Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NYADAR SINGH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/08/1988
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1979 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 546
1988 SCC (4) 170 JT 1988 (3) 448
1988 SCALE (2)409
ACT:
Central Civil Services (Classification, Control and
Appeal) Rules, 1966: Rule Il(vi)-Government servant-Directly
recruited to a particular post-Whether can be reduced to a
post lower in rank to the one that he was directly recruited.
%
Constitution of India, 1950-Article 311(2)-‘Reduction
in rank’-Whether a government servant by way of
punishment/penalty can be reduced in rank to a post lower
than that to which he was recruited directly-All reversions
from higher post are not necessarily reduction in rank.
Statutory Interpretation: Consequences do not alter
statutory language-They only help to fix its meaning.
HEADNOTE:
Pursuant to separate disciplinary proceedings the
penalty of ‘reduction in rank’ was imposed on the
appellants, Nyadar Singh and M.J. Ninama, reducing each of
them to a post lower than the one to which they were
directly recruited.
The Central Administrative Tribunals rejected the
appellants’ challenge to the orders imposing the penalty.
Before this Court, the appellants’ contention was that
as a result of the imposition of the penalty, they were
reduced in rank to posts lower than the one to which they
were initially recruited, which on a proper construction of
Rule 11 of the Central Civil Services (Classification,
Control and Appeal) Rules 1965 was not permissible.
The Additional Solicitor General, on the other hand,
contended that this limitation which might be appropriate in
the case of a ‘reversion’, was inappropriate in a case of
‘reduction in rank’ imposed as a penalty. The argument was
that ‘reduction in rank’ had a wider import than ‘reversion’
and there was no reason why the power to impose this penalty
which was permissible on the plain language of the Rule, be
whittled down by any other consideration.
PG NO 547
PG NO 548
Disposing of the appeals, it was,
HELD: (1) The meaning to be given to a particular
statutory language depends on the evaluation of a number of
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interpretative-criteria. Shorn of the context, the words by
themselves are ‘slippery customers’. The general presumption
is that these criteria do not detract or stand apart from,
but are to be harmonised with, the well accepted legal
principles. Considerations relevant to interpretation are
not whether a differently conceived or worded statute would
have yielded results more consonant with fairness and
reasonableness. Consequences do not alter the statutory
language, but might only help to fix its meaning. [555H;
556A-B, G-H]
(2) The expression ‘rank’, in ‘reduction in rank’ has,
for purposes of Article 311(2), an obvious reference to the
stratification of the posts or grades or categories in the
official hierarchy. It does not refer to the mere seniority
of the Government Servant in the same class or grade or
category. [552B-C]
(3) The penalty of ‘reduction in rank’ of a Government
servant initially recruited to a higher time-scale, grade,
service or post to a lower time-scale, grade, service or
post virtually amounted to his removal from the higher post
and the substitution of his recruitment to lower post,
affecting the policy of recruitment itself. ln conceivable
cases, the Government servant might not have the
qualification requisite for the post which might require and
involve different, though not necessarily higher, skills and
attainment. [551B-C, 557G]
[Worthington v. Robin, [1896] 75 Law Times Reports 446,
referred to.]
(4) Rule 11 must be read in consonance with general
principles and so construed the expression ‘reduction’ in it
would not admit of a wider meaning. [557H; 558A]
Babaji Charan Rout v. State of Orissa, [1982] 1 SLJ
496; Shivalingaswamy v. State of Karnataka, [1985] ILR Kar.
1453; approved.
Gopal Rao v. C.I.T., [1976] 2 MLJ 508; Mahendra Kumar v.
Union of India, [1984] 1 All India Ser. Law Journal 34;
(1985) 1 SLR 161; S.N. Dey v. Union of India, [1983] 2 SLJ
All. 114; C.S. Balakumar v. The lnspecting Asstt.
Commissioner of Income Tax, [1987] 1 All India SLJ 18,
over-ruled.
PG NO 548
P. V. Srinivasa Sastry v. Comptroller & Auditor General
of India, [1979] 3 SLR 509 and Hussain Sasan Saheb Kaldgi v.
