Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JASWANT SINGH & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1979
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 115 1980 SCR (1) 420
1979 SCC (4) 440
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC2130 (18)
ACT:
Punjab Reorganisation Act 1966-Ss. 79 & 80-Scope of-
Officers and staff employed by Beas Control Board and later
transferred to Bhakra Management Board-If Central Government
Employees.
Constitution of India-Arts. 14 & 16-Temporary employees
recruited for specified work-Services terminated while
retaining the services of deputationists-If violative of
Arts. 14 & 16.
Central Civil Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1965-
R. 3-Government servant-When would become a quasi permanent
servant.
Labour law-Work-charged employees-If Government
servants.
HEADNOTE:
The Beas Project, which was commenced in 1960, was a
joint venture of the composite State of Punjab and the State
of Rajasthan. All decisions on policy and administrative
matters relating to the project were entrusted to a Board
known as the Beas Control Board, which was constituted by
the Central Government in consultation with the State
Governments concerned. For the purpose of construction and
completion of the Project Engineers and a large number of
other categories of employees were taken on deputation from
the States of Punjab and Rajasthan and some others were
directly recruited by the Beas Control Board.
In the meantime in the year 1966, the State of Punjab
was reorganized and the new States of Haryana and the Union
Territory of Chandigarh came into being and a part of the
Punjab Territory was transferred to the then Union Territory
of Himachal Pradesh. The Punjab Reorganization Act, 1966
contains a chapter on Bhakra Nangal and Beas Projects. After
1966, the Project became the concern of the State of
Rajasthan and the successor States of Punjab, Haryana and
the then Union Territory Himachal Pradesh.
The Bhakra Management Board constituted by the Central
Government under s. 79(1) of the Act for the administration,
maintenance and operation of works specified in clauses (a)
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to (g) of that sub-section was empowered to employ the
necessary staff for the efficient discharge of its
functions. The proviso to s.79(4) of the Act states that
every person who immediately before the constitution of the
said Board was engaged in the construction, maintenance or
operation of the works shall continue to be so employed
under the Board in connection with the said works on the
same terms and conditions of service as were applicable to
him before such constitution until the Central Government by
order directs otherwise. The Bhakra Management Board was
placed under the control of the Central Government. By
virtue of s.80(1), construction of the Beas Project was to
be undertaken by the Central Government on behalf
421
of the successor States and the State of Rajasthan. Section
80(2) of the Act empowers the Central Government to
constitute the Beas Construction Board and the Board was
empowered to appoint such staff as may be necessary for the
efficient discharge of its functions. The first proviso to
s. 80(3) is in similar terms to the proviso to s. 79(4). By
sub-s. (5) any component of the Beas Project in relation to
which the construction has been completed after November 1,
1966, may be transferred by the Central Government to the
Bhakra Management Board constituted under s. 79 and
thereupon the provisions of s. 79 become applicable as if
works transferred to the Bhakra Management Board were
included in s.79(1). Sub-section (6) of Section 80 provides
that the Bhakhra Management Board shall be re-named as the
Bhakra Beas Management Board, when any of the components of
the Beas Project has been transferred and that the Beas
Construction Board shall cease to exist when all the
components of the Beas Project have been so transferred.
The Petitioners who were officers and staff of various
categories and whose services were sought to be terminated
by way of retrenchment on the completion of the Project work
contended (1) that they were employees of the Central
Government, (2) that their conditions of service were
governed by rules which apply to its temporary employees and
(3) that the orders of retrenchment passed against them
while retaining the deputationists in service were
violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
^
HELD : 1. (a) Though the petitioners were appointed
under the orders issued by or on behalf of the Beas Control
Board of the Beas Construction Board, they were employees of
the Central Government. Such of them as were appointed by
the Beas Control Board became the employees of the Beas
Construction Board by virtue of the first proviso to s.
80(3). It was by and on behalf of the Beas Control Board
that some of the petitioners were appointed prior to the re-
organization of the composite State of Punjab on November,
1966. The Beas Control Board ceased to exist and its place
was taken by the Beas Construction Board constituted on
October 1, 1967. Therefore by reason of the first proviso to
s.80(3) the petitioners became the employees or were
employed by the Beas Construction Board. [431-E-F,G, 432A]
(b) By virtue of s. 80(1) the Beas Project was to be
undertaken by the Central Government on behalf of the
successor States and the State of Rajasthan. But the direct
and immediate responsibility to construct and complete the
works of the Beas Project was imposed by the statute on the
Central Government and not on the successor States and the
State of Rajasthan. The concerned States were only under an
obligation to provide necessary funds to the Central
Government and that Government is empowered to constitute
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the Beas Construction Board and assign to that Board such
functions as it may consider necessary. Though the
appointments of the petitioners might have been made in the
name of or on behalf of the Beas Construction Board they
were truly and in substance made for the benefit and at the
behest of the Central Government. The staff appointed for
discharging the functions of the Board was appointed in
order to enable the Central Government to discharge its
responsibility under s. 80(1). The petitioners are,
therefore, employees of the Central Government. [432B, D, E,
H, 433A]
2. The contention of the petitioners that they were
quasi-permanent employees in terms of the Central Civil
Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1965 has no force. Under
r. 3 a Government servant is deemed to be in quasi-permanent
service if (i) he has been in continuous service for more
than three
422
years and (ii) the appointing authority being satisfied,
having regard to the quality of his work, conduct and
character as to his suitability for employment in quasi-
permanent capacity under the Government of India has made a
declaration to that effect. Although the petitioners have
been in continues temporary service for more than three
years, it is for the appointing authority to decide whether
they fulfil the second condition or not. No Government
servant can claim entitlement to a declaration that he was
in quasi-permanent service because the question of declaring
him to be quasi-permanent does not depend merely on the fact
of his being in service for a particular number of years.
