Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CENTRAL BANK OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. BERNARD
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1990
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
PANDIAN, S.R. (J)
REDDY, K. JAYACHANDRA (J)
CITATION:
1990 SCR Supl. (2) 196 1991 SCC (1) 319
JT 1990 (4) 142 1990 SCALE (2)704
ACT:
Labour Law--Bank Employee---Chargesheet--Departmental
Enquiry--Bank Official appointed as Enquiry Officer and
Disciplinary Authority--Superannuation of Enquiry
Officer--Continuance and conclusion of Enquiry after super-
annuation and imposition of punishment-Held Enquiry Offi-
cer’s order is incompetent and without jurisdiction--Absence
of bias prejudice or mala fides of the Enquiry Officer
cannot cure the defect as to his competence--De facto doc-
trine held inapplicable.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a bank employee, was chargesheeted for
claiming L.F.C. on the basis of fake travel receipts. The
Bank appointed one of its officers as Enquiry Officer as
well as Disciplinary Authority who conducted the departmen-
tal enquiry against the respondent. However, during the
pendency of the enquiry the Enquiry Officer retired from
service. Notwithstanding his retirement from service he
proceeded with the enquiry and concluded the same against
the respondent. The respondent participated in the enquiry
without raising any objection against the continuance of the
said Enquiry by the said Enquiry Officer. After giving an
opportunity to the respondent to be heard on the question of
punishment the Enquiry Officer/Disciplinary Authority im-
posed the punishment of discharge. The respondent fried a
departmental appeal which was dismissed. Thereafter, the
respondent filed a writ petition in the High Court challeng-
ing the order of discharge on the ground that the order
passed by the Enquiry Officer was without jurisdiction.
A single judge of the High Court allowed the Writ Peti-
tion, quashed the order of punishment with all consequential
benefits to the respondent on the ground that after retire-
ment the Enquiry Officer was nobody in the hierarchy of
authorities to impose punishment on the delinquent-employee
and hence his order imposing punishment was incompetent and
without jurisdiction.
Against the order of the single judge the Bank preferred
a Letter Patent Appeal before a Division Bench of the High
Court which was dismissed.
197
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In appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the appellant Bank; (i) that the decision of the Enquiry
Officer could be saved on the basis of de facto doctrine
because (a) his initial appointment being valid his actions
and decisions could not be invalidated by his subsequent
retirement since he continued to function as a de facto
Enquiry Officer; (b) even otherwise the Bank could have
appointed a non-official as Enquiry Officer; (ii) that since
the High Court quashed the punishment not on merits but on a
mere technicality, it erred in directing payment of all
consequential benefits to the respondent; and (iii) since
the respondent submitted to the jurisdiction of the Enquiry
Officer and there was no prejudice caused to him he was
estopped from raising the contention as to the competence or
jurisdiction of the Enquiry Officer for the first time in
the Writ Petition.
Allowing the appeal in part, this Court,
HELD: 1. The de facto doctrine has to requisites, name-
ly, (i) the possession of the office and the performance of
the duties attached thereto, and (ii) colour of title, that
is, apparent right to the office and acquiescence in the
possession thereof by the public. According to this doctrine
the acts of officers de facto performed within the sphere of
their assumed official authority, in the interest of the
public or third parties and not for their own interest, are
generally held valid and binding as if they were performed
by de jure officers. This doctrine can be invoked in cases
where there is an appointment to office which is defective;
but notwithstanding the defect to the title of the office,
the decisions made by such a de facto officer clothed with
the powers and functions of the office would be as effica-
cious as those made by a de jure officer. The same would,
however, not be true of a total intruder or usurper of
office. The doctrine envisages that acts performed de facto
by officers within the scope of their assumed official
authority are to be regarded. as binding as if they were
performed by officers de jure. While the de facto doctrine
saves official acts done by an officer whose appointment is
found to be defective the private parties to a litigation
are precluded from challenging the appointment in any col-
lateral proceedings. But the doctrine does not come to the
rescue of an intruder or usurper or a total stranger to the
office. Obviously the doctrine can have no application to
the case of a person who is not the holder of an office but
is merely a bank employee, for that matter an ex-employee.
[202E-F; 203BF-G; 204A-C]
1.1 In the instant case, the Enquiry Officer can hardly
be described as a person occupying or being in possession of
an office to which certain duties affecting the members of
the general public can be
198
said to be attached. Therefore in the facts and circum-
stances of this case the de facto doctrine can have no
application. [203H; 204A; 201G]
Pulin Behari Das v. King Emperor, [1911-12] 16 Cal.
