Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARYANA STATE ELECTRICITY BOARD AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HAKIN SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/09/1997
BENCH:
A.S. ANAND, K.T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
This appeal by the Haryana State Electricity Board
(‘the Board’ for short) is in challenge of the order of the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana declaring that respondent
is entitled to be considered as eligible for appointment in
the employment of the Board on compassionate grounds.
The facts leading to this appeal are the following:
Father of the respondent one Hakim Singh was a Lineman
in the employment of the Board. He died on 24.8.1974 in
harness leaving behind him his widow and minor children
including the respondent. About 14 years after the death of
Hakim Singh his widow applied for appointing her son (the
respondent) in the employment of the Board on compassionate
grounds mainly basing on two circulars issued by the Board,
one on 26.9.1985 and the other, in partial modification of
the earlier, on 1.10.1986. As per the said circulars one
member of the family of the deceased employee could be
considered for employment in the service of the Board as a
goodwill gesture, provided request for such employment is
made within one year of the death of the employee.
Respondent who filed the writ petition in the High
Court submitted that when his father he was only four years
old and hence his mother could make the application in the
prescribed from only when he attained majority and that the
Board has not given any favourable response to the repeated
representations made in this matter. The Board took the
stand that as the application was not made within the period
specified in the circulars the Board was unable to entertain
the request for employment on compassionate ground. While
resisting the writ petition the Board cited the decision of
the same High Court dated 18.1.1995 in Sohan Lal vs. HSEB,
in support of their stand.
Learned Single Judge of the High Court distinguished
Sohan Lal’s case on the premise that the claimant therein
waited for five years after attaining majority and that made
him disentitled to employment on compassionate grounds,
whereas in the present case the request was made soon after
respondent attained majority. Learned Single Judge found
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support from three other decisions of the High Court as the
facts therein were more comparable with the facts in this
case. The extended period of three years indicated in the
circular has been interpreted by the High Court to mean in
the case of a minor child as applicable from the date he
became a major. High Court has observed that "this is the
only possible way to give effect to the policy of giving
employment to the deceased employee where his dependents
happen to be minor children." Accordingly, learned Single
Judge allowed the writ petition and directed the Board to
entertain the claim of the respondent.
Though the Board has filed an appeal before a Division
Bench of the High Court the same was dismissed summarily.
However, the Division Bench granted further period of three
months to the Board to comply with the directions issued by
the learned Single Judge.
During consideration of the Special Leave Petition an
endeavour was made to have the matter otherwise settled
between the parties. But learned counsel for the Board,
after taking instructions, submitted to us that a decision
on the legal position is very much warranted from this Court
as large number of similar claims are pending consideration
before the Board.
The rule of appointments to public service is that they
should be on merits and through open invitation. It is the
normal route through which one can get into a public
employment. However, as every rule can have exceptions,
there are a few exceptions to the said rule also which have
been evolved to meet certain contingencies. As per one such
exception belief is provided to the bereaved family of a
deceased employee by accommodating one of his dependents in
a vacancy. The object is to give succour to the family which
has been suddenly plunged into penury due to the ultimately
death of its sole bread-winner. This Court has observed time
and again that the object of providing such ameliorating
relief should not be taken as opening an alternative mode of
recruitment to public employment.
The first circular which afforded such a beneficial
provision to the dependants of a deceased employee was
issued by the Board on 14.9.1983 wherein it was specified
that "only one member of the family of the deceased employee
is to be considered for employment in the Board’s service as
a goodwill gesture and the intention is not that the
employment is to be provided as a matter of course." In the
circular the time-limit within which the dependent of the
deceased employee is to be accommodated was fixed as one
year. The circular further stressed that "the request for
employment would be entertained only in the case in which
the widow submits application for employment immediately
after the death of her husband." On 26.9.91983 the Board
issued a circular clarifying that the purpose of such a
provision was not that employment would be given as a matter
of course. However, the Board extended the period as in the
case of a widow with minor children from one year to three
years "provided a request for giving such employment is made
to the Board within one year of the death of the employee."
High Court relied on an earlier decision of the same
High Court in which after considering the same circulars it
was observed thus:
"Neither in the service of the
Haryana Government nor in the
service of the respondent-Board a
person below the age of 18 years
can be given employment. Therefore,
if a deceased employee is survived
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by minors, it is impossible to give
effect to the condition
incorporated in the circulars of
the Board dated 26.9.1985 and
1.10.1986, which requires
submission of application within
three years of the death of the
employee. A condition which is
impossible to be performed is
ordinarily liable to be treated as
arbitrary and unconstitutional but
if such condition can be given a
reasonable meaning so as to avoid
the charge of unconstitutionality
that interpretation has to be
preferred. Therefore, the
instructions contained in the
circulars dated 26.9.1985 and
1.10.1986 will have to be
interpreted to mean that in case of
a minor child the period of three
years would be applicable from the
date he becomes major."
Learned Single Judge followed the aforesaid
observations and issued the impugned directions to the
Board.
We are of the view that the High Court has erred in
over stretching the scope of the compassionate relief
provided by the Board in the circulars as above. It appears
that High Court would have treated the provision as a lien
created by the Board for a dependent of the deceased
employee. If the family members of the deceased employee can
manage for fourteen years after his death one of his legal
heirs cannot put forward a claim as though it is a line of
succession by virtue of a right of inheritance. The object
of the provisions should not be forgotten that it is to give
succour to the family to tide over the sudden financial
crisis befallen the dependents on account of the untimely
demise of its sole earning member.
This Court has considered the scope of the aforesaid
circulars in Haryana State Electricity Board vs. Naresh
Tanwar and Anr. etc. etc [1996 (2) JT 542].
In that case widow of a deceased employee made an
application almost twelve years after the death of her
husband requesting for accommodating her son in the
employment of the Board, but it was rejected by the Board.
When she moved the High court the Board was directed to
appoint him on compassionate grounds. This Court upset the
said directions of the High Court following two earlier
decisions rendered by this Court, one in Umesh Kumar Nagpal
vs. State of Haryana & ors. [1994 (4) SCC 138], the other in
Jagdish Prasad vs. State of Bihar & anr. [1996 (1) SCC 301].
In the former, a Bench of two Judges has pointed out that
"the whole object of granting compassionate employment is to
enable to family to tide over the sudden crisis. The object
is not to give a member of such family a post much less a
post for the post held by the deceased." In the latter
decision, which also was rendered by a Bench of two Judges,
it was observed that "the very object of appointment of a
dependent of the deceased employees who die in harness is to
relieve unexpected immediate hardship and distress caused to
the family by sudden demise of the earning member of the
family." The learned Judges pointed out that if the claim of
the dependent which was preferred long after the death of
the deceased employee is to be countenanced it would amount
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to another mode of recruitment of the dependent of the
deceased government servant "which cannot be encouraged,
dehors the recruitment rules."
It is clear that the High Court has gone wrong in
giving a direction to the Board to consider the claim of the
respondent as the request was made far beyond the period
indicated in the circular of the Board dated 1.10.1986.
Respondent, if he is interested in getting employment in the
Board, has to pass through the normal route now.
We, therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the
impugned judgment of the High Court.