State of Maharashtra, [1987] AIR SC 1627, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3003 of
1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 8/9th April, 1986 of
the Central Administrative Tribunal, New Delhi in R.A. No. 2
of 1986 in TA No. T-564 of 1985.
AND
Civil Appeal No. 889 of 1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 29.10.86 and 5.11.1986
in the Central Administrative Tribunal, Ahmedabad in O.A.
No. 103 of 1986.
J.S. Bali and L.R. Singh for the Appellant in C.A. No.
3003 of 1988.
K.M.K. Nair for the Appellant in C.A. No. 889 of 1988.
Kuldip Singh, Additional Solicitor General, A. Subba
Rao, C.V.S. Rao and Hemant Sharma for the Respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALIAH, J. The special leave petition and the
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appeal-by two Central-Government-servants- raise an
interesting point of construction of a service Rule whether
a Disciplinary Authority can, under Sub-Rule (vi) of Rule 11
of the Central Civil Service (Classification, Control and
Appeal) Rules, 1965, (Rules for short), impose the penalty
of reduction on a Government Servant, recruited directly to
a particular post, to a post lower than that to which he was
so recruited; and if such a reduction is permissible,
whether the reduction could only be to a post from which
under the relevant Recruitment Rules promotion to the one to
which the Government servant was directly recruited.
PG NO 549
The petition and appeal are directed against the orders
dated 8/9-4-1986 of the Central Administrative Tribunal,
Delhi, and the order dated 29.10.1986 of the Central
Administrative Tribunal, Gujarat, respectively, affirming
the orders of the Disciplinary Authorities imposing on the
petitioner and the appellant the penalty of reduction in
rank to post lower than the one to which both of them were
initially recruited.
There is a divergence of judicial opinion amongst the
High Courts on the point: The Division Benches of the
Orissa and Karnataka High Courts have held that such a
reduction in rank is not possible at all. [See: Babaji
Charan Rout v. State of Orissa and Ors., [1982] 1 SLJ 496;
Shivalingaswamy v. State of Karnataka, [1985] ILR Kar.
1453].
However, the Madras, Andhra Pradesh and Allahabad High
Courts have held that there is no limitation on the power to
impose such a penalty. [See: Gopal Rao v. C.l.T., [1976] 2
MLJ 508; Mahendra Kumar v. Union of India, [1984] 1 All
India Ser. Law Jour. 34; S.N. Dey v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1983] 2 SLJ All. 114]. The Central Administrative Tribunal,
Madras, in C.S. Balakumar v. The lnspecting Asstt.
Commissioner of Income Tax, [1987] 1 All India SLJ 18 has
also subscribed to this view.
There is yet a third view, as typified in P.V. Srinivasa
Sastry v. Comptroller & Auditor General of India, [1979] 3
SLR 509 and the one taken by the Central Administrative
Tribunal in the case from which the Special Leave Petition
arises, that such a reduction in rank is permissible
provided that promotion from the post to which the
Government servant is reduced to the post from which he was
so reduced is permissible, or, as it has been put, the post
to which the Government servant is reduced is "in the line
of promotion" and is a "feeder-service".
Special leave is granted in SLP (C) 9509 of 1986. Both
the cases are taken up for final hearing, heard and disposed
of by this common Judgment.
2. A brief advertance to the facts of the cases is
necessary.
