Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT & ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMAN LAL KESHAV LAL SONI & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/01/1983
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1984 AIR 161 1983 SCR (2) 287
1983 SCC (2) 33 1983 SCALE (1)66
CITATOR INFO :
F 1984 SC 385 (11,20)
MR 1985 SC 421 (79)
E&R 1987 SC 415 (16,17)
R 1987 SC1858 (22)
RF 1991 SC1047 (8)
ACT:
Gujarat Panchayat Act, 1961-As amended by the Gujarat
Panchayat (Third Amendment) Act, 1978-officers and servants
of the panchayats - Whether Government servants.
Master and servant relations-Tests for the
determination of.
Constitution of India, 1950, Articles 14 and 311-Status
of Government servant-If could be determined
retrospectively.
Interpretation-Legislature, if has power to take away
or impair a constitutional right retrospectively.
HEADNOTE:
The Gujarat Panchayats Act, 1961 was enacted to
consolidate and amend the law relating to village panchayats
and district local boards with a view to reorganise the
administration pertaining to local Government in furtherance
of the object of democratic decentralisation of powers in
favour of different classes of panchayats. It was provided
that the state Government should exercise control over
panchayats either directly or through such officer or
officers as it may appoint for that purpose. The Panchayat
organisation consisted of Gram Panchayats, Taluqa Panchayats
and District Panchayats which are bodies corporate with
perpetual succession and common seal. Notwithstanding that
they were separate bodies corporate, the panchayats formed
part of the panchayat organisation set up for securing a
greater measure of participation by the people in the local
governmental functions. They were enjoined to perform
functions and duties assigned by or under the Act so as to
conform to the State plans, National plans and the State
policy in general. The State Government was empowered to
cause inspection to be made and to call for and examine the
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record of the proceedings of any panchayat. On the enactment
of the 1961 Act, the District Local Boards, village
panchayats and municipalities constituted under earlier Acts
stood transformed as District Panchayats, gram or nagar
panchayats, depending on population. Officers and servants
of the District Local Boards were deemed to be transferred
to the service of the district panchayats, Secretaries,
Officers and servants in the employ of the old village
panchayats became Secretaries, Officers and servants of the
new gram panchayats and h officers and servants in the
employ of municipalities became Officers and servants of the
interim panchayats.
288
The gram panchayats were entrusted with the work of
looking after sanitation and health, public works, community
development, agriculture, preservation of forests and a
number of other subjects. They were entrusted with the work
of collection of land revenue and do any or all the
functions and duties of village accountant or Patel or other
similar functions of any other person in relation to the
collection of land revenue and dues recoverable as arrears
of land revenue. Provision had been made in the Act for the
transfer to the District Panchayats of such powers,
functions and duties relating to any matters as are
exercised or performed by the State Government or any
officer of the Government under any enactment which the
State Legislature is competent to enact or otherwise in the
executive power of the State. The Act also provided that any
functions and duties relating to any of the matters
specified in the panchayat functions list, previously being
performed by the State Government, shall be transferred to
the District Panchayats together with the funds provided and
the staff employed therefor. On such transfer, the District
Panchayat may delegate, with the approval of tho Government,
to any panchayat subordinate to it any of the functions and
duties so transferred. A fund called the Gram Fund or Nagar
Fund was created and the proceeds of any tax or fee imposed
by or assigned to the Panchayat under the Act, sums
contributed to the fund by the State Government and all
other sums received by the Panchayat were to be credited in
the fund. The Act provided for appointment of a Secretary
and such other servants as may be determined for every Gram
Panchayat and Nagar Panchayat in accordance with rules
prescribed by the Government. Depending on the facts and
circumstances of a case, the State Government may direct
that a group of Panchayats shall have one Secretary only.
The Secretary and other servants were required to do all the
administrative functions as may be conferred on them by the
Panchayat. The Act provided that there shall be a Secretary
for every Taluqa Panchayat and that the Taluqa Development
officer who shall be an officer belonging to the State
service and posted under the panchayat, shall be ex-officio
Secretary of the panchayat. The District Development officer
posted under the District Panchayat was to be the ex-officio
Secretary of the District Panchayat.
For the purpose of bringing about uniform scales of pay
and uniform conditions of service-for persons employed in
the panchayats, the Act provided for the constitution of a
panchayat service which was declared to be distinct from the
State service. Power was given to the State Government to
determine from time to time classes, cadres and posts of
officers and their strength A servant belonging to district
cadre was liable to be posted whether by promotion or
transfer, to any post in any other cadre as provided in the
rules. The State Government was empowered to make rules
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regulating the mode of recruitment either by holding
examinations or otherwise and their conditions of service.
Appointments to posts in the panchayat service were to be
made by direct recruitment or by promotion or by transfer of
a member of the State service to the Panchayat service. The
Stale Government was empowered to allocate to the Panchayat
service the requisite number of officers and servants who
shall be taken over by the panchayat in such cadre and on
such tenure, remuneration and other conditions of service as
the State Government may determine and the it expenditure on
account of pay and allowances of officer and servants of the
Panchayat was to be met from the funds of The panchayat. The
Act enabled
289
the State Government to direct the posting of officers of
the Indian Administrative Service and of Class-ll services
of the State Government in panchayat institutions. Provision
was made for the constitution of a Panchayat Service
Selection Board and District Panchayat Service Selection
Committees for selection of officers and other members of
staff.
After the coming into force of the 1961 Act the State
Government made several sets of rules, one of which was the
Gujarat Panchayat Service (Absorption, Seniority, Pay and
Allowances) Rules, 1965. The Rules provided for the equation
of posts, fixation of seniority, scales of pay and
allowances of "allocated employees". An "allocated employee"
meant a person allocated to the panchayats service Under the
rules every allocated employee holding a corresponding post
immediately before the appointed day shall be appointed to
the equivalent post, that is, a post in the Panchayat
service, which the State Government may, by order, determine
to be generally corresponding to a post held by an allocated
employee immediately before the appointed day (called
corresponding post) having regard to the pay scales, minimum
educational and other qualifications prescribed for the
equivalent post and the corresponding post and the nature
and magnitude of responsibilities attached to such posts.
Therefore, unless equivalence of posts was first determined
by order of the State Government, the 1965 Rules could not
be applied The State Government did not make any order
regarding the equation of posts of the staff in the local
cadre and the fixation of their scales of pay, although such
orders were made in respect of posts of other cadres. The
Government did not extend to the staff borne on the local
cadre, the benefit of revision of scales of pay made on the
basis of the recommendations of the two Pay Commissions,
though such benefit was extended to the District and Taluqa
Cadres; nor did the Government make any order providing for
promotional avenues to employees of the local cadre.
Aggrieved by the inaction of the Government, the
employees of the local cadre of the panchayat service filed
a writ petition in the High Court seeking various reliefs.
’The Government contended that members of the panchayat
service were not Government servants and so were not
entitled to claim the reliefs asked for by them.
Allowing the petitions the High Court held that the
employees belonging to the local cadre were Government
servants and directed the State Government to make suitable
orders under the 1965 Rules to initially fix the pay scales
and other conditions of service, lo revise the scales of pay
in accordance with the recommendations of the Pay
Commission. Certain other reliefs were also given.
The State Government filed in this Court an appeal
against the, judgment of the High Court. In the meantime,
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the Governor promulgated the Gujarat Panchayats Amendment
ordinance, 1978 which later became the Gujarat Panchayats
(Third Amendment) Act, 1978.
The amending Act of 1978 was enacted to get over the
effect of the judgment of the High Court. It denied the
status of Government servants to certain categories of
employees and their allocation to the Panchayat service was
cancelled with retrospective effect.
290
In their writ petitions the employees of the local
cadre contended that the provisions of the Amendment, Act of
1978 were violative of Article 311 of the Constitution, that
the Act was discriminatory and that the benefits acquired by
them could not be taken away with retrospective effect.
In the appeal it was contended that having regard to
the various provisions of the Act the members of the
panchayat service were Government servants.
