Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRI RAM PRASAD (DECEASED) BY HIS LEGAL REPRESENTATIVE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/02/1966
BENCH:
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
BENCH:
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1607 1966 SCR (3) 486
CITATOR INFO :
D 1967 SC1260 (10)
ACT:
Constitution of India Art. 357(2)-"things done or omitted to
be done"-Scope of.
: Bank of Patiala Regulation and Management Order, 1954-
validity of. Rule 27 of Staff Rules framed thereunder-
Whether violative of art. 311- Whether staff rules infringe
Art. 14. Corporation-Whether majority can exercise powers
of.
Patiala State Regulations-Applied to Bank employees by
"extension"Whether extension executive act.
HEADNOTE:
On March 4, 1953, the President of India assumed Powers of
the Government of PEPSU (which included Patiala) under
Article 356 of in Constitution. On February 27, 1954, in
exercise of the powers vested in him by the Proclamation,
the President issued the Bank of Patiala Regulation and
Management Order 1954, to provide for the better regulation
and management of the Bank. By virtue of the powers
conferred upon it by Clause 4(1)(iii) of the Regulation
Order, the Board of Directors of the Bank framed certain
Staff Rules. Rule 27 of which provided for compulsory
retirement of employees of the Bank.
The appellant, who was an employee of the Patiala State Bank
was compulsorily retired by an order of the Board under Rule
27 passed in June 1958. He challenged the order in a suit
mainly on the ground that Rule 27 was illegal and void. The
Trial Court granted a decree substantially allowing the
appellant’s claim but on appeal, this decree was set aside
by the High Court.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the appellant, inter alia, (i) that though the Regulation
Order [Clause 4(1) (iii) of Which delegated power to the
Board of Directors of the Bank to frame staff rules] was
made on February, 27, 1954, it was not published in the
Gazette until March 14 1954, by which time, in view of the
revocation of the proclamation on March 7, 1954, the powers
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of the President to make rules governing the ervice
conditions of Government servants in the State had lapsed
and he delegation by the President to the Board of the Power
to frame rules had ipso facto come to an end. The Board
therefore, had no authority to frame the Staff Rules on
Marah 25, 1954 and to enforce them from April, 1, 1954; that
in any event the Regulation Order was in effect and
substance a legislative Act and, in view of the provisions
of Article 357(2), its operation could not extend beyond
the period of one year specified in that Article; (ii) that
prior to the promulgation of the Regulation Order in 1954
the Patiala State Regulations and other rules or orders,
except the pension rules. made by the Ruler of Patiala, were
applicable to the,staff of the Patiala State Bank; the
Staff Rules sought to supersede the provisions of the
patiala State Regulations and rules made by the Board of
Directors could not abrogate the Regulations promulgated by
the Ruler who exercised the
487
powers of the Legislature; (iii) that Rule 27 was
unconstitutional as it offended the guarantee under Article
311 of the Constitution and the Staff Rules were also
violative of Article 14; (v) that the Board which
promulgated the Staff Rules had not been properly
constituted inasmuch as some of the Directors were not
present at the meeting.
HELD : (i) Although the Regulation Order was made on
February 27, 1954 and was not published in the Gazette until
March 14, 1954, the order itself provided for its
commencement on the date on which it was made and it
therefore came in to operation on February 27, 1954, i.e.,
before the termination of the Prosident’s Rule in PEPSU.
On a consideration of the provisions of the Regulation
Order, it is manifest that those provisions were made for
the better regulation and management of the affairs of the
Bank and’ it would be an absurdity to hold that some of the
pro-visions would cease to be in operation after the period
of one year ipecified in Art. 357(2); all the clauses of the
Regulation Order, including Clause 4(1) (iii), come within
the purview of the saving clause in Aiticle 357(2) which
preserves the validity of "things done or omitted to be
done" before the expiration of the period of one year after
the proclaimation has ceased to operate and the Regulation
Order therefore continued to be in operation after the
expiration of that year. [494 B-H]
Foster v. Pritchard [1857] 2 L.J. Ex. 215; referred to.
