Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R.S. SHARMA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/04/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatro, K.T.Thomas, S.N.Variava
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
The grievance of the respondent a Divisional
Engineer in the Telecom Department - is that his promotion
to the next tier in the cadre (senior time scale in the
Indian Telecommunication Service Group A) has been
temporarily sealed on account of erroneously adhering to the
Sealed Cover Procedure. The Central Administrative
Tribunal (for short the Tribunal) before which he
approached for redressal of his grievance has upheld his
contentions and directed the appellants to open the sealed
cover and give effect to the recommendations made by the
Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC). Union of India and
the Chief General Manager of Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd.
have filed these appeals by special leave challenging the
aforesaid direction issued by the Tribunal.
The background of passing the said order is the
following: Respondent was appointed in the Telecom
Department during 1986. Hardly two years passed he got
himself delved in the vortex of serious allegations of
financial misdemeanors. One of the allegations is that he
purchased very substandard materials for the Department at
very high prices. An FIR was registered and the Central
Bureau of Investigation (for short CBI) took up the
investigation. On 10.3.1988, he was suspended but within
six months the suspension order was revoked. Nonetheless
the CBI continued with investigation and on completion
thereof they applied to the Government of India for
according sanction to prosecute the respondent.
In the meanwhile the DPC considered the cases of other
persons in the Department for promotion, but deferred the
case of the respondent on account of the pendency of
investigation of the said allegations against him. The
respondent then moved the Tribunal and on 30.11.1990, the
Tribunal passed an interim direction that the DPC should
consider the case of the respondent for promotion in the
event of considering the claims of any of his juniors
attached to the same Department.
Pursuant thereto the DPC considered the case of the
respondent on 3.4.1991 and adopted a decision. However, the
DPC did not communicate the decision to any one and instead
it put the recommendations in sealed cover as enjoined by
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the conditions specified in the Sealed Cover Procedure
adopted by the Government of India. (vide Government of
India, Deptt. Of Per. & Trg., Office Memo
No.22011/2/86-Estt.(A) dated the 12th January, 1988).
At this stage, it is relevant to extract paragraph 2
of the said Office Memorandum. It reads thus:
Cases where Sealed Cover Procedure applicable:- At
the time of consideration of the cases of Government
servants for promotion, details of Government servants in
the consideration zone for promotion falling under the
following categories should be specifically brought to the
notice of the Departmental Promotion Committee: (i)
Government servants under suspension; (ii) Government
servants in respect of whom disciplinary proceedings are
pending or a decision has been taken to initiate
disciplinary proceedings. (iii) Government servants in
respect of whom prosecution for a criminal charge is pending
or sanction for prosecution has been issued or a decision
has been taken to accord sanction for prosecution; (iv)
Government servants against whom an investigation on serious
allegations of corruption, bribery or similar grave
misconduct is in progress either by the CBI or any agency,
departmental or otherwise.
It is not disputed before us that on 3.4.1991 when DPC
decided to put the recommendations concerning respondent in
the sealed cover, investigation into the case involved in
the aforesaid FIR was pending. Hence the Sealed Cover
Procedure was adopted as his case fell within the purview of
clause (iv) of the aforesaid second paragraph. But on
31.7.1991 a new development took place. As per Office Memo
No.22011/1/91-Estt.(A) the restriction imposed as per clause
(iv) was deleted from the second paragraph of the Sealed
Cover Procedure. However, three counts of clarifications
have been made by the Government of India through the same
O.M. They are extracted below:
It is further clarified that:- (i) All cases kept in
sealed cover on date of this O.M. on account of conditions
obtainable in para 2(iv) of the O.M. dated 12.1.1988 will
be opened. If the official had been found fit and
recommended by DPC, he will be notionally promoted, from the
date his immediate junior had been promoted. The pay of the
higher post would of course, be admissible only on
assumption of actual charge in view of provisions of FR
17(1). (Since only officiating arrangements could be made
against the vacancies available because of cases of senior
officials being in sealed cover, there may not be any
difficulty in terminating some officiating arrangements if
necessary and giving promotion in such cases). (ii) If any
case is in a sealed cover on account of any of the other
conditions mentioned in para 2(I) to 2(iii) of the O.M.
dated 12.1.88, the case will continue to be in the sealed
cover. (iii) On opening of the sealed cover because of
deletion of para 2(iv) if an officer is found to have been
recommended as unfit by the DPC no further action would be
necessary.
Some further developments which took place in the
meanwhile are also relevant. CBI completed and submitted a
report to the Government on 7.5.1991 and sought for sanction
to be accorded to launch prosecution proceedings against the
respondent. On 9.7.1991 the Minister of State concerned
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gave his approval to the respondent and referred the matter
for the advice of the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC).
When the advice was given by the CVC the Minister for State
gave further approval on 10.9.91 for adopting follow up
actions on the report. However, formal order granting
sanction to prosecute the respondent was made by the
President only on 30.9.1991.
