Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NEW BANK OF INDIA EMPLOYEES UNION & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/03/1996
BENCH:
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
BENCH:
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
JT 1996 (3) 203 1996 SCALE (2)734
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
PATTANAIK,J.
Leave granted.
These four appeals by way of Special Leave deal with
one and the same scheme of amalgamation of the New Bank of
India (hereinafter called as the "Transferor Bank") with the
Punjab National Bank (hereinafter called the "Transferee
Bank"). The employees of the Transferor Bank filed Writ
Petitions, one by the officers and another by the workmen
challenging clause 4 (a)(iii) and clause 4 (b)(ii) of the
Scheme dated 8th December, 1993 called the New Bank of India
(Determination of Placement of Employee (officers and
workmen) of the New Bank of India in Punjab National Bank)
scheme, 1993 (hereinafter called the "Placement Scheme").
The aforesaid scheme had been framed by the Government of
India in exercise of the powers conferred by Section 9 of
the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertaking Act 1980) (hereinafter referred to as "the
Acquisition Act"). The employees of the Transferee Bank also
filed Writ Petitions in the High Court of Punjab & Haryana
challenging the Placement scheme on the ground that the
seniority of the employees of the Transferee Bank has been
altered to their disadvantage on account of the principle of
seniority indicated in the Placement Scheme and the said
Scheme is arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India. The Division Bench of the Punjab &
Haryana High Court dismissed all the Writ Petitions and
upheld the provisions of the Placement Scheme and hence
these appeals by the Workmen and Officers of the Transferor
Bank as well as by the employees of the Transferee Bank.
Under the provisions of the Acquisition Act of 1980, 14
Banks in the country were nationalized including the
Transferee Bank. The New Bank of India Limited was a Private
Bank which was taken over by the Central Govt, under the
provisions of the Acquisition Act of 1980 on 15.4.1980. The
said New Bank of India incurred financial loss to such an
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extent and its financial position was so unsatisfactory that
its capital and deposits completely stood eroded and the
Bank declared a loss of Rs.11.52 crores in the year 1991-92.
The Reserve Bank of India which is the monitoring authority
and advisor to the Government of India, on consideration of
the financial position of the New Bank of India suggested
that it would subserve public interest if the said New Bank
of India is merged with another stronger Nationalized Bank.
The Government of India finally decided to exercise the
powers under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act and in
consultation with the Reserve Bank of India decided to
amalgamate the Transferor Bank with the Transferee Bank and
for the aforesaid purpose brought into existence a Scheme
dated 4th September, 1993 called the New Bank of India
(Amalgamation and Transfer of undertaking) Scheme 1993
(hereinafter called "The Amalgamation Scheme"). Under the
aforesaid Amalgamation Scheme, the undertakings of the
Transferor Bank stood transferred to and vested in the
Transferee Bank and the effect of such vesting was that all
assets, rights, powers, authorities and privileges and all
property movable and immovable, cash balance, capital,
reserve funds, investments and all other rights and
interests in, or arising out of such property as were
immediately before the commencement of the Scheme in the
ownership, possession, power or control of the transferor
bank in relation to the undertakings, whether within or
outside India, and all books of accounts, registers, records
and all other, documents of whatever nature relating thereto
and shall also be deemed to include all borrowings,
liabilities and obligations of whatever kind then subsisting
of the transferor bank in relation to the undertakings
deemed to have been transferred to an vested in the
transferee bank. Clause 4 of the aforesaid Amalgamation
Scheme is extracted hereinbelow in extenso:-
"4. General effect of vesting:-
(1) The undertakings of the
transferor bank shall be deemed to
include all assets, rights, powers
authorities and privileges and all
property, movable and immovable,
cash balances, capital, reserve
funds, investments and all other
rights and interests in, or arising
out of; such property as were
immediately before the commencement
of this Scheme in the ownership,
possession, power or control of the
transferor bank in relation to the
undertakings, whether within or
outside India, and all books of
accounts, registers, records and
all other documents of whatever
nature relating thereto and shall
also be deemed to include all
borrowings, liabilities and
obligations of whatever kind then
subsisting of the transferor bank
in relation to the undertakings.
(2) Where any property is held by
the transferor bank under any lease
the transferee bank shall on and
from the date of commencement of
this scheme be deemed to have
become the lessee in respect of
such property as if the lease in
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relation to such property had been
granted to the transferee bank and
thereupon all the rights under such
lease shall be deemed to have been
transferred to, and vested in, the
transferee bank;
Provided that on the expiry of
the term of any lease referred to
in this sub-clause such lease
shall, if so desired by the
transferee bank, be renewed on the
same terms and conditions on which
the lease was held by the
transferor bank immediately before
the date of commencement of this
Scheme."
Under clauses 5 of the said Amalgamation Scheme the Board of
Directors of the Transferor Bank stood dissolve and the
officers and employees of the Transferor Bank became the
officer and employee of the Transferee Bank on the same
terms and conditions with the same rights to pension,
gratuity and other matters as would have been admissible to
those employees if the undertakings of the transferor bank
and not been transferred to and vested in the transferee
bank subject to those facilities being available at the time
of the transfer to the similarly placed employee of the
transferee bank.
Clauses 5(4) of the aforesaid Amalgamation Scheme
authorizes the Central Bank to make another scheme in
consultation with the Reserve Bank of India for determining
the placement of the employees of the transferee bank. The
aforesaid clause 5(4) of the Aamalgamation Scheme is
extracted in extenso:-
"5(4) The Central Government shall,
as soon as possible after the
commencement of this Scheme, make
a Scheme in consultation with
Reserve Bank of India for
determining the placement of the
employees of the transferor bank
including the determination of
their inter-se seniority vis-a-vis
the employees of the transferee
bank. While making the Scheme the
Central Government shall take
account of relevant factors such as
experience of the employee of the
transferor bank."
In exercise of the aforesaid power conferred upon the
Central Government under Clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation
Scheme read with Section 9 of the Acquisition Act the
Central Government did frame the Placement Scheme on 8th
December, 1993 the legality of which had been challenged
both by the employees of the Transferor bank as well as the
employees of the Transferee Bank.
Clause 1(2) of the Placement Scheme stipulates that the
Scheme shall be deemed to have come into force with effect
from 4th September, 1993.
Clause 4 of the aforesaid Placement Scheme deals with
the seniority of officers and employees of the Transferor
Bank vis-a-vis employees of the Transferee Bank.
