Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 14
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7977 of 2003
PETITIONER:
RESPONDENT:
Ms. Marie Fernandes @
September 23, 2003.
Doraiswamy Raju & Arijit Pasayat.
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.18351 of 2002
D. RAJU, J.
Special leave granted.
The appellant, who got an order in his favour before the Competent
Authority under the Maharashtra Rent Control Act, 1999 (hereinafter referred to
as ‘the Act’) condoning the delay in filing an application to defend the eviction
proceedings and also consequent leave to defend, but suffered an order against
him before a learned Single Judge of the High Court of Bombay, has filed this
appeal.
The appellant was said to have been allowed to use the property in
question as a licencee and a deed for the purpose was executed on 10.7.1999
between the parties, the period being for one year from the date of the deed.
According to the respondent, the said leave and licence agreement expired on
9.6.2000. Though, according to the appellant, in March 2001 after expiry of the
period as noticed above, a further agreement was executed permitting the
appellant to use the property for commercial purposes for a period of five years,
such a claim is being disputed and it is not only unnecessary but we are not also
entering into any exercise to deal with the correctness or otherwise of such claim
having regard to the limited issue that is before us in these proceedings. The
respondent filed an application under Section 24 read with Section 42 of the Act
before the Competent Authority (Rent Act) Konkan Division, Mumbai, for eviction
of the appellant and also for compensation on the ground that the leave/ licence
has expired by efflux of time. The property is said to be a residential property
and fully furnished and the further grievance of the respondent appears to be that
the property has been an unauthorisedly used for commercial purposes as well.
The said petition for eviction seems to have been filed before the Competent
Authority on 9.5.2001. Summons to the respondent therein, the appellant herein,
was said to have been served on 19.5.2001 and the appellant entered
appearance on 29.5.2001 before the said Authority. He appears to have filed an
application to summon for a document supported by an affidavit. It is necessary
to state even at this stage and it is the common case of parties that in the said
application, there was no prayer seeking to grant leave to defend the
proceedings for eviction. As a matter of fact, such an application was said to
have been filed only on 10.8.2001 with an application for condoning the delay in
filing the application seeking for grant of leave to defend the proceedings for
eviction. It is also stated that earlier application filed on 29.5.2001 with an
affidavit for summoning some document was said to have been also withdrawn
as not pressed on 10.8.2001. Overruling the objections of the respondent, the
Competent Authority by its order dated 20.9.2001 allowed the application for
condonation of delay filed on 5.8.2001. As a consequence whereof, the
application for grant of leave to defend the eviction proceedings seems to have
been separately considered and orders passed on 17.1.2002 granting leave to
defend and directing the written statement in the eviction proceedings to be filed
within the time stipulated therein.
Aggrieved, the respondent approached the High Court by filing Writ
Petition No.1575/ 2002 challenging the order condoning the delay and the
subsequent order granting also leave to defend. The learned Single Judge, as
noticed earlier, set aside the orders passed by the Competent Authority, both in
respect of condonation of the delay and the leave granted to defend the
proceedings as a consequence thereof, on the view that there is no provision in
the Act or any other law which vests power in the Competent Authority to
condone the delay in filing such a belated application. Consequently, the
Competent Authority was directed to pass further orders on the application of the
respondent filed for eviction of the appellant, in accordance with law.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 14
Aggrieved, the present appeal has been filed. Since admittedly there
were arrears, while granting stay, this Court issued certain directions for payment
of arrears and it appears substantial sum has been paid though correctness of
the arrears as had been paid, is being disputed by the respondent.
The learned senior counsel for the appellant strenuously contended that
the learned Single Judge in the High Court committed a grave error in interfering
with the order of the Competent Authority inasmuch as the Competent Authority
had the power of condonation. It is the stand of the appellant that the Competent
Authority, being one which has all trappings of a Court, is a ‘Court’ in the eye of
law and consequently possess inherent power to condone the delay as is
available to any other Court under the Civil Procedure Code, all the more so
when Sections 42 and 43 of the Act is indicative of the applicability of the
provisions of the CPC. It was also contended that the appearance within 30 days
would be sufficient compliance and it is not necessary that the application itself
seeking for leave to defend also should be filed within that period. It was further
urged that Section 5 or the principles contained in Section 5 of the Limitation Act,
1963 would apply to the case on hand to enable the Competent Authority to
countenance the claim for condonation in an appropriate case and no exception
could be taken to the said order passed in this case by the Competent Authority.
On behalf of the appellant, certain decisions have been brought to our notice, a
reference to which will be made at the appropriate stage while considering the
submissions of the counsel on either side and also dealing with the decisions
referred to by them in support of their respective stand.
Per contra, the learned counsel appearing for the respondent, while
placing strong reliance upon Sections 39 and 43 of the Act, contended with equal
vehemence that Chapter VIII is a distinct and separate one standing apart and
disassociated from the other provisions of the Act and according to the Scheme
underlying the said Chapter and the various provisions contained therein, the
powers of the Competent Authority are limited as specifically delineated and
indicated therein and no further or other powers outside the provisions contained
in the said Chapter could be invoked by the said Authority. Argued the learned
counsel for the respondent further that the Competent Authority is neither a
‘Court’ in the eye of law as would denote a Court of ordinary jurisdiction nor the
provisions of the Limitation Act or the principles enshrined therein could be
invoked or exercised by the said Authority in relation to any of the proceedings
arising under the said Chapter.
