Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
YASHWANT SINGH KOTHARI ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE BANK OF INDORE AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/01/1993
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (1) 208 1993 SCC Supl. (2) 592
JT 1993 (1) 247 1993 SCALE (1)121
ACT:
State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959/State Bank
of Indore (Officers) Service Regulations, 1979:
Sections 11(1) and 63/Regulation 19-Transfer of services of
employees of existing banks-Age of retirement-Fixing
retirement of officers after completion of 30 years service
-Whether arbitrary-Whether an exercise of excessive
delegation-Differentiation between nationalised banks and
subsidiary banks-Whether discriminatory-Whether regulation
applicable to existing employees.
Constitution of India, 1950:
Articles 14 and 16-Age of retirement-Differentiation between
officers of subsidiary banks and nationalised banks-Whether
discriminatory-Regulation 19 of State Bank of Indore
Officers Service Regulations, 1979 providing for retirement
on completion of 30 years service-Whether valid.
Words and Phrases-"Tenure"-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants, employees of the first respondent-Bank, who
were initially in the employment of a Limited Bank, which
ceased to exist with effect from 1.1.1960 and became a
subsidiary bank in the wake of State Bank of India
(Subsidiary Bank) Act, 1959, were made to retire before
attaining the age of 58 years on different dates, but upon
completing 30 years of actual service, in exercise of powers
under Regulation 19(1) of the State Bank of Indore
(Officers) Service Regulations, 1979. .The Writ Petitions
flied by the appellants challenging their retirement on the
basis of the Regulations were dismissed by the High Court.
In the appeals before this Court on behalf of the
appellants, it was contended that their retirement age of 58
years was statutorily protected under Section 11(1) of the
Act as a ’tenure’ and since there existed no provision in
the Act for retiring an officer on completion of 30 years of
209
service, the Regulation providing so, was an exercise of
excessive delegation of legislative powers, and was
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution, that the
Regulations which were the progeny of Section 63(1) of the
Act, could in no event, be inconsistent with the Act and the
Rules made thereunder, that since the date of superannuation
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
was fixed at 58 years for employees/officers who could claim
protection of Section 11, Regulation 19 providing another
alternative for effecting retirement upon the completion of
30 years of service, even though 58 years had not been
attained, subject to its occurring first, was an onslaught
on that statutory protection, that on the plain language of
Section 11 of the Act, the security of ’tenure’ protected in
the first part of the provision was not liable to change as
the word ’tenure’ was significantly missing in the later
part whereunder change is postulated, and therefore,
’tenure’ of service could in no event be altered by any
change, revision or alteration by the corresponding new
bank, that Regulation 19 could not apply in the case of the
appellants as existing officers, and that when retirement
age at 58 was the consistent policy for public employment,
its curtailment by the alternative of 30 years service, if
happening earlier, was discriminatory and violative of
Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
HELD : 1.1. What is protected under Section 11 (1) of
the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959 is the
right of the employee of the corresponding new bank to hold
office or service therein on the same tenure, at the same
remuneration and upon the same terms and conditions and with
the same rights and privileges as to bonus, gratuity and
other matters, as he would have held the same on the
appointed day, if the undertaking of the existing bank had
not been transferred to and vested, In the corresponding new
bank. That state of affairs is to last unless and until the
services of the employee In that bank are terminated or
until his removal, or other terms and conditions of service
are revised or altered by the corresponding new bank under,
or in ’pursuance of any law, or in accordance with any
provision which, for the time being, governs his service.
