Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M.H.BELLARY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/03/1964
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 868 1964 SCR (7) 471
CITATOR INFO :
E 1968 SC1113 (4)
F 1971 SC2111 (7)
F 1979 SC1596 (35)
D 1988 SC 968 (8,13)
ACT:
Bombay Civil Servic Rules- Government Servant of one
department sent on deputation to another department-On re-
version entitled to, the promotions based on merit-cum
seniority basis in the parent department-Breach of Statutory
Rule under Art. 309 gives rise to cause of action-
Constitution of India, Art. 309, 313-Bombay Civil Service
Rules, R. 50(b).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was a Government servant in one of the
departments of the Bombay Government. He was sent on
deputation to another department and after serving there for
a long period and getting a number of promotions he was re-
verted back to his parent department and ordered to be
posted at a considerably lower grade, while another
Government servant who was below his rank was promoted as
Assistant Secretary. Thereupon the respondent filed a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution challenging the
order of his posting. A preliminary objection was raised by
the appellant that the petition was not maintainable. But
the High Court held that the respondent was entitled to
invoke the jurisdiction of the Court when there is a
violation of a statutory rule and on merits it held that the
respondent was entitled to the relief claimed. The present
appeal was filed on a certificate granted by the High Court
under Art. 133 of the Constitution.
Before this Court in view of the decision State of U.P. v.
Babu Ram Upadhya. [1961] 2 S.C.R. 679 it was not disputed
that if there was a breach of a statutory rule framed under
Art. 309 or continued under Art. 313 in relation to the
condition of service the aggrieved Government servant could
have recourse to the Court.
The main contention on behalf of the appellant was that the
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respondent was not entitled to be appointed to any higher
post than as a Senior Assistant or to receive a salary
higher than that which had been granted to him by the im-
pugned order.
Held: (i) Assuming that this was a case where the respon-
,dent had a lien and his lien had not been suspended it was
not possible to interpret Rule 50(b) of the Bombay Civil
Service Rules as providing different criteria to cases where
a Government servant had a lien and where his lien has been
suspended.
The Rule and the circular make it abundantly clear that an
officer on deputation in another department shall be re-
stored to the position he would have occupied in his parent
department had he not been deputed.
(ii) Where promotions are based on seniority-cum-merit basis
an officer on deputation has a legal right to claim pro-
motion to a higher post in his parent -department provided
his service in the department to which he is lent is
satisfactory. This may not be the case in regard to
selection posts.
472
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 677 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 31, 1961 of
the Mysore High Court in Writ Petition No. 283 of 1959.
B. R. L. Iyengar and B. R. G. K. Achar, for the appellant.
S. V. Venkataranga Iyengar, M. Rama Jois and A. G.
Ratnaparkhi, for the respondent.
March 25, 1964. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
AYYANGAR, J.- A very short question regarding the proper
construction of Rule 50(b) of the Bombay Civil Services
Rules is involved in this appeal which comes before us by a
certificate of fitness granted by the High Court of Mysore
under Art. 133 of the Constitution.
