Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BALVANTRAY RATILAL PATEL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/12/1967
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1968 AIR 800 1968 SCR (2) 577
CITATOR INFO :
D 1970 SC 140 (5)
R 1970 SC1494 (8)
ACT:
Power to suspend employee during enquiry-Scope of-Whether
employee entitled to full remuneration during period of
suspension or as determined under Rules 151 and 152, Chapter
VIII, Bombay Civil Service Rules.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a member of the State Medical Service and
as such an employee of the respondent State. On a report
made in January 1950 by the Anti-Corruption branch, sanction
was given in May 1950 for his prosecution under s. 161
Indian Penal Code for accepting a bribe and the trial court
convicted him of the offence in February 1951. In February
1950, he was suspended by an order of the Civil Surgeon
pending further orders and in August 1950,directions were
given about the payment of subsistence allowance to the
appellant during the period of his suspension. Thereafter a
revision application against his conviction was allowed by
the High Court and a special leave petition to this Court
was rejected. In February 1953 the respondent State
Government directed that a departmental enquiry should be
held against the appellant, as a result of which an order of
dismissal was made against the appellant on February 11,
1960. While the enquiry was going on the appellant gave
notice to the respondent under s. 80 of the Civil Procedure
Code and then filed a suit against the respondent praying
for a declaration that the order of suspension was illegal
and inoperative in law and the appellant continued in
service as though no order for suspension had been made; he
therefore claimed remuneration and allowances with usual
increments from the date of his suspension till the date of
his reinstatement. A Single Bench of the High Court decreed
the suit in the appellant’s favour but a Division Bench
allowed an appeal and held that the respondent had inherent
power to suspend the appellant and to withhold full
remuneration for the period of suspension under r. 151 of
the Bombay Civil Service Rules.
In the, appeal to this Court it was contended, inter alia,
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on behalf of the appellant (i) that the power to suspend is
not an implied term in an ordinary contract between master
and servant and that such a power can only be the creature
either of a statute governing the contract, or of an express
term in the contract itself; in the absence of any express
provision either in the contract of employment or in the
Bombay Civil Service Rules, there was no power to suspend a
public servant pending inquiry into the allegations of his
misconduct; and (ii) as the appellant was suspended pending
an inquiry into the charge for the criminal offence alleged
to have been committed by him and as the proceedings in
connection with that charge ended with the acquittal of the
appellant by the High Court on February 15, 1952, the order
of suspension must be deemed to have automatically come to
an end on that date and the appellant was entitled to full
pay from then until February It, 1960 when he was ultimately
dismissed.
HELD : dismissing the appeal
(i)The order of the State Government dated February 13,
1950. suspending the appellant pending enquiry into his
conduct was valid. [586 B]
L2Sup.C.11/ 8- 6.
578
The general principle is that a employer can suspend an
employee pending an enquiry into his misconduct and the only
question that can arise in such suspension will relate to
payment during the period of such suspension. it is now
well-settled that the power to suspend, in the sense of a
right to forbid a servant to work, is not an implied term in
an ordinary contract between master and servant, and that
such a power can only be the creature either of a statute
governing the contract, or of an express term in the
contract itself. Ordinarily, therefore, the absence of such
power either as an express term in the contract or in the
rules framed under some statute would mean that the master
would have no power to suspend a workman and even if he does
so in the sense that he forbids the employee to work, he
will have to pay wages during the period of suspension.
Where, however, there is power to suspend either in the
contract of employment or in the statute or the rules framed
thereunder, the order of suspension has the effect of
temporarily suspending the relationship of master and
servant with the consequence that the servant is not bound
to render service and the master is not bound to pay. [582
D-G; 583 C-D]
It is equally well-settled that an order of interim
suspension can be passed against the employee while an
enquiry is pending into his conduct even though there is no
such term in the contract of appointment or in the rules,
but in such a case the employee would be entitled to his
remuneration for the period of suspension if there is no
statute or rule under which it could be withheld. In this
connection it is important to notice the distinction between
suspending the contract of service of an officer and sus-
pending an officer from performing the duties of his office
on the basis that the contract is subsisting. The
suspension in the latter sense is always -an implied term in
every contract of service. When an officer is suspended in
this sense it means that the Government merely issues a
direction to the officer that so long as the contract is
subsisting and till the time, the officer is legally
dismissed he must not do anything in the discharge of the
duties of his office. In other words, the employer is
regarded as issuing an order to the employee which, because
the contract is subsisting, the employee must obey. [582 H;
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583 A-C]
The Management of Hotel Imperial, New Delhi v. Hotel
Workers’ Union, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 476, T. Cajee v. U. Jormanik
Siem, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 750; R. P. Kapur v. Union of India,
[1964] 5 S.C.R. 431; Hanley v. Pease & Partners, Ltd. [1915]
1 K.B. 698; Wallwork v. Fielding, [1922] 2 K.B. 66; Boston
Deep Sea Fishing and Ice Co. v. Ansell, [1888] 39 Ch. D.