SLP (C) 9506 of 1986 is by a certain Nyadar Singh, the
unsuccessful petitioner before the Central Administrative
Tribunal, New Delhi, and is directed against that the
Tribunal’s order No. T-564/85 (SBCWP No.- 1747/80) dated
PG NO 550
28th February, 1986, rejecting his challenge to the order
dated 4th Sept., 1976, of the disciplinary authority
imposing a penalty of ‘reduction in rank’ reducing the
petitioner from the post of Assistant Locust Warning Officer
to which he was recruited directly on 31.10.1960 and
confirmed on 27.12.1971 to that of Junior Technical
Assistant pursuant to certain disciplinary proceedings held
against him. In 1974, he was working as an Assistant Locust
Warning Officer at Nohar. On 4.11.1975 in respect of certain
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acts alleged to constitute misconduct on his part certain
disciplinary proceedings were initiated against him which
culminated in the order dated 4.9.1976 imposing the
aforesaid penalty. The statutory appeal before the appellate
authority was, dismissed on 24.4.1979. Thereafter he filed a
writ petition before the Delhi High Court which, after the
coming into force of the Central Administrative Tribunal
Act, 1985, stood transferred to and was disposed of by the
Central Administrative Tribunal, New Delhi, by its order
dated 28.2.1986, now under appeal. It is relevant to mention
that in the year 1981, after the period of penalty of five
years had spent itself out, the appellant was re-promoted to
the post of Assistant Locust Warning Officer.
Civil Appeal No. 889 of 1988 is by M.J. Ninama, an
Upper Division Clerk in the Post & Telegraph Circle Office,
Ahmedabad, preferred against the order No. OA 103 of 1986
dated 29.10.1986 of the Central Administrative Tribunal,
Ahmedabad, rejecting appellant’s challenge to the legality
and correctness of the order dated 15.5.1988 of the Post
Master General who in modification of the earlier orders
imposing a penalty of compulsory retirement on him,
substituted in its place the order imposing the penalty of
‘reduction in rank’ to the post of Lower Division Clerk
pursuant to the findings recorded against the appellant on
the charge of accepting illegal gratification. Appellant had
been directly recruited as an Upper Division Clerk in the
Office of the Post Master General, Gujarat Circle,
Ahmedabad. He was reduced to the lower post of Lower
Division Clerk until he was found fit after a period of five
years from 15.5.1986. However, the appellant’s seniority on
re-promotion was directed to be fixed at what it would have
been, without the reduction.
4. We have heard Shri J.S. Bali, learned counse] for the
appellant-Nyadar Singh and Shri K.M.K. Nair, learned counsel
for the appellant-Ninama; and Shri Kuldip Singh, learned
Additional Solicitor General for the respondents in both the
appeals.
5. Rule 11 of the ‘Rules’ enumerates the penalties which
may for good and sufficient reasons be imposed on a
PG NO 551
Government servant. Sub-rule (vi) of Rule 11 provides:
"11. The following penalties may, for good and
sufficient reasons and as hereinafter provided, be imposed
on a Government servant namely:
Minor penalties: Omitted as irrelevant here.
Major penalties:
(v) ........
(vi) reduction to a lower time-scale of pay, grade, post
or Service which shall ordinarily be a bar to the promotion
of the Government servant to the time-scale of pay, grade,
post or Service from which he was reduced, with or without
further directions regarding conditions of the restoration
to that grade, or post or Service from which the Government
servant was reduced and his seniority and pay on such
restoration to that grade, post or Service;"
According to the contention of the appellants’ learned
counsel, the appellants were, as a result of the imposition
of the penalty, reduced in rank to a post lower than the one
to which they were initially recruited, which on a proper
construction of the Rule, is not permissible. Learned
counsel relied upon the decision of this Court in Hussain
Sasan Sahed Kaldgi v. State of Maharashtra, [1987] AIR SC
1627.
Shri Kuldip Singh, Additional Solicitor General,
however, contended that this limitation which may be
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appropriate in the case of a ‘reversion’ which, as the very
concept implies, could not be to a post which the Government
servant did not earlier hold, is inappropriate in a case of
reduction in rank imposed as a penalty. Reduction in rank,
according to learned Additional Solicitor General, has a
wider import than ‘reversion’ and there is no reason why the
power to impose this penalty which is permissible on the
plain language of the Rule be whittled down by any other
consideration. The learned Additional Solicitor General
sought to rely upon certain pronouncements of the High
Courts.