(ii) The Patiala State Regulations were applied to the
employees of the State Bank of Patiala as a result of an
"extension" made by tho Maharaja pursuant to the executive
powers vested in him. The act of extension being as
executive act it could be changed by a similar executive
act. What was changed or superseded was the extension and
not the rules. [497 E]
(iii) There was no force in the contention that Rule 27
offended Article 311 or that the Staff Rules were violative
of Article 14. [498 F]
Motiram Deka v. N. E. Frontier Railway [1964] 5 S.C.R. 683,
and Lachhman Das v. State of Punjab [1963] 2 S.C.R. 353;
referred to.
(iv) The High Court had rightly held that under the law
governing corporations, a majority of the members i the
Corporation is entitled to exercise the powers of the
Corporation and that the rule regarding corporations is
equally applicable to a company. "he Board was, therefore,
properly constituted at the time when the Staff Rules were
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promulgated. [499 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 530 of 1964.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated December 19, 1962
of the Punjab High Court in Regular First Appeal No. 78 of
1961.
C. B. Agarwala, K. P. Bhandari and R. Gopalakrishnan, for
the appellant.
Bishan Narain, K. S. Chawla and R. N. Sachthey, for the res-
pondents.
488
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Satyanarayana Raju, J. This appeal, on certificate granted
by the High Court of Punjab, arises out of a suit filed by
one Ram Prasad, against the State of Punjab, for a
declaration that the order of compulsory retirement passed
by the latter against Wm was invalid.
Ram Prasad originally entered serviced as a Clerk, in the
year 1924, in the Patiala Saddar Treasury in what was then
the Patiala State. He was subsequently transferred in the
same capacity to the Patiala State Bank on February 27,1984
Bk and was confirmed in his appointment. On September
1,1985 bk he was promoted to the next higher grade on the
establishment of the Patiala State Bank. Thereafter, he was
promoted as Manager and posted to the Bhatinda branch of the
Bank on April 1, 1944. On April 1, 1949 he was promoted as
Selection Grade Manager by the Board of Directors of the
Bank in the grade of Rs. 340-20-500-525-700. On September
23, 1953 he was cc mpulsorily retired from service but was
subsequently reinstated by the Government on June 10, 1954
since the order was legally defective. On June 11, 1958 the
Board passed an order compulsoriy retiring him from service.
Ram Prasad challenged the order of compulsory retirement
passed by the Board on various grounds, by means of a suit
institiuted in the Court of the Subordittate Judge, Patiala.
He pleaded that the order of compulsory retirement amounted
to ’dismissal or removal’ from service within the meaning of
art. 311 of the Constitution. He further maintained that r.
27 of the Bank of Patiala (Staff) Rules, 1954, hereinafter
termed the Staff rules, under which the order of compulsory
retirement was made, was illegal and void. The order was
also challenged on the ground that it was mala fide. The
substantial relief claimed by him in the ’suit was a
declaration that r. 27 of th( Staff rules was wholly uncons-
titutional, null and void for the reasons stated by him.
The respondent contested the suit contending inter alia that
the order of compulsory retirement was passed by the Board
of Directors of the Bank under rules, which were legal and
constitutionally valid and governed the employees of the
Bank.
The Subordinate Judge, Patiala, framed appropriate issues.
He found all but two issues in favour of the appellant and
granted a decree substantially allowing the claims made by
him. The respondent thereupon filed an appeal in the High
Court of Punjab which allowed the appeal and set aside the
judgment of the Subordinate Judge. During the pendency of
the appeal in the High Court Ram Prasad died and his widow
was brought on record as his legal representative. However,
it will be convenient to refer to Ram Prasad as the
appellant.
489
Before entering into the merits of the appeal, it would be
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convenient to refer very briefly to the historical
background of the legislation. The Patiala State
Regulations were first promulgated in the year 1908 and
governed the employees of the State in matters relating to
pay, allowances, leave, pension and travelling allowances.
The Regulations were revised and re-published in the year
1931. Subsequently, they were again revised and re-issued
as the Patiala Services Regulations in the year 1947.
Meanwhile, in April 1941 these Regulations were made
applicable expressly to the Bank staff of the Patiala state
Bank by the Maharaja, with the exception of the rules
relating to pension. On August 20, 1948, Patiala became a
constituent ’unit of the Patiala and ,East Punjab States
Union (PEPSU). On the formation of the Union, the Patiala
Services Regulations were made applicable to the entire
territories of the Union by Ordinance No. 1 of 2005 Bk.
