Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF HARYANA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI P.C. WADHWA, IPS INSPECTOR GENERAL OFPOLICE & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1987
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1201 1987 SCR (2)1030
1987 SCC (2) 602 1987 SCALE (1)799
ACT:
All India Services (Confidential Rolls)
Rules 1970--Rules 1(3), 2(a), (e), (f), 5, 6,
6A and 7--Inspector General of Police Confi-
dential Reports--Reporting and Reviewing
Authority--Minister-in-Charge of Police De-
partment and not Home Secretary--Chief Minis-
ter-Communication of adverse remarks within
seven months.
Police Act, 1861--Sections 3 and 4--Punjab
Police Rules, 1934--Rule 1.2--Inspector Gener-
al of Police-Head of Police Department-Immedi-
ate superior to Inspector General of Po-
lice--Minister-in-Charge of Police Department.
Business of Haryana Government (Alloca-
tion) Rules, 1974 Rules 14, 6B-Home Secretary
not head of Police Department-Minister-in-
Charge of Police Department Head of Depart-
ment-Confidential Report of Inspector General
of Police--Chief Minister reviewing authority
and accepting authority--Whether Business
Rules can override the provisions of Police
Act, 1861 or any other statutory rules.
Civil Service--Confidential
Reports--’reporting’ and ’reviewing’ authori-
ty--Who is--Inspector General of
Police--Minister-in-Charge of Police Depart-
ment--Chief Minister--’Reporting’, ’reviewing’
and ’accepting’ authority--Adverse
remarks--Object-to serve as advice for im-
provement and not as punishment--Lost by
inordinate delay in communication--Necessity
for communication--At the earliest.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a member of the Indian
Police Service was the Inspector General of
Police, Haryana from June 30, 1979 to July 25,
1980. The Home Secretary to the Government of
Haryana made certain adverse remarks against
the respondent which after acceptance were
communicated to the respondent on May 4, 1982,
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about two years and three months after the
close of the relevant period on March 31,
1980.
The respondent filed a writ petition
challenging the authority of the Home Secre-
tary to write a confidential report assessing
the per-
1031
formance, character, conduct and qualities of
the respondent as Inspector General of Police
and for the quashing of such report or adverse
remarks, which was dismissed by a Single Judge
of the High Court. The respondent filed an
appeal and the Division Bench set aside the
judgment of the Single Judge and allowed the
writ petition holding that the Home Secretary
had no authority to submit any report against
the performance of the respondent for the
aforesaid period during which he was the
Inspector General of Police, Haryana.
In the appeal by special leave by the
State of Haryana it was submitted that as the
Police Department has been placed under the
Home Department and the Home Secretary being
the head of the Department, the Home Secretary
must necessarily be the Head of the Police
Department under the Business of the Haryana
Government (Allocation) Rules, 1974. It was
also stated that the provisions of Rules 5, 6,
6A and 7 of the All India Services (Confiden-
tial Rolls) Rules 1970 are directory and not
mandatory.
It was urged by the respondent that the
Business Rules framed under Article 166 cannot
be relied upon for the purpose of interpreting
the provisions of clause (e) of Rule 2 of the
Rules, and in view of the delay in communica-
tion, the adverse remarks lost all importance
and should be struck down on that ground.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1. A reporting authority must be a
person to whom the member of the Service is
answerable for his performances. Such an
authority must be one superior in rank to the
member of the Service concerned. The State
Government can specifically empower only such
authority as the reporting authority as is
superior in rank to the Inspector General of
Police. [1036H; 1037A-B]
2.1 The Business Rules have been framed
under clauses (2) and (3) of Article 166 of
the Constitution for the more convenient
transaction of the business of the Government
of Haryana and for the allocation of business
among the Ministers. [1038E-F]
2.2 Under Rule 4 of the Business Rules,
the Secretary of each Department of the Secre-
tariat is the head of the Department. Thus,
the Secretary of the Home Department is the
head of the Home Department being a Department
of the Secretariat, but merely because he has
to conduct the business. on behalf of the
Government, of the Police
1032
Department, he does not thereby become the
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Head of the Police Department. [1038F-G]
2.3 The Rules of Business that have been
framed under Article 166 cannot override the
provisions of the Act, or any statutory rules.
3. In view of Section 3 and 4 of the
Police Act read with Rule 1.2 to the Punjab
Police Rules, the Inspector General of Police,
Haryana is the Head of the Police Department.