6. The import of the expression ‘Reduction in rank’ has
been examined in the context of the constitutional
PG NO 552
protection afforded to Government servants under Article
311(2) in relation to the three major penalties of
’dismissal’, ’removal’ and ’reduction in rank’ and the
constitutional safeguards to be satisfied before the
imposition of these three major penalties. In Article 311(2)
the penalty of "reduction in rank" is classed along with
’dismissal’ and ’removal’ for the reason that the penalty of
reduction in rank has the effect of removing a Government
servant from a class or grade or category of post to a
lessor class or grade or category. Though the Government
servant is retained in service, however, as a result of the
penalty he is removed from the post held by him either
temporarily or permanently and retained in service in a
lesser post. The expression ’rank’, in ’reduction in rank’
has, for purposes of Article 311(2), an obvious reference to
the stratification of the posts or grades or categories in
the official hierarchy. It does not refer to the mere
seniority of the Government servant in the same class or
grade or category. Though reduction in rank, in one sense,
might connote the idea of reversion from a higher post to a
lower post, all reversions from a higher post are not
necessarily reductions in rank. A person working in a higher
post, not substantively, but purely on an officiating basis
may, for valid reasons, be reverted to his substantive post.
That would not, by itself, be reduction in rank unless
circumstances of the reversion disclose a punitiveelement.
The submission of the learned Additional Solicitor
General in substance, is that while ’reversion’ envisages
that the lower post to which the Government servant is
reverted should necessarily to amongst those earlier held by
him and from which he had come on promotion, the idea of
reversion being a mere antonym of promotion-the importing of
such a limitation into a case of "reduction in rank"
imposed as a penalty would be doing, violence of the express
statutory language and an unwarranted fettering of the power
of the disciplinary authority. The idea of reduction in
rank, says the learned Additional Solicitor General, is much
wider than the ambit of the reversion and there is no
justification to whittle down the ambit of this expression
consciously employed by the rule-making-authority. Such a
construction would create more difficulties than It might
appear to solve and become counter-productive in the sense
that even where the disciplinary-authority, desires to
retain a Government servant in service, though not in the
same post but in a lower one, the Authority would be
rendered helpless by such a construction being place of in
the Rule.
PG NO 553
The argument in favour of this construction of the Rule
is stated by by a learned Single Judge in Gopal Rao’s case
(supra) thus:
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". . . . . ln effect, what the learned counsel says is
that there is no difference between the order of reversion
and an order of reduction in rank, that it is well
established that reversion can be only to a post which a
person held earlier and that reduction also can only be to a
post or class of service which the person occupied at any
time before......."
"’..... In my view, the expression "reduction in rank"
covers a wider field than reversion to a lower post. It is
true, the word "reversion" always connotes "a return to the
original post or place." But the word "reduction" has no
such limitation and therefore, reduction in rank extends
even to a rank which the officer concerned never held....."
Similar view has been taken by a learned Single Judge of
the the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Mahendra Kumar v. Union
of India and Anr., [1985] 1 SLR [8] :
"..... The Central Civil Service (Classification,
Control and Appeal) Rules provide for several penalties
which can be imposed for good and sufficient reasons. One of
the major penalties contemplated by Rule II is "reduction to
a lower . . . . . grade, post or service . . . . .", and I
see m, reason why this penalty cannot be imposed upon a
person who, on the date of imposition of penalty, is
continuing in the same post to which he was appointed by
direct recruitment. This is not a case of reversion of a
Government servant to his substantive post for want of
vacancy or otherwise, but this is a case of reduction by way
of punishment. I am unable to read any limitation upon the
power of the disciplinary authority to impose this
punishment on the petitioner, as suggested. No decision has
also been brought to my notice supporting this contention
It must, however, be observed that in the above case
the High Court upheld the challenge of the appellant that
there was no misconduct at all. The other observations as to
the scope of the Rude were, therefore, unnecessary for the
decision of the case.
PG NO 554
7. The opposite view is taken by the Orissa High Court
in Babaji Charan Rout v. State of Orissa and Ors., [1982] 1
All India SLJ 496 and by a Division Bench of the Karnataka
High Court in Shivalingaswamy v: State ot Karnataka, [l985]
ILR Kar. 1453. In the first case, there is no discussion of
the matter as the Division Bench merely followed an earlier
unreported decision of another Division Bench of the same
High Court. In the Karnataka case, a person who had been
directly recruited as "Village-Accountant had been reduced
by the Disciplinary Authority to the post of "daftarband".