339, referred to.
If there is no express term relating to payment during such
suspension or if there is no statutory provision in any
enactment or rule the employee is entitled to his full
remuneration for the period of his interim suspension. [583
G-H]
However, in the present case Rule 151 of the Bombay Civil
Service Rules empowered the State Government to withhold pay
for the period of interim suspension but the Government
servant was entitled under that rule to a subsistence
allowance at such rate as the suspending authority may
direct but not exceeding one-fourth of his pay. There was
no force in the contention that Rule 151 of the Bombay Civil
Service Rules applies only to a case where a Government
servant is ’suspended by way of penalty and not to a case of
interim suspension. [585 D]
R. P. Kapur v. Union of India, 5 S.C.R. 431, relied on.
(ii)The order of suspension dated February 13, 1950 recited
that the appellant should be suspended with immediate effect
"pending further
579
orders". It is clear therefore that the order could not be
terminated automatically but only by another order of the
Government. Until therefore a further order of the State
Government was made terminating the suspension the appellant
had no right to be reinstated in service and to the
remuneration claimed. [587 H]
Narayan Prasad Rewany v. State of Orissa, A.T.R. 1957 Orissa
51, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 442 of
1965.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 10, 1961 of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 23 of 1960.
H.R. Gokhate, P. N. Duda, and J. B. Dadachanji, for the
appellant.
H. M. Seervai, Advocate-General for the State of
Maharashtra,
R. Gopalakrishnan and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. This appeal is brought, by certificate, from
judgment of the Bombay High Court dated August 10, 1961 by
which the appeal of the respondent against the judgment of
S. M. Shah, J. of that High Court was allowed and the suit
of the appellant was dismissed.
The appellant was a member of the Bombay Medical Service,
Class 11 and as such was an employee of the State of
Maharashtra. In 1943, the appellant was posted at the Civil
Hospital, Ahmedabad and on February 18, 1950 he was in-
charge of the Medico-Legal Section of that hospital. On
January 19, 1950, one Nabimahomed complained to Mr. Rathod,
Sub-Inspector of Police’ Anti-Corruption Branch, Ahmedabad,
580
implicated by the Anti-Corruption Branch of the Police and
asking him to consider the representation before giving his
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sanction for prosecution of the appellant and before making
an order of suspension. The Surgeon-General forwarded the
report of Sub-Inspector, Mr. Rathod as well as the
representation of the appellant to the State Government by
his letter dated February 1, 1950. He requested the
Government that in the circumstances mentioned in the Sub-
Inspector’s report orders may be issued for placing the
appellant under suspension. His recommendation was approved
by the Minister for Health and by the Chief Minister. By a
letter dated February 13, 1950, the Deputy Secretary to the
Government informed the Surgeon-General that the appellant
should be suspended with immediate effect pending further
orders.. The Surgeon-General thereafter issued an order to
the Civil Surgeon, Ahmedabad dated February 16, 1950 that
the appellant should be placed under suspension pending
further orders from the date of the receipt of the
memorandum. In pursuance of the directions received by him
from the Surgeon-General, the Civil Surgeon, Ahmedabad,
issued the following office order and sent it; to the
appellant :
"Under orders from the Surgeon-General, with
the Government of Bombay, conveyed in his
Memorandum No. S. 97/189/A dated 16th
February, 1950, you are informed that you are
suspended pending further orders with effect
from the afternoon of 18th instant.
You should hand over your charge to Mr. S. S.
Doctor, B.M.S. Class 11 at this hospital."
On August 21, 1950 the Government directed that the
appellant should be allowed subsistence allowance at Rs.