Clause 4(a)(iii) of the Placement Scheme deals with the
procedure for computation of years of service rendered in
the transferor bank for the purpose of determining the
minimum length of service for promotion from subordinate
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cadre to clerical cadre in the transferee bank and clause
4(b)(ii) provides the guidelines for the determination of
seniority on fitment or for promotion to the next grade or
scale of an officer of the transferor bank in the transferee
bank. Since both these provisions have been challenged by
the employees and officers of the transferor bank as well as
the employees of the transferee bank it would be worthwhile
to extract the aforesaid provisions in extenso:-
"4(A)(iii) The procedure for
computation of years of service
rendered in the transferor bank for
the purpose of determining the
minimum length of service for
promotion from subordinate cadre to
clerical cadre as also from the
clerical cadre to officer cadre and
also for the purpose of posting in
the posts carrying special
allowance, shall be computed in the
ratio 2:2, that is, two years of
service in transferor bank as
equivalent to one year of service
in the transferee bank. For this
purpose, total service in the
respective cadre of the workmen
employees, that is clerical or sub-
staff in which the official is
placed at the time of transfer,
shall be reckoned but fractions of
a month shall be ignored, for
example, if a workmen employee has
rendered two years and nine months
service in the clerical/sub-staff
cadre, as the case may be, in the
transferor bank at the time of
amalgamation with transferee bank,
it shall be reckoned as equal to
one year and four months service in
the clerical or sub-staff cadre, as
the case may be, in the transferee
bank.
4(b)(ii) For the purpose of
seniority on fitment or for
promotion to the next grade or
scale, the service rendered by an
officer in the transferor bank
shall be computed, after
amalgamation, in the ratio of 2:1,
that is, two years of service in
the transferor bank as equivalent
to one year servive in the
transferee bank. For this purpose,
total service in the scale in which
an officer is transferred shall be
reckoned but fractions of a month
shall be ignored. For example if an
officer has rendered two years nine
months service in Scale-II in the
transferor bank at the time of
amalgamation with the transferee
bank, it shall be reckoned as equal
to one vear and four months service
in Scale-II in the transferee
bank."
The Division Bench of the High Court came to the conclusion
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that ;
(i) The scheme making process under Section 9 of the
Acquisition Act is not legislative in nature and, therefore,
the Placement Scheme is not law.
(ii) The power under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act is
wide enough to amalgamate the New Bank (The Transferor Bank)
with any another banking institution including the one taken
over under the Acquisition Act of 1970.
(iii) Once the Central Government has the power to
amalgamate the Transferor Bank with the Transferee Bank it
has to provide for the initial placement of the employees
and the scheme framed for the purpose cannot be said to be
without jurisdiction.
(iv) The Placement Scheme does not interrupt services of the
employees of the transferor bank nor does it alter their
terms and conditions of employees to their prejudice;
(v) The Placement Scheme providing for the services of the
employees of the transferor bank in the respective cadre at
the time of merger in the transferee bank to be counted in
the ratio of 2:1 cannot be said to be discriminatory when
the profitivity in terms of business of the two banks, the
volume of business handled by the employees of the two
banks, the promotion effected in scales 3 to 7 by the New
Bank of India just before its merger with the Punjab
National Bank, the rate of promotion of the employees in the
two banks when compared are taken into account. The High
Court also came to the conclusion that on account of acute
financial position of the transferor bank when it was open
to the Central Government to close down the bank, the
Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India
decided not to take the extreme step of closing the bank
and, on the other hand, decided to merge to same with the
stronger Punjab National Bank, the scheme of amalgamation
and placement has to be examined from the point of view of
wider public interest and unless it is positively
established that any clause thereof is arbitrary or
irrational the Court should not interfere with the same.
Mr. P.P. Rao, the learned senior advocate appearing for
the workmen of the transferor bank contended that clause
5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme authorizes the Central
Government to make a further scheme for determining the
placement of the employees of the transferor bank as well as
for determination of their inter se seniority vis-a-vis the
employees of the transferee bank whereas clause 4(a)(iii) of
the Placement Scheme provides the procedure for computation
of years of service rendered in the transferor bank for the
purpose of determining the minimum length of service for
promotion from subordinate cadre to the clerical cadre as
also from clerical cadre to the officer cadre which is
beyond the competence of the central Government. In other
words Mr. Rao contended that the promotion of an employee
from one cadre to the other is condition of service of an
employee which under clause 5(2) of the Amalgamation Scheme
could have been duly altered only by the transferee bank and
the Central Government exceeded its jurisdiction in the garb
of determining the placement of the employees of the
transferor bank as well as their inter se seniority in
altering the condition of service. Mr. Rao further urged
that even if clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme would be
held to authorise the Central Government to frame a scheme
as provided in clause 4(a)(iii) of the Placement Scheme but
the same is vitiated since no relevant materials have been
considered by the Central Government and there is no
justification for fixing the ratio of 2:1 i.e. 2 years of
service in the transferor bank is equivalent to one year of
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service in the transferee bank particularly when both the
banks are nationalized banks and the recruitment of service
in both the banks is through & process of selection by the
Recruitment Board. According to Mr. Rao, the aforesaid
computation in the ratio of 2:1 in clause 4(a)(iii) of the
Placement Scheme is irrational and arbitrary and therefore,
should be struck down. Mr. Rao lastly urged that in any view
of the matter the retrospective operation of the scheme
which came into force on 8th December, 1993 and was given
retrospective effect with effect from and was given
retrospective effect with effect from 4th September, 1993 is
on the face of it bad in law as by an executive order the
conditions of service of an employee could not have been
altered retrospectively.
Mr. Arora, the learned counsel appearing for the
officers of the transferor bank apart from reiterating the
stand taken by Mr. Rao submitted that the factors which were
given to be the relevant factors for the decision by the
Government to reduce the seniority of the officers of the
transferor bank as indicated in paragraph 6 of their counter
affidavit filed before the High Court by no stretch of
imagination can be considered to be germane factors and,
therefore, the decision contained in clause 4(b)(ii) of the
Placement Scheme must be struck down as irrational and
arbitrary. He further contended that the merger of a small
bank with a stronger bank cannot be held to be a ground for
reducing the years of service of an employee of a transferor
bank and such reduction of service is wholly arbitrary. Mr.
Arora, learned counsel also contended that there has been no
iota of material in the counter affidavit filed before the
High Court that the rate of promotion was much faster in the
transferor bank as compared to the transferee bank. And
further the finding of the High Court that the officers of
the transferee bank will be junior to the officers of the
New Bank of India if the entire credit is given to the
services rendered in the transferor bank is a finding based
on no evidence. Learned Additional Solicitor General
replying to the contentions raised by the learned counsel
for the appellants submitted that the framing of the
Amalgamation Scheme framed by the Central Government in
exercise of powers under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act
had not brought in a total fusion and was in a transitory
stage and clause 5(4) of the said Amalgamation Scheme
authorized the Central Government to make a scheme of
placement in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India.
