Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6758 of 2000
PETITIONER:
E.V.Chinnaiah
RESPONDENT:
State of Andhra Pradesh and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/11/2004
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hegde & S.N.Variava & B.P.Singh & H.K.Sema & S.B.Sinha
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
[Alongwith Civil Appeal Nos. 6934 and 7344 of 2000 and 3442/2001]
DELIVERED BY:
SANTOSH N.HEGDE, J.
S.B.SINHA, J.
HOTOI KHETOHO SEMA,J.
N. Santosh Hegde, J.
The validity of Andhra Pradesh Scheduled Castes (Rationalisation of
Reservations) Act, 2000 (A.P. Act 20 of 2000) was challenged before the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad which came to be dismissed by a
five Judge Bench on a majority of 4 : 1, the court having certified the
case as being fit for appeal to the Supreme Court, these appeals are now
before us after the same was referred to a Constitution Bench by an order
of this Court dated 25th June, 2001. The facts necessary for the disposal
of these appeals without reference to previous litigations are as follows:-
The State of Andhra Pradesh (the State) appointed a Commission headed by
Justice Ramachandra Raju (Retd.) to identify the groups amongst the
Scheduled Castes found in the List prepared under Article 341 of the
Constitution of India by the President, who had failed to secure the
benefit of the reservations provided for Scheduled Castes in the State in
admission to professional colleges and appointment to services in the
State.
The Report submitted by the Commission led to certain litigations and a
reference being made by the State to the National Scheduled Castes
Commission. We will not dilate on these facts since the same are not
necessary for the disposal of these appeals. Accepting the Report of
Justice Ramachandra Raju Commission (Supra), the State by an Ordinance
divided the 57 castes enumerated in the Presidential List into 4 groups
based on inter-se backwardness and fixed separate quota in reservation for
each of these groups. Thus, the castes in the Presidential List came to be
grouped as A, B, C, and D. The 15% reservation for the backward class in
the State in the educational institutions and in the services of the State
under Article 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution of India for the
Scheduled Castes were apportioned amongst the 4 groups in the following
manner :-
1. Group A - 1%
2. Group B - 7%
3. Group C - 6%
4. Group D - 1%
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The said Ordinance came to be challenged before the High Court by way of
various writ petitions as being violative of Articles 15(4), 16(4), 162,
246, 341(1), 338(7), 46, 335 and 213 of the Constitution of India as also
the Constitutional (Scheduled Castes) Order 1950 notified by the President
of India and Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes Amendment Act, 1976.
During the pendency of the said writ petitions, the State Government
replaced the Ordinance with the Andhra Pradesh Scheduled Castes
(Rationalisation of Reservation) Act, 2000 (A.P. Act 20 of 2000) (’the
Act’) on 2.5.2000. The impugned Act was on the same lines as the Ordinance
No. 9 of 1999. Consequently the Act was also challenged and as stated above
the petition being dismissed these appeals are now before us.
Mr. P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel led the argument on behalf of the
appellants, his arguments were supported and supplemented by Mr. P.S.
Mishra, learned senior counsel, Mr. Shiv Pujan Singh and Mr. T. Raja, the
other learned counsel appearing for the appellants.
The contentions advanced on behalf of the appellants are that the State
Legislature has no competence to make any law in regard to bifurcation of
the Presidential List of Scheduled Castes prepared under Article 341(1) of
the Constitution, therefore the impugned legislation being one solely meant
for sub-dividing or sub-grouping the castes enumerated in the Presidential
List, the same suffers from lack of legislative competence.
It is further submitted that once the castes are put in the Presidential
List, the said castes become one homogeneous class for all purposes under
the Constitution, therefore, there could be no further division of the said
castes in the Scheduled List by any Act of the State Legislature. His
further submission was that in the guise of exercising its legislative
competence under Entry 41 in List II or Entry 25 of List III the State
Legislature cannot exercise its legislative power so as to make a law
tinkering with the Presidential List because the said Entries do not permit
any law being made in regard to Scheduled Castes. In the guise of providing
opportunity to some of the castes in the list of Scheduled Castes the State
can not invoke Entry 41 of List II and Entry 25 of List III to divide the
Scheduled Castes. According to the learned counsel the impugned enactment
does not really deal with the field of Legislation contemplated under the
said Entries but in reality is targeted to sub-divide the Scheduled Castes.
Alternatively, he submitted the classification or sub-grouping made by the
State Legislature amounting to sub-classification or micro classification
of the Scheduled Caste is violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of
India.
One of the arguments addressed on behalf of the appellant is that
allotting a separate percentage of reservation from amongst the total
reservation allotted to the Scheduled Castes to different groups amongst
the Scheduled Castes amounted to depriving one class of the benefits of
such reservation at least partly. It is also argued that the impugned
legislation was bad because the Report of the National Commission was not
placed before the Legislature as required under Article 338(9) of the
Constitution of India.
On behalf of the respondents Shri K.K. Venugopal, learned senior counsel
appearing for the State who led the argument on behalf of the respondents,
contended Article 341 only empowers the President to specify the castes in
the Presidential List and the Parliament to include or exclude from the
specified list any caste or tribe and beyond that no further legislative or
executive power is vested with the Union of India or the Parliament to
decide to what extent the castes included in the Scheduled Castes List
should be given the benefit of reservation which according to the learned
counsel depended upon their degree of backwardness. His further argument is
that the authority to decide to provide reservation or not, and if yes,
then the quantum of reservation to be provided is the exclusive privilege
of the State. In that process the State will have to keep in mind the
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extent of backwardness of a group be it other backward class, Scheduled
Caste or Scheduled Tribe. Therefore, having found a class of persons within
the Scheduled Castes as having been deprived of such benefits the State has
the exclusive legislative power to make such grouping for reservation under
Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution subject, of course, to
Articles 245-246 of the Constitution. Since in the instant case there is no
allegation that there has been any violation of Articles 245-246, the
argument of lack of legislative competence advanced on behalf of the
appellant should fail. He further submitted that there is an obligation on
the State under Article 16(4) to identify the group of backward class of
citizens which in the opinion of the State is not adequately represented in
the service under the State and make reservation in their favour for such
appointments and under Article 15(4) of the Constitution there is an
obligation on the State to make special provisions for the advancement of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and what the State has sought to do
under the impugned Act was only to make such a provisions to fulfil the
constitutional obligation after due enquiry, hence, the allegation of
violation of Article 14 cannot be sustained. He strongly relied on the
findings of fact recorded in Justice Raju Commission’s report which
according to him establishes that some particular groups within the
Scheduled Castes have cornered all the benefits at the cost of others in
the said List, therefore, with a view to see that the benefit of
reservation percolates to the weaker of the weakest it had become necessary
to enact the impugned law. The learned counsel submitted that by re-
grouping the castes in the Scheduled Caste List there is no
reclassification or micro classification as contended by the appellants.
Some other counsels also argued that neither Article 341 nor any other
provisions of the Constitution prohibits the State from performing its
obligations under Articles 15(4), 16(4) and 16(4A) of the Constitution and
categorising the various castes found in the Presidential List of Scheduled
Castes based on inter-se backwardness within them. Reference was also made
to the Constituent Assembly Debates and Reports to point out that it was
the intention of the Constitution makers to confer the power of
classification of Scheduled Castes on the President or the Parliament as
the case may be under Article 341 of the Constitution. A further
classification of the caste within the List if became necessary, the same
could be done by the State only under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the
Constitution.
It was also argued that further classification of the backward class is
permissible in view of the judgment of this Court in the case of Indra
Sawhney v. Union of India and Ors. 1992 (Supp.3) SCC 217, the principles
laid down therein was applicable even to the Scheduled Castes. It was also
argued that the enactment was in the form of affirmative action to fulfil
the constitutional objects and the courts should not interfere in such
efforts of the Legislature. Reliance was also placed on the recommendations
made by the National Commission for Scheduled Castes and in its Report a
further argument addressed on behalf of the respondents is that even if
some castes in the Presidential List of Scheduled Castes get excluded from
the benefit of reservation made by the State that by itself would not take
the caste out of the List of Scheduled Castes because they will continue to
be entitled to other benefits that are being provided by the State to the
Scheduled Castes.
In regard to manner in which the constitutional provisions should be
interpreted, reliance was placed in the case of Her Majesty the Queen v.
Burah, 1878 Vol. III 889 contending that while interpreting the
constitutional provisions the court should try to give purposive
interpretation rather than restricted meaning.
From the pleadings on record and arguments addressed before us three
questions arise for our consideration:-
(1) Whether the impugned Act is violative of Article 341(2) of the
Constitution of India?
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(2) Whether the impugned enactment is constitutionally invalid for lack of
legislation competence?
(3) Whether the impugned enactment creates sub-classification or micro
classification of Scheduled Castes so as to violate Article 14 of the
Constitution of India?
