Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J.K. VASAVADA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHANDRAKANTA CHIMANLAL BHAVSAR & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/08/1975
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1975 AIR 2089 1976 SCR (1) 499
1975 SCC (4) 734
ACT:
States Reorganisation Act, 1956-Sec. 115(7)-Bombay
States Reorganisation Act, 1960-Sec. 81(b) and Sec. 87-
Change in conditions of service to the disadvantage of
allotted government employees-Approval of the Central
Government under earlier Re-organisation Act-Circular of
Central Government dated 11th May, 1957.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants and the respondents were originally
servants of the State of Bombay and were allotted to the
State of Gujarat on its formation on 1st of May, 1960. The
State of Gujarat issued certain orders in the year 1962 and
thereafter which provided that passing of G.D.C. & A.
examination was necessary for the purpose of getting a
promotion to the higher grades. It also provided that
persons who were already promoted would lose their
increments and in some cases further increments were stopped
unless they passed the said examination. The respondents
filed a Writ Petition in the High Court of Gujarat
challenging the validity of the said orders on the ground
that the said orders varied the conditions of service of the
respondents to their disadvantage without the approval of
the Central Government. The respondents contended that they
had passed all the prescribed departmental examinations, as
required by the Rules of the State of Bombay. The High Court
of Gujarat struck down the said orders on the ground that
they varied the conditions of service of the allotted
employees to their disadvantage without the approval of the
Central Government.
On appeal by special leave, it was contended by the
appellants:
(1) In view of the circular of 1957, the conditions of
service of the employees of the then Bombay States in so far
as promotion is concerned could have been varied to their
disadvantage. The said right of the State of Bombay was
available to the State of Gujarat.
(2) No circular similar to the 1957 circular was
required to be issued under s. 81(6) of the Bombay State
Reorganisation Act.
The respondents contended that the circular issued on
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11th May 1957 was under the States Reorganisation Act of
1956 and cannot therefore, apply in relation to the
provisions of the Bombay States Reorganisation Act of 1960,
which came into force subsequently.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD : (1) The condition of service applicable to the
employees of the State of Bombay included not merely the
rules made under the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution. It also included a liability to be subjected
to any other rule that might be made under that proviso till
1st May 1960 by the State of Bombay. The reorganised State
of Bombay could have made rules making the G.D.C. & A.
examination a necessary qualification for promotion even
though there was no such rule earlier. Therefore, the
conditions of service of the servants of the reorganised
State of Bombay before 1st of May 1960 included a condition
that they would be subject to any rule made by that State in
respect of their promotion. [503-AB, DE]
(2) The power granted to the reorganised State of
Bombay should be deemed to accrue to the successor States,
that is, the States of Maharashtra and Gujarat. [503E]
(3) Section 87 of the Bombay State Reorganisation Act,
1960 provides that the provisions of Part II of the State
Act shall not be deemed to have effected
500
any change in the territories to which any law in force
immediately before the appointed day extends or applies.
Section 2(d) of the said Act defines "law" as including any
enactment, Ordinance Regulation, order, bye-law, rule,
scheme, notification or other instrument having the force of
law in the whole or in any part of the State of Bombay. The
circular of 11th May 1957 was, therefore, law, and would,
therefore, continue to be in force in the new States of
Maharashtra and Gujarat. The Gujarat Government, therefore,
even in terms of the circular of the Central Government
dated 11th May 1957 was competent to make the rules which
they made in 1962 thereafter. [503G-H, 504A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1856 of
1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 24th June, 1969 of the Gujarat High Court in
Special Civil Application No. 231 of 1968
V. M. Tarkunde, V. N. Ganpule and P. C. Kapur, for the
appellant.
S. T. Desai, Rajen Yash Paul and R. B. Datar, for
respondents 1, 3, 4-6 & 8.
M. V. Goswami, for respondents 11-54.
M. N. Shroff, for respondent 9.
S. T. Desai, P. H. Parekh and Manju Jaitley, for
respondent 7 & Intervener (K. C. Swami & Ors.)
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J. This appeal filed in pursuance of
special leave granted by this Court by certain officers of
the Co-operation Department of the Government of Gujarat is
against the judgment of the High Court of Gujarat in a writ
petition filed by the respondents.
