Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TEJ NARAIN TIWARY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/02/1993
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
RAY, G.N. (J)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (2) 11 1993 SCC Supl. (2) 623
JT 1993 (2) 353 1993 SCALE (1)651
ACT:
Regularisation-Date of-Appellant appointed as Special
Officer by Bihar School Education Board on 6.8.69-Post
abolished in April 1971-Suit filed by Appellant-An pursuance
of compromise between the parties, Board appointed Appellant
to regular post of Section Officer and regularised the
appointment wef. 6.8.69.
Held, there was compulsory transfer from one post to the
other, or alternatively, amalgamation of the two posts-
Regularisation w.e.f. 6.8.69 justified.
HEADNOTE:
By an order dated 16th August 1969, the appellant was
appointed by respondent 2 the Bihar School Examination
Board as a Special Officer (Stores) for a period not
exceeding six months in the pay scale of Rs.
300-20400-EB-20-500, with usual allowances. The services
were, however, continued till 10th March, 1971, when it was
intimated that the said post of Special Officer would be
abolished with effect from 1st April 1971, and consequently
his services were terminated. The appellant riled a suit
and obtained an injunction against the abolition of the post
and the termination of his services. In the suit, a
compromise was arrived at between the Board and the
appellant, whereby he was appointed as Section Officer in
the General Cadre and his pay as Special Officer was to be
protected. Pursuant to this compromise, the Board by order
dated 20th March, 1972 appointed him on the vacant post of
Section Officer, with a personal pay of Rs. 70 per month.
Later, by an order dated 11.11.86, respondent No. 2
regularised the appointment from the date of his appointment
as Special Officer viz. 16.8.69. However, respondent No. 5
promoted to one of the posts of Section officers on 27-8-70,
contended that the seniority given to the appellant in the
post of Section Officer w.e.f. 16-8-69, ie. from the date of
his appointment as Special Officer was illegal. In the
Seniority list of Section Officers prepared by respondent
No. 2, the appellant was shown above respondent no. 5 and he
was granted promotion to the post of Asstt. Secretary on
20th March, 1982, and to that of Deputy Secretary on
29.11.87.
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Against the said list of seniority, respondent No. 5 filed a
writ petition in the High Court, formally challenging the
order of dt 11th Nov., 1986 in terms of which the inter se
seniority list was prepared. The High Court held that the
post of Special Officer occupied by the appellant was a
temporary post, which was abolished, and therefore, he would
have to rank below respondent No. S. The appellant came to
this Court.
Allowing the Appeal,
HELD: The approach of the High Court was not correct.
The appellant was appointed in a higher post with a higher
salary scale. He was in fact compulsorily transferred from
that post to the post of Section Officer and after that
transfer by the same order of 20th March, 1972, the post of
Special Officer was abolished. The order is also capable of
being interpreted as an order of amalgamation of the ex-
cadre post of a Special Officer with the cadre post of
Section Officer. [15H-G]
The consequence of both the interpretations of the said
order is the same, viz. that the appellant would get
seniority from the date of his appointment as Special
Officer. [15G]
It is true that there is nothing on record except the order
of 20th March, 1972, to show that in the temporary post of
Special Officer which was created for the first time on 16th
August, 1969, that the appointment of appellant was ever
regularised and the appellant was appointed regularly to the
same. However, on this aspect, we must go by the intention
revealed in the resolutions and orders of the Board itself.
The Board’s intention is clear. It treated the post as
regular. The appellant was appointed to it in a substantive
vacancy and in accordance with the condition governing it.
There is accordingly nothing, which militates against the
seniority given to the appellant. [16A-D]
The Direct Recruit Class II Engineering Officers’
Association and Ors. v. State of Maharashtra & Ors., AIR
1990 SC 1607 and State of Bihar& Ors. etc. v. Akhouri
Sachindra Nath & Ors., [1991] Suppl.. 1 SCC 334, referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 690 of 1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 21.5.1992 of the Patna
High
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Court in Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 1317 of 1990.
A.K. Sen and M.P. Jha for the Appellant.
Uday Singh, A.K. Sinha and A. Sharan for the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered:
Leave granted.
The admitted facts in the present case are that by an order
dated 16th August, 1969 the appellant was appointed by the
respondent 2. Bihar School Examination Board (’Board’) as a
Special Officer (Stores) for a period not exceeding six
months, in the pay scale of Rs. 300-20-400-EB-20-500 with
usual allowances. His services, however, were continued
till 10th March, 1971, when he was intimated that the said
post of Special Officer would be abolished w.e.f 1st April,
1971 and consequently his services would stand terminated.
The appellant filed a suit and obtained an injunction
against the abolition of the post and the termination of his
services. In the suit, a compromise was arrived at between
the Board and the appellant whereby he was to be appointed
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as Section Officer in the General Cadre and his pay as a
Special Officer was to be protected. Pursuant to this
compromise, the Board passed an Office Order on 20th March,
1972 which stated as follows:
"Shri Tej Narain Tiwary who is at present
working as Special Officer (Stores) on purely
temporary basis, is appointed on the vacant
post of Sectional Head (Section Officer) in
the initial pay of the pay scale of Rs. 230-
15350-EB-20-450 besides dearness allowance.
Besides pay he is sanctioned reducible
personal pay at the rate of Rs. 70 per month".
By the same order, another Special Officer (Vigilance) was
also appointed to one more vacant post of Sectional Head
(Section Officer) in the same pay with an additional
reducible personal pay of Rs. 20 per month.
