Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S.S. MOGHE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/05/1981
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1495 1981 SCR (3) 875
1981 SCC (3) 271 1981 SCALE (1)891
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 101 (28)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950, Articles 14,16, 32 and 309.
Petitioners in 1979 assailing validity of promotion
given to respondents between 1968 and 1975-No valid
explanation for delay in filling petition-Denial of relief.
No regular cadre and hierarchy of posts-No rules laying
down modes of appointment/promotion to posts-Government
whether competent to fill posts by securing services of
suitable persons.
Constitution of a new service-Method of appointment to
various posts-President whether competent to prescribe the
methods by which vacancies in the different categories are
to be filled.
Aviation Research Centre (Technical) Service Rules,
1976, Rules, 6. 7, 8 and 12-Validity of.
Civil Service Regulations, Article 26(7)(iii)-Initial
constitution of service-Absorption of deputationists-Whether
appointment by transfer.
HEADNOTE:
The Aviation Research Centre was a temporary and ad hoc
organisation set up in 1962 for carrying out the work of
collecting intelligence by the use of highly sophisticated
techniques. For manning this Task Force, persons with
experience in the specialised nature of the work were taken
on deputation basis from different sources, such as the
Intelligence Bureau, the Departments of Defence Science,
Wireless Planning ’and Coordination, the Directorate General
of Civil Aviation and the Police Cadres of different States
and they were grouped together to form the ARC. To
supplement the man power some persons were also directly
recruited to the organisation on a purely ad hoc basis. The
ARC organisation was initially treated as an extension of
the Intelligence Bureau. In February 1965, it was brought
under the control of the Director-General of Security. The
administrative control over the organisation which was
originally vested in the Ministry of External Affairs and
later with the Prime Minister’s Secretariat was transferred
to the Cabinet Secretariat in 1965. The sanction for
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continuance of the temporary organisation was accorded by
the Government from year to year till the year 1971 when a
decision was taken by the Government to make the ARC a
permanent Department. The finalisation of the principles to
be adopted for constitution of the new permanent Department
took considerable time and it was only on April 26, 1976
that the President of India promulgated the Aviation
Research Centre (Technical) Service Rules ]976 providing for
tho constitution of a new service the Aviation Research
Centre (Technical) Service.
876
Rule 6 of the said Rules dealt with the initial
constitution of the new ARC permanent Service and provided
that all persons holding, as on the appoint ed day, any one
of the categories of posts specified in rule 4, whether in a
permanent or temporary or officiating capacity or on
deputation basis, shall be eligible for appointment to the
service at the initial constitution thereof. Rule 7 laid
down the principles to be applied for fixation, of seniority
of those appointed to the various posts at the time of its
initial constitution, while Rule 8 dealt with the filling up
of vacancies in various grades remaining unfilled
immediately after the initial constitution of the service
and all vacancies that may subsequently arise in the
Department. Rule 12 provided that in regard to matters not
specifically covered by the rules or by order issued by the
Government, the members of the service shall be governed by
general rules, regulations and orders applicable to persons
belonging to the corresponding Central Civil Service.
The petitioners, who were persons recruited directly to
the ARC organisation during the period between 1965 and 1971
challenged in their writ petition, the validity of the
promotion given to respondent nos. 8 to 67 from the year
1968 onwards officers whose services were borrowed on
deputation. They contended that the deputationists were
occupying the posts in the Department only on an ad hoc
basis and such ad hoc appointees who were having the benefit
of lien in their parent departments and were getting
promotions in those departments had no claim whatever to
seniority or promotions in the borrowing department viz.
A.R.C. They also assailed the Aviation Research Centre
(Technical) Service Rules as conferring arbitrary powers on
the controlling authority to equate the ad hoc service
rendered by the deputationists in the ARC with the regular
service rendered by persons like the petitioners who had
been directly recruited to the Department on a regular basis
which resulted in permanently blocking all the future
chances of the petitioners in matters of promotion and other
service benefits. The Rules were highly arbitrary and
infringed Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution since it
was based on illegal treatment of unequals as equals by
equating persons functioning on a mere ad hoc basis with
those holding posts in the organisation on a regular basis.
Rule 6(2) conferred arbitrary and unfettered powers on the
Screening Committee and suffered from the vice of excessive
delegation. Rule 7 in so far as it empowered the Department
to reckon the seniority of the deputationists by giving them
the benefit of the ad hoc service rendered by them in the
ARC as well as the prior service put in by them in their
parent departments was arbitrary. Rule 8(1) enabled the
deputationists to consolidate the illegal advantage gained
by them at the initial constitution by further
promotions/appointments to still higher posts in the ARC,
and by specifying the method of recruitment to the various
posts in the Service and fixing a quota as between the
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vacancies to be filled up by promotions and those to be
filled up by direct recruitment/deputation or re-employment
in Schedule II of the rules, the deputationists have been
treated on a par with regular departmental personnel and
this involved a clear violation of Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. It was further contended that the position of
the deputationists being that of persons permanently
transferred from the parent departments to the ARC, under
Article 26 of the Civil Service Regulations, such persons
appointed by transfer shall be ranked below all the direct
recruits as well as the promotees already functioning in the
Department and the seniority list dated November 6, 1978
having been drawn up in contravention of the aforesaid
principle laid down in Article 26, the said list should be
declared to be illegal and void.
877
The case of the petitioners was resisted by respondent
No. 1, who contended that the appointments made by direct
recruitment were merely temporary and ad hoc in character.
While the deputationists were persons with rich experience
and long years of service, the direct recruits were
inexperienced and new to the job. The delay in promulgation
of the rules was due to the fact that because of the special
features of the Department and the sensitive nature of the
functions to be discharged by it, various circumstances and
factors had to be taken into account before the draft rules
were finally cleared by the several Ministries concerned.
There is no principle of law prohibiting the absorption in a
newly constituted Department of persons who are functioning
on deputation in a temporary organisation which was later
constituted into a permanent service. The Service Rules
extend equal treatment to all categories of employees who
were in position on the crucial date viz., April 26, 1976 in
the matter of absorption as well as determination of
seniority at the initial constitution, irrespective of
whether they were direct recruits or deputationists. The
Screening Committee prepared the seniority List of the
persons found suitable for absorption in accordance with the
provisions contained in Rule 6(2) read with Rule 7. The
Rules cannot be said to be arbitrary or violative of the
principles of equality enshrined in Articles 14 and 16.
Dismissing the writ petition,
^
HELD: l(i) A party seeking the intervention and aid of
this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution for
enforcement of his fundamental rights, should exercise due
diligence and approach this Court within a reasonable time
after the cause of action arises and if there has been undue
delay or laches on his part, this Court has the undoubted
discretion to deny him relief. [900 H-901 A]
(ii) The challenge raised by the petitioners against
the validity of the promotions given to respondent nos. 8 to
67 during the period between 1968 and 1975 is liable to be
rejected on the preliminary ground that it is most highly
belated. There is no valid explanation from the petitioners
as to why they did not approach this Court within a
reasonable time after those promotions were made. This writ
petition has been filed only in the year 1979 and after such
a long lapse of time the petitioners cannot be permitted to
assail before this Court the promotions that were effected
during the years 1968 to ]975. [900 F-G]
(iii) There is also no satisfactory explanation from
the petitioners as to why no action at all was taken to
challenge the validity of the promotions given to
respondents nos. 8 to 67 for a period of nearly seven years
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subsequent to the judgment of the High Court in 1972. [901
F]
Rabindra Nath Bose and ors. v. Union of India and ors
[1970] 2 S.C.R. 697 referred to.
2. So long as there was no regular cadre and hierarchy
of posts and no rules laying down the mode of
appointment/promotion to those posts, it was perfectly open
to the Government to fill up the posts by securing the
services of persons who in its opinion were by virtu. Of
their experience and qualifications, best suited for being
on trusted with the specialised kinds of functions attached
to the various posts. [902 E]
878
In the instant case the petitioners had been appointed
as ACIOs-II only on a temporary and ad hoc basis. Such
appointments did not confer on them any rights even to the
posts of DFOs. It had also been categorically made clear to
them in the letters containing the offers of appointment
that such appointments will not confer on them any right to
be permanently absorbed in the post if and when it was made
permanent. There was also not even any executive order or
administrative instruction declaring the post of DFO as the
feeder category for appointment to the higher posts. The
petitioners, therefore, had no legal right or claim for
being appointed by promotion to the higher posts of ACIO-I
(FO), ATO, etc. [902 F-G]
3(i) When a new service is proposed to be constituted
by the Government, it is fully within the competence of the
Government to decide as a matter of policy the sources from
which the personnel required for manning the service are to
be drawn. [903 F]
(ii) It is in the exercise of the said power, that
provision has been made by sub-rule (1) of Rule 6, that all
the persons who, as on the appointed day, were already
working in the ARC organisation on a temporary and ad hoc
basis and had thereby acquired valuable experience in the
specialised kinds of work would be eligible for appointment
to the new service at the stage of its initial constitution.
