Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAISHANKAR AVALRAM JOSHI & ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/03/1969
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1302 1969 SCR (3) 917
1969 SCC (1) 804
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC 471 (5)
ACT:
Constitution of India Art. 311(2)-reasonable opportunity-
whether requires supply of copy of Enquiry Officer’s report-
Bombay Reorganisation Act, 1960, ss. 60 and 61--whether
liability to pay arrears of salary if arising out of
contract under s. 61 or in respect of ’actionable wrong
other than breach of contract’ under s. 61.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent while he was holding the post of a
Senior Jailor in March, 1954, was suspended on the
allegations that he had committed certain acts of
misappropriation and maltreatment of prisoners. After
January, 1955. A show cause notice was then issued to him
to which he replied by a written statement. The respondent
was dismissed by an order of Inspector General of Prisons in
February, 1955. The respondent filed a suit for a
declaration that enquiry report was never supplied to him
and consequently he had not been given reasonable
opportunity within the meaning of Art. 311 of the
Constitution. He also prayed for a decree for arrears of
pay from April, 1954 to May, 1960. His suit was dismissed
by the trial court but he succeeded in the first appeal
where the order of dismissal was declared illegal and void.
An appeal by the respondent to the High Court claiming
arrears of salary was allowed.
As the State of Bombay had, in the meantime, been
reorganised, the High Court also directed that the liability
for arrears of salary upto the date of suit would be that of
the State of Maharashtra and the liability arising out of
the declaration that the appellant was in Government service
would be the liability of the State of Gujarat. A Letters
Patent appeal filed by the State of Maharashtra was
dismissed.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended, inter alia, on
behalf of the appellant that the liability to pay arrears of
pay was not a liability arising out of a contract within the
meaning of section 60 of the Bombay Reorganisation Act of
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1960 but it was a liability in respect of an actionable
wrong other than a breach of contract within the meaning of
section 61 of the Act.
HELD: (1) The High Court had rightly found that the
failure on the part of the competent authority to provide
the respondent with a copy of the report of the Enquiry
Officer amounted to denial of reasonable opportunity
contemplated by Art. 311(2) of the Constitution. The
Inspector General of Prisons had the report before him and
the tentative conclusions arrived at by the Enquiry Officer
were bound to influence him and in depriving the plaintiff
of a copy of the report he was handicapped in not knowing
what material was influencing the Inspector General of
Prisons. [920 F]
Union of India v. H. C. Goel, [1964] 4 S.C.R. 718, 728,
referred to.
It is true that the question whether reasonable opportunity
has or has not been’ afforded to the Government servant must
depend on the facts
918
of each case, but it would be in very rare cases indeed in
which it could be said that the Government servant is not
prejudiced by the non-supply of the report of the
Enquiry officer. [921 B]
(2) The decree of the High Court decreeing payment of
arrears of salary is truly a liability in proceedings
relating to a contract within s. 60(2) (a) of the Act.
Although the words ’actionable wrong’ other than breach of
contract in this context are wide words and include
something more than torts, but even so where a suit is
brought by a Government servant for arrears of salary the
decree more properly falls under s. 60 of the Act rather
than under a. 61. [925 B]
State of Tripura v. The Province of East Bengal, [1951]
S.C.R. 1, 44, State of Bihar v. Abdul Majid, [1954] S.C.R.
786, Owner of S. S. Raphael v. Brandy, [1911] A.C. 413-14,
Inland Revenue Commissioner v. Hambrook, [1956] 1 AR E.R.
807, 811-12, Reilly v. R., [1934] A.C. 176, 179; Terrell v.
Secretary of State for the Colonies, [1953] 2 Q.B. 482, 499;
R. v. Doultre, [1884] 9 A.C. 745 and Bushe v. R., (May 29,
1869, The Times), considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 647 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
June 19, 24, 1963 of the Gujarat High Court in Appeal No.
704 of 1960 from Appellate Decree.
P. K. Chatterjee and S. P. Nayar, for the appellant.
I. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 1.
S. K. Dholakia and Vineet Kumar, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This appeal by special leave arises out of the
suit filed by Bhaishankar Avalram Joshi, hereinafter
referred to as the plaintiff, for a declaration that the
order of dismissal, dated February 2/4, 1955, passed by the
Inspector General of Prisons, Saurashtra, was illegal and
void on the ground that it contravened the provisions of
Art. 311 (2) of the Constitution. The plaintiff also prayed
for a decree for Rs. 2,690 being arrears of his pay from
April 1, 1954 to May 7, 1956.
