Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S. S. KARMALKAR & OTHERS ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IBRAHIM HUSSENI TAMBOLI & OTHERS ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/10/1988
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 430 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 712
1989 SCC (1) 219 1988 SCALE (2)1516
ACT:
Civil Services: Food and Civil Supplies Department
Sholapur--Whether part and parcel of Revenue Department--
Inspecting Officers--Status of
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were promoted in January 1981 as Awal
Karkuns in the Department of Food and Civil Supplies,
Sholapur. At the same time, the private respondents holding
those posts were directed to be repatriated to their parent
department, that is, the Revenue Department. The private
respondents challanged these orders by way of a civil suit
on the ground that these orders were unjust, illegal and
violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The
Civil Judge decreed the suit. The Additional Sessions Judge
and the High Court upheld the decree. The High Court came to
the finding that the Food & Civil Supplies Department,
Sholapur, had no separate existence on the date the impugned
order was passed and that it was part and parcel of the
Revenue Department.
It is contended by the private respondents that on the
abolition of the statutory rationing, the Food & Civil
supplies Department was abolished, and the appellants were
absorbed in the Revenue Department. This contention is
disputed by the appellants.
Allowing the appeals, it was,
HELD: (1) It was not disputed that after the
introduction of statutory rationing, the Food & Civil
Supplies Department was an independent Government Department
at Sholapur. [71G]
(2) It was wrong to assume that the Food & Civil
Supplies Department dealing with food and supply thereof.
was abolished consequent on the abolition of the statutory
rationing. [718D]
(3) The fact of introduction or abolition of statutory
rationing had nothing to do with the question of food and
supply thereof, which must be dealt with by some department
of the Government and after the creation of the Food & Civil
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PG NO 713
Supplies Department, it was dealt with by that Department.
[718C]
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(4) As the Department existed, it could be reasonably
presumed that it had its own staff and the appellant’s
contention that they were retained in the Food & Civil
Supplies Department seemed to be correct. [718E]
(5) There was no material in proof of the alleged
absorption of the appellants in the Revenue Department.
Moreover, as they did not fulfil the conditions for
absorption in the Revenue Department, they could not be
transferred to or absorbed in that Department. [717C; 718H]
(6) It is true that there was no order showing that the
respondents were transferred on deputation from the Revenue
Department to the Food & Civil Supply Department. It could,
however, be reasonably presumed that the respondents were
sent on deputation to the Food & Civil Supplies Department,
otherwise there was no question of their repatriation to
their parent department. [718H; 719A]
(7) It was apparent from the fact that separate rules
were framed for recruitment of officers in the Food and
Civil Supplies Department and a final gradation list was
also prepared and published, that the Food and Civil
Supplies Department was not part and parcel of the Revenue
Department, but it had a separate and independent existence.
[719G]
(8) As the appellants belonged to a different department
their promotions would be governed by the rules of that
department. Similarly, the promotion of the private
respondents would be considered in accordance with the rules
of the Revenue Department. [721A]
Shri Atmaram Chaturvedi Garbude & Ors. v. State of
Maharashtra & Ors., Special Civil Application Nos. 707 of
1974 and 4834 of 1976--Bombay High Court, Nagpur Bench,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 3804 to
3807 of 1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 23.11.1987 of the
Bombay High Court in Second Appeal No. 404 of 1985, W.P. No.
607 of 1985 ant Second Appeal No. 86 of 1986.
R.K. Garg, Vijay Hansaria and Sunil K. Jain for the
Appellants.
PG NO 714
S.B. Bhasme, V.M. Tarkunde, A.S. Bhasme, V.N. Ganpule, S
K. Agnihotri, A.G. Pawar and A.B . Lal for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUTT, J. Special leave is granted in all these matters.
Heard learned Counsel for the parties.
The principal question that is involved in these appeals
is some-what peculiar. The question is whether the Food &
Civil Supplies Department, Sholapur, has a separate and
independent existence or whether it is part and parcel of
the Revenue Department. The best authority which can answer
the question is the Government, but the Civil Courts and the
High Court have not been able to accept the Government
version that the Food & Civil Supplies Department, Sholapur,
is an independent Government Department and does not form
part of the Revenue Department. The facts leading to the
question will be stated presently.