Equal opportunity was given to all to get permanently
appointed in the new ARC (Technical) Service subject to
their being found fit by the Screening Committee under sub-
rule (2) of Rule 6. The provision cannot be said to be
violative of Articles 14 and 16. [903 G, 904 A]
4(i) The provision for Constitution of a Screening
Committee for adjudging the suitability of the persons in
the field of eligibility for permanent appointment to the
service is absolutely reasonable. [904 D]
(ii) The power conferred on the controlling authority
to issue general or special instructions to a Screening
Committee is really in the nature of a safeguard for
ensuring that the rules relating to the initial constitution
of the service were applied fairly and justly. The
controlling authority is the "Secretary Department of
Cabinet Affairs". When supervisory powers are entrusted to
such a high and responsible official, it is reasonable to
assume that they will be exercised fairly and judiciously
and not arbitrarily. The contention that the provisions of
sub-rule (2) of Rule 6 suffer from the vice of arbitrariness
or excessive delegation therefore, fails. [904 E]
5(i) When recruitment to the new Service was being made
from two different classes of sources, it was necessary for
the Government to evolve a fair and reasonable principle for
regulating the inter se seniority of the personnel appointed
to a new Department. What has been done under Rule 6 is to
give credit to the full length of continuous service put in
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by all the appointees in the concerned grade, whether such
service was rendered in the temporary ARC organisation or in
other departments of the Government. The criterion applied,
namely the quantum of previous experience possessed by the
appointees measured in terms of the length of continuous
service put in by them in the concerned or equivalent grade
is perfectly relevant to the purpose underlying the framing
of tho rule. The principle laid down in rule 6(2) for
determination of
879
inter se seniority was quite reasonable and fair and did not
involve any arbitrary or unfair discrimination against the
petitioners. [905 C-E]
In the instant case while the petitioners had no
substantive lien in respect of or title to any post in any
department, the deputationists were having a lien on the
posts held by them in their parent departments. The
petitioners, therefore, formed a different class consisting
of persons who were virtually being recruited for the first
time into regular Government service, as distinct from
respondents 8 to 67 who had been holding posts in their
parent departments for several years on regular basis who
formed a separate class. [905 B]
6. The provisions contained in Rule 7 that the
seniority of persons appointed on permanent basis in each
grade at the initial constitution of the service shall be in
the order in which they are shown in the relevant list
prepared by the Screening Committee in accordance with the
provisions of Rule 6 was upheld as perfectly valid and
constitutional. [905 F-G]
7. At the time of constituting a new service and laying
down the mode of appointment to the various posts it is
fully within the powers of the President of India to
prescribe the methods by which vacancies arising in the
different categories of posts in the department should be
filled up. In the instant case this is precisely what has
been done by Rule 8 and the provisions of Schedule II. [906
B]
8. The draft rules were prepared by the Directorate of
ARC and submitted to the Government in 1972 itself but on a
detailed scrutiny being made it was found that the said
draft required substantial modification in several respects.
Revised rules were, therefore, drafted and submitted to the
Government late in 1974. The time taken in finalising the
rules was due to the fact that intensive examination of all
the relevant aspects had to be done by the various concerned
Ministries before the draft rules could be finally approved
and issued. The plea of malafides put forward by the
petitioners is not established. [906 H-907 B]
9. Article 26(7)(iii) of the Civil Services Regulations
applies to cases "where a person is appointed by transfer in
accordance with a provision in the recruitment rules
providing for such transfer in the event of non-availability
of candidates by direct recruitment or promotion". The
absorption of the erstwhile deputationists in the ARC
(Technical) Service at the time of its initial constitution
was not by such transfer. The provisions of Article
26(7)(iii) are, therefore not attracted. [909 F-G]
10. The provisions of Rule 6(3) and Rule 7 will be
strictly conformed, to both in letter as well as in spirit,
by respondents nos. 1 to 7. In case it is found on
examination that the ranking assigned to any of the
petitioners in the impugned seniority list dated November 6,
1978 is not consistent with the principles laid down in the
aforementioned rule, necessary action should be immediately
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taken to rectify the said defect. If the promotional chances
of any of the petitioners have been adversely affected by
reason of any defect in the seniority list, such promotions
should also be reviewed after following the requisite
procedure. The petitioners may bring to the notice of the
first respondent specific instances, if any, of deviation
from the principles enunciated in Rule 6(3) and Rule 7
resulting in incorrect assignment of seniority and rank by
sub-
880
mitting representations. Such representations, if received,
will be duly examined and appropriate orders passed thereon
as expeditiously as possible. [910 F-911 A]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 119 of 1979.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
V.M. Tarkunde, G.L. Sanghi, Mrs. Jayashree Wad, G.D).
Gupta and Miss Anita for the Petitioners.
K. Parasaran, Solicitor General and Miss. A. Subhashini
for Respondents 1-2 and 4-7.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, A.T.M. Sampath and P.N. Ramalingam
for the other appearing Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BALAKRISHNA ERADI, J. In this petition filed under
Article 32 of the Constitution, the petitioners-31 in
number-who are all officers serving in the Aviation Research
Centre (for short, the ’ARC’) have challenged the
constitutionality of Rules 6 to 8 of the "Aviation Research
Centre (Technical) Service Rules, 1976" issued by the
President of India under the proviso to Article 309 of the
Constitution, as also the legality and validity of the
"absorption" of respondents Nos. 8 to 67 in the said
Department pursuant to the impugned Rules. There is a
further prayer in the writ petition to declare the Seniority
List dated November 6, 1978 (Annexure ’G’) published by the
Department as illegal, unconstitutional and void. Yet
another relief claimed by the petitioners is that all the
promotions granted to respondents Nos. 8 to 67 in the ARC
service from 1968 till 1978 should be declared by this Court
as illegal and void, and that a writ of mandamus or any
other appropriate writ, order or direction should be issued
to respondents Nos. 1 to 7 the Union of India, the Cabinet
Secretary, the Director of Department of Personnel, the
Director General of Security, the Director of ARC and the
Adviser (Technical), A.R.C., respectively-to constitute the
ARC afresh in accordance with law and to rearrange the
seniority in the Service in conformity with law.
The petitioners’ case is that shortly after the
formation of the ARC in 1963 the petitioners were directly
recruited to the said department on a regular basis during
the period between 1963 and 1966 in the category of
Assistant Central Intelligence officers Grade II, (which has
since been redesignated as Deputy Field officers (Tech.)
881
(for short DFO) under the impugned Rules while respondents
Nos. 8 to 67 are officers whose services have been borrowed
on deputation to the ARC from some departments of Central
Government and from the Police Cadre of State Governments.
The petitioners contend that by virtue of their regular
appointments in the ARC, they were, as of right, entitled to
be promoted to the higher posts of Assistant Central
Intelligence officer, Grade-I-now called the Field officer
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(Tech.)-Deputy Central Intelligence officer
(Tech.)/Assistant Technical officer subject only to the
right of the Department to supersede those found unsuitable
for such promotions. However, instead of promoting the
petitioners to the vacancies that arose in such higher
categories of posts, the Department filled up those
vacancies by granting promotions to the deputationists.
thereby illegally denying to the petitioners the
opportunities legitimately due to them for promotion in the
Department. It is contended by the petitioners that the
deputationists were occupying the posts in the Department
only on ad hoc basis and such ad hoc appointees who were
having the benefit of lien in their parent departments and
were getting promotions in those departments had no claim
whatever to seniority or promotions in the borrowing
Department, namely, the ARC. On this basis the petitioners
have raised a .. challenge in this writ petition against the
legality of the various promotions given to respondents Nos.
8 to 67 in the year 1968 and thereafter.
A draft combined seniority list of Assistant Central
Intelligence officers Grade-II (Tech.) working in the ARC
was published in March 1971 (Annexure ’A’), wherein the
officers on deputation as well as those who are directly
recruited in the ARC had all been included and the seniority
of the deputationists had been fixed by taking into account
the total length of service put in by them in the rank of
ACIO in their parent departments as well as in the ARC.
According to the petitioners, the said list had been
prepared in violation of the principle that the same period
of service of a Government servant cannot be legally
considered twice over for service benefits in two
Departments, namely, the parent department and the borrowing
department. G
A Writ Petition-Civil Writ Petition No. 1020 of 1971-
was filed in the Delhi High Court by three of the present
petitioners complaining against the promotions given to the
deputationists and challenging the validity of the combined
seniority list published by the Department in 1971. During
the pendency of that writ petition the impugned seniority
list of 1971 was substituted by two separate
882
lists-one consisting of the direct recruits and the other
consisting of deputationists. Thereupon. the writ petition
before the Delhi High Court was got amended by the
petitioners therein by incorporating objections against the
new seniority lists published by the Department. When the
case came up for hearing, counsel appearing on behalf of the
Union of India submitted before the High Court that
statutory rules governing the service were then under
preparation, that the arrangements till then made were all
purely on ad hoc basis and the whole question will
eventually be finalised after the rules were framed. In the
light of the said submission, the High Court dismissed that
writ petition observing that since no rules governing the
Service had been framed and the appointments in question had
all been made on purely ad hoc basis, the petitioners did
not have at that point of time any legitimate grievance and
the writ petition was, therefore, premature. It is submitted
by the petitioners that, contrary to the assurance given to
the Delhi High Court, the Department did not take early
action for framing the rules but instead continued to confer
on the deputationists the benefit of further illegal
promotions and it was only after all the higher posts were
filled by promoting deputationists that the Department
ultimately promulgated the impugned statutory Service Rules
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on April 26, 1976. Strong reliance has been placed by the
petitioners on office Memorandum dated December 22, 1959
issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs (Annexure ’C’) laying
down certain general principles for determining seniority of
various categories of persons employed in Central Services.