Dismissing the appeal and allowing the petitions,
^
HELD: The panchayat service constituted under the Act
is a civil service of The State and the members of the
service are Government servants.
[309 C]
It is not possible to lay down any distinctive test to
determine when a person may be said to hold a civil post
under the Government. The presence of all or some of the
factors such as the right to select for appointment, the
right to appoint, the right to terminate the employment, the
right to take disciplinary action or determine the service,
(he source from which wages or salary are paid and a host of
such circumstances may have to be considered to determine
the existence of the relationship of master and servant.
[ 306 B-D]
Gurugobinda Basu v. Sankari Prasad Ghosal, [1964] 4 SCR
311; State of Uttar Pradesh v. Audh Narain Singh, [1964] 7
SCR 89; State of Assam v. Shri Kamakchandra Dutta, [1967] 1
SCR 679; Gurushantappa v. Abdul Khuddus, [1959] 3 SCR 425;
S.L. Aggarwal v. Hindustan Steel Ltd., [1970] 3 SCR 363;
Jalgaon Zilla Parishad v. Duman Gobind and others, C.A. No.
24 & 25 of 1968 decided on December 20, 1968, referred to.
In the instant case, members of the service are
required to perform functions in connection with those
affairs of the State entrusted to the panchayats either by
the Act itself or by transfer by the Government-under the
Act. It may be that the pay and other allowances of the
officers were paid out of the panchayats’ own funds but the
sums consisted of funds contributed or lent by the State
Government and of the proceeds of any tax or fee imposed by
or assigned to the panchayats under the Act. This imposition
of a tax or fee J in the nature of a tax is essentially a
function of the State. So the salary and allowances of
servants and officers are paid out of the funds contributed
or lent by Government or raised by the discharge of an
essential governmental function. Officers and staff are to
be appointed by an authority prescribed by the Government
and their conditions of service shall be as may be
prescribed by the Government. The Act contemplates the
constitution of a single centralised panchayat service, the
classes, cadres and posts of which have to be determined by
the Government from time lo time. Such other topics like
recruitment, conditions of . service, transfer, promotions,
disciplinary action to be taken against the officers and
servants are to be regulated by rules made by the
Government. There cannot be any question of a rule providing
for promotion from the panchayat service to the State
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service unless the panchayat service is also a service under
the State. The provisions
291
relating to inter district transfers of servants of the
panchayat service and provisions which provide for promotion
and transfer of servants belonging to the different cadres
within the District, Taluqa and Gram or Nagar panchayat
clearly show that these servants are not the servants of the
individual panchayat but belong to a centralised service.
The provision relating to transfer and allocation of members
of the State service to the panchayat service necessarily
implies that the panchayat service is also a service under
the State and such transfers would be impermissible unless
the panchayat service is also a service under the State. The
very idea that there can be an allocation to the Panchayat
service from a State service and a reallocation from the
panchayat service to the State service is only consistent
with the panchayat service also being a service under the
State.
[306 G-H, 307 A-H, 308 E]
The provision under the Act that the panchayat service
shall be distinct from the State service does not indicate a
disclaimer by the Legislature that the panchayat service is
a service under the State; it is a distinct service from the
state service because the panchayat institutions constitute
an almost parallel but subsidiary Government. Again
Government servants do not cease to be Government servants
merely because, for the time being, they are allocated to
different panchayat institutions and are paid out of the
funds of institutions which are declared to be bodies
corporate. [308 F-H, 309 B-C]
G.L. Shukla v. State of Gujarat, 8 G.L.R. 833 approved.
The Gujarat Panchayats (Third Amendment) Act, 1978 is
unconstitutional as it offends Articles 311 and 14 and is
arbitrary and unreasonable. The provisions are so
intertwined with one another that it is impossible to
separate the offending sections from the others. [320 E-G]
The object of the 1961 Act was "democratic
decentralisation of power and the consequent re-organisation
of tho administration of local Government" and even after
the 1978 amendment this object continued to be the same.
Even so, section 11 (1) which declared that the different
panchayats shall constitute a panchayat organisation was
omitted. The Statement of objects and reasons stated that
the amendments were necessitated to get over the judgment of
the High Court that the panchayat service was a State
service. That could not be a reason to go against the object
of the principal Act and to abandon the constitution of the
State panchayat organisation [312 E-H]
The effect of the amending Act was that non-Talati
Secretaries and other officers and servants of the Gram and
Nagar panchayats were to be deemed to be the servants of the
respective panchayats notwithstanding the judgments of
courts declaring them to be Government servants. The
District panchayats were barred from transferring their
staff to Gram and Nagar panchayats consequent on the
delegation of functions, powers and duties to Gram and Nagar
panchayats. A panchayat service consisting of persons
employed in connection with the affairs of Taluqa panchayats
and District panchayats and of specified servants was
constituted notwithstanding anything contained in any
judgment, decree or order of any court and such persons and
servants were deemed to have always been the officers and
servants of tho Taluqa panchayats or tho District panchayats
for the ostensible reason
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292
of enabling the respective panchayats to exercise their
powers and perform their functions efficiently. In so doing
it omitted the Gram and nagar panchayats which are at the
very base of democratic decentralisation and on which the
superstructure stands. [314 C-H, 315 E-F]
Before the Amending Act of 1978 was passed, ex-
municipal employees who had been allocated to the panchayat
service as Secretaries, officers and servants of Gram and
Nagar panchayats had achieved the status of Government
servants. The amending Act hag done away with their status
as members of a service under the State without giving them
an option. Retrospectivity is given in order that they could
not claim that they were ever Government servants. But their
status as Government servants could not be extinguished so
long as the posts were not abolished and their services were
not terminated in accordance with the provisions of Article
311 of the Constitution nor was it permissible to single
them out for differential treatment because that would
offend Article 14 of the Constitution. [319 B-D]
There is no force in the contention that some of the
officers and servants of the Gram and Nagar panchayats were
Government servants from the beginning while other officers
and servants of Gram and Nagar panchayats were not and that
a classification on the basis of source of their services
was permissible. Once they had joined the common stream of
service and performed the same duties, it is not permissible
to make any classification on the basis of their origin.
[319 D-E]
Undoubtedly, the Legislature is competent to legislate
with retrospective effect to take away or impair any vested
right but since laws are made under a written constitution
and have to conform to the do’s and don’ts of the
constitution neither prospective nor retrospective laws can
be made so as to contravene the fundamental rights. A
Legislature cannot legislate today with reference to a
situation that obtained 20 years ago and ignore the
constitutional rights accured in the course of 20 years. A
law which, if made today, would be plainly invalid as
offending constitutional provisions in the context of the
existing, situation cannot become valid by being made
retrospective [319 G-H, 320 B, E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 359 of
1978.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 28th January, 1977 of the Gujarat High Court in
Special Civil Application No. 309 of 1975.
AND
Writ Petition Nos. 4266-4270 of 1978.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
V.M. Tarkunde, Diranjan Mehta, P.H. Parekh and Mrs.
Manik Tarkunde for the Petitioners in MPs. and R.R. 1-3 and
in CA. 359.
D.V. Patel, C.V. Subba Rao, Dy. Govt. Advocate, M.N.
Shroff, G.N. Desai and R. N. Poddar for the Appellant in CA.
359 and RR 1 and 2 in WPs.
293
Vimal Dave and Miss Kailash Mehta for the Intervener in
W.P.
Mukul Mudgal for Respondent No. 9 in CA. 359/79 and for
Respondent No. 6 in WPs.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. The attitude of the State of
Gujarat in these cases bas indeed left us puzzled and
wondering. On the one hand, there are lakhs of employees
working under various Panchayat Institutions, call them
Government servants or no, to whom the benefits of the
recommendations of the two Pay Commissions, the Sarela and
the Desai Commissions, have been extended while on the other
hand, there is a microscopic number (comparatively) of about
six thousand employees of the lowest category, also working
under Panchayat Institutions, who are denied the benefits of
those recommendations, on the sole ground of a birth-mark,
if we may so call it, since they are denied the benefits
because before they came to work under the Panchayat
Institutions, they were employed in municipalities while the
others were Government servants to start with. The
unfairness and the injustice of the distinction is patent,
whatever legal justification may be put forward. Surely, the
State, dedicated as it is to socialism, equality and
economic justice and enjoined by the Directive Principles to
secure the right to work, a living wage, equal pay for equal
work and so on cannot make such a distinction But the
distinction has been made; it is sought to be sustained by
those making it and we are constrained to examine whether
there is any Constitutional or other legal sustenance for
the distinction. We did request the Counsel for the State of
Gujarat to communicate with his clients to find out if the
benefits cannot gracefully be extended to the erstwhile
employees of municipalities presently working under
Panchayat Institutions also. We are told that the answer of
the State of Gujarat is in the negative.
