Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MS. SAVITA SAMVEDI AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/01/1996
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
VENKATASWAMI K. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCC (2) 380 JT 1996 (1) 680
1996 SCALE (1)598
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Punchhi, J.
Special leave granted.
This appeal voices a cry for gender justice.
The two appellants before us are a married daughter and
father. The second appellant was in service of the Indian
Railways. While in service, he was allotted quarter No.
30/3, Railway Colony, Kishan Ganj, Delhi. He was due to
retire on 31.12.1993. It is a different matter that he was
permitted to retain the railway quarter for the maximum
permissible period of eight months thereafter upto
31.8.1994. Much prior to retirement, the second appellant on
18.3.1993 requested the railway authorities concerned in
permitting his married daughter, the first appellant to
share the accommodation allotted to him on the basis that
she was a railway employee at Delhi described as "Sr.
S.O./T.A./D.K.Z.". He pointed out that he had two sons
working out of Delhi, but neither of them was a railway
employee, whereas his married daughter was one, and he
needed her to look after him and his ailing wife. His
request was granted favorably in as much as on 31.5.1993
permission was granted to the first appellant to share
railway quarter of her father with effect from 16.3.1993
with the rider that she would not be entitled for
regularization of the railway quarter after the retirement
of the second appellant. All the same, a day short of the
retirement of the second appellant, the first appellant laid
claim to the regularization of the quarter contending that
her brothers were not in a position to look after her
parents, whereas she was, and would in future also look
after her parents. The prayer was declined on 31.1.1994 on
the ground that a married daughter was not eligible for
regularization of a railway quarter. The second appellant
also made a representation to the Divisional and
Superintending Engineer (Estates, Northern Railways, quoting
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instances where regularization of railway accommodation had
been made in favour of married daughters. The request was
forwarded by the Divisional and Superintending Engineer to
the General Manager, Northern Railways on 4.7.1994 pointing
out that the first appellant was in Railway Service w.e.f.
25.2.1973, sharing accommodation with her father with effect
from 16.3.1993 and that she was not drawing House Rent
Allowance on her part with effect from that date. Her
request was declined because of the Railway Circular on the
subject. Both the appellants then took the matter to the
Central Administrative Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi
but without any success. They have thus knocked the doors of
this Court for appropriate relief.
The respondents in defence rely upon the Railway Board
Circular dated 11.8.1992, whereunder regularization is
permitted on terms. The operative part thereof reads as
follows :
<SLS>
"Reference Railway Ministry’s letters No. E(G) 82 or 1-23
dated 27.12.1982 and E (G) 85 OR 1-9 dated 15.1.1990 OR 1-11
dated 15.3.91 and 1.7.91, conveying instructions that when a
Railway servant who is an allottee of Railway accommodation
retires from service, his/her son, unmarried daughter, wife,
husband or father as the case may be, may be allotted
Railway accommodation on out of turn basis subject to
fulfillment of prescribed condition.
The Ministry of Railways have reviewed the matter and
in supersession of the instructions vide their letter NO.
E(G) 82 OR dated 27-12-82 have decided to extend the scope
of this concession to the married daughter of a retiring
official, in case he does not have any son or in case where
the married daughter is that only person who is prepared to
maintain the parent(s) and the sons are not in a position to
do so (e.g. minor sons). This will be subject to the
conditions already prescribed which are applicable to the
other eligible wards seeking such concessions.
The decision communicated above will also be equally
applicable in the case of death/medical unfitness."
<SLE>
As is obvious from the plain reading of the Circular,
the married daughter of a retiring official is eligible to
obtain regularization if her retiring father has no son. She
thus has a foothold, not to be dubbed as an outcaste
outright. In case he has a son, she shall not be in a
position to do so, unless he is unable to maintain the
parents, e.g. like a minor son, but then she should be the
only person who is prepared to maintain her parents. It is
thus plain that a married daughter is not altogether
debarred from obtaining regularization of a railway quarter,
but her right is dependent on contingencies. The authorities
concerned as also the Central Administrative Tribunal seemed
to have overlooked the important and predominant factor that
a married daughter would be entitled to regularization only
if she is a railway employee as otherwise, she by mere
relationship with the retiring official, is not entitled to
regularization. Logically it would lead to the conclusion
that the presence of a son or sons, able or unable to
maintain the parents, would again have to be railway
employees before they can oust the claim of the married
daughter. We are not for the moment holding that they would
be capable of doing so just because of being males in
gender. Only on literal interpretation of the Circular, does
such a result follow, undesirable though.
