Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARISH CHANDER BHATIA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/12/1994
BENCH:
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
BENCH:
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (2) 48 JT 1995 (1) 233
1994 SCALE (5)144
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HANSARIA, J.- The perennial dispute of Service Law-inter se
seniority between promotees and direct recruits-has surfaced
again in this appeal. This time the parties in dispute are
officers belonging to DANI
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(Delhi and Andaman and Nicobar Islands) Police Service (the
Service). To resolve the lis we shall have to first
determine as to when the respondents can be said to have
become members of the Service and then we have to find out
as to how they are to be placed in the seniority list to be
prepared as required by Rule 29 of the DANI Police Service
Rules, 1971 (for short ’the Rules’).
2.While making appointments to the Service, proportion as
specified in Rule 5 has to be home in mind-which, under
normal circumstances is 1: 1 qua promotees and direct
recruits, which, however, for reasons to be recorded, may be
varied in the exigency of public service. The respondents
herein, who are 4 in number were appointed after they had
gone through the procedure of selection mentioned in Rule
24. They admittedly did not come to be appointed as per
Rule 16. They came to occupy the promotional post of
Assistant Commissioner of Police, by virtue of what has been
provided in Rule 25. We would be called upon to determine
whether the respondents were appointed under sub-rule (1) or
sub-rule (3) of this rule. After having done so, we would
be required to see as to how their seniority vis-a-vis the
direct recruits has to be determined.
3.Rules 4, 14, 15, 16, 24, 25 and 29 of the Rules are
relevant to determine the controversy at hand and they read
as below:
"4. Strength of the Service.- (1) The
authorised permanent strength of the Service
and the posts included therein shall be as
specified in the Schedule.
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(2) The number of selection grade posts in
the Service shall be 13 per centof the
authorised permanent strength of the Service.
(3) The Central Government or the
Administrator, subject to such conditions and
limitations as may be specified by the Central
Government, may, by order, create duty posts
for such period as may be specified therein.
14. Conditions of Eligibility and Procedure
for Selection.- (1) The Committee shall
consider from time to time the cases of
officers eligible under clause (b) of sub-rule
(1) of Rule 5, who have served in the
respective cadre or posts, as the case may be,
for not less than two years and prepare a list
of officers recommended for appointment after
taking into account the actual vacancies at
the time of selection and those likely to
occur during a year. The selection for
inclusion in the list shall be based on merit
and suitability in all respects for
appointment to the Service with due regard to
seniority.
(2)The seniority of the officers eligible
for consideration by the Committee under sub-
rule (1) shall be determined by the Central
Government with due regard to the dates of
their appointments on a regular basis to the
respective cadre or posts, the pay scales of
the posts etc.:
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Provided that the persons belonging to the same parent
service or Department shall be ranked inter se in order of
their relative seniority in the parent Service or
Department, as the case may be;
(3) The names of persons included in the list shall be
arranged in order ofmerit.
(4) The list so prepared shall be forwarded by the
Committee to the
CentralGovernment.
15. Consultation with the Commission.- (1) The list
prepared under Rule 14 together with the relevant records
shall be forwarded by the Central Government to the
Commission, where consultation with the Commission is
necessary or where the Chairman of the Committee desires
that a reference be made to the Commission along with the
relevant records.
(2)If the Commission considers it necessary to make any
change in the list received from the Central Government the
Commission shall inform the Central Government of the
changes proposed by it.
*(3) The list shall finally be approved by the Central
Government after taking into account the changes, if any,
proposed by the Commission, and where any changes suggested
by the Commission are not accepted, the reasons for such
non-acceptance shall be recorded in writing.
(4)The list thus finally approved shall be in force until
a fresh list is prepared for the purpose in accordance with
these rules. All persons except those under the Himachal
Pradesh Administration who immediately before the
commencement of these rules were borne on the list approved
by the Central Government under sub-rule (4) of Rule 15 of
the Delhi, Himachal Pradesh and Andaman and Nicobar Islands
Police Service Rules, 1965, shall be deemed to have been
included in the same order in a list approved under sub-rule
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(4) of this rule.
*Substituted w.e.f. 12.74 vide MHA Notification No.
U14012/10/73-UTS, dated 2-12-1974.
16. Appointment to the Service.- Appointment to the Service
shall be made in order of merit in the list referred to in
sub-rule (4) of Rule 15 with due regard to the proportion
specified in Rule 5.
24. Selection for Officiating Appointment.-If at any time
the Central Government is of the opinion that the number of
officers available in the list referred to in sub-rule (4)
of Rule 15 for appointments to duty posts is not adequate
having regard to the vacancies in such posts, it may direct
the Committee to consider the case of officers who have
officiated for a period of not less than three years in any
of the cadres mentioned in clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of
Rule 5 and prepare a separate list of officers selected.
