Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1726-28 of 2001
PETITIONER:
P.M. Latha and Another
RESPONDENT:
State of Kerala and Others
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/03/2003
BENCH:
Brijesh Kumar & D.M. Dharmadhikari.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dharmadhikari J.
These appeals have been preferred by the candidates
seeking recruitment to the post of lower primary/upper primary
teachers in the Government Schools of the State of Kerala.
They questioned their non-selection to the post due to inclusion
of B.Ed. candidates in the select list prepared by the Public
Service Commission of the State of Kerala. Their contention
before the High Court was that in the advertisement issued for
recruitment to the post of teachers in Government Primary
Schools, B.Ed. is not the prescribed qualification and only
candidates with prescribed educational qualifications of
Teachers Training (Certificate) (shortly referred to as TTC)
were entitled to compete for the selection and seek
appointment.
Learned Single Judge of the High Court of Kerala by
judgment dated 25.1.1999 allowed the petition of the present
appellants holding that B.Ed. candidates could not have been
included in the select or rank list as they were not eligible
under the terms of the advertisement. The learned single
judge issued directions to the State Public Commission to
prepare the rank list afresh by excluding B.Ed. candidates. A
further direction was issued that all orders of appointment
issued in favour of B.Ed. degree holders be cancelled. The
relevant part of the directions given by the learned single judge
deserves to be reproduced:
"In the above mentioned circumstances,
Original Petition succeeds and it is declared that
B.Ed. holders who are not having TTC and who
have been included in the rank list should be
deleted from the rank list. Accordingly, there
will be a direction to the Public Service
Commission to rearrange the rank list in the
Pathanamthitta District, after excluding above-
mentioned persons. This exercise should be
done within a period of one month from the
date of receipt of a copy of this judgment.
There will also be a direction to the PSC to
cancel the advice which has already been made
as far as B.Ed. holders are concerned who are
not having TTC and there will be a direction to
the Government to cancel the appointment
already made to all those persons whose advice
are to be cancelled by the PSC.
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Original Petition is allowed to the above
extent."
By the impugned judgement dated 18.2.2000, the
Division Bench of the High Court in Writ Appeals and Original
Writ Petition before it, preferred by the B.Ed. candidates (who
are private respondents before us), upheld the decision of the
learned single judge that under the terms of the
advertisement, the B.Ed. candidates were not qualified to
compete for the post. Despite this strangly it upset the
directions made in favour of the present appellants as TTC
candidates, because of an undertaking given by the State of
Kerala that they would be suitably amending the Rules of
recruitment for providing avenues of recruitment to B.Ed.
degree holders as teachers in Government Primary Schools.
The relevant part of the observations with reasoning and
conclusion drawn by the division bench in its order to allow the
appeal of the B.Ed. candidates also needs to be reproduced:
"The learned judge finally held that in view of
the principles laid down in the aforesaid
decisions, B.Ed is not a qualification
prescribed and therefore B.Ed. holders are
ineligible to apply. When the matter is thus
considered only in the premise of Ext.P3
notification we cannot say that the learned
judge has committed any error in holding that
PSC is not justified in searching for an
equivalent or better qualification. But we
have before us other lively and stimulating
issues for decision which we prefer to discuss
presently.
The Government have expressed in the
affidavit dated 19.1.2000 that they would
frame rules in accordance with the decision
taken on 2.6.1999 in consultation with the
PSC for future appointments of TTC hands
only in LP Schools and B.Ed. holders and TTC
hands in UP Schools as expeditiously as
possible. This is a solemn undertaking which
should be implemented with extreme
swiftness. We do not want to keep the
position uncertain and vague as far as future
appointments are concerned. It is made clear
that we have validated the appointments
already made for apparent reasons referred to
above. We therefore direct the government to
frame rules as above expeditiously, at any
rate within a period of three months from
today and to regulate all future selections and
appointments accordingly.
In view of he discussion herein above we hold
that the rank list published by the PSC for
appointment to the post of UPSA/LPSA
(Malayalam) in Pathanamthitta district is valid.
