Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
D. DASEGOWDA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA AND ORS.T.R. DHANANJAYA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/02/1993
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (2) 54 1993 SCC Supl. (4) 53
JT 1993 Supl. 18 1993 SCALE (3)307
ACT:
Service Law:
Karnataka Municipal Corporation Rules, 1977-Validated by
Karnataka Municipal Corporation Amendment Act
1981-Engineers-Appointment of-Deputation from PWD-Absorbed
in Corporation-Promoted to higher posts-Repatriation to PWD
just before retirement-Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who was an Assistant Engineer in Public Works
Department was transferred on deputation to the Bangalore
City Corporation under the City Bangalore (Cadre and
Recruitment) Regulation, 1971 which permitted 75% of
vacancies in the cadre to be filed in by deputation from
P.W.D.
In 1977, the Karnataka Municipal Corporation Rules were
framed and the appellant was absorbed in the Corporation.
On being challenged in a Writ Petition the High Court struck
down the Rules and set aside the absorption of the appellant
in the Corporation. The Government issued an ordinance
removing the infirmity in the Rules. It was replaced by the
Karnataka Municipal Corporation Amendment Act, 1981. In
course of time the appellant was promoted as Executive
Engineer, Superintending Engineer and Addl. Chief Engineer.
Ile earlier Writ Petitioners approached the High Court by
way of a Contempt Petition against the non-implementation of
its order. Faced with this situation, the Government
repatriated the appellant to his parent department,just a
few months before his retirement.
The appellant approached the Administrative Tribunal, which
dismissed his application as infructuous in view of the fact
that the matter was pending before the High Court and in any
case the appellant would get his pension either from the
State Government or the Corporation. Hence these appeals.
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Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: Under the Karnataka Municipal Corporation Amendment
Act, 1981 the basis on which the Karnataka Municipal Rules,
1977 were declared void was removed and appointments made or
continued before the commencement of the Amendment Act were
declared to be valid and were always be deemed to have been
validly made for all purposes as if the said appointments
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had been made under the Principal Act as amended by the Act.
It is not in dispute that the State Legislature is competent
to make the Act. When the Act was made and it validated
past acts done or proceedings taken, it was valid Act and
removed the defects declared by the Court. It must be
deemed and shall always be deemed that the appointment of
the appellant as Addl. Chief Engineer is legal and valid.
Unfortunately, the Act was not brought to the notice of the
High Court when the direction to repatriate the appellant
was made by the High Court. But the failure to bring to the
notice of the court does not have the effect of nullifying
the valid action legislatively taken. Consequently the
appellant must be deemed to have been retired from service
as Addl. Chief Engineer of the Corporation. The appellant
is entitled to all the consequential benefits, all
pensionary benefits etc. from the Corporation. [58H; 59-A-D]
Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. Broach Borough
Municipality & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 388; Janapada Sabha,
Chhindwara, etc. v. Central Provinces Syndicate Ltd. & Anr.,
etc., [1970] 3 SCR 745 and Yadlapati Venkateswarlu v. State
of Anadhra Pradesh & Anr., [19901 Suppl. 1 SCR 381, relied
on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 797-803 of
1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.7.91 of the Karnataka
Administrative Tribunal in Application No. 1443/91 & dated
9.3.81, & 25.11.82 of the Karnataka High Court in W.P. Nos.
20147, 20148/79, 11343/78 & 1016-1018 of 1981.
S.S.Javali, Gopal Singh and E.C. Vidyasagar for the
Appellant.
R.N.N. Narasimha Murthy, M.T. George, S.K. Kulkarni, M.
Veerappa and P. Mahale for the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered:
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Delay condoned in S.L.P (C) 3464-3469/93 (CC-19593)/93.
Both disposed of by this common order.
Leave granted.
The appellant who was working as Assistant Engineer in
Public Works Department was transferred on deputation to
Bangalore City Corporation under City Bangalore (Cadre and
Recruitment Regulation) 1971, which permitted 75% of
vacancies in the cadre to be filled in by deputation from
P.W.D. In 1977 Karnataka Municipal Corporation Rules were
framed under which the appellant was absorbed as Assistant
Executive Engineer in the Corporation. Validity of these
rules and absorption of the appellant was assailed in the
High Court by way of a Writ Petition which was allowed. The
rules were struck down and the absorption of the appellant
in the Corporation was set aside. In 1981 the Govt. issued
an Ordinance removing the infirmity in the rules. It was
replaced by the Karnataka Municipal Corporation Amendment
Act, 1981 (Act 40 of 1981), for short ’the Act’.
