Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
W.S. CHONA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/11/1997
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, G.T. NANAVATI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 25TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice Agrawal
Hon’ble Mr.Justice G.T.Nanavati
R.K.Anand, Sr.Adv., Lokesh Sawhney and A.K. Srivastava, Adv.
with him for the appellants.
Mukul Rohtagi, Sr.Adv., Manoj Prasad, Adv., with him for the
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
S.C. AGRAWAL, J.:
Special leave granted.
This appeal against the judgment of the Delhi High
Court dated November 10, 1995 in Civil Appeal No. 4915 of
1995 relates to promotion from the rank of Major General to
the rank of Lieutenant General in the Army.
The personnel in the Army fall in two broad categories,
namely, General Cadre consisting of Infantry, Mechanised
Infantry and Armoured corps, and Non-General Cadre
consisting of Artillery, Engineers, Signals, Army Ordinance
Corps, Army Service Corps and Electrical Mechanical Corps.
The appointment within the corps or the service is known as
’Corps Appointment’ which may be on the command side or
staff side within the corps or the service. Apart from
Corps Appointments, appointments are also made outside the
corps/service on the staff side which are called ’Staff
Appointments’. Till September 9, 1986 officers in the Non-
General Cadre could be promoted to the rank of Lt. Gen. in
their respective Corps/Service Appointments only. By
circular dated September 9, 1986 issued by the Military
Secretary at the Army Headquarters it was decided to adopt
the "Two Stream Concept’ for officers of the rank of
Brigadier and above. The said concept envisages that the
officers on promotion to the rank of Maj. Gen. and Lt. Gen.
will be bifurcated into the ’Command and Staff’ stream and
the ’Staff Only’ stream. Non-General Cadre officers could
also be considered for the "Staff Only’ stream in the rank
of Lt.Gen. The following provision was made in this regard
for Non-General Cadre officers in the said circular :-
"Non-General Cadre Officers
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6. High calibre officers in the
rank of Brig. from other Arms and
Services who are considered fir for
promotion to the next higher rank
within their own Corps, will be
screened for holding unspecified
Staff/ERE appointments on first
promotion. If selected to hold
unspecified appointments outside
their Corps, such officers may be
promoted to the higher rank of
Staff/ERE appointments outside
their Corps ahead of officers
senior to then in the same batch.
These officers will be exercised in
criteria appointments within their
Corps subsequently prior to
selection for next higher rank.
Methodology of Streaming
7. With the introduction of Stream
Concept, the methodology of
screening officers for promotion
will also undergo a change. Based
on the QRs prescribed from time to
time, officers will first be
screened to assess their
suitability for promotion to the
higher ranks. Those considered fit
will be subjected to another
screening for bifurcation into the
’Two Streams’. Officers with
higher
Considered for such selection by the Selection Board
and his Case was deferred for the reason that he had not
earned two ACRs after his promotion as Maj. Gen. and he did
not have to his credit the minimum service of 18 months in
the rank of Maj. Gen. Another Special Selection Board met in
April, 1994. Since there was no change in the position of
the respondent in the sense that two ACRs had not been
received, his case was deferred. The third Special
Selection Board met on July 18, 1994. The respondent was
considered for promotion to the rank of Ltd. Gen. as a
afresh case for staff appointment. He was, however, not
selected and the said recommendation of the special
Selection Board was accepted by the Central Government. By
latter dated November 1, 1994 the respondent was informed
about his non-selection for staff appointment. The case of
the appellant is that a Special Selection Board for Corps
Appointment for the Corps of Engineers met on October 21,
1994 and the respondent was considered as a fresh case for
Corps Appointment as Lt. Gen. but he was not selected for
such Corps Appointment also. On the basis of letter dated
January 4, 1994 the respondent was retired from Army in the
rank of Maj. Gen. with effect from October 31, 1994.
Feeling aggrieved by his non-selection for Staff Appointment
in the rank respondent filed a Writ Petition in the Delhi
High Court which has given rise to this appeal.