According to the petitioners, in the absence of statutory
rules governing the conditions of service of personnel in
the ARC, the principles laid down in the aforesaid office
Memorandum were applicable to the said Department. It is
urged that under clause (viii) of the said office
Memorandum, it was incumbent on the authorities to replace
all the deputationists who, according to the petitioners,
were holding the posts in the Department only on ad hoc
basis, by persons approved for regular appointment by direct
recruitment, and until the deputationists were so replaced
the deputationists had to be placed in bloc below person
directly recruited to the grade. The petitioners have sought
to derive support from Annexure ’D’ which is a letter dated
October 15, 1971 addressed by the Department of Personnel,
Cabinet Secretariat to the Director General of Security,
wherein it is pointed out that persons appointed to a grade
on deputation basis are appointed for a specific period,
after the expiry of which they are required to revert back
to their parent departments and since the said
deputationists do not have any locus standi in the borrowing
departments, they are not entitled to
883
promotions/confirmations in the borrowing departments. The
letter proceeds to state that the question of fixation of
their inter se seniority of such deputationists vis-a-vis
other categories of officers of a particular grade by
preparing a combined seniority list does not, therefore,
arise. However, it was also added in the next para. graph of
the letter that though deputationists are not entitled to
promotion to a higher grade, yet they can be considered for
appointment on deputation to the higher grades, if the
Recruitment Rules of the higher grade provide for
appointment on deputation basis, and in the absence of the
Recruitment Rules, it is for the appointing authority to
decide whether a person already serving as a deputationist
in the lower grade should be considered for appointment on
deputation to the higher posts. According to the
petitioners, on the basis of the principle enunciated in
this letter, persons serving on deputation in the ARC should
all have been repatriated to their parent departments as
soon as direct recruits became available in sufficient
number and the action taken by the Department in filling up
the vacancies in the higher categories, namely, ACIOs Grade
I (Field officers) and Assistant Technical officers by
granting promotions to respondents Nos. 8 to 67 was totally
illegal. The petitioners have alleged that some of the
deputationists were holding posts in their parent
departments which were inferior in rank in comparison with
the posts of DFOs. It is contended by the petitioners that
the grant of such promotions to the deputationists amounted
to conferment of double benefits on them since they were
simultaneously earning promotions in their parent
departments. Some of the petitioners who had joined the ARC
in 1963 as DFOs became eligible for promotions in 1968 by
completing the five years’ qualifying period, but instead of
promoting them to the category of Field officers, the
Department filled up the vacancies which became available in
1968 and subsequent years by promoting some of the
respondents who were only deputationists. The petitioners
contend that the deputationists were serving in the ARC only
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on ad hoc basis and hence they were not eligible under the
terms of the Memorandum dated December 27, 1959 (Annexure
’C’) for the grant of any promotions in the borrowing
department. It is alleged that while effecting such
irregular promotions, the petitioners were not even
considered and they were illegally denied the opportunity of
competing with the respondents for promotions to the posts
of Field officers. In 1975, a further injustice is said to
have been done to the petitioners when twenty of the
deputationists functioning as Field officers were promoted
as Assistant Technical officers (for short, ATOs). Writ-
petitioners Nos. 1 and 4 made representations
884
complaining against those promotions, but those
representations were rejected by the Director, ARC by his
Memorandum dated September 8, 1975 (Annexure ‘E’). On
December 1, 1975, seven more deputationists were promoted as
ATOs. The petitioners have raised the plea that the
aforesaid promotions of the deputationists were illegal and
discriminatory since the Department had fixed an arbitrary
date, namely, December 1972 for computing the qualifying
period of three years for eligibility to be considered for
promotions. It was only after most of the posts in the
higher categories of ATos and FOs had come to be occupied by
the deputationists as a consequence of such irregular
promotions that the impugned Rules were promulgated by the
President of India on April 26,1976. Through the said Rules,
the Department has purported to absorb all the
deputationists/respondents Nos. 8 to 67 in the ARC Service
as TOs/ATOs/FOs and thereby legalised all the illegal
promotions granted to those deputationists. This, according
to the petitioners, has been done with the mala fide
intention of giving favoured treatment to a deputationist at
the expense of the direct recruits like the petitioners. The
petitioners have put forward the contention that the
impugned Rules are arbitrary and discriminatory and are
violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. It is
their further plea that the wholesale absorption of the
deputationists is a colourable and unconstitutional exercise
of power and the impugned Rules in so far as they provide
for such absorption are in the nature of a fraud on the
powers conferred on the President by the proviso to Article
309 of the Constitution. The petitioners point out that even
after the constitution of the Service by the impugned Rules,
no seniority list was published for more than two years, but
promotions to the posts of FOs were, in the meantime,
granted to several of the deputationists. It is contended by
the petitioners that Rule 6 of the impugned Rules confers
arbitrary powers on the controlling authority to equate the
ad hoc service rendered by the deputationists in the ARC
with the ’regular’ service rendered by persons like
petitioners who had been directly recruited to the
Department on a regular basis and this has resulted in
permanently blocking all the future chances of the
petitioners in matters of promotion and other service
benefits. According to the petitioners the "initial
constitution" of the Service purported to be brought about
under the Rules is itself highly arbitrary and it infringes
Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution since it is based on
illegal treatment of unequals as equals by equating persons
functioning on a mere ad hoc basis with those holding posts
in he organisation on a regular basis. Another ground of
attack put forward by
885
the petitioners is that Rule 6(2) confers arbitrary and
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unfettered powers on the Screening Committee and hence it
suffers from the vice of excessive delegation. It is also
urged that the said sub-rule is unconstitutional because it
enables the controlling authority to retain to itself an
arbitrary power to control the decision-making of the
Screening Committee by means of "general or special
instructions ’ thereby rendering it impossible for the
Screening Committee to function in an independent and
objective manner. According to the petitioners, Rule 6(2)
enables the controlling authority to impose its will and
whims on the Screening Committee. The petitioners allege
that the controlling authority had imposed its favoured
treatment to deputationists and displayed a discriminatory
attitude against the regular departmental personnel like the
petitioners by treating the ad hoc service of the
deputationists in the ARC as regular service and absorbing
them in the posts or grades to which they have been granted
illegal promotions. The petitioners have urged that Rule
6(2) in so far as it vaguely uses the words "continuous
appointment in the grade" has vested an arbitrary power in
the Department to take into consideration the ad hoc service
rendered by the deputationists in grades to which they have
no right in law and hence the said provision is highly
arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
Alternatively, it is submitted by the petitioners that the
aforesaid words "continuous appointment in the grade" should
be reasonably construed to mean "continuous appointment on
regular basis in the grade" in which event alone the rule
can be regarded as free from the vice of arbitrariness. Rule
6(6) has also been attacked by the petitioners as infringing
Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution on the ground that it
enables the Screening Committee to discriminate against the
direct recruits by treating them on a par with the
deputationists. It is contended by the petitioners that the
said sub- rule confers power on the Screening Committee to
absorb such of the deputationists in a lower grade who were
found to be unsuitable for absorption in a higher grade and
thereby completely blocks the chances of persons like the
petitioners to get promotions into such lower grades despite
their being found suitable for such promotions. Another
point raised by the petitioners is that it was incumbent on
the Screening Committee before it took its final decision
regarding the absorption of personnel in the various grades
to give an opportunity to the petitioners to represent their
case, and inasmuch as this procedure was not followed, the
decisions taken by the Screening Committee were in clear
violation of the principles of natural justice. The
petitioners have also voiced a grievance that
886
even though the Screening Committee had prepared a list of
the officers whom it had decided to absorb in the various
grades, the Department did not disclose the contents of the
said list to personnel working in the ARC but kept the
matter secret.
Reiterating their contention that the promotions given
to respondents Nos. 8 to 67 during the period from 1968 to
1978 were all illegal on the ground that these promotions
had been made without considering the cases of the
petitioners, the petitioners have put forward further plea
that the publication of the impugned Seniority List was
deliberately delayed by the Department till November 6,
1978. with intent to favour the deputationists, some of whom
were promoted as ATOs on November 5, 1978. On this basis, it
is contended that the action taken by the Department in
publishing the Seniority List dated November 6, 1978 was
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mala fide.
Another argument advanced by the petitioners is that
Rule 7 in so far as it empowers the Department to reckon the
seniority of the deputationists by giving them the benefit
of the ad hoc service rendered by them in the ARC as well as
the prior service put in by them in their parent departments
is arbitrary. The petitioners con tend that this deviation
from the principle uniformly followed for fixing the
seniority in all other departments of the Government of
India namely those laid down in the Home Ministry’s office
Memorandum dated December 22, 1959 was wholly unjustified
and as a result thereof the direct recruits in the ARC are
subjected to a differential treatment resulting in gross
prejudice to them with out there being any rational basis
for separate classification. There is also an allegation
that in fixing the seniority of personnel as per the
impugned gradation list dated November 6, 1978, even service
rendered by the deputationists in non-comparable and lower
ranks has been wrongly taken into account. Rule 8(1) has
been attacked by the petitioners as empowering the
controlling authority to enable the deputationists to
consolidate the illegal advantage gained by them at the
initial constitution by further promotions/appointments to
still higher posts in the ARC. It is pointed out by the
petitioners that while specifying the method of recruitment
to the various posts in the Service and fixing a quota as
between the vacancies to be filled up by promotions and
those to be filled up by direct recruitment/deputation or
re-employment in Schedule II of the rules the deputationists
have been treated on a par with regular departmental
personnel, and this involves a clear violation of Articles
14 and 16 of the Constitution.
887
Lastly, it is contended that even if it is to be
assumed that the decision taken by respondents I to 7 to
retain the deputationists in the Departmental the time of
the initial constitution of the ARC was valid, the position
of the deputationists would, in law, be only that of persons
permanently transferred from the parent departments to the
ARC and under Article 26 of the Civil Service Regulations,
such persons appointed by transfer shall be ranked below all
the direct recruits as well as the promotees already
functioning in the Department. The petitioners contend that
since the Seniority List dated November 26, 1978 has been
drawn up in contravention of the aforesaid principle laid
down in article 26, the said list should be declared to be
illegal and void.