153-5-0 per mensem from the date of his suspension February
19, 1950 to March 31, 1950, at Rs. 158-13-0 per mensem from
April 1, 1950 to February 18, 1951 and at Rs. 119-2-0 per
mensem from February 19, 1951 onwards. The Government also
directed that the appellant should be paid in addition Rs.
35/- per mensem as dearness allowance and Rs. 14/- as house
rent allowance during the entire period of suspension. On
May 6, 1950 sanction was given for the prosecution of the
appellant under s. 161, Indian Penal Code. On February 26,
1951 the appellant was convicted by the First Class City
Magistrate at Ahmedabad and sentenced to one day’s
imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 1000/-. The appellant filed
an appeal to the Sessions Court, but his appeal was
dismissed. Thereafter, the appellant took the matter in
revision to the Bombay High Court. The revision application
was allowed and the conviction and sentence passed against
the appellant were set aside. On March 14, 1952, the
appellant made a representation to the Government praying
that he should be reinstated in service.
581
The Government, however, applied to the High Court for-
leave to appeal to this Court against the decision if the
High Court and on the said application being rejected, the
Government applied to this Court for special leave to
appeal. This Court rejected the application on October 13,
1952. On November 27, 1952 the Government issued another
order in regard to the payment of subsistence allowance to
the appellant. On February 20, 1953 the Government directed
that a departmental enquiry should be held against the
appellant. The Civil Surgeon, Ahmedabad was appointed
Inquiry Officer and he was asked to complete the inquiry
within three months and submit his report to the Government
through the Surgeon-General. For reasons which are not
apparent the departmental inquiry was delayed and ultimately
an order of dismissal was made against the appellant on
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February 11, 1960. Before the conclusion of the
departmental inquiry and while that inquiry was going on the
appellant gave a notice to the respondent under s. 80 of the
Civil Procedure Code. On April 11, 1953 the appellant
brought the present suit against the respondent praying for
a declaration that the order of suspension was illegal and
inoperative in law and the appellant continued in service as
though no order for suspension had been passed. The
appellant claimed remuneration and allowances with usual
increments from the date of his suspension till the date of
his reinstatement. The respondent controverted the
allegations made in the plaint and asserted that the
suspension of the appellant was not illegal. Shah, J. of
the Bombay High Court before whom the suit was tried held
that the appellant was entitled to salary and allowances
upto the date when he was dismissed i.e., February 11, 1960.
He granted to the appellant a declaration that the order of
suspension was illegal and inoperative in law and the
appellant continued to be on duty till February 11, 1960 as
though no order of suspension had been made. He also
granted a decree directing the respondent to pay to the
appellant Rs. 51,135.28 with interest on Rs. 43,223/- at the
rate of 4 per cent p.a. and the cost of the suit. The
respondent appealed against the judgment of the trial Judge.
The appeal was heard by a Bench consisting of the Chief
Justice and Mody, J. The Appellate Bench held that the
respondent had inherent power to suspend the appellant and
to withhold full remuneration for the period of suspension
under Rule 151 of the Bombay Civil Services Rules. The
Appellate Bench therefore held that the order of suspension
made by the respondent was legally valid as it was in
exercise of the inherent power as regards prohibition of
work, and in exercise of its powers conferred by the rules
so far as the withholding of pay during enquiry against his
conduct was concerned. The Appellate Bench also held that
the suit was barred under Article 14 of the Schedule to the
Indian Limitation Act. For these reasons the Appellate
Bench allowed the appeal, set aside the decree passed by the
trial
582
Judge and dismissed the suit and ordered the appellant to
pay four-fifths of the costs of the respondent through out.