In Gurditta Mal vs Bal Swarup (AIR 1980 Delhi 216) a learned Single
Judge of the said High Court chose to infer conferment of power under Rule 23
of the Delhi Rent Control Rules, 1959, though such power was not conferred
under the statute, by relying upon Section 151 CPC which in our view could not
have been, having regard to the very nature and content of power under Section
151 and its inapplicability to Authorities other than ordinary courts. The decision
in Mukri Gopalan vs Cheppilat Puthanpurayil Aboobacker [1995 (5) SCC 5],
proceeded on the assumption, keeping in view the authority concerned which
was held to be ’court’ and not person a designata, that Limitation Act applied in
view of Section 29(2) of the said Act. The decision in P.Sarathy vs State Bank
of India [2000(5) SCC 355] while construing Section 14 of the Limitation Act
observed that the authority constituted under Section 41(2) of the Tamilnadu
Shops and Establishments Act to hear and decide appeals was a ’court’ within
the meaning of the said provision, though not a ’civil court’ on the view that the
proceedings before him were civil proceedings. In Thakur Jugal Kishore Sinha
vs The Sitamarhi Central Co-operative Bank Ltd. & Another [1967(3) SCR
162] the Assistant Registrar of Co-operative Societies, was considered to be
’court’ for purposes of attracting Contempt of Courts Act, keeping in view the
nature of powers discharged by him.
In Sakuru vs. Tanaji [1985(3) SCC 590] while considering the question as
to whether the collector who was the appellate authority under Section 90 of the
Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1950,
was court and Limitation Act, 1963 applied to appeals before him for invoking
powers under Section 5 this court, on the provisions as it stood prior to certain
subsequent amendments specifically made for the purpose did not approve the
claim for condonation invoking powers under Section 5 of the Limitation Act. In
Birla Cement Works vs. G.M. Western Railways & Another [1995(2) SCC
493] Railway Claims Tribunal constituted under Section 78B of the Railways Act,
1890, was held to be not a civil court and Section 17(1)(c) of the Limitation Act,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 14
1963 had no application, the Tribunal being only a creature of the statute. In
France B. Martins vs. Mafaida Maria Teresa Rodrigues (AIR 1999 SC 3243) it
was held that the complaint filed under the Act was not either a suit or appeal or
an application within the meaning of the Limitation Act, 1963 and consequently
prior to the amendments effected by insertion of Section 24A in the year 1993 in
the Consumer Protection Act, the Limitation Act had no application.
We have carefully considered the submissions of the learned counsel
appearing on either side. Questions of the nature raised before us have to be
considered not only on the nature and character of the Authority, whether it is
court or not but also on the nature of powers conferred on such Authority or
Court, the scheme underlying the provisions of the Act concerned and the nature
of powers, the extent thereof or the limitations, if any, contained therein with
particular reference to the intention of the legislature as well, found expressed
therein. There is no such thing as any inherent power of court to condone delay
in filing a proceedings before Court/Authority concerned, unless the law warrants
and permits it, since it has a tendency to alter the rights accrued to one or the
other partly under the statute concerned. So far as the Maharashtra Rent
Control Act, 1999 is concerned, different provisions seem to have been made
constituting different authorities conferred with different nature of powers as well
in dealing with claims before such Authorities/Court constituted for the purpose
as well as in relation to further avenue of remedies against orders passed by the
original Authority. Chapter VIII of the Act is itself with a caption, "Summary
disposal of certain applications" and Section 39 reads that the provisions of
Chapter VIII or any rule made thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained elsewhere in the Act or in any other
law for the time being in force. Therefore, there is hardly any scope to have
recourse to any other provisions in the very Act or any other law, when
particularly there is specific and clear provisions or stipulation in chapter VIII itself
as to how a particular situation has to be handled and what are the powers of the
authorities constituted for the purpose of Chapter VIII of the Act. Section 40
envisages the appointment of competent Authority by the Government for
purposes of exercising powers therein. Section 41 has its own definition of
landlord for the purposes of the said chapter and Section 42 provides a special
procedure for seeking eviction under the said chapter, and Section 43 provides
special procedure, as the legislature itself calls it to be, for disposal of
applications. Sub-section (2) of Section 43 mandates the issue of summons in
the form specified in Schedule III, which form indicates, apart from informing the
person concerned about the filing of an application seeking for his eviction, the
need to appear and contest the application for eviction on the ground mentioned
therein and that in default whereof the applicant will be entitled, at any time after
the expiry of the period stipulated therefor, to obtain an order for his eviction from
the said premises and further as to how the said application should be filed as
well. Section 44 states that the order of competent Authority is not appealable
and only revision could be sought before the Government or the Authority
designated for the purpose. Section 49 deems the competent Authority under
the chapter to be a public servant within the meaning of Section 21 of the IPC,
while all proceedings before such Authority are deemed to be judicial
proceedings for the purposes of Section 193 and 228 IPC under Section 50, and
Section 51 deems the competent Authority to be civil court for the purposes of
Section 345 and 346 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.
Sub-section (4) of Section 43 of the Act, which is relevant for our purpose
reads as follows:
"(4)(a) The tenant or licensee on whom the summons
is duly served in the ordinary way or by registered
post in the manner laid down in sub-section (3) shall
not contest the prayer for eviction from the premises,
unless within thirty days of the service of summons on
him as aforesaid, he files an affidavit stating grounds
on which he seeks to contest the application for
eviction and obtains leave from the Competent
Authority as hereinafter provided, and in default of his
appearance in pursuance of the summons or his
obtaining such leave, the Statement made by the
landlord in the application for eviction shall be
deemed to be admitted by the tenant or the licensee,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 14
as the case may be, and the applicant shall be
entitled to an order for eviction on the ground
aforesaid.
(b) The competent Authority shall give to the tenant or
licensee leave to contest the application if the affidavit
filed by the tenant or licensee discloses such facts as
would disentitle the landlord from obtaining an order
for the recovery of possession of the premises on the
ground specified in section 22 or 23 or 24;
(c) Where leave is granted to the tenant or licensee to
contest the application, the Competent Authority shall
commence the hearing of the application as early as
practicable and shall, as far as possible, proceed with
the hearing from day to day, and decide the same, as
far as may be, within six months of the order granting
of such leave to contest the application."