The plaintiff failed before the Civil Judge, Rajkot, but on
appeal succeeded before the District Judge, Central
Saurashtra, inasmuch as he declared order dated February
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2/4, 1955, illegal and void. The plaintiff appealed to the
High Court claiming arrears of salary and the State of
Bombay filed cross-objections praying that the suit be
dismissed. The second appeal was heard by the High Court of
Gujarat (Miabhoy, J.) who directed that the decree passed by
the lower appellate court "be varied so as to show that the
appellant (plaintiff) continued to be in Government service
till the date of the suit only and there will be a decree
for Rs. 2,690
919
being arrears of pay due to the appellant (plaintiff) upto
the date of the suit. There will be a further provision in
the decree that the liability arising out of the declaration
that the appellant is in Government service is the liability
of the State of Gujarat and that the liability for the
payment of the arrears of pay is the liability of the State
of Maharashtra". The State of Maharashtra filed as
application for leave to appeal under the Letters Patent but
this’ was dismissed. The appeal is now before us.
The learned counsel for the appellant the state of
Maharashtra , contends ,first, that the High Court erred in
holding that there had been a breach of Art. 311(2) of the
Constitution, as, according to him, there was no duty to
supply a copy of the report of the enquiry held against the
plaintiff. Secondly, he contends that the High Court erred
in fastening the liability in respect of the arrears of pay
on the State of Maharashtra.
Before we deal with the above points we may give a
few facts. The plaintiff entered service in the Gondal
State in 1927 as a jailor. The Gondal State merged with the
United States of Saurashtra. On March 6, 1953, the
plaintiff was appointed senior jailor, Surendranagar
District Jail. On March 25, 1954, he was suspended, and at
that time he was acting as Accountant at Rajkot Central
Jail. On March 7, 1954, he was served with a charge sheet.
In substance the charges were that while he was serving at
Surendranagar he had committed certain acts of mis-
appropriation of food stuffs meant for prisoners,
maltreatment of prisoners and acceptance of illegal
gratification from them. The plaintiff filed a written
statement on September 4, 1954, and an enquiry was held by
Mr. Gangopadhyay. The plaintiff appeared before that
officer and cross-examined witnesses. He also examined
himself and some witnesses. He was also allowed to appear
through an Advocate in the enquiry proceedings. The Enquiry
Officer made a report and on or about January 7, 1955, the
following notice was issued to him calling upon him to show
cause why he should not be dismissed from service
"To
Shri Bhaishanker A. Joshi,
Accountant, Rajkot Central Prison
(Under suspension)
Charges framed against you under this office
No. C/ 14 dated 27-3-54 and in particular the
charges of having accepted illegal
gratification from prisoner Ratilal Jivan have
been established to the satisfaction of
Government. You are hereby asked to show
cause why the punishment of dismissal from
service should not be inflicted upon You.
920
You should please submit your reply to this
office, through the Superintendent, Rajkot
Central Prison,, within a week from the date
of receipt of this letter without fail.
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Sd/- M. J. BHATT
Inspector General of Prisons,
Government of Saurashtra. "
The plaintiff filed a written statement. He was
dismissed by the Inspector General of Prisons by his order
dated February 2/4, 1955. This order was amended on
February 9, 1955, in which it was stated that "the aforesaid
order should be read so as to show that the plaintiff was
dismissed from service on account of charge of accepting,
illegal gratification from prisoner Ratilal Jivan having
been conclusively proved against him in the departmental
inquiries conducted against him by the Government".
In the plaint the plaintiff alleged that copy of the enquiry
report was never supplied to him, and consequently he had
not been given reasonable opportunity within the meaning of
Art. 311 of the Constitution. The State of Bombay admitted
that the plaintiff was not supplied with a copy of the
report of the Enquiry Officer, but pleaded that the
plaintiff had not asked for copy of the report and had not
been prejudiced by the non-supply of the copy of the
report.
The High Court held that the failure on the part of the
competent authority to provide the plaintiff with a copy of
the report of the Enquiry Officer amounted to denial of
reasonable opportunity contemplated by Art. 311(2) of the
Constitution.