Weekly Notes 1105; Immedisetti Ramkrishnaiah Sons v. State
of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. 1976 A.P. 193; Jai Kumar v. State,
[1968] All. L.J. 877; Gokaraju Rangaraju v. State of A.P.,
[1981] 3 S.C.R. 474; referred to.
Abbe de Fountaine decided in 143 1; cited.
1.2 An Enquiry Officer need not be an officer of the
bank: even a third party can be appointed an Enquiry Officer
to enquire into the conduct of an employee. But there can be
no doubt that a non-official cannot act as a Disciplinary
Authority and pass an order of punishment against the delin-
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quent employee. Therefore, where punishment is imposed by a
person who has no authority to do so the very foundation on
which the edifice is built collapses and with and it fails
the entire edifice. It is a case more or less akin to a case
tried by court lacking in inherent jurisdiction. Absence of
bias, prejudice or mala fides, is of no consequence so far
as the question of competence of the Enquiry Officer is
concerned. [202B; 204D-E]
Saran Motors (P.) Ltd. v. Vishwanath & Anr., [1964] 2
L.L.J. 139; referred to.
Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Labour Court,
Tis Hazari & Ors., [1970] 1 L.L.J. 23; Held inapplicable.
2. In the instant case, the impugned order of punishment
was quashed not because the merits of the case so demanded
but because the technical plea of incompetence succeeded.
Therefore, the High Court was right in quashing the impugned
order of punishment but having regard to the special facts
and circumstances of the case, it should not have ordered
payment of ’all consequential benefits’ flowing from the
declaration that the impugned order was bad in law. The
order of the High Court is modified to the extent that the
respondent will be paid 50% of the consequential benefits
and not all the consequential benefits. Except for this
modification, the rest of the order of the High Court will
stand. [205E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3071 of
1988.
?
199
From the Judgment and Order dated 8.4.1988 of the Karna-
taka High Court in Writ Appeal No. 563 of 1988.
Narayana B. Shetye, D.N. Misra and O.C. Mathur for the
Appellant.
S.R. Bhatt for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI, J. The short question which arises in this
appeal by special leave is whether the departmental enquiry
entrusted to and conducted by a Bank official stands vitiat-
ed if the said official proceeds with the enquiry and con-
cludes the same after his superannuation. during the penden-
cy of the enquiry? The High Court of Karnataka has held that
such an enquiry is incompetent and without jurisdiction and,
therefore, null and void. The facts giving rise to this
appeal, briefly stated, are as under:
The respondent C. Bernard while serving as a Relieving
Head Cashier in the K.G. Road Branch of the Bank in Banga-
lore city availed of 15 days leave from April 17, 1978 to
May 1, 1978 and was allowed an advance of Rs.2,500 on April,
1978 under LFC to be adjusted later on his submitting the
LFC Bill. He submitted a bill for Rs.2,800 on May 5, 1978
along with a stamped cash receipt purported to have been
issued by M/s. Shri Manju Travels of Bangalore and claimed
reimbursement for the same. The said bill was passed by the
bank on May 15, 1978 but subsequent investigations revealed
that the firm of M/s. Shri Manju Travels was a spurious one
which indulged in issuing fake travel receipts. Thereupon
the respondent was served with a Memo dated August 1, 1978
by the Divisional office of the Bank calling for his expla-
nation. A letter was also addressed on the same day to M/s.
Shri Manju Travels, Bangalore requesting them to furnish the
details of the persons who traveled and the amounts received
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by the said firm. No reply was received from the said firm
but the respondent sent a reply on August 10, 1978 which was
not found to be satisfactory. Some correspondence ensued
between the respondent and the appellant in this connection
but finally the respondent was served with the charge-sheet
dated October 12, 1978 which was followed by a departmental
enquiry. It is not necessary to go into the details in
regard to proceedings at the departmental enquiry but it
would be sufficient to state that the respondent participat-
ed in the departmental enquiry till it was completed by the
enquiry officer Shri U.B. Menon.
200
Paragraph 9.14 of the Memorandum of Bi-partite Settle-
ment dated October 19, 1966 empowers the Chief Executive
Officer, etc., of he Bank to decide which officer(s) would
be empowered to hold enquiry and take disciplinary action in
the case of each office or establishment. Accordingly Shri
U.B. Menon, Special Officer, was appointed an Enquiry Offi-
cer under the Chief Executive Officer’s Order dated January
9, 1979, which reads as under:
"Pursuant to the powers vested in the Executive Director by
the Chairman and Managing Director of the Bank, as per his
office Order dated 20th December, 1978, authorising him to
appoint Enquiry Officers and Appellate Authorities under the
provisions of Chapter 19 of the Bi-partite Settlement dated
19th October, 1966, the undersigned is pleased to appoint
Shri U.B. Menon, Special Officer, to work as an Enquiry
Officer, to hold and conduct departmental enquiries against
the members of the staff governed by the provisions of the
Award and Bi-partite Settlement, and to pass necessary
orders under the provisions of Chapter 19 of the Bi-partite
Settlement dated 19th October, 1966."