We will first consider the effect of Article 341 of the Constitution
and examine whether the State could, in the guise of providing reservation
for the weaker of the weakest, tinker with the Presidential List by sub-
dividing the castes mentioned in the Presidential List into different
groups. Article 341 which is found in Part XVI of the Constitution refers
to special provisions relating to certain classes which includes the
Scheduled Castes. This Article provides that the President may with respect
to any State or Union Territory after consultation with the Governor
thereof by Public Notification, specify the castes, races or tribes or
parts of or groups within castes, races or tribes which shall for the
purposes of this Constitution be deemed to be Scheduled Castes in relation
to that State or Union Territory. This indicates that there can be only one
List of Scheduled Caste in regard to a State and that List should include
all specified castes, races or tribes or part or groups notified in that
Presidential List. Any inclusion or exclusion from the said list can only
be done by the Parliament under Article 341(2) of the Constitution of
India. In the entire Constitution wherever reference has been made to
"Scheduled Castes" it refers only to the list prepared by the President
under Article 341 and there is no reference to any sub-classification or
division in the said list except, may be, for the limited purpose of
Article 330, which refers to reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes in
the House of People, which is not applicable to the facts of this case. It
is also clear from the above Article 341 that except for a limited power of
making an exclusion or inclusion in the list by an Act of Parliament there
is no provision either to sub-divide, sub-classify or sub-group these
castes which are found in the Presidential List of Scheduled Castes.
Therefore, it is clear that the Constitution intended all the castes
including the sub-castes, races and tribes mentioned in the list to be
members of one group for the purpose of the Constitution and this group
could not be sub-divided for any purpose. A reference to the Constituent
Assembly in this regard may be useful at this stage.
In the Draft Constitution, there was no Article similar to Article 341
as is found in the present Constitution. Noticing the need for creating a
list of Scheduled Castes a Draft Article 300A was introduced in the Draft
Constitution and while introducing the same Dr. Ambedkar stated the object
of introducing the said Article in the following words : -
"The object of these two articles, as I stated, was to eliminate the
necessity of burdening the Constitution with long lists of Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes. It is now proposed that the President, in
consultation with the Governor or Ruler of a State should have the power to
issue a general notification in the Gazette specifying all the Castes and
tribes or groups thereof deemed to be Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
for the purposes of the privileges which have been defined for them in the
Constitution. The only limitation that has been imposed is this: that once
a notification has been issued by the President, which, undoubtedly , he
will be issuing in consultation with and on the advice of the Government of
each State, thereafter, if any elimination was to be made from the List so
notified or any addition was to be made, that must be made by Parliament
and not by the President. The object is to eliminate any kind of political
factors having a play in the matter of the disturbance in the Schedule so
published by the President." (emphasis supplied) (CAD, Vol. 9, Pg. 1637)
A discussion that ensued in regard to the framing of this Article
indicates that there was an attempt on the part of some of the Members of
the Constituent Assembly to empower the States also to interfere with the
list prepared by the President under the said Article. As a matter of fact
an amendment to this effect was also moved by Shri Kuladhar Chaliha, who
while moving the said amendment stated thus:-
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"That in amendment No. 201 of List V (Eighth Week) in clause (2) of the
proposed new article 300B after the words ’Parliament may’ the words ’and
subject to its decision the State Legislature’ be inserted". (CAD,
Vol.9,Pg.1638)
Speaking on the amendment Shri Chaliha stated :-
"I have always been fighting that the Governor should have power to
safeguard the rights of the Tribes. I am glad in some measure this has been
conceded. Yet I find certain amount of suspicion in that the State
Legislature is neglected. The Drafting Committee has not allowed the State
Legislature to have a voice. In order to fill up that lacuna I have said
that Parliament may and subject to its decision the State Legislature.
Somehow or other I feel you have neglected it. In these you have covered a
good deal which you had objected to in the past. The Governor has been
given power I am glad to say. The only thing is provincial assemblies have
no voice in this. Whatever Parliament says they are bound by it; but if
there is anything which consistently with the orders of the Parliament they
can do anything, they should be allowed to have the power. That is why I
have moved this. However, I am thankful this time that the Drafting
Committee has assimilated good ideas and only provincial assemblies have
been neglected. However, the Governor is there--that is an improvement--
Parliament is there and the President is there. Therefore, I thank the
Drafting Committee for this". (CAD, Vol.9,Pg.1638)
Opposing this amendment Shri V.I. Muniswami Pillai said among other
things as follows :-
"Sir, I am grateful to the Drafting Committee and also to the Chairman of
that Committee for making the second portion of it very clear, that in
future, after the declaration by the President as to who will be the
Scheduled Castes, and when there is need for including any other class or
to exclude anybody or any community from the list of Scheduled Castes that
must be by the word of Parliament. I feel grateful to him for bringing in
this clause, because I know, as a matter of fact, when Harijans behave
independently or asserting their right on some matters, the Ministers in
some Provinces not only take note and action against those members, but
they bring the community to which that particular individual belongs; and
thereby not only the individual, but also the community that comes under
that category of Scheduled Castes are harassed. By this provision, I think
the danger is removed". (Emphasis supplied) (CAD, Vol.9, Pg. 1639)
After the above discussion it is seen that this amendment came to be
defeated and the original draft Article was approved by the Constituent
Assembly which was renumbered as Article 341 in the present Constitution.
This part of the Constituent Assembly Debate coupled with the fact that
Article 341 makes it clear that the State Legislature or its executive has
no power of "disturbing" (term used by Dr. Ambedkar) the Presidential List
of Scheduled Castes for the State.
It is also clear from the Articles in part XVI of the Constitution that
the power of the State to deal with the Scheduled Castes list is totally
absent except to bear in mind the required maintenance of efficiency of
administration in making of appointments which is found in Article 335.
Therefore any executive action or legislative enactment which
interferes, disturbs, re-arranges, re-groups or re- classifies the various
castes found in the Presidential List will be violative of scheme of the
Constitution and will be violative of Article 341 of the Constitution.
We will now consider whether the Scheduled Castes List prepared by the
President under Article 341(1) forms one class of homogeneous group or does
it still continue to be a list consisting of different castes, sub-castes,
tribes etc. We have earlier noticed the fact that the Constitution has
provided for only one list of Scheduled Castes to be prepared by the
President with a limited power of inclusion and exclusion by the
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Parliament. The Constitution intended that all the castes included in the
said Schedule would be "deemed to be" one class of persons but arguments
have been addressed to the contrary stating that in spite of the
Presidential List these castes continue to hold their birth mark and remain
to be separate and individual caste though put in one List by the
President. It is the contention of the respondents that by merely including
them in a List by the President these castes do not become a homogeneous
group, therefore, to fulfil the constitutional obligation of providing an
opportunity to these castes more so to the weaker amongst them, it is
permissible to make a classification within this class, as was made
permissible in regard to other backward classes (OBC) by this Court in
Indra Sawhney’s case (supra). We cannot accept this argument for more than
one reason.
It cannot be denied that all the castes included in the Presidential
List for a State are deemed to be Scheduled Castes, which means they form a
class by themselves.
In State of Kerala and Anr. v. N.M.Thomas and Ors., Mathew, J.
discussing the status of the caste found in the Presidential List
observed:-
"This shows that it is by virtue of the notification of the President that
the Scheduled castes come into being. Though the members of the scheduled
castes are drawn from castes, races or tribes, they attain a new Status by
virtue of the Presidential notification".
(Emphasis supplied).
Krishna Iyer, J. speaking in the same case with reference to the status
of castes included in the Presidential List had this to say :-
"We may clear the clog of Article 16(2) as it stems from a confusion about
caste in the terminology of scheduled castes and scheduled tribes. This
latter expression has been defined in Articles 341 and 342. A bare reading
brings out the quintessential concept that they are no castes in the Hindu
fold but an amalgam of castes, races, groups, tribes, communities or parts
thereof found on investigation to be the lowliest and in need of massive
State aid and notified as such by the President". (para 135)
(Emphasis supplied)
According to Justice Krishna Iyer, though there are no castes, races,
groups, tribes, communities or parts thereof in Hinduism, the President on
investigation having found some of the communities within amalgam as being
lowliest and in need of massive State aid included them in one class called
the Scheduled Castes. The sequitor thereof is that Scheduled Castes are one
class for the purposes of the Constitution.
Justice Fazal Ali in the very same case referring to caste enumerated
in the list of Scheduled Caste stated thus in paragraph 169 :-
"Thus in view of these provisions the members of the scheduled
castes and the scheduled tribes have been given a special status in
the Constitution and they constitute a class by themselves".
(Emphasis supplied.)
Thus from the scheme of the Constitution, Article 341 and above
opinions of this Court in the case of N.M. Thomas (supra), it is clear that
the castes once included in the Presidential List, form a class by
themselves. If they are one class under the Constitution, any division of
these classes of persons based on any consideration would amount to
tinkering with the Presidential List.