The appeal and the Writ Petitions were heard once
before by a Constitution Bench consisting of Chandrachud,
CJ, Sarkaria, Untwalia, Kailasam and Venkataramiah, JJ. The
opinion of the Constitution Bench was pronounced by
Venketaramiah, J., on July 13, 1980. (The opinion is
reported in [1981] 1 SCR 144), But on the application of the
appellants, the opinion was set aside and the appeal and the
Writ Petitions were directed to be set down for hearing once
more by the Constitution Bench. That is how the matters have
again come before us.
294
Pursuant to the Constitutional mandate in Art. 40 that
"the State shall take steps to organise village panchayat
and endow them with such powers and authority as may be
necessary to function as units of self-Government". the
State of Gujarat enacted the Gujarat Panchayats Act 1961
(Act No. VI of 1962) ’to consolidate and amend the law
relating to village Panchayats and district local boards
with a view to reorganise the administration pertaining to
local Government in furtherance of the object of the
democratic decentralisation of powers in favour of different
classes of Panchayats’.
The Gujarat Panchayats Act 1961 was substantially
amended in 1978 in an attempt, as we shall presently point
out, to circumvent the judgment of the Gujarat High Court
which is under appeal before us. The constitutional validity
of the Amending Act is in question in the Writ Petitions
which are before us.
We shall first refer to the provisions of the Gujarat
Panchayats Act, as they stood before they were amended in
1978. By s. 11 (1) of the Act, as it originally stood, a
Panchayat organisation was constituted for the State of
Gujarat, consisting of Gram Panchayats, Taluqa Panchayats,
District Panchayats, Gram Sabhas, Nyaya Panchayats and
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Conciliation Panchas lt is provided by Section 11 (2) that
the State Government shall exercise control over Panchayats
either directly or through such officer or officers as it
may appoint for that purpose. Local areas comprising of
revenue villages or groups of revenue villages or hamlets
forming parts of revenue villages or other administrative
units or parts thereof are to be declared Grams under the
Act, if the population of the local areas does not exceed
10,000 and Nagars if the population of the local areas
exceed 10,000 but does not exceed 20,000. There is to be a
Gram Panchayat for each Gram and Nagar Panchayat for each
Nagar. There is also to be a Taluqa Panchayat for each
taluqa and a District Panchayat for each district, as
constituted from time to time under the Land Revenue Code.
The Gram Panchayat, the Nagar Panchayat, the Taluqa
Panchayat and the District Panchayats are to be bodies
corporate with perpetual succession and common seal. Sec. 8
prescribes the hierarchy and provides that, subject to the
control of the Government, a Gram Panchayat is to be
subordinate to the Taluqa Panchayat and the District
Panchayat, while a Nagar Panchayat and Taluqa Panchayat are
to be subordinate to the District Panchayat. While the Gram
Panchayats, Nagar Panchayats,
295
Taluqa Panchayats and District Panchayats are to be bodies
corporate, Sec. 287 makes it explicit that, notwithstanding
that they are separate bodies corporate having distinct
territorial jurisdiction and territorial functions to
perform, the Gram Panchayats, Nagar Panchayats, Taluqa
Panchayats and District Panchayats shall form part of the
panchayat organisation, set up for the purpose of securing a
greater measure of participation by the people of the State
in local government functions and shall perform the
functions and duties assigned to them by or under the Act so
as to conform to the State plans, National plans and the
State policy in general, and also so as to give effect to
general or special directions as may be issued by the State
Government. Sec. 292 (A) and Sec. 305 authorise the State
Government to cause inspection to be made and to call for
and examine the record of the proceedings of any panchayat.
At this juncture, we may mention that prior to the
enactment of the Gujarat Panchayats Act, 1961, there were in
force in the State of Gujarat the Bombay Village Panchayat
Act, 1958, the Bombay Local Boards Act, 1923, the Bombay
District Municipal Act, 1901 and the Bombay Municipal
Boroughs Act, 1925. The Bombay Village Panchayat Act 1958
and the Bombay Local Boards Act, 1923 are repealed by Secs.
325 and 326 of the Gujarat Village Panchayats Act, 1961. A
local area declared to be a village under the Bombay Village
Panchayats Act, 1958 and a Panchayat constituted under that
Act, are deemed to be gram and panchayat under the Gujarat
Gram Panchayats Act. 1961. The Secretaries and all officers
and servants under the employment of the old village
Panchayats are to be Secretaries, officers and servants of
the new gram panchayats. A District Local Board constituted
under the Bombay Local Boards Act for a local area is to
stand dissolved. All property which stood vested in the
district local board P immediately before the appointed day
is to be deemed transferred to the district panchayat
constituted for the local area, called the successor
panchayat. All officers and servants in the employment of
the District Local Board are similarly to be deemed
transferred to the service of the successor panchayat. Where
local areas are declared to be grams or nagars under Sec. 9
of the Gujarat Gram Panchayats Act, 1961 and such areas
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correspond to the limits of a municipal district or
municipal borough under the Bombay District Municipal Act or
Bombay Municipal Borough Act, it is provided by Sec. 307 of
the Gujarat Panchayats Act that the municipality previously
functioning in such local area shall cease to exist and that
the councillors of such municipality shall constitute an
interim
296
gram panchayat or interim nagar panchayat as the case may be
for the gram or nagar. It is also provided that all officers
and servants in the employment of the municipality
immediately before the date of declaration of the local
areas as gram or nagar, shall be officers and Servants of
the interim panchayat.
Thus broadly, District Local Boards under the Bombay
Local Boards Act stand transformed as District Panchayats,
village panchayats under the Bombay Village Panchayats Act
as gram panchayats and municipalities under the Bombay
District Municipal Act and Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act as
gram or nagar panchayats, depending on the population.
Officers and servants in the employ of the District Local
Boards are deemed to be transferred to the service of the
district panchayats; Secretaries, officers and servants in
the employ of the old village panchayat become Secretaries,
officers and servants of new gram panchayats and officers
and servants in the employ of municipalities become officers
and servants of interim panchayats.
To continue our tour of inspection (if one may use such
an expression) of the provisions of the Act, Sec. 88 of the
Act empowers each gram panchayat to make, in the area within
its jurisdiction, and so far as the fund at its disposal
will allow, reasonable provision in regard to all or any of
the matters specified in Sch. I. Sch. I enumerates a host of
matters under the heads ’Sanitation and Health ’Public
works’, ’Education and Culture’, Self Defence and Village
Defence’, ’Planning and Administration’, ’Community
Development, Agriculture, Preservation of forests and
Pasture Lands’, ’Animal Husbandry’, ’Village Industries’ and
’Collection of Land P Revenue’. Under each of these heads
innumerable subjects are specified. In regard to the
collection of land revenue express provision is further made
by Sec. 149 that the Government shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in Land Revenue Code or any other law,
entrust to every Gram Panchayat and every Nagar Panchayat,
any or all of the functions and duties of village Accountant
or Patel or other similar functions of any other person by
whatever name called, in relation to the collection of land
revenue and dues recoverable as arrears of land revenue and
all other functions and duties of village Accountant under
the Land Revenue Code. Sec. 150 provides that the panchayat
so entrusted under Sec. 149 shall be responsible for the
collection of land revenue and other dues of the gram or
nagar as the case may be.
297
In addition to the functions enumerated in Sch. E. Sec.
