitor-General, V. A. Seyid Muhammad, R. N.
Sachthey and S. P. Nayar, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bachawat, J. The petitioner is employed on the Northern
Railway as an enquiry and reservation clerk in the grade of
Rs. 150-240. In January 1965 several posts of enquiry-cum-
reservation clerks were upgraded, 11 posts being raised to
the grade of Rs. 370-475, 18 posts to the grade of Rs. 250-
380 and 26 posts in the grade of Rs. 205-280. As a result
of the up_grading the revised cadre of enquiry-cum-
reservation clerks on the Northern Railway consisted of the
following non-gazetted posts:-
Category No. of Posts Scale of pay Classification
Enquiry cum
reservation clerk 202 150-240(AS) selection
Assist. reservation
Supervisor 32 205-280(AS) Non-selection
Reservation Supervisor 23 250-380(AS) Selection
Chief Reservation Ins-
pector 11370-475(AS) Selection
The promotion of non-gazetted railway servants is governed
by Chapter II of the Indian Railway Establishment Manual and
the rules made by the Railway Board from time to time under
r. 157 of the Railway Establishment Code. Promotion to
selection posts has to be made from a panel of selected
employees prepared by a selection board and approved by the
competent authority. For making the selection, eligible
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staff up to four times the number of anticipated vacancies
are called for written and viva voce tests under r. 9 (d) of
Chapter 11. By letter No. E(NG) 62 PM 1/91/dated July 10,
1964 the Railway Board directed that "the number of persons
to be placed on a panel should be equal to the existing and
anticipated vacancies, plus 25% thereof for unforeseen
vacancies. Anticipated vacancies
314
connote only those which are likely to arise due to normal
wastage during the currency of the panel. The currency of
the panel for non-gazetted selection posts should be two
years from the date of the approval of the same by the
competent authority or till exhausted whichever is earlier."
On January 22, 1965 under orders of the General Manager.-
Northern Railway 152 enquiry-cum-reservation clerks were
asked to appear in tests for selection to the posts of
reservation supervisors in the grade of Rs. 250-380. The
petitioner who ranked 113 in order of seniority was allowed
to appear in the tests. As a result of the oral and written
tests a panel of 38 persons was drawn up on July 7, 1965,
and was published in the Railway Gazette on August 1, 1965.
The petitioner was one of the selected candidates and his
name was shown as No. 33 in the panel. A note at the foot
of the panel intimated to the staff- concerned that "the
mere fact that their names are on the panel will not confer
upon them any right for permanent absorption as a reserva-
tion supervisor." In calling 152 persons for the. selection,
the General Manager, Northern Railway proceeded upon the
footing that 38 persons had to be placed on the panel and 4
times 38, that is to say 152 persons should be asked to
appear in the tests. According to him there were 18
immediate vacancies in the posts of reservation supervisors
due to upgrading, 1 anticipated vacancy due to retirement
and 11 anticipated vacancies on account of promotion due to
upgrading of 11 posts in the next higher grade of chief
reservation inspector. The figure 38 is the total of 18
plus 1 plus 11 plus 25% thereof. The view that anticipated
vacancies included 11 vacancies on account of promotion due
to the upgrading of 11 posts in the next higher grade was
supported by the prevailing practice in the Northern and
other Railways.
The Railway Board received several complaints and repre-
sentations regarding the constitution of the panel. By an
order dated September 16, 1965 (annexure H) the Railway
Board decided that the panel of 38 persons was irregularly
drawn up and that there should be a panel of 24 persons only
for promotion to the grade of Rs. 250-380 to cover 18
upgraded vacancies, 1 vacancy on account of retirement and 5
vacancies representing 25% for contingencies and the field
of selection should be restricted to 24-4-96 and not 152
persons. Accordingly the panel already published should be
operated only in respect of the first 24 persons and that
the names of the remaining 14 persons should be deleted
forthwith. The Board directed that action should be taken
to form a panel for filling up 1 1 upgraded posts in the
grade of Rs. 370--475 and thereafter a further selection
should be held for filling up the resultant vacancies in the
grade of Rs. 250 -380. By an order dated November 3, 1965
(annexure K) the General Manager, Northern Railway
implemented the decision
315
and directed that the panel formed on July 7, 1965 was to be
operated upto the first 24 persons only and that the names
of the remaining 14 persons including the petitioner should
be treated as deleted from the panel. By another order
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dated October 4, 1966 (annexure N) the General Manager,
Northern Railway decided to hold a selection for filling up
the resultant vacancies in the grade of Rs. 250-380. Having
regard to the number resultant vacancies, the petitioner is
not eligible for being called for selection under Annexure
"N". In this writ petition the -petitioner alleges that the
orders under Annexures H; K and N have violated his
fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution, and he asks for the issue of appropriate writs
restraining the respondents from enforcing those orders and
directing them to make promotions to posts in the grade of
Rs. 250380 in accordance with the panel published in the
Gazette on August 1, 1965.