Detailed counter-affidavits have been filed on behalf
of respondent No. 1 and respondents Nos. 13 to 16, 22, 25,
28 and 31. In the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of
respondent No. 1, by the Deputy Secretary, Cabinet
Secretariat, it is stated that the Aviation Research Centre
was initially set up as a Sensitive Security organisation in
the year 1963 on a purely temporary basis by way of an
extension of the Intelligence Bureau. In February 1965, the
ARC, along with two other schemes, was brought under the
control of the Director General of Security. The Department
was continued by the Government on temporary basis from year
to year till 1971 when the Government, after reviewing all
the relevant factors, took a decision to make the ARC
permanent. The administrative control over the ARC was
originally vested in the Ministry of External Affairs and
later with the Prime Minister’s Secretariat till 1965 when
it was transferred to the Cabinet Secretariat. There were no
Recruitment and Cadre Rules for the ARC during the period
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when the Department was functioning on a temporary and
purely experimental basis and a number of officers,
including respondents Nos. 8 to 67, were taken on deputation
from other Central and State Government Departments to man
the various posts in the organisation. Some persons, like
the petitioners, were also directly recruited as ACIOs-II on
a purely temporary and ad hoc basis against temporary posts
in the ARC. The contention of the petitioners that they were
regularly recruited as DFOs in the ARC is denied by the
Government- respondents. It is submitted in the counter-
affidavit of respondent No. I that the appointments given to
the petitioners were merely ’ ad hoc in character and this
had been clearly specified in the Memos issued to them
containing the order of appointment that the appointments
were temporary and would not confer on them any right for
permanent appointment if and when the posts were made
permanent. It is stated that the Memos issued
888
to all the petitioners were on identical terms and a
specimen copy of the Memo issued to the petitioners has been
appended to the counter affidavit of respondent No. 1, as
Annexure ’R-1’. The further submission made in the counter-
affidavit of the first respondent is that in the ARC there
was no regular cadre nor any Recruitment Rules prior to 1976
and as and when posts in the various categories in the
grades were sanctioned, they were filled up by getting
suitable hands with the requisite qualifications and some
experience from other departments on deputation and some
vacancies were also filled up by direct recruitment.
Briefly sketching the history of the formation of the
ARC, the first respondent has stated that the ARC
organisation was set up in the wake of Chinese aggression
that took place in the winter of 1962 and its primary role
was to collect intelligence by employing the most modern
highly sophisticated techniques and to furnish it to other
Agencies like the Special Frontier Force and the Special
Security Bureau which were in need of such intelligence in
order to give better protection to our borders against
external aggression. For manning such an organisation, it
was absolutely essential to secure the services of persons
possessing the requisite experience, technological skill,
special attitude and ability. Initially, therefore, the
various posts in the ARC organisation, which was started on
a mere experimental basis, were filled up by taking on
deputation officers from the intelligence Bureau and other
departments which had the expertise in related fields, such
as, the Department of Defence Science, Wireless Planning and
Coordination and Directorate General of Civil Aviation. With
the gradual expansion in the activities of the ARC, it was
found that the aforesaid Departments could not supply on
deputation basis enough hands for meeting the needs of ARC
and hence, the direct recruitments from the open market had
also to be made. How ever, all the appointments made by
direct recruitment were merely temporary and ad hoc in
character. While the deputationists were persons with rich
experience and long years of service, the direct recruits
were inexperienced and new to the job. In the circumstances,
the higher posts of FOs, ATOs and Assistant Directors had to
be filled up by ad hoc appointments from amongst the
deputationists who by virtue of their long experience in the
particular type of work were considered suitable for those
posts. As and when direct recruits gained adequate
experience, several of them were also given ad hoc
appointments to such higher posts. It is further averred in
the counter affidavit that in making such appointments to
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the higher posts, only considerations of public interest and
maintenance of efficiency in the
889
functioning of the Department had weighed with the
appointing authority. The allegation put forward by the
petitioners that the direct recruits were discriminated
against has been denied by the first respondent as totally
unfounded, and it is stated that all such appointments to
the various technical posts in the higher categories of FOS,
ATOS and Assistant Directors were made by the Department on
the recommendations of the duly constituted DPCs/Selection
Committees. Some of the deputationists were also appointed
to the higher post when they got promotions to the
corresponding ranks in their parent departments. The
Department treated both the direct recruits as well as the
deputationists as ad hoc apponintees in the ARC with equal
rights, and equal weightage was given to both categories of
employees in respect of length of service in a given grade
irrespective of whether or not it was rendered wholly in
ARC. As regards the petitioners’ contentions based on the
MHA Memorandum dated December 22, 1959, it is pointed out in
the counter-affidavit that the general principles laid down
therein had no application till the matter of filling up of
temporary posts in a temporary department. Stress is laid in
the counter-affidavit on the fact that simultaneously with
the constitution of the ARC as a regular department, the ARC
(Technical) Service Rules, 1976 were promulgated by the
Government and it has been submitted that the principles
laid down in the aforesaid Memorandum did not get attracted
to the new service inasmuch as it is clearly specified in
the Memo itself that the principles enunciated therein will
not be applicable for such Services and posts for which
separate principles have been already issued or may be
issued thereafter by the Government, The allegation of the
petitioners that they had not been considered for promotion
at the time when the vacancies in the categories of DFOs
were filled up during the year 1968 to 1975 has been denied
by the first respondent and it is averred in the counter-
affidavit that the direct recruits were given promotions in
the higher posts when they were found suitable by the DPC
for ad hoc promotions to the grades of FOs (Tech.), etc.
Reliance is placed by the first respondent of the
observations made by the Delhi High Court in its judgment in
Civil Writ Petition No. 1020 of 1971, filed by three of the
present petitioners, that no discrimination could be said to
have been made against the direct recruits either in drawing
up the seniority list of 1971 or in the action taken by the
authorities to filling up some of the higher posts by
appointing deputationists. Though a decision was taken by
the Government in 1971 to make the ARC a permanent
department, and steps to frame rules were also immediately
initiated, the draft rules could be finalised after
intensive examination by various concerned Ministries only
by April 1976 when the Rules were
890
promulgated. The allegation made by the petitioners that the
promulgation of the rules was deliberately delayed in order
to confer an undue advantage on the deputationists who were
granted promotions to the higher grades in the meantime, has
been categorically denied by the first respondent in its
counter-affidavit. The delay in promulgation of the rules
was due to the fact that because of the special features of
the Department and the sensitive nature of the functions to
be discharged by it, various circumstances and factors had
to be taken into account before the draft rules were finally
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cleared by the several Ministries concerned.
The first respondent has stated in the counter-
affidavit that equal treatment had been meted out to the
direct recruits and the deputationists in the matter of
promotion/appointment from the grade of AClO-1 to that of
ATO. The allegation of the petitioners that the DPC had
fixed the crucial date for eligibility for promotion from
the category of ACIO-I to the grade of ATO in an arbitrary
manner so as to exclude the petitioners from consideration,
has f) been denied by the first respondent and it is averred
that the crucial date was determined by the DPC on each
occasion by taking into consideration the number of
vacancies likely to be available for promotion/selection and
the number of persons who could reasonably be considered for
such promotions/selection. It is pointed out by tile first
respondent that when deputationists were selected by the
DPC, they were ’appointed’ to the higher posts on deputation
and it was not a process of promotion as wrongly contended
by the petitioners.
In reply to the challenge made by the petitioners
against Rule 6 of the impugned Rules which provides for the
initial constitution of the new service to be known as the
Aviation Research Centre (Technical) Service it is submitted
by the first respondent that there is no principle of law
prohibiting the absorption in a newly constituted Department
of persons who are functioning on deputation in a temporary
organisation which was later constituted into a permanent
service. It is also submitted by the first respondent that
the provision in the impugned rules for absorption of the
deputationists in the ARC (Technical) Service was Made in
public interest since it was found that the continual
retention of the deputationists who possessed valuable
experience and had long association with the organisation
was absolutely necessary for the efficient functioning of
the Department. The first respondent states that the
impugned rules extend equal treatment to all categories of
employees who were in position on the crucial date, namely,
April 25, 1976, in the matter of absorption as
891
well as determination of seniority at the initial
constitution, irrespective of whether they were direct
recruits or deputationists. Since the direct recruits were
all occupying the posts in the ARC only on a purely cd hoc
basis, they had no legal right to be appointed in the new
Department and merely by reason of their temporary
appointments as ACIO-II (Tech.) in the ARC organisation they
could not automatically become members of the new ARC
(Technical) Service which was constituted for the first time
with effect from April 26, 1976. All persons working in the
ARC in various temporary posts as on April 26, 1976, were
given the option to express their willingness or otherwise
to be absorbed in the new Department. The petitioners as
well as the direct recruits were treated alike in the matter
of the assessment of their suitability for absorption by the
Screening Committee and on being found suitable, they were
absorbed either in the same posts which they were occupying
immediately prior to April 26, 1976 or in a lower post,
subject to availability of permanent posts. The Screening
Committee prepared the seniority list of the persons found
suitable for absorption in accordance with the provisions
contained in Rule 6 (2) read with Rule 7 of the impugned
Rules. The counter-affidavit of the first respondent goes on
to state that the seniority list published on November 6,
1978 had been prepared strictly in accordance with the
provisions of the impugned Rules, the names of the officers
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having been arranged with reference to the dates of their
continuous appointment to the concerned grade. Printing out
that the benefit of the ad hoc service rendered in a
particular grade has been given not only to the former
deputationists but also to the direct recruits in the matter
of determining their inter se seniority in the grade of FOs,
it is submitted by the first respondent that there is no
merit in the petitioner’s contention that the seniority list
of November 6, 1978 has been prepared in a discriminatory
manner so as to violate Article 16 of the Constitution. The
first respondent has further submitted that the charge of
discrimination has been made by the petitioners on the basis
of an erroneous assumption that the petitioners were in
regular service in the ARC prior to the promulgation of the
impugned Rules and that hence they had a superior claim for
promotion to a higher post in comparison with the
deputationists. The petitioners had been appointed/promoted
to various grades in the ARC only on ad hoc basis prior to
April, 26 1979 and the benefit of such ad hoc service
rendered by them had been given to the petitioners in the
same way and to the same extent as service rendered by the
former deputationists on deputation. The first respondent,
therefore, submits that the provisions of Rule 6
892
cannot be said to be ’arbitrary or violative’ of the
principle of equality enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution.