The immediate authority superior to Inspector
General of Police is the Minister-in-Charge of
the Police Department. The only authority who
could be specifically empowered as the report-
ing authority in regard to the Inspector
General of Police under clause (e) of Rule 2
of the All India Services (Confidential Rolls)
Rules is the Minister-in-Charge and the Chief
Minister being superior to the Minister-in-
Charge may be the reviewing authority under
clause (f) of Rule 2. [1039D-E]
4.1 Rules 5, 6, 6A and 7 of the All India
Services (Confidential Rolls) Rules require
that the whole process from the writing of the
confidential reports assessing the perform-
ance, character conduct and qualities of every
member of the service, to the communication of
the adverse remarks should be completed within
a period of seven months. In the instant case,
the adverse remarks were communicated after 27
months. [1040F-G]
4.2 The whole subject of the making and
communication of adverse remarks is to give to
the officer concerned an opportunity to im-
prove his performance, conduct or character,
as the case may be, and this object would be
lost if they are communicated to the officer
concerned after an inordinate delay. Adverse
remarks should not be understood in terms of
punishment, but really should be taken as an
advice to the officer concerned, so that he
can act in accordance with the advice and
improve his service career. [1041A-B]
4.3 Rules 5, 6, 6A and 7 are directory and
not mandatory, but that does not mean that the
directory provisions need not be complied with
even substantially. But, where compliance
after an inordinate delay would be against the
spirit and object of the directory provision,
such compliance would not be substantial
compliance. [1041C-D]
4.4 While the provisions of Rules 5, 6, 6A
and 7 require that everything including the
communication of the adverse remarks should be
completed within a period of seven months,
this period cannot be
1033
stretched to twenty seven months, simply
because these rules are directory, without
serving any purpose consistent with the spirit
and objective of these Rules. [1041D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 4395 of 1986.
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From the Judgment and Order dated
10.8.1984 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
in L.P.A. No. 748 of 1983.
F.S. Nariman, S.S. Shroff and Mrs. P.S.
Shroff for the Appellant.
Respondent in person.
R.K. Garg, and A. Saran for the Intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUTT, J. This appeal by special leave has
been preferred by the State of Haryana against
the judgment of the Division Bench of the High
Court of Punjab & Haryana whereby the Division
Bench has set aside the judgment of a learned
Single Judge of the High Court dismissing the
writ petition of the respondent Shri P.C.
Wadhwa, a member of the Indian Police Service.
who was the Inspector General of Police,
Haryana, from June 30, 1979 to July 25, 1980.
It appears that certain adverse remarks
were made by the Home Secretary to the Govern-
ment of Haryana against Shri Wadhwa, the
Inspector General of Police for the said
period. The adverse remarks were duly accepted
by the competent authority under the All-India
Services (Confidential Rolls) Rules, 1970,
hereinafter referred to as ’the Rules’. After
such acceptance, the adverse remarks were
communicated to Shri Wadhwa by the Home Secre-
tary by his letter dated May 4, 1982, about
two years three months after the close of the
relevant period of March 31, 1980. The re-
spondent did not make any representation
against the adverse remarks to the reviewing
authority under the Rules. Instead, he chose
to file a writ petition before the Punjab &
Haryana High Court challenging the authority
of the Home Secretary to write a confidential
report assessing the performances, character,
conduct and qualities of the respondent as the
Inspector General of Police and prayed for the
quashing of such report or adverse remarks.
1034
A learned Single Judge of the High Court
took the view that as the Home Secretary was
specifically empowered by the State Government
as the reporting authority under Rule 2(e) of
the Rules, he had the authority to write the
report or to make adverse remarks against the
performances of the Inspector General of
Police, Haryana. In that view of the matter,
the learned Single Judge dismissed the writ
petition. Being aggrieved by the judgment of
the learned Single Judge, the respondent filed
an appeal against the same to the Division
Bench of the High Court and, as stated al-
ready, the Division Bench set aside the judg-
ment of the learned Single Judge and allowed
the writ petition holding inter alia, that the
Home Secretary had no authority to submit any
report against the performance of the respond-
ent for the aforesaid period during which he
was the Inspector General of Police, Haryana.
Hence this appeal by special leave by the
State of Haryana.
The only point that is involved in this
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appeal is whether the State Government was
justified in specifically empowering the Home
Secretary as the reporting authority for the
purpose of writing a confidential report in
respect of the Inspector General of Police.