It seems to us that the High Court came to a correct conclu-
sion. The plaintiff was not aware whether the Enquiry
Officer reported in his favour or against him. If the
report was in his favour, in his representation to the
Government he would have utilised its reasoning to dissuade
the Inspector General from coming to a contrary conclusion,
and if the report was against him he would have put such
arguments or material as he could to dissuade the Inspector
General from accepting the report of the Enquiry Officer.
Moreover, as pointed out by the High Court, the Inspector
General of Prisons had the report before him and the
tentative conclusions arrived at by the Enquiry Officer were
bound to influence him, and in depriving the plaintiff of a
copy of the report he was handicapped is not knowing what
material was influencing the Inspector General of Prisons.
921
As observed by Gajendragadkar, J., as he then
was, in Union of lndia v. H. C. Goel(1), "the enquiry report
along with the evidence recorded constitute the material on
which the Government has ultimately to act. That is the
only purpose of the enquiry held by competent officer and
the report he makes as a result of the said enquiry".
It is true that the question whether reasonable
opportunity has or has not been afforded to the Government
servant must depend on the facts of each case, but it would
be in very rare cases indeed in which it could be said that
the Government servant is not prejudiced by the non-supply
of the report of the Enquiry Officer.
In the result we must over-rule the first contention urged
on behalf of the appellant, the State of Maharashtra.
The plaintiff is not concerned with the second contention
but it is a dispute between the State of Maharashtra and the
State of Gujarat. As is well-known, the State of Bombay was
reorganised into the above two States and the-Bombay
Reorganisation Act, 1960, contained various provisions for
the apportionment of assets and liabilities between the two
States. We are here concerned with ss. 60 and 61 of the
Bombay Reorganisation 1960, which read thus :
"60. (1) Where, before the appointed day, the
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State of Bombay has made any contract in the
exercise of its executive power for any
purposes of the State, that contract shall be
deemed to have been made in the exercise of
the executive power,-
(-a) if such purposes are, as from that day,
exclusively purposes of either the State of
Maharashtra or the State of Gujarat, of that
State; and
(b) in any other case, of the State of
Maharashtra;
and all rights and liabilities which have
accrued, or may accrue, under any such
contract shall, to the extent to which they
would have been rights or liabilities of the
State of Bombay, be rights or liabilities of
the State of Maharashtra or the State of
Gujarat, as the case may be;
Provided that in any such case as is
referred to in clause (b), the initial
allocation of ’rights and liabilities made by
this sub-section shall be subject to such
financial adjustment as may be agreed upon
between the State
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 718,728.
922
of Maharashtra and the State of Gujarat, or,
in default of such agreement, as the Central
Government may by order direct.
(2) For the purposes of this section there
shall be deemed to be included in the
liabilities which have accrued or may accrue
under any contract-
(a)any liability to satisfy an order or award
made by any court or other tribunal in
proceedings relating to the contract; and
(b any liability in respect of expenses
incurred in or in connection with any such
proceedings.
(3)This section shall have effect subject to
the other provisions of this Part relating to
the apportionment of liabilities in respect of
loans, guarantees and other financial
obligations; and bank balances and securities
shall, notwithstanding that they partake of
the nature of contractual rights, be dealt
with under those provisions.
61. Where, immediately before the appointed
day, the State of Bombay is subject to any
liability in respect of any actionable wrong
other than breach of contract, that liability
shall,--
(a) if the cause of action arose wholly
within the territories which, as from that
day, are the territories of the State of
Maharashtra or the State of Gujarat, be a
liability of that State; and
(b) in any other case, be initially a
liability of the State of Maharashtra but
subject to such financial adjustment as may be
agreed upon between the States of Maharashtra
and Gujarat or, in default of such agreement,
as the Central Government may by order
direct."
The learned counsel for the State of Maharashtra contends
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that the liability to pay arrears of pay was not a liability
arising out of a contract but was a liability in respect of
an actionable wrong other than a. breach of contract.
This Court in State of Bihar v. Abdul Majid(1) held "that
the rule of English Law that a civil servant cannot maintain
a suit against the Crown for the recovery of arrears of
salary does not prevail in India and it has been negatived
by the provisions of the statute law in India". Mahajan,
C.J., speaking for the Court, observed at p. 802:
"As regard torts of its servants in exercise
of sovereign powers, the company was not, and
the Crown in
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 786.
923
India was not, liable unless the act has been
ordered or ratified by it. Be that as it may,
that rule has no application to the case of
arrears of salary earned by a public servant
for the period that he was actually in office.
The present claim is not based on tort but is
based on quantum meruit or contract and the
court is entitled to give relief to him."