The said Writ Petition was contested by the appellants
and it was submitted that the Special Selection Board for
promotion of officers in the rank of Maj. Gen. to the rank
of Ltd. Gen. consists of the Chief of the army Staff, as
Chairman, the Vice Chief of the Army Staff and Army
Commanders of Western Command, Southern Command, Central
Command, Eastern Command, Northern Command and Army Training
Command as members with Military Secretary as the secretary
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to the Board. It was also submitted that the Selection
Board grades each officer either fit or unfit on the basis
of the officer’s individual overall profile as well as
comparative merit of the whole batch after taking into
consideration the following materials:-
(a) War Reports
(b) All Annual Confidential Reports
(c) Professional courses done
alongwith gradings obtained
therein
(b) Honours and Awards
(e) Disciplinary background and
punishment
(f) Special Achievements and
weaknesses
(g) Employability and potential
including positive recommendations
for promotion to next higher rank.
The grading by the Selection Board is then placed
before the Chief of the Army Staff who, as COAS, then gives
his recommendations in this respect and thereafter the Board
proceeding alongwith all the relevant records are submitted
to the Central Government which is the final approving
authority. It was submitted that the case of the respondent
was considered for promotion from the rank of Maj. Gen. in
the ’Staff Stream’ as per the above procedure and that the
name of the respondent for promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen.
came up for consideration before the Special Selection Board
which met in January 1994, but the respondent had earned
only one CR in the rank of Maj. Gen. for the period from
December 1992 to June 1993 against the mandatory
requirements of two CRs his case was deferred till the next
Selection Board. The next Selection Board met in April 1994
but till then the respondent had earned only one CR and his
name was again deferred. The respondent was considered for
staff appointment by Special Selection Board which met in
July 1994 by which time the second CR for the period from
July 1993 to June 1994 was available. But the respondent
was not recommended for promotion by the Special Selection
Board taking into account the QRs prescribed for promotion
to the rank of Lt. Gen. in ’Staff Stream’ as well as
comparative merit and that the approval of the Central
Government to the non-recommendation of the respondent for
promotion was received on November 1, 1994. The respondent
was accordingly informed of the said decision on the same
date by letter dated November 1, 1194. The allegations
about arbitrariness, discrimination and capricious
considerations contained in the Writ Petition filed by the
respondent were denied by the appellants. It was submitted
that since the respondent was considered by the Special
Selection Board and the Central Government did not approve
him for promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen. as per laid down
norms he has no right to claim promotion and to seek the
issuance of any writ from the Court. During the course of
the hearing before the High Court the relevant records from
the Army Headquarters as well as the Ministry of Defence
concerning the recommendations relating to the respondent
and other officers were produced. On a perusal of the said
records the High Court has found that the respondent was not
considered fit for promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen. due to
following reasons:-
(a) The petitioner does not meet
the general Qualitative
Requirements (hereinafter referred
to as ’the QRs’) introduced in the
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year 1986 for promotion to the rank
of Lt. General; and
(b) The present assignment of the
petition in C-DOT is not a staff
appointment and since the
petitioner has not worked in the
Army appointment in the rank of
Major General and his full period
of service after he was promoted to
the rank of Major General has been
in C-DOT he cannot be considered
for promotion to a higher Army rank
(Lt. General).
The High Court has referred to the two ORs prescribed
for selection into the Staff Stream. While dealing with QR
No. (1) the High Court has observed that the performance of
the respondent in the Corps appointment undisputedly had
been of a very high order and that the said fact was clear
from the records produced from the Army Headquarters and
from the Ministry of Defence and even after his promotion
the performance of the respondent in his capacity as Major
General, on deputation with C-DOT, had been outstanding
(Excellent) which fact stands duly acknowledged even by the
Defence Secretary in his note dated September 22, 1994. As
regards QR No. (2) the High Court has referred to the stand
taken by the army Headquarters that the assignment of the
respondent with the C-DOT was not a ’staff appointment’ and
has held that the said stand was not correct for the reason
that after his promotion as Maj. Gen. the respondent was
sent on deputation with C-DOT by the Army authorities and
when the respondent was sent to C-DOT on deputation no
adverse career certificate was obtained from him and it was
clearly stated in his deputation order dated February 18,
1993 that the entire period of deputation would count in
full as effective commissioned service for the purpose such
as seniority, promotion, increment of pay, pensionary awards
and leave etc. in the Army. The High Court has also
observed that QRs do not specifically lay down that such
staff appointment outside the Corps should be held within
the Army and that the concerned authorities did not have a
very clear cut definition of ’staff appointment’. While
dealing with the QRs the High Court has held that none of
the QRs relied upon by the appellants in the counter
affidavit had been approved by the Government which was the
appointing authority in the instant case. The High Court has
also held that the QRs relied upon the appellants are at
variance with the policy letter dated February 5, 1992 which
shows that for consideration for promotion to the rank of
Lt. General there are only two requirements, namely, that
the officer should have held the appointment as Major
General for a period of 18 months and that the officer
should have earned minimum two reports during the above
period of 18 months and in the said policy letter there is
no mention of any other condition for promotion from the
rank of Major General to the rank of Lt. General. The High
Court, therefore, held that reason (a) given for the
respondent being not considered for promotion to the rank of
Lt. General could not be sustained. The High Court has also
gone into the question of comparative merit of the
respondent and other officers and has observed that a
perusal of the records reveals that by all standards the
performance of the respondent has been of such a high order
which merit his promotion an that officers with much
inferior record have been promoted to the rank of Ltd.