The appellants as well as the respondents (hereinafter
called petitioners) were originally servants of the State of
Bombay and were allotted to the State of Gujarat on its
formation on 1st May, 1960. The petitioners alleged that
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they had passed all the prescribed departmental examinations
as required by the rules of the State of Bombay and
challenged the validity of certain orders of the Government
of Gujarat. One of them was an orders of May 10, 1962 which
provided that persons already promoted would have to pass
the examination of G.D.C. & A. within a period of three
years and if they did not their increment would be stopped
and if they have reached the maximum of the scale their pay
would be reduced to the next lower stage, until they passed
the examination. It also laid down G.D.C. & A. as a
necessary qualification for promotion. Another impugned
order was dated June 18, 1965 which contained rules made
under the proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution of
India and laid down the qualification of G.D.C. & A.
examination for promotion. They also complained against an
order dated January 23, 1968 that they should draw no
further increments and what had been paid to them earlier
without giving effect to that order should be recovered.
501
It is unnecessary to set out the impugned orders in
extenso. For the purposes of this case it is enough to say
that the main grievance of the petitioners before the High
Court of Gujarat was the laying down of the qualification of
G.D.C. & A. for purposes of earning increments as well as
for promotion. They complained that under the rules in force
in the State of Bombay they were not required to pass this
examination either for earning increments or for promotion
and the rules and resolutions of the Government of Gujarat
laying down the passing of the G.D.C. & A. examination as a
necessary qualification for promotion as well as for earning
increments contravened s. 81(6) of the Bombay
Re-organisation Act, 1960 which is in pari materia with s.
115(7) of the States Re-organisation Act, 1956. The
appellants who were the respondents in the writ petition had
passed the G.D.C. & A. examination and therefore been
promoted earlier than the respondents who were the
petitioners and had therefore been impleaded as parties to
the writ petition.
As regards the complaint about the petitioners not
being allowed to get future increments till they passed the
examination and reduction by one stage of persons who had
reached the maximum in their grade and the recovery of the
amounts which they had already drawn, they are no longer the
subject matter of any grievance because the State of Gujarat
have removed those grievances by Note 1 to Regulation
13(4)(iii) found in the order of the Government of Gujarat
dated September 14, 1967 at pages 17 to 22 of the paper
book. There is a certain amount of confusion in the records
regarding this. As against the rule above referred to there
is an order dated 23-1-1968 ordering recovery. But it was
made clear during the course of the arguments that no
recovery will be made. We are, therefore, concerned only
with the question of the validity of the orders of the
Government insofar as they laid down the qualification of
G.D.C. & A. as one of the requisites for promotion to higher
posts.
Before the High Court it was contended on behalf of the
State of Gujarat that immediately before the "appointed day"
the petitioners were governed by the 1939 Bombay Rules, of
which Note to Rule 6-A provided the passing of the G.D.C. &
A. as a qualification for promotion. On the ground that what
was produced was a typed compilation consisting of some
circular letters and rules of the Cooperative Department and
that the learned advocate appearing for the government had
not been able to tell the Court whether the rules were
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gazetted or otherwise notified rules and whether they were
made in any particular year and by what authority and under
any particular provision of law and that it was not known
when the ’note’ to the rule was added the High Court held
that it would not be proper to rely upon Rule 6-A and that a
note to a rule had in any case no legal effect.
In the course of arguments before this Court the
relevant rules were sought to be Produced. Based on the
existence of those rules
502
and on the decision of this Court in Mohd. Shujat Ali v.
Union of India it was argued on behalf of the appellants
that rules relating to promotion do not come within the
scope of s. 81 (6). The above decision of this Court was
concerned with s. 115(7) of the States Reorganisation Act.
There was in that case a circular of the Central Government
dated May 11, 1957 to all State Governments stating, among
other things, that so far as departmental promotion was
concerned the decision of the Central Government was that
"it would not be appropriate to provide any protection in
the matter". On the basis of that circular it was pointed
out by this Court that so far as departmental promotion was
concerned the State Governments might, if they so desired,
change the conditions of service and for this purpose they
might assume the previous approval of the Central Government
as required by the proviso to s. 115(7) and as the Central
Government had given its approval to any alteration which
the State Government might wish to make in the conditions of
service relating to departmental promotion they did not need
to be protected, and held that the Andhra Rules and Andhra
Pradesh Rules regarding promotion did not contravene the
proviso to s. 115(7). In view of this decision the question
whether there was any corresponding rule in the State of
Bombay before the parties in this case were allotted to the
State of Gujarat becomes academic. Whether there was or
there was not any rule governing the parties while they were
serving the Bombay State requiring that they should pass the
G.D.C. & A. examination in order to qualify for promotion to
higher posts the rule made by the Gujarat Government in ]962
should be held to be not hit by s. 81(6) of the Bombay
Reorganisation Act, 1960.
