Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 355 of 2000
PETITIONER:
K. SHEKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V. INDIRAMMA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/02/2002
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
with C.A.No. 356 of 2000
J U D G M E N T
RUMA PAL, J.
The question in these appeals is whether, K. Shekar, the
appellant in C.A. No. 355 of 2000 (referred to as as the appellant
hereafter) is entitled to continue as Additional Professor in the
National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences
(NIMHANS). The appellant was initially appointed as Lecturer.
The post of Lecturer was redesignated as Assistant Professor
pursuant to the 4th Pay Commission. During the pendency of
the proceedings, he has been promoted as Associate
Professor on 30th June 1992 and thereafter as Additional
Professor with NIMHANS w.e.f. 1st July 1996. Both the Single
Judge and the Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court, on an
application under Article 226 filed by the respondent No.1 have
held that he had no such right. This decision has been impugned
before us not only by the appellant but also by NIMHANS by way
of a separate appeal.
The relation of facts can start with 1984 when the Indian
Council of Medical Research ( ICMR), New Delhi undertook to set
up a project in major institutions and medical colleges for
developing advanced research. The Council laid down several
conditions subject to which such centers were to be set up, the
relevant clause (wherein ICMR is referred to as the Council) being:
"The host institution must undertake to
provide the necessary basic facilities for
carrying out medical research for a period of
at least 5 years. The host institutions are
expected to take over the Centres from the
Council after the stipulated period when the
Council’s support has been withdrawn.
One such Advanced Research Centre was set up at
NIMHANS by ICMR which came to be known as the ICMR
Advanced Research Centre on Community Mental Health. The
appellant was appointed in the Centre as Research Officer in
December 1984.
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On 28th September 1986, an advertisement was issued by
NIMHANS to fill the Research Project Posts in the Centre. It was
made clear in the advertisement that the Project was for a period of
three years and that some posts were likely to be made permanent
after three years. Of the several posts advertised, we are concerned
with the post of Assistant Professor (Psychiatric Social Work).
The qualifications prescribed for the post were:
"(a) First or Second Class Master’s Degree
in Social Work or allied Discipline or its
equivalent.
(b) Ph.D/D. Sc. In Medical or Psychiatric
Social Work for a recognised University or
Institute."
In addition, a candidate had to have ’4 years teaching and or
research experience in the discipline after obtaining the Ph.D.
Degree". It was also stipulated that if a suitable candidate is not
found, the Selection committee could recommend a candidate for a
lower post.
In the application submitted by the appellant, against the
column "Reference" he cited three persons to produce a
testimonial from them in regard to his fitness for the post. The
three referees were persons who were on the Selection Committee.
The Selection Committee did not appoint the appellant as
Assistant Professor of Psychiatric Social Work but appointed him
as a Lecturer in Psychiatric Social Work, a post which admittedly
had not formed part of the advertisement which was published on
28th September 1986.
The appellant was issued a letter of appointment on 28th
November 1986 by the ’Chairman, Governing Body/ Director of
NIMHANS". The letter of appointment stated that the post was
temporary and renewable on a year to year basis and that the
appellant would be on probation for a period of two years from the
date of appointment "which may be extended or curtailed at the
discretion of the competent authority". The appointment letter also
specified that the appellant’s appointment was terminable on
giving three months’ notice. The appellant signed the letter of
appointment in token of acceptance.
On 6th December 1986, a second advertisement was issued by
NIMHANS for its own purposes and not for the purposes of the
ICMR Centre. This advertisement called for applications for
various posts, one of which was a Lecturer in Psychiatric Social
Work. The qualifications were:
"(a) First or Second Class Master’s
Degree in Social work or allied
disciplines or its equivalent with
Medical Psychiatric Social Work, as
one of the subjects or equivalent.
(b) M.Phil. in Psychiatric social Work
or equivalent (2 years course) from a
recognised University OR Ph.D. in
Medical or Psychiatric Social Work
from a recognised University
Institution."
The appellant and the respondent No. 1 both applied.
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Interviews were held on 1st March 1987. By this date, the
respondent No. 1 who had already a Master’s degree in
Psychology and an M. Phil in Psychiatric Social Work, had in
addition acquired her Ph.D. degree. The Selection Committee
interviewed all the candidates including the appellant and the
respondent No. 1. As it turned out this was an unnecessary
exercise because according to NIMHANS, the post was reserved
for a Scheduled Caste candidate. After considering the merits of
all the candidates, it was noted that there was only one SC
candidate who was not found suitable. Therefore, the post was
not filled up.