The expression "Placement" in clause 5(4) of the
Amalgamation Scheme conceives of fitment of an employee in a
cadre or grade; position he occupies in the grade which in
other words, would be his seniority, and redeployment of his
service in the grade. The Placement Scheme framed by the
government more particularly clause 4(a)(iii) as well as
4(b)(ii) achieves the aforesaid objective and is squarely
within the powers conferred upon the Central Government
under clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme. So far as the
considerations which weighed with the Central Government to
take the ratio of 2:1, learned Additional Solicitor General
placed before us the relevant paragraphs of the counter
affidavit of the Reserve Bank of India as well as the Union
Government and also produced before us a chart indicating
the impact of the ratio being 2:1 as well as the impact of
it the entire service of an employee under transferor bank
is taken into account and contended that if the latter
course would have been taken then for years to come no
employee of the Punjab National Bank, namely, the transferee
bank would have got any opportunity of getting promotion to
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the higher cadre. He also further contended that when the
Reserve Bank of India which monitors all these Nationalized
Banks was consulted and the said Reserve Bank of India
decided to have the ratio of 2:1 after considering several
germane factors it cannot be said to be arbitrary or
irrational as contended by the learned counsel appearing for
the appellants. Mr. Reddy learned Additional Solicitor
General also contended that the provisions of clause
4(a)(iii) & 4(b)(ii) is merely one time exercise and the
said provision has been made after due consultation with the
Reserve Bank of India and after taking into consideration
several important factors, like, respective manpower of the
two banks, respective tenure of promotion in two banks,
respective business of two banks and the fact that there has
been a large scale promotion in the transferor bank just
before the amalgamation. According to Mr. Reddy no scheme
governing service matters can be foolproof and some section
or other of the employee is bound to feel aggrieved on the
score of its expectations being falsified or remaining to be
fulfilled as been held by this Court in the case of V.I.
Khanzode & Ors. vs. Reserve Bank of India & Ors. (1982(2)
SCC 7). Therefore, unless the persons aggrieved establish
arbitrariness, irrationality, perversity or malafide the
scheme cannot be held to be unconstitutional.
Mr. Reddy cited before us several decisions of this
Court indicating the parameters for interference by the
Court when validity of similar scheme is assailed and
submitted that the impugned scheme more particularly clauses
4(a)(iii) & 4(b)(ii) of the Placement Scheme infact strikes
a just balance between the conflicting claims of the
employees of the transferor bank and the employees of the
transferee bank and the said provision can neither be held
to be arbitrary and irrational and therefore the Court
should not interfere with the same.
Mr. Reddy lastly submitted that the conclusion of the
High Court that the scheme making process is not legislative
in nature is wholly erroneous.
Mr. Salve, the learned senior counsel, appearing for
the Reserve Bank of India contended that when the New Bank
of India was sustaining loss and would have been otherwise
wound up, the Reserve Bank of India advised the Union
Government to merge the same with a stronger bank so that
the employees will not suffer. While advising amalgamation
the Reserve Bank of India also considered the relevant
factors for determination of the inter se seniority of the
employees and after due deliberations came to the conclusion
of accepting the ratio of 2:1 at the stage of placement of
promotion which advice was ultimately accepted by the
Central Government. According to Mr. Salve all materials
having been duly considered advice having been given to the
Union Government which advice was ultimately accepted, the
contentions of arbitrariness and irrationality raised by the
counsel appearing for the appellants is nothin but an
imaginary grievance and not established through any positive
datta and, therefore, the Court should refrain from
interfering with the Amalgamation Scheme as well as the
Placement Scheme more particularly the ratio of 2:1.
Mr. Sharma, the learned counsel appearing for the
employees of the transferee bank, on the other hand
contended, that the Scheme works out harshly against the
employees of the transferee bank and the benefits conferred
upon the employees of the transferor bank under the scheme
should not be given to them.
In view of the rival submissions the following
questions really arise for our consideration :-
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1. Is the Placement Scheme framed
by the Central Government which
provides for the ratio of 2:1 for
the purpose of promotion of the
employees of the Transferor Bank is
beyond the power of the Central
Government as conferred under
Clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation
Scheme read with Section 9 of the
Acquisition Act?
2. What are the powers of the
Court to examine such schemes and
on what grounds the Court can
interfere with such a Scheme?
3. Whether framing the Placement
Scheme and determining the ratio of
2:1 in Clauses 4(a)(iii) and
4(b)(ii), relevant and germane
materials had been taken into
account or the provisions can be
held to be arbitrary and
irrational?
4. Can the Placement Scheme by
any stretch of imagination can be
said to be retrospective in nature?
5. Was the High Court correct in
coming to the conclusion that the
scheme making process under Section
9 of the Acquisition Act is not
legislative in nature?
So far as the first question is concerned Mr. Rao appearing
for the appellants elaborated his submission by contending
that no doubt Section 9 of the Acquisition Act confers power
on the Central Govt. to make a scheme for Amalgamation of
one bank with the other after consultation with the Reserve
Bank of India and in exercise of that power the Central
Government did frame the Scheme of Amalgamation which was
published on 4th September, 1993. Under the said
Amalgamation Scheme the undertaking of the New Bank of India
stood vested in Punjab National Bank on the commencement of
the Scheme itself and the effect of such vesting has been
indicated in clause 4 of the Amalgamation Scheme. Under
Clause 5(2) of the said Scheme the officer and employees of
the transferor bank became officer and employees of the
transferee bank and they shall hold their office or service
in the transferee bank on the same terms and conditions and
with the same rights, pension, gratuity and other matters as
would have been admissible to him if the undertakings of the
transferor bank had not been transferred to and vested in
the transferee bank until the terms and conditions are duly
altered by the transferee bank.