Section 3 of the All-India Services Act, 1951
empowers the Central Government to make rules
for the regulation of recruitment, and the
conditions of services of persons appointed to
an All-India Service. By virtue of section 3,
the Central Government framed the Rules. Under
Rule 1(3), the Rules shall apply to the writ-
ing and the maintenance of the confidential
reports on the members of the Service. Clauses
(e), (f) and (a) of Rule 2 of the Rules are as
follows:-
"2. Definitions--In these rules, unless the
context otherwise requires:-
(e) ’reporting authority’ means the
authority who was, during the period for which
the confidential report is written, immediate-
ly superior to the member of the Service and
such other authority as may be specifically
empowered in this behalf by the Government;
(f) ’reviewing authority’ means the authority
who was,
1035
during the period for which the confidential
report is written, immediately superior to the
reporting authority and such other authority
as may be specifically empowered in this
behalf by the Government;
(a) ’accepting authority’ means the
authority who was, during the period for which
the confidential report is written, immediate-
ly superior to the reviewing authority and
such other authority as may be specifically
empowered in this behalf by the Government;"
In this connection, it may be pointed out that it is not
disputed that the conjunction ’and’ occurring in clauses
(e), (f) and (a) should be read as ’or’. Under clause (e),
the ’reporting authority’ may be either immediately superior
to the member of the Service or such other authority as may
be specifically empowered in this behalf by the Government.
The expression ’immediately superior’ obviously indicates
that the reporting authority should be the immediate superi-
or officer in the same Service to which the member of the
Service belongs. The position is the same as in the cases of
’reviewing authority’ and ’accepting authority’. So, under
the first part of clause (e), the reporting authority of the
respondent could be a person who is immediately superior to
him in the Police Service. At this stage, it is necessary to
refer to sections 3 and 4 of the Police Act, 1861. Sections
3 and 4 are as follows:-
"Section 3. The superintendence of the police
throughout a general police-district shall
vest in and shall be exercised by the State
Government to which such district is subordi-
nate; and except as authorized under the
provisions of this Act, no person, officer, or
Court shall be empowered by the State Govern-
ment to supersede, or control any police func-
tionary.".
"Section 4. The administration of the police
throughout a general police-district shall be
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vested in an officer to be styled the Inspec-
tor-General of Police, and in such Deputy
Inspectors-General and Assistant Inspectors-
General as to the State Government shall seem
fit.
The administration of the Police
throughout the local jurisdiction of the
Magistrate of the district shall, under the
general control and direction of such Magis-
trate, be vested
1036
in a District Superintendent and such Assist-
ant District Superintendents as the State
Government shall consider necessary,"
It is clear from sections 3 and 4 that the administra-
tion of the police throughout a general police-district
shall be vested in the Inspector General of Police. The
position and status of the Inspector General of Police have
been described in Rule 1.2 of the Punjab Police Rules, 1934,
Volume I. Rule 1.2 provides as follows:-
"Rule 1.2. The responsibility for the command
of the police force, its recruitment, disci-
pline, internal economy and administration
throughout the general police district vests
in the Inspector-General of Police. He is head
of the Police Department, and is responsible
for its direction and control and for advising
the Provincial Government in all matters
connected with It. In the discharge of his
duties as Inspector-General arid in the execu-
tion of order of Government he is bound to act
in conformity with the system and regulations
regarding the functions, discipline and admin-
istration of the Force contained, in the
Police Act (V of 1861) and in these rules.
Orders of the Provincial Government affecting
the Police force, in whole or in part, will be
issued through him.
Inspector-General is assisted in the
control and administration of the Police force
by such number of Deputy Inspectors-General
and Assistant Inspectors General as the Pro-
vincial (Government may from time to time
appoint."
Under Rule 1.2, the Inspector General of Police is the
head of the Police Department and is responsible for its
direction and control and for advising the Provincial Gov-
ernment in all matters connected with it. Thus, the Inspec-
tor General of Police being the head of the Police Depart-
ment, there is no immediately superior officer to him in the
Police Service. Consequently, the first part of clause (e)
will not have any application to the respondent.
Now the question is whether the State Government can
specifically empower any authority to be the reporting
authority of the Inspector General of Police under the
second part of clause (e). Apart from any legal provision,
it is just and proper that a reporting authority
1037
must be a person to whom the member of the Service is an-
swerable for his performances. In other words, the reporting
authority should be a person higher in rank than the member
of the Service. Indeed, that is apparent from the first part
of clause (e). It is true that under the second part of
clause (e), there is no indication as to the status and
position of the authority who may be specifically empowered
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by the Government as the reporting authority, but from the
point of view of propriety and reasonableness and having
regard to the intention behind the rule which is manifest,
such an authority must be one superior in rank to the member
of the Service concerned. If that be not so, there will be
an apparent conflict between the first part and second part
of clause (e). We are, therefore of the view that the State
Government can specifically empower only such authority as
the reporting authority as is superior in rank to the In-
spector General of Police.