89 imposes certain other duties and functions on the
panchayat. A panchayat may, for example, carry out in the
area within the limits of jurisdiction, any other work or
measure which is likely to promote health, safety,
education, comfort, convenience or social or economic or
culture well-being of the inhabitants of the area including
secondary education. A panchayat is also required to carry
out the directions or orders given or issued from time to
time by the State Government for the amelioration of the
condition of scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, and
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other backward classes.
Taluqa and District Panchayats are required by secs.
117 and 137 respectively to make reasonable provision in
respect of matters specified in Schedules II and III. In
Schedule II, a number of subjects are enumerated under the
beads ’Sanitation and Health’, ’Communication’, ’Education
and Culture’, ’Social Education’, ’Community Development’,
’Agriculture and Irrigation’, ’Animal Husbandry’, ’Village
and Small Scale Industries’, ’Corporation’. ’Women’s
Welfare’, ’Social Welfare’, ’Relief’, ’Collection of
Statistics’, ’Trusts’, ’Forests’, ’Rural Housing,’ and
’Information’. ID Schedule III, similarly, a number of
subjects are enumerated under the heads ’Sanitation and
Health’, ’Public Works’, ’Education and other Cultural
Activities’, ’Administration’, ’Community Development’,
’Agriculture’, ’Animal Husbandry’, ’Village and Small Scale
Industries’, ’Social Welfare’, ’Relief’ and ’Minor
Irrigation Projects’.
Sec. 155 provides for the transfer of the functions
previously performed by District School Boards under the
Bombay and Saurashtra Primary Education Act to taluqa and
district panchayats.
Sec. 156 provides for the delegation to district and
taluqa panchayats such powers and functions and duties of
the Registrar or any other authority under the Bombay
Cooperative Societies Act, as may be specified.
Sec. 157 provides for the transfer to District
Panchayats of such powers, functions and duties relating to
any matters as are exercised or performed by the State
Government or any officer of the Government under any
enactment which the State Legislature is competent to enact,
or otherwise in the executive power of the State. On the
transfer of such functions, the Government is also required
to allot to the District Panchayats such funds and personnel
297
as may be necessary to enable the District Panchayats to
exercise the powers and discharge functions and duties so
transferred. Sec. 157 (2) mentions the subjects which in
particular may be transferred to the District Panchayats.
Sec. 157 (3) further provides that on the transfer of
powers, functions and duties under sub-Sec. (I) and (2), the
District Panchayat shall, if the State Government so directs
and may with the previous approval of the Government,
delegate to any panchayat subordinate to it any of the
functions, powers and duties so transferred and allot to
such Panchayats such funds and staff as may be-necessary to
enable the Panchayat to discharge the functions and duties
so delegated.
Sec. 158 provides that any function and duties relating
to any of the matters specified in the Panchayat functions
list, which were previously being performed by the State
Government, shall be transferred to the District Panchayats
together with the funds provided and the staff employed
therefor. On such transfer, the District Panchayat may
delegate, subject to the approval of the Government, to any
panchayat subordinate to it any of the functions and duties
so transferred.
Sec. 96 of the Act authorises the State Government to
vest in a Panchayat open sites, waste, vacant or grazing
lands or public roads, streets, bridges, ditches, dikes and
fences, wells, river banks, streams, lakes, nallas, canals,
water courses, trees or any other property in the gram or
nagar.
Sec. 99 provides for the creation of gram and nagar
funds. Each gram and nagar is to have a fund called the Gram
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Fund or the Nagar Fund into which are to be paid, inter-
alia, the proceeds of any tax or fee imposed by or assigned
to the panchayat under the Act, sums contributed to the fund
by the State Government or the Taluqa Panchayat or the
District Panchayat and all sums received by way of loans
from the State Government or the Taluqa Panchayat or the
District Panchayat or out of the District Development Fund
or otherwise.
Sec. 119 vests in the Taluqa Panchayat every road
building and other work constructed by the Taluqa Panchayat
any land or property transferred to the Taluqa Panchayat by
the State Government and any land or property transferred by
any other Panchayat. Sec. 139 vests in the District
Panchayat every road
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building or other work constructed by the Panchayat, any
land or property transferred to a District Panchayat by the
State Government and any land or other property transferred
to the District Panchayat by any other Panchayat,
We may now refer, conveniently, at this stage to the
provisions relating to services. Sec. 102 provides that
there shall be a Secretary for every gram panchayat and
nagar panchayat, who shall be appointed in accordance with
the rules. Rules, of course, have to be made by the
Government under Sec. 323. Sec. 102 also provides that a
gram panchayat and nagar panchayat may have suck other
servants as may be determined under Sec. 203, who shall be
appointed by such authority and with such conditions of
service, as may be prescribed. ’Prescribed’ again means
’prescribed by rules’ and rules have to be made by the
Government. It is further provided that having regard to the
population of a gram and its income, the State Government
may direct that a group of gram panchayats shall have one
Secretary only. The Secretary is required to keep in his
custody all records and registers of the panchayats, issue
receipts on behalf of the panchayats, prepare all statements
and reports required under the Act and perform such other
functions and duties, as may be prescribed under the Act.
Other servants of the panchayat are required to perform such
functions and duties and exercise such powers as may be
imposed or conferred on them by the Panchayat, subject to
any rules which may be made.
Sec. 122 provides that there shall be a Secretary for
every Taluqa Panchayat and that the Taluqa Development
officer, who shall be an officer belonging to the State
service and posted under the panchayat, shall be the ex-
officio Secretary of the panchayat. Sec. 122 further
provides that the taluqa panchayat shall have such other
officers and servants as may be determined under Sec. 203,
who may be appointed by such authority, with such conditions
of service, as may be prescribed.
Similarly, Sec. 142 provides that the District
Development officer posted under the District Panchayat
shall be the ex-officio Secretary of the District Panchayat.
In addition, the District Panchayat shall have such officers
and servants, as may be determined under Sec. 203,
performing such functions as may be prescribed and appointed
by such authority with such conditions of service, as may be
prescribed. We have earlier referred to Secs. 157 and 158
300
which provide for the allotment and transfer of staff to the
District Panchayat when functions are transferred by the
Government to the District Panchayats under those
provisions. We have already referred to Sec. 326 which
provides that all officers and servants in the employment of
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an existing District Local Board shall be deemed to be
transferred of the service of the successor District
Panchayat. We have also referred to Sec. 325 which
stipulates that the Secretaries and all officers and
servants in the employ of old village panchayats under the
Bombay Village Panchayats Act shall be Secretaries, officers
and servants of the new Gram Panchayats. We have further
referred to Sec. 307 which provides that all officers and
servants in the employment of municipalities whose local
areas have been declared as grams or nagars as the case may
be, shall be officers and servants of the interim panchayats
of such grams or nagars.
Sec. 203, as it stood before it was amended in 1978,
provided for the constitution of a Panchayat Service for the
purpose of bringing about uniform scales of may and uniform
conditions of service for persons employed in the discharge
of functions and duties of Panchayats. Such service, it was
declared, shall be distinct from the State Service. The
panchayat service was to consist of such classes, cadres and
posts and the initial strength of officers and strength of
such classes cadres and posts was to be such as the State
Government might determine from time to time. District
Panchayats were empowered to alter, with the previous
approval of the State Government, any class, cadre or number
of posts determined by the Government. The cadres were to
consist of district cadres, taluqa cadres and local cadres.
A servant belonging to a district cadre was liable to be
posted, whether by promotion or transfer, to any post in any
taluqa or of the district. A servant belonging to the taluqa
cadre was liable to be posted whether by promotion or
transfer to any post in any gram or nagar in the same
taluqa. A servant belonging to a local cadre was liable to
be posted whether by promotion or transfer to any post in
the same gram or nagar. In addition to the posts in the
district taluqa and local cadres, a panchayat might have
such other posts of such classes as the State Government
may, by general or special order, determine such posts being
called ’deputation posts’. They were to be filled in
accordance with the provisions of Sec. 207. The State
Government was empowered to make rules regulating the mode
of recruitment either by holding examinations or otherwise
and conditions
301
of service of persons appointed to the panchayat service and
powers of appointment, transfer and promotion of officers
and servants in the panchayat service and disciplinary
action against such officers and servants. The rules were
required to make provision entitling servants of such cadres
in the Panchayat Service to promotion to such cadres in the
State service as may be prescribed. The rules were also
required to provide for inter-district transfer of servants
belonging to the panchayat service.