According to Mr. Rao the aforesaid provision makes it
clear that the employees of the transferor bank would
continue to be the employees of the transferee bank on the
same terms and conditions with they were enjoying under
their erstwhile employer, namely, the transferor bank, until
and unless the terms and conditions are duly altered by the
transferee bank. In that view of the matter the Union
Government had no power to frame clauses 4(a)(iii) &
4(b)(ii) of the Placement Scheme and thereby jeopardize the
chances of promotion of the employees of the transferor bank
i the transferee bank to their detriment and altering their
conditions of service. According to Mr. Rao promotion and
seniority are two different concept and clause 5(4) of the
Amalgamation Scheme had merely authorized the Central
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Government to make another Scheme, a subsidiary one after
consultation with the Reserve Bank of India for determining
the placement of the employees of the transferor bank and
for determining their inter-se seniority vis-a-vis the
employees of the transferee bank. Promotion by no stretch of
imagination can be included within the purview of clause
5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme. In this view of the matter
the impugned clause of the Placement Scheme, namely, clause
4(a)(iii) & 4(b)(ii) computing the ratio of 2:1 for the
purpose of determining the minimum length of service for
promotion from subordinate cadre to clerical cadre and also
from clerical cadre to officer cadre is wholly without
jurisdiction and an arbitrary exercise of power by the
Central Government. Mr. Rao contends that the right of
promotion of the employees of the transferor bank remains
fully protected under clause 5(2) of the Amalgamation Scheme
and it can only be duly altered by the transferee bank and
that right cannot be taken away by the Central Government in
framing a scheme in the garb of determination of inter se
seniority. In this connection Mr. Rao has also advanced an
argument that in the minimum, before introducing the scheme
and altering the service conditions, the employees should
have been given atleast an opportunity of hearing. Mr. Rao
placed reliance on the decisions of this Court in the case
of K.I. Shephard & Ors. etc. etc. vs. Union of India & Ors.
(1988 (1) SCR 188) which was approved and followed in the
case of H.L. Trehan vs. Union of India (1983(Suppl.)(3) SCR
923). In the Shephard’s case (supra) when some private banks
were amalgamated with Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank and
State Bank of India in terms of separate schemes drawn under
Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, some of the
employees of the amalgamated banks were excluded from
employment in the transferee banks and such exclusion was
made without giving the employees an opportunity of being
heard. When the matter had been challenged before the Kerals
High Court, the learned Single Judge of the High Court had
proposed a post amalgamation hearing but that had been
vacated by the Division Bench of the High Court. In that
context this Court had held that even a post decisional
hearing will not meet the ends of justice and there is no
justification to throw out the employees from their
employment without giving them an opportunity of
representation and giving an opportunity of representation
is a condition precedent to the action taken. We fail to
understand how this decision is of any assistance to the
appellants. In that particular case on account of certain
charges against the employees of the private banks they were
not given employment in the transferee bank and, therefore,
this Court had observed that before excluding them from
consideration they had a right to be heard. In the present
case none of the employees of the transferor bank and been
excluded from absorption in the transferee bank, on the
other hand an option was asked for and thereafter by
operation of the Amalgamation Scheme, the employees of the
transferor bank have become the employees of the transferee
bank and, therefore, question of giving them opportunity of
hearing does not arise. In Trehan’s case (supra) the
question for consideration was whether there can be
deprivation or curtailment of any existing right or benefit
enjoyed by government servant without complying with the
rules of natural justice by giving the servant concerned an
opportunity of being heard. In that particular case the
Caltex Oil Refinery (India) Ltd., a government company (for
short ‘Coril’), which was acquired by the Government of
India under the provision of the Caltex (Acquisition of
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Shares of Caltex Refining (India) Ltd.) Act 17 of 1977, the
Board of Directors of Coril had issued a circular indicating
the perquisites admissible to the Management staff should be
rationalized in the manner stated in the circular. That
circular was challenged by the employees of Corils on the
ground that it curtails the existing rights and advantages
and such circular should not have been therefore, issued
without affording an opportunity of hearing. The High Court
had quashed that circular accepting the contention of the
employees and on appeal this Court confirmed the decision of
the High Court and following the earlier view expressed in
Shephard’s case (supra) held that there can be no
deprivation or curtailment of any existing right, advantage
or benefit enjoyed by government servant without complying
with the rules of natural justice by giving the government
servant concerned an opportunity of being heard. We fail to
understand how this decision also is applicable to the
present case where Section 9 of the Acquisition Act
authorises Central Government to make a Scheme of
Amalgamation of two banks and in exercise of that power the
central Government after consulting the Reserve Bank of
India framed the Amalgamation Scheme and retained to itself
the power to frame another scheme for placement and
seniority of the employees of the transferor bank vis-a-vis
the employees of the transferee bank and in accordance with
that power framed the Placement Scheme. In our considered
opinion, neither the Placement Scheme in any way alters the
conditions of service of the employees of the transferor
bank nor does it require any opportunity of hearing to be
given to the employees of the transferor bank before framing
of the Placement Scheme. Mr. Rao also placed reliance on the
decision of this Court in the case of Canara Bank vs. M.S.
Jasra & Ors. (1992) 2 SCC 484). In the aforoesaid case the
question for consideration was, when some private banks are
amalgamated with the nationalized bank under the provisions
of Banking Regulation Act 1949 can the employees of the
private banks claim to be governed by an age of
superannuation of the transferor bank or they would be
governed by the terms and conditions of service applicable
to the employees of corresponding ranks or status of the
transferee bank. This court answered the question by holding
that the employees would be governed by the terms and
conditions of service of employees of the corresponding rank
of the transferee bank and therefore, their claim to
continue in service upto 60 years is unsustainable.
Analysing the provisions of the Banking Regulation Act 1949
and referring to proviso (ii) to clause (i) of Sub Section
(5) of Section 45 of the said Act this Court held that the
employees of the transferor bank would be entitled to the
terms and conditions of service which the employees of the
corresponding rank and status of the transferee bank were
availing of and therefore the High Court was in error in
allowing the claim of the employees of the transferor bank.
In our considered opinion this decision is of no assistance
to the point which arises for consideration in the present
case. Firstly, the provisions of Banking Regulation Act 1949
has no application in the case in hand. Secondly, the point
in controversy in the case in hand is different than the
point in controversy in that case. Thirdly, Section 9 of the
Acquisition Act confers power on the Central Bank to frame
the Scheme of Amalgamation and in exercise of that power the
Amalgamation Scheme had been framed which came into force on
4th September, 1993 and under clause 5(4) thereof Central
Government had retained power to frame the Scheme for
placement and inter-se seniority between the employees of
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the transferor bank with the transferee bank and in
accordance with that power the impugned scheme of placement
had been framed. The question for consideration therefore,
is whether the Central Government had the power to frame the
impugned Placement Scheme? As has been noticed earlier the
expression Placement in clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation
Scheme must be construed to mean re-deployment of the
employees; fitment of those employees in a grade or rank or
cadre in the transferee bank and inter se seniority of those
employees vis-a-vis the employees of the transferee bank in
the cadre or grade. If this meaning is given to the
expression ‘Placement’ in Section 5(4) of the Amalgamation
Scheme and then the impugned provision of clause 4(a)(iii)
and 4(b)(ii) are considered it is difficult for us to accept
the contention of Mr. Rao that it alters the conditions of
service of the employees of the transferor bank and beyond
the power of the Central Govt. It would be appropriate for
us at this stage at the cost of repetition to extract clause
5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme as well as Clauses 4(a)(iii)
& 4(b)(ii) of the Placement Scheme.
