Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS..
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DINANATH SHATARAM KAREKAR & ORS..
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/07/1998
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, G.B. PATTANAIK.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G E M E N T
The original respondent, Dinanath Shantaram Karekar,
who died during the pendency of the proceedings before the
Central Administrative Tribunal Bombay and has since been
replaced by the present respondents, was appointed as
unskilled labour in the Naval Armament Depot, Bombay. He
was subsequently promoted to the post of Gun Repair
Labourer, Grade-I. On 25th October, 1973, he was declared
quasi-permanent on that post with effect from 1.8.1966. He
was, however, removed from service by order dated 19th
August, 1985 after regular departmental enquiry. This order
was upheld in the Departmental appeal. The order of removal
as also the appellate order were challenged by him before
the Tribunal on the grounds, inter alia, that neither the
charge sheet nor the show-cause notice were ever served upon
him and, therefore, the entire proceedings are vitiated.
The Tribunal has found that the charge sheet which was
issued to him by registered post was returned with the
postal endorsement "not found", while the show-cause notice
was published straightaway in Dainiki Sagar, Navshakti. The
Tribunal found the service of the charge-sheet and the show
cause notice on the respondent as insufficient and
therefore, set aside the order dated 19th August, 1985, by
which be was removed from service.
Learned counsel for Union of India has strenuously
urged that since the respondent had been absenting himself
from the office unauthorisedly, the service of charge sheet
sent to him through registered post should be treated as
sufficient. This contention cannot be accepted.
Respondent was as employee of the appellant His
personal file and the entire service record was available in
which his home address also had been mentioned. The charge
sheet which was sent to the respondent was returned with the
postal endorsement "not found". This indicates that the
charge sheet was not tendered to him even by the postal
authorities. A document sent by registered post can be
treated to have been served only when it is established that
it was tendered to the addressee. Where the addressee was
not available even to the postal authorities, and the
registered cover was returned to the sender with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
endorsement "not found", it cannot be legally treated to
have been served. The appellant should have made further
efforts to serve the charge sheet on the respondent. Single
effort, in the circumstances of the case, cannot be treated
as sufficient. That being so, the very initiation of the
departmental proceedings was bad. It was ex-parte even from
the stage of charge sheet which, at no stage, was served
upon the respondent.
So far as the service of show cause notice is
concerned, it also cannot be treated to have been served.
Service of this notice was sought to be effeected on the
respondent by publication in a newspaper without making any
earlier effort to serve him personally by tendering the show
caunse notice either through the office peon or by
registered post. There is nothing on record to indicate
that the newspaper in which the show-cause notice was
published was a popular newspaper which as expected to be
read by the public in general or that it had wide
circulation in the area or locality where the respondent
lived. The show-cause notice cannot, therefore, in these
circumstances, be held to have been served on the
respondent. In any case, since the very initiation of the
disciplinary proceedings was bad for the reason that the
charge sheet was not served, all subsequent steps and
stages, including the issuance of the show-cause notice
would be bad.
Lastly, in order to save the lost battle, a novel
argument was raised by the learned counsel for the
appellant. He contended that since the charge-sheet as also
the show-cause notice, at different stages of the
disciplinary proceedings, were despatched and had been sent
out of the office so that no control to recall it was
retained by the department, the same should be treated to
have been served on the respondent. It is contended that it
is the communication of the charge-sheet and the show-cause
notice which is material and not its actual service upon the
delinquent. For this proposition, reliance had been placed
on the decision of this Court in State of Punjab and others
Vs. Balbir Singh etc., AIR 1977 SC 629.
This decision has been misread, misunderstood and is
now being misapplied by the counsel for the appellants in
the instant case.
As would appear from the persual of that decision,
the law with regard to "Communication" and not Actual
Service" was laid down in the context of the order by which
services were terminated. It was based on a consideration
of the earlier decisions in State of Punjab . Khemi Ram,
AIR 1970 SC 214; Bachhittar Singh Vs. State of Punjab, 1962
Supp. (3) SCR 713 = AIR 1963 SC 395; State of Punjab Vds.
Amar Singh Harika, AIR 1966 SC 1313 and S. Pratap Singh Vs.
State of Punjab, (1964) 4 SCR 733 = AIR 1964 SC 72. The
following passage was quoted from S> Pratap Singh’s
Judgement (supra):-
"It will be seen that in all the decisions cited
before us it was the communication of the impugned order
which was held to be essential and not its actual receipt by
the officer concerned and such communication was held to be
necessary because till the order is issued and actually sent
out to the person concerned the authority making such order
would be in a position to change its mind and modify it if
it thought fit. But once such an order is sent out, it goes
out of the control of such an authority, and therefore,
there would be no chance whatsoever of its changing its mind
or modifying it. In our view, once an order is issued and
it is sent out to the concerned government servant, it must
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
be held to have been communicated to him, No matter when he
actually received it."
It was in this background that in cases where
services are terminated or a person is dismissed from
service, communication of the order and not its actual
service was held to be sufficient. But this principle
cannot be invoked in the instant case.
Where the services are terminated, the status of the
delinquent, as a Government servant, comes to an end and
nothing further remains to be done in the matter. But if
the order is passed and merely kept in the file, it would
not be treated to be an order terminating services nor shall
the said order be deemed to have been communicated.
Where the disciplinary proceedings are intended to
be initiated by issuing a charge-sheet, its actual service
is essential as the person to whom the chargesheet is issued
is required to submit his reply and, thereafter, to
participate in the disciplinary proceedings. So also, when
the show-cause notice is issued, the employee is called upon
to submit his reply to the action proposed to be taken
against him. Since in both the situations, the employee is
given an opportunity to submit his reply, the theory of
"Communication" cannot be invoked and "Actual Service" must
be proved and established. It has already been found that
neither the charge-sheet nor the show-cause notice were ever
served upon the original respondent, Dinanath Shantaram
Karekar. consequently, the entire proceedings were
vitiated.
For the reasons stated above, we do not find any reason to
interfere with the findings recorded by the Tribunal. The
appeal has no merit and is dismissed with no order as to
costs.