Section 8 of the Act reads thus:
"8. Validation :- (1) The Karnataka Municipal
Corporations Rules, 1977 made in notification
No. HMA 270 MUN 77 dated 19th Dec., 1977 and
published as GSR 390 in the Karnataka Gazette
(Extraordinary) dated 22nd Dec., 1977
(hereinafter referred to as the said rules)
shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
any judgment, decree or offer of any court or
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other authority or in the principal Act, be
deemed to be as valid and effective for all
purposes as if the said rules had been made
under the Principal Act as amended by this Act
and accordingly
(a) all actions or things taken or done
(including appointments and promotions made)
under the said rules shall, for all purposes
be deemed to be and to have always been taken
or done in accordance with law;
(b) (i) suit or other proceedings shall be
maintained or continued in any court or
tribunal or before any authority questioning
the validity of any action or thing taken or
done under the said rules; and
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(ii)court shall recognise or enforce any
decree or order declaring that the said rules
or any action or thing taken or done
thereunder as invalid, on the ground that the
rules were made without giving reasonable
opportunity to persons likely to be affected
by it to file their objections and
suggestions.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
any judgment, decree or order of any court or
other authority or in the principal Act all
appointments of Administrators made or
continued before the commencement of this act
shall be deemed to have been validly made for
all purposes as if the said appointment had
been made under the Principal Act as amended
by this act and accordingly all actions and
things taken or done by or under the authority
of the Administrators shall be and shall be
deemed to have always been validly taken or
done and no suit or other proceedings shall
lie or be continued in any court of law or any
other authority on the ground that at the time
when such action or thing was taken or done
the appointment or continuance of the
Administrator was not authorised by law."
Since the law had been amended and all actions taken
including appointments and promotions were validated the
appellant after coming into force of the Act, was promoted
as Executive Engineer and Superintending Engineer in 1981
and 1990 and Addl. Chief Engineer respectively. In 1991
those persons who had challenged validity of appellant’s
appointment approached the High Court once again in contempt
jurisdiction for non-implementation of the order passed in
1979. Faced with this situation the Govt. repatriated the
appellant to his parent department, just few months before
his retirement.
According to the appellant this affected him, prejudicially
both in status and pensionary benefits. He, therefore,
approached the Administrative Tribunal which being of
opinion that since it could not examine the’ validity of
orders in favour of appellant challenging his continuance
which was pending in the High Court and the appellant was
not going to suffer as he is bound to be paid pension either
by the Corporation or the State
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Govt., the petition had spent out its utility and,
therefore, dismissed it as infructuous.
In Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd & Anr. v. Broach Borough
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Municipality & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 388, this court held thus:
"When a legislature sets out to validate a tax
declared by a court to be illegally collected
under an ineffective or an invalid law, the
cause for ineffectiveness or invalidity must
be removed before validation can be said to
take place effectively. The most important
condition, of course, is that the legislature
must possess the power to impose the tax, for,
if it does not, the action must ever remain
ineffective and illegal. Granted legislative
competence, it is not sufficient to declare
merely that the decision of the Court shall
not bind for that is tantamount to reversing
the decision in exercise of judicial power
which the legislature does not possess or
exercise. A court’s decision must always bind
unless the conditions on which it is based are
so fundamentally altered that the decision
could not have been given in the altered
circumstances..........
If the legislature has the power over the
subject matter and competence to make a valid
law, it can at any time make such a valid law
and make it retrospectively so as to bind even
past transactions. The validity of a
validating law, therefore, depends upon
whether the legislature possesses the
competence which it claims over the subject
matter and whether in making the validation it
removes the defect which the courts had found
in the existing law and makes adequate
provisions in the Validating law for a valid
imposition of the tax."
In the above case the Validation Act was upheld. The same
view was reiterated in Janapada Sabha, Chihindwara, etc. v.
Central Provinces Syndicate Ltd. & Anr., etc., [1970] 3 SCR
745 and Yadlapati Venkateswarlu v. State of Andhra Pradesh &
Anr., 119901 Suppl. 1 SCR 381.
It is seen that under the Act the basis on which the 1977
Rules were declared void was removed and a appointments made
or continued before
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the commencement of the Amendment Act were declared to be
valid and shall always to be deemed to have been validly
made for all purpose as if the said appointments had been
made in the Principal Act as amended by the Act. It is not
in dispute that the State legislature is competent to make
the Act. When the Act was made and validated past acts done
or proceedings taken, it was a valid Act and removed the
defects declared by the Court. It must be deemed and shall
always been deemed that the appointment of the appellant as
Addl. Chief Engineer is legal and valid. Unfortunately,
the Act was not brought to the notice of the High Court when
the direction to repatriate the appellant was made by the
High Court. But the failure to bring to the notice of the
court does not have the effect of nullifying the valid
action legislatively taken.
In these circumstances, the order of the High Court and
consequent order of the Govt. repatriating the appellant
from the Corporation service to the State service are
declared illegal. Consequently the appellant must be deemed
to have been retired from service as Addl. Chief Engineer
of the Corporation. The appeals are accordingly allowed.
The appellant is entitled to all the consequential benefits,
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all pensionary benefits etc. from the Corporation. No
costs.
G.N.
Appeals allowed.
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