The first question to be considered in this appeal is
whether Government had the power to suspend the appellant by
its order dated February 13, 1950 pending enquiry into his
alleged misconduct. It was contended on behalf of the
appellant that the power to suspend is not an implied term
in an ordinary contract between master and servant and that
such a power can only be the creature either of a statute
governing the contract, or of an express term in the
contract itself. It was urged that there was no express
provision in the Bombay Civil Services Rules granting a
power to the Government to suspend a Government servant
pending enquiry into the allegations made against him. The
argument was put forward that in the absence of any express
provision either in the contract of employment or in any
statute or statutory rules governing such employment, there
was no power to suspend a public servant pending inquiry
into the allegations of his misconduct. We are unable to
accept the argument put forward on behalf of the appellant
as correct. The general law on the subject of suspension
has been laid down by this Court in three cases, viz., The
Management of Hotel Imperial, New Delhi v. Hotel Workers’
Union,(1) T. Cajee v. U. Jormanik Siem,(2) and R. P. Kapur
v. Union of India(3). It is now well-settled that the power
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to suspend, in the sense of a right to forbid a servant to
work, is not an implied term in an ordinary contract between
master and servant, and that such a power can only be the
creature either of a statute governing the contract, or of
an express, term in the contract itself. Ordinarily,
therefore, the absence of such power either as an express
term in the contract or in the rules framed under some
statute would mean that the master would have no power to
suspend a workman and even if he does so in the sense that
he forbids the employee to work, he will have to pay wages
during the period of suspension. Where, however, there is
power to suspend either in the contract of employment or in
the statute or the rules framed thereunder, the order of
suspension has the effect of temporarily suspending the
relationship of master and servant with the consequence that
the servant is not bound to render service and the master is
not bound to pay. This principle of law of master and
servant is well-established: (See Hanley v. Pease &
Partners, Ltd., (4) Wallwork v. Fielding, (5) and the
judgment of Cotton, L. J. in Boston Deep Sea Fishing and Ice
Co. v. Ansell) (6). It is equally well-settled that an
order of interim suspension can be passed against the
employee while an inquiry is pending into his conduct even
though there is no such term in the contract of appointment
or in the rules, but in such a case the employee would
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 476.
(3) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 431.
(5) [1922] 2 K.B. 66.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 750.
(4) [1915] 1 K.B. 698.
(6) [1888] 39 Ch. D. 339.
583
be entitled to his remuneration for the period of suspension
if there is no statute or rule under which it could be
withheld. In this connection it is important to notice the
distinction between suspending the contract of service of an
officer and suspending an officer from performing the duties
of his office on the basis that the contract is subsisting.
The suspension in the latter sense is always an implied term
in every contract of service. When an officer is suspended
in this sense it means that the Government merely issues a
direction to the officer that so long as the contract is
subsisting and till the time the officer is legally
dismissed he must not do anything in the discharge of the
duties of his office. In other words, the employer is
regarded as issuing an order to the employee which, because
the contract is subsisting, the employee must obey.
The general principle therefore is that an employer can sus-
pend an employee pending an inquiry into his misconduct and
the only question that can arise in such suspension will
relate to payment during the period of such suspension. If
there is no express term relating to payment during such
suspension or if there is no statutory provision in any
enactment or rule the employee is entitled to his full
remuneration for the period of his interim suspension. On
the other hand, if there is a term in this respect in the
contract of employment or if there is a provision in the
statute or the rules framed thereunder providing for the
scale of payment during suspension, the payment will be made
in accordance therewith. This principle applies with equal
force in a case where the Government is an employer and a
public servant is an employee with this qualification that
in view of the peculiar structural hierarchy of Government
administration, the employer in the case of employment by
Government must be held to be the authority which has the
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power to appoint the public servant concerned. It follows
therefore that the authority entitled to appoint the public
servant is entitled to suspend him pending a departmental
enquiry into his conduct or pending a criminal proceeding,
which may eventually result in a departmental enquiry
against him. But what amount should be paid to the public
servant during such suspension will depend upon the
provisions of the statute or statutory rule in that
connection. If there is such a provision the payment during
suspension will be in accordance therewith. But if there is
no such provision, the public servant will be entitled to
his full emoluments during the period of suspension. On
general principles therefore the government like any other
employer, would have a right to suspend a public servant in
one of two ways. It may suspend any public servant pending
departmental enquiry or pending criminal proceedings; this
may be called interim suspension. The Government may also
proceed to hold a departmental enquiry and after his being
found guilty order suspension as a
584
punishment if the rules so permit. This will be suspension
as a penalty. As we have already pointed out, the question
as to what amount should be paid to the public servant
during the period of interim suspension or suspension as a
punishment will depend upon the provisions Of the statute or
statutory rules made in that connection.
On behalf of the respondent Advocate-General of Maharashtra
relied upon Rules 151 and 152 of Ch. VIII of the Bombay
Civil Service Rules. These rules provide as follows:
"151. A Government servant under suspension
is entitled to the following payments :-
(a) In the case of a military officer who is
liable to revert to military duty, to the pay
and allowances to which he would have been
entitled had he been suspended while in
military employment.