[433C-E]
3. The plea of the petitioners that they should be
retained in service for the purposes of the Beas Project
even after the transfer of the completed works of that
Project to the Bhakra Management Board is without force. The
petitioners were holding their employment either under the
Beas Control Board or, after November 1, 1966 under the Beas
Construction Board. The first proviso to s.79(4) is designed
to protect the services of persons, who, prior to the
establishment of the Bhakra Management Board, were engaged
in the construction work connected with the Bhakra and
Nangal Dams and the power houses linked therewith. The
petitioners were working on the Beas Project and were not
therefore entitled to the benefit of that proviso. [434A, F-
G]
4. Though Section 80(5) requires a completed work of
the Beas Project to be transferred to the Bhakra Management
Board, it does not provide that persons who were employed in
connection with such a work should also be transferred as
employees of the Bhakra Management Board. In the very nature
of things there could be no such provision because if any
persons were employed for the Beas Project only their
employment would normally cease on the completion of that
Project. In fact, the petitioners were taken in employment
on temporary posts for the purpose of completing the Beas
Project. On the completion of that Project or any other
works for which they were employed, their employment would
normally come to an end, especially since the statute from
which their rights are said to flow does not protect that
employment. [435A-C]
5. The first proviso to s.79(4) speaks of persons who
immediately before the constitution of the Bhakra Management
Board were engaged in the works mentioned in s.79(1). The
scheme of s. 80 shows that the Bhakra Beas Management Board
was never constituted as such. The only effect which the
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statute brings about by s. 80(6) is the renaming of the
Bhakra Management Board as the Bhakra Beas Management Board.
The words "constitution of the said Board" cannot be
substituted by the words "the re-naming of the said Board".
The contemplation of s. 79(4) is that only a certain class
of employees should receive protection in the matter of
continued employment. The petitioners do not fall within
that class since they were not employees of the Bhakra
Management Board immediately before October. 1, 1967 when
that Board was constituted. [435E-G]
6. There is no substance in the grievance of the
petitioners that the proposed orders of retrenchment
involved violation of the guarantee of equality in the
matter of employment. The petitioners and the deputationists
were not equals the petitioners were appointed on a purely
temporary basis and their appointments were governed by the
rules applicable to temporary establishment. While accepting
the offers of appointment they subscribed to a declaration
that they had understood and accepted the conditions of
their employment. They
423
are being retrenched in accordance with the conditions of
appointment and on completion of the Project for which they
were appointed. The deputationsts on the other hand belonged
to the services of the respective States. The concerned
State Governments were responsible to provide the necessary
funds to meet all the expenses of the Bhakra Management
Board. Since the very basis of their claim to be treated
equally with the deputationists is fallacious their claim
must fail. [436C-E, 437A, B, 438C]
7. (a) From the very beginning of their employment the
work-charged employees were engaged for execution of
specified work. They are industrial workers entitled to the
benefits of the provision of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947. Their services automatically came to an end on the
completion of the works. [439D, E]
(b) Out of 36,000 work-charged employees, 26,000 had
accepted retrenchment compensation in the conciliation
proceedings. By reason of s. 18(3) (d) of the Industrial
Disputes Act a settlement arrived at in the course of
conciliation proceedings is binding on all persons who were
employed in the establishment to which the dispute relates,
whether they were employed on the date of the dispute or
subsequently. The settlement arrived at would bind the work
charged employees. [440B, C-D, E]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 3598, 4369,
4423, 4536, 4391, 4505, 4376, 4658 of 1978 and 565 of 1979.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution.
L. N. Sinha (W.P. 3598), A. K. Sen (W.P. 4369), Dr. Y.
S. Chitale (W. P. 4391 and 4536), M. K. Ramamurthy (W. Ps.
4505 and 1246), B. P. Singh, S. S. Javali and Ashok Kaul for
the Petitioners.
Sushil Kumar for Respondent No. 10 in all Writ
Petitions
S. N. Kackar, Sol. Genl. (W. Ps. 3598, 4369 and 4505),
E. C. Agrawala (W. Ps. 4369, 4505 and 3598), R. N. Sachthey
(in all matters and for the State of Haryana in W.P. 565)
and Miss A. Subhashini for the other appearing Respondents.
Anand Prakash, P. H. Parekh, B. Datta and K. K.
Manchanda for RR 11-17 (WP 4536) R. 14 (in WPs 4505 and
4658)
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S. M. Jain for R. 4 in 3598, 4369, 4376 and 4391
B. D. Sharma for R. 4 in rest of the W. Ps.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. this is a group of nine Writ
Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution raising the
questions as to whether the petitioners are employees of the
Central Government; if so, whether their conditions of
service are governed by rules which apply
424
to temporary employees of the Central Government; and
lastly, whether the orders of retrenchment proposed or
passed against them are violative of Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution.
There are in all 542 petitioners in Writ Petitions Nos.
3598, 4369, 4423, 4376 and 4391 of 1978. This group consists
of Engineers, Overseers, Teachers, Sub-divisional Clerks,
Clerks, Accounts Clerks, Time-keepers, Research Assistants,
Store-keepers, Meter Readers, Daughtsmen, Tracers and Steno-
typists. In these five Writ Petitions orders of retrenchment
were proposed to be passed against the petitioners but those
orders have been stayed by this Court during the pendency of
the Writ Petitions. In Writ Petition No. 565 of 1979, there
are 158 petitioners amongst whom are Shift Engineers, Line
Superintendents and Sectional Officers. The 375 petitioners
in the remaining three Writ Petitions Nos. 4505, 4536 and
4658 of 1978 are work-charged employees. The petitioners in
these three Writ Petitions have already been retrenched.
They are industrial employees and there is an Award of 1974
by which their rights have been adjudicated upon.
We will deal with the petitions of work-charged
employees separately. Their cases stand on an altogether
different footing from those of other employees. Our
reference to the petitioners’ immediately hereinafter will
mean petitioners other than work charged employees.