After the second advertisement was issued, Dr. R. Srinivasa
Murthy who was heading the ICMR Centre wrote to the Director,
NIMHANS that NIMHANS had an agreement with ICMR to
"absorb the faculty posts". It was suggested by Dr. Murthy that "in
view of this it would be appropriate that the appointment order
could be suitably modified" and that "the same could apply to the
appointment of Mr. Mahendra Sharma, Lecturer in Clinical
Psychology and Dr. K. Sekar(sic), Lecturer in Psychiatric Social
Work". The suggestion of Dr. Murthy was accepted by
NIMHANS and an order dated 21st April 1987 was issued by the
Chief Administrative Officer (with a copy to Dr. Murthy) by way
of a Corrigendum to the letter of appointment issued to the
appellant. The first correction was as to the nature of his
appointment. From a ’ temporary tenure appointment’, the
appointment letter was corrected to read ’the post is permanent but
the appointment is on officiating basis’. A further correction was
introduced by the corrigendum which provided that ’on completion
of the tenure appointment in the Centre, appointees will revert
back to the service in the respective departments at NIMHANS.
Further, the services rendered will count for seniority in the service
of NIMHANS from the date of joining the post in the Centre".
And so, by virtue of this corrigendum, the appellant’s temporary
appointment as a Lecturer with the Centre, became a permanent
one with NIMHANS.
On 9th November 1989, the Government of India approved
the re-designation and Faculty Improvement Programme in
respect of faculty posts under NIMHANS. Consequent upon this,
the appellant was re-designated as Assistant Professor w.e.f.
1.10.86 with NIMHANS although the appellant continued to serve
in the ICMR Centre.
On 1st June 1989, a third advertisement was issued by
NIMHANS calling for applications to fill the posts of Assistant
Professor in Psychiatric Social Work (Deaddiction Unit) and
Lecturer, Psychiatric Social Work (De-addiction Unit). The
qualifications prescribed were substantially the same as those
which had earlier been prescribed for the posts of Assistant
Professor and Lecturer in the second advertisement. The
respondent No. 1 applied for both the posts. No interviews were
held nor any selection made and the respondent No.1 heard
nothing further from NIMHANS.
The appellant was appointed as Assistant Professor
(Psychiatric Social Work) in NIMHANS in 1990. According to
the appellant and NIMHANS, this was consequent upon the Centre
being wound up in June 1990. Along with the appellant Dr.
Mahendra Prakash Sharma was posted to the Department of
Clinical Psychology in NIMHANS.
According to the Respondent No.1, the process for
appointing an Assistant Professor started by the advertisement
issued in 1989 had been circumvented by the posting of the
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appellant from the Centre to NIMHANS. The respondent No. 1
filed a writ application in which she challenged inter-alia the
appointment of the appellant as Assistant Professor in
NIMHANS. She subsequently withdrew this writ petition with
the leave of the Court to file a second writ petition on the same
cause of action. In the second writ petition, the respondent No. 1
questioned the authority of NIMHANS to fill the post of
Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatric Social Work
by converting the temporary post in the ICMR into a permanent
one and by resorting to reversion on the basis that the appellant
had served with NIMHANS before he was appointed at the
Centre. She made specific allegations of partiality against the
respondent No. 3 in the writ petition who was a member of the
Selection Committee and also one of the persons cited by the
appellant as a reference.
Statements of objections were filed by the appellant and
the Chief Administrative Officer of NIMHANS. The respondent
No. 3 chose not to file any reply. It was the case of the appellant
and NIMHANS in their statements of objections, that the
procedure followed in the appointment and subsequent absorption
of the appellant in NIMHANS was perfectly regular. According to
them there was no need to advertise the post of a lecturer in view
of the following clause in the advertisement: "If the candidate is
not found suitable to the post applied for the selection committee
may recommend the candidate for a lower post in case of highly
qualified candidate, the selection committee may recommend to a
higher post other than the one advertised." It was further said that
the respondent No. 1 had no locus standi to question the
appellant’s appointment in 1986 since she could not have been
considered at all for the post of Lecturer since she had a 3rd class
Masters degree. It was also stated that the selection process which
had been started by the publication of the advertisement in 1989
had been abandoned because the Union Government was not
interested in funding a de-addiction unit in NIMHANS.
The learned Single Judge called for the records and after
scrutinising them came to the conclusion that the appellant’s
appointment as Lecturer pursuant to the advertisement issued on
28th September 1986 was invalid because the post of Lecturer has
not been advertised. He held that the clause which permitted the
Selection Committee to appoint a ’suitable’ candidate for a lower
post, did not entitle the Selection Committee to either create a
new post which had not been advertised or to at all consider a
candidate who was not eligible to apply for the post advertised.