[215C-D]
1.2. The legislature in enacting Section 11(1) of the
Act cannot be attributed the fault of tautology to have used
the word ’tenure’ as explanatory of the expression ’terms
and conditions of service, or Inclusive
210
of it. Even if it is assumed that there was total
protection of fixed tenure offices or services, unalterable
under the second part of the provision, fixation of age of
superannuation cannot be said to fix a tenure of office or
service. [215G-H, 216A]
1.3. In the instant case, the appellants have nowhere
ever set up a case that they hold tenure posts or their
services were tenurial, or have pleaded that they had any
fixity of tenure of a specified duration on laid down In
their contract of service. Rather, throughout they have
claimed to have joined service in the lower rungs of the
banking service and to have risen to the posts of officers
by the time they were asked to retire. Therefore, providing
for the date of retirement is not to fix a ’tenure’ as
retirement, as ordinary incidence of service. [215F]
1A. In service jurisprudence the word ’tenure’ has acquired
a legal sense or connotation which may mean a fixed term
during which an office is held. [215E]
1.5. The purpose of the Act, as spelt out from the Preamble
of the Act, is to provide for formation of subsidiary
banks for the State Bank of India and for the
Constitution, management and control of subsidiary banks so
formed and for matters connected therewith or incidental
thereto. Section 63 empowers the State Bank of India to
frame Regulations for the purpose of giving effect to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
provisions of the Act. One such purpose is to lay down
conditions and limitations subject to which the subsidiary
banks may appoint officers, advisers and other employees and
fix their remuneration and other terms and conditions of
service. Co-relating the enabling provisions under Section
63 and Regulation 19 framed thereunder, the terms and
conditions so laid thereunder would definitely go to alter
or revise the conditions of service of the existing officers
as contemplated in the second part of Section 11. The
manner in which such power is exercised is nowhere arbitrary
because the State Bank of India is hedged on the one side to
seek approval of the Reserve Bank of India and the Act and
the Rules made thereunder on the other, when making Regula-
tions in respect of the subsidiary banks. The policy of
providing a retirement rule such as one in Regulation 19, is
reflective of a policy and It is uniform for all employees
existing and joining in future, for all subsidiary banks
uniformly. Conditions of service under Section 11 were
protected till revised or altered in accordance with law.
It cannot, therefore, be held
211
that Regulation 19 cannot apply in the case of appellants,
as existing officers. [216C-F, B]
1.6. It Is not correct to say that the Regulations are
ultra vires the Act, being exercise of excessive delegation.
The power to frame Regulations State Bank of India, which
has to work out the policy of retirement uniformally to sub-
serve the interests of the subsidiary banks. The so called
protection In Section 11 is not absolute but conditional to
change by the same intendment of the legislature.The
provision In the Regulation in question for maintaining the
age of retirement of 58 years as before but in the same
breath permitting retirement on the completion of 30 years
of service, whichever occurs earlier, Is in keeping with the
policy of reckoning a stated number of years of office
attaining the crest, whereafter inevitably is the descent,
justifying retirement In this context 30 years period of
active service is not a small period for gainful employment,
or an arbitrary exercise to withhold the right to hold an
office beyond 30 years, having not attained 58 years of age.
[216G, 217C]
K. Nagaraj and Ors. etc. etc. v. Chief Secretary of Andhra
Pradesh A.I.R. 1985 S.C. 551, relied on.
2. The bank nationalisation and creation of subsidiary
banks of the nationalised banks have a history of their own.
The employees of the two are rationally differentiated on
the basis of policy. The employees of the subsidiary banks
cannot claim equation with the employees of the nationalised
banks to be retiring at the age of 58 years, on the basis
that the employees of the nationalised banks are not
retirable on completion of 30 years of service. [218B]
B.S. Yadav & Anr. v. The Chief Manager, Central Bank of
India & Ors., A.I.L 1987 S.C. 1706, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 127 of 1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17.1.89 of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in M.P. No. 1187 of 1985.
WITH
212
Civil Appeal No. 128 of 1993.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 129 of 1993.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
M.C. Bhandare, S.K Jain and Ms. Pratibha Jain for the
Appellants.
A.K. Sanghi A.V. Rangam and A. Ranganadhan for the Respon-
dents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PUNCHHI, J. Special leave granted in these three connected
petitions.
