Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
V. B. RAJU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/09/1980
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1980 AIR 2075 1981 SCR (1) 613
1981 SCC (1) 1
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 149 (1080)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Articles 217 and 222(2)-
Scope of-On reorganisation of a State a Judge allotted to
another High Court-Such allotment if amounts to transfer
from one High Court to another.
HEADNOTE:
Exercising power under section 29(1) of the Bombay
Reorganisation Act the President had determined that the
appellant who then was an additional Judge of the Bombay
High Court should cease to be a Judge of that High Court and
become a Judge of the newly formed High Court of Gujarat. In
his petition under article 226 of the Constitution the
appellant claimed that the source of power to transfer a
Judge from one High Court to another being in article 222
read with article 217(1) (c) of the Constitution the
impugned order though purporting to have been passed under
section 29(1) of the Bombay Reorganisation Act, amounted to
an order of transfer of a Judge and therefore, he was
entitled to the compensatory allowance contemplated by
article 222(2).
A single Judge of the High Court held that the order
passed under section 29 was an order of allocation of Judges
of the erstwhile High Court of Bombay to the two new High
Courts and that such allocation did not amount to transfer.
On appeal a Division Bench held that the transfer envisaged
by article 222 was a transfer in a situation when a Judge of
one High Court was sent to another existing High Court for
reasons which had nothing to do with the bifurcation or
reorganisation of a State and the setting up of a new High
Court while section 29 was part of the provisions which were
supplemental, incidental or consequential to the formation
of the State of Gujarat.
Dismissing the appeal
^
HELD: The entitlement to compensatory allowance under
article 222(2) is conditional upon the Judge being "so
transferred", that is, transferred as envisaged by article
222(1). Since the appellant was "allotted" to the Gujarat
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High Court on the setting up of that Court, he was not
entitled to claim the compensatory allowance. [617 D]
Articles 3 and 4 of the Constitution deal with a
special situation and so long as a provision of law
promulgated by Parliament can be considered as supplemental,
incidental or consequential to the formation of a new State
it would be enforceable even though it might amount to an
amendment of certain provisions of the Constitution. The
provision contained in section 29 of the Act is clearly
consequential to the formation of the State of Gujarat and
establishment of a High Court for it. It was for the purpose
of setting up that High Court that Judges then serving in
the Bombay High Court were so
614
to say allotted to the High Court of Gujarat and although
their appointment to the Gujarat High Court may partake of
some of the characteristics of a transfer, they cannot be
said to have been transferred from the Bombay High Court to
the Gujarat High Court within the meaning of article 222(1)
of the Constitution. [617 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1134 of
1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 2-8-1973 of the
Gujarat High Court in L.P.A. No. 255/71.
Appellant in person.
L. J. Nain and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KOSHAL, J.-This appeal by certificate granted under
Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution of India by the High
Court of Gujarat is directed against its judgment dated 2-8-
1973 and the sole point requiring decision therein is as to
whether an order passed by the President of India under sub-
section (1) of section 29 of The Bombay Reorganization Act,
1960 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) and determining
that the appellant shall on the 1st day of May 1960 cease to
be a Judge of the High Court of Bombay and become a Judge of
the High Court of Gujarat is to be regarded as an order of
transfer under article 222(1) of the Constitution.
2. The appellant was appointed an Additional Judge of
the High Court of Bombay on June 29, 1959. After the Act
came into force the President of India passed the said order
(hereinafter referred to as the impugned order) under
section 29(1) of the Act in respect of the appellant, who
was still an Additional Judge of the High Court of Bombay
(and 4 other Judges of that Court) so that with effect from
the 1st of May 1960 the appellant became an Additional Judge
of the High Court of Gujarat. Claiming that the impugned
order amounts to an order of transfer within the meaning of
article 222(1) of the Constitution the appellant brought a
petition under article 226 thereof with the prayer that the
Governments of the Union of India and the State of Gujarat
be directed to pay him an allowance to which, according to
him, he had become entitled under article 222(2) of the
Constitution with effect from October, 1963. Another prayer
was also made in the petition but therewith we are no longer
concerned as the same was withdrawn at a later stage.
3. In order to appreciate the contention raised by the
appellant before a learned Single Judge of the Gujarat High
Court and again in the Letters Patent Appeal before the
Division Bench which passed
615
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the judgment now under appeal, it is necessary to set out
the provisions of clause (1) of article 217 and those of
article 222 of the Constitution:
"217(1) Every Judge of a High Court shall be
appointed by the President by warrant under his hand
and seal after consultation with the Chief Justice of
India, the Governor of the State, and, in the case of
appointment of a Judge other than the Chief Justice,
the Chief Justice of the High Court, and shall hold
office, in the case of an additional or acting Judge,
as provided in article 224, and in any other case,
until he attains the age of sixty-two years:
"Provided that-
(a) a Judge may, by writing under his hand
addressed to the President, resign his office;
(b) a Judge may be removed from his office by
the President in the manner provided in clause (4)
of article 124 for the removal of a Judge of the
Supreme Court;
(c) the office of a Judge shall be vacated by
his being appointed by the President to be a Judge
of the Supreme Court or by his being transferred
by the President to any other High Court within
the territory of India."
