Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1889 of 2000
PETITIONER:
TARLOCHAN DEV SHARMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/07/2001
BENCH:
CJI & R.C. Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The appellant was elected a Councilor of Rajpura Municipal
Council in January, 1998. In the month of April, 1998, he was elected
as President of the Municipality. He had held the office hardly for a
period of four months when he was served with a notice dated
19.8.1998 issued by the Principal Secretary, Department of Local
Government, State of Punjab requiring him to show cause why he be
not removed from the post of President and of member of the
Municipal Council and also why he be not restrained from contesting
elections of the Municipal Council for the next five years. The notice
levelled three charges against the appellant. The first two charges are
redundant in as much as the same have been found not substantiated
and hence not acted upon. The third charge only needs to be dealt
with on which alone is founded the order of removal from
Presidentship which was impugned by the appellant by filing a writ
petition before the High Court. Charge no.3 is extracted from the show
cause notice and reproduced hereunder:-
3. . the Executive Officer vide his letter
No. 6416 dated 5.6.1998 have informed that the
Municipal Council, had invited the tenders for
purchase of the Fogging Machine as per the rules
and after completion of all the formalities Fogging
Machines were brought and tested for many days
in different wards of Municipal Council but you
asked the Executive Officer that payment of this
machine should not be made. Due to this reason
the working of Municipal Council have been
obstructed. Whereas to purchase this machine the
funds from the District Planning Board have been
received by the Municipal Council. But Deputy
Commissioner, Patiala had also ordered the
Municipal Council, to purchase this Fogging
Machine. This action of yours is against the
interest of the Municipal Council.
4. Therefore, for the charges stated above it is
proposed that action be taken against you under
Section 22, 16(1)(e) and (2) of Punjab Municipal
Act, 1911 and to remove you from the post of
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President/post of Member of the Municipal Council,
Rajpura and to restrain you from contesting the
election of Council for next five years.
[Underlining by us]
The appellant gave a detailed reply. In so far as the abovesaid
third charge is concerned, the appellant submitted as under:-
.. that the aforesaid fogging machine was
delivered to the Municipal Council Rajpura for
testing purposes and the said machine was worked
out in various wards of the Municipal Council.
Upon using and testing the said machine, it was
found that the said machine has certain inherent
defects and was not working properly. Because of
the same defects and on the advice of the
Municipal Council, the said machine was returned
to the supplier and therefore, there was no
question of making any payment of the aforesaid
machine. It is apparent that the Executive Officer
Shri Ashok Kumar wanted a defective machine to
be purchased by the Municipal Council for his
personal gains. By any stretch of imagination the
undersigned was not expected to approve the
purchase of a defective machine and make the
payment thereof causing a big loss to the Municipal
Council. Under the circumstances, there is no
question of any loss having been caused to the
Municipal Council or any such act done by the
undersigned which is against the interest of the
Municipal Council. All the actions of the
undersigned as a President of the Municipal Council
have been taken in the best interest of the general
public and in the interest of the Municipal Council
and public exchequer. The so called report
submitted by the Executive Officer of the Municipal
Council Shri Ashok Kumar against the undersigned,
through various communications dated 5.8.1998
and 3.8.1998 are out of personal vengeance and is
a calculated move made by him to harm the
undersigned and to seek his removal so that the
aforesaid Shri Ashok Kumar may carry out his evil
designs with a free hand and without any
obstruction.
The appellant was called for a personal hearing on 27.7.1999
before the Principal Secretary, Local Government. The appellant
availed the opportunity of personal hearing and apart from making oral
submissions, also submitted a written memo of his submissions
reiterating, though by elaborating, the stand earlier taken by him. He
also set out in very many details, how his presidentship of the
Municipality in the background of the political party to which he
belonged, was an eyesore to the political party and the politicians in
power and the bureaucracy having joined hands with the politicians by
submitting to their dictates, acting together they were determined to
drive him out of the office. By order dated 1.10.1999 issued by Shri
N.K. Arora, Principal Secretary to Government of Punjab, Department
of Local Government, the appellant was informed that although there
was doubt in allegations no. 1 and 2 but allegation no. 3 was
substantiated and therefore the appellant was being removed from the
presidentship of the Municipal Council, Rajpura. The relevant part of
the order reads as under:-
I have gone through the facts of the case
and have given due consideration to the claims and
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contentions advanced by the noticee on the one
hand and the State representative on the other.