(b) In any other case, to a subsistence
grant at such rates as the suspending
authority may direct, but not exceeding one-
fourth of the pay of the suspended Government
servant.
Provided that the suspending authority may
direct that the Government servant under
suspension shall be granted in addition such
compensatory allowances as the Government may
sanction by general or special order for issue
under this proviso.
Note 1.-The grant of subsistence allowance
cannot altogether be withheld."
"152. When the suspension of a Government
servant is held to have been unjustifiable or
not wholly justifiable; or when a Government
servant who has been dismissed, removed or
suspended is reinstated, the revising or
appellate authority may grant to him for the
period of his absence from duty-
(a) if he is honourably acquitted, the full
pay to which he would have been entitled if he
had not been dismissed, removed or suspended
and, by an order to be separately recorded any
allowance of which he was in receipt prior to
his dismissal, removal or suspension; and
(b) if otherwise, such proportion of such
pay and allowances as the revising or
appellate authority may prescribe.
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585
In a case falling under clause (a), the
period of absence from duty will be treated as
a period spent on duty. In a case falling
under clause (b) it will not be treat
ed as a
period spent on duty unless the revising or
appellate authority so direct........ Note 2-
Under this rule the revising or appellate
authority can convert a period spent under
suspension into one of leave admissible under
the rules. The period of suspension cannot,
however, be converted into leave without pay
except in accordance with the conditions in
Rule 752. Subsistence allowance paid under
this rule should be adjusted or recovered from
the Government servant when the period of
suspension is-converted into leave with or
without pay."
On behalf of the appellant Mr. Gokhale contended that Rule
151 applies only to a case where a Government servant is
suspended by way of penalty and not to a case of interim
suspension. We see no warrant for accepting this argument.
Suspension is used in Rule 151 in a general sense and Rule
151 applies to all kinds of suspension, whether it is
imposed by way of penalty or as an interim measure pending
departmental inquiry or a criminal proceeding. We see no
reason, either in the context or the language of Rule 151,
to place a restricted interpretation upon the meaning of the
word "suspension" in that rule. On the contrary, the
language of Rules 153 and 156 suggests that the suspension
contemplated by these rules includes not only suspension by
way of penalty but also interim suspension pending a
departmental inquiry or a criminal proceeding. Rules 153
and 156 state as follows
"153. Leave may not be granted to a
Government servant under suspension."
"156. A Government servant committed to a
prison either for debt or on a criminal charge
should be conssidered as under suspension from
the date of his arrest and therefore entitled
only to the payments specified in Rule 151
until the termination of the proceedings
against him when, if he is not removed or
dismissed from service, an adjustment of his
pay and allowances should be made according to
the conditions, and terms prescribed in rule
152 the full amount being given only in the
event of the Government servant being
considered to be acquitted of \blame, or, if
the imprisonment was for debt, of its being
proved that the Government servant’s liability
arose from circumstances beyond his control."
If the word "suspension" in Rules 153 and 156 contemplates
suspension pending an inquiry we see no reason why it should
be
586
given a different interpretation in Rules 151 and 152. We
are accordingly of the opinion that Rule 151 empowers the
State Government to withhold pay for the period of interim
suspension but the Government servant is entitled under that
rule to a subsistence allowance at such rate as the
suspending authority may direct but not exceeding one-fourth
of his pay. It follows therefore that the order of the
State Government dated February 13, 1950 suspending the
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appellant pending enquiry into his conduct was legally valid
and the argument of the appellant on this aspect of the case
must be rejected. The view that we have expressed is
supported by the ratio of the principle of the decision of
this Court in R. P. Kapur v. Union of India(1). The
question in that case arose with regard to the
interpretation of Fundamental Rule 53 which provided for
payment to a Government servant under suspension and which
states as follows
"53(1). A Government servant under
suspension shall be entitled to the following
payments, namely :-
(i) in the case of a Commissioned Officer of
the -Indian Medical Department or a Warrant
Officer in Civil Employ who is liable to
revert to Military duty, the pay and
allowances to which he would have been
entitled had he been suspended while in
military employment;
(ii)in the case of any other Government
servant-
(a) a subsistence allowance at an amount
equal to the leave salary which the Government
servant would have drawn if he had been on
leave on half average pay or on half pay and
in addition, dearness allowance, if admissible
on the basis of such leave salary:
Provided that where the period of suspension
exceeds twelve months, the authority which
made or is deemed to have made the order of
suspension shall be competent to vary the
amount of subsistence allowance for any period
subsequent to the period of the first twelve
months as follows
Fundamental Rule 54 is to the following
effect:
"54(1) When a Government servant who has been
dismissed, removed, compulsorily retired or
suspended is re-instated or would have been
re-instated but for his retirement on
superannuation while under suspension. the
authority competent to order the reinstatement
shall consider and make a specific order-
(1) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 431.