"5(4) The Central Government
shall, as soon as possible after
the commencement of this Scheme,
make a Scheme in consultation with
Reserve Bank of India for
determining the placement of the
employees of the transferor bank
including the determination of
their inter se seniority vis a vis
the employees of the transferee
bank. While making the Scheme the
Central Government shall take
account of relevant factors such as
experience of the employee of the
transferor bank."
"4(a)(iii) The procedure for
computation of years of service
rendered in the transferor bank for
the purpose of determining the
minimum length of service for
promotion from subordinate cadre to
clerical cadre as also from the
clerical cadre to officer cadre and
also for the purpose of posting in
the posts carrying special
allowance, shall be computed in the
ratio 2:1 that is, two years of
service in transferor bank as
equivalent to one year of service
in the transferee bank. For this
purpose, total service in the
respective cadre of the workmen
employees, that is, clerical or
sub-staff in which the official is
placed at the time of transfer,
shall be reckoned but fractions of
a month shall be ignored, for
example, if a workmen employee has
rendered two years and nine months
service in the clerical/sub-staff
cadre, as the case may be, in the
transferor bank at the time of
amalgamation with transferee bank,
it shall be reckoned as equal to
one year and four months service in
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the clerical or sub-staff cadre, as
the case may be, in the transferee
bank."
"4(b)(ii) For the purpose of
seniority on fitment or for
promotion to the next grade or
scale, the service rendered by an
officer in the transferor bank
shall be computed, after
amalgamation, in the ratio of 2:1,
that is, two years of device in the
transferor bank as equivalent to
one year service in the transferee
bank. For this purpose, total
service in the scale in which an
officer is transferred shall be
reckoned but fractions of a month
shall be ignored. For example, if
an officer has rendered two years
nine months service in Scale II in
the transferor bank at the time of
amalgamation with the transferee
bank, it shall be reckoned as equal
to one year and four months service
in Scale II in the transferee
bank."
When the Central Government decided to amalgamate two banks
it has to make a scheme after consulting the Reserve Bank of
India under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act. In the case in
hand Amalgamation became necessary as the transferor bank
was incurring heavy loss and without the amalgamation it
would have been totally wound up. When a scheme is framed
amalgamating two banks, it is not possible for the Central
Government to take the details of the service condition in
account and that is why it provided that the employees of
the transferor bank would become the employees of the
transferee bank on the same terms and conditions, with the
same rights to pension, gratuity and other matters which
would have been admissible to them if they would have
continued as the employees of the transferor bank. But so
far as the question of their placement and inter-se
seniority vis-a-vis the employees of the transferee bank,
the Scheme itself stipulated that in consultation with the
Reserve Bank of India the Central Government after taking
relevant factors in consideration may frame the Scheme. It
is in exercise of this power the placement scheme has been
framed and under the Placement Scheme what has been intended
is that for determination of the inter so seniority and in
the matter of promotion from subordinate cadre to the
clerical cadre and from the clerical cadre to the officers
cadre while the computation of years of service rendered is
taken into account, the computation shall be made in the
ratio of 2:1 i.e. two years of service in the transferor
bank would be considered equivalent to one year of service
in the transferee bank. This computation is only one time
computation and whether such decision has been taken after
taking the relevant factors into account will be considered
by us when the question determination of the placement of
the employees of the transferor bank and the inter-se
seniority vis-a-vis the employees of the transferee bank and
for framing such scheme it was not necessary to afford an
opportunity of hearing to the employees of the transferor
bank, as in our view there has been no change on conditions
of their service. In this view of the matter we answer the
first question by holding that the Central Government had
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the power to frame the subsequent scheme which has been
termed by us in this judgment as the Placement Scheme for
the placement of the employees of the transferor bank in the
transferee bank and for the determination of their inter se
seniority with the employees of the transferee bank.
Coming down to the second question the legal positions
fairly settled that no scheme of amalgamation can be fool
proof and a Court would be entitled to interfere only when
it comes to the conclusion that either the scheme is
arbitrary or irrational or has been framed on some
extraneous consideration. Learned Additional Solicitor
General, Mr. Reddy appearing for the respondents in this
context contended that the only enquiry which the Court can
make is whether the provisions of this scheme is arbitrary
and irrational so that it results no inequality of
opportunities amongst employees belonging to the same class.
In support of this contention he placed strong reliance on
the decision of this Court in the case of Reserve Bank of
India vs. N.C. Paliwal (1976) 4 SCC 838). In that case the
Reserve Bank had 5 different departments which were broadly
divided into two groups called the General Department and
the Specialized Department and each department was treated
as a separate wing for the purpose of determining seniority
and promotion of the employees within the group. The
employees of the Specialized departments were having greater
opportunities for confirmation and promotion as compared to
the employees of the General Department. On account of this
disparity the employees of the General Department claimed
for equalization of their chance of their confirmation and
promotional opportunity by having a combined seniority list
of all employees irrespective of the departments to which
they belong. Ultimately the Reserve Bank of India introduced
a Scheme called Optee Scheme. In May 1972 the Reserve Bank
issued another scheme called Combined Seniority Scheme which
provided for integration of clerical staff of the general
departments with the clerical staff of the specialized
departments and it also made provision for determination of
inter so seniority. the validity of the said Scheme had been
challenged on the ground that the Scheme is violative of the
Constitutional principle of equality and must be held to be
discriminatory. This Court negativing the aforesaid
contentions held that the integration of different cadres
into one cadre cannot be said to involve any violation of
equality clause. Examining the question of rule of seniority
adopted by the Combined Seniority Scheme the Court further
observed :-
"Now there can be no doubt that it
is open to the State to lay down
any rule which it thinks
appropriate for determining
seniority in service and it is not
competent to the court to strike
down such rule on the ground that
in its opinion another rule would
have been better of more
appropriate. The only better or
more appropriate. The only enquiry
which the court can make is whether
the rule laid down by the State is
arbitrary an irrational so that it
results in inequality of
opportunity amongst employees
belonging to the same class. Now ,
here employees from non-clerical
cadres were being absorbed in the
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clerical cadre and, therefore, a
rule for determining their
seniority vis-a-vis those already
in the clerical cadre had to be
devised. Obviously, if the non-
clerical service rendered by the
employees from non clerical cadres
were wholly ignored, it would have
been most unjust to them. Equally,
it would have been cadre, if the
entire non clerical service of
those coming from non clerical
cadres were taken into account, for
non clerical service cannot be
equated with clerical service and
the two cannot be treated on the
same footing. The Reserve Bank,
therefore, decided that tone third
of the non clerical service
rendered by employees coming from
non clerical cadres should be taken
into account for the purpose of
determining seniority. This rule
attempted to strike a just balance
between the conflicting claims of
non clerical and clerical staff and
it cannot be condemned as arbitrary
of discriminatory"
Learned Additional Solicitor General also relied upon
another decision of this Court in the case of Tamil Nadu
Education Department Ministerial and General Subordinate
Services Association & Ors. vs. State of Tamil Nadu & Ors
(1980) 3 Supreme Court Cases 97). In the aforesaid case the
District Board Schools were taken over by the Government of
Tamil Nadu and after such taking over the issue of merger of
the staff confronted the government. At the time of taking
over Government decided to keep the absorbed personnel as a
separate service in the education department. This dicotomy
between the staff of District Schools and the Government
Schools gave rise to heart burning and the Government
therefore, considered afresh the question of integration of
two services, the Government schools’ servants were being
called the ‘A’ wing staff and the staff of the former
District Board Schools were being referred to as ‘B’ Wing
staff. Finally after examining the matter of integration in
great detail and taking into account the number of personnel
in different categories of both the wings and promotional
opportunities for them, the government adopted a formula to
integrate the two wings and to equalise their service
conditions to the extent possible by issuing the circular
which was challenged by the employees of the ‘A’ wing on the
ground that it is capricious and arbitrary. The government
decision in question fixed the ratio between two wings in
the matter of promotion and fixed the principle of
computation of service in determining the seniority. This
Court on examining the ratio fixed by the government order
held "The ratio of 5:3 and 3:2 respectively were prescribed
for the ministerial staff and teaching staff, taking
realistic note of the total numbers in the two equivalent
groups viz. quondam District Board servants and relative
government school staff. This is not an irrational criterion
when coalescence of two streams springing from two sources
occurs."