Even if full benefit of doubt is given to the noticee
in regard to allegation No.1 and 2, it is abundantly
clear that in regard to allegation No.3, he has
utterly failed to clarify his position. Instead, deep
and distinct shadows of doubt and suspicion hover
over his head as he has tried to mislead the
Government and had patently resorted to
falsehood. He clearly mentions in his reply that he
had found the fogging machine defective on its
official report and had thus ordered its return.
There is thus no question for payment of the
machine. Facts, however, tell a different story.
During the trial run, the machine was found to be
okay. The Executive Officer had prepared the
cheque and signed the same on 20.11.1998. For
over two months, the cheque was not presented to
the bank. Eventually, it was presented on
22.1.1999 and the payment was made. In all
fairness, the President should have not distorted
the facts and got himself sunk into highly
embarrassing situation. One fails to understand
why in his reply, he states that the machine was
returned and no payment was to be made. One
also fails to understand why he kept the cheque in
his custody for over 2 months. Circumstantial
evidence, therefore, goes deeply against him. It
appears to be a case of abuse of power and the
conduct of the President is quite unbecoming.
Accordingly, Shri Tarlochan Dev Sharma is hereby
removed from the presidentship of the Municipal
Council Rajpura in exercise of powers vested in me
under Section 22 of Punjab Municipal Act, 1911.
[Underlining by us]
The appellant filed a writ petition before the High Court of
Punjab & Haryana putting in issue the abovesaid order. A Division
Bench of the High Court formed an opinion that the High Court could
not test the validity of the impugned order sitting like an appellate
court merely because there could be a possibility of arriving at a
conclusion different from the one arrived at by the competent
authority, and therefore, the impugned order was not liable to be
interfered with. The writ petition was directed to be dismissed.
Feeling aggrieved by the impugned judgment of the High Court, the
appellant has filed this appeal by special leave which leave has been
granted.
The notice to show cause dated 19.8.1998 proposed a
dichromatic action. What has followed at the end is removal from the
office of President only. Therefore, the short question arising for
decision in this appeal is: whether the impugned order of removal is
sustainable within the purview of Section 22 of the Punjab Municipal
Act, 1911 (hereinafter, the Act, for short)?
Section 22 of the Act read as under:-
22. Resignation or removal of President and
Vice-President - Whenever a President or Vice-
President vacates his seat or tenders in writing to
the committee his resignation of his office, he shall
vacate his office; and any president or vice-
president may be removed from office by the State
Government on the ground of abuse of his powers
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or of habitual failure to perform his duties or in
pursuance of a resolution requesting his removal
passed by two-thirds of the members of the
committee:
Provided that if a resolution requesting the removal
of the President or the Vice-President is passed by
two-thirds of the members of the committee the
President or, as the case may be the Vice-President
shall be deemed to be under suspension
immediately after such resolution is passed;
Provided further that before the State Government
notifies his removal, the reason for his proposed
removal shall be communicated to him by means of
a registered letter in which he shall be called upon
to tender within twenty-one days an explanation in
writing and if no such explanation is received in the
office of the appropriate Secretary to Government
within twenty one days of the despatch of the said
registered letter, the State Government may
proceed to notify his removal.
In a democracy governed by rule of law, once elected to an
office in a democratic institution, the incumbent is entitled to hold the
office for the term for which he has been elected unless his election is
set aside by a prescribed procedure known to law. That a returned
candidate must hold and enjoy the office and discharge the duties
related therewith during the term specified by the relevant enactment
is a valuable statutory right not only of the returned candidate but also
of the constituency or the electoral college which he represents.
Removal from such an office is a serious matter. It curtails the
statutory term of the holder of the office. A stigma is cast on the
holder of the office in view of certain allegations having been held
proved rendering him unworthy of holding the office which he held.
Therefore, a case of availability of a ground squarely falling within
Section 22 of the Act must be clearly made out. A President may be
removed from office by the State Government, within the meaning of
Section 22, on the ground of abuse of his powers (of President),
inter alia. This is the phrase with which we are concerned in the
present case.