The next question for our consideration is : whether the impugned
enactment is within the legislative competence of the State Legislature ?
According to the respondent-State, it is empowered to make reservations for
the backward classes which include the Scheduled Castes as contemplated
under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution. Since the impugned
enactment contemplates reservation in the field of education and in the
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field of services under the State, the State Legislature derives its
legislative competence under Entry 41 of List II and Entry 25 of List III
of the VII Schedule which are the fields available to the State to make
laws in regard to education and services in the State. Therefore, it has
the necessary legislative competence to enact the impugned legislation
which only provides for reservation to the Scheduled Castes who are the
most backward of the backward classes.
The appellants have argued that the impugned Act in reality is not an
enactment providing for reservation for the Scheduled Castes in the
educational institutions and in the services of the State. They further
contended that such reservation has already been provided when the State
took a decision to exercise its power under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) and
made reservations for the backward classes in the State. In that process,
it had already allotted 15% of the reserved quota in favour of the
Scheduled Castes. Therefore, the State had already exercised its
constitutional power of making reservations under Articles 15(4) and 16(4).
It is further contended that by the impugned Act, the State has only
divided the Scheduled Castes in the Presidential List by re-grouping them
into four groups. For making such re-grouping of the Scheduled Castes List,
the State neither can rely upon Articles 15(4) and 16(4) nor on Entry 41 of
List II and Entry 25 of List III of the VII Schedule.
One of the proven methods of examining the legislative competence of an
enactment is by the application of doctrine of pith and substance. This
doctrine is applied when the legislative competence of a Legislature with
regard to a particular enactment is challenged with reference to the
Entries in various lists and if there is a challenge to the legislative
competence the courts will try to ascertain the pith and substance of such
enactment on a scrutiny of the Act in question. (See : Kartar Singh v.
State of Punjab ). In this process, it is necessary for the courts to go
into and examine the true character of the enactment, its object, its scope
and effect to find out whether the enactment in question is genuinely
referable to the field of legislation allotted to the State under the
constitutional scheme.
Bearing in mind the above principle of the doctrine of pith and
substance, if we examine the impugned Act then we notice that the Preamble
to the Act says that it is an Act to provide for rationalisation of
reservations to the Scheduled Castes in the State of Andhra Pradesh to
ensure their unified and uniform progress in the society and for matters
connected therewith and incidental thereto. The Preamble also shows that
the same is being enacted with a view to give effect to Article 38(2) found
in Part IV of the Directive Principles of the State Policy of the
Constitution. If the objects stated in the enactment were the sole criteria
for judging the true nature of the enactment then the impugned enactment
satisfies the requirement on application of the doctrine of pith and
substance to establish the State’s legislative competence, but that is not
the sole criteria. As noted above, the Court will have to examine not only
the object of the Act as stated in the statute but also its scope and
effect to find out whether the enactment in question is genuinely referable
to the field of legislation allotted to the State.
On a detailed perusal of Act it is seen that Section 3 is the only
substantive provision in the Act, rest of the provisions are only
procedural. Section 3 of the Act provides for the creation of 4 groups out
of the castes enumerated in the Presidential List of the State. After the
re-grouping it provides for the proportionate allotment of the reservation
already made in favour of the Scheduled Castes amongst these 4 groups.
Beyond that the Act does not provide for anything else. Since the State had
already allotted 15% of the total quota of the reservation available for
the backward classes to the Scheduled Castes the question of allotting any
reservation under this enactment to the backward classes does not arise.
Therefore, it is clear that the purpose or the true intendment of this Act
is only to first divide the castes in the Presidential List of the
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Scheduled Castes into 4 groups and then divide 15% of reservation allotted
to the Scheduled Castes as a class amongst these 4 groups. Thus it is clear
that the Act does not for the first time provide for reservation to the
Scheduled Castes but only intends to re-distribute the reservation already
made by sub-classifying the Scheduled Castes which is otherwise held to be
a class by itself. It is a well settled principle in law that reservation
to a backward class is not a constitutional mandate. It is the prerogative
of the State concerned if they so desire, with an object of providing
opportunity of advancement in the society to certain backward classes which
includes the Scheduled Castes to reserve certain seats in educational
institutions under Article 15(4) and in public services of the State under
Article 16(4). That part of its constitutional obligation, as stated above,
has already been fulfilled by the State. Having done so, it is not open to
the State to sub-classify a class already recognised by the Constitution
and allot a portion of the already reserved quota amongst the State created
sub-class within the List of Scheduled Castes. From the discussion herein
above, it is clear that the primary object of the impugned enactment is to
create groups of sub-castes in the List of Scheduled Castes applicable to
the State and, in our opinion, apportionment of the reservation is only
secondary and consequential. Whatever may be the object of this sub-
classification and apportionment of the reservation, we think the State
cannot claim legislative power to make a law dividing the Scheduled Castes
List of the State by tracing its legislative competence to Entry 41 of List
II or Entry 25 of List III. Therefore, we are of the opinion that in pith
and substance the enactment is not a law governing the field of education
or the field of State Public Services.
The last question that comes up for our consideration is : whether the
impugned enactment creates sub-classification or micro classification of
the Scheduled Castes so as to violate Article 14 of the Constitution.
We have earlier noticed that by the impugned Act the State has
regrouped the 59 castes found in the Presidential List into 4 separate
groups and allotted them different percentage out of the total reservation
made for Scheduled Castes as a class. We have also noticed from Article 341
and the judgment of this Court in N.M. Thomas (supra) all the castes in the
Schedule acquire a special status of a class and all the castes in the
schedule are deemed to be a class. Under the States reservation policy the
backward class consists of other backward class, Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. Therefore, there is already a classification for the
purpose of reservation. In that background the question that arises is
whether further classification amongst the class of Scheduled Castes for
the very same object of providing reservation is permissible and if so will
it stand the test of Article 14.
In The State of Jammu and Kashmir v. Triloki Nath Khosa and Ors., this
Court held :
"29. This argument, as presented, is attractive but it assumes in
the Court a right of scrutiny somewhat wider than is generally
recognised. Article 16 of the Constitution which ensures to all
citizen equality of opportunity in matters relating to employment
is but an instance or incident of the guarantee of equality
contained in Article 14. The concept of equal opportunity
undoubtedly permeates the whole spectrum of an individual’s
employment from appointment through promotion and termination to
the payment of gratuity and pension. But the concept of equality
has an inherent limitation arising from the very nature of the
constitutional guarantee. Equality is for equals. That is to say
that those who are similarly circumstanced are entitled to an equal
treatment.
31. Classification, however, is fraught with the danger that it may
produce artificial inequalities and therefore, the right to
classify is hedged in with salient restraints; or else, the
guarantee of equality will be submerged in class legislation
masquerading as laws meant to govern well marked classes
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characterized by different and distinct attainments.
Classification, therefore, must be truly founded on substantial
differences which distinguish persons grouped together from those
left out of the group and such differential attributes must bear a
just and rational relation to the object sought to be achieved.
51. But we hope that this judgment will not be construed as a
charter for making minute and microcosmic classifications.
Excellence is, or ought to be, the goal of all good governments and
excellence and equality are not friendly bed-fellows. A pragmatic
approach has therefore to be adopted in order to harmonize the
requirements of public services with the aspirations of public
servants. But let us not evolve, through imperceptible extensions,
a theory of classification which may subvert, perhaps submerge, the
precious guarantee of equality. The eminent spirit of an ideal
society is equality and so we must not be left to ask in
wonderment: what after all is the operational residue of equality
and equal opportunity?
57. Mini-classifications based on micro- distinctions are false to
our egalitarian faith and only substantial and straightforward
classifications plainly promoting relevant goals can have
constitutional validity. To overdo classification is to undo
equality. If in this case Government had prescribed that only those
degree holders who had secured over 70 per cent marks could become
Chief Engineers and those with 60 per cent alone be eligible to be
Superintending Engineers or that foreign degrees would be preferred
we would have unhesitatingly voided it."
Said decision has been followed by this Court in Food Corporation of India
and Ors. v. Om Prakash Sharma and Ors. and other cases.
In Om Prakash Sharma’s case (supra) this Court noticed that the
Constitution Bench in Triloki Nath Khosa (supra) while deciding the case
took care to add that one has always to bear in mind the facts and
circumstances of the case in order to judge the validity of a
classification. Applying the aforesaid principles the Court is required to
interpret the provisions of the impugned Act on the touchstone of Clause
(4) of Article 15 and Clause (4) of Article 16 of the Constitution of
India. Articles 14, 15 and 16 form a group of provisions guaranteeing
equality. Such provisions confer a right of equality to each individual
citizen. Article 15 prohibits discrimination. Article 16 confers a right to
equality of opportunity for being considered for public employment.