The Court further observed :-
"Counsel for the respondents explain that when equated
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groups from different sources are brought together quota-
rota expedients are practical devices familiar in the field.
Bearing in mind the strength of the District Board staff to
be included, the ratio is rational. Maybe, a better formula
could be evolved, but the court cannot substitute its wisdom
for government’s, save to see that unreasonable perversity,
mala fide manipulation, indefensible arbitrariness and like
infirmities do not defile the equation for integration. We
decline to demolish the order on this ground. Curial
therapeutics can heal only the pathology of
unconstitutionality, not every injury."
The Court also examined the principle of fixation of
seniority and held :-
"The more serious charge is that length of service for
fixing seniority has inflicted manifest injustice on the ‘A’
wing i.e. regular government staff, being born in
arbitrariness and fed on mala fide. It is fair to state the
generalities and then proceed to particularities. Here we
must relies that all the schools having been taken over by
the State directly the personnel had to be woven into the
basic fabric. Some relevant formula had to the furnished for
this purpose so that the homogenisation did not unfairly
injure one group or the other. In 1970 government chose not
to integrate but to keep apart. Later, this policy was given
up. We cannot, as court, quarrel if administrative policy is
revised. The wisdom of yesterday may obsolesce into the
folly of today, even as the science of old may sour into the
superstition now, and vice versa. Nor can we predicate mala
fide or ulterior motive merely because Assembly
interpellation have ignited rethinking or, as hinted by
counsel, that the Education Minister’s sensitivity is due to
his having been once District Board teacher. Democratic
processes -- both these are part of such process -- are not
anathema to judges and we cannot knock down the order
because government have responded to the Question Hour or
re-examined the decision at the instance of a sensitive
minister."
At this stage it would also be appropriate to notice
yet another decision of this Court in the caseV. T.
Khanzodoe and others vs. Reserve Bank of India and Anr.
(1982 2 Supreme Court Cases 7) in which case the Court was
examining again the principle evolved by the Reserve Bank of
India for a combined seniority for different groups of
employees with retrospective effect. The Court observed :-
"Combined seniority has been recommended by two special
committees, whose reports reflect the expertise and
objectivity which was brought to bear on their sensitive
task. It is clear that inter-group mobility and common
seniority are a safe and sound solution to the conflicting
demands of officers belonging to Group I on one hand and
those of Groups II and III on the other. Private interest of
employees of public undertakings cannot override public
interest and an effort has to be made to harmonize the two
considerations. No scheme governing service matters can be
foolproof and some section or the other of employees is
bound to feel aggrieved on the score of its expectations
being falsified or remaining to be fulfilled. Arbitrariness,
irrationality, perversity and mala fide will of course
render any scheme unconstitutional but the fact that the
scheme does not satisfy the expectations of every employee
is not evidence of these."
InS.C Sachdev & Anr. vs. Union of India (1981) 1 SCR
971) a particular provision of the Recruitment Rules of 1969
was being challenged as an arbitrary. The said provision
provided that UDCs drawn from Audit offices must put in 10
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years of service for acquiring eligible for promotion where
other UDCs are eligible for promotion in putting in 5 years
of service. Rejecting the contention of the appellant this
Court held :-
"Considering the history leading to the formation of
the new organisation, SBCO-ICO, the distinction made between
the two classes of UDCs, in the context of the length of
their service for the purposes of promotion is not arbitrary
or unreasonable. The staff of the Audit Offices which was
engaged in the Savings Banks’ work might well have faced
retrenchment. Instead of subjecting them to that hardship,
they were given the option of joining the new organisation.
Experience-wise also, there would appear to be fair
justification for requiring them to put in longer service in
the new organisation before they are eligible for promotion
to the higher grade. The challenge has therefore to be
repelled."
The facts of this case are somewhat akin to the facts
of the present case. Mr. Rao, learned counsel appearing for
the appellants on the other hand, urged that the subsequent
scheme framed for placement of the employees must be held to
be arbitrary as there is no rational for wiping of the past
service of the employees of the transferor bank. Relying
upon the decision of this Court in the case of K.Madhavan
and Anr. etc. vs. Union of India & Ors. (1988 (1) SCR 421)
the learned counsel urged that the entire period of service
rendered by the employees of the transferor bank can be
taken into account for the purpose of their seniority after
amalgamation. In the aforesaid case petitioner Madhavan was
a permanent officer in the grade of Deputy Commandant. On
14.6.76 it has been found to be equivalent to the grade of
S.P. in the CBI. When Madhavan’s services were taken over by
the CBI the question arose whether his past service shall be
taken into account for determining his seniority in the CBI
and in that context this Court has observed that his entire
period of service should be taken into account. In our
considered opinion this decision is of no assistance to the
appellant in the present case where a particular scheme has
required to be framed after amalgamation of the services of
the transferor bank with the transferee bank and in that
scheme certain provisions haven been made as to how the
employees of the transferor bank would be fitted in the
transferee bank.