It is, however, submitted by Mr. Nariman, learned Coun-
sel appearing on behalf of the State of Haryana, that the
Home Secretary is the head of the Police Department under
the Business of the Haryana Government (Allocation) Rules,
1974, hereinafter referred to as the Business Rules. The
Business Rules have been framed by the Haryana Government in
exercise of the power conferred by clauses (2) and (3) of
Article 166 of the Constitution of India. Rules 1 to 4 of
the Business Rules are as follows:-
"1. These rules may be called the Busi-
ness of the Haryana Government (Allocation)
Rules, 1974.
2. The Business of the Government of the
State of Haryana shall be transacted in the
Departments specified in the Schedule annexed
to these rules and shall be classified and
distributed among those Departments as laid
down therein.
3. The Governor shall, on the advice of
the Chief Minister, allot among the Ministers
the business of the Government by assigning
one or more Departments to the Charge of a
Minister.
Provided that nothing in this rule shall
prevent the assigning of one Department to the
charge of more than one Minister.
4. Each Department of the Secretariat shall
consist of the
1038
Secretary to the Government, who shall be the
official head of that Department, and of such
other officers and servants subordinate to him
as the State Government may determine:
Provided that:-
(a) more than one Department may be
placed in charge of the same Secretary; and
(b) the work of a Department may be
divided between two or more Secretaries."
Rule 2 provides inter alia that the Business of the
Government of the State of Haryana shall be transacted in
the Departments specified in the Schedule. Under rule 4 each
Department of the Secretariat shall consist of the Secretary
to the Government, who shall be official head of that De-
partment. In the Schedule to the Business Rules, Item No. 17
under the Home Department inter alia relates to "Police,
Railway Police and P.A.P." Much reliance has been placed by
the learned Counsel for the State of Haryana on Rule 4 read
with Item No. 17. It is submitted by him that the Home
Secretary being the head of the Home Department and as the
Police Department has been placed under the Home Department,
the Home Secretary must necessarily be the head of the
Police Department. We are unable to accept this contention.
The Business Rules have been framed under clauses (2) and
(3) of Article 166 of the Constitution for the more conven-
ient transaction of the business of the Government of Har-
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yana and for the allocation of business among the Ministers.
Under Rule 4, the Secretary of each Department of the Secre-
tariat is the head of that Department. Thus, the Secretary
of the Home Department is the head of the Home Department
being a Department of the Secretariat, but merely because he
has to conduct the business, on behalf of the Government, of
the Police Department, he does not thereby become the head
of the Police Department. Item No. 37 under the General
Administration Department in the Schedule relates to Judges
of the High Court and officers of the Superior Judicial
Service. The Chief Secretary of the Government of Haryana is
the head of the General Administration Department by virtue
of Rule 4 of the Business Rules. But that does not mean that
the Chief Secretary is also the head of the Administration
relating to the Judges of the High Court and officers of the
Superior Judicial Service. Similarly, Item No. 21 of the
General Administration Department relates to Council of
Ministers and its
1039
Committees. Surely, the Chief Secretary has no authority
whatsoever on the Council of Ministers and its Committees.
There is, therefore, no substance in the contention made on
behalf of the appellant that as Police, Railway Police and
P.A.P. have been placed under the Home Department, the
Secretary of the Home Department is the head of the Police
Department by virtue of Rule 4 of the Business Rules. The
Rules of Business that have been framed under Article 166
cannot override the provisions of the Act or any statutory
rules. Indeed, the Business Rules also do not attempt to
override Rule 1.2 of the Punjab Police Rules, for it cannot.
There is much substance in the contention made by the re-
spondent appearing in person and Mr. Garg, learned Counsel
appearing on behalf of the intervener, the IPS Officers’
Association, that the Business Rules framed under Article
166 cannot be relied upon for the purpose of interpretating
the provision of clause (e) of Rule 2 of the Rules.
In view of sections 3 and 4 of the Police Act read with
Rule 1.2 of the Punjab Police Rules, the Inspector General
of Police, Haryana, is the head of the Police Department.
The immediate authority superior to the Inspector General of
Police is the Minister-in-Charge of the Police Department.