Repelling the contention of the petitioners that the
principle for fixation of seniority laid down in the
impugned Rules is illegal for the reason that it is
inconsistent with the guidelines and general principles for
determination of seniority in the Central Services
enunciated in MHA Memorandum dated December 22, 1959
(Annexure ’C’) the first respondent has submitted in the
counter affidavit that there is no substance in this plea
since it has been specially stated in the Memorandum
(Annexure ’C’) itself that the principles contained therein
will not apply to "such services and posts for which
separate principles have already been issued or may be
hereafter issued by Government". The allegation made by the
petitioners that the framing of the rules and the
constitution of. the ARC (Technical) Service was
deliberately delayed with a view to give undue advantage to
the deputationists has been denied by the first respondent
as baseless and untrue. Prior to 1971, there were no
permanent posts at all in the ARC because the Department was
temporary and all the temporary posts were being sanctioned
on a year to year basis. Action to frame the rules was
initiated shortly after the decision was taken in 1971 to
make the ARC a permanent Department. The first set of draft
rules was prepared and submitted to Government in 1972.
Since it was found to be defective in certain aspects, a
revised draft was prepared in 1974. Since the whole matter
had to be subjected to extensive and intensive examination
by various Ministries taking into account all relevant
factors, the finally approved rules could be promulgated
only in April 1976.
The first respondent has submitted that Rule 6 of the
impugned Rules provides equal treatment to all the officers
in position in the ARC on the crucial date in the matter of
absorption and determination of inter se seniority at the
time of initial constitution of the service. The service
rendered by the former deputationists in various grades
prior to their absorption in the ARC could not be ignored,
as their services were required by the Department in public
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interest. It is pointed out that if the contention of the
petitioners that only persons who are regularly appointed in
the ARC could be absorbed in the service is to be accepted,
then none of the petitioners could have been permanently
appointed in the ARC Technical Service, as the appointments
held by the petitioners prior to the constitution of the ARC
Service in 1976 were purely temporary and ad hoc in
893
The further plea put forward by the petitioners that
Rule 6(2) of the impugned Rules suffers from the vice of
excessive delegation of power has been stoutly denied by the
first respondent. The Screening Committee was required to
act within the frame-work of the scheme of absorption
envisaged in the Rules and the Committee had followed proper
guidelines which had been approved by the controlling
authority, namely, the Secretary, Department of Cabinet
Affairs, Cabinet Secretariat. The provision enabling the
controlling authority to issue general instructions was
incorporated in the rules for the purpose of ensuring that
the rules relating to the initial constitution of the
service were applied uniformly and judiciously. The
contention put forward by the petitioners that the said
provision renders the functioning of the Screening Committee
nugatory, is C refuted by the first respondent as being
devoid of any merit. The allegation made by the petitioners
that the deputationists were given illegal promotions from
time to time has also been denied in the first respondent’s
counter-affidavit as totally baseless. It is admitted that
during the period when the ARC was functioning as a
temporary Department. some of the deputationists who were
initially appointed as (Tech.) were subsequently appointed
to higher posts on deputation basis but the first respondent
submits that there could be no valid objection to such
appointments, as they had all been made in the public
interest and in accordance with the general instructions on
the subject. Referring to the provisions contained in Rule
5(3) of the impugned Rules regarding the exercise of option
by officers willing to be absorbed on permanent basis in the
ARC, it is submitted in the counter-affidavit that the said
provision was equally applicable to direct recruits as well
as the erstwhile deputationists. Since the temporary
appointments of the direct recruits in the post of ACIO-II
(Tech.) did not confer on them any right of confirmation and
the ARC (Technical) Service was altogether a new service,
the first respondent states that the petitioners were
rightly asked to exercise their option in terms of Rule
6(3). Dealing with the attack levelled by the petitioners
against the validity of Rule 6(6), it is pointed out in the
counter-affidavit that the spirit and content of the rule is
that persons who were holding higher posts on the crucial
date and were considered suitable for permanent appointment
in the said posts but could not be appointed substantively
to such posts for want of vacancies, may be given permanent
posts in the owner grade. It is pointed out in the counter-
affidavit that the said rule was applicable to direct
recruits as well as to the deputationists and that, as a
matter of fact, some of the petitioners got the benefit of
this rule inasmuch as they were
894
appointed substantively in the grade of DFO(T) with effect
from April 26, 1976, while they are holding posts of Fo(T)
on the said date. The charge of discrimination levelled by
the petitioners is, therefore, denied by the first
respondent as being devoid of any foundation.
With reference to the grievance put forward by the
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petitioners that they were denied an opportunity to
represent their case before the Screening Committee, it is
submitted by the first respondent that under the scheme of
the impugned Rules, the Screening Committee was not expected
to entertain any representations from any quarter and, in
fact, no representations were received. The Committee had
acted strictly in accordance with the provisions contained
in the Rules in determining the suitability of the persons
concerned for absorption in the new Department and the
principles of natural justice have no applicability in such
a context. The allegation of mala fides put forward by the
petitioners has been stoutly denied by the first respondent.
After the seniority list was prepared by the Screening
Committee in accordance with the provisions contain ed in
Rule 6(2) read with Rule 7 of the impugned Rules, certain
formalities had to be gone through before orders regarding
substantive appointments of the officers to the various
grades could be issued. It was only after the issue of
substantive appointment orders to persons who had opted for
absorption into the service, that the Department could
publish the seniority list. The formalities aforementioned
included obtaining the options from all the employees,
getting the approval of the parent departments of the
erstwhile deputationists for their permanent absorption in
the ARC Service, medical examination of employees, etc. It
was on account of the delay involved for completing the said
procedure that the seniority list could be finally published
only on November 6, 1978. The counter-affidavit proceeds to
state that promotions in the Department were effected in the
meantime strictly on the basis of the seniority list of
officers recommended for absorption which the Screening
Committee had prepared. It is further pleaded by the first
respondent that no illegality whatever was involved in
adopting the principle of reckoning the seniority in a
particular post on the basis of total length of continuous
service put in by the concerned officers in the particular
grade in the ARC or in the equivalent grade in the parent
department. The said rule was framed keeping in view the
special requirements of the new Department. If the
deputationists had not been given the benefit of the service
put in by them in the equivalent grade in their parent
departments, they
895
would have all opted for their reversion to their parent
departments and that would have resulted incomplete
dislocation of the functioning in the ARC. The first
respondent states that lin formulating or applying the
seniority rule there has not been any arbitrary
discrimination as between direct recruits and deputationists
and hence neither the rules nor the seniority list can be
said to be violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. B
Dealing with the contention put forward by the
petitioners on the basis of article 26 of the Civil Service
Regulations, it is submitted by the first respondent that
the said article, which deals with appointments by transfer
"in accordance with a provision in the Recruitment Rules
providing for such transfers" had no applicability at all in
the matter of taking persons on deputation to the ARC when
it was a purely temporary Department which had no
Recruitment Rules. The subsequent absorption of such
deputationists and other categories of employees has been
done strictly in accordance with the provisions contained in
the impugned Rules which are statutory in origin. In the
absence of any Recruitment Rules, there was no legal bar
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whatever preventing the competent authority from borrowing
persons from other departments on deputation basis to man
the various posts in the ARC during the period prior to the
introduction of the impugned Rules with effect from April
26, 1976. The former deputationists had occupied a larger
percentage of the higher posts during the aforesaid period
because they had put in more years of service in different
grades and had much greater experience in carrying out the
functions which were of a highly specialised nature when
compared to the direct recruits whose induction in the ARC
started only from 1965.
On the basis of the aforesaid averments contained in
his counter-affidavit, the first respondent has submitted
that the petitioners are not entitled to any relief in this
writ petition and that the petition should be dismissed.
In the separate counter-affidavit filed on behalf of
respondents 13, 16,22 etc., they have put forward more or
less the same contentions in defence of the writ petition as
have been taken by the first respondent.
From the averments contained in counter-affidavit of
the first respondent and the documents produced before us,
it is seen that .. the Aviation Research Centre was a
temporary and ad hoc organisation set up late in 1962, on an
emergency basis, when the country
896
was threatened with the Chinese aggression for carrying out
the work of collecting intelligence by the use of highly
sophisticated techniques. For manning this Task Force,
persons with experience in the specialised nature of the
work were taken on deputation basis from different sources,
such as the intelligence Bureau, the Departments of Defence
Science, Wireless Panning and Coordination, the Directorate
General of Civil Aviation and the Police of different States
and they were grouped together to form the ARC.
