Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3765 of 2001
PETITIONER:
U.P. State Electricity Board
RESPONDENT:
Pooran Chandra Pandey & others
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/10/2007
BENCH:
A.K. Mathur & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
1. Heard learned counsel for the parties and perused the record.
2. This appeal has been filed against the impugned judgment and order
dated 3.1.2000 in SA No. 364/1999 of the Division Bench of the Allahabad
High Court (Lucknow Bench) whereby the Division Bench has affirmed the
judgment of the learned Single Judge dated 21.9.1998 in Writ Petition No.
4027(SS) of 1998.
3. By means of the writ petition, 34 petitioners who were daily wage
employees of the Cooperative Electric Supply Society (hereinafter referred
to as \021the Society\022) had prayed for regularization of their services in the U.P.
State Electricity Board (hereinafter referred to as \021the Electricity Board\022. It
appears that the Society had been taken over by the Electricity Board on
3.4.1997. A copy of the minutes of the proceeding dated 3.4.1997 is
Annexure P-2 to this appeal. That proceeding was presided over by the
Minister of Cooperatives, U.P. Government and there were a large number
of senior officers of the State government present in the proceeding. In the
said proceeding, it was mentioned that the daily wage employees of the
Society who are being taken over by the Board will start working in the
Electricity Board \023in the same manner and position\024.
4. Pursuant to the said proceeding, the respondents herein were absorbed
in the service of the Electricity Board.
5. Earlier, the Electricity Board had taken a decision on 28.11.1996 to
regularize the services of its employees working on daily wage basis from
before 4.5.1990 on the existing vacant posts and that an examination for
selection would be held for that purpose.
6. The contention of the writ petitioners (respondents herein) was that
since the Society had been taken over by the Electricity Board, the decision
dated 28.11.1996 taken by the Electricity Board with regard to its daily wage
employees will also be applicable to the employees of the Society who were
working from before 4.5.1990 and whose services stood transferred to the
Electricity Board and who were working with the Electricity Board on daily
wage basis.
7. The learned Single Judge in his judgment dated 21.9.1998 held that
there was no ground for discriminating between two sets of employees who
are daily wagers, namely, (i) the original employees of the Electricity Board
and (ii) the employees of the Society, who subsequently became the
employees of the Electricity Board when the Society was taken over by the
Electricity Board. This view of the learned Single Judge was upheld by the
Division Bench of the High Court.
8. We are in agreement with the view taken by the Division Bench and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
the learned Single Judge.
9. The writ petitioners who were daily wagers in the service of the
Society were appointed in the Society before 4.5.1990 and their services
were taken over by the Electricity Board \023in the same manner and position\024.
In our opinion, this would mean that their services in the Society cannot be
ignored for considering them for the benefit of the order dated 28.11.1996.
10. In our opinion, the proceeding dated 3.4.1997 makes it clear that the
employees of the Society should be deemed to be the employees of the
Electricity Board with continuity of their service in the Society, and it is not
that they would be treated as fresh appointees by the Electricity Board when
their services were taken over by the Electricity Board. In this view of the
matter, the writ petitioners (respondents herein) are entitled to the benefit of
the order of the Electricity Board dated 28.11.1996. This view also finds
support from the affidavit of Shri Ramapati Dubey, Chief Engineer,
R.P.M.O., U.P. State Electricity Board in which it is mentioned that \023In this
way, the Board Order dated 28.11.1996, a copy of which has been filed as
Annesxure No. 5 to the writ petition, has been complied with and the
employees of the Cooperative Electric Supply Society have been given the
same status and benefit of regularization in the similar manner as it was
given to the employees of the Board\024.
11. Learned counsel for the appellant has relied upon the decision of this
Court in Secretary, State of Karnataka & Ors vs. Uma Devi (3) & Ors
(2006) 4 SCC 1 and has urged that no direction for regularization can be
given by the Court. In our opinion, the decision in Uma Devi\022s case (supra)
is clearly distinguishable. The said decision cannot be applied to a case
where regularization has been sought for in pursuance of Article 14 of the
Constitution.
12. As observed by this Court in State of Orissa vs. Sudhansu Sekhar
Misra (AIR 1968 SC 647 vide para 13):-
\023A decision is only an authority for what it actually decides.
What is of the essence in a decision is its ratio and not every
observation found therein nor what logically follows from the
various observations made in it. On this topic this is what Earl
of Halsbury, LC said in Quinn v. Leathem, 1901 AC 495:
\023Now before discussing the case of Allen v. Flood
(1898) AC 1 and what was decided therein, there are two
observations of a general character which I wish to make,
and one is to repeat what I have very often said before,
that every judgment must be read as applicable to the
particular facts proved, or assumed to be proved, since
the generality of the expressions which may be found
there are not intended to be expositions of the whole law,
but governed and qualified by the particular facts of the
case in which such expressions are to be found. The other
is that a case is only an authority for what it actually
decides. I entirely deny that it can be quoted for a
proposition that may seem to follow logically from it.
Such a mode of reasoning assumes that the law is
necessarily a logical Code, whereas every lawyer must
acknowledge that the law is not always logical at all.\024
13. In Ambica Quarry Works vs. State of Gujarat & others (1987) 1
SCC 213 (vide para 18) this Court observed:-
\023The ratio of any decision must be understood in the
background of the facts of that case. It has been said long
time ago that a case is only an authority for what it
actually decides, and not what logically follows from it.\024
14. In Bhavnagar University vs. Palitana Sugar Mills Pvt. Ltd (2003)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
2 SCC 111 (vide para 59), this Court observed:-
\023It is well settled that a little difference in facts or
additional facts may make a lot of difference in the
precedential value of a decision.\024
15. As held in Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd. & another vs.
N.R.Vairamani & another (AIR 2004 SC 4778), a decision cannot be
relied on without disclosing the factual situation. In the same Judgment this
Court also observed:-
\023Court should not place reliance on decisions without
discussing as to how the factual situation fits in with the
fact situation of the decision on which reliance is placed.