The provisions of Chapter VIII stand apart, distinctly and divorced from the
rest of the Act, except to the extent indicated therein itself and for that matter has
been given overriding effect over any other provisions in the very act or any other
law for the time being in force, though for enforcement of other remedies or even
similar remedies under the provisions other than Chapter VIII, altogether different
procedure has been provided for. It is unnecessary to once over again refer to
the special procedure provided for in Chapter VIII, but the various provisions
under Chapter VIII unmistakably indicate that the competent authority constituted
thereunder is not ’court’ and the mere fact that such authority is deemed to be
court only for limited and specific purposes, cannot make it a court for all or any
other purpose and at any rate for the purpose of either making the provisions of
the Limitation Act, 1963 attracted to proceedings before such Competent
Authority or clothe such authority with any power to be exercised under the
Limitation Act. It is by now well settled by innumerable judgments of various
courts including this Court, that when a statute enacts that anything shall be
deemed to be some other thing the only meaning possible is that whereas that
the said thing is not in reality that something, the legislative enactment requires it
to be treated as if it is so. Similarly, though full effect must be given to the legal
fiction, it should not be extended beyond the purpose for which the fiction has
been created and all the more, when the deeming clause itself confines, as in the
present case, the creation of fiction for only a limited purpose as indicated
therein. Consequently, under the very scheme of provisions enacted in Chapter
VIII of the Act and the avowed legislative purpose obviously made known
patently by those very provisions, the competent Authority can by no means be
said to be ’court’ for any and every purpose and that too for availing of or
exercising powers under the Limitation Act, 1963.
The Competent Authority constituted under and for the purposes of the
provisions contained in Chapter VIII of the Act is merely and at best a statutory
authority created for a definite purpose and to exercise, no doubt, powers in a
quasi-judicial manner but its powers are strictly circumscribed by the very
statutory provisions which conferred upon it those powers and the same could be
exercised in the manner provided therefor and subject to such conditions and
limitations stipulated by the very provision of law under which the Competent
Authority itself has been created. Clause (a) of sub-section (4) of Section 43
mandates that the tenant or licensee on whom the summons is duly served
should contest the prayer for eviction by filing, within thirty days of service of
summons on him, an affidavit stating the grounds on which he seeks to contest
the application for eviction and obtain the leave of the Competent Authority to
contest the application for eviction as provided therefor. The legislature further
proceeds to also provide statutorily the consequences as well laying down that in
default of his appearance pursuant to the summons or obtaining such leave, by
filing an application for the purpose within the stipulated period, the statement
made by the landlord in the application for eviction shall be deemed to be
admitted by the tenant or licensee, as the case may be, and the applicant shall
be entitled to an order for eviction on the ground so stated by him in his
application for eviction. It is only when leave has been sought for and obtained in
the manner stipulated in the statute that an hearing is envisaged to be
commenced and completed once again within the stipulated time. The net result
of an application/affidavit with grounds of defence and leave to contest, not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 14
having been filed within the time as has been stipulated in the statute itself as a
condition precedent for the Competent Authority to proceed further to enquire
into the merits of the defence, the Competent Authority is obliged, under the
constraining influence of the compulsion statutorily cast upon it, to pass orders of
eviction in the manner envisaged in clause (a) of sub-section (4) of Section 43 of
the Act. The order of the learned Single Judge of the High Court under challenge
in this appeal is well merited and does not call for any interference in our hands.
The appeal, consequently, fails and shall stand dismissed with no order as
to costs.
5 2050-2052 1996
BATIARANI GRAMIYA BANK
Vs.
PALLAB KUMAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/09/2003
BENCH:
M. B. Shah & Dr. AR. Lakshmanan.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
Dr. AR. LAKSHMANAN, J.
These appeals are directed against the judgment and order of the Division
Bench of the High Court of Orissa dated 26.09.1994 in O.J.C. Nos. 1866, 2981 and
5052 of 1991.
The High Court, by the impugned judgment, has allowed the writ petitions
filed by the respondents herein and has directed the appellant-Bank to issue
appointment orders to them for the post of Officer/Field Supervisors.
For the purpose of recruitment, the Banking Service Recruitment Board
(hereinafter referred to as "the BSRB") issued an advertisement in the newspapers.
The contention of the Bank before the High Court was that in view of the financial
crisis they had revised their indents submitted to the BSRB, long before the
publication of the results regarding intimation of selection and as such the BSRB
ought not to have gone ahead and issued letters of selection based on the original
indent submitted by the Bank to the candidates and that merely by getting an
intimation of selection, no right accrues to the candidates for appointment.
The selections to the category of Officers in the Bank is done by the BSRB.
Indents are submitted by the Bank to the BSRB. By letter dated 14.01.1987, an
indent was placed by the Bank to the BSRB. In the said indent for the category of
Officers, 36 posts were mentioned and for the category of Field Supervisors, 61
posts were mentioned. Thereafter, by letter dated 23.06.1987, the indent for Field
Supervisors was revised from 61 to 30. By further letter of 18.11.1987 another
revised indent was submitted, wherein the requirements were as follows:-
Officers Cadre â\200¦ 36
Field Supervisors â\200¦ 30
On 23.08.1988 a revised indent was submitted by the Bank to the BSRB
under which their requirements were as follows:-
Officers â\200¦ 14
Field Supervisors â\200¦ 11
This letter was replied to by the BSRB on 01.09.1988 whereunder they
refused to accommodate the Bank’s request. According to the Bank, as stated in the
grounds of special leave petition, the reasons which had pruned their indent well
ahead of the publication of the results were:
a) the Bank incurred loss of more than Rs. 7 crores;
b) the target in the various anti-poverty programmes could not be met on
account of the loss;
c) the ban imposed by the State Government, for the opening of further
branches, in view of the loss;
d) due to poor recovery performances, the rural banks became ineligible for
refinance from NABARD and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 14
e) due to the Award given by the National Industrial Tribunal on 30.04.1990,
all staff of Gramiya Bank were equated with the corresponding staff of the
Sponsor Bank as regards pay and allowances and all other benefits with
retrospective effect from 1987. In view of this the arrears payable to the
existing employees alone come to Rs. 2. crores and establishment
expenditure increased by 150%.
According to the Bank, they had bona fide and genuine reasons for pruning
down the indent and the Bank had communicated the revised indent by 23.08.1988,
well ahead of the publication of the results and if the Banks are forced to
accommodate Officers and Field Supervisors more than their required indent, it will
have a crippling effect on the Bank.