Counsel for the petitioner contended that the Railway Board
or the General Manager had no power to amend the panel pub-
lished on August 1, 1965. We are unable to accept this
contention. The point was not taken in the petition. When
the contention was raised at the hearing of the petition,
the learned Solicitor-General drew our attention to the
letter of the Railway Board No. E/52/PM 2-34 dated August 4,
1953. On the subject of cancellation or amendment of
approved panels the Railway Board directed by this letter
"that the panels once approved should not be cancelled or
amended without reference to the authority next above the
one that approved the panel." There is no controversy that
the Railway Board had power to issue this general direction
under r. 157 of the Railway Establishment Code. In the
present case the General Manager, Northern Railway was the
authority approving the panel. The Railway Board was the
authority next above him. Under the general direction
issued by the Board in its letter dated August 4, 1953, the
General Manager was competent to amend the panel with the
approval of the Railway Board. In Srivastava v. N. E.
Railway(1) the Court held that an amendment of an approved
panel in accordance with a similar rule was in order.
The point in controversy was whether there were 11 more
anticipated vacancies in the grade of Rs. 205-380 on account
of the upgrading of 11 posts in the next higher grade of Rs.
375480. Now the selection for the 11 new posts in the grade
of Rs. 375-480 had to be made from 56 eligible members of
the staff comprising 23 clerks in the grade of Rs. 205-380
and 33 clerks in lower grades. The Railway Board held that
until the selection was made, it could not be anticipated
that 11 clerks in
(1) [1966]3S.C.R.61,64,65.
316
the grade of Rs. 205-380 would be promoted and that there
would be 11 consequential vacancies in that grade due to
promotions to the higher grade. Acting upon this view the
Railway Board decided that the anticipated vacancies in the
grade of Rs. 205-380 due to normal wastage would be 19 and
not 30 and that the panel should be amended accordingly and
should be operated in respect of the first 24 persons only.
We are unable to say that the decision is perverse or that
it should be quashed and set aside.
All the 24 enquiry-cum-reservation clerks retained in the
panel were senior to the petitioner. The junior most of
them ranked 77 in order of seniority. All of them would
have been selected and included in the panel, even if 96
persons were originally called for selection. There is no
force in the contention that the retention of the first 24
persons in the panel without holding a fresh selection is
discriminatory or is violative of Articles 14 and 16.
For purposes of promotion, all the enquiry-cum-reservation
clerks on the Northern Railway form one separate unit.
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Between members of this class there is no discrimination and
no denial of equal opportunity in the matter of promotion.
It is said that panels of class III selection posts of
station masters in the grade of Rs. 370-475 on the Northern
Railway and all class III selection posts on other Railways
have been drawn up on the footing that anticipated vacancies
in the selection grade include vacancies on promotions due
to upgrading of posts in the next higher grade and that the
Railway Board has not issued any direction for the amendment
of these panels. Assuming this allegation to be true, the
other panels might require revision and the matter deserves
the attention of the Railway Board. But the other panels
relate to separate classes of employees and have no bearing
on the question of equal opportunity in the matter of
promotion of enquiry-cum-reservation clerks on the Northern
Railway. Equality of opportunity in matters of employment
under Art. 16(1) means equality as between members of the
same class of employees and not equality between members of
separate, indePendent classes. (see All India Station
Masters’ and Assistant Station Masters’ Association v.
General Manager Central Railways(1).
In the result, the petition is dismissed. There All be no
Order as to costs.
Y.P.
1) [1960]2 S.C.R.311,319 Petition dismissed.
317