587
(a) regarding the pay and allowances to be
paid to the Government servant for the period
of his absence from duty or for the period of
suspension ending with the date of his
retirement on superannuation as the case may
be; and
(b) whether or not the said period shall be
treated as a period spent on duty.
(2) Where the authority mentioned in sub-
rule (1) is of opinion that the Government
servant has been fully exonerated or, in the
case of suspension, that it was wholly
unjustified, the Government servant shall be
given the full pay and allowances to which he
would have been entitled, had he not been
dismissed, removed, compulsorily retired or
suspended, as the case may be.
It was held by the majority decision of this Court that
Fundamental Rule 5 3 contemplates all kinds of suspension,
whether it is a penalty or as an interim measure pending
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departmental inquiry or criminal proceeding. It is manifest
that Rules 151 and 152 of the Bombay Civil Service Rules are
couched in a similar language to that of Fundamental Rules
53 and 54 and it must be held for this reason also that
Rules 151 and 152 of the Bombay Civil Service Rules comprise
in their scope both kinds of suspension, whether it is a
penalty or as an interim measure pending an inquiry into the
conduct of the Government servant concerned or criminal
proceeding against him.
We proceed to consider the next question arising in this
case i.e., whether the order of suspension came to an end on
February 15, 1952 when the appellant was acquitted by the
High Court in revision and whether in consequence the
appellant is entitled to full pay for the period from
February 15, 1952 to February 11, 1960 when he was
ultimately dismissed. It was contended on behalf of the
appellant that he was suspended pending an inquiry into the
charge for the criminal offence alleged to have been com-
mitted by him and as the proceedings in connection with that
charge ended with the acquittal of the appellant by the High
Court on February 15, 1952, the order of suspension must be
deemed to have automatically come to an end on that date.
We see no justification for accepting this argument. The
order of suspension dated February 13, 1950 recites that the
appellant should be suspended with immediate effect "pending
further orders". It is clear therefore that the order of
suspension could not be automatically terminated but it
could have only been terminated by another order of the
Government. Until therefore a further order of the State
Government was made terminating the suspension
588
,the appellant had no right to be reinstated to service. On
behalf ,of the appellant reliance was placed on the decision
of the Orissa High Court in Narayan Prasad Rewany v. State
of Orissa(1). But the facts of that case are clearly to be
distinguished. The order of suspension in that case did not
contain the phrase "pending further’ orders". Furthermore,
the order of suspension was passed under R. 93A of the
Orissa Service Code, Vol. 1, under which the Government
servant could be suspended during the periods when he was
not actually detained in custody or imprisoned. Having,
regard to the terms of that rule it was held by the Orissa
High Court that the order ceased to be operative as soon as
criminal proceedings had terminated. In the present case,
however, the appellant was not suspended under any rule
similar to rule 93A of the Orissa Service Code, Vol. 1 and
the decision of the Orissa High Court has therefore no rele-
vance. We are therefore of the opinion that the order of
suspension of the appellant made by the State Government on
February 13, 1950 did not come to an end on the date of the
order of acquittal made by the High Court and Counsel for
the appellant is unable to make good his submission on this
aspect of the case.
It is not necessary for us to express any opinion as to
whether the suit is barred under Article 14 of the Schedule
to the Indian Limitation Act as we have held that the claim
of the appellant is devoid of merit.
For the reasons already expressed, we hold that the judgment
of the Bombay High Court dated August 10, 1961 is correct
-and this appeal must be dismissed. In view of the
circumstances of the case we do not propose to make any
order as to costs ,of this Court.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
(1) A.I.R. 4957 Orissa 51.
589
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