A common saying is worth pressing into service to blunt
somewhat the Circular. It is
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<SLS>
"A son is a son untill he gets a wife. A daughter is a
daughter throughout her life."
<SLE>
The retiring official’s expectations in old age for
care and attention and its measure from one of his children
cannot he faulted, or his hopes dampened, by limiting his
choice. That would be unfair and unreasonable. If he was
only one married daughter, who is a railway employee, and
none of his other children are, then his choice is and has
to be limited to that railway employee married daughter. He
should be in an unfettered position to nominate that
daughter for regularization of railway accommodation. It is
only in the case of more than one children in Railway
service that he may have to exercise a choice and we see no
reason why the choice be not left with the retiring
official’s judgment on the point and be not respected by the
railways authorities irrespective of the gender of the
child. There is no occasion for the railways to be
regulating or bludgeoning the choice in favour of the son
when existing and able to maintain his parents. The railway
Ministry’s Circular in that regard appears thus to us to be
wholly unfair, gender biased and unreasonable, liable to be
struck down under Article of the Constitution. The
eligibility of a married daughter must be placed at par with
an unmarried daughter (for she must have been once in that
state), so as to claim the benefit of the earlier part of
the Circular, referred to in its first paragraph,
abovequoted.
The Tribunal took the view that when the Circular dated
11.8.1992 had itself not specifically been impugned before
it and ex-facie the conditions contained in the said
Circular had not been satisfied in the present case, no
relief need be given to the appellants. The Tribunal viewed
that when there were two major sons of the second appellant,
gainfully employed, the fact that they were not railway
employees, not residing in Delhi, did not alter the
situation that the terms of the Circular dated 11.8.1992 had
not been satisfied, under which alone regularization was
permissible. As brought about before, the Tribunal
overlooked this aspect that the Circular was meant only to
enlist the eligibles, who could claim regularization, but
the important condition of one being a railway employee had
to be satisfied before claim could be laid. In the instant
case, the first appellant, on that basis, alone was eligible
(subject to gender disqualification going). So the second
appellant could exercise his choice/option in her favour to
retain the accommodation, obligating the railway authorities
to regularise the quarter in her favour, subject of course
to the fulfillment of other conditions prescribed. The error
being manifest is hereby corrected, holding the first
appellant in the facts and circumstances to be the sole
eligible for regularization of the quarter.
It was also pointed out before us that the Central
Administrative Tribunal, Bombay Bench in one of its
decisions in OA 314 of 1990 decided on 12.2.1992 (Ann. P-8)
relying upon its own decision in Ms. Ambika R. Nair and
another vs. Union of India and others (T.A. No. 467 of 1986)
in which the earlier Circular of the railway board dated
27.12.1982 had been questioned, held that the same to be
unconstitutional per se as it suffered from the twin vices
of gender discrimination and discrimination inter se among
women on account of marriage. We have also come to the same
view that the instant case is of gender discrimination and
therefore should be and is hereby brought in accord with
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Article 14 of the Constitution. The Circular shall be taken
to have been read down the deemed to have been read in this
manner from its initiation in favour of the married daughter
as one of the eligibles, subject, amongst others, to the
twin conditions that she is (i) a railway employee; and (ii)
the retiring official has exercised the choice in her favour
for regularization. It is so ordered.
For the reasons stated above, this appeal is allowed
and direction is issued to the respondents to grant
regularization of the quarter in favour of the first
appellant with effect from the date of retirement of the
second appellant and regulate/re-adjust the charges on
account of house rent accordingly. There shall be no order
as to costs.