Mr. Rao, learned counsel also placed reliance on
another decision of this Court in the case of Tei Narain
Tiwarv vs. State of Bihar & Ors. (1993 (2) (suppl.) Supreme
Court Cases 623) in support of his contention that in a case
of amalgamation the entire past service of the employee
should be taken into account. In that case the appellant
Narain Tiwary has been appointed by the Bihar School
Examination Board as Special Officer in August 1969. The
said post was abolished with effect from April 1, 1971. He
filed a suit and obtained injunction against the abolition
of post and termination of his services. In the course of
litigation a compromise had been arrived at between the
Board and the appellant wherein he was appointed as a
Sectional Head Officer and his pay as a Special Officer was
also protected. The Board, therefore, passed an order on
March 20, 1972 appointing the appellant as a Sectional Head
Officer in the general cadre. In the seniority list of
Sectional officers prepared by the Board the appellant had
been shown above respondent no. 5 and he had been granted
promotion to the post of Asstt. Secretary. The respondent
no. 5 therefore, filed a Writ Petition challenging the
seniority list. The High Court came to the conclusion that
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the post of Sectional Officer occupied by the appellant not
being a cadre post the services rendered by the appellant as
Special officer cannot be taken into account for his
seniority in the cadre of Sectional Officer. This Court in
appeal reversed the judgment of the High Court and held that
the compromise entered into between the parties and the
order of March 20, 1972 is capable of being interpreted as
an order of amalgamation of the ex cadre post of Special
Officer with the cadre of Sectional officer and consequently
the appellant would get his seniority from the date of his
appointment as a Special Officer. In coming to this
conclusion the Court also relied upon the results and orders
of the Board itself. We fail to understand how this case can
be of any assistance to the appellants in the present case.
In view of the legal position as discussed above, and
on examining the provisions of the Placement Scheme more
particularly Clauses 4(a)(iii) & 4(b)(ii) and on
consideration of the opinion rendered by the Reserve Bank of
India we have no hesitation to come to the conclusion that
the said Scheme is neither arbitrary nor irrational and on
the other hand a just scheme evolved by the Union Government
after due consultation with the Reserve Bank of India and
Court cannot interfere with such a Scheme.
Coming to the third upon the relevant materials
considered both by the Reserve Bank of India as well as by
the Union Government before framing of the Placement Scheme.
At the outset it may be noted that most important function
of the Reserve Bank of India is to regulate the Banking
system generally. It is usually described as a Bankers Bank.
The Reserve Bank of India has been given certain advisory
and regulatory functions. It advices government and other
banks on financial and banking matters. The provisions of
the Reserve Bank of India Act shows that a bank has been
created as a Central Bank with powers of supervision,
advice and inspection over banks particularly those desiring
that they be included in the Second Schedule or those
Scheduled already. The Reserve Bank safeguards the economy
and financial stability of the country. We have set out the
functions of the Reserve Bank of India because the
Placement Scheme which is being impugned in the present case
by the employees of the transferor bank had been framed in
due consultation with the Reserve Bank of India and the said
Reserve Bank has filed affidavits indicating the broad
consideration on which the ratio 2:1 has been fixed. The
Union of India in its affidavit filed in this Court, sworn
to by the Under Secretary in the Ministry of Finance,
Banking Division stated thus:-
"Central Government after taking into consideration the
complete date and entire material on record of the case and
in consultation with Reserve Bank of India decided that the
Service rendered in erstwhile New Bank of India by
employees/Officers in grade/scale in which they were placed
at the time of amalgamation had to be computed in the ratio
of 2:1 and that to only for the purpose of computing
eligibility for consideration for promotion to next
grade/scale and/or for the purpose of posting on a post
carrying special allowance. For all other purpose, the
service rendered by the employees of erstwhile New Bank of
India has to be treated at par with the service rendered by
the employees of New Bank of India in PNB. It is relevant to
mention that New Bank of India was small in size both in
regard to its branches and also in terms of its deposits and
business Act. A comparison of the erstwhile New Bank of
India and the Punjab National Bank in terms of productivity,
volume of business, staff strength, time taken for promotion
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etc. as indicated below would reveal that the employees of
Punjab National Bank were having higher productivity per
employee and higher level of responsibilities, house keeping
and higher average business per branch. As compared to this,
the promotional avenues available to them were less. On
account of the merger, if the number of years of services
were equated between the employees of erstwhile New Bank of
India and Punjab National Bank, it would happen that the
employees with longer years of service of Punjab National
Bank would become junior to the employees with lesser period
of service in the corresponding grades."
The Reserve Bank of India in its affidavit in this
Court have stated thus :-
"New Bank of India Limited was nationalized and
constituted as New Bank of India in 1980 under the
provisions of the Banking Companies (Acquisition and
Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1980. It was a bank
comparatively small in size with 591 branches and deposits
of Rs.2362.33 crores as at the end of March, 1993.
6. The Reserve Bank of India as the Central Bank of the
country, has been monitoring on a continual basis the
performance of the various public sector banks. It was
brought to the notice of the Government by Reserve Bank of
India that the financial position of New Bank of India as
revealed by the Annual Financial Review conducted by Reserve
Bank of India as on 31st March, 1992 was extremely
unsatisfactory. The losses of the bank including loan losses
were estimated at Rs.306.90 crore which exceeded the
provisions, reserves and paid up capital of the bank
amounting to Rs. 242.78 crore. The deposits of New Bank of
India had thus been eroded to the extent of Rs.64.12 crore.
The said evaluation of Reserve Bank of India did not take
into account the depreciation in Government and other
securities estimated at Rs.25.52 crore which had not been
provided for. The bank had declared a loss of Rs.41.52 crore
in its published accounts for the year 1991-92.
7. The Reserve Bank of India brought to the notice of the
Government various deficiencies in the working of the bank.
Some of these are set out below :-
i) The calibre and quality of officials in the senior
management cadre was inadequate.
ii) The supervision and control exercised by the Head
Office over the controlling offices and the branches was
unsatisfactory. The internal working of the branches was
also far from satisfactory.
iii) Funds management had been a weak area. The bank had
been lending much beyond what its scarce resources would
permit, relying heavily on market borrowings. With the
constraints on resources the bank would find it difficult to
service even its existing borrowers.
iv) The bank had not been able to bring about any
improvement in credit management despite repeated advice.