Subject to the rules made under Sec. 203, appointment
to posts in the panchayat service, Sec. 205 provides, shall
be made by direct recruitment by promotion or by transfer of
a member of the State service to the panchayat service. Sec.
206 obliges the State Government by general or special order
to allocate to the panchayat service: "(i) such number of
officers ar d servants out of the staff allotted or
transferred to a panchayat under sections (157, 158 and 325)
as it may deem fit, (ia) all officers and servants of the
municipalities dissolved under Sec. 307, (ii) all officers
and servants in the service of district local boards and
district school boards immediately before their dissolution
under this Act and transferred to the panchayats under secs.
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155 and 326". It is further provided that officers and
servants so allocated shall be taken over by such panchayats
in such cadre and on such tenure, remuneration and other
conditions of service, as the State Government may
determine. Sec. 204 provides that, subject to the rules
which the State Government may make, the expenditure towards
the pay, allowances and other benefits allowed to an officer
or servant of the panchayat service serving for the time
being under any panchayat shall be met by that panchayat
from its own fund. Sec. 207 enables the State Government to
direct the posting of officers of the Indian P
administrative service and of Class II services of the State
under panchayat institutions. Sec. 208 enables a panchayat
to obtain the services of any officer of Government on loan.
Sec. 210 provides for the constitution of a Panchayat
Services Selection Board and Sec. 211 provides for the
constitution of District Panchayat Service Selection
Committees and District Primary Education Staff Selection
Committees.
The broad and general picture that we have on a perusal
of the relevant provisions of the Act, as it stood before it
was amended in 1978, is that the Gujarat Legislature aimed
at the democratic decentralization of important governmental
functions by vesting
302
such functions in gram, nagar, taluqa and district
panchayats (see Sec. 88 read with Sch. I, Sec. 117 read with
Sch. II and Sec. 137 read with Sch. III) and, besides, by
enabling the State Government to transfer other powers,
functions and duties to the Panchayat institutions (see
Secs. 89, 149, 150, 155, 156, 157 and 158). A perusal of the
lists of subjects entrusted to the Panchayat Institutions
shows that they are not merely the ordinary run of subjects
entrusted to municipal bodies, such as, public health,
sanitation, etc, but they include a great variety of
subjects intimately connected with all aspects of community
life and vital to it, except functions, such as, law and
order, administration of justice and the like. Even part of
the revenue administration is entrusted to panchayat
institutions, as evident from the fact that collection of
land revenue is one of the duties of the gram panchayats
under the Act. Since decentralisation was not to mean mere
chaotic fission and confusion, a three-tier organisation was
set up, subject to the overall control of the Government and
it was as if a parallel but subsidiary or subordinate
Government was set up by the Government itself to discharge
some of its functions. Not merely were the panchayat
institutions required to discharge governmental functions,
the organisation and its three-tier units were to have very
close links with the Government at every twist and turn, as
it were. The property of the panchayats was that which
previously belonged to the Government but came to be vested
in them or transferred to them and the funds of the
panchayats were those to be provided substantially by way
of. contribution or loan by the Government. The Government
was not only empowered to make the rules to carry out the
objects of the Act. but also to issue directions from time
to time to all or any of the panchayats. The Government was
also, empowered to cause inspection to be made and, further,
to call for the proceedings of the panchayat, to satisfy
itself as to the legality or propriety of any order made by
the Panchayat. For the purpose of efficiently discharging
the functions and duties of the various panchayat
institutions and havining regard to the three-tier system
which had been established, it was apparently thought
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necessary to constitute a panchayat service, the members of
which would have uniform scales of pay and uniform
conditions of service. So a single centralised Panchayat
Service was constituted which was to be ’distinct from the
State Service’. The distinction lay in that it was a service
parallel to the State Service and not in that the members of
the service were not Government servants. The question
303
whether the members of the panchayat service are Government
servants or not is the principal question to be answered in
the appeal and we will come bark to it again later.
After the coming into force of the 1961 Act, several
sets of rules were promulgated and orders were made which
concerned the Gujarat Panchayat Service. One such order was
that made on January 2, 1967 under Sec. 203 (2) directing
that the Panchayat service shall consist of district cadre,
taluqa cadre and local cadre and further specifying the
posts which belonged to each of the cadres. Amongst the
rules made were the Gujarat Panchayat Service (Absorption,
Seniority, Pay. and Allowances) Rules, 1965, which provided
for the equation of posts, fixation of seniority, scales of
pay and allowances of "allocated employees". "Allocated
employees’ were defined in the rules to mean persons
allocated to the panchayat service under the provisions of
Sec. 206 (i). The rules provide that every allocated
employee holding a corresponding post, immediately before
the appointed day, shall be appointed to the equivalent
post. Equivalent post is defined to mean a post in the
panchayat service, which the State Government may, by order,
determine to be generally corresponding to a post held by an
allocated employee immediately before the appointed day
(called corresponding post) having regard to the pay scales,
the minimum educational and other qualifications prescribed
for the equivalent post and the corresponding post and the
nature and magnitude of responsibilities attached to such
posts. Therefore, unless equivalence of posts is first
determined, by order, by the Government the Gujarat
Panchayat Service Absorption Seniority Pay and Allowances
Rules, 1965 cannot be effectively applied. Even so, the
State Government did not make any order regarding equation
of posts of the staff in the local cadre and the fixation of
their scale of pay, although such orders were made in
respect of posts of other cadres. The State Government did
not also extend to the staff borne on the local cadre of the
panchayat service the benefit of revision of scales of pay,
etc. which were made on the basis of the recommendations of
the two Pay Commissions, though such benefit was extended to
the District and Taluqa cadres; nor did the Government make
any order providing for promotional avenues to employees of
the local cadre. Aggrieved by the deaf ear turned to their
representations, certain ex-municipal employees now included
in the local cadre of the Panchayat Service, for themselves
and on behalf
304
of other ex-municipal employees now in the local cadre of
the Panchayat Service, filed a Writ Petition in the High
Court of Gujarat seeking various reliefs. The Writ Petition
was resisted by the State of Gujarat and the Development
Commissioner on the principal ground that the members of the
Panchayat Service were not Government servants and
therefore, they were not entitled to claim the reliefs asked
by them. The High Court of Gujarat allowed the Writ Petition
holding that the members of the panchayat service belonging
to the local cadre were Government servants and directed the
State Government .
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"(1) To make suitable orders under the Gujarat
Panchayat Service (Absorption, Seniority, Pay and
Allowances) Rules, 1965 as regards the equivalence of
posts, fixation of pay scales for such posts, fixation
of the petitioners and the person to whom they
represented an appropriate stage in such pay scales and
other incidental matters covered by the said rules and
to give effect to such orders from the date of
allocation of the petitioners and the persons whom they
represent to the Panchayat Service, that is to say,
from February 11, 1969.
(2) To initially fix the pay scales and allowances
and other conditions of service, including the grant of
house rent allowance, compensatory local allowance,
leave benefits, medical benefits, retirement benefits,
etc. Of the petitioners and the persons whom they
represent in the equivalent posts in the Panchayat
Service in accordance p with the provisions of the
Gujarat Panchayats Service (Absorption, Seniority, Pay
and Allowances) Rules, 1965 and simultaneously give to
them the benefit of such of the accepted
recommendations of the First Pay Commission (Sarala
Commission) in the said matters as were extended to the
other officers and servants of the Panchayat Service;
alternatively, having initially fixed the pay scales,
allowances and other conditions of service in the
equivalent post in accordance with the said rules, to
revise subsequently such pay scales and other
conditions of service as per the accepted
recommendations of the First Pay Commission (Sarala
Commission) in the said matters with effect from
February 11, 1969.