In Akhil Bharatiya Soshit Karamchari Sangh (Railway) represented by its
Assistant General Secretary on behalf of the Asson.Etc. v. Union of India
and Ors., Krishna Iyer, J. stated:
"78... Since a contrary view is possible and has been taken by some
judges a verdict need not be rested on the view that SCs are not
castes, Even assuming they are, classification, if permitted, will
validate to the differential rules for promotion. Moreover, Article
16(4) is an exception to Article 16(2) also.
22... The success of State action under Art. 16(4) consists in the
speed with which result-oriented reservation withers away as no
longer a need, not in the everwidening and everlasting operation of
an exception (Art. 16(4) ) as if it were a super-fundamental right
to continue backward all the time ..
37... The first sub-article speaks of equality and the second sub-
article amplifies its content by expressly interdicting caste as a
ground of discrimination. Article 16(4) imparts to the seemingly
static equality embedded in Article 16(1) a dynamic quality by
importing equalisation strategies geared to the eventual
achievement of equality as permissible State action, viewed as an
amplification of Art. 16(1) or as an exception to it. The same
observation will hold good for the sub-articles of Article 15..."
We have already held that the members of Scheduled Castes form a class
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by themselves and any further sub- classification would be impermissible
while applying the principle of reservation.
On behalf of the respondents, it was pointed out that in Indra Sahani’s
case(supra), the court had permitted sub- classification of other backward
communities, as backward and more backward based on their comparative under
development, therefore, the similar classification amongst the class
enumerated in the Presidential List of Scheduled Castes is permissible in
law. We do not think the principles laid down in Indra Sahani’s case for
sub-classification of other backward classes can be applied as a precedent
law for sub- classification or sub-grouping Scheduled Castes in the
Presidential List because that very judgment itself has specifically held
that sub-division of other backward classes is not applicable to Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes. This we think is for the obvious reason, i.e.
Constitution itself has kept the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes List
out of interference by the State Governments.
Legal constitutional policy adumbrated in a statute must answer the
test of Article 14 of the Constitution of India. Classification whether
permissible or not must be judged on the touchstone of the object sought to
be achieved. If the object of reservation is to take affirmative action in
favour of a class which is socially, educationally and economically
backward, the State’s jurisdiction while exercising its executive or
legislative function is to decide as to what extent reservation should be
made for them either in Public Service or for obtaining admission in
educational institutions. In our opinion, such a class cannot be sub-
divided so as to give more preference to a miniscule proportion of the
Scheduled Castes in preference to other members of the same class.
Furthermore, the emphasis on efficient administration placed by Article
335 of the Constitution must also be considered when the claims of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to employment in the services of the
Union are to be considered.
The conglomeration of castes given in the Presidential Order, in our
opinion, should be considered as representing a class as a whole. The
contrary approach of the High Court, in our opinion, was not correct. The
very fact that a legal fiction has been created is itself suggestive of the
fact that the Legislature of a State cannot take any action which would be
contrary to or inconsistent therewith. The very idea of placing different
castes or tribes or group or part thereof in a State as a conglomeration by
way of a deeming definition clearly suggests that they are not to be sub-
divided or sub-classified further. If a class within a class of members of
the Scheduled Castes is created, the same would amount to tinkering with
the List. Such sub-classification would be violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India. It may be true, as has been observed by the High
Court, that the caste system has got stuck up in the Society but with a
view to do away with the evil effect thereof, a legislation which does not
answer the constitutional scheme cannot be upheld. It is also difficult to
agree with the High Court that for the purpose of identifying backwardness,
a further inquiry can be made by appointing a commission as to who amongst
the members of the Scheduled Castes is more backward. If benefits of
reservation are not percolating to them equitably, measures should be taken
to see that they are given such adequate or additional training so as to
enable them to compete with the others but the same would not mean that in
the process of rationalizing the reservation to the Scheduled Castes the
constitutional mandate of Articles 14, 15 and 16 could be violated.
Reservation must be considered from the social objective angle, having
regard to the constitutional scheme, and not as a political issue and,
thus, adequate representation must be given to the members of the Scheduled
Castes as a group and not to two or more groups of persons or members of
castes.
The very fact that the members of the Scheduled Castes are most
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backward amongst the backward classes and the impugned legislation having
already proceeded on the basis that they are not adequately represented
both in terms of Clause (4) of Article 15 and Clause (4) of Article 16 of
the Constitution of India, a further classification by way of micro
classification is not permissible. Such classification of the members of
different classes of people based on their respective castes would also be
violative of the doctrine of reasonableness. Article 341 provides that
exclusion even of a part or a group of castes from the Presidential List
can be done only by the Parliament. The logical corollary thereof would be
that the State Legislatures are forbidden from doing that. A uniform
yardstick must be adopted for giving benefits to the members of the
Scheduled Castes for the purpose of Constitution. The impugned legislation
being contrary to the above constitutional scheme cannot, therefore, be
sustained.
For the reasons stated above, we are of the considered opinion that the
impugned legislation apart from being beyond the legislative competence of
the State is also violative of Article 14 of the Constitution and hence is
liable to declared as ultra vires the Constitution.
The appeals are allowed, impugned Act is declared as ultra vires the
Constitution.
_______________________________________________________________________
SEPARATE CONCURRING JUDGMENT
S.B. Sinha, J.
The vires of a State Legislation of Andhra Pradesh known as the Andhra
Pradesh Scheduled Castes (Rationalisation of Reservations) Act, 2000 (Act
20 of 2000) (for short ’the Act’) purported to have been made in terms of
Entry 41, List II and Entries 23 and 25, List III of the Seventh Schedule
of the Constitution of India was questioned before the High Court. Its
validity has been upheld by a Five Judge Bench of the said Court
correctness whereof is in question before us.
INTRODUCTION:
The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes occupy a special place in our
Constitution. The President of India is the sole repository of the power to
specify the castes, races or tribes or parts of or groups within castes,
races or tribes which shall for the purposes of the Constitution be deemed
to be Scheduled Castes.
Clause (2) of Article 341 of the Constitution confers power only on the
Parliament to include therein or exclude therefrom castes, races or part or
group within any caste etc. By reason of the provisions of the said Act the
members of the Scheduled Castes specified for the State of Andhra Pradesh
had been divided in four different categories and reservations both in
public office as also in education had been earmarked in the manner
specified therein.
HIGH COURT JUDGMENT:
The validity of the said Act has been upheld by the High Court inter
alia on the premise that the State has the exclusive jurisdiction to make
reservation in relation to Public Service and Education. It was further
held that by reason of the provisions of the said Act the Presidential
Order has not been tinkered with.
QUESTIONS:
The questions raised before the High Court were:
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"(1) Whether the State’s legislative power is curtailed or eclipsed by any
provision of the Constitution;
(2) Whether the impugned act is beyond the legislative competence of the
State and is violative of Article 341(2);
(3) Whether the impugned act violates Articles 14, 15 and 16 of the
Constitution;
(4) Whether the impugned legislation is a colourable piece of legislation;
(5) Whether the law declared by the Full Bench operates as res judicata and
the State is debarred from enacting the impugned act; and
(6) Whether the act is invalid for non-compliance with the provisions of
Article 338 of the Constitution.
All answers to the aforementioned questions were rendered in favour of
the State.
HIGH COURT JUDGMENT:
The High Court having regard to Articles 15, 16, 38, 39, 41, 46, 335,
338 and legislative powers of the State under Lists II and III of the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution opined that no technical meaning
should be given to the expression "a caste" as such and further opined that
the conglomeration of castes given in the Presidential Order cannot be
considered as representing a caste as a whole in view of the fact that it
is a deeming definition.
It was observed that an attempt should be made to do away with the evil
of the caste system which has got struck up in the society. Referring to
Doctrine of Federalism and the necessity of distribution of legislative
powers, it was held that States though are not separate sovereigns; neither
Union nor States possess untrammeled sovereignty because the legislative,
executive and judicial powers in India are divided between the Union and
the States. Having regard to the fact that there is no express field of
legislation providing for regulation of reservations, it was opined that
the State is empowered to provide for reservation in the public services
and educational institutions. It was furthermore held that as no citizen
has any fundamental right as regard reservation under the constitutional
scheme, the State would be well within its power to identify the extent of
backwardness of a class of citizens so as give preference to those who may
be more backward on account of their social or economic backwardness and,
thus, would form a distinct class from the general body of the civil
society.
Relying on or on the basis of the purported experience that out of 59
castes specified in the Scheduled Castes for the State of Andhra Pradesh in
the Presidential Order, it was held that as the State in discharge of its
function or duty bound to provide for upliftment of the educational and
social interests of the Scheduled Castes who are most backward classes
amongst the Scheduled Castes, the impugned legislation is valid as thereby
it was perceived that the benefits of reservation had not been percolating
to them equitably so as to rationalize the reservation meant for the
Scheduled Castes.