According to the learned Single Judge, it was only when the
candidate possessed the minimum qualifications for the post of
Assistant Professor and he was not found suitable for whatever
reason to hold the post, that the Selection Committee could
consider him for being appointed to a lower post. The learned
Single Judge held that at the interview for the post of Lecturer
held pursuant to the second advertisement, the Selection
Committee had found that the appellant was not suitable. The
learned Judge found from the records that the appellant did not
have any substantive appointment with NIMHANS and,
therefore, the question of his reversion under the Corrigendum
did not arise. The learned Judge concluded that the selection of
the appellant was a ’fraud on the power of NIMHANS’; that
NIMHANS had ’allowed itself to safeguard the interests of one
individual’, and that ’undue interest’ had been taken in the
appointment of the appellant. The appointment of the appellant
having been set aside, the learned Judge directed the post of
Assistant Professor, Psychiatric Social Work which then fell
vacant, to be filled up in terms of the advertisement issued in
1989, and further that the experience acquired by the appellant by
virtue of his illegal appointment was not to be taken into account.
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Both NIMHANS and the appellant preferred two separate
appeals. The Division Bench upheld the finding of the learned
Single Judge and dismissed the appeals.
According to the appellant and NIMHANS, the High Court’s
finding that appellant’s appointment as Lecturer in 1986 was
invalid was uncalled for as the respondent No.1 had not
challenged the appointment. Even if she had, the challenge was
grossly delayed. What had been challenged, according to the
appellants, was the corrigendum dated 21st April, 1987 and the
order directing the posting of the appellant to NIMHANS as
Assistant Professor. It is contended that the respondent No.1 did
not have the locus standi to challenge the appointment of the
appellant either as Lecturer or subsequently as an Assistant
Professor not only because she herself had not applied pursuant to
the 29th September 1986 advertisement but also because she did
not have the necessary educational qualifications to be appointed
to either post. It is urged that the writ petition filed by the
respondent No. 1 was not bona-fide as the appointment of Dr.
M.K. Sharma as Assistant Professor had not been challenged.
According to the appellant and NIMHANS, NIMHANS was
under an obligation to absorb the employees of the ICMR project
because of the agreement between NIMHANS and ICMR arrived
at in 1984. The finding of the High Court that at the interview
held pursuant to the second advertisement, the appellant was
found unsuitable for the post of Lecturer has been criticised on the
ground that the High Court had failed to note that the post had
been reserved for a scheduled caste candidate and the only
scheduled caste candidate was not found suitable. According to
the appellants, the High Court also failed to consider that the
third advertisement which was issued on 1.6.1989 had been
abandoned because of a lack of funds. There was as such no
question of the process being completed as directed by the High
Court. The appellant has also urged us to consider the matter
from an equitable point of view. He has put in several years of
hard work after his appointment in 1986 all of which would be
nullified if his appointment were set aside.
The respondent No.1 has contended that her basic grievance
was that the NIMHANS had appointed the appellant as Assistant
Professor by a backdoor method, contrary to the Recruitment
Rules of NIMHANS, without completing the process started by
the third advertisement. The respondent No.1’s claim was
overlooked although she was fully qualified, only to accommodate
the appellant. The entire process of appointing the appellant as
against the post of Assistant Professor in NIMHANS was vitiated
by fraud and bias starting with his irregular initial appointment in
1986 and culminating with his recruitment by absorption.
According to the respondent No. 1, the Recruitment Rules could
not be overridden by any agreement with ICMR, It is pointed out
that the affidavit filed on behalf of NIMHANS contained several
contradictory statements which further substantiated the
concurrent findings of the Single Judge and the Division Bench of
the High Court that the appellant’s appointment was the outcome
of bias.
We can take judicial notice of the fact that that NIMHANS is
an institution of repute. It has already been so recognised by this
Court in B.R. Kapoor and Another V. Union of India and
Others 1989 (3) SCC 387. It is also true that generally speaking
Courts have been reluctant to interfere with the running of
educational institutions. But there can be ’no islands of
insubordination to the rule of law’. The actions of educational
institutions, however highly reputed, are not immune from judicial
scrutiny. Indeed to preserve the high reputation, there is a greater
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need to avoid even the semblance of arbitrariness or extraneous
considerations colouring the Institution’s actions.
It may be that the respondent No. 1 could not directly
challenge the appellant’s appointment as Lecturer at the Centre in
1986 either because she herself was merely not an applicant but
was unqualified to be so appointed or on the ground of delay. But
the immediate grievance of the respondent No.1 was the
appellant’s appointment in 1990 as Assistant Professor. Because
the appointment was as a result of the appellant’s appointment as a
Lecturer in the ICMR Centre in 1986, it was also called into
question. To get rid of the "weed" so to speak, one had to
eliminate the root. It is nobody’s case that the respondent No. 1
could not be considered for appointment as Assistant Professor in
1990. The Writ Application was filed in the same year. There was
as such no question of the respondent No.1’s application being
defeated because of any delay.