Each appellant in these appeals was an employee of the
State bank of Indore (a subsidiary bank of the State Bank of
India), the first respondent in these appeals. They were
initially in the employment of the Bank of Indore Limited
which ceased to exist with effect from 1.1.1960 and became a
subsidiary bank known as the State Bank of Indore, in the
wake of the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959
(hereafter referred to as the "Act"). The existing
employees of the kind of the appellants claimed to have
certain service rights protected under section 11 of the
aforesaid Act inclusive of the right to continue till the
age of 58 years. They were however made to retire before
attaining the age of 58 years on different dates, but upon
completing 30 years of actual service. The subsidiary bank
claims to have exercised powers under Regulation 19(1) of
the State Bank of Indore (officers) Service Regulations,
1979 (hereafter referred to as the ’Regulations"), in taking
such steps.
The respective appellants moved the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh under Article 226 of the Constitution claiming inter
alia that Regulation 19 could not be invoked in their cases
and, if it all it could, then that was ultra vires and in
exercise of excessive delegation of legislative powers made
over to the State Bank of India under section 63 of the Act.
The High Court by a common judgment dated 17-1-1989
dismissed the writ petitions of the appellants being
Miscellaneous Petition No. 1187 of 1985, Miscellaneous
Petition No. 3532 of 1988 and Miscellaneous Petition No.
3197 of 1986, respectively. While these were put to
challenge, it was felt by this Court on 26.2.1992 that the
State Bank of India, though originally not a respondent
213
before the High Court, should be added as a party since the
impugned Regulation 19 had been framed by the Central Board
of Directors of the State Bank of India under the powers
conferred on it by Section 63 of the Act. Notice
accordingly was given to the State Bank of India and
apparently its stance is supportive of the impugned
Regulation.
When the Act came into force on 1.1.1960 and the subsidiary
bank, the State Bank of Indore, came into existence, the age
of superannuation of its employees was clearly 58 years.
The Regulations came into force on October 1, 1979, almost
19 years later. The field pre-existing was governed by
office circulars and departmental practices besides section
11(1) of the Act, which provided as follows:
TRANSFER OF SERVICES OF EMPLOYEES OF EXISTING
BANKS:
"Save as otherwise provided in this Act, every
employee of an existing Bank in the employment
of that bank immediately before the appointed
day, shall, on and from that day, become an
employee of the corresponding new bank and
shall hold his office or service therein by
the same tenure at the same remuneration and
upon the same terms and conditions and with
the same rights and privileges as to pension,
gratuity and other matters as he would have
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
held the same on the appointed day, if the
undertaking of the existing bank had not been
transferred to and vested in the corresponding
new bank and shall continue to do so unless
and until his employment in that bank is ter-
minated or until his remuneration or other
terms and conditions of service are revised or
altered by the corresponding new bank under,
or in pursuance of any law, or in accordance
Kith any provision which, for the time being
governs, his service."
(emphasis ours).
And then Regulation 19(1), in so far is
relevant, provides as follows:
"AGE OF RETIREMENT - 19(1):
An officer shall retire from the service of
the Bank of attaining the age of fifty-eight
years of upon the completion of thirty
214
years service, whichever occurs first:
Provided further that the competent authority
may, at its discretion, extend the period of
service of an officer who has attained the age
of fifty-eight years or has completed thirty
years service as the case may be, should such
extension be deemed desirable in the interest
of the Bank.’
The thrust of the claim of the appellants was and is
that their retirement age of 58 years was statutorily
protected under section 11(1) as a ’tenure" and since there
existed no provision in the Act for retiring an officer on
completion of 30 years of services, the Regulation providing
so, is an exercise of excessive delegation of legislative
powers. To put it differently, it is suggested that the
measure is a violent transgression on the security of tenure
statutorily protected and was violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution.
The Regulations are the progeny of Section 63(1) of the
Act which empowers the State Bank of India to make
Regulations in respect of subsidiary banks with the approval
of the Reserve Bank of India. Those Regulations can in no
event be inconsistent with the Act and the Rules made
thereunder, and may provide for all matters for which
provision is necessary and expedient for the purpose of
giving effect to the provision of the Act. Clause (m) of
sub-section (2) of Section 63 provides that in particular
and without prejudice to the generalities of the power under
subsection (1), such Regulations may provide for the
conditions and limitations subject to which the subsidiary
bank may appoint officers, advisers and other employees and
fix their remuneration and other terms and conditions of
service. As is plain from the reading of Section 11(1) of
the Act, while protection of existing terms and conditions
of service is guaranteed under Section 11, that protection
lasts so long as those terms and conditions are not revised
or altered under, or in pursuance of any law, or in
accordance with any provision, which governed the service.