Therefore the Patiala Services Regulations continued to
govern the members of the Patiala State Services even after
they became integrated into the PEPSU Services.
On March 4, 1953, the President of lndia assumed the powers
of the Government of PEPSU, in exercise of the powers
conferred on him by art. 356 of the Constitution.
On February 27, 1954, the President, in exercise of the
powers vested in him in relation to PEPSU by the
Proclamation, issued the Bank of Patiala Regulation and
Management Order, 1954, hereinafter called the Regulation
Order, t0 provide for the better regulation and management
of the affair.,, of the said Bank. We will have occasion to
refer to the material clauses of this Order at a later
stage.
By virtue of the powers conferred Upon it by cl. 4(i)(iii)
of the Regulation Order, the Board of Directors of the Bank
framed the Staff rules. Rule 27 of these rules, at the
relevant date, was in the following terms :
"An employee shall retire at fifty five years
of age provided that
(i) the Bank may, at its discretion and
without giving any reasons, retire any
employee from the Bank’s service after he has
completed the age of fifty years or the
service of twenty five years whichever happens
first and no claim to special compensation on
this account will be entertained;
(ii) the Bank retains the absolute right to
retire any employee after he has completed 10
years of service without giving any reasons
and no claim to special compensation on this
account will be entertained. This right will
not be exercised except when it is the
interest of the Bank
490
to dispense with the further services of an
employee such as on account of inefficiency,
dishonesty, corruption or infamous conduct.
Explanation I :
The action under proviso (ii) is intended to
be taken
(a) Against an employee whose efficiency is
impaired but against whom if is not desirable
to make formal charge of inefficiency or, who
has ceased to be fully efficient that is, the
value of the employee is clearly
incommensurate with the pay which he draws.
It is not the intention to use the provision
as a financial weapon that is to say the
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provision shall be used only in case of
employees who are considered unfit for
retention on personal as opposed to financial
grounds;
(b) In cases where reputation for
corruption, dishonesty or infamous conduct is
clearly established even though no specific
instance is likely to be proved under those
rules.
The arguments advanced by Mr. Agarwala, learned counsel for
the appellant, have covered a wide ground, but, in the main,
he has impugned the validity of r. 27 set out above. His
contentions may be briefly summarised as follows
(1) Prior to the promulgation of the
Regulation Order in 1954, the Patiala State
Regulations and other Rules or Orders, except
the pension rules, made by the Ruler of
Patiala, were applicable to the staff of the
Patiala State Bank. The Staff rules were made
by the Board of Directors of the Bank by
virtue of the delegation made in its favour
under cl. 4(1)(iii) of the Regulation Order.
The delegation in favour of the Board lapsed
on March 7, 1954 with the termination of the
President’s rule in PEPSU. Thereafter, the
Board had no authority or power or
jurisdiction to approve of the Staff rules on
March 25, 1954 and to enforce them from April
1, 1954. (2) The Board, assuming the
delegation in its favour to be valid, was not
vested wit the power to make rules regarding
compulsory retirement of the servants of the
Bank. (3) The Staff rules seek to s
upersede.
The provisions of Regulation IX of the Patiala
State Regulations. Rules made by the Board
cannot abrogate the Regulations promulgated by
the Ruler who exercised the powers of the
legislature. (4) The Board which promulgated
the Staff Rules had not been properly
constituted inasmuch as all the Directors were
not present at the meeting.
However, the main ground on which the validity of the staff
rules is challenged is that the Regulation Order, though
made on
491
February 27, 1954, was published in the Gazette only on
March 14, 1954, that by reason of the revocation of the
Proclamation issued by the President the power of the
President to make rules governing the service conditions of
Government servants in the State had lapsed and that the
delegation by the President to the Board power to frame
rules ipso facto came to an end when the Proclamation was
revoked, on the principle that the delegate’s power comes to
an automatic end by reason of the principal’s power having
lapsed.
Mr. Bishan Narain, learned counsel for the respondent-State,
countered these arguments and maintained that the Staff
Rules were valid.
We may initially set out the relevant facts with regard to
the Proclamation of Emergency by the President and its
revocation. As already stated, by notification dated March
4, 1953, the President, in exercise of the powers conferred
by art. 356 of the Constitution, assumed all functions of
the government of the State of, PEPSU and all powers vested
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in or exercisable by the Rajpramukh of the State. The
Notification declared that the powers of the legislature of
the State shall be erercisable by or under the authority of
Parliament.