Before examining the petitioners’ contentions, it is
necessary to have a broad acquaintance with the initiation
and implementation of the Bhakra-Nangal and Beas
Construction Projects, the provisions of the Punjab
Reorganisation Act, 31 of 1966, and the circumstances in
which a conflict has arisen between the competing right of
petitioners on one hand, who were recruited directly and the
’Deputationists’ on the other, who belong to service cadres
of certain State Governments and whose services have been
lent for the purposes of the aforesaid Projects.
The construction of the Beas Project was commenced in
the year 1960 as a joint venture of the erstwhile State of
Punjab and the State of Rajasthan, by mutual agreement
between the two States. All decisions on policy and
administrative matters were taken by a Board known as the
Beas Control Board, which was constituted by the Central
Government in consultation with the two States on February
10, 1961. The Beas Control Board was presided over by the
Governor of the then Punjab and its members included
Ministers of the States of Punjab and Rajasthan, and senior
officers of the Central Govern-
425
ment and of the two States. The decisions of the Beas
Control Board used to be implemented by the Punjab
Government which was administering and executing the works
on the project. Expenditure for the project was shared by
the Punjab and Rajasthan Governments.
With the passing of the Punjab Reorganisation Act which
came into force on November 1, 1966, the new State of
Haryana and the Union Territory of Chandigarh came into
being, having been formed out of the territory of the
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erstwhile State of Punjab. A part of the Punjab territory
was also transferred to what was then the Union Territory of
Himachal Pradesh. What remained with Punjab became the new
State of Punjab.
The Punjab Reorganisation Act contains a separate
chapter, Part VIII, on "Bhakra-Nangal and Beas Projects".
With effect from November 1, 1966, the Bhakra-Nangal Project
and the Beas Project became the concern of the State of
Rajasthan and of the successor States of the erstwhile State
of Punjab, namely, the new States of Punjab and Haryana and
the then Union Territory of Himachal Pradesh.
By section 79(1) of the Punjab Reorganisation Act, the
’Bhakra Management Board’ was constituted by the Central
Government for administration, management and operation of
the Bhakra Nangal Project which included the Bhakra Dam, the
Nangal Dam, certain irrigation headworks, power houses and
sub-stations. By section 79(2), the B. M. Board consists of
(a) a whole-time Chairman and two whole-time members to be
appointed by the Central Government; (b) a representative
each of the Governments of the States of Punjab, Haryana and
Rajasthan and the Union Territory of Himachal Pradesh to be
nominated by the respective Governments or Administrator, as
the case may be; and (c) two representatives of the Central
Government to be nominated by that Government. By Section
79(3), the functions of the B. M. Board include (a) the
regulation of the supply of water from the Bhakra-Nangal
Project to the States of Haryana, Punjab and Rajasthan; (b)
the regulation of the supply of power to any Electricity
Board or other authority in charge of the distribution of
power; (c) the construction of such of the remaining works
connected with the Right Bank Power House as the Central
Government may, specify, and (d) such other functions as the
Central Government may, after consultation with the
Governments of the States of Haryana, Punjab and Rajasthan,
entrust to it. Sub-section (4) of section 79 gives to the
B.M. Board the power to employ such staff as it may consider
necessary for the efficient discharge of its functions,
subject to an important proviso to which we will refer in
due course. Sub-section
426
(5) of section 79 provides that the Governments of the
successor States and of Rajasthan shall at all times provide
the necessary funds to the B. M. Board to meet all expenses
(including the salaries and allowances of the staff)
required for the discharge of its functions and that such
amounts shall be apportioned among the successor States, the
State of Rajasthan and Electricity Boards of the said States
in such proportion as the Central Government may, having
regard to the benefits to each of the said States or Boards,
specify. By sub-section (6), the B.M. Board is under the
control of the Central Government and has to comply with
such directions, as may from time to time be given to it by
that Government. Sub-section (9) gives to the B.M. Board the
power, with the previous approval of the Central Government,
to make regulations for certain matters, including
appointments and the regulation of the conditions of
service, of the officers and other staff of the Board.
Section 80(1) of the Punjab Reorganisation Act provides
that the construction, including the completion of any work
already commenced, of the Beas Project shall on and from the
1st November, 1966 be undertaken by the Central Government
on behalf of the successor States and the State of Rajasthan
: Provided that the Governments of the successor States and
the State of Rajasthan, shall provide the necessary funds to
the Central Government for the expenditure on the project
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including the expenses of the Beas Construction Board. For
the discharge of its functions under sub-section (1), sub-
section (2) of section 80 empowers the Central Government,
in consultation with the Governments of the successor States
and the State of Rajasthan, to constitute a Board to be
called the Beas Construction Board. Sub-section (3) of
section 80 provides that the notification constituting the
B. C. Board may empower the Board to appoint such staff as
may be necessary for the efficient discharge of its
functions. There is an important proviso to this sub-section
to which we will turn later. Sub-section (5) of section 80
provides that any component of the Beas Project in relation
to which the construction has been completed after the
appointed day may be transferred by the Central Government
to the Bhakra Management Board constituted under section 79,
whereupon the provisions of that section shall apply as if
it were a work included in sub-section (1) of that section.
By sub-section (6), the Bhakra Management Board constituted
under section 79 is to be renamed as the Bhakra Beas
Management Board when any of the components of the Beas
Project is transferred under sub-section (5). The Beas
Construction Board is to cease to exist when all the
components of the Beas Project have been so transferred.
427
Thus, Part VIII of the Punjab Reorganisation Act
provides for the constitution and prescribes the functions
and powers of three different Boards : (1) The Bhakra
Management Board, (2) The Beas Construction Board and (3)
The Bhakra Beas Management Board. For brevity, these Boards,
are mostly referred to in this judgment as the B.M. Board,
the B.C. Board and the B.B.M. Board respectively. The B.M.