As already noticed, the Bank had placed a revised indent in view of the
changed circumstances. However, the BSRB expressed its unwillingness to accept
the revised indent and they had stated that the matter will be considered by the
Board. In the meeting of the Board held on 11.11.1988, it was decided that no
reduction in the original indent was to be done. The BSRB expressed their
unwillingness to accommodate the appellant-Bank’s request and sent nomination
letters to the respondents based on the original indent and also published the results
and also intimated the selection on 28.11.1988. The respondents/candidates
aggrieved by the non-absorption filed writ petitions in the High Court seeking
Mandamus directing the appellant-Bank to appoint them in the respective posts. The
matter was placed before the Division Bench of the High Court. The Division Bench
observing that as a common merit list was drawn by the BSRB, there can be no
dispute that the appointments have to be strictly in accordance with the merit list, in
view of the conflicting views expressed in various decisions placed the writ
applications before a larger Bench to decide the question as to (a) when specific
vacancies were intimated by the Gramya Banks for appointment to the posts of Field
Supervisors and Officers, and in pursuance of their indent, the BSRB conducted one
common examination, and the petitioners were successful, whether they can be
denied the orders of appointment by the concerned Bank on the ground of financial
crisis, (b) when BSRB after conducting examination in respect of all the posts
prepared one merit list and because of individual choice, any/some successful
candidates were allotted to a particular Bank whether the Bank, to which any
successful candidate is allotted can refuse order of appointment even if the
candidate is higher up in the select list. Particularly, in this case while other Banks
issued appointment orders to other successful candidates, non-issuance of
appointment letters by Baitarani Gramya Bank will be violative of Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution, and (c) whether a person selected in pursuance of an
advertisement for selection has a right to demand order of appointment, if he is
higher up in merit list, and others lower in the merit list are appointed in other Banks.
The Full Bench held as follows:
"Coming to the question referred to us, we may say that the ground
given in the present case for slashing down is "financial crisis". As to this
reason, we would say, as admitted by Shri Dora that the entire finance for
Gramya Banks comes from outside sources; 35% from the sponsor Bank,
15% from the concerned State Government and the remaining 50% from
the Central Government. So, there is no financial contribution by the
Gramya Bank. We, therefore, do not understand as to what financial crisis
was there or could have been there for the Bank at hand to slash down the
indent to 14, unless that was a self-created crisis. Shri Dora submits that
the crisis was generated because the aforesaid authorised were not
carrying out their obligations. That, however, was a matter to be taken up
with the concerned authorities. The selected candidates cannot be allowed
to suffer because of this, as the result of the same may be that a selectee
would not get appointment even if he be higher in merit list whereas a
candidate lower in ranking would get appointment, which could be totally
against public interest and cannot be allowed to take place. This is our
answer to question No.(a).
Question No. (b) answers itself in view of our answer to question
No.(a). To reiterate, we say that once an allotment is made to a particular
Bank, it would not be open to it do refuse appointment which would even be
violative of Article 16 of the Constitution.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 14
As to question No. (c), we would state that though in law a selected
candidate does not acquire an indefeasible right of appointment in view of
what has been held by a Constitution Bench in Shankarsan Dash vs. Union
of India, AIR 1991 SC 1612, which was followed by a three Judge Bench
decision in Union Territory of Chandigarh vs. Dilbagh Singh, AIR 1993 SC
16, but the Scheme of selection of the Officers and other employees of the
regional rural Banks, to which we have referred, which requires examination
of the matter by a centralised agency (the Board) and which permits giving
of option and visualises preparation a select list as per descending order of
merit, would clothe a selectee higher up in the merit list with a right to
demand appointment if a person lower in the list has been appointed in any
other Bank; any other view would denude his fundamental right available by
the force of Article 16 of the Constitution.
The aforesaid are our answers to the three questions. Let the cases
be now placed before the Bench which had made the reference for their
disposal keeping in view the answers given."
The Division Bench after remand by the Full Bench passed the following
order:
"As noted earlier, while referring the cases to the Full Bench, we had
discussed in detail the case of the parties and the contentions raised on
their behalf. Therefore, we do not like to burden this order by repeating the
same in the said order. For the present purpose, it is sufficient to state that
the Full Bench has answered all the three questions formulated in favour of
the petitioners. In that view of the matter, there is little scope for doubt that
the petitioners are entitled to the reliefs claimed.
Accordingly, the writ petitions are allowed. The opposite party
Baitrani Gramya Bank is directed to issue appointment orders to the
petitioners in the respective posts for which they have been selected
forthwith. There will be no order for costs."
Aggrieved by the judgment and order dated 26.09.1994 of the Division Bench
of the High Court, the above three appeals were filed.
Mr. K.V. Viswanathan, learned counsel appearing for the appellant-Bank,
submitted that the impugned order has totally overlooked the prejudice that would be
caused to public interest if the respondents are directed to be appointed in the
appellant-Bank. He also submitted that in the advertisement issued by the BSRB,
based on their original indent, it was clearly mentioned that the vacancies are
approximate and likely to be varied upward or downwards depending on the needs
of the indenting Banks and that this aspect of the matter has not been considered at
all either by the Full Bench or by the Division Bench of the High Court. He would
further submit that in the case of the appellant-Bank, the revised indent was
submitted on 23.08.1988, long before the publication of the result an intimation of
selection was sent to the respondents and the BSRB ought to have sent the
nominations on the basis of the revised indent and not on the basis of the original
indent and that for the fault of the BSRB, the appellant-Bank cannot be prejudiced.
In any case, he submitted that the selection/nomination does not confer a
indefeasible right on the respondents to seek appointments and the selection
intimation was not an offer of appointment when in fact in the selection nomination
itself it was mentioned that the offer of appointment was to be made by the Bank. It
is to be noted that no such offer was made. He further submitted that the Bank had
reduced the indent for bona fide reasons as stated in the grounds of special leave
petition and that the Bank had bona fide and genuine reasons for pruning down the
indent.