General. In this context, the High Court has mentioned the
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name of Lt. General Singhal (DGBR) whose record was stated
to be much inferior to that of the respondent bu the had
been promoted as Lt. General. In view of the aforesaid
findings the High Court has allowed the writ Petition filed
by the respondent and has quashed the letter dated November
1, 1994 issued by the Military Secretary Branch, Army
Headquarters as well as the letter dated January 4, 1994
insofar as it relates to the retirement of the respondent
from Army service with effect from October 31, 1994. The
High Court has directed the appellants to constitute within
six weeks from the dat of the said order a Special Selection
Board for considering the case of the respondent for
promotion to the rank of Lt. General in the Army and has
further directed that the Board thus constituted, while
considering the case of the respondent for promotion to the
rank of Lt. General in the army and has further directed
that the Board thus constituted, while considering the case
of the respondent shall apply the same criteria which were
applied by the Board held on July 18, 1994 except that it
shall also keep in mind the direction/observations given by
the High Court and while doing so shall treat the service
rendered by the respondent while on deputation with C-DOT,
at par with the service in the army and if by applying the
above standards the respondent is found fit for promotion,
the appellants shall promote him to the rank of Lt. General
in the Army from the date officer immediately junior to him
has been promoted to the said rank with all consequential
benefits and if, after considering the case of the
respondent in the manner stated above, it is found that the
respondent is still considered to be ’unfit’ the date of
retirement of the respondent shall remain unchanged and he
shall be deemed to have retired from the service of the Army
as Major General with effect from October 31, 1994. Feeling
aggrieved by the said decision of the High Court, the
appellants have filed this appeal.
The first question which requires consideration is
whether the QRs for promotion of Non-General Cadre officers
from the rank of maj. Gen. to the rank of Lt. Gen. on the
staff side had been approved by the Central Government.
Shri R.K. Anand, the learned senior counsel appearing on
behalf of the appellants, has urged that the High Court was
in error in holding that the Qrs had not been approved by
the Central Government. In support of this submission the
learned counsel has placed before us the relevant records
relating to the passing of order dated September 9, 1986.
The learned counsel had also invited our attention to the
decisions of this Court in Union of India & Anr. V. Mai.
Gen. Dayanand Khurana, 1991 (3) SCR 350, and Lt. General
R.K. Anand v. Union of India & Anr.,. 1991 (3) Supp. SCR
498. From a perusal of the records relating to the passing
of the order dated September 9, 1986 we find that the QRs
for the "Command and Staff Stream" and "Staff Only" Stream
were finalised in the note submitted to the Joint Secretary
(G) by the Military Secretary dated February 7, 1996 and the
Joint Secretary (G) In his note has specifically referred to
the proposed QRs. In the said note the Joint Secretary has
said:-
"In the proposed QRs, the emphasis
is on high order of performance in
Corps appointment as also on Staff
appointments outside the Corps.
Another essential requirement is
that the officer should be fit for
promotion to higher rank in his own
Arm/Service. It is also a
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requirement that an officer’s
qualifications, performance on
courses and experience should make
him eminently suitable to hold
senior Staff appointments on first
promotion.
