Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P.L. SHAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/01/1989
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
OJHA, N.D. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 985 1989 SCR (1) 224
1989 SCC (1) 546 JT 1989 (1) 98
1989 SCALE (1)81
ACT:
Central Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985: Section
21(2)-Subsistence allowance--Reduction of--Application
seeking restoration moved after five years--Maintainability
of--Period of limitation-Computation of--Held, cause of
action arises every month in which reduced subsistence
allowance is paid.
Civil Services: Suspension order--Nature and purpose
of-Subsistence allowance--Sufficiency of--Need to review
from time to time.
HEADNOTE:
Sub-section (2) of s. 21 of the Administrative Tribunals
Act, 1985 empowers the Tribunal not to entertain an applica-
tion the grievance in respect of which had arisen beyond
three years immediately preceding the date on which the
jurisdiction, powers and authority of the Tribunal became
exercisable under the Act.
The appellant, an Upper Division Clerk, was suspended
from service, in July 1975 pending on account of the insti-
tution of criminal proceedings against him. By an order
dated August 4, 1975 he was sanctioned subsistence allowance
at the rate of 50 per cent of his salary last drawn. By a
further order dated May 6, 1982 the subsistence allowance
was reduced to 25 per cent of the salary he was drawing on
the date of suspension. He moved a petition before the
Tribunal in the year 1988 for a direction to the Government
to restore the original order of August 4, 1975. That peti-
tion was dismissed by the Tribunal solely on the ground that
the order reducing the allowance having been passed on May
6, 1982, it could not entertain the application made more
than five years thereafter, apparently on the ground of
limitation set out in s. 21(2) of the Act.
In this appeal by special leave it was contended for the
appellant that the Government had failed to review the order
of May 6, 1982 even though a long period of five years had
elapsed after the reduction of the subsistence allowance,
that the delay in conclusion of the criminal proceedings, as
a consequence of which he had been kept under suspension,
225
was not due to him and in the circumstances it was not just
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and appropriate that he should be paid a subsistence allow-
ance at a reduced rate for an unreasonably long period.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD: 1. The Tribunal was not right in rejecting the
application. [229F]
2. The cause of action in respect of a prayer seeking
enhancement of subsistence allowance arises every month in
which the said allowance at the reduced rate is paid. There-
fore, in the instant case, though no relief could be given
to the appellant in respect of the period which was beyond
three years from the date on which the Tribunal commenced to
exercise its powers under the Act, it was quite open to the
Tribunal to consider whether it was proper for the Govern-
ment to continue to give effect to the order dated May 6,
1982 from any subsequent date, and if the Tribunal came to
the conclusion that the said order was required to be re-
vised it could pass an appropriate order notwithstanding the
fact that a period of five years had elapsed from the date
on which the order reducing the subsistence allowance was
passed. While doing so it was open to the Tribunal to fix a
date within the period of the said three years from which
the appellant should be paid subsistence allowance at the
revised rate having due regard to the date of the applica-
tion. [229C-E]
3.1. The very nomenclature of the allowance makes it
clear that the amount paid to a Government servant under
suspension should be sufficient for bare subsistence in this
world in which the prices of the necessaries of life are
increasing every day on account of the conditions of infla-
tion obtaining in the country. More so, when a Government
servant cannot engage himself in any other activity during
the period of suspension. The amount of subsistence allow-
ance payable to the Government servant concerned should,
therefore, be reviewed from time to time where the proceed-
ings drag on for a long time, even though there may be no
express rule insisting on such review. [228F-G]
3.2. In doing so, the authority concerned no doubt has
to take into account whether the Government servant is in
any way responsible for the undue delay in the disposal of
the proceedings initiated against him. If the Government
servant is not responsible for such delay or even if he is
responsible for such delay to some extent but is not pri-
marily responsible for it, it is for the Government to
consider whether the
226
order of suspension should be continued or whether the
subsistence allowance should be varied to his advantage or
not. [228G-H; 229A]
4. The case is remanded to the Tribunal to dispose of
the application made by the appellant on merits. [229G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 38 of
1989.