The facts giving rise to this appeal which are necessary to
be narrated to appreciate the only point urged before us
were these: The respondent was recruited as an Upper
Division Clerk by the Government of Bombay in 1931 and was
later appointed substantively as a Junior Assistant in the
Political Department. While so, on September 17, 1943 his
services were transferred on deputation to the office of the
Controller of Rationing, Bombay to work as a Senior
Assistant in the newly started Rationing department which
was a temporary department. He obtained successive promo-
tions in this department and by March, 1954 he was drawing a
pay of Rs. 460/- p.m. in the grade Rs. 350-30-650 as
Rationing Officer. That department was abolished in March,
1954 and thereafter he was reverted to his parent depart-
ment. Though his parent department was the Political De-
partment, the respondent was, after he ceased to be a
Rationing Officer, posted first to the Labour Department and
then to the Public Works Department. When this reversion
took place his pay was fixed at Rs. 120/- p.m. The
petitioner protested against this reversion and this loss of
his emoluments on the ground that this fixation of pay was
contrary to the Rules framed by Government in regard to the
service conditions of a Government servant who was appointed
on deputation in another department. He also pointed out
that the officer next below him in his parent department had
been appointed as an Assistant Secretary by virtue of normal
and regular promotion. therefore, however, final orders were
passed on his representation by the Government of Bombay,
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the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 came into force and the
respondent was allotted to the State of Mysore. On November
27, 1958 the Government of Mysore informed the respondent
through an official memorandum that in view of
473
certain communications received by that Government from the
Government of Bombay in answer to his representations he
should be considered to have held the post of Senior
Assistant on June 1, 1954 on a salary of Rs. 225/- in the
grade Rs. 210-15-300.The petitioner’s complaint,however, was
that even this order was in violation of the conditions of
his service and he claimed that when he was reverted to the
parent department he was entitled to be posted as an
Assistant Secretary-a post which according to him, he would
have held on that date had he not been deputed to the
department of Civil Supplies on September 17, 1943. There
was no dispute that subject to an argument to which we shall
refer presently, the respondent would have held the post of
Assistant Secretary because the person next below him-one
Nadkarni-actually held that post on that day. The
respondent claimed that on the basis of the Service Rules to
which we shall immediately make reference he should, on his
return to the parent department, have been posted as an
Assistant Secretary and been allowed the scale of emoluments
applicable to that post. As the Government of Mysore
refused to accede to his demand the respondent filed a
petition under Art. 226 for inter alia a writ of mandamus
directing the appellant-State to include the petitioner in
the grade-pay of an Assistant Secretary I and fix him above
Nadkarni.
The appellant raised a preliminary objection to the writ
petition, the objection being that the complaint of the
petitioner was not justiciable. This was primarily based
upon the fact that the respondent relied upon a circular of
the Government of Bombay dated October 31, 1950 in support
of his plea that he was entitled to the benefit that he
claimed on reversion to the parent department from his
service on deputation. The material part of that circular
ran:
"It has come to the notice of Government that
Government servants when deputed to other
Departments or offices often draw pay in time
scales which are identical with the timescales
in their parent Departments. The question
therefore, arises on their reversion to their
parent Department whether the service rendered
in an identical time scale in the Department
to which their service had been lent, should
be allowed to count for increments in the
parent Department under Note 4 below Bombay
Civil Service Rule 41. Government is pleased
to direct that all such cases should be
regulated under Bombay Civil Service Rule 51
and that only that portion
of service in the foreign Department or office
should be allowed to count for increments in
the parent Department during which the person
concerned would have drawn pay in the time
scale applicable to the post he holds on
reversion, but for his deputation to another
Department or office, i.e., the case should be
so regulated as to restore the position the
person concerned would have occupied in his
parent Department had he not been deputed."
The question as to whether this circular which was treated
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as an administrative instruction could confer rights en-
forceable in a court on a Government servant was referred to
a Full Bench for its opinion. Before the learned Judges of
the Full Bench the learned Advocate-General, however,
brought to the notice of the Court that this circular merely
gave effect to a statutory rule framed by the Government of
Bombay. The relevant rule in this respect was rule 50(b) of
the Bombay Civil Services Rules which ran:
"50(b) Service in another post, other than a
post carrying less pay referred to in clause
(a) of rule 22 whether in a substantive or
officiating capacity, service on deputation
and leave other than extraordinary leave
counts for increments in the time scale
applicable to the post on which the Government
servant holds a lien as well as in time scale
applicable to the post or posts, if any, on
which he would hold a lien had his lien not
been suspended:
Provided that Government may, in any case in
which they are satisfied that the leave was
taken on account of illness or for any other
cause beyond the Government servant’s control,
direct that extraordinary leave shall be
counted for increment under this clause."