The Division Bench interpreting an analogous rule in the
State’s Service Rules, held the reduction impermissible,
observing:
"...... Rule 8 [v] of the Karnataka Civil Services
(Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules, 1957, as
amended, in our opinion, does not justify such an action. It
will lead to most unreasonable results if a person directly
recruited to a post is reduced to a post which he never
came to hold in service. That is not the scheme of the CCA
Rules and therefore we have no hesitation in holding that
the Deputy Commissioner had no competence to impose the
penalty of reducing the appellant to the post of Daftar-
band-Attender when in fact he entered service only as
Village Accountant. If the disciplinary authority felt that
the gravity of the charges proved warrants that the
appellant should be removed from service it was open to the
authorities to make an order either dismissing or removing
him from service .. . . ."
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8. The third view of the matter which while holding such
a reduction is permissible, but subject to the post to
which the Government servant is reduced being one from which
promotion to the post from which reduction is effected is
permissible, is to be found in Srinivasa Sastry’s, case
(supra) where Rama Jois, J. of the Karnataka High Court
held:
"...... It is no doubt true that normally penalty of
’reduction in rank’ is imposed only so as to bring down a
civil servant to a lower time scale, grade, service or post,
held earlier by him before promotion and not below the post,
grade, service, or time-scale to which a civil servant was
directly recruited, and it appears, that it is also
PG NO 555
reasonable to do so. The learned counsel, however, could not
substantiate the point-with reference to the rule which
empowered the disciplinary authority to impose the penalty
of reduction in rank as it does not make any such
differentiation ......."
[See 1979 3 SLR 509 at 515, para 91.
This is also the view taken by the Tribunal in the first
of the appeals now before us. The Tribunal held :
"12. In the light of the aforesaid discussion we find
that rule 11 (vi) of the Central Civil Services
(Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules, 1965, on its
true construction permits reduction in rank in the case of a
direct recruit if the post to which he is reduced is in the
line of promotion i.e. is a feeder service . . . . ."
But as against this judicial-opinion in Srinivasa Sastry’s
case, the learned Judge, as auther, [See ’Services under the
State’: Indian Law Institute, page 220] expressed the view:
"Therefore, it is reasonable to take the view that a
civil servant earns promotion by exhibiting his merit and
ability and suffers reduction in rank instead of removal or
dismissal for misconduct or inefficiency during his service
in the higher post unless he is unworthy of being retained
in the service and that the word ’reduction in rank’ is used
in Article 311 in this sense. It appears that the punishment
by way of reduction in rank can be inflicted only against a
civil servant who held a lower post and who has been
promoted to the higher post; ....."
9. The contention of the learned Additional Solicitor
General that when a legislative-authority uses the
expression "reduction in rank" without imposing any
limitations there is no justification to fetter or otherwise
limit the plenitude of the idea of ’reduction’, looks, at
the first blush, seemingly plausible and even somewhat
attractive. The view has commended itself for acceptance to
some of the High Courts and Tribunals.
The meaning to be given to a particular statutory
language depends on the evaluation of a number of
interpretative-criteria. Shorn of the context, the words by
themselves are "slippery customers". The general presumption
PG NO 556
is that these criteria do not detract or stand apart from,
but are to be-harmonised with, the well accepted legal-
principles. In a difficult case, the number of relevant
interpretative-criteria may be so high that the task of the
court in assessing their effect is, correspondingly,
difficult. Even the statutory-language apparently free from
the sins of semantic ambiguity might not, in the context of
the purpose, connote or convey its lexicographic thrust; but
would acquire a different shade or colour imparted to it by
the variations of the interpretation-criteria. The ambiguity
need not necessarily be a grammatical ambiguity, but one of
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appropriateness of the meaning in a particular context.