"222(1) The President may, after consultation with
the Chief Justice of India, transfer a Judge from one
High Court to any other High Court.
"(2) When a Judge has been or is so transferred,
he shall, during the period he serves, after the
commencement of the Constitution (Fifteenth Amendment)
Act, 1963, as a Judge of the other High Court, be
entitled to receive in addition to his salary such
compensatory allowance as may be determined by
Parliament by law and, until so determined, such
compensatory allowance as the President may by order
fix."
According to the appellant’s contentions before the High
Court the only source of power conferred on the President to
effect the transfer of a Judge from one High Court to
another was article 222 read with article 217(1)(c) and the
impugned order which was an order flowing from that source
of power, therefore amounted to an order of transfer even
though it was passed under section 29(1) of the Act which
runs thus:
"(1). Such of the Judges of the High Court of
Bombay holding office immediately before the appointed
day as may be determined by President shall on that day
cease to be Judges of the High Court at Bombay and
become Judges of the High Court of Gujarat."
616
The High Court noted that the Act was passed in
pursuance of the powers vested in Parliament under articles
3 and 4 of the Constitution. Article 3 provides, inter alia,
for the formation of new States. Under clause (a) thereof
Parliament may by law form a new State by separation of
territory from any existing State or by uniting two or more
existing States or parts thereof or by uniting any territory
to a part of any State. Under article 4(1) any law referred
to in article 3 shall contain such provisions for the
amendment of the First Schedule and the Fourth Schedule as
may be necessary to give effect to the provisions of such
law and may also contain such supplemental, incidental and
consequential provisions (including provisions as to
representation in Parliament and in the Legislature or
Legislatures of the State or States affected by such law) as
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Parliament may deem necessary. Under clause (2) of article 4
no such law shall be deemed to be an amendment of the
Constitution for the purposes of article 368. The learned
Single Judge held that an order under section 29 of the Act
was an order of "allocation" of Judges of the High Court of
Bombay to the two new High Courts and that such allocation
did not amount to a transfer within the meaning of article
217(1)(c) or 222(1) of the Constitution. It was in that view
of the matter that he dismissed the petition presented by
the appellant. In Letters Patent Appeal the Division Bench
was of the opinion that although the impugned order amounted
to an order of transfer, the transfer effected by it was of
a type entirely different from that contemplated by article
222(1). In effect, however, the reasons for dismissal of the
appeal were the same as those for which the petition could
not succeed before the learned Single Judge. According to
the Division Bench the transfer envisaged by article 222 was
a transfer in a situation when a Judge of a High Court was
sent to another existing High Court for reasons which had
nothing to do with the bifurcation or reorganisation of a
State and the setting up of a new High Court in consequence,
while section 29 of the Act was part of the provisions which
were supplemental, incidental or consequential to the
formation of the State of Gujarat.
It was also argued before the Division Bench that the
Government of Gujarat itself had, during the course of its
correspondence with the appellant, treated his appointment
to the High Court of Gujarat as a transfer from the High
Court of Bombay, a fact which was not denied but which, the
High Court held, had no bearing on the matter in dispute as
there was no plea of estoppel raised in the petition
presented by the appellant.
4. After hearing the appellant in person and learned
counsel for the respondents we find no substance in the
appeal and, broadly
617
speaking, our reasons for so holding coincide with those
given by the learned Single Judge and the Division Bench of
the High Court, Articles 3 and 4 of the Constitution deal
with a special situation and so long as a provision of law
promulgated by Parliament can be considered as supplemental,
incidental or consequential to the formation of a new State
it would be enforceable even though it might amount to an
amendment of certain provisions of the Constitution. The
provision contained in section 29 of the Act is clearly
consequential to the formation of the State of Gujarat and
the establishment of a High Court for it. It was for the
purpose of setting up that High Court that Judges then
serving in the Bombay High Court were, so to say, "allotted"
to the High Court of Gujarat; and although their appointment
to the Gujarat High Court may partake of some of the
characteristics of a transfer, we do not think that they can
be said to have been transferred from the Bombay High Court
to the Gujarat High Court within the meaning of article
222(1) of the Constitution. The entitlement to compensatory
allowance under article 222(2) is conditional upon the Judge
being "so transferred", that is, transferred as envisaged by
article 222(1). Since the appellant was "allotted" to the
Gujarat High Court on the setting up of that Court, he will
not be entitled to claim the compensatory allowance.
5. In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed but
there will be no order as to costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
618
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