By an order made by the President on the same date, the
President issued a direction that all the functions of the
Government of the State of PEPSU and all the powers vested
and exercisable by the Rajpramukh of the State under the
Constitution or under any other law in force in the State
shall, subject to, the superintendence, direction and
control of the President, be exercised by the Rajpramukh of
the said State who was to act on the advice of the Adviser
appointed by the President in that behalf.
By notification dated March 21, 1954, in exercise of the
powers conferred by cl. (2) of art. 356 of the Constitution,
the President revoked the Proclamation issued by him under
the said article on March 4, 1953.
When a proclamation is made under art. 356, it will be open
to the President to specify in such proclamation (a) that he
will himself exercise all or any of the functions of the
Govt. of the State or all or any of the powers vested in or
exercisable by the Governor or any body or authority in the
State other than the Legislature of the State; (b) declare
that the powers of the Legislature of the State shall be
exercisable by or under the authority of Parliament. When a
declaration is made to this effect by the President, it
shall be competent for Parliament to direct that the
legislative power of the State Legislature shall be
exercised by the President himself or by any other authority
to whom such power may be delegated by the President under
art 357 (1). Art, 357(2) provides that
492
any law made in exercise of the power of the legislature of
the State by Parliament or the President or other authority
referred to in sub-cl. (a) of cl. (1) which Parliament or
the President or such other authority would not, but for the
issue of a Proclamation under art. 356, have been competent
to make shall, to the extent of the incompetency, cease to
have effect on the expiration of a period of one year after
the Proclamation has ceased to operate, but Cl. (2) of
Article 357 makes an exception............ in the case of
things done or omitted to be done before the expiry of the
period of one year. It is argued firstly that the
Regulation Order was not made before the date of revocation
of the Proclamation. It is said that the Order, though
purporting to have been made on February 27, 1954 was not
published in the Gazette till March 14, 1954.
It is doubtless true that the Regulation Order, though made
on February 27, 1954, was not published in the Official
Gazette tiff March 14, 1954. But cl. 1(b) of the Order
provides that it shall come into force at once and repeal
all. the previous Orders and instructions in so far as they
are inconsistent with the provisions of the Regulation
Order. By reason of the fact that the Order itself provides
for its commencement as the date on which it was made, it is
clear that the Order came into operation on February 27,
1954, though it was published at a later date. The Order
was therefore made before the date of termination of the
President’s rule in PEPSU.
Now, it is contended by learned counsel for the appellant
that the Regulation Order is in effect and substance a
legislative act and that its operation could not extend
beyond the period specified in art. 357(2). It may be
initially stated that this contention was pot raised in the
Courts below and there was no pleading or any .Issue
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covering that contention. Further, there is nothing on
record to show that no order was passed during the period of
one year provided by art. 357(2) extending the life of the
Regulation Order beyond that period.
Coming to the contention, the question is whether, on a fair
construction of all its provisions and its intendment, the
Regulation Order comes within the scope of ,he expression
’things done’ occurring in art. 357(2). In Craies On
Statute Law, Sixth Edition, it is pointed out at p. 415 that
if, an Act is repealed with a proviso 6 except as to things
done under ’the proviso will receive a liberal
interpretation. In Foster v. Pritchard ( it was contended,
with respect to an action tried after the passing of the
County Courts Act, 1856, that the trespass committed by the
defendant under colour of the process of the Court was not
’an act done under’ the repealed section, but, said the
Court, ’there can be no doubt that it Was the
(1) [1857] 26 L. J. Ev. 215.
493
Intention of ’the legislature that the words in this proviso
as to acts done under the repealed statutes should be
construed in an extensive sense’. It is therefore open to
the Court to find, on a fair construction of all the
provisions of the Regulation Order which must be read as an
integrated whole, whether they were intended to continue to
be in force after the period specified in ad. 357(2). It
therefore becomes necessary to examine the provisions of the
Regulation Order.
The Regulation Order provides that the management, control,
supervision and direction of the affairs and business of the
Bank shall vest in a Board constituted as provided in cl.