By a subsequent circular dated January 17, 1979 all offices
of the Bank were informed about the appointment. Shri U.B.
Menon was intimated about the same by the Assistant General
Manager’s letter dated January 23, 1979. The said Enquiry
Officer conducted the departmental enquiry against the
respondent. However, during the pendency of the departmental
enquiry he retired from service on January 31, 1979. Not-
withstanding his retirement he continued to function as an
Enquiry Officer and concluded the enquiry against the re-
spondent by the end of 1979. He then gave an opportunity to
the respondent to be heard on the question of punishment and
then passed the impugned order of discharge on January 14,
1980. The respondent’s departmental appeal was also dis-
missed on June 17, 1980. The respondent did not raise any
objection against the continuance of the enquiry by the said
Shri U.B. Menon at any time during the pendency and till the
disposal of the departmental appeal preferred by him. Suf-
fice it to say that he raised this objection for the first
time in Writ Petition No. 18 140 of 1980 filed against the
impugned order of discharge in the High Court.
A learned Single judge of the High Court by his order
dated January 18, 1988 came to the conclusion that on the
retirement of Shri U.B. Menon ’he was nobody in the
hierarchy of authorities’ to impose
201
punishment on the respondent and hence the order imposing
punishment was clearly incompetent and without jurisdiction.
The argument that since the impugned order of discharge got
merged in the appellate order, the initial defect, if any,
stood removed, was repelled by the learned Judge on the
ground that ’as the original order was without jurisdiction
or competence, there was nothing for the Appellate Authority
to confirm’. The learned Single Judge, therefore, allowed
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the writ petition, quashed the impugned order of punishment
and directed that the respondent be paid all consequential
benefits. The appellant preferred a Letters Patent Appeal
against the said order of the learned Single Judge. The
Division Bench of the High Court which heard the appeal
dismissed it by a one line order: ’no ground for interfer-
ence is made out’. It is against this order that the appel-
lant has approached this Court under Art. 136 of the Consti-
tution.
Shri Narain Shetye, the learned counsel for the appel-
lant strongly urged that the High, Court ought not to have
permitted the respondent to question the competence or
jurisdiction of Shri U.B. Menon to act as an Enquiry Officer
as well as a Disciplinary Authority after his superannuation
since he had participated in the enquiry throughout without
a demur. According to him, by conduct the respondent was
estopped from raising such a contention for the first time
in a writ petition, more so because he had submitted to the
jurisdiction of Shri U.B. Menon and there was no prejudice
caused on him on that account. Lastly, he submitted that
even otherwise the appellant could have appointed a non-
official as an Enquiry Officer and therefore his decision
could be saved on the de facto doctrine.
Taking the last submission first we think that in the
facts and circumstances of this case the de facto doctrine
can have no application. Under paragraph 19.14 of the by-
parties agreement the Chief Executive Officer was entitled
to decide which officer should be empowered to hold an
enquiry and take disciplinary action in the case of each
office or establishment. Under this paragraph only an offi-
cer of the bank could be empowered to hold an enquiry and
take disciplinary action against a delinquent. The names of
officers so empowered were required to be published on the
bank’s notice board. Accordingly, Shri U.B. Menon was ap-
pointed an Enquiry Officer/Disciplinary Authority under
paragraph 19.14 of the bi-partite agreement while he was
still in service. It is indeed surprising that an officer
who was due to retire within a few days only was chosen to
act as an Enquiry Officer and Disciplinary Authority by the
order dated January 9, 1979. Shri U.B. Menon was intimated
about his appoint-
202
ment by the letter of January 23, r979, i.e., hardly a week
before his superannuation on January 31, 1979. After his
retirement from service he proceeded with the enquiry and
concluded it by the end of 1979. The respondent was then
served with a second show cause notice on the question of
punishment and thereafter the impugned order of discharge
was passed on January 14, 1980. There is nothing on the
record to show that any formal decision was taken by the
appellant to continue the services of Shri U.B. Menon as an
official of the bank. Shri Shetty is right when he contends
that an Enquiry Officer need not be an officer of the bank;
even a third party can be appointed as Enquiry Officer to
enquire into the conduct of an employee. See: Saran Motors
(P) Ltd. v. Vishwanath & Anr., [1964] 2 LLJ 139. But there
can be no doubt that a non-official cannot act as a Disci-
plinary Authority and pass an order of punishment against
the delinquent-employee. It is for this reason that the
learned Single Judge of the High Court observed that on
retirement Shri U.B. Menon was nobody in the hierarchy of
authorities to impose punishment on the delinquent. He
therefore, held that the order of punishment was clearly
incompetent and without jurisdiction. The learned counsel
for the appellant submitted that since the initial appoint-
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ment of Shri U.B. Menon was valid, his actions and decisions
could not be invalidated by his subsequent retirement.