The Commissioner of Pune Division, by his order dated
January 27, 1981, granted promotions to the appellants to
the posts of Awal Karkuns, and directed that the private
respondents herein, who were holding these posts would be
repatriated to their parent department, that is, the Revenue
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Department. Aggrieved by the said order of the Commissioner,
Pune Division, some of the private respondents filed a civil
suit for a declaration that the said order granting out of
turn promotions to the appellants as Awal Karkuns was
unjust, illegal and violative of the fundamental rights of
the respondents guaranteed under Articles 14 and 16 of the
Construction of India. The learned Civil Judge, Senior
Division, Sholapur, decreed the suit and declared that the
impugned order of the Commissioner, Pune Division was
discriminatory, illegal and not binding upon the
respondents. The learned Civil Judge also granted an
injunction permanently restraining the Government from
reverting the respondents from the posts of Awal Karkuns to
the posts of Clerks on appeal. the Fourth Addition District
Judge, Sholapur, upheld the judgment and decree of the Civil
Court and dismissed the appeal preferred by the appellants
and the State of Maharashtra The appellants and the State of
Maharashtra filed two separate second appeals to the High
Court of Bombay. In the meantime, some of the respondents
also filed writ petitions in the High Court challenging the
validity of the impugned order of the Commissioner, Pune
Division. The High Court, by a common judgment, disposed of
the second appeals and the writ petitions. The High Court
PG NO 715
came to the finding that the Food & Civil Supplies
Department, Sholapur, had no separate existence on the date
the impugned order was passed, and that it was part and
parcel of the Revenue Department. Upon that finding, the
High Court dismissed the second appeals and allowed the writ
petitions of the respondents.
It is not disputed before us that before 1965, there was
no such Department as the Food & Civil Supplies Department
at Sholapur. Initially, the Agriculture, Food & Cooperation
Department of the Government was entrusted with the subject
of food and the supply thereof. By a circular dated January
13, 1965 of the Government of Maharashtra, a new department
called "the Civil Supplies Department" was created. By a
subsequent Government circular dated May 13, 1965 it was
renamed as "Food & Civil Supplies Department . It appears
from the said Government circular dated January 13, 1965,
creating the department, that the Agriculture, Food &
Cooperation Department was renamed as the Agriculture &
Cooperation Department. In other words, the subject of food
was withdrawn from the said and a new Department, namely
the Civil Supplies Department. subsequently renamed as Food
& Civil Supplies Department, was created.
After the creation of the Food & Civil Supplies
Department the rationing was introduced in Sholapur City
and Salgarwadi area under the control of the Food & Civil
Supplies Department which will appear from the Government
resolution dated February 19, 1966. As a result of
introduction of statutory rationing several posts had to be
created in the establishment of the Controller of Rationing,
which was admittedly a part of the Food & Civil Supplies
Department. Certain posts were also transferred from the
Revenue Department to the Food & Civil Supplies Department
along with the holders of such posts. The most significant
fact in this regard is that the holders of the posts had to
be appointed afresh as personnel of the Food & Civil
Supplies Department which will also appear from the
Government resolution dated February 19 1966. It is not
disputed that at the time that is to say, after the
introduction of statutory rationing, the Food & Civil
Supplies Department was an independent Government Department
at Sholapur.
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The statutory rationing was discontinued in Sholapur
with effect from May, 1, 1968. The posts in the rationing
establishment were directed to be merged in the office of
the Foodgrain Distribution Officer, Sholapur, and the
expenditure on that account was directed to be debited to
PG NO 716
the budget head "26-Miscellaneous Department Civil Supplies
Department (iii) Procurement, Distribution and Price Control
(b) Mofussil" and met from the grants sanctioned thereunder.
It is, however, not disputed that some of the rationing
staff were retrenched, some were absorbed in the Revenue
Department and the remaining staff were directed to be
merged in the office of the Food grain Distribution Officer,
Sholapur, with effect from May 1, 1969. So far as the
appellants before us are concerned, they were not
retrenched, but according to the private respondents they
were absorbed in the Revenue Department. This has been
emphatically disputed by the appellants.
Mr. Tarkunde, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
private respondents, has drawn our attention to a letter
dated October 25, 1969 written by the Foodgrain Distribution
Officer, Sholapur, to the Collector, Revenue Branch,
Sholapur. In that letter, the Food grain Distribution
Officer, Sholapur, requested the Collector to absorb the
remaining staff of the rationing department, who were then
working in the Foodgrain Distribution Office. At this stage,
it may be that there is no dispute that both the
Departments, namely, the Food & Civil Supplies Department
and the Revenue Department, were under the District
Collectorate. A list was attached to the said letter dated
October 25, 1969 of the Foodgrain Distribution Officer
relating to absorption of rationing staff in the Revenue
Department. The list contains the names of the appellants
and under column No. 7 of the list, it has been recorded
that the appellants and other remaining staff were willing
to work in the Revenue Department. In view of the said
letter of the Foodgrain Distribution Officer and the list
annexed to his letter written to the Collector, it is
submitted by the learned Counsel, appearing on behalf of
the private respondents, that the appellants were
transferred to the Revenue Department as the Food & Civil
Supplies Department was abolished on the abolition of the
statutory rationing.