Since the age of superannuation was fixed at 58 years for
employees/officers who could claim protection of section 11,
Regulation 19 providing another alternative for effecting
retirement upon the completion of 30 years of service, even
though 58 years had not been attained, subject to its
occurring first, was said to be an onslaught on that
statutory protection, if the Regulation was taken to apply
to the service conditions of the existing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
215
officers. But in case it was meant to apply prospectively
and not to the existing officers, the appellants have no
grievance. Secondly it was asserted that on the plain
language of Section 11 of the Act, the security of ’tenure"
protected in the first part of the provision was not liable
to change as the word "tenure" was significantly missing in
the later part whereunder change is postulated. On that
basis it was suggested that "tenure" of service could in no
event be altered by any change, revision or alteration by
the corresponding new bank.
Now let us examine the second argument first. What is
protected under section 11(1) on the employee of the
corresponding new bank is his right to hold office or
service therein on the same tenure at the same remuneration
and upon the same terms and conditions and with the same
rights and privileges as to bonus, gratuity and other
matters, as he would have held the same on the appointed
day, if the undertaking of the exiting bank had not been
transferred to and vested in the corresponding new bank.
That state of affairs is to last unless and until the
services of the employee in that bank are terminated or
until his removal or other terms and conditions of service
are revised or altered by the corresponding new bank under,
or in pursuance of any law, or in accordance with any
provision which, for the time being, governs his service.
If holding of office or service by the same "tenure’ is
unalterable as excludingly urged on behalf of the appellants
by Mr. Murli Bhandare, Sr. Advocate, then on testing we
find no basis for the same. No-where have the appellants in
their respective special leave petitions or writ petitions
annexed thereto ever asserted that they hold ’tenure’ posts
or their services were tenurial. In service jurisprudence
the word "tenure’ has acquired a legal sense or connotation
which may mean a fixed term during which an office is held.
The appellants have nowhere ever set up such a case before
the High Court or to have pleaded that they had any fixity
of tenure of a specified duration, laid down in their
contract of service. Rather the appellants throughout have
claimed to have joined service in the lower rungs of the
banking service and to have risen to the posts of officers
by the time they were asked to retire. There is thus no
room for the argument that providing for the date of
retirement was to fix a "tenure’ as retirement as ordinary
incidence of service. The legislature in enacting Section
11(1) of the Act cannot be attributed the fault of tautology
to have used the word ’tenure’ as explanatory of the
expression "terms and conditions of service or inclusive of
it; this far we may go with the appellants. Even if we go
that long to say that there was total protection of fixed
tenure offices or services, unalterable
216
under the second part of the provision, the appellants gain
nothing, for they have not laid the necessary foundation for
that claim ever. Therefore we are of the view that there is
no substance in the argument that fixation of age of
superannuation is to fix a tenure of office or service. The
argument thus fails.
The other argument of the appellants that Regulation 19
cannot apply to the case of the appellants as existing
officers is also of no merit because, as is plain,
conditions of service under section 11 were protected till
revised or altered in accordance with law. The purpose of
the Act, as spelled out from the preamble of the Act, is to
provide for formation of subsidiary banks for the State Bank
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
of India and for the constitution, management and control of
subsidiary banks so formed and for matters connected
therewith or incidental thereto. Section 63, as has been
noticed earlier, empowers the State Bank of India to frame
Regulations for the purpose of giving effect to the
provisions of the Act. One such purpose is to lay down
conditions and limitations subject to which the subsidiary
banks may appoint officers, advisers and other employees and
fix their remuneration and other terms and conditions of
service. Co-relating the enabling provisions under section
63 and Regulation 19 framed thereunder, the terms and
conditions so laid thereunder would definitely go to alter
or revise the conditions of service of the existing officers
as contemplated in the second part of Section 11. The
manner in which such power is exercised is nowhere arbitrary
because the State Bank of India is hedged on the one side to
seek approval of the Reserve Bank of India and the Act and
the Rules made thereunder on the other, when making
Regulations in respect of the subsidiary banks. The policy
of providing a retirement rule such as one in Regulation 19,
is reflective of a policy and it is uniform for all
employees existing and joining in future, for all subsidiary
banks uniformly.