Board and the B.C. Board were constituted on October 1,
1967. The B.M. Board was renamed as B.B.M. Board on May 15,
1976 when two components of the Beas Project, the Bhatinda-
Sangrur Transmission Line and the Panipat Sub-Station, were
transferred to the B.M. Board. Prior to reorganisation,
there was only one Board in existence, called the Beas
Control Board, which was constituted on February 10, 1961.
We have noticed that the Beas Project which, prior to
the reorganisation of Punjab, was a joint venture of the
erstwhile State of Punjab and the State of Rajasthan, became
a venture of the successor States and the State of Rajasthan
with effect from November 1, 1966. Prior to the
reorganisation, the management and construction works of
Bhakra-Nangal Project as well as of the Beas Project were
under the control of the erstwhile State of Punjab, though
the entire expenditure for the two Projects was shared by
Punjab and Rajasthan. By the Reorganisation Act, the entire
expenditure for the construction and completion of the Beas
Project was to be shared by the successor States and the
State of Rajasthan but the responsibility of construction
and completion of the Beas Project was entrusted to the
Central Government.
The petitioners were appointed for the purpose of
construction and completion of the Beas Project. Most of
them have been working as Engineers, Sectional Officers,
Accounts Clerks, Teachers, etc. for over 11 years. The
construction works of the Beas Project were nearing
completion as a result of which, they were under an imminent
threat of retrenchment from service. The petitioners came to
know that the Central Government had taken a policy decision
to retain in service for the purposes of the Bhakra-Nangal
Scheme, only such employees who belonged to the services of
the Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan Governments and who were
serving on deputation in connection with the works of the
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Bhakra-Nangal Scheme. The petitioners have filed these writ
petitions to restrain the Government from enforcing that
decision.
The case of the petitioners is that they are holding
posts under the Central Government and are governed by Rules
applicable to the Central Government employees.
Consequently, their services were not
428
liable to be terminated and they were not liable to the
retrenched except in accordance with the said Rules. In any
event, according to the petitioners, they are entitled to be
retained in service and to continue in service as employees
of the Bhakra Beas Management Board, after the components of
the Beas Project are transferred to that Board.
The Petitioners further contend that they and the
employees of the various State Governments who had come on
deputation in connection with the Beas-Sutlej Project were
discharging similar duties and were clothed with similar
responsibilities. The petitioners, no less than the
deputationists, had rendered service to the satisfaction of
their employers and therefore they could not be
discriminated against in the matter of continuing in their
present employment. The policy initiated by the Government
of India under which it was decided to retain the
deputationists in service and retrench direct recruits like
the petitioners is, according to the petitioners, violative
of the guarantee of equality contained in Article 14 of the
Constitution. In any event, so the petitioners contend, they
cannot be removed from service while officers junior to them
and less qualified than them who had come on deputation from
other States are retained in service.
On these grounds the petitioners pray by their Writ
Petitions that (a) the decision of the Central Government to
retrench the petitioners from service be quashed; (b)
respondents be directed to retain the petitioners in service
in the Beas Project and continue to employ them in the posts
held by them after their transfer to the Bhakra Beas
Management Board; and (c) respondents be asked to issue
certificates to the petitioners that they are quasi-
permanent employees within the meaning of the Central Civil
Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1965.
The Union of India, the States of Punjab, Haryana,
Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh, the State Electricity Boards
of these four States, the Bhakra Beas Management Board, the
Beas Construction Board, the General Manager of the Beas
Project, three Chief Engineers and two Superintending
Engineers of the Beas-Sutlej Link Project and the Beas Dam
Project have been impleaded as respondents to the Writ
Petitions.
The contention of the respondents, as set out in the
affidavits filed on their behalf, is briefly this: Persons
like petitioners who were appointed by the Beas Construction
Board are not employees of the Central Government and
therefore they cannot claim any declaration or relief on the
basis that they are employees of the Central Government. The
petitioners were all employed by the Beas Construction
429
Board on a purely temporary basis and at the time of their
appointment they had given written undertakings confirming
the terms of their appointment. They could not be permitted
to resile from their undertakings and ask for being absorbed
in permanent employment. The bulk of the regular employees
working on the Beas Project belonged to the partner-States
of Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan where they held liens on
their posts in their parent departments. The partner-States
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having been unable to meet the employment requirements of
the Beas Project, the Beas Construction Board appointed the
petitioners on an ad hoc, temporary basis with a clear
understanding that they will have no right to be retained in
service after the completion of the Beas Project. By the
very nature of its requirement, the Beas Construction Board
had no authority to employ any person permanently and indeed
it was for that reason that the Board had to resort to
periodical termination and re-employment of certain directly
recruited employees. As the Beas Project did not have any
permanent or independent cadre of its own, the services of
the petitioners were governed by the express terms mentioned
in the letters of their appointment.
The first question which arises for consideration is
whether the petitioners are employees of the Central
Government. Whereas the petitioners contend that they are,
learned Solicitor General contends on behalf of the Union
Government that the petitioners were appointed either by the
Beas Control Board or by the Beas Construction Board,
depending on whether the appointments were made prior to or
after November 1, 1966, that the Central Government had no
power or authority to make appointments to these two Boards,
that the appointments of the petitioners were made by one or
the other Board expressly for a temporary period and for the
specific purpose of completing the works of the Beas Project
and that on completion of those works the petitioners cannot
become the employees of the Central Government.
These rival submissions require an examination of the
provisions of the Punjab Reorganisation Act on which both
sides rely in support of their contentions, but before that,
it is necessary to state that the offers of appointment were
made to the petitioners mostly by the Executive Engineer or
the S.D.O., Administration, on behalf of the Superintending
Engineer, Department of Construction, Beas Dam, Talwara
Township. These offers were accepted by the petitioners.
The provisions of the Punjab Reorganisation Act afford
in our opinion a clear answer to the question whether the
petitioners are employees of the Central Government.