Referring to the Full Bench judgment of the High Court, Mr. Viswanathan,
learned counsel submitted that there was no material either before the Full Bench or
before the Division Bench to prove that candidates with lesser merit had been
favoured with letters of appointment and in the absence of any material particulars,
the Full Bench could not have been proceeded on the basis that candidates with
lesser merit were given offers of appointment and candidates with higher merits were
denied. He would further argue that, in any case, it is for the BSRB to accommodate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 14
the unabsorbed candidates since it was their fault of having proceeded on the basis
of the original indent and not on the basis of the revised indent in spite of their own
advertisement clearly intimated the candidates that the vacancies notified were only
approximate and are likely to vary upwards or downwards depending on the needs
of the indenting Bank. Mr. Viswanathan, in support of his contention, placed reliance
on the following judgments:-
1. Shankarsan Dash vs. Union of India reported in (1991) 3 SCC 47
2. Babita Prasad & Ors. vs. State of Bihar & Ors. reported in 1993
Supp(3) SCC 268
3. State of Bihar & Ors. vs. Secretariat Assistant Successful Examinees
Union 1986 &Ors. reported in (1994) 1 SCC 126.
4. Rani Laxmibai Kshetriya, Gramin Bank vs. Chand Behari Kapoor &
Ors. reported in (1998) 7 SCC 469.
5. State of A.P. & Anr. Vs. V. Sadanandam & Ors. reported in AIR 1989
SC 2060
6. Union Territory of Chandigarh vs. Dilbagh Singh & Ors. reported in
(1993) 1 SCC 154.
Concluding his arguments, Mr. Viswanathan submitted that the judgment of
the Division Bench impugned in these appeals is liable to be set aside and interfered
with.
Mr. Vinoo Bhagat, learned counsel appearing for the respondents, in reply to
the arguments of Mr. Viswanathan raised a preliminary objection in regard to the
maintainability of the present appeals. He said that this Court had already dismissed
an earlier special leave petition of the Bank being Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.
2505 of 1992 by order dated 03.03.1992 against another judgment of the High Court
directing the Bank to appoint the respondent therein who was placed at serial No. 4
in the same Select List of Field Supervisors in which respondent No.2 in the present
matters (Special Leave Petition No. 738 of 1995) is placed at serial No. 3 and that
the Respondent No. 2 is at a higher position in the same select list than the
respondent in the earlier Special Leave Petition, he cannot be denied appointment
when the person below him has been appointed pursuant to the rejection of the
earlier Special Leave Petition. He would further submit that the writs issued by the
High Court in two earlier writ petitions, O.J.C. No.1265 of 1991 (the one challenged
in the special leave petition mentioned above) and No. 6566 of 1991 (which was not
challenged), have been implemented and the writ petitioners, Surya Prasad Rath
and Anjan Kumar Mallik, have been appointed in their respective posts and,
therefore, it is illegal and improper that the appellant-Bank should thereafter
challenge the High Court’s judgment in the remaining cases of the present
respondents and, therefore, the plea in the present special leave petitions/appeals
that the appellant-Bank had to produce the indents due to subsequent events was
negatived in the two judgments of the High Court also and became final in respect of
the same dispute and, therefore, these special leave petitions are liable to be
dismissed.
Arguing further, learned counsel for the respondents submitted that the
appellant-Bank was bound to disclose the dismissal of its previous special leave
petitions in identical matter, as also the fact that it had implemented the High Court’s
writs issued in other similar matters, but it has chosen to indulge in suppression
instead and, therefore, the present matters are liable to be dismissed on account of
such suppression. In regard to the reasons for reducing the indent given by the
Bank, learned counsel submitted that the reasons stated in the special leave
petitions, namely, the financial constraints etc. find no place in the contemporaneous
documentary records and, therefore, the said reasons have been invented
subsequently in an attempt to mislead this Court and, therefore, the special leave
petitions ought to be dismissed on this ground alone. According to Mr. Vinoo
Bhagat, learned counsel for the respondents, the Bank’s financial constraints were
never cited as the reason before the litigation began and this reason has been
dishonestly invented for the purposes of litigation and as correctly noticed by the
High Court, the appellant is financed entirely by outside sources.
It is further argued that the appellant-Bank has not even appointed the
persons eligible under its pruned list and that two of the respondents, namely, Tridip
Kumar Dass at serial No.4 in the select list of Officers and Alekha Prasad Behera at
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 14
serial No.3 in the select list of Field Supervisors were entitled to appointment even if
the indent stood reduced to 14 Officers and 11 Field Supervisors and the fact that
they have not been appointed makes it clear that the appellant’s case is entirely dis-
honest. He would further urge that since the appellant-Bank did not challenge the
judgment of the Full Bench of the High Court dated 14.09.1993 that judgment
attained finality and it is the abuse of the process of the Court to try and fault with the
judgment in the present matters.
The appellant-Bank filed rejoinder affidavit denying the allegations made in
the counter affidavit. The Chairman of the Bank has also filed an affidavit on
10.04.2002 pursuant to the order dated 12.01.1996 of this Court. The said order
dated 12.01.1996 reads thus:
"Leave granted.
Printing of appeals dispensed with. Appeals will be heard on the
SLP paper books with liberty to file additional papers, if any, within ten
weeks.
The petitioners will make appointments on the posts as indicated in
their last indent on the basis of the merit list sent by the BSRB (respondent
No.4). In respect of the additional persons whose names have been
recommended by respondent No.4 for appointment with the petitioners, it
will be open to the respondent No.4 to proceed on the lines similar to the
guidelines contained in the letter dated 31.3.1993, annexure O to the SLPs
with regard to recruitment to the clerical cadre persons in regional rural
banks."
It was submitted that pursuant to the above order, appointment orders were
issued to 9 Field Supervisors and 14 Officers and 2 Field Supervisors had already
been appointed pursuant to the judgment of the High Court dated 08.11.1991 and
18.11.1991 in O.J.C. No. 1265 and O.J.C. No. 6506. It was further stated therein
that the appellant-bank has also advised the BSRB, Bhubaneswar to take care of the
candidates as per direction dated 12.01.1996 of this Court and as such the dossiers
in respect of 11 Officers and 19 Field Supervisors which were in excess of the
Bank’s last indent were returned. It was also submitted in the affidavit that out of 30
candidates, 23 appointment orders were issued by them, 5 Officers/Field
Supervisors have joined the appellant-Bank on 10.04.1996. It was further submitted
that at the relevant time, there is no vacancy in any cadre in the appellant-Bank and
as per the Government of India’s revised guidelines, the appellant-Bank is identified
as having surplus man-power and that the accumulated loss of the bank as on
31.03.2001 was Rs. 39.69 crores and the Bank is not in a position to absorb any
more additional establishment cost.