305
(3) To further revise the pay scales and
allowances and other conditions of service, including
the grant of house rent allowance, compensatory local
allowance, leave benefits, medical benefits, retirement
benefits, etc. of the Second Pay Commission (Desai
Commission) in the said matters and to give effect to
such revision on and with effect from January 1, 1975.
(4) To extend to the petitioners and the persons
whom they represent the benefit of interim relief in
the same manner in which such benefit was extended to
the other officers and servants of the Panchayat
Service.
(5) To pay to the petitioners and the persons whom
they represent the amount payable to them as a
consequence of the rationalisation or revision of pay
scale and allowances and other conditions of service in
pursuance of the directions contained in clauses (I) to
(4) hereinabove.
(6) To consider the question of making suitable
provisions in the Gujarat Panchayats Service (Promotion
to Cadres in State Service) Rules, 1974 or by framing
appropriate Rules for promotion of the ex-municipal
staff of the Panchayat Service to consider the question
of providing to such staff, by framing appropriate
rules, pro motional avenues to the other two cadres in
the Panchayat Service, namely, the taluka cadre and the
district cadre".
The State Government and the Development Commissioner
have filed the appeal which is now before us. But during the
pendency of the appeal, in an effort to undo the basis of
the decision of the High Court, the Governor of Gujarat
promulgated the Gujarat Panchayats Amendment ordinance,
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1978, later replaced by the Gujarat Panchayats (Third
Amendment) Act, 1978. The constitutional validity of the
Amending Act is questioned in the Writ Petitions by the ex-
municipal employees now included in the local cadre.
The appeal was argued first as if the Amending Act had
not been passed and the main question argued in the appeal
was whether the members of the Panchayat service were
Government servants. The Writ Petitions were argued next and
the question argued in the Writ Petitions was about the
constitutional validity of the Amending Act.
306
We have to first consider the question whether the
members of the Gnjarat Panchayat Service are Government
Servants. Earlier we have already said enough to indicate
our view that they are Government Servants. We do not
propose and indeed it is neither politic nor possible to lay
down any definitive test to determine when a person may be
said to hold a civil post under the Government. Several
factors may indicate the relationship of master and servant.
None may be conclusive. On the other hand, no single factor
may be considered absolutely essential. The presence of all
or some of the factors, such as, the right to select for
appointment, the right to appoint, the right to terminate
the employment, the right to take other disciplinary action,
the right to prescribe the conditions of service, the nature
of the duties performed by the employee, the right to
control the employee’s manner and method of the work, the
right to issue directions and the right to determine and the
source from which wages or salary are paid and a host of
such circumstances, may have to be considered to determine
the existence of the relationship of master and servant. In
each case, it is a question of fact whether a person is a
servant of the State or not. Amongst the cases cited before
us were Guru Govinda Babu v. Sankar Prasad Ghosal(1), State
of Uttar Pradesh v. Audh Narasin Singh(2), State of Assam v.
Shri Kanakchandra Dutt(3), Gurushantappa v. Abdul Khuddus(4)
S.L. Aggarwal v. Hindustan Steel Ltd.(5) and Jalgaon Zila
Parishad v. Duman Gobind and others(6). We have considered
all of them and do not consider it necessary to refer to
each of them.
We may now revert to the question whether the members
of the Gujarat Panchayat Service are Government servants.
First, we see that the duties which they are required to
perform are in connection with those affairs of the State
which are entrusted to the Panchayat Institutions, by the
statute itself or by transfer by the Government under the
statute. Next, the expenditure towards the pay and allowance
of officers and servants of the panchayat service, serving
for the time being under any panchayat has, no doubt, to be
met by the panchayat from its own fund, but, as we have
seen, the
307
fund consists substantially of sums contributed or lent by
the State Government and of the proceeds of any tax or fee
imposed by or assigned to the panchayat under the Act. The
imposition of a tax or a fee in the nature of a tax, as we
know, is essentially a function of the State. So the salary
and allowances of the servants and officers of the panchayat
service are paid out of funds contributed or lent by the
Government or raised by the discharge of an essential
governmental function. Secretaries of Gram and Nagar
Panchayats are to be appointed in accordance with the rules
made by the Government, while the Taluqa Development officer
is to be the Secretary of the Taluqa Panchayat and the
District Development officer is to be the Secretary of the
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District Panchayat. Taluqa and District Development officers
are, of course, officers of the State service. Gram and
Nagar panchayats may have other servants, as may be
determined under Sec. 203, but they have to be appointed by
such authority as may be prescribed by the Government and
their conditions of service shall be such as may be
prescribed by the Government. Sec. 203, as already noticed
by us, contemplates the constitution of a single centralised
Panchayat Service, the classes, cadres and posts of which
have to be determined by the Government from time to time.
The mode of recruitment, whether by examination or
otherwise, the conditions of service the powers in respect
of appointments, transfers and promotions of officers and
servants and disciplinary action which may be taken against
them, are to be regulated by the rules made by the
Government. The rules so made are particularly required to
contain "a provision entitling servants of such cadres in
the panchayat service to promotion to such cadres in the
State service, as may be prescribed: vide Sec. 207 (4) (a).
this is an important provision. There cannot be any question
of a rule providing for promotion from the panchayat service
to the 17 State service unless the Panchayat Service is also
a service under the State. Again Sec. 203 (5) requires that
rules may provide for inter-district transfers of servants
belonging to the panchayat service and the circumstances in
which and the conditions subject to which such transfers may
be made This provision along with the provisions of Sec. 203
which provide for the promotion and transfer of servants
belonging to the district, taluqa and local cadres within
the district taluqa and gram or nagar clearly show that the
servants are not the servants of the individual panchayats
but belong to a centralised service. Sec. 205 provides that
appointments to posts in the Panchayat service shall be made
(i) by direct recruitment, (ii) by promotion or (iii) by
transfer of a member of the State service to the Panchayat
service. This provision which enables an appointment to be
308
made to a post in the Panchayat Service by transfer of a
member of the State service necessarily implies that the
panchayat service is also a service under the State. Secs.
157 and 158 provide for the transfer of certain functions
performed by the Government to Panchayat Institutions
together with funds and staff. Sec. 325, as we have already
seen, provides that secretaries, all officers and servants
in the employ of old village panchayats shall be
secretaries, officers and servants of the new gram
panchayats. It is not disputed that Talaties and Kotwals,
who were Government Servants, were the Secretaries and
officers of old village panchayats. Now, Sec. 206 (1) (i)
provides for the allocation to the Panchayat service of such
number of officers and servants out of the staff transferred
to the panchayat under Sec. 157, 158 and 325, as the
Government may deem fit. Sec. 206 (1) (iii) further provides
for the allocation to the Panchayat service of such other
officers and servants employed in the state service as may
be necessary to enable the panchayats to discharge
efficiently their functions and duties under the Act.
Obviously this transfer and allocation of members of State
services to the Panchayat service under Sections 157, 158,
325, 206 (1) (i) and 206 (l) (iii) will be impermissible
unless the Panchayat service is also a service under the
State. Otherwise, there would be a patent violation of the
provisions of Art. 311 of the Constitution. Sec. 206A
authorises a review of allocation within a period of four
years and reallocation to the State service of these
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transfers under Sections 157 and 158. The very idea that
there can be an allocation to the Panchayat Service from a
State service and a reallocation from the Panchayat Service
to the State Service is only consistent with the Panchayat
Service also being a service under the State.
Considerable stress was laid by the Counsel for the
State of Gujarat on the statement in Sec. 203 that such
service (Panchayat Service) shall be distinct from the State
service. We do not think this is to be interpreted as a
disclaimer by the Legislature that the Panchayat service is
a service under the State. All that it can possibly mean is
that the Panchayat service is not a service which can be
identified with other State Services for the reason that
while the Panchayat service too discharges the duties
connected with the affairs of the State, it does so not
directly under the State but under the various Panchayat
Institutions to whom are delegated or transferred certain
functions of the State Government. Panchayat Service is
distinct from a State Service because the Panchayat
institutions whom it serves together constitute an almost
parallel but subsidiary Government. It is only in that sense
Panchayat Service is distinct from a
309
State Service and not in the same that members of the
service are not servants of the State.