430
By virtue of section 78(1) of that Act, all rights and
liabilities of the erstwhile State of Punjab in relation to
the Bhakra-Nangal Project and the Beas Project became the
rights and liabilities of the successor States with effect
from November 1, 1966. Under section 78(4), "Beas Project"
means the works which were either under construction or were
to be constructed as components of the Beas-Sutlej Link
Project (Unit I) and Pong Dam Project on the Beas river
(Unit II).
Section 79(1) confers upon the Central Government the
power to constitute the Bhakra Management Board for the
administration, maintenance and operation of the works
specified in clauses (a) to (g) of that sub-section. Section
79(4) empowers the Bhakra Management Board to employ such
staff as it may consider necessary for the efficient
discharge of its functions. The first proviso to this sub-
section is important and may be extracted fully:
"Provided that every person who immediately before
the constitution of the said Board was engaged in the
construction, maintenance or operation of the works in
sub-section (1) shall continue to be so employed under
the Board in connection with the said works on the same
terms and conditions of service as were applicable to
him before such constitution until the Central
Government by order directs otherwise".
Sub-section (6) provides that the Bhakra Management Board
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shall be under the control of the Central Government and
shall comply with such directions as may from time to time
be given to it by that Government.
Section 80(1) provides that notwithstanding anything
contained in the Reorganisation Act or in any other law, the
construction (including the completion of any work already
commenced) of the Beas Project shall, on and from November
1, 1966, be undertaken by the Central Government on behalf
of the successor States and the State of Rajasthan. Under
the proviso to sub-section (1), the successor States and the
State of Rajasthan are under an obligation to provide the
necessary funds to the Central Government for meeting the
expenditure on the Beas Project for the discharge of its
functions under sub-section (1). The Central Government is
empowered by sub-section (2) of section 80 to constitute the
Beas Construction Board. The notification constituting that
Board may empower the Board, as provided in sub-section (3)
of section 80, to appoint such staff as may be necessary for
the efficient discharge of its functions.
431
The first proviso to sub-section (3) is also important and
may be extracted fully:
"Provided that every person who immediately before
the constitution of the Board was engaged in the
construction or any work relating to the Beas Project
shall continue to be so employed by the Board in
connection with the said works on the same terms and
conditions of service as were applicable to him before
such constitution until the Central Government by order
directs otherwise".
By sub-section (5) any component of the Beas Project in
relation to which the construction has been completed after
November 1, 1966 may be transferred by the Central
Government to the Bhakra Management Board constituted under
section 79 and thereupon the provisions of section 79 become
applicable as if a work transferred to the Bhakra Management
Board were included in subsection (1) of section 79. Sub-
section (6) of section 80 provides that the Bhakra
Management Board constituted under section 79 shall be "re-
named" as the Bhakra Beas Management Board when any of the
components of the Beas Project has been transferred under
subsection (5) and that the Beas Construction Board shall
cease to exist when all the components of the Beas Project
have been so transferred.
These provisions leave no doubt that the petitioners,
though appointed under orders issued by or on behalf of the
Beas Control Board or the Beas Construction Board are
employees of the Central Government. Such of the petitioners
as were appointed by the Beas Control Board became the
employees of the Beas Construction Board by virtue of the
first proviso to section 80(3) which we have extracted
above. The construction of the Beas Project was commenced in
the year 1960 as a joint venture of the composite State of
Punjab and the State of Rajasthan. The Beas Control Board
was established on February 10, 1961 and it is by and on
behalf of that Board that some of the petitioners were
appointed prior to November 1, 1966 when the Punjab
Reorganisation Act came into force. The Beas Control Board
ceased to exist and its place was taken by the Beas
Construction Board which was constituted on October 1, 1967.
The remaining petitioners were appointed by or under the
authority of the Beas Construction Board. The position which
therefore emerges is that either by reason of the first
proviso to section 80(3) under which every person who
immediately before the constitution of the Beas Construction
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Board was engaged in the construction of any work relating
to the Beas Project became entitled to continue to be so
employed by the Beas Construction Board, or because the
appointments were made for
432
the first time by the Beas Construction Board itself, the
petitioners became the employees or were employed by the
Beas Construction Board.
That leads to the question whether the Beas
Construction Board was a body incorporate with an
independent statutory existence or B, whether it was merely
a limb of the Central Government. Section 80(l), which
clinches the matter, provides that notwithstanding anything
complained in the Reorganisation Act or in any other law,
the construction and completion of any work of the Beas
Project shall be undertaken by the Central Government on and
from November I, 1966. It is undoubtedly true that under the
said provision, the Beas Project was to be undertaken by the
Central Government on behalf of the successor States and the
State of Rajasthan. But the direct and immediate
responsibility to construct and complete works of the Beas
Project was imposed by the statute on the Central Government
and not on the successor States and the State of Rajasthan.
Under the proviso to section 80(1), the Governments of these
States are only under an obligation to provide the necessary
funds to the Central Government for meeting the expenditure
on the Beas Project, including the expenses of the Beas
Construction Board in behalf of the discharge of its
functions under sub-section ( 1 ) . The Central Government
is empowered by section 80(2) (a) to constitute the Beas
Construction Board "with such members as it may deem fit"
and to assign to that Board "such functions as it may
consider necessary".
In the light of these provisions, we find no substance
in the contention of the Union Government that the
petitioners are employees of the Beas Construction Board and
not of the Central Government. The constitution of the Beas
Construction Board is a matter of administrative expediency
provided for by section 80(2), in order to enable the
Central Government to act through a statutory agency for the
purpose of discharging its functions and obligations under
section 80(l). Section 80(3) shows that it is by virtue of
the authorisation contained in the notification issued by
the Central Government constituting the Beas Construction
Board that the Board acquires the power and authority to
appoint the staff which is necessary for the efficient
discharge of its functions. The Beas Construction Board, in
appointing its staff. acts in pursuance of an authority
delegated to it by the Central Government or conferred upon
it by that Government. In one word therefore, though the
appointments of the petitioners may have been made in the
name of or on behalf of the Beas Construction Board, they
were truly and in substance made for the benefit and at the
behest of the Central Government. The staff appointed for
discharging the functions of the Board was appointed in
order to enable the Central
433
Government to discharge its responsibility under section
80(1) of undertaking the construction and completion of the
works of the Beas project. There is therefore no doubt that
petitioners are employees of the Central Government.