3(1). There can be no doubt that the management, control,
supervision and direction of the affairs and business of the
Bank are matters which were provided for not for a limited
period but for an unspecified period even beyond the period
of one year as provided by art. 357(2). Clause 4(1) is
important. It provides that the Board shall pass the half-
yearly balance-sheets and annual budget estimates and frame
rules for the day to day working of the Bank. We may, for
the present, omit cl. 4(i)(iii) Sub-cl. (iv) provides that
the Board may grant advances and fix limits upto which bills
of exchange drawn by individual constituents may be accepted
and frame rules in that behalf. Sub-cl. (V) provides for
the Board framing rules regarding the Provident Fund for
employees of the Bank, and sub-cl. (vi) for sanctioning
expenditure and framing rules for its sanction by the
Managing Director and other officers of the Bank. Under
sub-cl. (vii), the Board shall invest the funds of the Bank
in Government Securities, shares, debentures and other
securities and sell them; under sub-cl. (viii) the Board
shall borrow moneys and negotiate, transfer, sell endorse,
renew, pledge or mortgage Government promissory notes and
other securities for the purpose of taking overdrafts and
demand loans on their security; under sub-cl. (ix) issue
instructions for the guidance of the Managing Director and
require him to submit to the Board all information
regarding the transactions of the. Lastly, under sub-cl. (x)
the Board shall delegate to the Managing Director, or
subject to the Managing Director’s supervision, to any of
the other employees of the Bank any of the aforesaid powers.
Clause 5 provides that the Board shall comply with such
general or special directions as may from time to time be
issue by the State Government.
Clause 6 provides for the meetings of the Board being held
at least once in every three months or at such shorter
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intervals as the Chairman may decide and cl. 7 specifies the
powers of the Managing Director. Clause 8 provides for the
conduct of the business of the Bank. Clause 9 provide for
the applicability of some of the provisions of the Banking
Companies Act to the Bank. Clause 10 provides for the audit
of the a :counts of the Bank and cl. II provides that the
Board shall, at the end of every calendar
494
year, submit to the State Government the annual balance-
sheet of the Bank accompanied by a report on the working of
the Bank and that the Board shall submit to the State
Government such other information concerning the affairs of
the Bank as may from time to time be required by the State
Government.
On a consideration of the provisions of the Regulation
Order" set out above, it is manifest that those provisions
have been made, as is stated in the preamble to the Order,
for the better regulation and management of the affairs of
the Bank.- Indeed, cl. 3 of the Order provides for the
constitution of a Board of Directors for the management,
control, supervision and direction of the affairs. and
business of the Bank. The matters provided, barring cl.
4(i) (iii), relate to the day-to-day administration of the
affairs of the Bank. It is impossible to say that the
matters provided for in the Order would cease to be in
operation after the period of one year. It will result in
an absurdity to hold, for instance, that provisions like the
one for sanction of expenditures. would cease to be in
operation after the period of one year.
We may now deal with cl. 4(1) (iii) which provides that the
Board shall appoint, remove, dismiss and lay down the
general conditions of service of the employees of the Bank
other than the Managing Director and frame rules in that
behalf. It is pursuant to the powers vested in it tinder
this clause that the Board of Directors of the Bank made the
Staff rules, including r. 27 whose validity is questioned.
The expression ’things done’ occurring in art. 357(2), in
our opinion, must receive a liberal and extensive
construction. As already indicated, all the clauses of the
Regulation Order must be read together as an integrated
whole and we have to find, on a construction of all the
clauses, whether they were intended to continue beyond the
period of one year provided by art. 357(2). In the context
in which cl. 4(1) (iii) occurs, it is not unreasonable to
construe the power to make rules vested in the Board under
that clause as things done’ within the meaning of art.
357(2). There can be no doubt about the intention to
preserve and continue the rules even after the period of one
year after the cessation of the Emergency so that there may
not be any hiatus in the administration of tie affairs of
the Bank.
It must therefore be held that all the clauses of the’ Regu-
lation Order, including cl. 4(1) (iii), come within the
purview of the saving clause occurring in art. 357(2) of the
Constitution and that they continue to be in operation after
the period specified in that article.