According to him he continued to function as an Enquiry
Officer de facto and hence his actions and decisions were
saved. The de facto doctrine has two requisites, namely, (i)
the possession of the office and the performance of the
duties attached thereto, and (ii) colour of title, that is,
apparent right to the office and acquiescence in the posses-
sion thereof by the public. According to this doctrine the
acts of officers de facto performed within the sphere of
their assumed official authority, in the interest of the
public or third parties and not for their own interest, are
generally held valid and binding as if they were performed
by de jure officers. This doctrine dates back to the case of
Abbe de Fontaine decided way back in 1431 to which reference
was made by Sir Asutosh Mookerjee, 3. in Pulin Behari Das v.
King Emperor, [1911-12] 16 Calcutta Weekly Notes 1105 at
1120. Mookerjee, J. held that as the complaint was made
after complying with section 196, Criminal Procedure Code,
by the order of or under authority from Local Government
which was de facto, the proceedings were valid. On the same
principle it was further held that the Court of Sessions,
assuming it was not the holder of a de jure office, was
actually in possession of it under the colour of title which
indicated the acquiescence of the public in its actions and
hence its authority could not be collaterally impeached in
the proceedings arising from the conviction of Pulin and his
co-accused. Again, in Immedisetti Ramkrishnaiah Sons
203
v. State of Andhra Pradesh, AIR 1976 A.P. 193, the Govern-
ment nominated nine persons on a Market Committee which
nomination was later set aside by the High Court. However,
before the High Court pronounced its judgment, the Market
Committee had functioned as if it had been properly consti-
tuted. Between the date of its constitution and the date of
the High Court decision it had taken several decisions,
issued notifications, etc., which were the subject-matter of
challenge on the ground that its constitution was ab initio
bad in law. Chinnappa Reddy, J. relying on the observations
of Mookerjee, J., in Pulin’s case concluded that the acts of
the Market Committee de facto performed within the scope of
its assumed official authority, in the interest of the
public or third persons and not for his own benefit are
generally as valid and binding as if they were performed by
a de jure Committee. The Allahabad High Court in Jai Kumar
v. State, [1968] All. L.J. 877 upheld the judgments of the
District Judges whose appointments were later struck down by
this Court on the principle that the acts of officers defac-
to are not to be questioned because of the want of legal
authority except by some direct proceeding instituted for
the purpose by the State or by someone claiming the office
de jure, or except when the person himself attempts to build
up some right, or claim some privilege or benefit by reason
of being the officer which he claims to be. In all other
cases, the acts of an officer de facto are valid and effec-
tual, while he is suffered to retain the office, as though
he were an officer by right and the same legal consequences
will flow from them for the protection of the public and of
the third parties. This Court in Gokaraju Rangaraju v. State
of A.P., [1981] 3 SCR 474=AIR 1981 SC 1473 was required to
consider the question of the effect of the declaration of
this Court holding the appointment of an Additional Sessions
Judge invalid on judgments pronounced by him prior to such
declaration. This Court observed that the defacto doctrine
is rounded on good sense, sound policy and practical experi-
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ence. It is aimed at the prevention of public and private
mischief and the protection of public and private interest.
It avoids endless confusion and needless chaos. It, there-
fore, seems clear to us that the de facto doctrine can be
invoked in cases where there is an appointment to office
which is defective; but notwithstanding the defect to the
title of the office, the decisions made by such a de facto
officer clothed with the powers and functions of the office
would be as efficacious as those made by a de jure officer.
The same would, however, not be true of a total intruder or
usurper of office.