Having found that the petitioners are employes of the
Central Government, the next question which we must proceed
to examine is whether their conditions of service are
governed by rules which apply to temporary employees of the
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Central Government.
One of the principal reliefs claimed by the petitioners
is that the Government of India be directed to issue
certificates to them to the effect that they are quasi-
permanent employees in terms of the Central Civil Services
(Temporary Service) Rules, 1965. It is impossible to
entertain the plea that the petitioners are entitled to any
such certificate. Rule 3 of the aforesaid rules provides
that a Government servant shall be deemed to be in quasi-
permanent service if, (i) he has been in continuous service
for more than three years and (ii), the appointing authority
being satisfied, having regard to the quality of his work,
conduct and character as to his suitability for employment
in quasi-permanent capacity under the Government of India,
has made a declaration to that effect. It does appear that
the petitioners have been in continuous temporary service
for more than three years but whether they fulfil the second
condition or not is a matter to be decided by the appointing
authority having regard to the various circumstances
mentioned therein. No Government servant can claim
entitlement to a declaration that he is in quasi-permanent
service, because the question as to whether he is entitled
to such a declaration does not depend upon the mere fact of
his being in service for a particular number of years. We
cannot therefore grant to the petitioners this particular
relief.
We would however like to make it clear that if by
reason of being in the temporary service of the Government
of India, any benefit like terminal gratuity or death-
gratuity provided for in the rules of 1965 accrues in favour
of the petitioners, it will be open to them to make n
representation in that behalf to the appropriate
authorities. We have no doubt that if the petitioners are
entitled to any benefit under the rules of 1965 by reason of
the fact that they are in the temporary service of the
Government of India, the concerned authorities will not deny
that benefit to them. It is however not possible for us to
consider the question sought to be raised by the petitioners
in regard to the benefits to which they are said to be
entitled, because the determination of that question depends
on the satisfaction of the authorities and on the
fulfillment of conditions into which it is not possible or
appropriate for this Court to enter.
434
The petitioners also pray that the respondents be
directed to retain them in service for the purposes of the
Beas Project itself and to continue to employ them in the
posts held by them, after the transfer of the completed
works of that Project to the Bhakra Management Board. This
prayer is founded on the provisions of the first proviso to
section 79(4) and those of sub-sections (S) and (6) of
section 80 of the Punjab Reorganisation Act. We do not think
that any of the aforesaid provisions can help the
petitioners. Section 79(4) provides that the Bhakra
Management Board may employ such staff as it may consider
necessary for the efficient discharge of its functions under
the Act. By the first proviso to this sub-section, every
person who "immediately before the constitution of the said
Board" was engaged in the construction, maintenance or
operation of the works mentioned in subsection (1) shall
continue to be so employed under the Board in connection
with the said works, on the same terms and conditions of
service as were applicable to him before such constitution,
until the Central Government by order directs otherwise. The
proviso refers to persons who were engaged in any of the
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works mentioned in clauses (a) to (g) of section 79(1)
immediately before the constitution of the Bhakra Management
Board. That Board was constituted on October 1, 1967 and
therefore the narrow question to ask oneself is whether the
petitioners were engaged in connection with any of the
matters mentioned in clauses (a) to (g) of section 79(1),
immediately before that date The Beas Construction Board was
also constituted on the same date as the Bhakra Management
Board, that is to say, on October 1, 1967. The petitioners
were holding their employment either under the Beas Control
Board or, after November 1, 1966 under the Beas Construction
Board. The first proviso to section 79(4) is designed to
protect the services of persons who, prior to the
establishments of the Bhakra Management Board, were engaged
in the construction work connected with the Bhakra and
Nangal Dams and the power houses linked therewith. The
petitioners were working on the Beas project and are not
therefore entitled to the benefit of that proviso.
A branch of the same argument is that under section
80(S), components of the Beas Project the construction of
which has been completed after November 1, 1966 have to be
transferred to the Bhakra Management Board and thereupon the
provisions of section 79 come into operation as if the
transferred works were included in clauses (a) to (g) of
section 79(1). It is urged that if any completed component
of the Beas Project is transferred to the Bhakra Management
Board as required by section 80(S), as has been done in the
present case on May 15, 1976, the petitioners would become
the employees of the
435
Bhakra Management Board, since the work in connection with
which they were employed is transferred to that Board. There
is no warrant for this submission because, though section
80(5) requires a completed work of the Beas Project to be
transferred to the Bhakra Management Board, it does not
provide that persons who were employed in connection with
such a work should also be transferred as employees of the
Bhakra Management Board. In the very nature of things there
could be no such provision because if any persons were
employed for the Beas Project only, their employment would
normally cease on completion of that Project. In fact, the
petitioners were taken in employment on temporary posts for
the purpose of completing the Beas project. On the
completion of that Project or any other works for which they
were employed their employment would normally come to an
end, especially since the statute from which their rights
are said to flow does not protect that employment.