From the Judgment and order dated 15.3. 1988 of the
Central Administrative Tribunal, Ahmedabad in M.A. No. 49 of
1988.
P.H. Parekh and Shishir Sharma for the Appellant.
B. Dutta, Additional Solicitor General, Ms. Indu Malho-
tra and C.V. Subba Rao for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. The appellant was working as an Upper
Division Clerk in the year 1975. He was placed under suspen-
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sion by an order dated 25.7.1975 as a result of the institu-
tion of a criminal prosecution against him and he continues
to remain under suspension till today. By an order dated
4.9. 1975 he was sanctioned subsistence allowance at the
rate of 50 per cent of his salary last drawn. By a further
order made on 6.6.1982 the subsistence allowance was reduced
to 25 per cent of the salary he was drawing on the date of
suspension. The increments he would have earned from time to
time and the periodical revisions of pay-scales were not
taken into consideration in determining the subsistence
allowance.
The charge-sheet was filed in the criminal case against
the appellant in 1976 and the case was committed to the
sessions, but the committal proceedings were quashed by the
High Court in 1978. Then the proceedings again began before
the Metropolitan Magistrate in 1979. The case, however, has
not yet come to an end.
Aggrieved by the denial of the salary and allowances due
to him for a long time on account of the order of suspension
and in particular the order fixing the subsistence allowance
at 25 per cent of the salary which he was drawing at the
time of suspension by the Order dated 6.5. 1982, the appel-
lant approached in the year 1988 the Central Administrative
Tribunal (Ahmedabad Bench) for a direction to be
227
issued to the Government to restore the original Order dated
4.8. 1975 by which the subsistence allowance was fixed at 50
per cent of his salary. That petition was dismissed by the
Tribunal by its order dated 15.3.1988 on the ground that the
appellant had approached the Tribunal more than five years
after the date on which the Order dated 6.5. 1982 had been
passed apparently on the ground of limitation set out in
sub-section (2) of section 21 of the Administrative Tribu-
nals Act, 1985 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’).
Aggrieved by the order of the Tribunal, the appellant filed
this appeal.
The question for consideration in this appeal by special
leave is whether in a case of this nature, the Tribunal was
right in holding that the application before it, was barred
by time. Sub-section (1) of section 21 of the Act, no doubt,
says that a Tribunal shall not admit an application in a
case where a final order such as is mentioned in clause (a)
of sub-section (2) of section 20 has been made in connection
with the grievance unless the application is made, within
one year from the date on which such final order has been
made, and in a case where an appeal or representation such
as is mentioned in clause (b) of subsection (2) of section
20 has been made and a period of six months had expired
thereafter without such final order having been made, within
one year from the date of expiry of the said period of six
months. Sub-section (2) of section 21, however, provides
that notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1)
of section 21 where the grievance in respect of which an
application is made had arisen by reason of any order made
at any time during the period of three years immediately
preceding the date on which the jurisdiction, powers and
authority of the Tribunal become exercisable under the Act
in respect of the matter to which such order related, and no
proceedings for the redressal of such grievance had been
commenced before the said date before any High Court, the
application shall be entertained by the Tribunal if it is
made within the period referred to in clause (a), or, as the
case may be, clause (b) of sub-section (1) or within a
period of six months from the said date, whichever period
expires later. Sub-section (3) of section 21 further confers
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power on the Tribunal to condone the delay in certain cir-
cumstances if the applicant satisfies the Tribunal that he
had sufficient cause for not making the application within
such period.
In the present case the main grievance of the appellant
was not that the Order dated 6.5.1982 by which the subsist-
ence allowance payable to him was reduced to 25 per cent was
bad at the commencement although there were some allegations
to that effect but it was one relating to the failure of the
authority or the Government to review the Order dated
6.5.1982 even though a long period of 5 years had elapsed
228
after the reduction of the subsistence allowance. His con-
tention was that the delay in the conclusion of the criminal
proceedings as a consequence of which he had been kept under
suspension was not due to him and in the circumstances it
was not just and proper that he should be paid a subsistence
allowance at a reduced rate for an unreasonably long period.