In our view, the submission of Shri Shetty based on the
defacto doctrine is clearly misconceived. Shri U.B. Menon
can hardly be described as a person occupying or being in
possession of an office to
204
which certain duties affecting the members of the general
public can be said to be attached. The de facto doctrine, as
explained earlier, envisages that acts performed de facto by
officers within the scope of their assumed official authori-
ty are to be regarded as binding as if they were performed
by officers de jure. While the de facto doctrine saves
official acts done by an officer whose appointment is found
to be defective the private parties to a litigation are
precluded from challenging the appointment in any collateral
proceedings. But the doctrine does not come to the rescue of
an intruder or usurper or a total stranger to the office.
Obviously the doctrine can have no application to the case
of a person who is not the holder of an office but is merely
a bank employee, for that matter an ex-employee. We, there-
fore, see no merit in this contention’.
True it is that the respondent did not attribute any
bias or mala fides to the Enquiry Officer nor did he com-
plain that he was in any manner prejudiced on account of the
said Enquiry Officer conducting he domestic enquiry but that
will not cure the defect as to his compensence. Where pun-
ishment is imposed by a person who has no authority
do so the very foundation on which the edifice is built
collapses and with and it fails the entire edifice. It is a
case more or less akin to a case tried by a court lacking in
inherent jurisdiction. We, are, therefore, of he opinion
that absence of bias, prejudice or mala fides, is of no
consequence so far as the question of competence is con-
cerned. The cases which were cited at the bar (i) Delhi
Cloth and General Mills Co., Ltd. v. Labour Court, Tis
Hazari & Ors., [1970] 1 LLJ 23 and (ii) Saran Motors,
(supra) also have no application to the special facts and
circumstances of this case.
Shri Shetye next submitted that if a third party non-
official can validly be appointed an Enquiry Officer, though
not Disciplinary Authority, his report upto the stage pre-
ceding the issuance of a second ,how-cause notice could be
saved because both sides to the proceedings had not raised
any objection to the continuance of the enquiry by the said
Enquiry Officer and therefore the High Court ought to have
remitted the matter to the competent Disciplinary Authority
to take a fresh decision based on the report of the Enquiry
Officer. To put it differently, according to the learned
counsel for the appellant, the High Court should have re-
manded the matter with a direction that the competent Disci-
plinary Authority will proceed to dispose of the departmen-
tal enquiry from the stage of the report submitted by the
Enquiry Officer. We would have considered it necessary to
examine this submission had the delinquent not retired in
the meantime on August 21, 1986. The High Court pronounced
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its Judgment thereafter
205
on January 18, 1988. No useful purpose, therefore, can be
served by adopting the procedure suggested by Shri Shetye as
the respondent had admittedly retired from service in 1986
and if the order imposing punishment is quashed he would
ordinarily have to be paid his wages etc., upto the date of
his retirement. We, therefore, do not think that, in the
facts and circumstances of this case, the course suggested
by Shri Shetye can be usefully adopted.
Lastly, Shri Shetye submitted that in any event the
respondent succeeded in getting the order of punishment
quashed on a mere technicality and that too on the conten-
tion belatedly raised before the High Court for the first
time and, therefore, the High Court was in error in direct-
ing payment of all consequential benefits. We think there is
merit in this contention. If the objection was raised at the
earliest possible opportunity before the Enquiry Officer the
appellant could have taken steps to remedy the situation by
appointing a competent officer to enquire into the charges
before the respondent’s retirement from service. It is
equally true that the penalty has not been quashed on mer-
its. On the contrary, if one were to go by the charge le-
velled against the respondent and the reply thereto one may
carry the impression that the respondent had made the claim
on the basis of the fake receipt; whether the respondent
himself was duped or not would be a different matter. The
fact, however, remains that the impugned order of punishment
has to be quashed not because the merits of the case so
demand but because the technical plea of incompetence suc-
ceeds. In the circumstances, we think that the ends of
justice would be met if instead of directing ’all consequen-
tial benefits’ the appellant is ordered to pay ’50% of the
consequential benefits’ to which the respondent would be
entitled on superannuation. For the above reasons, we are of
the opinion that the High Court was right in quashing the
impugned order of punishment but we think having regard to
the special facts and circumstances pointed out earlier, it
should not have ordered payment of ’all consequential bene-
fits’ flowing from the declaration that the impugned order
was bad in law. We, therefore, modify this part of the order
by substituting the words fifty percent’ in place of the
word ’all’ in the penultimate paragraph of the learned
Single Judge’s order. To put the matter beyond the pale of
doubt we clarify that the respondent will be paid 50% of the
consequential benefits and not all the consequential bene-
fits. Except for this modification, the rest of the order of
the High Court will stand. The appeal will stand allowed to
the above extent but, in the facts and circumstances of this
case, we think the parties should be directed to bear their
own costs.
T.N.A. Appeal allowed partly.
206