Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KUNAL NANDA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/04/2000
BENCH:
S.S.Ahamad, Doraiswami Raju
JUDGMENT:
Raju, J.
Special leave granted.
The appellant, who lost before the Tribunal as well as
the High Court, has come up before this Court challenging
the judgment of the High Court declining to interfere with
the order dated 16.4.99 of the Central Administrative
Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi, in O.A. No.241 of
1999 which, in turn, repelled a challenge to the
repatriation of the appellant to his parent department. The
appellant, a member of CRPF and serving as an Assistant
Sub-Inspector in the said parent department w.e.f. 1.1.87,
joined the service of CBI on deputation in the same capacity
as ASI on 1.8.91. He continued to work as ASI on the
deputation terms for the initial period, which came to be
extended from time to time with the mutual consent of the
lending and borrowing department. In the year 1994, no
doubt, the borrowing department expressed an inclination for
permanent absorption in the CBI and sought for the
concurrence of the CRPF to which, it appears, the lending
department also conveyed its clearance.
It may be noticed at this stage that while on such
deputation in the CBI, the appellant was also appointed as
Sub-Inspector on 1.6.95 and in his parent department also he
was promoted as such. There are no specific statutory rules
as such governing the question of absorption of a
deputationist. On the other hand, the said subject is
governed by departmental instructions and circular orders as
per which the qualification and experience of the Officers
to be selected should be comparable to those prescribed for
direct recruits to such posts where direct recruitment has
also been prescribed as one of the methods of the
appointment in the Recruitment Rules. In consonance with
such procedure, the appellant was asked to undertake a
written test. He made a formal application disclosing his
credentials and on the basis of his performance in the
written test, the record relating to last five years
A.C.Rs. (Part-I - Personal Data) for the period 1993-94 to
1997/98 in which the appellant mentioned about his basic
educational qualification as B.A. and his performance in
the interview, the Screening Committee constituted for the
purpose recommended the absorption of the appellant in the
CBI as Sub-Inspector. But when the appellant was asked to
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produce the documents in original in support of his
educational qualifications etc., the appellant started
explaining that for a person of his standing in service the
basic educational qualification of passing Senior Secondary
Examination is enough and passing of degree examination, may
not be insisted upon. This was not only contrary to his
earlier representation that he was a graduate but the
Screening Committees recommendation for absorption in CBI
was also on the basis that the appellant was a graduate, as
disclosed by him. This seems to have been taken also as
proof of his doubtful integrity in furnishing wrong
information about his educational qualification to be
graduation to some how gain absorption. Since, in terms of
the relevant rules the total period of deputation in the
rank of ASI/SI including that of deputation in any other
cadre/cadre post cannot be for more than five years, the
appellant was repatriated to his parent department and also
relieved with effect from 31.1.99. (A.N.) with a direction
to report for duty to the parent department. Apprehending
the same, the appellant moved the Central Administrative
Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi, in O.A. No.241 of 99.
The Tribunal by its order dated 16.4.99, rejected the
claim of the appellant holding that he had no vested right
to absorption, that he was not totally an indispensable
person in CBI and that he being not a graduate cannot be
absorbed, under the relevant rules. The grievance of
alleged differential treatment has also been found to be not
substantiated - in that the absorption erroneously made of
N.N. Mishra (a mistaken reference to N.P. Mishra) is
sought to be undone by already initiating action in that
direction and that the case of N.P.Pandey - a departmental
officer has to be treated as regular promotion and not to be
treated as a deputationist. It was ultimately held for
those reasons that the CBI cannot be compelled to absorb the
appellant, and consequently the order of repatriation dated
29.1.99 did not call for any interference. Not satisfied
the appellant moved the Delhi High Court by means of Writ
Petition (Civil) No.2533 of 1999 and a Division Bench of the
High Court, by an order dated 26.7.99 rejected the same
observing that there are no merits in the petition and find
no grounds to interfere with the order of the Tribunal under
challenge. Relentless, the appellant has approached this
court.
Heard the learned counsel for the appellant and Shri
R.N. Trivedi, learned Additional Solicitor General. The
least said about the conduct of the appellant is better for
him. The appellant, indisputably, is only a deputationist
so far as CBI is concerned and his parent department is only
CRPF and his substantive position and appointment is only in
that department and ordinarily a deputation, as per
governing rules, cannot last for a period more than five
years. The frivolous claim that a person like him need not
be a graduate for absorption and appointment in CBI, apart,
the appellant appears to have rendered himself unreliable by
making, to put it in most mild terms, an incorrect
representation of his basic educational qualification to be
a graduate while factually it is not so, and this one
ground, strongly urged is enough to non-suit him. This
itself will be sufficient to dis-entitle him to even
continue in the CBI any longer. The Screening Committee
which appears to have initially recommended for absorption
also seem to have proceeded on the basis of the erroneous
representation of the appellant of his basic educational
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qualification and the copy of the proceedings made available
disclose this serious lapse and consequently no advantage
can be claimed on the basis of the recommendation, made on a
mistaken view of the facts more so, when such mistake was
the making of the appellant himself. This assertion of the
respondent- CBI Department was specific and reiterated in
unmistakable terms from the beginning before the Tribunal
(vide para 4 (h) and 5 of the reply) and thereafter before
the High Court in the counter filed (vide para 3 (e) and
finally before this Court also (vide para 5 (c) of the
counter filed on behalf of the respondent). Throughout, the
response of the appellant to those assertions at various
stages was evasive and nebulous and neither direct nor
specific in refutation of facts in particular. Being an
appeal under Act 136 of the Constitution of India, this
Court will be justified in even rejecting this appeal, on
this ground alone.
On the legal submissions made also there are no merits
whatsoever. It is well settled that unless the claim of the
deputationist for permanent absorption in the department
where he works on deputation is based upon any statutory
Rule, Regulation or Order having the force of law, a
deputationist cannot assert and succeed in any such claim
for absorption. The basic principle underlying deputation
itself is that the person concerned can always and at any
time be repatriated to his parent department to serve in his
substantive position therein at the instance of either of
the departments and there is no vested right in such a
person to continue for long on deputation or get absorbed in
the department to which he had gone on deputation. The
reference to the decision reported in Rameshwar Prasad vs
M.D., U.P. Rajkiya Nirman Nigam Ltd. and Others [1999 (8)
SCC 381] is inappropriate since, the consideration therein
was in the light of statutory rules for absorption and the
scope of those rules. The claim that he need not be a
graduate for absorption and being a service candidate, on
completing service of 10 years he is exempt from the
requirement of possessing a degree need mention, only to be
rejected. The stand of the respondent department that the
absorption of a deputationist being one against the direct
quota, the possession of basic educational qualification
prescribed for direct recruitment i.e., a degree is a must
and essential and that there could no comparison of the
claim of such a person with one to be dealt with on
promotion of a candidate who is already in service in that
department is well merited and deserves to be sustained and
we see no infirmity whatsoever in the said claim.
For all the reasons stated above, we see no merit in
this appeal which shall stand dismissed. No costs.