Subsequently, to supplement the man power, some persons were
also directly recruited to the organisation on a purely ad
hoc basis. The ARC organisation was initially treated as an
extension of the intelligence Bureau. In February 1965, it
was brought under the control of the Director General of
Security. The administrative control over the organisation
which was originally vested in the Ministry of External
Affairs and later with tho Prime Minister’s Secretariat was
transferred to the Cabinet Secretariat in 1965. The sanction
for continuance of the temporary organisation was accorded
by the Government from year to year till the year 1971 when
decision was taken by the Government to make the ARC a
permanent Department. But, the finalisation of the
principles to be adopted for constitution of the new
permanent Department took considerable time and it was only
on April 26, 1976 that the President of India promulgated
the Aviation Research Centre (Technical) Service Rules
providing for the constitution of a new service to be known
as Aviation Research Centre (Technical) Service and laying
down the principles regulating the method of recruitment to
the various posts in the said Service. Till 1976, there was
no regularly constituted cadre of posts in the temporary ARC
organisation and there were also no rules or even executive
orders laying down any principles regulating the method of
appointment to the various posts in the organisation.
Clause 6 of the impugned Rules deals with the initial
constitution of the new ARC permanent Service. That clause
is in the following terms:
"6. Initial Constitution-
(1) All persons holding, as on the appointed day, any
one of the categories of posts specified in rule
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4, whether in a permanent or temporary or
officiating capacity or on deputation basis, shall
be eligible for appointment to the service at the
initial constitution thereof.
897
(2) The controlling authority shall constitute a
Screening Committee in respect of each grade for
adjudging the suitability of persons, who, being
eligible to be appoint ed to the service under
sub-rule (1) were serving in any grade immediately
before the initial constitution of the cadre for
permanent appointment therein and every committee
so constituted shall, subject to such general or
special instructions as the controlling authority
may give and after following such procedure as the
committee may deem fit, prepare lists of persons
considered suitable for such appointment in each
grade with the names of such persons arranged in
the order of seniority based on the date of
continuous appointment in the grade in which they
are to be absorbed or in an equivalent grade;
Provided that if the controlling authority
deems it necessary so to do, the same committee
may be constituted to function in relation to two
or more grades. D
(3) An intimation shall be sent to every person
considered suitable for appointment on a permanent
basis to a post in any grade giving him an
opportunity to express, within thirty days of the
receipt of intimation by him his willingness to be
so appointed on a permanent basis and the option
once exercised shall be final.
(4) Persons who are willing to be appointed on a
permanent basis shall be so appointed in the order
of seniority against permanent posts available as
on the appointed day.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-rules
(2) to (4), every person holding, as on the
appointed day, a permanent post in any one of the
categories specified in rule 4 in the Aviation
Research Centre shall, without prejudice to his
being considered for appointment to a permanent
post in the higher grade or to his continuance in
such higher grade in officiating or temporary
capacity, be absorbed in his respective
substantive grade against the permanent posts
available as on the appointed day.
(6) The Screening Committee may recommend for
permanent appointment in a lower grade any person
who
898
is serving in a higher grade irrespective of
whether he is deputationist or a direct recruit
and every appointment made on such recommendation
shall be without prejudice to his continuing to
serve in the higher grade.
(7) Persons holding posts, as on the appointed day, in
any grade of the service who are not found
suitable for permanent appointment under sub-rules
(2) to (6), may be continued in posts in the same
grade of the service in a temporary or officiating
capacity as the case may be."
Rule 7 lays down the principles to be applied for fixation
of seniority of those appointed to the various posts in the
ARC at the time of its initial constitution. That rule
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reads:
"7. Seniority of persons appointed on permanent basis
in each grade at the initial constitution of the
service shall be in the order in which they are
shown in the relevant list prepared in accordance
with provisions of rule 6."
The next rule under challenge by the petitioners is Rule 8
which deals with the topic of filling up of vacancies in
various grades remaining unfilled immediately after the
initial constitution of the service and all vacancies that
may subsequently arise in the Department. That rule is in
the following terms:
"8. Maintenance-
(1) Subject to the initial Constitution of the various
grades in the service, every post remaining
unfilled and every vacancy that may arise
thereafter shall be filled in accordance with the
provisions contained in Schedule II, by
appointment on promotion, deputation transfer, re-
employment after retirement or direct recruitment
as the case may be.
(2) For a period not exceeding three years from the
date of commencement of these rules,
notwithstanding the limits specified in column 7
of Schedule II, the controlling authority may, if
it considers it necessary so to do, exceed the
percentage specified for filling up of vacancies
by deputation and decrease the percentage
899
prescribed for filling up of vacancies by
promotion, direct recruitment of re-employment
after retirement, as it may deem fit."
The only other rule which requires to be referred to for the
purpose of the present case is Rule 12 which states that "in
regard to matters not specifically covered by these rules or
by orders issued by the Government, members of the service
shall be governed by general rules, regulations and orders
applicable to persons belonging to the corresponding Central
Civil Service".
The petitioners are some amongst the persons recruited
directly to the ARC organisation during the period between
1965 and 1971. The basic premise on which the petitioners
have rested their challenge against the validity of the
promotions given to respondents Nos. 8 to 67 from the year
1968 onwards as well as of the provisions contained in the
impugned Rules is that they (petitioners) had all been
regularly appointed to the ARC at the time of their initial
appointment itself and that by virtue of such regular
appointments, they had acquired vested rights for seniority,
promotions etc., in the said organisation. As already
noticed, during the period between 1965 and 1971, the ARC
organisation was a purely temporary one, the continuance of
which, on an experimental basis, was being sanctioned from
year to year. There was no regular cadre of posts in the
organisation nor was there any set of rules regulating the
method of appointment to the various posts that had created
on a mere temporary and ad hoc basis.
Annexure ’R-l’ produced along with the first
respondent’s counter-affidavit is a copy of the letter
issued by the Directorate General of Security to one of the
petitioners, communicating the offer of appointment to the
temporary post of ACIO-II(Tech.). It was on the basis of the
acceptance of that offer by the said petitioner that he was
appointed in the Department of ARC. It is stated in the
counter-affidavit of the first respondent that the
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appointments of all the remaining writ-petitioners to the
cadre of ACIO-II (DFO) were made on identical terms and this
averment has not been controverted by the petitioners. It is
expressly recited ill Ex. R-1 that what was being offered
thereunder was a temporary appointment to a temporary post
and that the perm anent appointment of the person concerned
to the post, if and when the post was made permanent, would
depend upon various factors governing permanent appointment
in such posts in force at the time, and that the temporary
appointment will not
900
confer on him the title of permanency from the date the post
is converted. It is further stipulated in the letter that
the appointment was liable to be terminated at any time by a
notice given by either side, namely, the appointee or the
appointing authority without assigning any reason. There is
also a further condition that the services of the appointee
were liable to be terminated within a period of six months
from the date of his appointment without any notice and
without any reason being assigned. Since the petitioners are
shown to have been appointed to the cadre of ACIO-Il on the
aforementioned conditions, it is difficult to see how they
can successfully contend that they had been regularly
appointed to the ARC with effect from the dates of their
initial recruitment. They were holding merely ad hoc
appointments which did not confer on them any entitlement
for permanent absorption in the posts if and when the posts
were made permanent. The basic premise on which the
petitioners have sought to build up their case of
arbitrariness and discriminations, namely, that the
petitioners had all been initially recruited directly to the
ARC on a regular basis while the deputationists were holding
posts only on ad hoc basis, is thus seen to be contrary to
facts. The correct position which obtained as on the date of
the promulgation of the impugned Rules was that the
petitioners as well as the deputationists were all working
in the temporary ARC organisation only on a purely ad hoc
basis. It is against this factual background that we have to
examine the contentions put forward by the petitioners in
support of the challenge levelled by them against the
impugned Rules as well as against the seniority list of 1968
and the various promotions given to respondents Nos. 8 to
67.
At this stage, it will be convenient to first dispose
of the contentions urged by the petitioners, against the
validity of the promotions given to respondents Nos. 8 to 67
during the period between 1968 and 1975. In our opinion, the
challenge raised by the petitioners against those promotions
is liable to be rejected on the preliminary ground that it
is most highly belated. No valid explanation is forthcoming
from the petitioners as to why they did not approach this
Court within a reasonable time after those promotions were
made, in case they really did feel aggrieved by the said
action of the Department. This writ petition has been filed
only in the year 1979, and after such a long lapse of time
the petitioners cannot be permitted to assail before this
Court the promotions that were effected during the years
1968 to 1975. A party seeking the intervention and aid of
this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution for
enforcement of his fundamental rights,
901
should exercise due diligence and approach this Court within
a reasonable time after the cause of action arises and if
there has been undue delay or laches on his part, this Court
has the undoubted discretion to deny him relief. [See
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Rabindra Nath Bose & Ors v. Union of India & Ors.
In this case before us, many of the impugned promotions
had been effected during the year 1968-69 onwards. Three of
the present petitioners had challenged the validity of some
of the promotions granted to various deputationists as well
as the ranking given to them in a seniority list of ARC
personnel published in 1971 by filing Civil Writ Petition
No. 1020 of 1971 in the Delhi High Court. Though the High
Court by its judgment dated April 7, 1972 dismissed that
writ petition on the ground that it was premature inasmuch
as it had been submitted before it by the counsel for the
Union of India that all the existing arrangements in the ARC
were purely ad hoc and that service rules would be framed
shortly, the High Court has recorded clear findings in the
judgment that the principle adopted for the preparation of
the combined seniority-list of 1971 could not be said to
have violated Articles 14 to 16 of the Constitution and that
it had not been shown by the writ petitioners in that case
that the impugned promotions had been effected in violation
of any "statutory rules, constitutional or statutory
limitations or even administrative instructions" .