The selection for inclusion in the list shall be based on
merit and suitability in all respects for
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officiating appointments to duty posts with due regard to
seniority. The provisions of sub-rules (3) and (4) of Rule
14 and Rule 15 shall apply mutatis mutandis in the
preparation of the selection list under this rule.
25. Officiating appointment to duty posts of the Service.-
(1) If a member of the Service is not available for holding
a duty post, the post may be filled on an officiating basis-
(a) by the appointment of an officer
included in the list referred to in sub-rule
(4) of Rule 15, or
(b) if no such officer is available, by the
appointment of an officer included in the list
prepared under Rule 24.
(2)Notwithstanding anything contained in these rules if
the exigencies of public service so require, a duty post for
which a member of the Service is not available may be filled
on an officiating basis by the appointment with prior
consultation with the Commission of an officer belonging to
a State Police Service on deputation for such period or
periods ordinarily not exceeding three years as the Central
Government may consider necessary.
(3)Notwithstanding anything contained in these rules,
where appointment to a duty post is to be made purely as a
local arrangement for a period of not exceeding six months,
such appointment may be made by the administrator from
persons who are included in the list prepared under sub-rule
(4) of Rule 15, or Rule 24 or who are eligible for inclusion
in such a list
(4)Any appointment made under sub-rule (3) shall be
reported by the Administrator to the Central Government
forthwith.
29. Seniority.- The Central Government shall prepare a list
of members of the Service arranged in order of seniority as
determined in the manner specified below:
(1) Member of the Service appointed at the
initial constitution under Rule 17 shall be
ranked inter se in the order of their relative
seniority in the Delhi, Himachal Pradesh and
Andaman and Nicobar Islands Police Service:
Provided that if the seniority of any such
officer had not been specifically determined
before the commencement of these rules, it
shall be as determined by the Central
Government.
(2) Seniority of person appointed to the
Service under clauses (a) and (b) of sub-rule
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(1) of Rule 5 after the initial constitution
under Rule 17, shall be determined as follows:
(a) Persons recruited on the results of the
competitive examination in any year shall be
ranked inter se in the order of merit in which
they are placed at the competitive examination
on the results of which they are recruited,
those recruited on the basis of an earlier
examination
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being ranked senior to those recruited on the
basis of later examination.
(b) The seniority inter se of persons
recruited by selection shall be determined on
the basis of the order in which their names
are arranged in the list prepared under Rule
14, those recruited on the basis of an earlier
selection being ranked senior to those
recruited on the basis of a later selection.
(c) The relative seniority of direct
recruits and of promotees shall be determined
according to the rotation of vacancies between
direct recruits and promotees which shall be
based on the quotas of vacancies reserved for
direct recruitment and promotion under Rule
5."
4. From the above, it is clear that for a person to be
appointed under subrule (1) of Rule 25, he has to be an
officer whose name is included in the list referred to in
sub-rule (4) of Rule 15 or one prepared under Rule 24.
Insofar as sub-rule (3) is concerned, this requirement is
not to be satisfied, and further, appointment under that
sub-rule cannot exceed six months and is made as a local
arrangement. The respondents are those whose names found
place in the list prepared under Rule 24 and their
appointments not having been made purely as a local
arrangement for a period not exceeding six months, we have
no difficulty in upholding the view of the Central
Administrative Tribunal, Principal Bench, whose judgment has
been impugned in this appeal, that respondents were
appointed under sub-rule (1).
5. There is no serious dispute to this position even by
learned Additional Solicitor General, Shri Tulsi, who has
appeared for the appellants. His first real contention is
that despite the appointments being under sub-rule (1), the
respondents cannot be taken to have been appointed to the
Service and as such the direction of the Tribunal to treat
them as permanent appointees instead of as officiating
hands, is not in consonance with what has been provided in
the Rules. Shri Tulsi submits that appointment to the
Service can be made only as visualised by Rule 16 and this
can be of those whose names find place in the list referred
in sub-rule (4) of Rule 15. The respondents not being such
incumbents, they cannot be treated as permanent appointees
to the Service.
6. This submission would not be correct if heart of the
matter is looked into. To put it differently, the
submission is not correct in substance, but is so only in
form. We have taken this view because an examination of
Rule 24 shows that the list prepared as required by that
rule, has also to satisfy the requirements of provisions of
sub-rules (3) and (4) of Rules 14 and 15. This shows that
the incumbents whose names find place in the list prepared
as contemplated by Rule 24 are also those who have been duly
selected and consultation with the Commission has also been
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made and the list prepared has been forwarded to the
Central Government as well for its doing the needful. There
is thus no difference in substance between the list
prepared, as
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contemplated by Rule 14 read with Rule 15, and the one
visualised by Rule 24. So, there appears to be no
justifiable reason to regard Rule 24 selectees as in any way
inferior to Rule 14 selectees. According to us, they stand
almost at par. It is because of this that clauses (a) and
(b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 25 have virtually made no
distinction between these two categories of incumbents.