On this conclusion it follows that the delegation made by
the President in favour of the Board of Directors of the
Bank under the Regulation Order did not lapse on the
terminatio of the Presidents rule in PEPSU. It is therefore
unnecessary to
495
consider the decisions bearing on the question of the extent
of the authority or power of a delegates.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that the
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Patiala Services Regulations were existing law made by the
Maharaja and it was not competent for- the President to make
the Regulation Order empowering the Board of Directors of
the Bank to supersede those Regulations. The learned Judges
of the High Court held that the President was competent to
promulgate the Regulation Order under art. 309 read with
arts. 330’and 372 of the Constitution. Having regard to the
conclusion reached by us, that the Regulation Order was
validly made, we consider it unnecessary to go into the
larger question whether the Regulation Order had the force
of rules framed under art. 309.
It is then contended that the Patiala State Regulations
governing the conditions of service of public servants were
laws made by the erstwhile ruler of Patiala and could not be
changed to the disadvantage of such public. servants. The
rules, published on February 17, 1930 contain the following,
in Part 1, Preliminary, under the heading ’Right of Changing
Rules’
"1. The rules contained in these Regulations
may not be modified or departed from except
under the orders of the Ijlas-i-Khas based
upon a report of the Finance Minister.
4. The rules in these regulations apply to
all officers holding appointments in the
Patialal State, except in so far as they are
over-ridden by distinct provision in any
formal agreement entered into with the State
by any officer."
It is not the appellant’s case that there was
any formal agreement between him and the State
of Patiala that the rules shall not be changed
during the period of his service
The Patiala Services Regulations, Vol. 1,
published in 1947, preserved the right of the
Maharaja to change the rules. Rule 1.7, of
Chapter I, reads
"Right of changing rules : The rules
contained in these Regulations shall not be
modified or departed from except under the
orders of the Ijlas-i-Khas based upon a report
of the Finance Minister."
Rule 1.7 of the 1947 Regulations corresponds to rr. 1 and 4
of the 1930 Regulations. The contention of the appellant
that the rules could not be changed is not therefore
sustainable. They can certainly be changed by an authority
competent to change them, as is evident from Exhibit P. 8,
dated July 19, 1940. The change
10 Sup. CI/66-19
496
was in fact effected by the Maharaja in his administrative
capacity.
Exhibit P-8 is as follows :
"The Patiala State Bank is a State Department
governed by its Constitution laid down by the
Ijlas-i-Khas, but being at the same time
autonomous as regards its accounts, which are
kept on commercial basis, it has become
necessary to define how far the rules applying
to other State Departments and the Patiala
State Regulations shall apply to the Bank.
The Board of Directors think and recommend
that the internal management of the Bank shall
be subject to rules and regulations framed by
them subject to the following exceptions :
(a) The P. S. R. shall apply to the Bank Staff
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with
the exception of the pension rules, but
instead thereof
will have the benefit of, a contributory
Provident Fund, as already established.
(c) The Bank service shall be recognised as
State service for the purposes of employment
in State service of suitable candidates among
the descendants of Bank employees.
The Chairman of the Board of Directors put up a note to the
Maharaja of Patiala underneath :
"I respectfully request that the
recommendations of the Board of Directors of
the Bank, as stated above, may graciously be
sanctioned."
On this, the Finance Committee recommended as
follows
"The Finance Committee recommends that
(1) Requests of the Chairman, Board of
Directors, at (c), (e), (f) and (g) may be
sanctioned.
(2) The request at (a) may be sanctioned
adding the following ’and other State Rules or
orders’ after Patiala State Regulations’ in
the first line.
This recommendation was made by the Revenue Minister and the
Finance Minister who constituted the members of the Finance
Committee. On this the Cabinet supported the
recommendations of the Finance Committee and submitted the
same to the Maharaja. These recommendations were accepted by
the Maharaja on April 8, 1941.
497
It may be noted that the Order issued by the Maharaja on
July 19, 1940, viz., Ex-P. 8 quoted above, is headed :
’Precis’. It states that by reason of the fact that the
Patiala State Bank is an autonomous department it became
necessary to define how are the rules applying to other
State departments and the Patiala State Regulations applied
to the Bank. It was specifically stated in the
recommendation made by the Board of Directors that the
internal management of the Bank shall be subject to rules
and regulations framed by them. Two important exceptions
were made and those were that the Patiala State, Regulations
shall apply to the Bank staff with the exception of the
pension rules, but that the staff shall have the benefit of
a contributory provident fund and that the Bank service
shall be recognized as a State service for the purposes of
employment in State service of suitable candidates from
among the descendants of the Bank employees.