These QRs will ensure that only the
best officers of the non-General
Cadre enter into the ’Staff Only’
stream of Maj. General and Lt.
General."
Thereafter the matter was placed before the Defence
Secretary and it was finally approved by the Prime Minister.
In Maj. Gen. Dayanand Khuranna (supra) this court has
mentioned that on May 31, 1986 the Government of India
approved, in principle, the "Two Stream" concept of career
management of Army Officer of the rank of Maj. Gen. to the
rank of Lt. Gen. subject to the following stipulations:-
"(a) The modalities fro
implementation of "Two Stream"
concept will be worked out by the
Army Headquarters and submitted to
Government for Information. This
will include identification of
appointments to be manned by
officers belonging to the "Staff
Only" Stream.
(b) The criteria and the QRs
formulated by the Army HQrs and
submitted to the Government vide
Army HQrs No. PC-01102/MS 9B dated
7th February, 1986 will be applied
for screening officers for
promotion to the two streams. It
will ensured that the QRs
prescribed for promotion to the
"command and Staff" stream are
stricter than those prescribed for
the "Staff Only" stream.
(c) A comprehensive review of the
working of the concept will be done
in 1987 and such amendments, as may
be necessary, will be put up to
Government for approval." (pp.
354,355).
In the said decision it has also been mentioned that
this approval of the Government was preceded by the approval
of the Prime Minister on May 26, 1986.
Similarly in Lt. General R.K. Anand
(supra) it has been stated:-
"In order to satisfy ourselves
whether the communication of 9th
September, 1986 had received the
concurrence of the concerned
Ministry, we inspected the
department file and found that the
matter was referred to the Ministry
of Defence and received the
approval of the Prime Minister."
(p.504)
It must, therefore, be held that the QRs for promotion
of Non-General Cadre officer from the rank of Maj. Gen. to
the rank of it. Gen. on which reliance has been placed by
the appellants had been approved by the Central Government
and the High Court was not right in holding that the said
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QRs had not been approved.
The next question which needs examination is whether
the said QRs can be said to have been superseded by the
letter dated February 5, 1992. The said letter may be
reproduced as under:-
"CONCEPT OF CRITERIA APPOINTMENTS
IN THE RANK FOR MAJOR GENERAL:
OTHER ARMS AND SERVICES
1. Reference MS Branch letter No.
04560/I/IX/MS: policy dated 22
April 90.
2. The concept of criteria
appointments for general officers
of supporting arms and services was
first introduced in 1984. This
issues was deliberated upon during
Army Commander’s Conference held
during Oct 91 and it was decided to
dispense with the concept of
criteria for officers of supporting
arms and services in the rank of
Maj. Gen.
3. Henceforth, all appointments
both within the Corps and outside,
in the rank of Maj. Gen. for
officers of supporting arms and
services will be treated as command
criteria appointments. However,
there is no change to the existing
requirements before Maj. Gens. of
supporting arms and services can be
considered for promotion to the
rank of Lt. Gen., which are as
follows:-
(a) The General Officer should have
held the appointment for a period
of 18 months.
(b) The General officer should have
earned minimum two reports during
the above period."
Shri Anand has submitted that this letter is primarily
concerned with the concept of "criteria appointment" in the
rank of Maj. Gen. for supporting Arms and Services. The
learned counsel has pointed out that the concept of
"Criteria appointments" for officers in the rank of Maj.
Gen. and Brig. was introduced in 1984 and appointments in
the rank of Maj. Gen. In Headquarters Commands were only
designated as criteria appointments. Since these
appointments were only five in number in Arms and Services,
it became very difficult for the management to exercise all
affected officers in criteria appointments before being
considered for promotion to the next rank and, therefore,
some selected appointments in Army Headquarters for
Artillery, Engineers and Signals were identified and
designated as criteria appointments. It was further found
that with the existing number of criteria appointments the
problem of truncated tenures and frequent moves had not been
fully resolved and it became necessary tenures and frequent
moves had not been fully resolved and it became necessary to
designate additional appointments as criteria appointments
to enable the management to have adequate flexibility and to
provide stable tenures and, as a result though a certain
amount of stability had been achieved in command tenure at
Brig. level, the tenures of Maj. Gen. continued to be short.