It was further held that the named castes in the Presidential Order
would jointly and severally be a Scheduled Caste and issuance of
Presidential Order does not denude the State from its legislative
competence to make laws and to adopt such policy decision so as to confer
the benefit of reservation with regard to admissions to educational
institutions and services under the State subject to Article 335 and other
provisions of the Constitution. The Scheduled Castes enumerated in the
Scheduled Castes Order, it was observed, do not lead to an inference that
all of them are equal to each other.
SCHEME OF THE ACT:
Section 2 sets out the definitions. Section 3 is the charging section
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enabling reservation to the extent of 1%, 6%, 7% and 1% to be provided for
categories A, B, C and D respectively in each of the four categories curved
out from the Presidential Order. Section 4 provides for primacy to the
provisions of the Act in relation to the matters stated therein. Section 5,
however, carves out an exception from the purview of the provisions of the
said Act the services and educational institutions coming within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Centre. Section 7 provides for rule making
power. Section 8 declares that nothing therein shall be construed as
including or excluding from or further classification of the list of
Scheduled Castes with respect to the State.
Pursuant to or in furtherance of the said legislation, the roster
points for eligible candidates for public appointments or posts and
admission to educational institutions were also recast.
ISSUE:
The short question which arises for consideration is as to whether by
reason of the impugned legislation the State has exceeded its legislative
power,
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE ACT:
Equality Clause:
It is true that by reason of Article 341 of the Constitution of India
no benefit other than expressly provided for in the Constitution, as, for
example, Article 320 or Article 322, had been conferred on a member of
Scheduled Caste. It is also not in doubt or dispute that the State has the
legislative competence to provide for reservations both in the field of
public services as also education. Article 15(4) and Article 335 expressly
refer to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Clause (4) of Article
16 although does not refer to Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes, having
regard to the expressions "backward class of citizens" contained therein,
it is judicially interpreted that Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
would come within the purview thereof. Scheduled Caste indisputably is
treated to be more backward than the backward class people.
By reason of the impugned legislation, the State although had not
sought to alter or amend the Scheduled Castes Order made by the President
of India, but admittedly, it sub-divided the members of Scheduled Castes in
four different categories.
It may not be necessary for us to delve deep into the question as to
whether the factual foundation for enacting the said legislation being
based on a report of a Court of Inquiry constituted under Section 3 of the
Commission of Inquiry Act 1952 known as Justice Raju Report is otherwise
laudable or not
By reason of the said legislation, each category of citizens whether
placed in Category A or Category B or Category C or Category D remains
members of most backward class. Indisputably, the policy of reservation or
the extent thereof must have a nexus to the broader question as to whether
the members of Scheduled Castes are adequately represented in public
services or not but by reason of the provisions of the said Act the State
accepts that members of each category are not adequately represented in
public services and, therefore, the state policy of reservation should be
extended to them.
It is, therefore, manifest that the classes of citizens mentioned in
the said Act are not only socially, educationally or economically backward,
they are also entitled to be provided with the benefits of state’s
reservation policy.
Equal protection clause mandates that all persons under like
circumstances should be treated alike. Article 14 is in many respects
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similar to Fourteenth Amendment of the American Constitution, the relevant
portion whereof reads as follows:
"...no State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States: nor shall any
State deprive any person of life liberty or property without due process of
law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of
the laws."
The equal protection clause contained in Fourteenth Amendment of the
American Constitution, however, postulates that it is permissible to
distribute a benefit or a burden on, or partly, on the basis of race - to
use race as a criterion of selection in distributing a benefit or a burden
- is not necessarily to distribute the benefit or the burden on an
"invidious" because there might be a nonracist reason for using race as a
criterion of selection. [See Shaw v. Reno, 509 US 630, 642 (1993)]
Although in the United States of America, affirmative action based on
race is a deeply divisive issue insofar as whereas the proponents thereof
regard the continuance of affirmative action as a litmus test over the
nation’s commitment to racial justice; opponents thereof see it as an
unacceptable violation of the ideal of equality of opportunity and the
principle that government should treat its citizens in a colour-blind
fashion. (See The Affirmative Action Debate, 17 Philosophy & Public Policy
1 (Special Issue, Winter/Spring 1997) (quoting Glenn Loury). Constitution
of India, on the contrary, specifically provides for affirmative action.
Such affirmative action can be based on a nonracist reason for using race
as a criterion of selection.
In a recent decision a question came up before the US Supreme Court in
Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher v. Lee Bollinger (decided on 23rd June,
2003) as regard the validity of guidelines providing for selection method
under which every applicant from an underrepresented racial or ethnic
minority groups was to be automatically awarded 20 points out of 100 points
needed to guarantee admission. The said provision was struck down as being
violative of equality protection clause observing:
"The very nature of a college’s permissible practice of awarding
value to racial diversity means that race must be considered in a
way that increases some applicants’ chances for admission. Since
college admission is not left entirely to inarticulate intuition,
it is hard to see what is inappropriate in assigning some stated
value to a relevant characteristic, whether it be reasoning
ability, writing style, running speed, or minority race. Justice
Powell’s plus factors necessarily are assigned some values. The college
simply does by a numbered scale what the law school accomplishes in its
"holistic review," Grutter, post, at 25; the distinction does not imply
that applicants to the undergraduate college are denied individualized
consideration or a fair chance to compete on the basis of all the various
merits their applications may disclose."
Delivering his minority opinion on his own behalf as also on behalf of
Justice Souter, Justice Ginsburg, however, held:
"Our jurisprudence ranks race a "suspect" category, "not because (race) is
inevitably an impermissible classification, but because it is one which
usually, to our national shame, has been drawn for the purpose of
maintaining racial inequality." Norwalk Core v. Norwalk Redevelopment
Agency, 395 F. 2d 920, 931-932 (CA2 1968) (footnote omitted). But where
race is considered "for the purpose of achieving equality," id., at 932, no
automatic proscription is in order. For as insightfully explained, "the
Constitution is both color blind and color conscious. To avoid conflict
with the equal protection clause, a classification that denies a benefit
causes harm, or imposes a burden must not be based on race. In that sense,
the Constitution is color blind. But the Constitution is color conscious to
prevent discrimination being perpetuated and to undo the effects of past
discrimination. "United States v. Jefferson County Bd. Of Ed., 372 F.2d
836, 876 (CA5 1966)(Wisdom, J.): see Wechsler, The Nationalization of Civil
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Liberties and Civil Rights Supp. To 12 Tex.Q. 10,23(1968) (Brown may be
seen as disallowing racial classifications that "imply an invidious
assessment" while allowing such classifications when "not invidious in
implication" but advanced to "correct inequalities"). Contemporary human
rights documents draw just this line; they distinguish between policies of
oppression and measures designed to accelerate de facto equality. See
Grutter, post at 1 (Ginsburg, J. concurring)(citing the United Nations -
initiated Conventions on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination and on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women)."
The minority opinion of Ginsburg, J. appeals to us and is in tune with
our Constitutional scheme.
Can having regard to the constitutional scheme, the conglomeration of
the members of Scheduled Castes be subjected to further classification is
the question.
Article 14 of the Constitution of India aims at equality. It prohibits
discrimination in any form. At its worst form, it will be violative of
basic and essential feature of the Constitution. [See Maharao Sahib Shri
Bhim Singhji v. Union of India and Ors.].
Reasonableness of sub-classification of the Scheduled Castes must be
judged on the touchstone of the equality clause.
Having regard to the decision of this Court in Indra Sawhney and Ors.
v. Union of India and Ors. [1992 Supp (3) SCC 217], the backward class
citizens can be classified in four different categories - (i) more
backward, (ii) backward, (iii) Scheduled Caste and (iv) Scheduled Tribe. A
contention has been raised that in Indra Sawhney (supra) the Court
permitted a classification amongst other backward classes and as such there
is no reason as to why the said principle shall not be applied to the
members of the Scheduled Castes. In Indra Sawhney (supra) itself this Court
categorically stated that it was not concerned with the question as regard
members of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
It is relevant to note that question No. 5 formulated by Jeevan Reddy,
J. was only in relation to the further division in the backward class into
backward and more backward categories. Advisedly, no question was framed as
regard division of Scheduled Castes into more backward and backward
Scheduled Castes.
There appears to be no good reason for classifying the backward classes
of citizens in four categories; as noticed in the judgment of Brother
Hegde, J. and furthermore the Scheduled Caste Order and Scheduled Tribe
Order provide for conglomeration of castes and tribes and, thus, must be
treated as a distinct and separate class for the purpose of the
Constitution. We may notice that there is no such express provision in the
Constitution in respect of "other backward class".