The direction given by the learned single
judge in the impugned judgment to the PSC to
re-arrange the rank list in Pathanamthitta
district and to cancel all the appointments of
B.Ed. holders to the post of UPSA and LPSA is
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set aside. All the appointments of B.Ed.
holders so far made to the post of LPSA/UPSA
are declared valid. The judgment of the
learned single judge in OP No.19187 of 1999
is accordingly set aside."
Aggrieved by judgment of the division bench, the present
appellants who are holders of TTC and have not been able to
get selected for the post of lower/upper primary teachers have
approached this Court in these appeals.
In the advertisement which was published in the
Notification in the Gazette dated 22.11.1994, the qualifications
for the post of lower/upper primary teachers were prescribed
thus:
(1) Pass in SSLC conducted by the
Commissioner for Government Examination,
Kerala, or any other equivalent qualification.
(2) Pass in TTC conducted by the
Commissioner for Government Examinations,
Kerala, or pass in Pre-degree of Kerala
University with pedagogy as optional subject or
pass in basic TTC examination (Malayalam)
conducted by the Government of Madras or
pass in Malayalam Vidhvan examination.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellants contends
that when the terms of advertisement, quoted above, are very
clear to indicate that B.Ed. degree is not the prescribed
qualification, such candidates were clearly ineligible to compete
and they could not have been allowed to take up the selection
test and to be included in the select list. Learned counsel
placed before us two judgments of Kerala High Court in
Thulasibhai Amma vs. Asst. Educational officer [1993 (2)
KLT 245] and Mathew vs. State of Kerala [1992 (2) KLT
116] and pointed out that those decisions were wrongly
referred to and relied by the division bench for allowing the
appeal of the B.Ed. candidates and directing the authorities to
suitably amend the Rules. Those judgments related to
recruitment to the post of primary teachers in private primary
schools aided by the Government and to which the provisions
of Kerala Education Act and Rules were applicable.
Recruitment to Government Primary Schools is regulated by a
Government Resolution or Order and this legal position is not in
dispute.
Learned counsel appearing for the State of Kerala, the
State Public Service Commission and some of the private
respondents have strongly urged that B.Ed. qualification is a
higher qualification than TTC and as in the process of
recruitment of primary teachers in Government Primary
Schools, candidates with B.Ed. degree were allowed to
compete, the division bench was right in not upsetting the
select list and the appointment of B.Ed. candidates on
undertaking given by the authorities to suitably amend the
recruitment Rules.
On behalf of the State of Kerala, learned counsel pointed
out that pursuant to the directions of the division bench, Kerala
Education Rules framed under the Kerala Education Act of 1958
have been amended and for Upper Primary Teaches now along
with TTC, B.Ed./BT/LT of recognized Universities of Kerala have
also been prescribed as qualifications with effect from the date
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of Notification i.e. 8.6.2000.
It is not disputed before us by the parties that Kerala
Education Act of 1958 and the Kerala Education Rules framed
thereunder regulate recruitment to the posts of teachers in
private schools aided by the Government. It is not brought to
our notice that correspondingly the Government Memorandum
or Order which regulated recruitment to Government Primary
Schools has also been amended to prescribe B.Ed. and
equivalent degree qualification as eligibility qualification for the
post.
We find absolutely no force in the argument advanced by
the respondents that B.Ed. qualification is a higher qualification
than TTC and therefore, the B.Ed. candidates should be held to
be eligible to compete for the post. On behalf of appellants, it
is pointed out before us that Trained Teachers Certificate is
given to teachers specially trained to teach small children in
primary classes whereas for B.Ed. degree, the training
imparted is to teach students of classes above primary. B.Ed.
degree holders, therefore, cannot necessarily be held to be
holding qualification suitable for appointment as teachers in
primary schools. Whether for a particular post, the source of
recruitment should be from the candidates with TTC
qualification or B.Ed. qualification, is a matter of recruitment
policy. We find sufficient logic and justification in the State
prescribing qualification for post of primary teachers as only
TTC and not B.Ed. Whether B.Ed. qualification can also be
prescribed for primary teachers is a question to be considered
by the authorities concerned but we cannot consider B.Ed.
candidates, for the present vacancies advertised, as eligible.