Yet another limb of the same argument flowing from the
provisions of section 80(6) is that since a completed
component of the Beas Project was transferred to the Bhakra
Management Board on May 15, 1976. that Board had to be
renamed under sub-section (6) as the Bhakra Beas Management
Board. It is urged that the words "Bhakra Beas Management
Board" should be substituted for the words "Bhakra
Management Board" occurring in section 79(4) of the
Reorganisation Act, and if they are so substituted, the
expression "said Board" in the first proviso to section
79(4) would necessarily have reference to the Bhakra Beas
Management Board. This argument contains a fallacy. The
first proviso to section 79(4) speaks of persons who
immediately before "the constitution" of the Bhakra
Management Board were engaged in the works mentioned in sub-
section (1) of section 79. The scheme of section 80 shows
that the Bhakra Beas Management Board was never constituted
as such. The only effect which the statute brings about by
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sub-section (6) of section 80 is the renaming of Bhakra
Management Board as the Bhakra Beas Management Board. The
words "constitution of the said Board" cannot therefore be
substituted by the words "the renaming of the said Board".
The contemplation of section 79(4) is that only a certain
class of employees should receive protection in the matter
of continued employment. Unfortunately, the petitioners do
not fall within that class since they were not employees of
the Bhakra Management Board immediately before October 1,
1967 when that Board was constituted.
The only point which now remains to be examined is
whether any violation of articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution is involved in the
436
proposed retrenchment of the petitioners. The case of the
petitioners is this: They and the ’Deputationists’ from
State Government services possess similar qualifications,
carry the same responsibilities and discharge similar duties
and functions. Therefore, no discrimination can be made
against them in the matter of continuation in employment.
They cannot be retrenched from service and the
Deputationists allowed to take their place. If at all there
has to be retrenchment consequent upon the completion of
works of the Beas Project, the Deputationists must be
retrenched along with the petitioners, so that the senior
employees in the two categories will be retained in service.
Wholesale retrenchment of one category of employees, the
direct recruits here, to the exclusion of the other
category, the Deputationists, brings about Elegant
inequality between the two and is hostile discrimination
against the former.
We see no substance in the grievance of the petitioners
that the proposed orders of retrenchment involve violation
of the guarantee of equality in the matter of their
employment. It is of the essence of the right of equality
that equals must be treated alike. In other words, some
amongst equals cannot be subjected to hostile discrimination
by giving favoured treatment to others who are similarly
situated. The difficulty in accepting the petitioners’
contention in regard to discrimination is that they and the
Deputationists are not equals, not being similarly situated
in the matter of the right to continue in employment. The
petitioners were appointed on a purely temporary basis for
the consumption and completion of the works of the Beas
Project. The offers of appointment made to them are on the
record and they show that each of them was offered a
"Temporary post" and the appointment was to be "governed by
the rules applicable to Temporary Establishments". Two of
the six conditions on which they were appointed are these:
"(1) Persons engaged temporarily will be on the
footing of monthly servants and their employment
carries with it absolutely no claim to pensions or any
other absentee allowance beyond those conditionally
given to temporary employees.. ; and
(2) The services of such employees may be
dispensed with at any time without notice in cases of
misconduct of any description on their part or of
unsatisfactory work and otherwise by one month’s
notice, or payment of one month’s salary in lieu of
notice. Also with or without notice, their engagement
will cease absolutely on completion of work in
connection with which their appointments may have been
sanctioned."
437
The petitioners accepted the offers of appointments by
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subscribing to A a declaration that they had understood and
accepted the conditions of their employment. The petitioners
are being retrenched in accordance with the conditions
subject to which they were appointed. It is not denied that
the works of the Beas Project are in the final stage of
completion and the petitioners will be rendered surplus, in
so far as that Project is concerned.
The Deputationists belong to a different class
altogether and are situated differently as compared with the
petitioners, in so far as the continuation in employment is
concerned. The Deputationists belong to the service of the
successor States and the State of Rajasthan. It is these
States which, under section 79(5) of the Reorganisation Act,
are under an obligation at all times to provide the
necessary funds to the Bhakra Management Board to meet all
expenses, including the salaries and allowances of the
staff, required for the discharge of its functions. By
section 79(3), the functions of the B.M. Board include the
regulation of the supply of water from Bhakra-Nangal Project
to the States of Haryana, Punjab and Rajasthan. Under
section 79(2), the Bhakra Management Board consists of,
inter alia, a representative each of the Governments of the
States of Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and the then Union
Territory of Himachal Pradesh. The State of Punjab, the
successor States and the State of Rajasthan are thus
directly interested in the successful working of the Bhakra-
Nangal Scheme, being its immediate beneficiaries. Since they
are also under an obligation to provide the necessary funds
to meet all expenses of the B.M. Board, including the
salaries and allowances of its staff, the Governments of
these States want their own employees to be posted on
deputation for service under that Board.
Thus, the petitioners are employees of the Central
Government while the Deputationists are employees of the
respective State Governments. The terms and conditions of
the petitioners’ appointments provide for the termination of
their employment by one month’s notice cr pay in lieu of
notice. Their services are also liable to be terminated on
completion of the Beas Project for which they were employed.
The rights and liabilities of the Deputationists flow from
the terms of their service under the State Governments. On
completion of the works of the Beas Project, the
Deputationists working on that Project are required by their
employers, the respective State Government, to work under
the B.M. Board. There is no question of the entitlement or
right of the Deputationists to work under that Board.
The genesis of the appointments of the petitioners and
the Deputationists thus shows that they belong to two
distinct and separate
438
classes and cannot be considered as equals in the matter of
continuation in their respective employments. The infirmity
in the argument of the petitioners on the question of
violation of the right to equality is that though they were
employed by the Beas Construction Board for the purposes of
the Beas Project, they claim in the first instance the right
to be transferred to the services of the Bhakra Management
Board which, as we have shown earlier, they cannot do. The
reason why they claim the right to be transferred to the
services of the B.M. Board is clear. If they are entitled to
be so transferred, the claim that they are equals of the
Deputationists will acquire some plausibility because they
will at least be serving, for the time being at any rate,
under the same Board. They would then be able to claim equal
treatment with the Deputationists. Since the very basis of
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their claim is fallacious! as they have no right to be
transferred to the employment of the B. M. Board, their
claim to equal treatment with the Deputationists has to fall
with it.