The position, therefore, that emerged after this was whether
an infraction of a statutory rule could give rise to a cause
of action to an aggrieved Government servant. The learned
Judges answered this question in the affirmative and there-
after the Division Bench which heard the petition allowed
the writ and granted the respondent the relief that he
sought. It might be mentioned that even by the date of the
pendency of these proceedings in the High Court the
respondent had retired on account of superannuation and the
only question, therefore, was whether he would be entitled
to the remuneration to which he, would have- been entitled
uader the rule in question. The appellant-State applied to
the High Court
475
for a certificate to enable an appeal to be filed to this
Court and on this having been granted the appeal is now
before us.
in view of the decisions of this Court of which it is
sufficient to refer to State of U.P. v. Babu Ram Upadhya(1)
it was not disputed that if there was a breach of a
statutory rule framed under Art. 309 or which was continued
under Art. 313 in relation to the conditions of service the
aggrieved Government servant could have recourse to the
Court for redress.
Learned Counsel for the Appellant, however urged two
contentions in support of the stand that the respondent was
not entitled to be appointed to any higher post than as a
Senior Assistant or to receive a salary higher than Rs.
225/in the scale Rs. 210-15-300 which had been granted to
him by the impugned order of November, 1958. The first was
that on a proper construction of Rule 50(b), an officer who
after serving on deputation in another department is revert-
ed to his parent department is entitled to nothing more than
the increments allowable in the time scale applicable to the
substantive appointment which he held at the time of the
transfer. In this connection stress was laid on the words
"increments in the time scale applicable to the post on
which the Government servant holds a lien" occurring in the
subrule. We are unable to accept this contention. In the
first place, it is not clear whether the case of the
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respondent was one where he held a lien or one where the
lien was suspended, and no material was placed before the
Court in this regard, the point in this form not being urged
in the High court. But even assuming that it was a case
where the respondent had a lien and his lien had not been
suspended it is difficult to see what logic there could be
in interpreting the rule as providing different criteria in
the two cases. ’Where the lien is suspended the rule speaks
of the "post or posts, if any he would have held if his lien
had not been -suspended". By the use of the plural, it is
clear that the rule ,contemplated the suspended lien being
transferred from one post to another-in other words, to a
promotion from one post to another during the period of the
service in another ,department. If there was any ambiguity
in what the rule meant it is wholly dispelled by reference
to the circular which ensures to the officer on deputation
in another department that he shall be restored to the
position he "would have occupied in his parent department
had he not been deputed". It was not suggested that there
was any ambiguity in the wording of this circular which, in
our opinion, gives proper effect to the provisions of Rule
50(b)..
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 679.
476
The other submission of learned Counsel was that a
Government servant though he had a right to increments in a
time scale applicable to the post that he held on the date
of his transfer on deputation and on which he had a lien,
had no legal right to be promoted to a higher post and that
the construction adopted by the High Court virtually con-
ceded or guaranteed to officers on deputation a right to an
automatic promotion which they would not have had if they
had not been posted on deputation. We see no force in this
contention either. Learned Counsel is right only in so far
as the promotion involved relates to a selection post. But
where it is based on seniority-cum-merit, those
considerations are not relevant. The service of an officer
on deputation in another department is treated by the rule
as equivalent to service in the parent department and it is
this equation between the services in the two departments
that forms the basis of Rule 50(b). So long therefore as
the service of the employee in the new department is
satisfactory and he is obtaining the increments and
promotions in that department, it stands to reason that that
satisfactory service and the manner of its discharge in the
post he actually fills, should be deemed to be rendered in
the parent department also so as to entitle him to
promotions, which are often on seniority-cummerit basis.
What is indicated here is precisely what is termed in
official language the "next below rule" under which an
officer on deputation is given a paper-promotion and shown
as holding a higher post in the parent department if the
officer next below him there is being promoted. If there
are adverse remarks against him in the new department or
punishments inflicted on him there, different considerations
would arise and these adverse remarks etc. would and could
certainly be taken into account in the parent department
also, but that is not the position here. In view of the
facts of the case it is not necessary to discuss this aspect
in any detail or any further.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
477
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