Normally the case of respondent should have succeeded
if the situation which happened on 31.7.1991 was confined to
deletion of clause (iv) from second paragraph of the Sealed
Cover Procedure. But when the same O.M. made specific
mention of a clarification that the case will continue to
be in the sealed cover on account of existence of any one of
the remaining three conditions specified in clauses (I) to
(iii) of the first O.M. the matter has to be considered
from those angles also.
Shri Mukul Rohtagi, learned Additional Solicitor
General contended that as the Minister concerned accorded
approval for granting sanction to prosecute the respondent
as early as 9.7.1991, the recommendations of the DPC must
remain under sealed cover by virtue of the conditions
specified in clause (iii) of the second paragraph of the
Sealed Cover Procedure (supra), because in such an event
deletion of clause (iv) on 31.7.1991 by itself had no
consequence.
Shri Anil Kumar Sharma, learned counsel for the
respondent contended that appellants are debarred from
adopting such a contention as the Department stated in the
affidavit filed in this Court that the Minister had given
approval only on 10.9.1991 and by then clause (iv) in the
aforesaid second paragraph of the Sealed Cover Procedure
was already deleted.
Without conceding to the above position, Shri Mukul
Rohtagi, Additional Solicitor General, adopted an
alternative contention based on Paragraph 7 of the Sealed
Cover Procedure which reads thus:
Sealed cover applicable to officer coming under cloud
before promotion:- A Government servant, who is recommended
for promotion by the Departmental Promotion Committee but in
whose case any of the circumstances mentioned in para 2
above arise after the recommendations of the DPC are
received but before he is actually promoted, will be
considered as if his case had been placed in a sealed cover
by the DPC. He shall not be promoted until he is completely
exonerated of the charges against him and the provisions
contained in this O.M. will be applicable in his case
also.
The conditions necessary to invoke the said clause
are: (1) Recommendations of the DPC should have been made
for promoting the Government servant. (2) After such
recommendations and before he is actually promoted any, one
of the circumstances in clause (ii) of the second paragraph
(supra) should have arisen.
Two factual aspects are admitted. One is that
respondent was not actually promoted even now. The other is
that formal sanction has been accorded to prosecute him in
the meanwhile. If that be so, paragraph 7 of the Sealed
Cover Procedure would entirely apply and the recommendations
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made by the DPC in respect of the respondent have to remain
in the sealed cover until he is completely exonerated of
the charges against him.
Shri Anil Kumar Sharma, learned counsel, adopted the
contention that the situation would not have arisen as
envisaged in paragraph 7 of the Sealed Cover Procedure if
the appellants had complied with the conditions stipulated
in the Office Memorandum dated 31.7.1991 either on that day
itself or at least soon thereafter by promoting the
respondent. Learned counsel contended that the Department
had willfully and deliberately avoided to comply with the
said Office Memo dated 31.7.1979, and hence appellants
should not be permitted to take advantage of their own
wrong.
We are not impressed by the said arguments for two
reasons. One is that, what the Department did not do is not
the yardstick indicated in paragraph 7 of the Sealed Cover
Procedure, what is mentioned therein is that it cannot apply
to the Government servant who is not actually promoted by
that time. Second is that, the stand taken up by the
Department is that in spite of deletion of clause (iv) of
the second paragraph, the recommendations of the DPC must
remain in the sealed cover on account of the conditions
specified in clause (iii) of the said paragraph by virtue of
the operation of paragraph 7 thereof. We cannot say that
the said stand was incorrect and, therefore, we are unable
to blame the Department for not opening the sealed cover
immediately after 31.7.1991.
Learned counsel for the respondent made an endeavour
to contend that in the light of the decision of this Court
in Union of India vs. K.V. Janakiraman {1991 (4) SCC 109}
the Sealed Cover Procedure can be resorted to only after
Charge Memo is received or a charge-sheet is filed and that
unless such an event had happened at the relevant time the
Government employee cannot be denied of his promotion, if he
is otherwise entitled to it. Learned counsel also submitted
that Janakiraman was since followed in Union of India vs.
Dr. Sudha Salhan {1998(3) SCC}; Bank of India vs. Degala
Suryanarayana {1999(5) SCC 762}. The clauses of second
paragraph of the Sealed Cover Procedure considered in
Janakiraman were not those involved in the present case and
hence that decision is of no avail to the respondent. In
the other two decisions the facts warranted application of
the ratio contained in Janakiraman. The added factor in
these two cases was that the public servant concerned had
been exonerated of the charges framed by the criminal
courts. In the present case the respondent is still facing
the trial for serious offences, and hence the situation is
different.
We may also point out, in this context, that in Delhi
Development Authority vs. H.C. Khurana {JT 1993(2) 695}
and Union of India vs. Kewal Kumar {JT 1993 (2) 705} this
Court found that the ratio in Janakiraman is applicable only
to the situations similar to the cases discussed therein,
and hence the Sealed Cover Procedure resorted to by the DPC
in those two cases was upheld by this Court.
In our opinion the Tribunal has erred in overlooking
paragraph 7 of the Sealed Cover Procedure (supra) and
hence the direction issued by it as per the impugned
judgment cannot be sustained. We, therefore, allow these
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appeals and set aside the said direction.