A decision was, therefore, taken at the Army Commander’s
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Conference during October 1991 to dispense with the concept
of criteria appointments for officers of supporting Arms and
Services in the rank of Maj. Gen. and to treat all
appointments, both within the Corps and outside, in the rank
of Maj. Gen., as criteria appointments. The submission is
that the letter dated February 5, 1992 gives effect to the
said decision taken at the army Commander’s Conference held
in October 1991. As regards promotion of Maj. Gen. of
supporting Arms and Services to the rank of Lt. Gen. the
said letter clarifies that no change was being made in the
existing requirements, namely, that (i) the General Officer
should have held the appointment for a period of 18 months
and (ii) the General Officer should have earned minimum two
reports during this period of 18 months. Shri Anand has
pointed out that the said two requirements were general
requirements which had been in operations ever since 1984
for the purpose of promotion from the rank of Maj. Gen. to
the rank of Lt. Gen. and the letter dated February 5, 1992
has to bearing on the QRs which had been adopted for the
purpose of promotion of Non-General Cadre officers from the
rank of Maj. Gen. to the rank of Lt.Gen. in the "Staff Only"
stream and that the fulfilment of the said QRs cannot be
said to have been dispensed by the letter dated February 5,
1992.
We find merit in the said contention of the learned
counsel. The letter dated February 5, 1992 primarily
relates to dispensing with the concept of criteria
appointments in the rank of Maj. Gen. In supporting Arms and
Services and gives effect to the decision taken at the Army
Commander’s Conference held in October 1991 and, as a result
all appointments, both within the Corps and outside, in the
rank of Maj. Gen. for officers of supporting Arms and
Services are to be treated as "Command Criteria
Appointments". The statement in the said letter that "there
is no change to the existing requirements before Maj. Gen.
of supporting arms and services can be considered for
promotion to the rank of Lt.Gen." only clarifies that the
said requirements would continue to be followed for such
promotion. Sine these requirements were in existence prior
to the adoption of the QRs in 1986, the reiteration of the
said requirements in the letter dated February 5, 1992 does
not, in any way, effect the operation of the QRs as adopted
in 1986 for the purpose of promotion of Non-General Cadre
officers from the rank of Maj. Gen. to the rank of Lt. Gen.
We are, therefore, unable to agree with the learned Judges
of the High Court that after letter dated February 5, 1992,
the QRs primarily adopted for the purpose of promotion of
Non-General Cadre officers from the rank of Maj. Gen. to the
rank of Lt. Gen. of "Staff Only" Stream had ceased to
operate.
It is, therefore, necessary to examine whether the
respondent satisfies the QRs for promotion of Non-General
Cadre officers from the rank of Maj. Gen. to the rank of Lt.
Gen. in the "Staff Only" Stream. As indicated earlier,
clause (b) of the said QRs requires that performance
on staff appointment should be of a high order and he should
be considered fit in all respect to hold various staff,
instructional and ERE appointments in the higher rank. The
question in whether the respondent has held staff
appointments outside his Corps as Brig./Maj. Gen. The
respondent has submitted that he fulfils the said
requirement and has pointed out that he has held the
following appointments:-
(a) Deputy Director General & Chief
Engineer with DGNP Vishakapatnam
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from April 1986 to December 1987,
in the rank of Brig.
(b) Deputy Director General Works
(Navy) at Army HQ Engineer-in-
Chief’s Branch from April 1988 to
September 1992 in the rank of Brig.
(c) Deputy Commandant College of
Military Engineering, Pune from
October 1992-December 1992 in the
rank of Maj. Gen.
(d) Chief Project Manager,
redesignated as Engineer-in-Chief
(Works), C-DOT, New Delhi from 28th
December 1992-31 October, 1993 in
the rank of Maj. Gen.
