Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI RATI PAL SAROJ & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, D.P. WADHWA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
The respondent Rati Pal Saroj was, at the material
time, Under Secretary, Union Public Service Commission as a
Grade - I Officer of the Central Secretariat Service. He
appeared for the Civil Service Examination 1985. On the
basis of the results declared the respondent was offered an
appointment to the Indian Administrative Service by a letter
dated 31st July, 1986. The respondent was offer of
appointment by his telegram of 5th August, 1986.
Under the letter of appointment respondent was required
to join the Lal Bahadur Shastri Nation Academy of
Administration, Mussoorie as a probationer on 24th August,
1986. A copy of joining instructions was also enclosed with
the letter of appointment. The respondent was, however, not
relieved from the post of Under Secretary, Union Public
Service Commission’s letter to the respondent dated 22nd
August, 1986 directed the respondent not to hand-over charge
of his office or get relieved as Under Secretary, Union
Public Service Commission until he got specific orders in
this regard. Since he was not relieved from his post the
respondent could not join the Indian Administrative Service
as a probationer at the National Academy of Administration,
Mussoorie. In 7th September, 1986 C.B.I. registered a
complaint against the respondent and certain other person to
the effect that the respondent and these persons had entered
into a criminal conspiracy where by the originally written
answer-papers of the respondent in the Civil Services
Examination were clandestinely removed and substituted by
other answer-papers. The respondent had abused his official
position as a public servant and an official of the Union
Public Service Commission in doing so. The appellant, by
letter dated 9th September, 1986 withdrew its offer of
appointment to the Indian Administrative Service made to the
respondent by the letter of 31st July, 1986 and stated that
the same should be treated as cancelled. The respondent was
detained in custody on 10th September, 1986. He was
suspended from Central Secretariat Service with effect from
10th September, 1986 and a departmental inquiry was also st
arted. The respondent was served with a charge-sheet on 21st
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November, 1986. However, on the application of the
respondent, the departmental inquiry has been ordered to be
kept in abeyance because of the pending criminal
proceedings.
The respondent filed an application before the Central
Administrative Tribunal challenging the withdrawal/
cancellation of his appointment to the Indian Administrative
Service by the letter of 9th September, 1986. The Tribunal
held that the offer could not have been withdrawn after
acceptance; if such a step became necessary the principles
of natural justice would warrant giving a hearing to the
respondent. So long as the respondent was not relieved from
his previous post the offer of appointment should be treated
as if it were in abeyance. The offer could not be withdrawn.
The tribunal, therefore, allowed the application of the r
espondent. Hence the present appeal by the appellant.
The above facts show that the respondent had been
offered an appointment to the Indian Administrative Service
which he had accepted. The respondent, however, could not
join Indian Administrative Service as a probationer within
the prescribed period because he was not relieved from his
previous post. Before the respondent could join the Indian
Administrative Service as a probationer, the appointment is
withdrawn or cancelled. Therefore, one thing at least is
clear - the respondent was not a probationer in the Indian
Administrative Service on the date when his appointment was
withdrawn or cancelled. He held the post of a Grade -I
Officer in the Central Secretariat Service on the date when
the appointment was withdrawn and he continues to hold that
post.
What is the position of the respondent? Once an
appointment order is issued, is it open to the Government to
withdrawn that appointment on bona fide ground before the
prospective employee actually joins service; or is the
Government required to hold a departmental inquiry or give a
hearing to the prospective employee? Obviously, the employer
will have no right to hold a departmental inquiry because
the employee has not joined service and is, therefore, not
amenable to the Service Rules of the employer. The only
question, therefore, is whether a hearing necessarily needs
to be given to the prospective employee before the
appointment letter can be withdrawn, or whether this will
depend on the facts and circumstances of each case.
Our attention was drawn to The Indian Administrative
Service (Appointment by Competitive Examination)
Regulations, 1955, framed under the Indian Administrative
Service (Recruitment) Rules, 1954. The regulations provide
for holding of examination by the Public Service Commission
and the manner in which this examination is to be held.
Regulation 11 deals with Disciplinary action. Under this
regulation a candidate for the examination who has been
declared by the Commission to be guilty of, inter alia,
using unfair means during the examination may, in addition
to rendering himself liable to criminal prosecution, be
labile, inter alia, if he is already in service under the
Government, to disciplinary action under the appropriate
rules. Regulation 13 provides as follows :-
"13. Inclusion in List Confers no
Right to Appointment - The
inclusion of a candidate’s name in
the list confers no right to
appointment unless the Central
Government is satisfied, after such
enquiry as may be considered
necessary, that the candidate
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having regard to his character and
antecedents is suitable in all
respects for appointment to the
Service."
Therefore , even though a candidate’s name may be
included in the select list, he has no right to appointment
and the Central Government is entitled to satisfy itself
about the character and antecedents of the candidate before
offering him an appointment. Therefore, it is open to the
Central Government not to offer appointment to a candidate
although he is on the select list if the Central Government
is not satisfied about his character or antecedents. There
is no question of any enquiry or hearing at this stage
because no right is created in favour of a candidate whose
name is on the select list. If the candidate is offered
appointment and joins, he is governed by the Indian
Administrative Service (Probation) Rules of 1954. Under Rule
12 of these Rules, a probationer shall be liable to be
discharged from service or, as the case may be, reverted tot
he permanent post on which he holds a lien if, inter alia, t
he Central Government is satisfied that he is unsuitable for
being a member of the Service or he is found lacking in
qualities of mind and character needed for the Service. The
proviso to this Rule requires that except in the case of a
probationer’s services being terminated for failure to pass
the re-examination, in all other cases the Central
Government shall hold a summary enquiry before passing an
order.