The division bench in the impugned order upheld the
decision of the single judge that in terms of the advertisement,
B.Ed. candidates were not eligible to take up the selection and
to be included in the rank list. We fail to understand that
having thus upheld the decision of the learned single judge
what was the justification for the division bench to refer to
statutory recruitment Rules applicable to teachers in private
primary schools, aided by the Government and the judgments
rendered by the High Court in their cases, for reversing the
judgment of the Single Judge and maintaining the Rank List
including names of the B.Ed. candidates and their
appointments on the basis of rules yet to be framed.
On behalf of respondents, it is submitted that since large
number of B.Ed. candidates were allowed to compete and
actual appointment orders were also issued in their favour, the
division bench has tried to adjust the equities between the
parties.
Equity and law are twin brothers and law should be
applied and interpreted equitably but equity cannot over-ride
written or settled law. The division bench forgot that in
extending relief on equity to B.Ed. candidates who were
unqualified and yet allowed to compete and seek appointments
contrary to the terms of the advertisement, it is not redressing
the injustice caused to the appellants who were TTC candidates
and would have secured a better position in the Rank List to
get appointment against the available vacancies, had B.Ed.
candidates been excluded from the selections. The impugned
judgment of the division bench is both illegal, inequitable and
patently unjust. The TTC candidates before us as appellants
have been wrongly deprived of due chance of selection and
appointment. The impugned judgment of the division bench,
therefore, deserves to be set aside and of the learned single
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judge restored.
Learned counsel for the respondent states that two
interim orders were made by this Court during the pendency of
Special Leave Petitions and after grant of leave for these
appeals. The relevant orders dated 3.7.2000 and 1.3.2001
read as under:
Court Order dated 3.7.2000
"Taken on Board. Issue notice.
Any appointment in the meanwhile made will
be subject to the result of any order passed
in this SLP."
Court Order dated 1.3.2001
".
Mr. PP Rao, learned Senior Counsel submitted
on behalf of the State of Kerala that TTC
holders alone will be appointed in the
vacancies arising in respect of lower primary
schools (LPS). This will continue for the
future posts also until otherwise decided by
this Court. He submitted that so far as upper
Primary Schools (UPS) are concerned, until
otherwise decided, TTC holders as well as
B.Ed. holders will be considered and the
Public service Commissin (PSC) will select the
persons out of this as one category who are
more competent among them for
appointment. We make it clear that all such
appointments made after 3.7.2000 will be
treated as only provisional appointments and
be subject to the final result of the appeals.
This order will apply only to non-private
schools."
Learned counsel for the private respondents relying on
the above orders of this Court, submits that since the B.Ed.
candidates have been appointed after amendment of the Rules
and on the statement made by the counsel for the State and
the Public Service Commission, this Court should not upset the
appointment of B.Ed. candidates already made.
We have held that the impugned judgment of the division
bench is liable to be set aside and that of the single judge
maintained. Having thus reached a conclusion in favour of the
present appellants who are TTC candidates, it would be highly
unreasonable to deny them relief merely because of the interim
orders or arrangements made thereby this Court: Under the
aforesaid two orders, B.Ed. candidates were allowed to be
appointed only provisionally. We take note of the fact that all
the B.Ed. appointees are not before us and even though all
B.Ed. candidates who have been arrayed as respondents to
these appeals, have been served with notices of these appeals,
only a few of them are represented through counsel. In these
circumstances, we would restrict the relief to the candidates
who were petitioners before the learned single judge including
the present appellants.
The exercise of preparation of a fresh Rank List directed
to by the learned single judge shall be undertaken and after
fresh list is prepared by exclusion of B.Ed. candidates, if the
appellants get the necessary rank against available vacancies
at the relavant time, they would be given appointment and to
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make room for them, by terminating appointment, if
necessary, of B.Ed. candidates who might have been selected
in their places.
Consequently, we allow these appeals. The impugned
judgment dated 18.2.2000 of the division bench is set aside
and order of the learned single judge dated 25.1.1999 is
restored with the modification made above. Since the
petitioners in the High Court and in this Court have been
waiting for selection and appointment, so long, let the
directions made by the learned single judge as modified by this
Court be carried out with expedition and within an outer limit of
four months. The appellants will also be entitled to get costs
from the respondents State of Kerala with Counsel’s fee as per
rules.