This affidavit was verified on 10.04.2002 and signed by the Chairman of the
Bank. On the above pleadings, the following questions of law would emerge for
consideration:-
a) Whether the respondents/writ petitioners had acquired any
indefeasible right to be appointed to the posts in question, when the
decision taken by the appellant-Bank not to fill up all the vacancies is
based on bona fide and appropriate reasons;
b) Whether the appellant-Bank is under any legal obligation or legal duty
to fill up any or all of the vacancies;
c) Whether the appellant-Bank is entitled to revise their indents submitted
to the BSRB long before the publication of the results by the BSRB in
view of financial crisis as stated in the grounds of special leave petition
and
d) Whether the basis indicated by the appellant-Bank can be
characterized to be mala fide or unreasonable.
We have given our anxious consideration to the points urged by both the
learned counsel with reference to the pleadings, documents and annexures.
The entire basis for the arguments advanced by counsel for the respondents
appears to be the judgment of the High Court of Orissa at Cuttack in O.J.C. No. 1265
of 1991 in the case of Surya Prasad Rath and Another vs. Batiarani Gramiya
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 14
Bank dated 08.11.1991 and the subsequent dismissal of the special leave petition
by this Court on 03.03.1992. In this context, the respondents has failed to notice that
there were two other judgments on the issue one of which was subsequent in point
of time which accepted the contention of the Bank and rejected the writ petition filed
by the selected candidates. The said judgments are Ashok Kumar Sarangi vs.
Secretary, BSRB and Others in O.J.C. No. 2902 of 1990 dated 16.01.1992 (page
Nos.81-89 of the paper-book. Bipin Bihari Das and Others vs. Batiarani Gramiya
Bank and Others in O.J.C. No. 1125 of 1991 dated 04.10.1991 (page Nos.90-93 of
the paper-book).
The respondents, in our opinion, has failed to appreciate the fact that in view
of the conflicting judgments, the Division Bench of the High Court of Orissa by its
order dated 19.04.1993 made a reference in this very matter to the Full Bench of the
Orissa High Court and the Full Bench of the High Court by its judgment dated
14.09.1993 answered the questions and relegated the matter to the Division Bench
for disposal in accordance with the answers given. The Full Bench while answering
the questions has categorically held that a selected candidate does not acquire
indefeasible right of appointment. In holding so, the Full Bench has placed reliance
on a Constitution Bench judgment of this Court in Shankarasan Dass vs. Union of
India reported in AIR 1991 SC 1612 equivalent to 1991 (3) SCC 47and another
judgment by a Bench of three-Judges of this Court in Union Territory of
Chandigarh vs. Dilbagh Singh reported in AIR 1993 SC 16 equivalent to 1993 (1)
SCC 154. The only exception made by the Full Bench (about which the present
appellant-Bank made a grievance in the present appeals) is that the Full Bench has
held that a selectee higher up in the merit list will have a right to demand
appointment if a person lower than in the list has been appointed in any other Bank.
The Full Bench overlooked the fact that the advertisement extract (page 38-
39 of the paper book) and the paper clipping clearly mentioned the following:-
(a) "Bank once opted for can not be changed later".
(b) In the notes under item one it was mentioned that "the above vacancies
are approximate and likely to vary upwards or downwards depending on
the need of the indenting banks."
(c) From the Full Advertisement, it is also clear in para in the left-hand
column under the head ’Selection Procedure’ that the finally selected will
be allotted to the regional rural bank for which the candidates originally
opted.
(d) Further in para 10(a), it says (right-hand column 1st line) "the choice will
be restricted to one RRB only."
(e) Further in para 10(b) it says :
"10(b) The candidates for posts of Officers and Field
Supervisors (posts 1 and 2) should apply in separate
applications along with requisite fee for the respective post.
But for both the posts his choice will be restricted to a single
regional rural bank."
All these clearly go to show that the assumption of the Full Bench that a
Common Merit List for all the Banks is prepared and that a selectee higher in merit
list would be overlooked is incorrect. Further, the assumption that the
procedure/scheme visualises preparation of a select list as per descending order of
merit, would clothe a selectee higher up in the merit list with a right to demand
appointment if a person lower in the list has been appointed in any other Bank, is
also erroneous. No material or factual foundation was laid in the writ petition and
nothing has been found regarding this by the Full Bench. On the contrary, one of the
writ petitions annexed the Paper Publication of the final results and that showed that
results were declared qua each Bank.
Once the premise of the Full Bench is found to be erroneous, the judgment of
the Full Bench and the impugned order deserve to be set aside
It was argued by learned counsel for the respondents that the Bank has
stated the aspect of financial crisis/constraints for the first time in the special leave
petitions as the reasons mentioned by them in pruning down the indent. This
statement is factually incorrect. The Division Bench, by its common order, in O.J.C.