The respondent, in the present case, in the strict
sense, governed by Regulation 13 of The Indian
Administrative Service (Appointment by Competitive
Examination) Regulations, 1955, since the appointment has
been withdrawn after the appointment order was issued an
not before. The Indian Administrative Service (Probation)
Rules of 1955 also do not apply to the respondent because he
does not belong to the Indian Administrative Service as a
probationer. He is in the intermediate stage of a person who
has accepted the appointment offer but has not joined the
new service. What are his rights?
His position appears more akin to the position of a
selected rather than a probationer because he has not joined
the new service when the appointment is cancelled. He
continues to belong to the Service which he had joined and
to which he belonged prior to his present selection. One
thing at least is clear - he cannot have higher rights than
a probationer. It is well settled that a probationer’s
service can be terminated during the period of probation if
he is found unsuitable. No enquiry is necessary for such
termination of the services of a probationer. In the case of
Samsher Singh v. State of Punjab & Anr. [1974 (2) SCC Page
831], a Bench of this court consisting of seven Judges,
inter alia, held that the services of a probationer can be
terminated when the authorities are satisfied regarding his
inadequacy for the job, or unsuitability for temperamental
or other reasons not involving moral turpitude, of when his
conduct may result in dismissal or removal but without a
formal enquiry. An enquiry is necessary only when the
termination is by way of a punishment, and to determine this
the substance of the order and not the from is decisive. The
same position has been re-affirmed in Anoop Jaiswal v.
Government of India & Anr. [1984 (2) SCC 369] where the
decision on Samsher Singh v. State of Punjab (supra) has
been quoted extensively. Before a probationer is confirmed,
the authority concerned is under an obligation to consider
whether the work of the probationer is satisfactory or
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whether he is suitable for the post. If it comes to the
conclusion that the probationer is not suitable he is
liable to the discharged. he cannot, in this situation,
claim the benefit of Article 311(2).
There is no reason why the same right to terminate the
offer of appointment on the ground of the prospective
employee’s unsuitability should be denied to the Central
Government. An employee who has not yet joined the Central
Government Service cannot be put on a higher pedestal that a
probationer. If an employee who has been offered a post by
the Central Government is not in a position to join on the
date fixed under the appointment letter and there is no
prospect of his joining for several years to come, the
Central Government would be entitled to terminate the
appointment as the person appointed is not available to the
Central Government within a reasonable time of the
appointment and hence he is not suitable. This does not cast
any stigma nor is it a punishment for the prospective
employee. If the employee has a right to be appointed by
virtue of his acceptance of the offer of appointment hat
right has to be exercised within a reasonable tome. It is
not a right which remains for an indefinite period of time.
In the same way, if the Government discovers after the offer
of appointment, circumstance relating to the prospective
employee which make him unsuitable for the post, the
appointment can be cancelled. If the circumstances raise a
doubt about the suitability of the candidates for the post
or the Service in question, the doubt should be dispelled
within a reasonable time. Otherwise the employer is entitled
to cancel the appointment. This is not by way of a
punishment nor does it case a stigma on the prospective
employee.
Learned counsel for the respondent relied upon a
decision of this Court in Sharwan Kumar Jha & Ors. v. State
of Bihar & Ors. [1991 supp. (1) SCC 330] where the
appellants were appointed as Assistant Teachers and were
required to join the schools by a specified date. There was
a dispute whether they had joined the s chools or not when
an order was passed cancelling their appointments. This
Court said that in the facts and circumstance of the case
the appellants should have been given a hearing before
cancelling their appointments. This decision turns on the
facts and circumstances of the case, especially when there
was a dispute as to whether the teachers had actually joined
or not joined. This decision will have no application to the
present case where it is quite clear that the respondent was
not even a Probationer at the time when his appointment was
withdrawn.
In the present case looking to the facts and
circumstances it was not necessary to give a hearing to the
respondent. It is urged that the withdrawal of appointment
was on account of the F.I.R. filed against the respondent
and, therefore, the respondent should have been hard and
given a opportunity to present his case before withdrawing
his appointment. Or his appointment should be kept in
abeyance till he is found guilty or acquitted. The earlier
correspondence, however, shows that the respondent was
unable to join as a Probationer on the due date because he
was not being relieved from his post. The Central Government
thereafter learnt why the respondent was not being relieved
from his post. If thereafter it came to a conclusion that
the respondent was not a suitable person, or that it was not
possible to wait for a long period for the respondent to
join, it would be entitled to withdraw the appointment.
Indian Administrative Service is a premier administrative
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service of the Central Government. All those who are members
of the Indian Administrative Service are called upon to disc
harge heavy responsibilities which require on the part of an
incumbent to the post the highest degree of probity,
rectitude, and an impeccable character. If in the facts and
circumstances of the present case the Central Government
decided that the respondent was unsuitable to be given a
post in the Indian Administrative Service, the decision
cannot be faulted. The impugned letter merely withdraws the
e offer of appointment. It casts no stigma. So long as the
decision is taken bona fide on relevant facts and in the
interest of the service it cannot be faulted.
The appeal is allowed, the impugned order of the
Tribunal is set aside and the application filed by the
respondent before the Central Administrative Tribunal is
dismissed with costs.