On behalf of the appellants Shri Anand has urged that
neither of these appointments can be regarded as a Staff
appointment as envisaged in clause (b) of the Qrs. The
submission is that Staff appointment that is contemplated in
the said clause (b) of the QRS is other than the Corps Staff
appointment and contemplates graded staff appointment
outside the Corps so that the officer can have the essential
expertise to hold specified staff appointment in the rank of
Lt. Gen. which does not belong to any particular Arm or
Service. It has been submitted that the various
appointments held by the respondent, namely, Deputy Director
and Chief Engineer with Director General Naval Project,
Visakhapatnam as Brig, Deputy Director General Works (Navy)
at Army Headquarters, Engineer-in-Chief Branch as Brig. and
Deputy Commandant, College of Military Engineering, Pune in
the rank of Maj. Gen. were all Corps appointments and were
not graded staff appointments. As regards his appointment
as Chief Project Manager, redesignated as Engineer-in-Chief
(Works), C-DOT, it was submitted that though, in view of
letter dated February 5, 1992 the period of deputation with
C-DOT was to be treated as a part of effective commissioned
service in the Army for the purpose of promotion, the said
appointment had to be treated only as a Corps Staff
appointment which could be counted for the purpose of Corps
appointment on the post of Lt. Gen., and that the said
appointment with C-DOT could not be treated as a Staff
appointment for the purpose of clause (b) of the QRs. It was
pointed out that the respondent was considered for promotion
to the rank of Lt. Gen. In a corps appointment by the
Special Selection Board which met on October 21, 1994 but he
was not selected. The submission is that period of service
of the respondent with C-DOT was taken into consideration
for the purpose of promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen. and it
is not correct to say that the terms on which the respondent
jointed C-DOT on deputation as contained in the letter dated
February 5, 1992 were not given effect to.
Shri Mukul Rohtagi, the learned senior counsel
appearing for the respondent, has urged that the word "Staff
appointment" In clause (b) of the QRs covers all Staff
appointments whether within the Corps or outside Corps and,
therefore, the experience of the respondent on the post held
by him as Brig. and Maj. Gen., including his experience with
C-Dot, had to be treated as Staff appointment for the
purpose of promotion to the post of Lt. Gen. on the "Staff
Only" Stream. We find it difficult to accept this
contention. Clause (b) of the QRs envisages that the staff
has to be a Staff appointment outside the Corps and
performance of the officer on such appointment should be of
higher order so that he can be considered fit in all
respects to hold various staff, instructional and extra
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regimental (ERE) appointments in the higher rank. A Corps
Staff appointment only enables an officer to acquire
experience of the work relating to his Arm or Service and
does not enable him to acquire experience in other fields
which is necessary for promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen. on
the "Staff Only" Stream. The performance of the officer on
a Corps Staff appointment is already covered by clause (a)
of the QRs which requires that the performance of the
officer in Corps appointment should be of a very high order.
Since Corps appointments [which would include a Corps Staff
appointment] are already covered by clause (a), the Staff
appointment in clause (b) must necessarily mean a Staff
appointment outside the Corps. We are, therefore, in
agreement with the submission of Shri Anand that clause (b)
of the QRs only contemplates a Staff appointment outside the
Corps. Since the appointments held by the respondent, both
as Brig. and Maj. Gen., including that with the C-DOT, were
Corps appointments and were not graded Staff appointments,
it cannot be said that he fulfilled the qualitative
requirement contemplated in clause (b) of the QRs. We,
therefore, of not find any infirmity in the recommendation
of the Special Selection Board treating him unfit for
promotion to the rank of Lt. Gen. in the "Staff Only" stream
which recommendation had been approved by the Central
Government.
The High Court was, therefore, in error in interfering
with the said decision of the Central Government and
quashing the order dated November 1, 1994. Once it is held
that there is no infirmity in the non-selection of the
respondent for promotion from the rank of Maj. Gen. to the
rank of Lt. Gen. by the Special Selection Board which met in
July 1994, the respondent had to retire as Maj. Gen. after
attaining the age of 56 years on October 31, 1994 and the
direction contained in the letter dated January 4, 1994
regarding his date of superannuation from the Army has been
rightly issued and the High Court was in error in quashing
the same. In the impugned judgment the High Court here are
adverse remarks against the functionaries at the higher
level both at the Army Headquarters as well as in the
Ministry of Defence. The said remarks, in our opinion, were
uncalled for and are, therefore, set aside.
In the result, the appeal is allowed, the impugned
judgment of the High Court dated November 10, 1995 is set
aside and the Writ Petition filed by the respondent is
dismissed. In the circumstances there is no order as to
costs.