It is also argued that the several Panchayat
Institutions are declared to be bodies corporate by the Act
and, therefore, their servants cannot be Government
servants. We are unable to see any force in the submission.
Government servants do not cease to be Government servants
merely because, for the time being, they are allotted to
different Panchayat Institutions and are paid out of the
funds of those institutions. We have already explained why
the servants belonging to the various cadres of the
Panchayat service cannot be considered to be servants of
individual panchayats. It is unnecessary to pursue the
matter further.
We are, therefore, of the view that the Panchayat
Service constituted under Sec. 203 of the Gujarat Panchayats
Act is a civil service of the State and that the members of
the service are Government servants. This very question had
been decided by the High D Court of Gujarat more than 15
years back in G.L. Shukla and Anr. v. The State of
Gujarat(1) and there appears no good reason to depart from
the view then taken by the High Court. Bhagwati J., who
spoke for the Court had said, "The Panchayat Service
contemplated under the Act is as much a civil service of the
State as the State Service. The legislature by enacting the
Act provided for the establishment of the Panchayat
organisation of the State and for the efficient
administration of the Panchayat organisation, particularly
in view of the fact that a large part of the service
personnel would be drawn from different sources and would,
therefore, be heterogeneous in composition with widely
differing scales of pay and conditions of service, the
Legislature felt l? that it would be desirable to have a
separate civil service of persons employed in the discharge
of functions and duties of panchayats with uniform scales of
pay and uniform conditions of service and, therefore, with
that end in view the Legislature provided for constitution
of the panchayat service. All the provisions of the Act
relating to the panchayat service point unmistakably and
inevitably to one and only one conclusion, namely, that the
panchayat service is one single service with the State as
the master. The panchayat service is to be constituted by
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the State Government and its strength is also to be
determined by the State Government. Sec. 203 subsec. (2)
says that the panchayat service shall consist of such
classes,
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cadres and posts and the initial strength of officers and
servants in each such class and cadre shall be such as the
State Government may be order from time to time determine
............................................................
............................................................
"The provisions of different cadres in the panchayat service
and the transferability of persons employed in the panchayat
service from a post in the district cadre to a post in any
taluka in the district and from a post in the taluka cadre
to a post in any taluka in the district and from a post in
the taluka cadre to a post in any gram or nagar in the same
taluka emphasize that the panchayat service is one single
service with one master, namely, the State and each
panchayat is not the master of the servant employed in the
discharge of its functions and duties. It is difficult to
imagine that the Legislature should have provided for
transfer of servants from one master to another ............
............................................................
"The mode of recruitment, the conditions of service and
matters relating to appointments, transfers and promotions
of persons employed in the panchayat service as also
disciplinary action against them are all determined by the
State Government and that is consistent only with the State
being the master in the entire panchayat service. The
mandatory provision for promotion from panchayat service to
State service which is required to be made in the rules also
shows that both the services are services of the State.
There could be no question of promotion from one service to
another if the masters in the two services were different.
Then it would be a case of termination of one service and
appointment to another .....................................
............................................................
"Then comes Sec. 206 which provides for making of an order
of allocation to the panchayat service .....................
............................................................
"This provision relating to allocation of officers and
servants under clauses (i) and (iii) does not contemplate
any termination of service of such officers and servants or
any fresh appointment to a new service. There is no concept
of termination of the existing service and reappointment to
a new service involved in the process of allocation: the
concept is only of transfer from one service of the State to
another without any break in the continuity cf service and
that clearly postulates that both services are under the
same master, namely, the State. Sec. 206A also reinforces
this conclusion. It makes the initial allocation provisional
and Permits the State to
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review the allocation within a period of four years from 1st
April, 1963 ................................................
"It is not possible to believe that the officer or servant
could have been intended by the Legislature to be treated
like a chattel which can be tossed about from one master to
another. The only reasonable way of looking at the matter
seems to be and that conclusion is inevitable on the
language of these provisions, that the panchayat service is
a civil service of State like’ the State service and since
both the services are civil services of the State with the
State as the master an officer or servant can be allocated
from the State service to the panchayat service and
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reallocated from the panchayat service to the State service
...........................................................
"The conclusion which emerges from this discussion is that
the panchayat service is a distinct and separate service set
up for serving the Panchayat organisation of the State and
it is as much a civil service of the State as the State
service. The State can have many services such as State
Service, police service, engineering service etc. and
panchayat service as one of them. In the panchayat service,
as in the State service, the State is the master and every
officer or servant employed in the panchayat service is the
servant of the State and not of the panchayat under which he
may be serving for the time being. The panchayat service is
one single service with the State as the master."
We entirely agree with the above observations of the
learned Judge.
It was argued that the High Court was wrong in issuing
directions for equation of posts, revision of pay scales and
payment of salaries. We do not think that the High Court
committed any error in issuing the directions which were
consequential to its findings. The High Court had directed
the State Government to discharge its statutory duty to make
orders for the equation of posts and to extend the benefits
arising out of the reports of the two Pay Commissions, which
benefits bad been denied to the local cadre only. The
obligation to make provision for the payment of salaries,
allowances and other benefits to Government servants did not
cease by their being allocated to Panchayat Institutions,
notwithstanding that Sec. 204 places an obligation on the
Panchayat under whom an officer or servant of the Panchayat
service may service for the time being to meet the
expenditure towards the pay, allowances and benefits
available to such officer or servant. We do not have any
doubt that the case was correctly decided by the High Court
and
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that the appeal deserves to be dismissed with costs which we
quantify at Rs. 15,000.
We then come to the Writ Petitions. As mentioned by us
earlier the Gujarat Panchayats Act was amended during the
pendency of the appeal in an effort to nullify the effect of
the judgment of the Gujarat High Court. First, the
Government promulgated an ordinance and next the legislature
enacted the Amending Act.
Sec. I of the Amending Act stipulates the dates from
which the various amending provisions must be deemed to have
come into force. We shall refer to the dates from which some
of the provisions are deemed to have come into force when we
refer to those provisions.
By Sec. 2 of the Amending Act, original Sec. 11 (1)
which declared that the Gram panchayats, Taluqa panchayats,
District panchayats, Gram sabbas, Nagar Panchayats and
Conciliation Panchas shall constitute the Panchayat
organisation of the State of Gujarat was omitted and
original Sec. 11 (2) which provided for the control of the
State Government over panchayats directly or through their
officers was made Sec. 11. It is extremely difficult to
understand the omission of old Sec. 11 (1). The whole object
of the Gujarat Panchayats Act is "democratic
decentralisation of power and the consequent reorganisation
of the administration of Local Government". The object is to
decentralise and reorganise. So it was thought that Gram
Panchayats, Nagar Panchayats, Taluqa Panchayats, District
Panchayats, etc. should constitute the panchayat
organisation of the State of Gujarat. The object of the Act
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is still the same, yet s. 11(1) has been omitted. Does it
mean that there is a disbandment of organisation ? According
to the Statement of objects and Reasons, the amendments were
necessitated to get over the judgment of the Gujarat High
Court that the Panchayat Service is a State Service. But
surely that can’t be a reason to go against the object of
the Principal Act and to abandon the constitution of a State
Panchayat organisation. No wonder it was described as an act
of cutting the nose to spite the face. We may mention here
that s. 2 is deemed to have come into force on February 24,
1962, the date on which the origina s. 11 came into force.