Francis Bennion in his "Statutory lnterpretation" refers to
the nature of the task in weighing the factors:
"......it is necessary for the interpreter to assess the
respective weights of the relevant interpretative factors
and determine which of the opposing constructions they
favour on balance . . . . ."
"We may speak of the factors tending in a certain
direction as a bundle of factors. This is figurative, but
then so is the idea of factors being ’weighed’. The court is
unlikely even to consider the factors one by one, and
certainly will not proceed in any mechanistic way . . . . ."
"We find that one bundle of factors favours one of the
opposing constructions of the enactment. while the other
bundle favours the other construction. [As to opposing
constructions see s. 84 of this Code. ] .
There may be factors drawn from a single interpretative
criterion in both bundles . . . . ."
[See ‘Statutory lnterpretation’ by Francis Bennion. 1984
End.- page 390]
It is true that where statutory language should be given
its most obvious meaning-to accord with how a man in the
street might answer the problems posed by the words’-the
Statute must be taken as one finds it. Consideration
relevant to interpretation are not whether a differently
conceived or worded statute would have yielded results more
consonant with fairness and reasonableness. Consequences do
not alter the statutory Ianguage, but may only help to fix
its meaning.
PG NO 557
10. As to whether a person initially recruited to a
higher time-scale, grade or service or post can be reduced
by way of punishment, to a post in a lower time-scale,
grade, service or post which he never held before, the
statutory-language authorises the imposition of penalty does
not, it is true, by itself impose any limitations. The
question is whether the interpretative-factors, relevant to
the provision, impart aNy such limitation. On a
consideration of the relevant factors to which we will
presently refer we must hold that they do.
Though the idea of reduction may not be fully equivalent
with ’reversion’, there are certain assumptions basic to
service law which bring in the limitations of the latter on
the former. The penalty of reduction in rank of a Government
servant initially recruited to a higher time-scale, grade,
service or post to a lower time-scale, grade, service or
post virtually amounts to his removal from the higher post
and the substitution of his recruitment to lower post,
affecting the policy of recruitment itself.
In Worthington v. Robin, [l896] 75 Law Times Reports 446
where a supervisor of Inland Revenue was reduced in rank by
statutory authority, referring to the effect of reduction in
rank. though in a different context, brought about by the
order of the statutory authority, the Court of appeals
understood the process as a dismissal from the higher post
and reappointment to the Iower post. Rigby. L.J observed:
" . . . . . 1 treat what has happened as a dismissal,
because, though in effect he has been reduced to a lower
position, his new appointment is in fact a re-appointment.
If we could see any point in this action upon which there
might be a possibility of his succeeding, we should be most
anxious to give him the opportunity . . . . ."
But action was dismissed because the civil servant was
holding the office at the pleasure of the Commissioners
under the Inland Revenue Regulation Act governing the
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situation.
There are, therefore, certain considerations of policy
that might militate against such a wide meaning to be given
to the power. In conceivable cases, the Government servant
may not have the qualifications requisite for the post which
may require and involve different, though not necessarily
higher, skills and attainments. Here enter considerations of
the recruitment-policy. The rule must be read in consonance
PG NO 558
with the general principles and so construed the expression
‘reduction’ in it would not admit of a wider connotation.
The power should, of course, be available to reduce a civil
servant to any lower time-scale, grade, service or post from
which he had subsequently earned his promotion.
11. The Second, and perhaps equally relevant,
consideration, is the anomaly that a pushing to its logical
limits of such power might produce. In Srinivasa Sastry’s
case, (supra), the learned Judge of the Karnataka High Court
visualised these anomalies thus.
". . . . . Acceptance of the contentions urged for the
respondents would lead to incongruous and absurd results. To
illustrate, could a Doctor be reduced in rank to the post of
a Compounder, or an Engineer to the post of a Fitter, or a
Teacher in a High School to the post of a Peon, or a
Scientific Officer to the post of a ministerial officer, in
the absence of any provision in the rules for the
consideration of the case of the civil servant concerned,
for promotion from the latter category to the former
category? It appears to me that on a fair and proper
construction of rule II (vi) of the Rules, the condition
precedent for the exercise of power under that rule by way
of imposing penalty of reduction in rank to a lower post is,
that the higher post from which the concerned civil servant
is sought to be reduced must be a promotional post in
relation to the lower post to which he is sought to be
reduced . . . . . [See 1979 3 SLR 509 at 516]."