7. Shri Tulsi, however, contends that Rule 25 visualises
officiating appointment and not permanent; and that
appointment is required to be made when a member of the
Service is not available. Though this is so, but the facts
of the present case would show that though the appointments
were stated to be officiating these continued for a very
long period, which in the case of Respondent 1 was of about
12 years as he came to be appointed under Rule 25 on 6-11-
1972 and was fixed permanently in the slot meant for
promotees on 28-7-1984. An officiating appointment for over
a decade cannot be treated as fleeting appointment with no
service benefits to be given. Any other view would very
seriously prejudice such a service-holder who, even after
having rendered service equal to those of permanent
appointees for a long period, and that too for proper
functioning of the Service, would be denied the benefit of
the same for no cogent reasons. Any other view is bound to
have a demoralising effect in the Service as a whole. As
the appointments under Rule 25 are also to duty posts, which
may form part of the strength of Service because what has
been stated in Rule 4(3), we are of the view that justice of
the case and the need to preserve the efficient functioning
of the Service would require to treat the appointments of
the respondents as permanent, despite their having been
first appointment on officiating basis.
8. The real hub lies in the placement of the respondents
in the seniority list. Shri Tulsi has urged that we may not
do anything, because of the long period for which
respondents have served, which would be against the
principle of seniority embodied in Rule 29. As per clause
(c) of sub-rule (2) of this rule inter se seniority has to
be determined according to the "rotation of vacancies
between direct recruits and promotees", which shall be based
on the quotas of vacancies reserved for direct recruitment
and promotion under Rule 5, which, as already noted, is in
the ratio of 1: 1. The learned counsel, on the strength of
recent decision of this Court in Syed Khalid Rizvi v. Union
of India1 contends that present is not a case where
seniority can be determined on the basis of continuous
officiation. Shri Tulsi earnestly prays that we may not
depart for the requirement of Rule 29 as sanctity of law is
greater than interest of some individuals. It is also
submitted that the present is not a case as to which it can
be said that quota rule has broken down, in which case
alone, seniority which is required to be determined on the
basis of quota can be fixed on the basis of length of
service. We are reminded that the quota rule has become an
inseparable part of our service jurisprudence, as
1 1993 Supp (3) SCC 575: 1994 SCC (L&S) 84: (1994) 26 ATC
192
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it allows a harmonious combination of fresh blood and old
experience, and we may not do anything to cause dent to this
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useful principle.
9.The strenuous contention of Shri Gupta, appearing for
the respondents, is that the present is a case on all fours
with O.P Singla v. Union of India2 in which case this Court
in a similar situation took the view that seniority was
required to be determined on the basis of length of service,
despite there being quota in appointment to the Service in
that case also, which was taken to have broken down.
10.In our view, a few scattered appointments against the
quota rule as have been given here, cannot be taken to be
breakdown of the principle of quota. Such appointments are
at times made in exigency of service because of non-
availability either of direct recruits or suitable
incumbents for promotion. In Singla case2 breakdown was
read because of the language of the service rule concerned
and the way appointments had come to be made. The fact
situation and provision in the rules are different here.
Singla case2 cannot, therefore, come to the aid of the
respondents.
11.According to us, the just and proper order to be passed
would be to direct the appellants to treat the dates of
officiating appointments of the respondents as the dates of
their regular appointments and then to place them in the
seniority list as required by Rule 29 i.e. to interpose a
direct recruit in between two promotees as per their
respective inter se seniorities; and we direct accordingly.
The seniority would, therefore, be refixed of all concerned,
not as per length of service alone as ordered by the
Tribunal, but as indicated by us.
12.Before closing, it is required to be stated that we
have not appreciated the stand taken by the appellants.
This is for the reason that employers like the appellants,
who are required to be model employers, should not take a
stand which is unfair. They have to treat both the wings of
the Service fairly, as both are equally important insofar as
they are concerned. The need for making this observation
has been felt because what we find is that despite an
incumbent like Respondent 1 having served for more than a
decade following his appointment, the stand taken is that he
should be taken to have become a member of the Service from
1984 and not from 1972, being oblivious of the fact that for
more than 12 years he had discharged the functions of the
higher post to the satisfaction of all concerned. Denial of
such long period of service for the purpose of seniority is
an unjustified and arbitrary act which a model employer has
to eschew.
13.The appeal is disposed of as per direction given
earlier. In the facts and circumstances of the case we make
no order as to costs. Special Leave Petition (C) No. 22013
of 1994 (CC No. 21852 of 1993)
14.This petition stands disposed of in terms of the
judgment in CA No. 2481 of 1993 delivered today.
2 (1984) 4 SCC 450: 1984 SCC (L&S) 657: (1985) 1 SCR 351
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