It may be that these observations are not conclusive on the
point under consideration. It seems to us, however, that
some elements of relationship between a public servant and
Government are based on contract within the meaning of s. 60
of the Bombay Reorganisation Act, 1960. In particular, the
liability to pay salary, when it has been fixed, arises out
of a contract to pay salary. Authority is not lacking even
in England where a special relationship exists between the
Crown and its public servants. In Owner or S. S. Raphael v,
Brandy(1) the head-note reads
A stoker on board a merchant ship, who was en-
titled to wages from the shipowners, and also
as a stoker in the Royal Naval Reserve to 6
pound a year as a retainer, was injured by an
accident on the ship which disabled him from
continuing to serve in the Royal Naval Reserve
Held, that the stoker was entitled under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1906, to
compensation from the shipowners not only in
respect of his wages but also of the retainer,
which must be taken into account as earnings
under a concurrent contract of service."
The Lord Chancellor in the course of the speech observed
"A point was made before your Lordships which
does not appear to have been made in the Court
below, that there was no contract with the
Crown at all here. The authorities cited_go
no further than to say that when there is an
engagement between the Crown and a military or
naval officer the Crown is always entitled to
determine it at pleasure, and that no
obligation contrary to that would be
recognized or valid in law.
It was then said that there were not here
concurrent contracts. I agree with Fletcher
Moulton L.J. that this is almost a typical
case of concurrent contracts, because the
workman was being paid wages for his services
on board a merchant ship, and at the same time
he was earning his 6 pound a year by virtue of
his engagement with the Crown; and he was
giving an equivalent for that,
(1) [1911] A.C. 413-14.
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924
because he was keeping himself fit and doing
the work which he stipulated to do."
It is true that Lord Goddard, C.J., in Inland
Revenue Commissioners v.Hambrook(1) observed :
"If I may be bold enough to express a
conclusion on a matter on which the Judicial
Committee hesitated in Reilly v. R (2) , it is
that an established civil servant is appointed
to an office and is a public officer, remune-
rated by moneys provided by Parliament, so
that his employment depends not on a contract
with the Crown but on appointment by the
Crown, though there may be as indicated in
Reilly v. R. (2) exceptional cases, as for
instance an engagement for a definite period
where there is a contractual element in or
collateral to his employment."
But in the Court of Appeal nothing was said about these
observations.
It will be remembered that the Privy Council had said in
Reilly v. R(2) that "their Lordships are not prepared to
accede to this view of the contract, if contract there be.
If the terms of the appointment definitely prescribe a term
and expressly provide for a power to determine "for cause"
it appears necessarily to follow that any implication of a
power to dismiss at pleasure is excluded."
Even Lord Goddard, C.J., in Terrell v. Secretary of State
for the Colonies(3) observed that "the case (Reilly v. R.)
(2) shows that there may be contractual rights existing
before determination of a contract at will which are not
inconsistent with a power to determine," and he stuck to
this in Hambrook’s case(1) by stating :
"Although it is clear that no action for
wrongful dismissal can ’be brought by a
discharged civil servant, I may be allowed to
say that I adhere to the opinion which I
expressed in Terrell v. Secretary of State for
the Colonies(1) that he could recover his
salary for the time during which he has
served. He would claim on a quantum mersuit
and I am fortified in this view by Reilly v.
R. (2), by R. v. Doultre(4) and by Bushe v.
R(5) referred to in Robertson’s book at p,
338."
(1)[1956] 1 All E.R. 807, 811-12. (2) [1934] A.C. 176; 179.
(3) [1953] 2Q.B.482,499. (4) (1884) 9 A.C. 745.
(5) (May 29, 1869, The Times)
925
We are here concerned with a choice between s. 60 and s. 61,
which lay down two broad categories. It seems to us that
the decree of the High Court decreeing payment of arrears of
salary is truly a liability in proceedings relating to a
contract within s. 60(2)(a) of the Act. It is true, as held
by this Court in the State of Tripura v. The Province of
East Bengal(1), that the words ,actionable wrong other than
breach of contract’ in this context are wide words and
include something more than torts, but even so where a suit
is brought by a Government servant for arrears of salary,
the decree more properly falls under s. 60 of the Act rather
than under s. 61.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs
to the respondent, Baishankar Avalram Joshi. The State’ of
Gujarat will bear its own costs in this appeal.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
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(1) 1951] S.C.R. 144.
926