The proceedings for removal must also satisfy the requirements
of natural justice. Second proviso to Section 22 requires that the
reason for the proposed removal shall be communicated to the person
proceeded against by means of a registered letter and he shall be
allowed 21 days for putting up his explanation in writing. And
thereafter alone, the State Government may proceed to notify his
removal. In between a duty to take decision by due application of
mind to the allegations made and the explanation given is implicit and
shall have to be read in the provision though not expressly stated
therein. The appellant is not charged with habitual failure to perform
the duties of President of Municipal Council. He is charged with having
abused his powers of President. The vires of the impugned order
dated 1.10.1999 have to be tested on the touchstone of the
availability of this ground.
The phrase abuse of powers as providing a ground for
proceeding under Section 22 is not defined in the Act. Blacks Law
Dictionary (Seventh Edition, 1999) gives the meaning of abuse as to
depart from legal or reasonable use in dealing with (a person or
thing), to injure (a person) physically or mentally, to damage (a
thing). In Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol.1, p.402) it is so stated:-
ABUSE.
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As Noun- It has been said that the word is not a
term of art in the law and that its every day
popular sense is well known; but that its proper
signification when employed depends upon the
context and subject matter. In its largest sense, ill
use or improper treatment of another; misuse. In
the plural as used with reference to the authority of
governmental commissions to correct abuses, the
word has been held to mean a disregard of duty
imposed by law; any improper use of a right or
privilege.
The word abuse as occurring in Section 5(1)(d) of Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 came up for consideration of this court in M.
Narayanan Nambiar Vs. State of Kerala, AIR 1963 SC 1116. This
court observed ___
Abuse means mis-use i.e. using his
position for something for which it is not intended.
That abuse may be by corrupt or illegal means or
otherwise than those means. The word otherwise
has wide connotation and if no limitation is placed
on it, the words corrupt, illegal, and otherwise
mentioned in the clause become surplusage, for on
that construction every abuse of position is
gathered by the clause. So some limitation will
have to be put on that word and that limitation is
that it takes colour from the preceding words along
with which it appears in the clause, that is to say,
something savouring of dishonest act on his part.
The contention of the learned counsel that if the
clause is widely constructed even a
recommendation made by a public servant for
securing a job for another may come within the
clause and that could not have been the intention
of the Legislature. But in our view such innocuous
acts will not be covered by the said clause. The
juxtaposition of the word otherwise with the words
corrupt or illegal means, and the dishonesty
implicit in the word abuse indicate the necessity
for a dishonest intention on his part to bring him
within the meaning of the clause.
To find the meaning of a word or expression not defined in an
enactment the courts apply the subject and object rule which means
__ ascertain carefully the subject of the enactment where the word or
expression occurs and have regard to the object which the Legislature
has in view. Forego the strict grammatical or etymological propriety of
language, even its popular use; let the subject or the context in which
they are used and the object which the Legislature seeks to attain be
your lenses through which look for the meaning to be ascribed. In
selecting one out of the various meanings of a word, regard must
always be had to the context as it is a fundamental rule that the
meanings of words and expressions used in an Act must take their
colour from the context in which they appear. Therefore when the
context makes the meaning of a word quite clear, it becomes
unnecessary to search for and select a particular meaning out of the
diverse meanings a word is capable of, according to
lexicographers.. Judge Learned Hand cautioned not to make
a fortress out of the dictionary but to pay more attention to the
sympathetic and imaginative discovery of the purpose or object of the
Statute as a guide to its meaning (See __ Principles of Statutory
Interpretation, Justice G.P. Singh, 7th Edition 1999, pp. 258-259).
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The expression abuse of powers in the context and setting in
which it has been used cannot mean use of power which may appear
to be simply unreasonable or inappropriate. It implies a willful abuse
or an intentional wrong. An honest though erroneous exercise of
power or an indecision is not an abuse of power. A decision, action
or instruction may be inconvenient or unpalatable to the person
affected but it would not be an abuse of power. It must be such an
abuse of power which would render a Councilor unworthy of holding
the office of President. In as much as an abuse of power would entail
adverse civil consequences, the expression has to be narrowly
construed. Yet again, the expression employed in Section 22 is
abuse of his powers or habitual failure to perform his duties. The
use of plural - powers, and the setting of the expression in the
framing of Section 22 is not without significance. It is suggestive of
legislative intent. The phrase abuse of powers must take colour
from the next following expression - or habitual failure to perform
duties. A singular or casual aberration or failure in exercise of power
is not enough; a course of conduct or plurality of aberration or failure
in exercise of power and that too involving, dishonesty of intention is
abuse of powers within the meaning of Section 22 of the Act. The
legislature could not have intended the occupant of an elective office,
seated by popular verdict, to be shown exit for a single innocuous
action or error of decision.