In this view of the matter, it is unnecessary to
consider the decisions in Mervyn Coutindo v. Collector of
Customs, Bombay; Roshan Lal Tandon v. Union of India; S. M.
Pandit v. State of Gujarat; and General Manager, South
Central Railway Secunderabad v. A.V.R. Siddhanti, which Shri
A. K. Sen has cited in his written submissions.
To sum up, we are of the opinion that the petitioners
are employees of the Central Government. Their conditions of
service will be primarily governed by the terms of their
appointment but, if they are entitled to the benefit of any
of the rules of the Central Civil Services (Temporary
Service) Rules 1965, they may make representations in that
behalf to the appropriate authorities. It is, however, not
possible for this Court to grant to the petitioners any of
the reliefs claimed by them as arising out of the provisions
of the aforesaid rules, including the relief by way of a
declaration that they shall be deemed to be in quasi-
permanent service under rule 3. We are further of the
opinion that the petitioners have no right to be transferred
to the services of the Bhakra Management Board, now re-named
as the Bhakra Beas Management Board. Lastly, the proposed
retrenchment of the petitioners does not offend against the
guarantee of equality contained in articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution, since the petitioners and the Deputationists
belong to two different and distinct classes.
439
Before parting with the cases of these petitioners, we
would like to record the assurance given by the learned
Solicitor General on behalf of the Government of India that
while retrenching the petitioners, the ’last come, first go’
rule will be applied inter se amongst the petitioners and
further, that if and when any direct recruitments are made
to the posts under the Bhakra Beas Management Board,
preference in those appointments will be given to the
petitioners, if they are retrenched.
We will now proceed to deal with Writ Petitions Nos.
4505, 4536 and 4658 of 1978 in which the petitioners are all
work-charged employees.
A work-charged establishment broadly means an
establishment of which the expenses, including the wages and
allowances of the staff, are chargeable to "works". The pay
and allowances of employees who are borne on a work-charged
establishment are generally shown as a separate sub-head of
the estimated cost of the work.
The entire strength of labour employed for the purposes
of the Beas Project was work-charged. The work-charged
employees are engaged on a temporary basis and their
appointments are made for the execution of a specified work.
From the very nature of their employment, their services
automatically come to an end on the completion of the works
for the sole purpose of which they are employ- ed. They do
not get any relief under the Payment of Gratuity Act nor do
they receive any retrenchment benefits or any benefits under
the Employees State Insurance Schemes.
But though the work-charged employees are denied these
benefits, they are industrial workers and are entitled to
the benefits of the pro- visions contained in the Industrial
Disputes Act. Their rights flow from that special enactment
under which even contracts of employment are open to
adjustment and modification. The work-charged employees,
therefore, are in a better position than temporary servant
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like the other petitioners who are liable to be thrown out
of employment without any kind of compensatory benefits.
The record of Writ Petition No. 4505 of 1978 shows that
offers of alternative employment were made to the work-
charged employees and many of them have accepted those
offers. The rule of ’last come, first go’ has also been
consistently adopted while retrenching the work-charged
employees. In fact the work-charged employees possess a
unique right as industrial employees since, by reason of
section 25J(1) of the Industrial Disputes Act, the
provisions of Chapter VA,
440
"Lay-off and Retrenchment", have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law
including standing orders made under the Industrial
Employment (Standing orders) Act, 1946.
There were in all about 36000 work-charged employees
working on the Beas Project. Out of them, about 26000 have
already accepted retrenchment compensation under the
settlement arrived between the workmen and the management in
the conciliation proceedings held by the Regional Labour
Commissioner (Central), New Delhi, under section 12 of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. All the 12 unions of which
the work-charged employees are members were parties to the
said conciliation proceedings. By reason of section 18(3)(d)
of the Industrial Disputes Act, a settlement arrived at in
the course of a conciliation proceeding is binding on all
persons who were employed in the establishment to which the
dispute relates, whether they were employed on the date of
the dispute or subsequently. In Ramnagar Cane and Sugar Co.
Ltd. v. Jatin Chakravorty and ors., it was held by this
Court that it is not even necessary, in order to bind the
work men to the settlement arrived at before the
conciliator, to show that they belonged to the union which
took part in the conciliation proceedings, since the policy
underlying section 18 of the Act is to give an extended
operation to such settlements. In the instant case, all the
12 unions which represented the workmen on the work-charged
establishment were parties to the conciliation proceedings.
The settlement will therefore bind all the work-charged
employees.
Apart from the settlement in the conciliation
proceedings, an award was made by the Industrial Tribunal,
Central, Chandigarh, in Reference No. 2-C of 1971, in an
industrial dispute between the work-charged employees of the
Beas-Sutlej Link Project, Sundernagar, with which we are
concerned, and the management. Under that award, as stated
in the award itself, a consent formula was evolved to which
the workmen "virtually agreed". The benefits which flow- to
the work- charged employees under the aforesaid award dated
May 15, 1974, have been accepted by almost all the work-
charged employees, involving a burden of about Rs. 3 crores
on the employers.
Since the work-charged employees are bound by the
settlement dated June 28, 1977 effected between them and the
management in the conciliation proceedings and since they
are also bound by and have accepted benefits under the
consent award dated May 15, 1974,
441
they are not entitled to any rights apart from those flowing
from the A aforesaid settlement and the Award. Special Leave
Petition No. 1246 of 1979 which is filed to challenge the
Award and C.M.P. No. 2077 of 1979 which is filed for
condonation of the delay of over four and half years caused
in filing the S.L.P. shall have to be dismissed
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We would like to say that in regard to the work-charged
employees, it is high time that the Government framed
specific rules to govern their employment so as to dispel
all doubts and confusion.
The result of the aforesaid discussion is that all the
Writ Petitions, the Special Leave Petition and the C.M.P.
for condonation of delay are dismissed. There will be no
order as to costs.
N.K.A. Petitions dismissed.
442