The appraisal of credit proposals showed several
deficiencies. Discretionary powers had not been exercised
properly by the functionaries at various levels including
the top executives. Adhoc/spot sanctions/excess drawals had
been allowed frequently. The post disbursement supervision
of advances was also unsatisfactory.
v) The bank was saddled with substantial load of sticky
advances amounting to Rs. 438.66 crore as on 31/3/1992 which
formed 39.2% of the total advances.
vi) The bank did not comply with the minimum capital
requirement under the provisions of the Reserve Bank of
India Act. It was prima facie a fit case for de-scheduling
the bank;
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vii) The bank was not in a position to pay the depositors in
full as and when their claims accrue and its methods of
operation were far from satisfactory. Under the policy
followed with reference to private sector banks, this would
be a fit case for compulsory merger, as it did not satisfy
even the requirements under Section 22 of the Banking
Regulation Act, 1949 for carrying on banking business
although the said provisions do not apply to nationalized
banks.
8. The Reserve Bank of India was of the view that the
possibility of New Bank of India earning reasonable profits
in the near future and making up the gap in provisions and
emerging as a strong and viable unit was remote. It was
doubtful whether the bank would be in a position to recover
or regularize and bring down the high level of sub-standard
advances to any significant extent. If the bank was to
remain as a separate unit, financial assistance of
substantial magnitude would have to be given to it. But the
extremely weak senior management structure of the bank as
well as the deficiencies in its lower sections did not
infuse confidence that even with such assistance, the
management would be able to remove the weaknesses in its
working and make it a viable unit in the near future."
The appellants, however, strongly relied upon the fact
that both the banks being nationalized banks and the
recruitment to both the banks being through the same
Selection Board, there is no justification for treating the
services of the employees of the transferor bank on 2:1
basis after amalgamation for the purpose of promotion. In
our considered opinion the contention of the appellant is
wholly unsustainable. As has been stated earlier, the
financial loss sustained by the transferor bank had brought
the bank to a virtual collapse. It is at that point of time
the Reserve Bank on consideration having taken a sympathetic
view of the matter and instead of advising winding up of the
bank and its liquidation advised for its merger with a
stronger bank and the Government of India ultimately
accepted the advise of the Reserve Bank. On its amalgamation
necessary provisions were required to be made for the
placement of the employees of the transferor bank with the
employees of the transferee bank. At that stage the bank as
well as the Union Government considered the total volume of
business of both the banks, the rate of promotion in both
the banks, the total number of employees in both the banks,
as well as the impact if the entire length of service of the
employees of the transferor bank is taken into account or
one time reduced level is taken into account and finally
evolved the schemen of placement and modalities for
promotion. Having considered the necessary averments made in
the affidavits filed by the Union Government as well as by
the Reserve Bank of India we are of the considered opinion
that in framing the Placement Scheme and determining the
ratio of 2:1 in clauses 4(a)(iii) & 4(b)(ii) the appropriate
authorities have taken relevant and germane materials into
consideration and the said provision cannot be termed as
arbitrary and irrational.
So far as the fourth question is concerned we do not
find any substance of Mr. Rao’s argument that the Placement
Scheme is retrospective in nature. As we have discussed
earlier, on deciding to amalgamate the two banks in exercise
of power under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act the Union
Government framed the scheme of amalgamation and notified
the same on 4th September, 1993. But in that scheme
excepting making the employees of the transferor bank as
employees of the transferee bank, the other questions like
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their inter se seniority and fitments in the cadre of the
transferee bank had not been decided. On the other hand
clause 5(4) of the Amalgamation Scheme left the matter open
for being evolved at a later stage and the complete fusion
between the employees of the two banks came only on the
subsequent scheme being framed, which scheme was evolved
after due deliberations on the relevant materials. The
scheme therefore, necessarily have to be given effect with
effect from the date of amalgamation and the same cannot be
held to be retrospective in nature as contended by Mr. Rao.
The only other question which remains for consideration
is whether the conclusion of the High Court that the scheme
making process under Section 9 of the Acquisition Act is not
legislative is correct in law. In view of our conclusions
on the four questions formulated, this question is not of
much relevance but since the High Court has recorded a
conclusion and the learned Additional Solicitor General and
Shri Salve advanced the argument we think it appropriate to
answer this question also. The High Court relied upon the
decision in Sapherd’s case (supra) and came to hold that the
provisions of Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act being
in parimateria with Section 9 of the Banking Companies
Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings Act, 1980, and the
scheme framed under Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act
having been held by this Court to be not legislative, the
scheme framed under the Acquisition Act as in the present
case, must also be held to be not legislative one. It is
undisputed that in Sephard’s case (supra) the amalgamation
was of a private bank with a nationalized bank and the
provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 applied. This
Court in Sephard’s case (supra) on examining Section 45(11)
of the Banking Regulation Act 1949 came to hold that merely
because a scheme framed is required to be laid before both
the Houses of Parliament after the same has been sanctioned
by the Central Government the Scheme cannot be held to be
legislative in nature. But in our considered opinion the
High Court has failed to notice the fundamental distinction
between the provisions of Section 45 of the Banking
Regulation Act and Section 9 of the Acquisition Act. Under
Section 9 of the Acquisition Act under which Act the
impugned scheme has been framed, every scheme framed by the
Central Government has to be laid before each Houses of
Parliament for a total period of 30 days and the Parliament
has the power to agree to the Scheme and making any
modification or in giving to a decision that the scheme
should not be made and it is only thereafter the scheme has
the effect either in the modified form or does not agree.
The essential distinction between the two provisions
therefore, is that whereas under the Banking Regulation Act
the Scheme framed has merely to placed before the Parliament
and nothing further but under the Acquisition Act the scheme
becomes effective only after the same is placed before both
the Houses of Parliament and after the Parliament makes such
modification and agrees to the scheme. In this view of the
matter the decision of this Court in Sephard’s case (supra)
has no application to a scheme framed under the provisions
of the Acquisition Act and in our considered opinion, a
scheme framed under Section 9 of the Banking Companies
Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings Act, 1980, is a
legislative one. The High Court was in error in holding the
scheme not to be a legislative one.
Mr. Sharma, the learned senior counsel appearing for
the appellant, the Punjab National Bank Employees Federation
urged that the ratio of 2:1 fixed under the Placement Scheme
infact works out gross injustice. The interest of the
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employees of the Punjab National Bank should not be
jeopardized by bringing the employees of the New Bank of
India and no credit should be given to the employees of the
New Bank of India for their past services rendered. We do
not find any force in the aforesaid contention and, as
discussed earlier, the ratio of 2:1 was fixed in the
Placement Scheme in consultation with the Reserve Bank of
India and after a comparative study of the business of the
two banks, the rate of promotion, the higher productivity
and larger measure of responsibility and higher average
business per branch of the Punjab National Bank as compared
to the New Bank of India and all other germane
considerations. The submission of Mr. Sharma, therefore, is
rejected.
In the premise, as aforesaid. all the appeals are
dismissed but in the circumstances, there will be no order
as to costs,.