Nos. 1866, 2981 and 5052 of 1991 while referring to the counter affidavit filed by the
Bank has clearly stated that on account of various factors including liquidity crisis,
ban order for opening new branches and on account of financial burden incurred on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 14
account of implementation of agricultural rural debt relief scheme and the award
given by the National Industrial Tribunal, the Authorities had decided not to fill up the
posts though at the time of advertisement indent had been given. Thus, it is seen
that counter affidavit in all the writ petitions, the appellant-Bank has raised the aspect
of financial crisis. This submission of the respondents is, therefore, liable to be
rejected. In regard to the submission made by learned counsel for the respondents
though the appellant-Bank was bound to disclose the dismissal of its previous
special leave petitions in an identical matter, we are of the opinion that the same
need not be disclosed in the present special leave petitions since the previous
special leave petition was dismissed at the special leave petitions stage (Annexure-
R1). This Court in a catena of decisions has held that the dismissal of special leave
petition by a non-speaking order which does not contain the reasons for dismissal
does not amount to acceptance of the correctness of the decision sought to be
appealed against. Such an order does not constitute the law laid down by the
Supreme Court for the purpose of Article 141. In this context, we may refer to a
recent decision of this Court in Kunhayammed & Ors. vs. State of Kerala & Anr.
reported in 2000 (6) SCC 359 (Three Judges)
In regard to the argument of learned counsel for the respondents that the Full
Bench judgment of the Orissa High Court was not challenged and, therefore, that
judgment has attained finality, learned counsel for the respondents is not correct in
submitting so. The appellant-Bank could not have challenged the Full Bench
judgment because the Full Bench answered the questions and relegated the matter
to the Division Bench for disposal and the cause of action for filing the present
appeals arose only after the Division Bench of the High Court disposed of the
matters.
In our view, the respondents/writ petitioners had not acquired any
indefeasible right to be appointed to the post in question when the Bank has taken a
decision not to fill up all the vacancies which is based on sound bona fides and
appropriate reasons. The Bank is also under no obligation or legal duty to fill up any
or all of the vacancies and that the basis indicated by the appellant-Bank for pruning
the indents cannot at all be characterized to be mala fide or unreasonable. The law
is well-settled. This Court has taken the same view in the following judgments.
In State of Andhra Pradesh and Another vs. V. Sadanandam and Others
etc. etc. AIR 1989 SC 2060, this Court has observed as under:-
"The mode of recruitment and the category from which the recruitment to a
service should be made are all matters which are exclusively within the
domain of the executive. It is not for judicial bodies to sit in judgment over
the wisdom of the executive in choosing the mode of recruitment or the
categories from which the recruitment should be made as they are matters
of policy decision falling exclusively within the purview of the executive. The
question of filling up of posts by persons belonging to other local categories
or zones is a matter of administrative necessity and exigency. When the
rules provide for such transfers being effected and when the transfers are
not assailed on the ground of arbitrariness or discrimination, the policy of
transfer adopted by the Government cannot be struck down."
This Court, in a judgment rendered by a Constitution Bench in Shankarsan
Dash vs. Union of India (1991) 3 SCC 47, observed as under:-
"Even if a number of vacancies are notified for appointment and adequate
number of candidates are found fit, the successful candidates do not
acquire any indefeasible right to be appointed against the existing
vacancies. Ordinarily the notification merely amounts to an invitation to
qualified candidates to apply for recruitment and on their selection they do
not acquire any right to the post. Unless the relevant recruitment rules so
indicate, the State is under no legal duty to fill up all or any of the vacancies.
However, it does not mean that the State has the licence of acting in an
arbitrary manner. The decision not to fill up the vacancies has to be taken
bona fide for appropriate reasons. And if the vacancies or any of them are
filled up, the State is bound to respect the comparative merit of the
candidates, as reflected at the recruitment test, and no discrimination can
be permitted."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 14
In Union Territory of Chandigarh vs. Dilbagh Singh and Others (1993) 1
SCC 154, this Court has observed as follows:-
"A candidate who finds a place in the select list as a candidate selected for
appointment to a civil post does not acquire an indefeasible right to be
appointed in such post in the absence of any specific rule entitling him to
such appointment. He could be aggrieved by his non-appointment only
when the Administration does so either arbitrarily or for no bona fide
reasons. Hence such candidate, even if he has a legitimate expectation of
being appointed due to his name finding a place in the select list of
candidates, cannot claim to have a right to be heard before such select list
is cancelled for bona fide and valid reasons and not arbitrarily. In the instant
case, when the Chandigarh Administration accepted the complaints and
cancelled the select list it cannot be said to have acted either arbitrarily or
without bona fide and valid reasons."
In Babita Prasad and Others vs. State of Bihar and Others 1993 Supp. (3)
SCC 268, this Court held that a panel, as prepared in the said case, cannot be
treated as conferring any vested or indefeasible right to the teachers to be
appointed. This Court further held as follows:
"The mere fact that the candidates who had been brought on the panel had
been sent for training at the Government expense, would also not imply that
any right had been created in their favour for appointment after they had
completed their training because training was intended to confer eligibility
on the candidates for being brought on the list."
In the case of The State of Haryana vs. Subash Chander Marwaha & Ors.
reported in (1974) 3 SCC 220, this Court has observed as under:
"The existence of vacancies does not give a legal right to candidate
to be selected for appointment. The examination is for the purpose of
showing that a particular candidate is eligible for consideration. The
selection for appointment comes later. It is open then to the Government to
decide how many appointments shall be made. The mere fact that a
candidate’s name appears in the list will not entitle him to a mandamus that
he be appointed. Indeed, if the State Government while making the
selection for appointment had departed from the ranking given in the list,
there would have been a legitimate grievance on the ground that the State
Government had departed from the Rules in this respect.
In order that mandamus may issue to compel an authority to do
something, it must be shown that the statute imposes a legal duty on that
authority and the aggrieved party has a legal right under the statute to
enforce its performance.
Since there was no legal duty on the State Government to appoint
all the 15 persons who are in the list and the petitioners have no legal right
under the rules to enforce its performance the petition was clearly
misconceived."