The preamble to the Constitution proclaims that ’we the people of
India’ adopt, enact and give to ourselves the Constitution of India to
secure to all its citizens justice, liberty and equality. There are a few
Articles in Part IV of the Constitution of India like Articles 38, 39 and
47 which aim at securing equality of opportunity and social justice. The
State in terms of Articles 14, 15(1) and 15(4) of the Constitution had
inter alia made special provisions with regard to admissions in educational
institutions for advancement of Scheduled Castes. Article 16(4) likewise
enables the State from making any provision for the reservation of
appointments or posts in favour of the backward classes under the State.
Inevitably, its meaning is influenced by the legal context in which it must
operate.
Indisputably, only because the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
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and other socially and economically backward class of citizens are not in a
position to compete with the general category candidates, the equality
principle has been adopted by way of affirmative action by the State
Government in making reservations in their favour both as regard admission
in educational institutions and public employment. The doctrine of equality
is the fibre with which constitutional scheme is woven.
Our Constitution permits application of equality clause by grant of
additional protection to the disadvantaged class so as to bring them on
equal platform with other advantaged class of people. Such a class which
requires the benefit of additional protection, thus, cannot be
discriminated interse i.e. between one member of the said class and another
only on a certain presupposition of some advancement by one group over
other although both satisfy the test of abysmal backwardness as also
inadequate representation in public service.
In a case of this nature, the burden of reasonable classification and
its nexus with the object of the legislation is on the State. The State, in
my opinion, has not been able to discharge the said burden.
Reservation:
The essence of reservations basically can be sub-divided into three
categories: (i) Facilitating access to value posts or resources whereby
seats are reserved in the Legislature in Government services and in
academic institutions; (ii) Providing for scholarships, land allotments,
grants for health care, etc. and (iii) Special protections like prohibiting
exploitation of Scheduled Castes by others with a view to promote the
educational and economic interests of the weaker sections of the people and
in particular of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes who, for
centuries, have been deprived of their legitimate due, so that they may be
brought to the same platform so as to enable them to compete with the
others. In relation to the backwardness arguably reservation in favour of a
caste cannot be by itself a ground for grant thereof but may only by one of
the several factors for determining the criteria of backwardness under
Article 16(4) which provides for the following criteria:
(i) There must be a backward class of citizens.
(ii) The said class in the opinion of the State is not adequately
represented on the services of the State.
Provision for reservation can be made only when both the conditions are
satisfied.
Constitution of India is not caste blind and, thus, if the citizens
belonging to a caste as such be rationally assumed backward, the entire
caste can be as such be recognized as Backward Class. Articles 15(2) and
16(2) of the Constitution prohibit discrimination based ’only on Caste’ and
not ’Caste and something else’.
Determination:
The approach to construe the impugned legislation should not he based
on subjective intention of legislation but should be given an objective
meaning. The meaning is declared by the courts after the application of
relevant interpretative principles so as to construe the constitutionality
of a statute having regard to the object the Constitution makers sought to
achieve. The Constitution makers inserted Articles 341 and 342 with a view
to provide benefits to the members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes as being belonging to a socially, educationally and economically
backward class of citizens. Any legislation which would bring them out of
the purview thereof or tinker with the order issued by the President of
India would be unconstitutional. In Regina (Daly) v. Secretary of State for
the Home Department [(2001) 2 AC 532 at 548], Lord Stein observed that in
the law context is everything. Constitutional law is a part of the Indian
law and being suprema lax its meaning is subject to textual consideration.
As the Constitution itself treats the members of the Scheduled Castes
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as a single integrated class of most backward citizens, it is not competent
for the Legislature of a State to sub-divide them into separate
compartments with a separate percentage of reservation for each resulting
in discouraging merit as well as the endeavour of individual members to
excel - vide Fundamental Duty under Article 51A(j). The operation of
reservation policy ought to be in a manner consistent with the objective of
promoting fraternity among all citizens, assuring, the dignity of the
individual and unity of the Nation.
The aim of the Constitution is to equip each member of the weaker
sections with the ability to compete with other citizens with dignity on a
level playing field. The pitiable condition of Scheduled Castes is
recognized by the Constitution as a national problem. Therefore, the
responsibility of improving the lot of Scheduled Castes has been entrusted
to the National Commission and the Parliament.
The provisions of Article 330(1)(b)(c) show that the Constitution has
treated Scheduled Tribes in the autonomous districts of Assam as a separate
category distinct from all other Scheduled Tribes. This clearly indicates
that when the Constitution-makers wanted to make a sub-classification of
Scheduled Tribes, they have themselves made it in the text of the
Constitution itself and have not empowered any Legislature or Government to
make such a sub-classification. Except to the extent the Constitution
itself makes a sub-classification, there cannot be grouping of Scheduled
Castes into different categories for differential treatment. Only exclusion
of castes, parts or groups within the castes from the list of Scheduled
Castes is contemplated by law made by Parliament, but not sub-
classification of Scheduled Castes and that too on the basis of caste.
In Indra Sawhney and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors. [1992 Supp (3) SCC
217] analyzing the caste factor vis-a-vis the necessity for making
reservation it was observed:
"Even if one ceases to follow that occupation, still he remains and
continues a member of that group. To repeat, it is a socially and
occupationally homogeneous class. Endogamy is its main characteristic. Its
social status and standing depend upon the nature of the occupation
followed by it. Lowlier the occupation lowlier the social standing of the
class in the graded hierarchy. In rural India, occupation-caste nexus is
true even today. Caste-occupation-poverty’ cycle is thus an ever present
reality. In rural India, it is strikingly apparent; in urban centres, there
may be some dilution. But since rural India and rural population is still
the overwhelmingly predominant fact of life in India, the reality remains.
All the decisions since Balaji speak of this ’cast-occupation-poverty’
nexus. The language and emphasis may vary but the theme remains the same.
This is the stark reality notwithstanding all our protestations and
abhorrence and all attempts at weeding out this phenomenon. We are not
saying it ought to be encouraged. It should not be. It must be eradicated.
That is the ideal - the goal. But any programme towards betterment of these
sections-classes of society and any programme designed to eradicate this
evil must recognise this ground reality and attune its programme
accordingly. Merely burying our heads in the sand - Ostrich-like - wouldn’t
help."
The validity of the Act must be tested on the touchstone of the
aforementioned tests.
What in my considered view, is necessary to be kept in mind for
determining the validity of the impugned statute would be: (i) whether a
member of Scheduled Caste is still backward, (ii) whether they require
special protection so as to invoke equality clause.
In India, States are not separate sovereigns. The respective
legislative competence of the Union and the States have although been
delineated under Article 246 but the same would be subject to other
provisions thereof. The legislature, executive and judicial powers in India
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are divided between the Union and the States. The States indisputably have
been granted legislative competence as regard education (Entry 25, List
III) and public employment (Entry 41, List II) but the same is
circumscribed by Article 341 of the Constitution of India.
Jeevan Reddy, J. incidentally who wrote the majority judgment in Indra
Sawhney (supra) made a reference to his judgment in Narayana Rao and Anr.
v. State of A.P. and Anr., AIR 1987 AP 57 wherein the learned Judge opined:
"94...Article 15(4) or Article 16(4) are not designed to achieve abolition
of caste-system-much less to remove the meanness or other evils in the
society. They are designed to provide opportunities in education, services
and other fields to raise the educational social and economic levels of
those lagging behind, and once this is achieved, these Articles must be
deemed to have served their purpose. If so. excluding those who have
already attained such economic well-being (inter-linked as it is with
social and educational advancement) from the special benefits provided
under these clauses cannot be called unreasonable or discriminatory or
arbitrary much less contrary to the intention of the founding-fathers. It
can be reasonably presumed that these people have ceased to be socially if
not educationally backward and hence do not require the preferential
treatment contemplated by Articles 15(4) and 16(4). Moreover, in the face
of the repeated pronouncements of the Supreme Court referred to above,
these arguments cannot be countenanced. Not only it does not amount to
creating a class within a class, it is a proper delineation of classes..."
Those observations were confined to backward classes and not SCs and
STs. The learned Judge in Indra Sawhney (supra) also struck to the said
view.
The impugned Act as also the judgment of the High Court are premised on
the observations in Indra Sawhney (supra) that there is no constitutional
or legal bar for a State in categorizing the backward classes as backward
and more backward class. This Court, however, while referring to Article
16(4) of the Constitution stated that it recognized only one class, viz.,
backward class of citizens in the following terms:
"At the outset we may state that for the purpose of this discussion, we
keep aside the. Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes (since they are
admittedly included within the backward classes), except to remark that
backward classes contemplated by Article 16(4) do comprise some castes -
for it cannot be denied that Scheduled Castes include quite a few castes."
Scheduled Caste, however, is not a caste in terms of its definition as
contained in Article 366(24) of the Constitution of India. They are brought
within the purview of the said category by reason of their abysmal
backwardness. Scheduled Caste consists of not only the people who belong to
some backward caste but also race or tribe or part of or groups within
castes, races or tribes. They are not merely backward but the backwardmost.