The Finance Committee, as provided in rr. 1-7 of the rules,
recommended that the request might be sanctioned. The
Cabinet supported the recommendation of the Finance
Committee. On this, the Maharaja made an endorsement : "We
approve the recommendation of the Cabinet". This was dated
April 11, 1941.
It is therefore clear that the extension of the rules
governing the conditions of service of Government servants
to the employees of the State Bank of Patiala was the result
of ’an extension’ made by the Maharaja pursuant to the
executive power vested in him. The act of extension being
an executive act, there can be no doubt that it could be
changed by a similar executive act. Therefore it is clear
that what was changed or superseded was the extension and
not the rules.
It is contended on behalf of the appellant that r. 27 of the
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Staff rules is not valid since it violates the
constitutional guarantee under art. 311 of the Constitution.
We may here refer to the position in law with regard to a
rule providing for compulsory retirement. In Moti Ram Deka
v. N. E. Frontier Railway(1) where the decisions on the
question were reviewed it was stated :
"The next decision in the same volume is the
State of Bombay v. Saubhag Chand M. Doshi,
(1958) S.C.R. 571 =A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 892. This
was a case of compulsory retirement under r.
165-A of the Bombay Civil Services Rules as
amended by the Saurashtra Government. In so
far as this case dealt with the compulsory
retirement of a civil servant, it is un-
necessary to consider the Rule in question or
the facts relating to the compulsory
retirement of the civil servant. It is of
interest to note that in dealing with the
question as to whether
(1) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 683. 715=AIR 1964 S.C.
600,613.
L 10 sup. CI/66-20
498
compulsory retirement amounted to removal or
not, the tests which were applied were in
regard to the loss of benefit already accrued
and stigma attached to the civil servant. It
is, however, significant that in considering
the objection based on ,the contravention of
Art. 311(2), Venkatarama Aiyar J., took the
precaution of adding that ’questions of the
said character could arise only when the rules
fix both an age of superannuation and an age
for compulsory retirement and the services of
a civil servant are terminated between these
two points of time. But where there is no
rule fixing the age of compulsory retirement,
or if there is one and the servant is retired
before the age prescribed therein, then that
can be regarded only as dismissal or removal
within art. 311(2),. It would be noticed that
the rule providing for compulsory retirement
was upheld on the ground that such compulsory
retirement does not amount to removal under
art. 311(2) because it was another mode of
retirement and it could be enforced only
between the period of age of superannuation
prescribed and after the minimum period of
service indicated in the rule had been put in.
If, however, no such minimum period is
prescribed by the rule of compulsory
retirement, that according to the judgment,
would violate art. 311(2) and though the
termination of a servant’s services may be
described as compulsory retirement, it would
amount to dismissal or removal within the
meaning of art. 311(2). With respect, we
think that this statement correctly represents
the true position in law".
The validity of r. 27 cannot, in the instant case, be
assailed on this ground.
It is then argued that the Staff rules are invalid because
they offend art. 14. The ground of complaint is that
different rules govern different public servants in the same
State and that they are bad because they are discriminatory.
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This Court has held in a series of decisions culminating in
the judgment of this Court in Lachhman Dass v. State of
Punjab (1) that after the enactment of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956, different Acts in different parts
,of the same State could be sustained on the ground that the
differentiation arises from geographical classification
based on historical reasons. The contention raised by the
learned counsel therefore fails.
There remains a minor contention which is that the Staff
rules were not properly made by the Board of Directors. It
is stated that cl. 3 of the Regulation Order, which provides
for a minimum number of six members, was not complied with
and that since the Staff rules were made by four members
instead of six, they
(1) [1963] 2 S.C.R. 353 = A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 222.
499
were invalid. As pointed out by the learned Judges of the
High Court, under the law governing corporations a majority
of the members of the corporation is entitled to exercise
the powers of the corporation and that the rule regarding
corporations is equally applicable to a company. We are in
agreement with this view.
As a result of the conclusions reached by us, this appeal
must fail and is dismissed. In the circumstances of the
case there will be no order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
500