The order further stated as follows:
"As per the decision dated 18.12.1971 of the Board, the
posts of Special Officer (Stores) and Assistant Vigilance
Officer are abolished from the date of issue of this order:
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We are not concerned with the post of Special Officer
(Vigilance).
What is obvious from the above order is that the appellant
was working as Special Officer till that time and was
appointed in one of the vacant posts of Section Officers
with the protection of his pay. We do not know how the
amount of Rs. 70 per month was arrived at. Read with the
note put up by the Secretary of the Board, it is apparent
that appellant’s then pay as Special Officer was to be
protected entirely. We presume that it was wholly
protected. The point to note is that his pay could be
protected, whether partially or fully, only if he was
transferred from one post to another whether on account of
the abolition of the former post or as a matter of
compulsory transfer. Read with the Office Order dated 20th
March, 1972, it appears that the Board had adopted the
device of first transferring the appellant from the post of
Special Officer to the post of Section Officer and then
abolishing the post of the Special Officer. It is necessary
to note this fact, since the Board has interpreted this
device as amalgamation of the posts of Special Officer with
that of the Section Officer and not as a compulsory transfer
from the post of Special Officer to that of Section Officer.
Further, whether it is construed as amalgamation or as
compulsory transfer, the legal consequences are the same,
viz., that the appellant would have to be absorbed in the
post of Section Officer from the date of his appointment in
the post of Special Officer. Since further the Board itself
regularised the appointment from the date of appointment as
Special Officer, viz., 16th August, 1969, as is evident from
its Order of 11th November, 1986, no objection can be raised
in that behalf However, respondents who was promoted to one
of the posts of Section Officers on 27th August, 1970 has
contended that the seniority given to the appellant in the
post of Section Officer w.e.f 16th August, 1969 i.e., from
the day on which he was appointed as Special Officer, was
illegal. We may now deal with the said contention.
Respondent-5 was an Assistant in the Office of the Board and
as stated above, was for the first time, promoted as Section
Officer on 27th August, 1970. It appears that for the first
time in 1983, a seniority list of Section Officers was
prepared but not circulated. In that list respondents was
shown at No. 23 whereas, the appellant was shown at No. 33.
This was so because two representations made by the
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appellant to give him seniority from 16th August, 1969 stood
rejected on 20th April, 1977 and 13th March, 1978
respectively. It appears that it was for the first time
that by the order
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dated 11th November, 1986, the appellant’s representation
was accepted and he was given seniority from 16th August,
1969. Against the said order, respondents filed a writ
petition which was withdrawn by him on 22nd December, 1986
since the learned Advocate General appearing for the Board
stated before the Court that by the order dated 11th
November, 1986 the Board had merely given seniority to the
appellant from 16th August, 1969 and that grant of this
seniority to the appellant had nothing to do with the inter
se seniority in the cadre of Section Officers which would be
determined later.
It appears that, thereafter, & seniority list of Section
Officers was prepared by the Board in which the appellant
was shown above respondent-5 and was granted promotion to
the post of Assistant Secretary on 20th March, 1982 and to
that of Deputy Secretary on 29th November, 1989. Against
the said list of seniority, the respondents filed the
present writ petition in the High Court primarily
challenging the order of llth November, 1986 in terms of
which the inter se seniority list was prepared.
The High Court held that the post of Special Officer
occupied by the appellant was a temporary post and was not a
cadre post; since the said post was abolished and thereafter
the appellant was appointed as a Section Officer on 20th
March, 1972 he would have to rank below respondent-5 who was
appointed as Section Officer on 27th August, 1970. The High
Court also relied on the fact that the Board’s case before
it was that as a consequence of the abolition of the post,
the appellant was appointed as a Section Officer.
We are of the view that the approach of the High Court is
not correct. As stated above, the facts reveal that the
appellant was appointed in a higher post with a higher
salary-scale. He was in fact compulsorily transferred from
that post to the post of Section Officer, and after the
transfer, by the same order of the 20th March, 1972, the
post of Special Officer was abolished. The order is also
capable of being interpreted as an order of amalgamation of
the ex-cadre post of Special Officer with the cadre posts of
Section Officers. As stated earlier, the consequence of
both the interpretations of the said order is the same,
viz., that the appellant would get seniority from the date
of his appointment as the Special Officer. That it is a
case of a compulsory transfer or of the amalgamation of post
is evident from the fact that the appellant’s salary as
Special Officer was
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protected on the said transfer. It is true that there is
nothing on record except the order of 20th March, 1972 to
show that the temporary post of Special Officer which was
created for the first time on 16th August, 1969 with the
appointment of the appellant to it, was ever regularised and
the appellant was appointed regularly to the same. However,
on this aspect, we must go by the intention revealed in the
resolutions and the orders of the Board itself. It cannot
be suggested that the Board could not regularise the post
and the appointment retrospectively by passing resolutions
which in the absence of rules and regulations are equally
valid. The Board’s intentions in that behalf are clear. It
treated the post as regular. The appellant was appointed to
it in a substantive vacancy and in accordance with the
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conditions governing it. There is, therefore, nothing in
the decisions relied upon by the learned Counsel for
respondent-5, viz., The Direct Recruit Class-II Engineering
Officers’ Association and Ors. v. State of Maharashtra and
Ors., AIR 1990 SC 1607 and State of Bihar & Ors. etc. v.
Akhouri Sachindra Nath & Ors., [1991] Suppl. 1 SCC 334 which
militates against the seniority given to the appellant.
We accordingly allow the appeal. There will be no order is
to costs.
S.L.S. Appeal allowed.
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