The argument that the rule enables a reduction in rank
to a post lower than the one to which the civil servant was
initially recruited for a specified-period and also enables
restoration of the Government servant to the original post,
with the restoration of seniority as well, and that,
therefore, there is nothing anomalous about the matter, does
not, in our opinion, wholly answer the problem. It is at
best one of the criteria supporting a plausible view of the
matter. The rule also enables an order without the
stipulation of such restoration. The other implications of
the effect of the reduction as a fresh induction into a
lower grade, service or post not at any time earlier held by
the Government servant remain unanswered. Then-again, there
is an inherent anomaly of a person recruited to the higher
grade or class of post being asked to work in a lower grade
which in certain conceivable cases might require different
qualifications. It might be contended that these anomalies
PG NO 559
Could well be avoided by a judicious-choice of the penalty
in a given fact-situation and that these considerations are
more matters to be taken into account in tailoring-out the
penalty than those limiting the scope of the punitive power
itself. But, an over-all view of the balance of the
relevant-criteria indicates that it is reasonable, to assume
that the rule-making-authority did not intend to chothe the
disciplinary-authority with the power which would produce
such anomaious and unreasonable situations. The contrary
view taken by the High Courts in the several decisions
referred to earlier cannot be taken to laid down the
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principle correctly.
The pronouncement of this Court in Hussain Sasan Saheb
Kaldgi v. State of Maharashtra, [l987[ AIR (SC) 1627 relied
upon by the appellant is one which deals with a case of
’reversion’. Appellant in that case who, while working as a
primary-teacher in the services of the District Local Board,
offered himself for and was selected by direct recruitment
to the post of the Asst. Deputy Educational Inspector. But
after four years he was sought to be reverted to the post of
primary-teacher. His suit for the declaration that the
purported reversion was illegal and void was decreed by the
trial court, but was dismissed by the High Court in appeal.
This court restored the decree of the trial court. As
rightly pointed out by the learned Additional Solicitor
General, the case dealt with the scope and limitations of
the process of ’reversion’ and is of no assistance in
deciding the point under consideration. But this does not
make any difference to the conclusion we have reached.
13. The point now is as to what orders are to be made in
these appeals. Appellants in the two appeals have been
reduced to posts lower than these to which they were
initially directly recruited. As these penalties cannot be
sustained in the view we take of the rule, in the normal
course the penalties imposed would require to be set aside
and the disciplinary authority directed to re-consider which
other penalty which it would now choose to impose. But, we
are of the opinion that it would be somewhat unfair that at
this distance of time the matters are re-opened. We think,
having regard to all the circumstances of the cases the
orders that commend themselves appropriate in the two cases
are in terms following:
(i) In the first of the appeals, appellant-Nyadar Singh,
has, after the period of the reduction in rank has spent
itself out, been restored to the original position. It
would, therefore, be sufficient to set aside the penalty
imposed on him and direct that the period of service in the
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reduced post be treated as service in the post held by him
prior to imposition of the penalty, subject to the
condition, however, that the appellant shall not be entitled
to any difference of salary for and during the period of
reduction. In view of this, we think that the proceedings
taken against him should come to an end and there is no need
to remit the matter to the Disciplinary-Authority for
selection and imposition of a fresh penalty.
(ii) In the case of M.J. Ninama the penalty of reduction
in rank is set aside and he shall be restored to the post
which he held before the imposition of the penalty. However,
for the period, if any, served by him in the lower post
pursuant to the penalty imposed on him, he shall not be
entitled to the difference of salary. It will also not be
necessary to remit his case for fresh consideration of the
choice of the penalty having regard to the lapse of time.
It is ordered and the appeals disposed of accordingly.
No costs.
R.S.S. Appeals disposed of.