If we start with the ’root’, - there can be no doubt that the
appellant’s appointment as Lecturer in 1986 was not in terms of
the advertisement pursuant to which he had applied. Before any
appointment could be made to the post of Lecturer, the post should
have been advertised together with the eligibility criteria in respect
thereof. The submission of NIMHANS was that since the post of
Lecturer was lower than an Assistant Professor’s, it was not
necessary to be advertised. If this argument were accepted, it
would amount to a violation of Articles 14 and 16. The absence of
an advertisement necessarily deprived persons who could have
applied for the post, of the opportunity of applying for the post.
The clause in the advertisement which enabled the Selection
Committee to recommend the candidate for a lower post if the
candidate was not found suitable to fill the post applied for, did not
give NIMHANS the power to appoint the recommended candidate
against an unadvertised post. Significantly, in the other
advertisements on record dated 6.12.1986 and 1.6.1989, the post
of Assistant Professor and the post of Lecturer were both
advertised.
The clause, far from allowing NIMHANS the power to
dispense with the advertisement of any lower post as a pre-
condition to appointment, indicates that only eligible persons could
be considered for selection. Once the barrier of eligibility was
crossed, the Selection Committee could consider the suitability of
the candidate for the post advertised. It follows that the appellant
should not have been called for interview at all. His application
clearly showed that he did not fulfill the requisite eligibility criteria
for the post he had applied for, because he lacked any post-
doctorate experience at all. The power in the Selection Committee
to relax the eligibility criteria cannot be read as including the
power to do away with the criteria altogether.
Then again, the post which was advertised was a temporary
tenure post and yet by virtue of the Corrigendum, the posts were
made permanent. It is true that the advertisement stated there was
a likelihood of some of the advertised posts being made permanent
after three years. All that this meant was that the posts would
remain temporary tenure posts for three years after which there
was a possibility of the appointments being made permanent.
When the post itself was made permanent from its very inception
by the corrigendum issued several months later, the post should
have been re-advertised so as to give fair notice to all prospective
candidates regarding the nature of the vacancy to be filled. It was
not open to NIMHANS to retrospectively and subsequent to the
appointment change the nature of post advertised by issuing the
Corrigendum.
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In any case, the Corrigendum proceeded on a mis-
interpretation of the terms and conditions under which the Centre
was set up by the ICMR. There was no obligation on the part of
the NIMHANS by reason of any ’agreement’ with ICMR to
absorb any employee of the Centre. ICMR’s condition as quoted
earlier merely obliged all Institutes where such centres were set up
to continue the work after ICMR withdrew its financial support at
the end of five years.
The corrigendum in so far as it provided for the ’reversion’ of
persons working at the Centre to NIMHANS certainly could not
operate to revert back the appellant. The Cadre and Recruitment
Rules of NIMHANS provide that appointments to the posts of
Assistant Professor and Lecturer are to be made by direct
recruitment. Besides, the appellant was in fact serving as Research
Officer with the ICMR Centre when he was appointed as a
Lecturer in 1986. There was a distinction between appointment as
a Lecturer at the ICMR Centre and appointment to the post of a
Lecturer in NIMHANS. That is why the appellant, even after
having been issued the letter of appointment as Lecturer in the
ICMR Centre, applied again pursuant to the second advertisement
for appointment as Lecturer in NIMHANS. He could not, in the
circumstances, be reverted back to NIMHANS.
It is unnecessary to consider any further submission as there
are already sufficient reasons for dismissing these appeals and
upholding the judgment of the Karnataka High Court.
However the appellants are correct in their submission that
the High Court should not have directed the selection of an
Assistant Professor on the basis of the 1989 advertisement. That
advertisement related to appointments in the De-addiction Unit.
NIMHANS’ statement that the setting up of the De-addiction Unit
in NIMHANS had been abandoned because of lack of funds has
been categorically refuted by respondent No. 1. Without going
into the controversy having regard to the lapse of several years on
account of the pendency of the litigation before different Courts, it
would not be appropriate to direct the process initiated in 1989 to
be completed more than 11 years later. The vacancy created by the
setting aside the appellant’s appointment will have to be filled and
a fresh advertisement will have to be issued by NIMHANS in
accordance with its Cadre and Recruitment Rules. The unfortunate
consequence that the appellant will suffer by reason of the setting
aside of his appointment as Assistant Professor in NIMHANS
cannot be avoided on any equitable considerations although the
harshness may be mitigated to some extent.
Accordingly, while affirming the decision of the High Court,
we modify it to the extent that the actual experience gained by the
appellant by virtue of his appointment as Assistant Professor may
be taken into account if the appellant applies pursuant to any
future advertisement that may be issued by NIMHANS for the post
of Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatric Social
Work.
With this modification, the appeals are dismissed but without
any order as to costs.
....J.
(S. Rajendra Babu)
J.
(Ruma Pal)
February 27, 2002
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