In the case of U.P. Bhumi Sudhar Nigam Ltd. vs. Shiv Narain Gupta
reported in 1994 Supp (2) SCC 541, this Court has observed as under:
"â\200¦â\200¦We are of the view that the High Court fell into patent error in
issuing the mandamus in the facts and circumstances of this case. This Court
has authoritatively laid down that even if a vacancy is available and the
employer bona fide declines to make an appointment, the candidate on the
select list has no right whatsoever to claim appointment. In the present case,
the post was abolished by the Board of Director in the year 1991. Shiv Narain
Gupta in fact challenged before the High Court the action of the Corporation in
abolishing the post. Neither the facts of this case nor the law on the subject
warranted any interference by the High Court in the writ petition filed by Shiv
Narain Gupta. The Constitution Bench judgment in Shankarsan Dash case
was cited before the learned single Judge of the High Court. We are
constrained to say that the learned Judge failed to appreciate the binding ratio
of the said judgment. "
Our attention was drawn to Annexure-J issued by the Government of India,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 14
Ministry of Finance, Department of Economic Affairs (Banking Division) dated
31.03.1993 on the subject "Recruitment of Clerical Cadre Personnel in Regional
Rural Banks". In the said communication, course of action was advised to the
Chairman of all Banking Services Recruitment Boards to resolve the problem. We
are concerned only with regard to the course of action II which reads thus:
"As regards candidates who have already been selected for the
posts of Clerk of RRBs but have not yet absorbed/appointed, the BSRBs
concerned may follow the following Board guidelines:
a. BSRBs may invite indents from all the RRBs in a State in order to
make an assessment of their actual requirement.
b. If the number of unabsorbed candidates is more than the indents
received from RRBs they may identify the candidates who fulfil the
requirements in respect of age, qualification etc. for posting in the public
sector banks.
c. They may get an option from such candidates found eligible as stated
above, for their posting to the public sector banks.
d. Allegation of the candidates may be made to RRBs/Public Sector
Banks in order of merit list already drawn by the RSRBs and only those
candidates who are coming in that merit list and are eligible for public
sector Banks will be allocated to these Banks.
2. In addition to the above, BSRBs may also explore the possibility of
absorbing the remaining unabsorbed candidates in the RRBs in the
adjoining States through RSRBs of these States, after obtaining option from
the unabsorbed candidates in this regard."
The respondents in the counter affidavit filed by them has stated that the
letter of 31.03.1993 has not been annexed to the special leave petitions. The
statement is not correct. The other letter has been annexed as Annexure-J and is at
page 77 of the paper-book. The letter of 31.03.1993 makes it very clear that the
cause of action for the writ petitioners is against the BSRB and not against the
appellant-Bank.
The Government of India Circular dated 31.3.1993, which has been extended
to the present case by order dated 12.1.1996 of this Court, pre-supposes that there
can be revision of indent even before declaration of results and even after
declaration of results and alternative mechanism has been laid down. Neither the
Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976 nor the Regional Rural Banks (Appointment and
Promotion of Officers and other Employees) Rules, 1988, restricts pruning and/or
mandates that of selectee should be appointed. No rule has been placed.
Learned counsel for the respondents did not dispute the legal position. His
contention was based on the letter of the BSRB dated 28.11.1988 and he stated that
Mr. Surya Prasad Rath has been appointed whereas those above him have not been
appointed. The communication dated 28.11.1988 at page 130 has to be read with
the reply of the Bank (at page 109 of the paper book) where the Bank’s query was
about the merit list. Further one thing that is clear that selection is qua Bank. No
factual foundation was laid to show that within the Bank a lower selectee was
preferred.
We have already noticed though the advertisement was published in the
newspapers and the examinations were held thereafter on 20.03.1988, the Bank had
communicated the revised indent by 23.08.1988 well ahead of the intimation of
selection and publication of results. The Bank had bona fide and genuine reasons
for pruning down the indent. If the Banks are forced to accommodate Officers and
Field Supervisors more than their required indent, it will have a crippling effect on the
Bank and public interest will stand seriously prejudiced as several employees will
have to be unnecessarily retained and public money will have to be expended on
them. When public interest competes with private interest, the private interest will
have to give way to public interest. In this case, asking the appellant-Bank to
accommodate as directed by the BSRB would cause loss to public revenue. It has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 14
been clearly stated in the counter affidavit filed by the Bank before the High Court in
the writ petition that on account of various factors including liquidity crisis, ban order
for opening new branches and on account of financial burden incurred on account of
implementation of Agricultural Rural Debt Relief Scheme and the award given by the
National Industrial Tribunal, the Bank had decided not to fill up the posts though at
the time of advertisement indents had been given. Thus, it is seen that the decision
of the Bank not to fill up the posts was due to financial crisis. Therefore, no direction
can be given to issue appointment letters to the respondents/writ petitioners though
they have come out successful in the selection process.
The aforesaid being the decision, we would hold that the respondents/writ
petitioners had not acquired any indefeasible right and the decision not to fill up all
the vacancies had been taken bona fide reasons and directions as sought for by the
respondent cannot, therefore, be issued.
Today the position is that the appellant-Bank has filed an affidavit setting out
how it has implemented the order of this Court dated 12.1.1996. As averred in para
4 therein, there is no vacancy in any cadre in the Bank. In the Government of India
revised guidelines the appellant-Bank has been identified as having surplus
manpower. The accumulated loss today is in the range of 39.65 crores.
Pursuant to the order of this Court, three of the respondents have been
admittedly appointed. They are :
(a) Mr. Pallab Kumar Das (OJC No. 1866)
(b) Mr. Alekha Prasad Behera (OJC No. 1866)
(c) Mr. Tridip Kumar Das (OJC No. 5652)
Today 15 years have passed after the advertisement and seven years after the order
of this Court dated 12.1.1996. In view of the settled legal position, the respondents
do not have any indefeasible right.
However, with a view to do justice between the parties and balance the
equities, we issue the following directions:-
a) If, however, the business of the Bank would require filling up of more
vacancies and if the respondents/writ petitioners turn would come as
per the merit list, we have no doubt that the concerned
respondents/writ petitioners would be absorbed in service as per rules.
b) The appointment shall be made on the basis of merit/select list if there
are vacancies in any cadre.
c) The select list would remain in force for two years from now.
d) The appellant-Bank, we hope, will consider the question of relaxation
of age bar in suitable cases so as to minimize their hardship.
We are unable to subscribe to the opinion expressed by the Full Bench and
the Division Bench of the Orissa High Court impugned in these appeals for the
reasons stated in paragraphs supra.
The judgment dated 14.9.1993 of the Full Bench and of the judgment dated
26.9.1994 of the Division Bench of the High Court hereby are set aside and the
appeals filed by the appellant-Bank stand allowed. However, there will be no order
as to costs.