The third submission about the Regulations being ultra
vires the Act, being exercise of excessive delegation too is
of no substance when viewed in the scheme of things. As
observed earlier, the power to frame Regulations is vested
not in the executive government but in a nationalised bank,
the State Bank of India, which has to work out the policy of
retirement uniformally to sub-serve the interests of the
subsidiary banks. The so called protection in Section 11 is
not absolute but conditional to change by the same
intendment of the legislature.
In K Nagaraj and others etc. etc. v. Chief Secretary of
Andhra Pradesh,
217
AIR 1985 SC 551 this Court repelled a challenge to the
reduction of retirement age from 58 to 55 on the basis of
the policy of the Government, which was found not to be
irrational or violating recognised norms of employment plan.
It was also noticed that not to provide for an age of
retirement at all would be contrary to public interest
because the State cannot afford the luxury of allowing its
employee to continue in service after they have passed the
point of peak and that rules of retirement do not take away
the right of a member to his livelihood, the only limit is
to the right to hold office till the stated number of years.
The provision in the Regulation in hand for maintaining the
age of retirement at 58 years as before but in the same
breath permitting retirement on the completion of 30 years
of service, whichever occurs earlier, is in keeping with the
policy of reckoning a stated number of years of office
attaining the crest, whereafter inevitably is the descent,
justifying retirement. In this context 30 years period of
active service is not a small period for gainful employment,
or an arbitrary exercise to withhold the right to hold an
office beyond thirty years, having not attained 58 years of
age.
Much reliance was placed by learned counsel for the
parties on B.S. Yadav & another v. The Chief Manager,
Central Bank of India & others, AIR 1987 SC 1706 in support
of their respective contentions. It was contended on behalf
of the respondent bank that Section 12(2) of the Banking
Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act,
1970 was pari materia the same as section 11(1) of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
present Act and Regulation 19 framed under the former Act
was akin to Regulation 19 of the present Regulation
providing for different ages of retirement of two categories
of employees. As is evident from the Report those two
classes were those falling under Rules 1 and 2 of "Rules of
Age of retirement" for whom the age of retirement was 60
years and those falling under Rule 3 for whom the age of
retirement was 58 years, depending on the date of
recruitment of promotion being prior to or after the
appointed day i.e. 19th July, 1969. This Court ruled that
the classification so made was valid as it satisfied the
tests laid down under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution
because this Court could not say, in the circumstances, that
the attitude of the nationalised bank was unreasonable,
particularly when the age of retirement of 58 years of the
post 19th July, 1969 entrants was consistent with the
conditions prevailing in almost all the sectors of public
employment. But on the other hand it was contended by the
appellants that when retirement age at 58 was the consistant
policy for public employment, as
218
laid down in B.S. Yadav’s case, its curtailment by the
alternative of 30 years service, if happening earlier, is
discriminatory and violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. We are not impressed by this argument. The
bank nationalisation and creation of subsidiary banks of the
nationalised banks have a history of their own. The
employees of the two are rationally differentiated on the
basis of policy. The employees of the subsidiary banks
cannot claim equation with the employees of the nationalised
banks to be retiring at the age of fifty eight years, on the
basis that the employees of the nationalised banks are not
retirable on completion of 30 years of service.
No other point of substance remains to be discussed even
though the parties by their written submissions submitted
much after the close of the case made an effort to expand
the controversy.
For the fore-going reasons, we find no substance in these
appeals which are dismissed without any order as to costs.
N.P.V. Appeals dismissed.
219