It was, however, argued on behalf of the petitioners
that the circular of the Central Government which was under
consideration by this Court in the decision above cited was
dated 11-5-1957 and cannot therefore apply in relation to
the provisions of the Bombay Reorganisation, Act, 1960 which
came into force subsequently. But there is a fallacy in this
argument. Section 81(6) reads:
"Nothing in this section shall be deemed to
affect, after the appointed day the operation of the
provision or the provisions of Chapter I of Part XIV of
the Constitution in relation to the determination of
the conditions of service of persons serving in
connection with the affairs of the State of Maharashtra
or Gujarat.
Provided that the conditions of service applicable
immediately before the appointed day to the case of any
person provisionally or finally allotted to the State of
Maharashtra or Gujarat under this section shall not be
varied to his disadvantage except with the previous approval
of the Central Government."
503
The question, therefore, is what were the conditions of
service applicable immediately before the appointed day to
the parties in this case ? They were the rules and orders
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applicable to them when they were servants of the State of
Bombay before May 1, 1960. The conditions of service
applicable to them included not merely the rules made under
the proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution. It also
included liability to be subjected to any other rule that
might be made under that proviso till May 1, 1960 by the
State of Bombay. The States Reorganisation Act, 1956 was
also applicable to them. It would be remembered that under
the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 the new State of Bombay
included not merely the pre-reorganisation State of Bombay
but also areas of Kutch, Marathwara from the old Hyderabad
State and the Vidharba region from the old Central Provinces
and Berar. In respect of all Government servants who were
allotted to the reorganised State of Bombay s. 115(7) of the
States Reorganisation Act applied. It was under the proviso
to that section that the above mentioned circular of May 11,
1957 was issued by the Government of India. Under that
circular it was open to the reorganised State of Bombay to
make any rules for promotion of its servants which were not
applicable to them before the formation of the reorganised
State of Bombay. In other words the reorganised State of
Bombay had the right to make rules regarding those
Government servants including the parties in this case. The
reorganised State of Bombay could have made rules making the
G.D.C. & A. a necessary qualification for promotion even
though there was no such rule earlier. Therefore the
conditions of service of the servants of the reorganised
State of Bombay before 1st of May, 1960 included a condition
that they would be subject to any rule made by that State in
respect of their promotion. The power granted to the
reorganised State of Bombay should be deemed to accrue to
the successor States, that is, the States of Maharashtra and
Gujarat.
We may in this connection refer to s. 87 of the Bombay
Reorganisation Act, 1960 which reads:
"87. Territorial extent of laws.-The provisions of
Part II shall not be deemed to have effected any change
in the territories to which any law in force
immediately before the appointed day extends or
supplies, and territorial reference in any such law to
the State of Bombay shall until otherwise provided by a
competent legislature or other competent authority, be
construed as meaning the territories within that State
immediately before the appointed day."
Law is defined in that Act in s. 2(d) as follows:
"law" includes any enactment, ordinance,
regulation, order, bye-law, rule, scheme, notification
or other instrument having, immediately before the
appointed day, the force of law in the whole or in any
part of the State of Bombay;"
504
The memorandum of Central Government dated 11th May, 1957
was an approval in terms of the proviso to sub-s. (7) of
s. 115 of the States Reorganisation Act. It is, therefore,
an order or other instrument having the force of the law for
the purposes of the definition of ’law’. That circular had
certainly the force of law in the whole of the State of
Bombay and as s. 87 provides that law would continue to be
in force within the territories of the State of Bombay
immediately before the appointed day which, included the
territories of the State of Maharashtra as well as the State
of Gujarat the reference to the State Governments in the
circular would include reference to the Governments of the
State or Maharashtra and the State of Gujarat. It should,
therefore, be held that even in terms of the circular of the
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Central Government dated 11th May, 1957 the Gujarat
Government was competent to make the rules which they had
made in 1962. The argument on behalf of the petitioners
therefore that no approval could have been, given in terms
of s. 87 of the Bombay Reorganisation Act by a circular
issued even in 1957 before that Act was passed has no force.
The result is that the order of the Government of
Gujarat State of 1962 laying down the G.D.C. & A.
examination as a necessary qualification for promotion
should be held to be valid. The appeal is therefore allowed
and the judgment or the Gujarat High Court set aside. We,
however, make it clear that no recovery shall be made from
the respondents. In the circumstances of this case there
will be no order as to costs.
P.H.P. Appeal allowed.
505