Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAKSHISH SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/09/1998
BENCH:
S.Saghir Ahmad, S. Rajendra Babu.
JUDGMENT:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, J.
The respondent who was a police constable in Punjab
was dismissed from service on 1.6.1998 after a regular
departmental enquiry on the charge of unauthorised absence
from duty. This order was challenged by the respondent in a
suit filed in the trial court on 16.7.1990 which was decreed
on 12.5.1993 and the order of dismissal was set aside as it
was found by the trial court that the defendants having
themselves regularised and treated the period of
respondent’s absence from duty as the "period of leave
without pay", could not legally say that he was guilty of
misconduct for unathourised absence from duty. The trial
court also recorded a finding that the respondent’s
statement that he was not given an opportunity of personal
hearing and that his signatures were obtained under duress
in the departmental proceedings was not controverted by the
appellant as no evidence was produced by the appellant in
defence.
The decision of the trial court was challenged in
appeal before the District Judge which was disposed of by
the Addl.District Judge, Jalandhar on 15.1.1995 with the
following findings :
"In view of the above brief discussion, I
am of the considered opinion that once
period of absence is treated as leave of
the kind whatsoever, the fact that the
delinquent remained absent form duty
cannot be sustained after the person has
been treated on whatsoever kind it may be.
Thus the findings of the learned lower
court upon this matter are hereby
confirmed."
Having affirmed the findings of the trial court that
the charge of absence from duty did not survive, the lower
appellate court proceeded to consider the question whether
absence form duty was a misconduct of the gravest kind so as
to warrant the maximum penalty of "dismissal from service"
or it was a mer "misconduct" for which lesser punishment
would be appropriate. Having found that it was not a case
of misconduct of the gravest kind. the lower appellate
court remanded the case back to the punishing authority for
passing a fresh order of punishment. The appellant then
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filed a second appeal in the High Court which was dismissed
summarily.
It will thus be seen that the trial court as also
the lower appellate court has both recorded the findings
that the period of absence from duty having been regularised
and converted into leave without pay, the charge of absence
from duty did not survive. Once it was found as a fact that
the charge of unauthorised absence from duty did not
survive, we fail to understand how the lower appellate court
could remand the matter back to the punishing authority for
passing a fresh order of punishment. In the face of these
findings, specially the finding of the trial court that
proper opportunity of hearing was not given and the
signatures of the respondents were obtained under duress
during departmental proceedings with have not been set aside
by the lower appellate court, we are of the view that there
was no occasion to remand the case to the punishing
authority merely for passing a fresh order of punishment.
Learned counsel for the appellant contended that
respondent has not filed nay cross appeal and, therefore,
the order of remand passed by the lower appellate court for
a fresh order of punishment need not be interfered with,
particularly as that order has been upheld by the High Court
which had summarily dismissed the second appeal filed by the
State of Punjab. If, therefore, this Court intervenes in
the matter even in exercise of its power under Article 142
of the Constitution, the same would be without jurisdiction.
This contention cannot be accepted.
A Constitution Bench of this Court in Supreme Court
Bar Association vs. Union of India & Anr. AIR 1998 SC 1895
has already held that while exercising power under Article
142 of the Constitution, the court cannot ignore the
substantive rights of a litigant while dealing with a cause
pending before it. The power cannot be used to "supplant"
substantive law applicable to a case. The court further
observed that Article 142, even with the width of its
amplitude, cannot be used to build a new edifice where none
existed earlier, by ignoring express statutory provisions
dealing with a subject and thereby achieve something
indirectly which cannot be achieved directly.
In this case, what we propose to do would be fully
in consonance with the provisions of order XLI Rule 33 which
provides as under :
"ORDER XLI - APPEAL FROM ORIGINAL DECREES:
33. Power of Court of Appeal - The
Appellate Court shall have power to pass
any decree and make any order which ought
to have been passed or make and to pass or
made such further or other decree or order
as the case may require, and this power
may be exercised by the Court
notwithstanding that the appeal is as to
part only of the decree and may be
exercised in favour of all or any of the
respondents or parties, although such
respondents or parties may not have filed
any appeal or objection and may, where two
or more decrees are passed in one suit, be
exercised in respect of all or any of the
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decrees, although an appeal may not have
been filed against such decrees.
Provided that the Appellate Court shall
not make any order under Section 35-A, in
pursuance of any objection on which the
Court from whose decree the appeal is
preferred has omitted or refused to make
such order."
This provision gives very wide power to the
appellate court to do complete justice between the parties
and enables it to pass such decree or order as ought to have
been passed or as the nature of the case may require
notwithstanding that the party in whose favour the power is
sought to be exercised has not filed any appeal or
cross-objections.
The direction, however, has to be exercised with
care and caution and that too in rare cases where there has
been inconsistent findings and an order or decree has been
passed which is wholly uncalled for in the circumstances of
the case. The appellate court cannot, in the garb of
exercising power under Order XLI Rule 33, enlarge the scope
of the appeal. Whether this power would be exercised or not
would depend upon the nature and facts of each case.
The powers of the appellate court are also indicated
in Section 107 of the Code of Civil Procedure which provides
that the appellate court shall have the same powers as are
conferred on the original court. If the trial court could
dispose of a case finally, the appellate court could also,
by virtue of clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section 107,
determine a case finally. In R.S.Lala Praduman Kumar vs.
Virendra Goyal & Ors. AIR 1969 SC 1349, it was held that
the appellate court could even relieve against forfeiture in
a case under the Transfer of Property Act. This too was
based on the principle that the power which was available to
the original court, could be exercised by the appellate
court also.
Applying the above principles to the instant case,
it will be noticed that the trial court recorded a
categorical finding of fact that a proper opportunity of
hearing was not afforded to the respondent in the
departmental proceedings and that his allegation that his
signatures on certain papers during those proceedings were
obtained under duress, was not controverted as the State of
Punjab had lead no evidence in defence. The trial court
also recorded a finding that unauthorised absence from duty
having been regularised by treating the period of absence as
leave without pay, the charge of misconduct did not survive.
It was with this finding that the suit was decreed. The
lower appellate court confirmed the finding that since the
period of unauthorised absence from duty was regularised,
the charge did not survive but it did not say a word about
the finding relating to the opportunity of hearing in the
departmental proceedings. Since those findings were not
specifically set aside and the lower appellate court was
silent about them, the same shall be treated to have been
affirmed. In the face of these findings, it was not open to
the lower appellate court to remand the case to the
punishing. The High Court, before which the second appeal
was filed by the State of Punjab, did not advert itself to
this inconsistency as it dismissed the appeal summarily,
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which indirectly reflects that it allowed an inconsistent to
pass through its scrutiny.
It is in circumstances that we, in exercise of our
power of doing complete justice between the parties, finally
decide this appeal and the whole case by providing as under
:
(a) The appeal is allowed.
(b) The judgment dated 15.1.1996 passed by the lower
appellate court in so far as it purports to remand
the case to the punishing authority as also the
judgment of the High Court dated 21.8.1996 are set
aside.
(c) The judgment and decree passed by the trial
court is upheld.
There will be no order as to costs.