One of the requirements of the principles of natural justice, as
incorporated in second proviso to Section 22, is that the reasons for
the proposed removal have to be communicated to the person
proceeded against. The purpose of such communication is to enable
him to furnish an explanation of his conduct or his act or omission
which is likely to be construed as an abuse of power. It is clear that
the facts constituting gravamen of the charge have to be
communicated. It follows as a necessary corollary therefrom that
what has not been communicated or not relied on in the show cause
notice as a ground providing reason for the proposed removal cannot
be relied upon as furnishing basis for the order of removal. The
person proceeded against under Section 22 of the Act has to be made
aware of the precise charge which he is required to meet and therefore
he must be apprised of the exact content of the abuse of power
attributed to him. The authority taking decision must apply its mind
also to the explanation furnished by the person proceeded against and
this must appear from the order passed under Section 22.
The show cause notice alleged only this much that the Municipal
Council had purchased a fogging machine of which payment was to be
made but the appellant (as President of the Municipality) instructed
the Executive Officer not to make the payment and this resulted in
the working of the Municipal Council having been obstructed. The
finding arrived at in the impugned order dated 1.10.1999 is different.
There is no finding arrived at that the working of the Municipal Council
was in any manner obstructed by the appellant having instructed the
Executive Officer not to make the payment. The specific stand taken
by the appellant in his reply was that the machine had certain inherent
defects and was not working properly and hence it was on the advice
of the Municipal Council that the appellant had desired the payment
not to be made. The finding as to abuse of power is based mainly on
the fact that the Executive Officer had prepared a cheque and signed
the same on 20.11.1998 and yet the cheque was not presented to the
bank resulting in delayed payment to the supplier of the fogging
machine. The impugned order also states that the cheque was kept by
the appellant in his custody for over two months. These events are
subsequent to the date of the show cause notice, i.e. 19.8.1998 as
also to the date of appellants reply i.e. 8.9.1998. Thus, briefly stated,
the content of abuse of power, as stated in the notice dated 19.8.1998
was-asking the Executive Officer not to make payment while the order
dated 1.10.1999 is founded on a subsequent event that in spite of the
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Executive Officer having prepared and signed the cheque on
20.11.1998, the appellant detained the cheque in his custody for about
two months resulting payment being delayed and this amounted to
abuse of power. There is no finding recorded in the impugned order
that the explanation furnished by the appellant was factually incorrect.
A President is supposed to act in the best interests of the Municipality
which he is heading. In spite of fogging machine worth lakhs having
been found by the Executive Officer to be okay in its trial run, if the
President was informed of the machine having certain inherent
defects, there was nothing wrong in his asking the Executive Officer
not to make the payment unless he was satisfied that the machine was
fit for the purpose for which it was being purchased, all the more,
when the funds for purchasing the machine were made available to the
Municipality by the District Planning Board. Even accepting the
allegations made against the appellant, as contained in the show cause
notice, to be correct, his decision to withhold the payment may be said
to be an erroneous or unjust decision. For this reason alone the
appellant cannot be said to be guilty of an abuse of his powers. If any
one suffered by delay in payment it was the supplier and not the
Municipality. There is nothing in the show cause notice or the ultimate
order to hold how the act of appellant had obstructed the working of
Municipal Council or was against the interest of council. We are,
therefore, clearly of the opinion that not only the principles of natural
justice were violated by the factum of the impugned order having been
founded on grounds at variance from the one in the show cause
notice, of which appellant was not even made aware of let alone
provided an opportunity to offer his explanation, the allegations made
against the appellant did not even prima facie make out a case of
abuse of powers of President. The High Court was not right in forming
an opinion that the appellant was persuading the High Court to
judicially review like an appellate court the finding arrived at by the
competent authority. The present one is a case where the impugned
order is vitiated by perversity. A conclusion of abuse of powers has
been drawn from such facts wherefrom such conclusion does not even
prima facie flow. The impugned order is based on non-existent
grounds. It is vitiated by colourable exercise of power and hence
liable to be struck down within the well settled parameters of judicial
review of administrative action.