In support of his case the appellant relied upon a decision
dated 23.6.1987 of the very bench of the Tribunal in Shri
Bhupendra Mahashuklal Mehtap v. The Union of India & Ors.,
in T.A. No. 223 of 1986 (S.C.A. No. 3509 of 1922) in which
Fundamental Rule 53 which authorised the Government to
review an order regarding subsistence allowance arose for
consideration. In the said case the Ahmedabad Bench of the
Tribunal quashed the Order dated 6.5.1982 passed against the
applicant in that case by which the subsistence allowance
payable to the said applicant had been reduced.
An order of suspension is not an order imposing punish-
ment on a person found to be guilty. It is an order made
against him before he is found guilty to ensure smooth
disposal of the proceedings initiated against him. Such
proceedings should be completed expeditiously in the public
interest and also in the interest of the Government servant
concerned. The subsistence allowance is paid by the Govern-
ment so that the Government servant against whom an order of
suspension is passed on account of the pendency of any
disciplinary proceeding or a criminal case instituted
against him could maintain himself and his dependants until
the departmental proceeding or the criminal case as the case
may be comes to an end and appropriate orders are passed
against the Government servant by the Government regarding
his right to continue in service etc. depending upon the
final outcome of the proceedings instituted against him. The
very nomenclature of the allowance makes it clear that the
amount paid to such a Government servant should be suffi-
cient for bare subsistence in this world in which the prices
of the necessaries of life are increasing every day on
account of the conditions of inflation obtaining in the
country. It is luther to be noted that a Government servant
cannot engage himself in any other activity during the
period of suspension. The amount of subsistence allowance
payable to the Government servant concerned should, there-
fore, be reviewed from time to time where the proceedings
drag on for a long time, even though there may be no express
rule insisting On such review. In doing so the authority
concerned no doubt has to take into account whether the
Government servant is in any way responsible for the undue
delay in the disposal of the proceedings initiated against
him. If the Government servant is not responsible for such
delay or even if he is responsible for such delay to some
extent but is not primarily responsible for it, it is for
the Government to recon-
229
sider whether the order of suspension should be continued or
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whether the subsistence allowance should be varied to his
advantage or not. The decision on the said question no doubt
depends upon several factors relevant to the case. In the
instant case the appellant was suspended in the year 1975.
Now nearly 13 years have elapsed from the date of suspen-
sion. He was paid subsistence allowance at the rate of 50
per cent of the salary last drawn by him from 1975 and 1982
and from 1982 he is being paid 25 per cent of the salary
last drawn by him. It is not clear from the record before
us, since the application made by the applicant was dis-
missed by the Tribunal at the preliminary stage, whether the
appellant was responsible for the inordinate delay in the
disposal of the case instituted against him. In the circum-
stances of the case we are of the view that even though no
relief could be given to the appellant in respect of the
period which was beyond three years from the date on which
the Tribunal commenced to exercise its powers under the Act,
it was quite open to the Tribunal to consider whether it was
proper for the Government to continue to give effect to the
Order dated 6.5.1982 from any subsequent date and if the
Tribunal came to the conclusion that the Order dated
6.5.1982 was required to be revised it could pass an appro-
priate order notwithstanding the fact that a period of five
years had elapsed from the date on which the order reducing
the subsistence allowance was passed. While doing so it was
open to the Tribunal to fix a date within the period of the
said three years from which the appellant should be paid the
subsistence allowance at the revised rate of course, having
due regard to the date of the application also. In the
alternative, the Tribunal could have asked the authority
concerned to review the order.
In the circumstances, the Tribunal was not right in
rejecting the application solely on the ground that the
order reducing the subsistence allowance having been passed
on 6.5. 1982 the Tribunal could not entertain an application
for directing the Government to revise the Order dated 6.5.
1982 even in respect of any period within three years from
the date on which the Tribunal commenced to exercise its
powers having due regard to the date of the application also
since we feel that the cause of action in respect of such
prayer arises every month in which the subsistence allowance
at the reduced rate is paid. We therefore set aside the
order of the Tribunal and remand the case to it to dispose
of the application made by the appellant on merits. We make
an order accordingly.
There is no order as to costs.
P.S.S. Appeal allowed.
230