The only authority who could be specifically empowered as
the reporting authority in regard to the Inspector General
of Police under clause (e) of Rule 2 of the’ Rules is the
Minister-in-Charge and the Chief Minister, being superior to
the Minister-in-Charge, may be the reviewing authority under
clause (f) of Rule 2. In acting as the reporting authority
the Minister-in-Charge may be assisted by the Home Secre-
tary, but the confidential report relating to the perform-
ance of the Inspector General of Police has to be written by
the Minister-in-Charge. The Minister-in-Charge of the Police
Department is supposed to be aware of the performance of the
Inspector General of Police. As the Chief Minister is the
reviewing authority, he will also act as the accepting
authority on the basis of the principle as laid down under
Rule 6B of the Rules providing that where the accepting
authority writes or reviews the confidential report of any
member of the Service, it shall not be further necessary to
review or accept any such report. In other words, the Chief
Minister will act both as the reviewing authority and the
accepting authority.
In this connection, we may notice the statements made in
the writ petition filed by the respondent in the High court
of Punjab & Haryana. It has been stated in paragraph 14 that
reports of the work and conduct of the various Secretaries
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to the Government are written and recorded by the Minister-
in-Charge of the Departments concerned
1040
and not even by the Chief Secretary so that the Minister-in
Charge of the Departments concerned are the ’immediate
superior’ authorities to the Secretaries concerned within
the meaning of Rule 2(e) of the Rules. Further, it has been
stated that before independence the report on the work and
conduct of the Inspector General of Police, Punjab, was
being recorded by the Minister-in-Charge of the Department
and such a position continued even after the independence
till 1974 when the Haryana State Government passed the order
dated May 3, 1974 under clause (e) of Rule 2 of the Rules,
inter alia, specifically empowering the Home Secretary as
the reporting authority for writing out the confidential
reports in regard to the Inspector General of Police, Har-
yana. The statements made in paragraph 14 have not been
denied by the State of Haryana in its counter-affidavit
filed in the High Court. The Division Bench of the High
Court was, therefore, perfectly justified in quashing the
confidential report written by the then Home Secretary on
the work and conduct of the respondent Shri Wadhwa.
Before we part with this appeal, we may dispose of
another contention of the respondent about the delay in
communicating to him the impugned adverse remarks. Under
Rule 5 of the Rules, a confidential report assessing the
performances, character, conduct and qualities of every
member of the service shall be written for each financial
year, or calendar year, as may be specified by the Govern-
ment, ordinarily within two months of the close of the said
year. Rule 6 provides that the confidential report shall be
reviewed by the reviewing authority ordinarily within one
month of its being written. Under Rule 6A, the confidential
report, after review, shall be accepted with such modifica-
tions as may be considered necessary, and countersigned by
the accepting authority, ordinarily within one month of its
review. Thus, the whole process from the writing of the
confidential report to the acceptance thereof has to be
completed ordinarily within a maximum period of four months.
Further, under Rule 7 the adverse remarks, if any, in a
confidential report shall be communicated to the officer
concerned within three months of the receipt of the confi-
dential report. Thus, a total period of seven months has
been laid down as the maximum period within which adverse
remarks, if any, has to be communicated to the officer
concerned. It has been already noticed that the adverse
remarks were sent to the respondent after two years three
months, that is, after twenty seven months of the close of
the year. It is submitted by the respondent that in view of
the delayed communication. the adverse remarks lost all
importance and should be struk down on that ground.
1041
The whole object of the making and communication of
adverse remarks is to give to the officer concerned an
opportunity to improve his performance, conduct or charac-
ter, as the case may. The adverse remarks should not be
understood in terms of punishment, but really it should be
taken as an advice to the officer concerned, so that he can
act in accordance with the advice and improve his service
career. The whole object of the making of adverse remarks
would be lost if they are communicated to the officer con-
cerned after an inordinate delay. In the instant case, it
was communicated to the respondent after twenty seven
months. It is true that the provisions of Rules 5, 6, 6A and
7 are directory and not mandatory, but that does not mean
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that the directory provisions need not be complied with even
substantially. Such provisions may not be complied with
strictly, and substantial compliance will be sufficient.
But, where compliance after an inordinate delay would be
against the spirit and object of the directory provision,
such compliance would not be substantial compliance. In the
instant case, while the provisions of Rules 5, 6, 6A and 7
require that everything including the communication of the
adverse remarks should be completed within a period of seven
months, this period cannot be stretched to twenty seven
months, simply because these Rules are directory, without
serving any purpose consistent with the spirit and objec-
tives of these Rules. We need not, however, dilate upon the
question any more and consider whether on the ground of
inordinate and unreasonable delay, the adverse remarks
against the respondent should be struck down or not, and
suffice it to say that we do not approve of the inordinate
delay made in communicating the adverse remarks to the
respondent.
For the reasons aforesaid, this appeal is dismissed.
There will, however, be no order as to costs.
N.P.V. Appeal dis-
missed.
1042