If the petitioners were dissatisfied with the
aforementioned findings entered by the Delhi High Court, one
should have expected then to approach this Court at least
soon after that decision was rendered by that High Court in
April 1972-we are not suggesting that the findings of the
High Court operate as res judicata against the petitioners
in these proceedings. There is no satisfactory explanation
forthcoming from the petitioners as to why no action at all
was taken by them to challenge the validity of the impugned
promotions given to respondents Nos. 8 to 67 from 1968
onwards for a period of nearly seven years subsequent to the
aforesaid pronouncement by the Delhi High Court.
Quite apart from what has been stated above on the
aspect of ’laches’, on the merits also we do not find any
substance in the contentions urged by the petitioners
against the legality of the promotions granted to
respondents Nos. 8 to 67 during the period between 1968 and
1975. At that time, as already, noticed, the ARC was a H
902
purely temporary organisation which was being continued on a
year to year basis. There was no regular cadre of posts in
the said organisation, nor were there any rules governing
the mode of recruitment etc. All the appointments made in
the organisation, whether of direct recruits like the
petitioners or of deputationists like respondents Nos. 8 to
67, had been made only on an ad hoc basis. Since there was
no regularly constituted service, the principles contained
in the office Memorandum dated December 22, 1959 issued by
the Ministry of Home Affairs (Annexure ’C’), on which strong
reliance was placed by the petitioners, could have no
application at all to the temporary ARC organisation. It is
clear from a reading of the said Memorandum (Annexure ’C’)
that its provisions will get attracted only in relation to
Government servants appointed to the Central Services.
During the period aforementioned, the ARC was just a
Task Force set up on an ad hoc and experimental basis for
the purpose of carrying out certain functions of a highly
specialised and sensitive nature. Quite naturally, the
personnel required for manning the organisation had to be
picked and grouped together in the manner best suited to
effectuate the object and purpose underlying the creation of
the organisation. So long as there was no regular cadre and
hierarchy of posts and no rules laying down the mode of
appointment/promotion to those posts it was perfectly open
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to the Government to fill up the posts by securing the
services of persons who, in its opinion, were, by virtue. Of
their experience and qualifications, best suited for being
entrusted with the specialised kinds of functions attached
to the various posts. We have already seen that the
petitioners had been appointed as ACIOs-II(DFOs) only on a
temporary and ad hoc basis. Such appointments did not confer
on them any rights even to the posts of DFos. It had also
been categorically made clear to them in the letters
containing the offers of appointment that such appointments
will not confer on them any right to the permanently
absorbed in the post if and when it was made permanent.
There was also not even any executive order or
administrative instruction declaring the post of DFo as the
feeder category for appointment to the higher posts. In such
circumstances, it has to be held that the petitioners had no
legal right or claim for being appointed by promotion to the
higher posts of ACIO-I (FO), ATO, etc.
It has been averred in the counter-affidavit that as
and when vacancies arose in the higher posts of FO. ATO,
etc, in the tem-
903
porary ARC organisation in the early years after its
formation, deputationists who, by virtue of their greater
experience in the particular type of specialised work, were
considered suitable for carrying out the duties attached to
those posts on deputation basis to the category of FO, ATO,
etc. Subsequently, after the direct recruits had gained
sufficient experience, some of them who were found suitable,
were also appointed as ACIOs-I, ATOs, etc. No illegality of
any kind was involved in the action so taken by the
concerned authorities to fill up the vacancies in the higher
posts by ad hoc appointments of persons possessing the
requisite ability and experience. We have, therefore, no
hesitation to reject the contention put forward by the
petitioners that the promotions granted to respondents Nos.
8 to 67 during the period between 1968 and 1975 were illegal
and violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution .
We shall now proceed to deal with the challenge raised
by the petitioners against the provisions contained in the
impugned rules. It is under Rule 3 of the Rules that the
Aviation Research Centre (Technical) Service was constituted
for the first time. The com position of the service has been
described in Rule 4, wherein the designations,
classifications and scales of pay of the various posts
included in the Service have been set out. Rule 6 provides
for the initial constitution of the Service. The petitioners
have challenged f the validity of sub-rule (I) of this Rule
which declares that all persons holding, as on the appointed
day, any one of the categories of posts specified in Rule 4,
whether in a permanent or temporary or officiating capacity
or on deputation basis, shall be eligible for appointment to
the service at the initial constitution thereof. When a new
service is proposed to be constituted by the Government, it
is fully within the competence of the Government to decide
as a matter of policy the sources from which the personnel
required for manning the Service are to be drawn. It is in
the exercise of the said power vested in the Government,
that provision has been made by sub-rule (I) that all the
persons who, as on the appointed day were already working in
the ARC organisation on a temporary and ad hoc basis and had
thereby acquired valuable experience in the specialised
kinds of work would be eligible for appointment to the new
service at the stage of its initial constitution. The writ-
petitioners as well as the deputationists, namely,
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respondents Nos. 8 to 67 were all functioning in the
temporary ARC organisation on an ad hoc basis. Equal
opportunity was given to all of them by sub rule (I) of Rule
6 to get permanently appointed in the new ARC
904
(Technical) Service subject to their being found fit by the
Screening Committee referred to in the sub-rule (2). We fail
to see how the said provision can be said to be violative of
Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The attack levelled
by the petitioners against sub-rule (1) of Rule 6 is thus
manifestly devoid of merit.
The next contention urged by the petitioners is that
sub-rule (2) of Rule 6 confers arbitrary and uncanalised
powers on the Screening Committee and is hence violative of
the principles of equality of opportunity enshrined in
Article 16 of the Constitution. Another point urged is that
the said sub-rule in so far as it provides that the
Screening Committee should discharge its functions subject
to such general or special instructions as the controlling
authority may give, confers an arbitrary and unlimited power
on the controlling authority and enables the controlling
authority to impose its will and whims on the Screening
Committee. We see no force in either of the aforesaid
contentions. The provision for constitution of a Screening
Committee for adjudging the suitability of the persons in
the field of eligibility for permanent appointment to the
service is absolutely reasonable. The power conferred on the
controlling authority to issue general or special
instructions to a Screening Committee is really in the
nature of a safeguard for ensuring that the rules relating
to the initial constitution of the service were applied
fairly and justly. The ’controlling authority’ is the
"Secretary, Department of Cabinet Affairs". When supervisory
powers are entrusted to such a high and responsible
official, it is reasonable to assume that they will be
exercised fairly and judiciously and not arbitrarily. We
are, therefore, unable to uphold the contention of the
petitioners that the provisions of sub-rule (2) of Rule 6
suffer from the vice of the arbitrariness or excessive
delegation.
The petitioners have also attacked the provisions
contained in sub-Rule (2) of Rule 6 enjoining the Screening
Committee to arrange the names of persons considered
suitable for appointment in each grade in the order of
seniority based on the date of continuous appointment in the
grade in which they were absorbed or in an equivalent grade.
We have already found that the basic assumption on which the
petitioners have founded the attack against this provision,
namely, that the petitioners were all holding regular
appointments as DFOs in the ARC organisation from the dates
of their initial recruitment and that the deputationists
(respondents Nos. 8 to 67) l were functioning in their
respective posts only on an ad hoc basis is incorrect and
fallacious. As on the date of the promulgation of the rules
and the initial constitution of the ARC. (Technical)
Service,
905
petitioners as well as respondents Nos. 8 to 67 were all
holding the various posts in the ARC organisation only on a
temporary and ad hoc basis. While the petitioners had no
substantive lien in respect of or title to any post in any
department, the deputationists were having a lien on the
posts held by them in their parent departments. l he
petitioners, therefore, formed a different class consisting
of persons who were virtually being recruited for the first
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time into regular Government service, as distinct from the
respondents 8 to 67 who had been holding posts in their
parent departments for several years on the regular basis
who formed a separate class When recruitment to the new
Service was being made from two different classes of
sources, it was necessary for the Government to evolve a
fair and reasonable principle for regulating the inter se
seniority of the personnel appointed to a new Department.
What has been done under Rule 6 is to give credit to the
full length of continuous service put in by all the
appointees in the concerned grade, whether such service was
rendered in the temporary ARC organisation or in other
departments of the Government. The criterion applied, namely
the quantum of previous experience possessed by the
appointees measured in terms of the length of continuous
service put in by them in the concerned or equivalent grade
is perfectly relevant to the purpose underlying the framing
of the rule. In our opinion, the aforesaid principle laid
down hl rule 6(2) for determination of inter se seniority
was quite reasonable and fair and it did not involve any
arbitrary or unfair discrimination against the petitioners.
The attack levelled by the petitioners against the said
provision contained in sub-rule (2) will, therefore, stand
repelled.
In the light of what we have stated above, the
provision contained in rule 7 that the seniority of persons
appointed on permanent basis in each grade at the initial
constitution of the service shall be in the order in which
they are shown in the relevant list prepared by the
Screening Committee in accordance with provisions of Rule 6
has also to be upheld as perfectly valid and constitutional.
We see no substance at all in the challenge raised by
the petitioners against Rule 8 of the impugned rules and the
provisions of Schedule II. Under the said rule, the
appointing authority is empowered to fill up every post
remaining unfilled immediately after the initial
constitution of the various grades in the service as well as
906
every vacancy that subsequently arises by making
appointments on promotion, deputation/transfer, re-
employment after retirement or direct recruitment, in
accordance with the provisions contained in Schedule II. At
the time of constituting a new service and laying down the
mode of appointment to the various posts, it was fully
within the powers of the President of India to prescribe the
methods by which vacancies arising in the different
categories of posts in the department should be filled up
and this is precisely what has been done as per rule 8 and
the provisions of Schedule II. The petitioners have not been
able to make out that the provisions of Rule 8 and Schedule
II are tainted by illegality of any kind.