A person even does not cease to be a Scheduled Caste automatically even on
his conversion to another religion. (See Punit Raj v. Dinesh Dhaudhary, and
State of Kerala and Anr. v. Chandramohanan).
It is also relevant to note that the two groups, i.e., socially and
educationally backward class and Scheduled Castes were differentiated for
the purpose of Clause (4) of Article 15 of the Constitution as therein
Scheduled Castes had been recognized, in the nature of things, to be
backward but it is also recognized that besides them, there may be other
groups of persons who are backward and deserve preferential treatment.
In Indra Sawhney (supra) while applying the ’Means-test’ and ’Creamy
layer test’, it was observed:
"it is not a question of permissibility or desirability of such test but
one of proper and more appropriate identification of a class - a backward
class. The very concept of a class denotes a number of persons having
certain common traits which distinguish them from the others. In a backward
class under Clause (4) of Article 16, if the connecting link is the social
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backwardness, it should broadly be the same in a given class. If some of
the members are far too advanced socially (which in the context,
necessarily means economically and, may also mean, educationally) the
connecting thread between them and the remaining class snaps. They would be
misfits in the class. Alter excluding them alone, would the class be a
compact class. In fact, such exclusion benefits the truly backward.
Difficulty, however, really lies in drawing the line - how and where to
draw the line? For, while drawing the line, it should be ensured that it
does not result in taking away with one hand what is given by the other.
The basis of exclusion should not merely be economic, unless, of course,
the economic advancement is so high that it necessarily means social
advancement. Let us illustrate the point. A member of backward class, say a
member of carpenter caste, goes to Middle East and works there as a
carpenter. If you take his annual income in rupees, it would be fairly high
from the Indian standard. Is he to be excluded from the Backward Class? Are
his children in India to be deprived of the benefit of Article 16(4)?
Situation may, however, be different, if he rises so high economically as
to become say a factory owner himself. In such a situation, his social
status also rises. He himself would be in a position to provide employment
to others. In such a case, his income is merely a measure of his social
status."
But we must state that whenever such a situation arises in respect of
Scheduled Caste, it will be the Parliament alone to take the necessary
legislative steps in terms of Clause (2) of Article 341 of the
Constitution. The States concededly do not have the legislative competence
therefore.
The State’s argument to justify the legislation on the basis of
population ratio also would not satisfy the test. The population of ’Relli’
which is the most backward category consists of 1.67% only and although
hardly any person of that community had been getting the benefits of
education, they are placed in Category A wherefor the benefits of
reservation being 1%; whereas those belonging to Adi-Andhra having 8.96% of
population and where the students belonging to that community have been
taking admissions in all disciplines had been placed in Category D had also
been provided reservation to the extent of 1%. We do not know on what basis
both the categories have been put in the same class.
The legislation may not be amenable to challenge on the ground of
violation of Article 14 of the Constitution whence it is intended to giving
effect to principles specified under Article 15 or when the differentiation
is not unreasonable or arbitrary but when a classification is made which is
per se violative of the constitutional provisions, the same cannot be
upheld. While reasonable classification is permissible what would be
impermissible is micro classification or mini classification.
In Triloki Nath and Anr. v. State of Jammu & Kashmir and Ors. [(1969)
1 SCR 103] it was stated:
"...The members of an entire caste or community may in the social, economic
and educational scale of values at a given time be backward and may on that
account be treated as a backward class, but that is not because they are
members of a caste or community, but because they form a class. In its
ordinary connotation the expression "class" means a homogeneous section of
the People grouped together because of certain likenesses or common traits,
and who are identifiable by some common attributes such as status, rank,
occupation, residence in a locality, race, religion and the like. Rut for
the purpose of Article 16(4) in determining whether a section forms a
class, a test solely based on caste, community, race, religion, sex,
descent place of birth or residence cannot be adopted, because it would
directly offend the Constitution."
In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradip Tandon and Ors. it was stated:
"The backwardness contemplated under Article 15(4) is both social and
educational. Article 15(4) speaks of backwardness of classes of citizens.
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The accent is on classes of citizens. Article 15(4) also speaks of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Therefore, socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens in Article 15(4) could not be
equated with castes. In M. R. Balaji v. State of Mysore ((1963) Supp 1 SCR
439 : and State of A. P. v. P. Sagar this Court held that classification
of backwardness on the basis of castes would violate both Articles 15(1)
and 15(4).
Broadly stated, neither caste nor race nor religion can be made the basis
of classification for the purposes of determining social and educational
backwardness within the meaning of Article 15(4). When Article 15(1)
forbids discrimination on grounds only of religion, race, caste, caste
cannot be made one of the criteria for determining social and educational
backwardness. If caste or religion is recognised as a criterion of social
and educational backwardness Article 15(4) will stultify Article 15(1). It
is true that Article 15(1) forbids discrimination only on the ground of
religion, race, caste, but when a classification taken recourse to caste as
one of the criteria in determining socially and educationally backward
classes the expression "classes" in that case violates the rule of
expressio unius est exclusio alterius. The socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens are groups other than groups based on caste.
In Kumari K.S. Jayasree and Anr. v. The State of Kerala and Anr., this
Court held:
"...If any classification of backward classes of citizens is based solely
on the caste of the citizen it will perpetuate the vice of caste system.
Again, if the classification is based solely on poverty it will not be
logical. The society is taking steps for uplift of the people. In such a
task groups or classes who are socially and educationally backward are
helped by the society. That is the philosophy of our Constitution. It is in
this context that social backwardness which results from poverty is likely
to be magnified by caste consideration. Occupations, place of habitation
may also be relevant factors in determining who are socially and
educationally backward classes. Social and economic consideration come into
operation in solving the problem and evolving the proper criteria of
determining which classes are socially and educationally backward. That is
why our Constitution provided for special consideration socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens as also schedule castes and
tribes. It is only by directing the society and the State to offer them all
facilities for social and educational uplift that the problem is solved.
In Akhil Bharatiya Soshit Karamchari Sangh (Railway) represented by
its Assistant General Secretary on behalf of the Asson. Etc. v. Union of
India and Ors., it was opined:
"The President notifies Scheduled Castes not with reference to any caste
characteristics, but their abysmal backwardness, as is evident from the
scheme of Part XVI. He appoints, under Article 338, a Special Officer whose
duty is to investigate into all matters relating to safeguards for the SC &
ST. The Constitution provides not merely for adequate representation of SC
& ST to services and posts under the Union and States, but also provides
for reservation of seats for SC & ST in the legislatures. The cursory study
of the articles relating to the status and safeguards of SC & ST puts it
beyond doubt that the founding fathers have assigned to them a special
place and shown towards them special concern and charged the State with
special mandates to redeem these handicapped human sectors from their
grossly retarded situation. Indeed, they are not merely backward, but are
the backwardmost and cannot be equated with just any other caste in the
Hindu fold. It is, therefore, problematic whether Article 16(2) when it
refers to equality among castes deals with the Scheduled Castes which, as
shown above, may even be made of a plurality of castes or groups or races
and may vary from State of State. Also, a caste, subjected qua caste, to
the most humiliating handicaps may be a backward class although the court
will hesitate to equate caste with class except where the degree of
dismalness is "dreadful...."
(Emphasis supplied )
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This Court in Kailash Chand Sharma v. State of Rajasthan and Ors.
following Pradip Tandon (supra) held an affirmative action as regards
employment of rural residents vis-a-vis the residents in the town is not
sustainable under Clause (4) of Article 16.
It is, therefore, manifest that the backward class which may given the
benefit of Clause (4) of Article 15 or Article 16 must consist of a
homogeneous group - the element of homogeneity being the backwardness
characterizing the class. The link or the thread holding the class
together, thus, should be the backwardness of its members which can never
be supplemented by castes. Classification, thus, may be justified on the
ground that it is a backward class but the same may not stand the scrutiny
or the equality clause when classification is made on the basis of a
backward caste or a section of a backward caste.
Furthermore, Article 16(4) must be read with Article 335 of the
Constitution which emphasizes the fact that efficiency of administration
cannot be sacrificed which would lead to the conclusion that the same
cannot be done to favour less weak sections, i.e., some castes out of the
homogeneous class of Scheduled Castes.
The decision of this Court in State of J&K v. Triloki Nath Khosa and
Ors., to which a detailed reference has been made in the accompanying
judgment of Brother Hegde, J. we may notice that the ratio thereof has
distinctly been noticed and factually differentiated in Food Corporation of
India and Ors. v. Om Prakash Sharma and Ors., K.R. Lakshman and Ors. v.
Karnataka Electricity Board and Ors. [(2001) 1 SCC 442], Kuldeep Kumar
Gupta and Ors. v. H.P. State Electricity Board and Ors. [(2001) 1 SCC 475].
In Om Prakash Sharma (supra), this Court noticed that the Constitution
Bench in Triloki Nath Khosa (supra) while deciding the case took care to
add that one has always to bear in mind the facts and circumstances of the
case in order to judge the validity of a classification.