It has been already noticed that some of the staff of
the rationing establishment, who were not retrenched, were
transferred to the office of the Foodgrain Distribution
Officer. According to the respondents, the Foodgrain
Distribution Office is under the Revenue Department, while
the appellants aver that it belongs to the Food & Civil
Supplies Department. In this regard, the most important say
is that of the Government. It is asserted on behalf of the
State of Maharashtra that the Food grain Distribution
Officer belongs to the Food & Civil Supplies Department. The
PG NO 717
controversy in this respect can be easily resolved by
referring to the said letter dated October 25, 1969 of the
Foodgrain Distribution Officer to the Collector, Revenue
Branch. If the Foodgrain Distribution Office belongs to the
Revenue Department, there was no necessity for the Foodgrain
Distribution Officer to request the Collector, Revenue
Department, to absorb the unretrenched staff of the
rationing establishment. Be that as it may, the question
that arises is whether the appellants were absorbed in the
Revenue Department. It is true that under column No. 7 of
the list annexed to the said letter dated October 25, 1969
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of the Food grain Distribution Officer, it has been recorded
that the appellants and other staff of the rationing
establishment were willing to work in the Revenue
Department. There is, however, nothing to show that as a
matter of fact the appellants were transferred to the
Revenue Department. The appellants might be willing to be
absorbed in the Revenue Department, but there is no material
in proof of the alleged absorption of the appellants in the
Revenue Department. It is also not the case of the State
Government that the appellants were absorbed in the Revenue
Department. In the counter affidavit of the respondent No.
1, it is stated as follows:
"That the District Collector of Solapur by his
memorandum dated 17-4-1969 laid down the conditions of
giving alternative employment to the retrenched ex-civil
supply staff in Revenue Department. These conditions are:
(1) That the services in Revenue Department are
transferable throughout the district.
(2) That Revenue employees are required to pass
departmental examination within prescribed period.
(3) That to hold Awal Karkun’s post Revenue employee is
required to pass revenue qualifying exam. in addition to
Sub-Service Department Examination."
It is clear from the statement extracted above that one
of the conditions for absorption was that the appellants
were required to pass the departmental examination within
the prescribed period. Another conditions was that one had
to pass revenue qualifying examination in addition to Sub-
Service Department Examination for holding the post of Awal
Karkun in the Revenue Department. It is not disputed that
the appellants have not passed any of these examinations.
This shows that as they did not fulfil the conditions for
PG NO 718
absorption in the Revenue Department, they could not be
transferred to or absorbed in that Department.
The High Court proceeded on the assumption that on the
abolition of the statutory rationing, the Food & Civil
Supplies Department, Sholapur, also came to be absolished.
Indeed, this is also the contention of the private
respondents. Food is an important matter for Government’s
consideration and it was the responsibility of the
Agriculture, Food & Cooperation Department before the
creation of the Food & Civil Supplies Department. The said
Department was renamed as ‘Agriculture & Cooperation
Department’ inasmuch as food ’ was taken out of that
Department and placed under the Food & Civil Supplies
Department. Thus, the fact of introduction or abolition of
statutory rationing has nothing to do with the question of
food and supply thereof, which must be dealt with by some
department of the government and after the creation of the
Food & Civil Supplies Department, it was dealt with by that
Department. It will be wrong to assume that the Food &
Civil Supplies Department dealing with food and supply
thereof, will be abolished consequent on the abolition of
the statutory rationing. In the counter affidavit of the
State of Maharashtra, affirmed by Shri Chandrasen
Pandarinath Kamble, it has been stated inter alia that in
the State of Maharashtra there is a system of Fair Price
Shops and Household Card System in the areas where statutory
rationing system does not exist This Fair Price Shops and
Household Card system undoubtedly comes under the control
and supervision of the Food & Civil Supplies Department. As
the Department existed it can be reasonably presumed that it
had its own staff and the appellants contention that they
were retained in the Food & Civil Supplies Department seems
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to be correct. Merely the fact of giving of consent by the
appellants to their absorption in the Revenue Department,
fails to persuade us to hold that the appellants were
absorbed in the Revenue Department, in the absence of any
proper material in that regard.
A question has, however, been raised on behalf of the
private respondents that if the Department of Revenue and
the Food & Civil Supplies Department are two different
Departments of the Government, there is no material to show
how the respondents came to hold posts in the Food & Civil
Supplies Department. It is true that there is no order
showing that the respondents were transferred on deputation
from the Revenue Department to the Food & Civil Supplies
Department. In our opinion, in view of the facts and
circumstances stated above, it can be reasonably presumed
PG NO 719
that the respondents were sent on deputation to the Food &
Civil Supplies Department, otherwise there was no question
of their repatriation to their parent department, that is,
the Revenue Department. There are other materials which
would also justify the finding that the Food & Civil
Supplies Department and the Department of Revenue are two
independent and separate Departments even after the
abolition of statutory rationing.
