Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARESH CHANDRA SAHA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION TERRITORY OF TRIPURA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/10/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 364 1970 SCR (2) 639
1970 SCC (3) 22
ACT:
Civil Service Reposting in officiating post held at the time
of dismissal after order of dismissal set aside--subsequent
reversion to substaintive post-Legality.
Practice and Procedure-Petition filed in High Court
challenging order passed 7 years before-If could be
entertained.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was a junior officer in the State
service, was appointed as an officiating senior officer on
May 10, 1954. On May 12, 1954, an order was passed
reverting him to the, post of junior officer. On the ground
that he refused to obey the order of reversion, on May 6,
1957 he was suspended, and ultimately dismissed. The orders
of the suspension and dismissal were set aside by the Court
of Judicial Commissioner. By order dated November 7. 1960,
he was reinstated in the post of the senior officer which he
was holding on the date of his suspension. with effect from
the afternoon of May 7, 1957. By the same order, he was
reverted to his substantive post of junior officer with
retrospective effect from June, 7, 1957, as another officer
was already occupying the post. The appellant, thereupon,
challenged both the orders dated May 12, 1954, and November
7, 1960, but the Judicial Commissioner dismissed the
petition.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) The order dated November 7, 1960 reverting the
appellant to his substantive post did not entail forfeiture
of the appellant’s pay or allowances, or loss of seniority
in his substantive rank, or stoppage or postponement of his
future chances of promotion. The appellant could not claim
the salary of the senior post from the date of suspension or
dismissal till date of reinstatement, because, the
appropriate authority, when reinstating the appellant could
revert him, as from an earlier date, to his substantive post
from the officiating post, provided the order was not passed
mala fide. [641 H; 642 B-C]
Parshotam Lal Dhingra v. Union of India, [1958] S.C.R. 828,
referred to.
(2) There is nothing to show that any retrospective
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operation was given to the order dated May 12, 1954 In any
event, the Judicial Commissioner was justified in refusing
to entertain any contention as to its validity seven years
after the order was passed. [640 H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2203 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 8, 1965 of the Judicial Commissioner’s Court,
Tripura in Writ Petition No. 27 of 1961.
M. K. Ramamurthi and Shyamala Pappu, for the appellant.
V. A Seyid Muhammad, S. P. Nayar and B. D. Sharma, for
the,respondents.
640
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The appellant joined the Tripura Civil Service on
October 30, 1949, and was posted as a probationer Divisional
Purchasing Officer, Dharmnagar. In 1953 the Tripura Civil
Service was split into two cadres-senior officers being
absorbed as Sub-Divisional Officers and junior officers as
Sub-Treasury Officers. The appellant was absorbed as Sub-
Treasury Officer with effect from April 1, 1950. On May 10,
1954, the appellant was appointed officiating Sub-Divisional
Officer with effect from September 10, 1953. By order dated
May 12, 1954, the appellant was reverted to the post of Sub-
Treasury Officer with effect from May 6, 1954. The
appellant made several representations to the Chief
Commissioner but without success. The appellant was
suspended by order dated May 6, 1957, for failure to obey
the orders of the Additional District Magistrate and he was
dismissed with effect from July 3, 1958, by the order of the
Chief Commissioner.
The appellant moved a petition in the Court of the Judicial
Commissioner at Tripura challenging the orders of suspension
and dismissal. On February 19, 1960 the Court set aside the
impugned orders. By order dated November 7, 1960 the Chief
Commissioner reinstated the appellant to the post of
Superintendent of Surveys and by the same order reverted him
to his substantive post of Sub-Treasury Officer with
retrospective effect, from June 7, 1957. The appeal of the
appellant to the President having been rejected, he moved a
petition in the Court of the Judicial Commissioner for a
writ quashing the orders dated May 12, 1954 and November 7,
1960. The appellant contended that in order of reversion
cannot be made to have retrospective operation.
The petition insofar as it relates to the first order was
belated. Again there is no ground for holding that
retrospective operation was in fact given to that order of
reversion. By the order dated May 12, 1954 the appellant
was reverted to the post of SubTreasury Officer, but the
order did not state the date from which the order was to be
effective. In summarising the averments made in the
petition, the Judicial Commissioner stated that the
petitioner had alleged that the order dated May 12, 1954,
was to have effect from May 6, 1954. A copy of that
petition is not filed in this Court and we are unable to
accept, especially having regard to the terms of the order,
that any retrospective operation was sought to be given. In
any event the Judicial Commissioner was justified in
refusing to entertain any contention as to the validity of
the order of reversion made nearly seven years before the
date on which the petition was filed,
641
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The second order dated November 7, 1960, passed by the Chief
Commissioner consists of two parts-(i) that the appellant be
reinstated in the post of the Superintendent of Surveys with
effect from the afternoon of May 7, 1957; and (ii) that the
appellant be reverted to the substantive post of Sub-
Treasury Officer with retrospective effect from June 7,
1957. The appellant, as already stated, was suspended on
May 6, 1957. The order of suspension and the order of
dismissal which followed it were set aside by the Judicial
Commissioner, and the Chief Commissioner therefore
reinstated the appellant with effect from the afternoon of
May 7, 1957 to the post occupied by the appellant on the
date on which he was suspended. But the appellant was not
holding the post of Superintendent of Surveys substantively
: he was merely officiating in that post. He was therefore
reverted with effect from June 7, 1957 to his substantive
post. The order was passed because the post was filled by
another officer approved by the U.P.S.C.
Counsel for the appellant relied upon the observations made
by S. R. Das, C.J., in Parshotam Lal Dhingra v. Union of
India(1) :
"But the mere fact that the servant has no
title to the post or the rank and the
Government has, by contract, express or
implied, or under the rules, the
right to
reduce him to a lower post does not mean that
an order of reduction of a servant to a lower
post or rank cannot in any circumstances be a
punishment. The real test for determining
whether the reduction in such cases is or is
not by way of punishment is to find out if the
order for the reduction also visits the
servant with any penal consequences. Thus if
the order entails or provides for the
forfeiture of his pay or allowances or the
loss of his seniority in his substantive rank
or the stoppage or postponment of his future
chances of promotion. then that circumstance
may indicate that although in form the
Government had purported to exercise its right
to terminate the employment or to reduce the
servant to a lower rank under the terms of the
contract of employment or under the rules, in
truth and reality the Government has
terminated the employment as and by way of
penalty."
These observations. in our judgment, do not assist the
appellant. The order reverting the appellant from June 7,
1957, to his substantive post does not entail forfeiture of
his pay or allowances or loss of seniority in his
substantive rank or stoppage or postponement of his future
chances of promotion,
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 828, 863.
642
Counsel for the appellant urged that whenever a person is
reinstated as from the date on which his services were
terminated he must be restored to the same office which he
was holding at the date of the termination of employment or
suspension and must receive salary upto the date of
reinstatement which that office carried. We find no warrant
for the submission. If the appellant had not been
suspended, it was open to the Chief Commissioner still to
revert him to his substantive post. We see no reason for
holding that the Chief Commissioner could not do so when he
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reinstated the appellant. There is no ground for thinking
that the order was made maliciously. The reason for
reversion was that since June 7, 1957 another officer was
occupying the post of the Superintendent of Surveys. The
post having been already filled, the appellant
cannot claim that when he was reinstated lie should have
been paid emoluments attached to the office of Sub-
Divisional Officer on the footing that he continued to
occupy that office which he was holding in an officiating
capacity.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed. Having regard
to the circumstances of the case there will be no order as
to costs.
V.P.s. Appeal dismissed.
643