Although the appellant tried to suggest a case of malafides and
colourable exercise of power by stating a few facts and inviting a
finding that impugned order was passed with an ulterior motive in as
much as the appellants election to the office of the President did not
suit the power that be and the political bosses of Shri N.K. Arora, the
then Principal Secretary, Department of Local Government, State of
Punjab, however, we are not entering into that question as it is
unnecessary and also because adequate material has not been
brought on record and placed before the court so as to undoubtedly
arrive at such a finding. However, something has to be said about
Shri N.K. Arora, Principal Secretary who initiated the action, heard the
appellant and passed the impugned order of removal dated 1.10.1999.
It is interesting to view the present day bureaucrat-politician
relationship scenario. A bureaucratic apparatus is a means of
attaining the goals prescribed by the political leaders at the top. Like
Alladins lamp, it serves the interest of whosoever wields it. Those at
the helm of affairs exercise apical dominance by dint of their political
legitimacy. . . . . . . . . The ministers make strategic decisions. The
officers provide trucks, petrol and drivers. They give march orders.
The minister tells them where to go. The officers have to act upon
instructions from above without creating a fuss about it. [Effectiveness
of Bureaucracy, The Indian Journal of Public Administration, April-June
2000 at p.165]
In the system of Indian Democratic Governance as
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contemplated by the Constitution senior officers occupying key
positions such as Secretaries are not supposed to mortgage there own
discretion, volition and decision making authority and be prepared to
give way or being pushed back or pressed ahead at the behest of
politicians for carrying out commands having no sanctity in law. The
Conduct Rules of Central Government Services command the civil
servants to maintain at all times absolute integrity and devotion to
duty and do nothing which is unbecoming of a Government servant.
No Government servant shall in the performance of his official duties,
or in the exercise of power conferred on him, act otherwise than in his
best judgment except when he is acting under the direction of his
official superior. In Anirudhsinhji Jadeja (1995) 5 SCC 302, this
court has held that a statutory authority vested with jurisdiction must
exercise it according to its own discretion; discretion exercised under
the direction or instruction of some higher authority is failure to
exercise discretion altogether. Observations of this court in The
Purtabpur Company Ltd., AIR 1970 SC 1896, are instructive and
apposite. Executive officers may in exercise of their statutory
discretions take into account considerations of public policy and in
some context policy of Minister or the Government as a whole when it
is a relevant factor in weighing the policy but they are not absolved
from their duty to exercise their personal judgment in individual cases
unless explicit statutory provision has been made for instructions by a
superior to bind them. As already stated we are not recording, for
want of adequate material, any positive finding that the impugned
order was passed at the behest of or dictated by someone else than its
author. Yet we have no hesitation in holding that the impugned order
betrays utter non-application of mind to the facts of the case and the
relevant law. The manner in which the power under Section 22 has
been exercised by the competent authority is suggestive of betrayal of
the confidence which the State Government reposed in the Principal
Secretary in conferring upon him the exercise of drastic power like
removal of President of a Municipality under Section 22 of the Act. To
say the least what has been done is not what is expected to be done
by a senior official like the Principal Secretary of a wing of the State
Government. We leave at that and say no more on this issue.
The appeal is allowed. The judgement of the High Court under
appeal is set aside. The writ petition filed by the appellant stands
allowed. The impugned order dated 1.10.1999 removing the appellant
from the Presidentship of the Municipal Council, Rajpura under Section
22 of the Punjab Municipal Act, 1911 is hereby quashed and set aside.
The appellant shall be entitled to costs quantified at Rs.10,000/- from
the State of Punjab, respondent No.1, which has contested the
appellants case throughout. The appellant shall stand forthwith
reinstated in the office of the President of Rajpura Municipality for the
rest of his term.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CJI.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( R.C. Lahoti )
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( K.G. Balakrishnan )
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New Delhi;
July 25, 2001.
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