Observations of Courts are neither to be read as Euclid‘s
theorems nor as provisions of the statute and that too
taken out of the context. These observations must be
read in the context in which they appear to have been
stated. Judgments of Courts are not to be construed as
statutes. To interpret words, phrases and provisions of a
statute, it may become necessary for judges to embark
into lengthy discussions but the discussion is meant to
explain and not to define. Judges interpret statutes, they
do not interpret judgments. They interpret words of
statutes; their words are not to be interpreted as statutes.
In London Graving Dock Co. Ltd. vs. Horton (1951 AC
737 at p. 761), Lord Mac Dermot observed:
\023The matter cannot, of course, be settled merely by
treating the ipsissima vertra of Willes, J. as though
they were part of an Act of Parliament and
applying the rules of interpretation appropriate
thereto. This is not to detract from the great
weight to be given to the language actually used by
that most distinguished judge.\024
In Home Office vs. Dorset Yacht Co. (1970
(2) All ER 294) Lord Reid said, \023Lord Atkin‘s
speech \005. is not to be treated as if it was a statute
definition; it will require qualification in new
circumstances.\024 Megarry, J. in (1971)1 WLR 1062
observed: \023One must not, of course, construe even
a reserved judgment of Russell L. J. as if it were an
Act of Parliament.\024 And, in Herrington v. British
Railways Board (1972 (2) WLR 537) Lord Morris
said:
\023There is always peril in treating the words
of a speech or judgment as though they are
words in a legislative enactment, and it is to
be remembered that judicial utterances are
made in the setting of the facts of a
particular case.\024
Circumstantial flexibility, one additional or
different fact may make a world of difference
between conclusions in two cases. Disposal of
cases by blindly placing reliance on a decision is
not proper.
The following words of Lord Denning in the
matter of applying precedents have become locus
classicus:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
\023Each case depends on its own facts and a
close similarity between one case and another is
not enough because even a single significant detail
may alter the entire aspect, in deciding such cases,
one should avoid the temptation to decide cases (as
said by Cardozo, J. ) by matching the colour of one
case against the colour of another. To decide
therefore, on which side of the line a case falls, the
broad resemblance to another case is not at all
decisive.\024
*
\023Precedent should be followed only so far as
it marks the path of justice, but you must cut the
dead wood and trim off the side branches else you
will find yourself lost in thickets and branches.
My plea is to keep the path of justice clear of
obstructions which could impede it.\024
16. We are constrained to refer to the above decisions and principles
contained therein because we find that often Uma Devi\022s case (supra) is
being applied by Courts mechanically as if it were a Euclid\022s formula
without seeing the facts of a particular case. As observed by this Court in
Bhavnagar University (supra) and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd.
(supra), a little difference in facts or even one additional fact may make a lot
of difference in the precedential value of a decision. Hence, in our opinion,
Uma Devi\022s case (supra) cannot be applied mechanically without seeing the
facts of a particular case, as a little difference in facts can make Uma Devi\022s
case (supra) inapplicable to the facts of that case.
17. In the present case the writ petitioners (respondents herein) only wish
that they should not be discriminated against vis-‘-vis the original
employees of the Electricity Board since they have been taken over by the
Electricity Board \023in the same manner and position\024. Thus, the writ
petitioners have to be deemed to have been appointed in the service of the
Electricity Board from the date of their original appointments in the Society.
Since they were all appointed in the society before 4.5.1990 they cannot be
denied the benefit of the decision of the Electricity Board dated 28.11.1996
permitting regularization of the employees of the Electricity Board who
were working from before 4.5.1990. To take a contrary view would violate
Article 14 of the Constitution. We have to read Uma Devi\022s case (supra) in
conformity with Article 14 of the Constitution, and we cannot read it in a
manner which will make it in conflict with Article 14. The Constitution is
the supreme law of the land, and any judgment, not even of the Supreme
Court, can violate the Constitution.
18. We may further point out that a seven-Judge Bench decision of this
Court in Maneka Gandhi vs. Union of India & Anr. AIR 1978 SC 597
has held that reasonableness and non-arbitrariness is part of Article 14 of the
Constitution. It follows that the government must act in a reasonable and
non-arbitrary manner otherwise Article 14 of the Constitution would be
violated. Maneka Gandhi\022s case (supra) is a decision of a seven-Judge
Bench, whereas Uma Devi\022s case (supra) is a decision of a five-Judge Bench
of this Court. It is well settled that a smaller bench decision cannot override
a larger bench decision of the Court. No doubt, Maneka Gandhi\022s case
(supra) does not specifically deal with the question of regularization of
government employees, but the principle of reasonableness in executive
action and the law which it has laid down, in our opinion, is of general
application.
19. In the present case many of the writ petitioners have been working
from 1985 i.e. they have put in about 22 years\022 service and it will surely not
be reasonable if their claim for regularization is denied even after such a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
long period of service. Hence apart from discrimination, Article 14 of the
Constitution will also be violated on the ground of arbitrariness and
unreasonableness if employees who have put in such a long service are
denied the benefit of regularization and are made to face the same selection
which fresh recruits have to face.
20. For the reasons aforementioned, we find no merit in this appeal. The
appeal is accordingly dismissed. No costs.