The Governor of Maharashtra, by an order dated April 13,
1983, framed rules under the proviso to Article 309 of the
Constitution of India for regulating recruitment to the
posts of Assistant Commissioner (Supply), District Supply
Officer and Foodgrain Distribution Officer Class-I under the
Food & Civil Supplies Department of the Government of
Maharashtra. Framing of these rules, proves two things,
namely, that the Food & Civil Supplies Department has
independent and separate existence, and that the Foodgrain
Distribution Officer belongs to that Department. Another set
of rules was framed under the proviso to Article 309 of the
Constitution of India by the notification dated May 21, 1984
for regulating recruitment to Class-11 posts in the Food &
Civil Supplies Department of the Government of Maharashtra.
The framing of these rules for regulating the recruitment of
officers in the Food & Civil Supplies Department supports
the case of the appellants and also of the Government that
the Food & Civil Supplies Department Sholapur, is an
independent Department. The final gradation list of supply
staff of directly recruited Clerks and Godown Keepers was
prepared and published. It is. however contended on behalf
of the private respondents that the supply staff belong to
the Revenue Department. This contention is without any
substance. The words supply staff undoubtedly, refer to the
supply staff of the Food & Civil Supplies Department . The
State Government is justified in placing reliance upon the
gradation list in support of its case that the Food & Civil
Supplies Department is an independent and separate
Department.
It is, therefore, apparent from the above facts,
particularly the fact that separate rules were framed for
recruitment of officers in the Food & Civil Supplies
Department and a final gradation list was also prepared and
published, and the Food & Civil Supplies Department not part
and parcel of the Revenue Department but it has a separate
and independent existence. This finding finds support from
another fact that the Revenue Department has its own
gradation list of its employees including the private
respondents.
PG NO 720
We may now deal with one more submission made on behalf
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of the private respondents. Our attention has been drawn to
a fact which has also been noticed by the High Court,
namely, that by a Government order issued to all
Commissioners of Divisions, it was directed that the posts
of Inspecting Officers should be made available to the
persons from the Revenue Department as well as from the Food
& Civil Supplies Department in the ratio of 75:25. It is
submitted on behalf of the private respondents that this
Government order points to the fact that both the Food &
Civil Supplies Department and the Revenue Department are one
and the same Department at Sholapur. We are unable to accept
this contention. The Government order in question, in our
opinion, establishes the fact that the two Departments are
separate Departments of the Government. It has been already
noticed that some officers of the Revenue Department were
holding the posts in the Food & Civil Supplies Department,
Sholapur, presumably on deputation and, hence, the ratio
with regard to the posts of Inspecting Officers, with which
we are not concerned, had to be fixed. If the two
Departments were not separate Departments, there was no
necessity for mentioning the names of these two Departments
in the said order. It is not disputed that the posts of
Inspecting Officers are posts of the Food & Civil Supplies
Department. The contention of the private respondents based
on the said Government order is, accordingly, rejected.
Before we conclude the judgment, we may refer to an
unreported Bench decision of the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay
High Court in Special Civil Applications Nos. 707 of 1974
and 4258 and 4834 of 1976 (Shri Atmaram Chaturji Garbade &
Ors. v. State of Maharashtra & Ors.) disposed of on January
13, 1977 where it has been held that the two departments are
separate. It is, however, contended by Mr Tarkunde that the
Nagpur Bench decision has no bearing on the instant appeals
before us as it relates to the city of Nagpur and cantonment
in Kampte where the Food & Civil Supplies Department was not
abolised. It, however, appears that in that decision, the
Bench has taken into consideration some common
documents. Be that as it may, in the instant appeals, there
are ample materials which justify the conclusion that the
two departments are not one and the same department but are
two separate departments.
In the circumstances, we are unable to agree with the
High Court that the appellants are employees of the Revenue
Department inasmuch as after the abolition of the statutory
rationing, the Food & Civil Supplies Department was also
abolished and the appellants were absorbed in the Revenue
PG NO 721
Department. As the appellants belong to a different
department, their promotions will be governed by the rules
of that department. Similarly, the promotions of the private
respondents will be considered in accordance with the rules
of the Revenue Department. We are told that after their
repatriation to their parent department all the private
respondents were promoted to the posts of Awal Karkuns.
For the reasons aforesaid, we set aside the judgment of
the High Court as also of the trial court and that of the
lower appellate court and dismiss the suit and the appeals.
The writ petitions filed’ in the High Court are also
dismissed. The instant appeals are allowed, but in view of
the peculiar facts and circumstances of the cases, there
will be no order as to costs.
R .S.S. Appeals allowed.