In Kuldeep Kumar Gupta (supra), Pattanaik, J. (as the learned Chief
Justice then was) in no uncertain terms observed that in Triloki Nath Khosa
(supra) a word of caution has been indicated that the right to classify is
hedged in with salient restraints stating:
"5... Classification must be truly founded on substantial differences which
distinguish persons grouped together from those left out of the group and
such differential attributes must bear a just and rational relation to the
object sought to be achieved and judicial scrutiny extends only to the
consideration whether the classification rests on a reasonable basis and
whether it bears a nexus with the object in view. It cannot extend to
embarking upon a nice or mathematical evaluation on the basis of
classification."
In K.R. Lakshman (supra), Pattanaik, J. again observed:
"5...It is no doubt true that in Triloki Nath Chandrachud, J. had observed
that the classification should not be earned too far lest it may subvert,
perhaps submerge the precious guarantee of equality..."
In Vijay Lakshmi (supra), M.B. Shah, J. while holding that reservation
for women is permissible in terms of Clause (3) of Article 15 of the
Constitution stated:
"8(a).For the policy decision of" classification, we would straightaway
refer to the decision rendered by this Court in State of Jammu & Kahsmir v.
Shri Triloki Nath Khosa wherein the Court [Chandrachud, J. (as he then
was)] succinctly held thus :--
". . .The challenge, at best reflects the respondent’s opinion on
promotional opportunities in public services and one may assume that if the
roles were reversed, respondents would be interested in implementing their
point of view. But we cannot sit in appeal over the legislative judgment
with a view to finding out whether on a comparative evaluation of rival
theories touching the question of promotion, the theory advocated by the
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respondents is not to be preferred. Classification is primarily for the
Legislature or for the statutory authority charged with the duty of framing
the terms and conditions of service; and if, looked at from the standpoint
of the authority making it, the classification is found to rest on a
reasonable basis, it has to be upheld." (p. 30)
It was also observed that discrimination is the essence of classification
and does violence to the constitutional guarantee of equality only if it
rests on an unreasonable basis and it was for the respondents to establish
that classification was unreasonable and bears no rational nexus with its
purported object. Further, dealing with the right to equality, the Court
(in paras 29 & 30) held thus :--
"29. . . .But the concept of equality has an inherent limitation arising
from the very nature of the constitutional guarantee. Equality is for
equals. That is to say that those who are similarly circumstanced are
entitled to an equal treatment.
30. Since the constitutional code of equality and equal opportunity is a
charter for equals, equality of opportunity in matters of promotion means
an equal promotional opportunity for persons who tall, substantially,
within the same class." (p. 33)
Applying the aforementioned principles, the Court is required to
interpret the provisions of the impugned act on the touchstone of Clause
(4) of Article 15 and Clause (4) of Article 16 of the Constitution of
India.
The Constitution provides for declaration of certain castes and tribes
as Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in terms of Articles 341 and 342
of the Constitution of India. The object of the said provisions is to
provide for grant of protection to the backward class of citizens who are
specified in the Scheduled Castes Order and Scheduled Tribes Order having
regard to the economic and educationally backwardness wherefrom they
suffer. The President of India alone in terms of Article 341(1) of the
Constitution of India is authorized to issue an appropriate notification
therefore. The Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 made in terms of
Article 341(1) is exhaustive.
Mr. Venugopal has strongly relied on a decision in NTR University of
Health Sciences, Vijayawada v. G. Babu Rajendra Prasad and Anr., for the
proposition that the question as to how and in what manner the reservation
should be made is a matter of policy of the State and such a policy
decision normally would not be open to challenge, but the said observation
must be understood in the context of the Presidential Order made under
Article 371D application to the State of Andhra Pradesh. Under the
Presidential Order, 1974, 85% of the seats were reserved in favour of the
local candidates within the University area only and the remaining 15% were
reserved for candidates of non-local area. In the instant case, it is not
the extent of reservation, but competence of, the State Legislature to make
a sub-classification of Scheduled Castes notified initially by the
President and subsequently amended by Parliament by law, is in question.
The power of State Legislature to decide as regard grant of benefit of
reservation in jobs or in educational institutions to the backward classes
is not in dispute. It is furthermore not in dispute that if such a decision
is made the State can also lay down a legislative policy as regard extent
of reservation to be made for different members of the backward classes
including Scheduled Caste. But it cannot take away the said benefit on the
premise that one or the other group amongst the members of the Scheduled
Castes has advanced and, thus, is not entitled to the entire benefit of
reservation. The impugned legislation, thus, must be held to be
unconstitutional.
WHAT IS THE REMEDY?
There is one practical aspect of the matter which may not also be lost
sight of. The chart produced before us clearly: shows that the members
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belonging to Relli and Adi-Andhra are hardly educated. What was necessary
in the situation was to provide to them scholarships, hostel facilities,
special coaching, etc., so that they may be brought on the same platform
with the member of other Scheduled Tribes, viz., Madiga and Mala, if not
with the other backward classes. It is not in dispute that members
belonging to Relli are hardly educated. Only 2% of the members of the said
community have studied in secondary school. No one has ever been admitted
in any engineering discipline or other professional disciplines. The said
facts clearly go to show that providing reservation for them in engineering
or medical discipline or in public service would not solve their problem.
Without such basic education, the members belonging to the said community
would not be getting admission either in the engineering or medical
colleges or other professional courses and as such the question of their
joining public service may not arise at all. Now, even for the post of
Class IV employees, qualification of passing matriculation examination is
provided. Unless children of the said community are educated, the provision
for both for education as also public service would be a myth for them and
ultimately in view of the impugned legislation for all intent and purport,
the benefit thereof would go to other categories. The State, in our
opinion, should take positive steps in this behalf.
I entirely agree with the opinion of Brother, N. Santosh Hegde, J.
that the appeals be allowed.
___________________________________________________________________________
SEPARATE CONCURRING JUDGMENT
H.K. Sema, J.
I had the privilege of going through the erudite judgment prepared by
my learned Brother Hegde, J and I respectfully agree with him. However,
having regard to the substantial question of law involving as to the
interpretation of the Constitution. I thought of putting a few lines of my
own in one aspect of the matter.
Article 366(24) defines "Scheduled Castes" means such castes, races or
tribes or parts of or groups within such castes, races or tribes as are
deemed under Article 341 to be Scheduled Castes for the purposes of this
Constitution. This would go to show that by virtue of the Notification of
the President the Scheduled Castes come into being as one class of persons
regardless of members drawn from castes, races or tribes etc. They attain a
homogeneous group by virtue of the Presidential Notification.
In Indra Sawhney and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors. 1992 Supp(3) SCC
217 this Court observed at page 725(SCC) that the discussion of creamy
layer is confined to other backward classes only and has no relevance in
the case of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
In the case of State of Maharashtra v. Milind and Ors. (2001) 1 SCC 4,
it was pointed out by the Constitution Bench of this Court at page 15 SCC:-
"By virtue of powers vested under Articles 341 and 342 of the Constitution
of India, the President is empowered to issue public notification for the
first time specifying the castes, races or tribes or part of or groups
within castes, races, or tribes which shall, for the purposes of the
Constitution be deemed to be Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes in
relation to a State or Union Territory, as the case may be. The language
and terms of Articles 341 and 342 are identical. What is said in relation
to Article 341 mutatis mutandis applies to Article 342. The laudable object
of the said articles is to provide additional protection to the members of
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes having regard to social and
educational backwardness from which they have been suffering since a
considerable length of time. The words "castes" or "tribes" in the
expression "Scheduled Castes" and "Scheduled Tribes" are not used in the
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ordinary sense of the terms but are used in the sense of the definitions
contained in Articles 366(24) and 366(25)."
Thus, the pious object for issuing the Presidential Notification is to
afford them special protection having regard to social and educational
backwardness. The Presidential Notification under Article 341 of the
Constitution as well as the benefits of reservation of appointments or
posts which in the opinion of the State, is not adequately represented in
the services under the State, is afforded to a class of persons specified
in Presidential Notification under Article 341 of the Constitution. The
backward class of citizens enshrined in Article 16(4) of the Constitution
includes Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The whole basis of
reservation is to provide additional protection to the members of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes as a class of persons who have been
suffering since a considerable length of time due to social and educational
backwardness. The protection and reservation is afforded to a homogeneous
group. Further classification and/or regrouping the homogeneous groups by
State Legislature would tinker with the Presidential Notification issued
under Article 341, which is constitutionally impermissible. By the impugned
legislation, the State has sought to re-group the homogeneous group
specified in Presidential Notification for the purposes of reservation and
appointments. It would tantamount to discrimination in reverse and would
attract the wrath of Article 14 of the Constitution. It is a trite law that
justice must be equitable. Justice to one group at the costs of injustice
to other group is another way of perpetuating injustice.