The next point urged by the petitioners is that the
Screening Committee had acted in violation of the principles
of natural justice in as much as it had not afforded to the
petitioners an opportunity to make their representations
before the Committee. The function entrusted to the
Committee was to adjudge the suitability of person who were
holding posts in the different grades in the temporary ARC
organisation for permanent appointment in the newly
constituted ARC (Technical) Service on the basis of the
records relating to their past performance in ARC
organisation, etc. We do not see how the principles of
natural justice can get attracted in such a context. The law
does not cast any obligation on a Committee discharging such
a function to invite representations from the persons in the
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eligible categories and consider those representations while
adjudging their suitability for appointment into the new
service. Hence we do not find any substance in the argument
advanced on behalf of the petitioners that there was a
violation of principles of natural justice by the Screening
Committee.
The petitioners have put forward a further plea that
the promulgation of the impugned rules was deliberately
delayed till April 1976 with a view to confer an unfair
advantage on the deputationists, several of whom were
granted promotions to higher posts during the v period
between 1971 when the decision to make the department
permanent was taken and April 26, 1976 when the impugned
rules were finally issued. We find it stated in the counter-
affidavit filed on behalf of the first respondent that the
draft rules were prepared by the Directorate of ARC and
submitted to the Government in 1972 itself, but, on a
detailed scrutiny being made, it was found that the
907
said draft required substantial modification in several
respects. Revised rules were, therefore, drafted and
submitted to the government late in 1974. The first
respondent has submitted that the time taken in finalising
the rules was due to the fact that intensive examination of
all the relevant aspects had to be done by various concerned
Ministries before the draft rules could be finally approved
and issued. We are inclined to accept the explanation
offered by the first respondent for the delay in
promulgation of the Rules, and we hold that the plea of mala
fides put forward by the petitioners is not established.
All the promotions given to the deputationists as well
as to the direct recruits during the period between 1968 and
1976 had been effected only on a purely ad hoc basis. Even
though temporary in character, those promotions had been
made only on the basis of the recommendations made by the
Departmental Promotion Committee which had effected the
selections by applying uniform and relevant considerations,
such as length of service in the lower grade and over-all
experience and performance. It is stated in the counter-
affidavit that, while making such promotions for
appointments to higher posts, no deputationists with lesser
years of service vis-a-vis direct recruits had been given ad
hoc appointment to any higher post. The first respondent has
submitted that in making the promotions aforementioned, the
authorities concerned were actuated only by considerations
of the best interests of the department and the maintenance
of a higher standard of efficiency in its function and there
was no intention whatever to confer any advantage to the
deputationists or to discriminate against the direct
recruits. We do not find any ground for not accepting as
correct and true the aforesaid submissions made on behalf of
the first respondent. Accordingly we hold that in granting
promotions to the deputationists during the period between
1971 and 1975 respondents 1 to S were not actuated by any
intention to confer an unfair advantage on the
deputationists.
Another argument advanced on behalf of the petitioners
was that at the time of their initial appointment in the
ARC, they had been given high expectations regarding their
promotional prospects from the post of DFO, and that by
bringing in large number of deputationists and fitting them
into the higher posts, the Government had illegally gone
back on the promise held out to the petitioners. We see no
merit in this contention. As already noticed, in the letters
908
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sent to the petitioners offering appointment to the category
of AClO- II (DFO), it had been made abundantly clear that
their appointments would be purely temporary and ad hoc in
nature and would not confer on them any claim for permanent
absorption even in the post of DFo. No subsequent
representation is shown to have been made to the petitioners
by the Department at any time prior to 1976 holding out any
prospects of Department permanent absorption in service or
promotions to higher grades. The petitioners continued to
function in the ARC organisation only on ad hoc basis till
the rules were promulgated and they were absorbed into the
new ARC (Technical) Service at the stage of its initial
constitution on the basis of the provisions contained in
Rules 3 and 6. It is significant to note in this context
that it was only after the petitioners had seen the impugned
rules and had gained full knowledge of the provisions
contained therein relating to absorption and seniority in
the department, that they opted for absorption in the
service in accordance with those rules and it was on the
basis of the options so exercised by them that they were
appointed in the hew constituted service.
The petitioners have also put forward a case that
despite the provision contained in rule 6 (3) there was, as
a matter of fact, no adjustment of the suitability of the
various officers by the Screening Committee and, instead,
there was a wholesale absorption of all the personnel in the
posts which they were holding in the ARC organisation as on
April 26,1976. This allegation has been strongly refuted in
the counter-affidavit filed by the first respondent wherein
it has 11 been staled that the Screening Committee has
examined individually 9 the cases of all the concerned
officers before deciding about their ,, suitability for
permanent absorption in the service and prepared ranked
lists strictly in accordance with the principle laid down in
Rule 6 (2). The learned Solicitor General, appearing on
behalf of the Union of India. submitted before us that the
files containing the minutes of the meetings of the
Screening Committee and the ranked select lists prepared by
the Committee for the different grades were available with
him in Court and he offered to place them before us for our
perusal. In the circumstances, we see no reason not to
accept as correct the aforesaid averments contained in the
counter affidavit of the first respondent. It then follows
that this contention of the petitioners has also to fail.
Another point urged on behalf of the petitioners was
that some of the deputationists were not holding in their
parent depart-
909
ments posts equivalent in rank to those in which they were
appointed on deputation in the ARC organisation and such
persons should not have been subsequently absorbed in the
new ARC Service In those higher categories. We are unable to
uphold this contention. At the time when the ARC was a mere
temporary organisation without any recruitment rules the
posts in that organisation could be filled up by appointing
suitable hands possessing the requisite specialised skill
and experience drawn from any source in respect of whatever
was the position occupied by such appointees in their parent
service, if any. Likewise, at the stage of the initial
constitution of the new ARC (Technical) Service the
Government had the right and full freedom to decide from
what all sources the personnel for the new Department should
be drawn and there is no warrant in law for imposing a
limitation that in taking persons from other departments the
field of choice should be restricted to persons holding any
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particular ranks in those other departments. The relevant
consideration for appointment of personnel in a department
of this nature has necessarily to be the suitability of the
person concerned for the specialised type of the work for
adjudging which the experience and expertise that he
possesses in carrying out such functions would be the most
relevant criterion. Once appointments are made to the
various grades in the new service the inter se seniority of
the persons appointed in each category or grade is to be
fixed under Rule 6 on the basis of the total length of
service in the particular or equivalent Grade and this, in
our opinion, is a perfectly reasonable principle.
The argument advanced by the petitioners that the
seniority of the deputationists who have been absorbed into
the ARC (Technical) Service is governed by the provisions of
Article 26 (7) (iii) of the Civil Service Regulations is
wholly devoid of merit. Article 26 (7) (iii) applies to
cases "where a person is appointed by transfer in accordance
with a provision in the recruitment rules providing for such
transfer in the event of non-availability of candidates by
direct recruitment or promotion". The absorption of the
erstwhile deputationists in the ARC (Technical) Service at
the time of its initial constitution was not by such
transfer and hence the provisions of Article 26 (n (iii) are
not attracted.
We do not also see any merit in the argument put
forward on behalf of the petitioners that sub-rule (6) of
Rule 6 of the impugned
910
Rules enables the Screening Committee to absorb in a lower
grade such of the deputationists who were found unsuitable
to be absorbed in the higher posts which they were holding
as on April 26, 1976. Firstly, this is not a provision
applicable only to the erstwhile deputationists. On the
other hand, the sub-rule itself makes it very clear that its
provisions apply equally to all the persons who are eligible
for absorption in the service under sub-rule (1)
irrespective of whether they are deputationists or direct
recruits. Sub-rule (6) comes into operation when a person in
the eligible category holding a post in a higher grade on
the appointed day, who has been found suitable for permanent
appointment in such higher grade cannot, however, be
absorbed in the said grade on account of non-availability o
a vacancy therein. What the sub-rule lays down is that in
such eventuality the Screening Committee may recommend such
a person for permanent appointment in a lower grade and
thereby retain his services in the new Department. We fail
to see how this provision can be said to infringe any of the
fundamental rights of the petitioners.
Lastly, it was contended on behalf of the petitioners
that in preparing the impugned seniority list dated November
6, 1978, the principles laid down in Rule 6 (3) and Rule 7
have not been correctly observed, and that by reason of the
deviation from those principles, the promotional prospects
of some of the petitioners have been adversely affected. No
concrete instance of any such deviation from the principles
set out in Rule 6 (3) and Rule 7 has been brought to our
notice. All the same, we think it necessary to observe that
this Court expects that the provisions of Rule 6 (3) and
Rule 7 will be strictly conformed to, both in letter as well
as in spirit, by respondents Nos. I to 7, and that in case
it is found on examination that the ranking assigned to any
of the petitioners in the impugned seniority list dated
November 6, 1978 is not consistent with the principles laid
down in the aforementioned rule, necessary action should be
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immediately taken to rectify the said defect, and if the
promotional chances of any of the petitioners have been
adversely affected by reason of such defect in the seniority
list, such promotions should also be reviewed after
following the requisite procedure. We direct that the
petitioners may bring to the notice of the first respondent
specific instances, if any, of deviation from the principles
enunciated in Rule 6 (3) and Rule 7 resulting in incorrect
assignment of seniority and rank to them by submitting
representations before the first respondent within a period
of six weeks from today. In
911
case any such representations are received, they will be
duly examined by the first respondent and appropriate orders
will be passed thereon in the manner indicated above as
expeditiously as possible.
Subject to the above observations and directions, we
dismiss this writ petition. The parties will bear their
respective costs.
N.V.K. Petition dismissed