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Sec. 3 of the Amending Act introduced substantial
changes in s. 102. While the provision that there shall be a
Secretary for every Gram panchayat and Nagar panchayat, who
shall be appointed in accordance with the rules, was
retained, a proviso was added in the following terms:
"Provided that where on account of conversion of
municipality into a Gram panchayat or a Nagar panchayat
under. s. 307, an officer of a municipality becomes a
Secretary of such panchayat or where any person not being a
Talati-cum-Panchayat Secretary is appointed as a Secretary
to such panchayat, such Secretary shall not be governed by
the rules so made and the rules for regulating recruitment
and conditions of service of such Secretary shall be such as
the Panchayat may, subject to general or special order of
the State Government, by its resolution determine". The
provision in the original s. 102 (1) (b) which enabled the
Gram panchayat or Nagar panchayat to have such other
servants as may be determined under s. 203 and which
provided that such servant shall be appointed by such
authority and their conditions of service shall be such as
may be prescribed was omitted and in its place a new s. 102
(1) (b) was substituted enabling the Gram panchayat itself
to appoint such servants as may be necessary for the proper
exercise of its powers, discharge of duties and performance
of functions and further providing that the rules for
regulating recruitment and conditions of service of such
servants shall be made by the Punchayat itself. An
explanation was added to say that the expression ’servants’
included a Secretary referred to in the proviso to cl. (a).
A further cl. (c) was introduced after cls. (a) and (b) of
s. 102 (1) and it is as follows: "Notwithstanding any thing
contained in any judgment, decree or order of any court,-(i)
the officers and servants of a Gram Panchyat, as the case
may be, bf a Nagar Panchayat shall be and shall be deemed to
have always been the officers and servants of such Gram
Panchayat or Nagar Panchayat; (ii) the expenditure towards
the pay and allowances of, and other benefits available to,
a servant of the Gram Panchayat or, as the case may be,
Nagar Panchayat, shall be met by that Panchayat from its own
fund".
The mischief of the new proviso to s. 102 (1) (a) is
manifest. Amongst persons to be appointed as Secretaries of
Gram and Nagar Panchayats, persons who were previously
Talati-cum-Panchayat Secretaries were to be appointed as
Secretaries in accordance with the rules, but the rules were
not to apply to officers of municipalities, who became
Secretaries of Panchayats consequent on conversion
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of municipalities into Gram and Nagar Panchayats under s.
307. The conditions of service of the latter category were
to be regulated by the panchayat itself, by resolution. and
not by any rules made by the Government as in the case of
the others. Other servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats were
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also to be appointed by the Panchayats and their conditions
of service were also to be regulated by the Gram and Nagar
Panchayats Notwithstanding any judgment of the court, the
officers and servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats were to
be deemed to have always been officers and servants of such
Nagar and Gram Panchayats The amended s. 102 (1) was to be
given retrospective effect from February 24, 1962. In other
words, the non-Talati Secretaries and other officers and
servants of the Gram and Nagar Panchayats were to be deemed
to be servants of the Gram and Nagar Panchayats,
notwithstanding the judgments of the courts which had
declared them to be Government servants.
By Sec 4 of the Amending Act a proviso was added to s.
157 (3) of the Principal Act barring the District Panchayat
from transferring its staff to a Gram or Nagar Panchayat
consequent on the delegation of functions, powers and duties
to a Gram or a Nagar PanchaYat.
By sec. 6 of the Amending Act, s. 203 of the Principal
Act was substantially amended. While s. 203 (1) of the
Principal Act, as it stood originally, provided for the
constitution of a Panchayat Service for the purpose of
bringing about uniform scales of pay and uniform conditions
of service for persons employed in the discharge of
functions and duties of panchayats and declared that such
service shall be distinct from the State Service, the new
sub-sec. (1) introduced by cl. (l) of s. 6 of the Amending
Act, is as follows: ’(1) In order to enable taluka
panchayats and district panchayats to exercise their powers,
discharge their duties and perform their functions
effectively and efficiently, there shall be constituted a
Panchayat Service consisting of persons employed in
connection with the affairs of taluka panchayats and
district panchayats and of specified servants, and
notwithstanding anything contained in any judgment, decree
or order of any court such persons and Servants shall be and
shall be deemed to have always been the officers and
servants of the taluka panchayats or, as the case may be,
the district panchayats.
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Explanation-In this sub-sec., the expression "specified
servants" means-
(a) talatis-cum-Panchayat secretaries discharging the
functions of gram Panchayat or of nagar panchayats, and
(b) kotwals."
See. 203 (2A) was amended by omitting reference to
local cadres
Old Sec. 203 (4) (a) which obliged the making of a rule
containing a provision entitling servants of such cadres in
the panchayat service to promotion to such cadres in the
State service as may be prescribed was omitted and in its
place a new cl. (a) was substituted by cl. (4) of s. 6 of
the Amending Act and it is as follows :-
"(a) A provision entitling persons holding such class
of posts Din the district cadre to be recruited to such
cadre in the State service as may be prescribed."
The opening clause of the new s. 203 is extremely
curious It gives the reason for constituting the new
Panchayat Service of the Amending Act. The reason, it
appears, is to enable taluka panchayats and district
panchayats to exercise their powers, discharge their duties
and preform their functions effectively and efficiently. But
then what about the Gram and Nagar Panchayats which are at
the very foundations of the whole idea of democratic
decentralisation of powers in favour of panchayat
institutions ? The entire Panchayats superstructure has to
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stand on the base of F Gram and Nagar Panchayats and
obviously there can be no vigorous and strong Local Self-
Government institutions without efficient and effective Gram
and Nagar Panchayats. It is, therefore, difficult to
discover the logic behind excluding Gram and Nagar
Panchayats from the benefits of a centralised, effective and
efficient service.
The vice of the new provision is again obvious. Local
cadre is made to appear to be excluded from the Panchayat
Service, but not truly so. In the guise of ’specified
servants’ are brought in, as if by the back door, talatis-
cum-Panchayat Secretaries functioning in Gram or Nagar
panchayats and Kotwals. What is done in
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truth is that employees of gram or nagar panchayats, other
than Talatis-cum-Panchayat Secretaries and Kotwals alone,
and this primarily means, the ex-Municipal employees are
excluded from the Panchayat Service and the judgment of the
court that they form part of a centralised State Service, is
sought to be nullified, by giving effect to cls (1) and (4)
of s. 6 of the Amending Act from February 24, 1962.
By s. 8 of the Amending Act, s. 206 (1) (i) was amended
by substituting the figures and word ’157 and 158’ for the
figures and word ’157, 158 and 325’. In Sec. 206 (1) (la),
the clause ’All officers and servants of municipalities
dissolved under s. 307’ was substituted by the clause "all
persons who have under cl. (x) of S. 325 become the
secretaries of new gram panchayats and kotwals". In the rest
of S. 206 wherever the words ’the panchayats’ were used, the
words ’the district and taluqa panchayats’ were substituted.
The real effect of S. 8 of the Amending Act is to take out
"all officers and servants of the municipalities dissolved
under S. 307" from the applicability of S. 206 though S. 206
is made otherwise applicable to all other categories of
officers and servants allotted to a panchayat.
By S. 10 of the Amending Act, two new sections S. 206
(AB) and S. 206 (AC) are introduced, the object of which is
really to give options to those officers and servants who
are allotted or transferred to panchayats, under the various
provisions of the Act. These provisions are obviously
introduced to defeat an argument that allotment and transfer
of Government servants to a non-Government service is
violative of Art. 311.
By Sec. 14 of the Amending Act, a new Sec. 21 I(A) is
introduced the effect of which is that the allocation of
officers and servants of erstwhile municipalities and
officers and servants of old village panchayats was to cease
and those officers and servants were to be deemed to have
always been officers and servants of the gram and nagar
panchayats. It was as if these officers and servants never
had to be allocated by any order of the Government, but they
had automatically became officers and servants of the new
gram panchayats. There was no question of any option. They
could take it or leave it. They were not to be treated as
having been Government servants at any time.
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Other provisions of the Amending Act were merely
consequential to the confining of the Panchayat Services to
district or taluqa cadres.
From the summary of the provisions of the Amending Act
that has been set out above it requires no perception to
recognise the principal target of the amending legislation
as the category of ex-municipal employees’, who are, so to
say, pushed out of the Panchayat Service and are to be
denied the status of Government servants and the
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consequential benefits. The ex-municipal employees are
virtually the "poor relations", the castle, the Panchayat
Service, is not for them nor the attendant advantages,
privileges and perquisites, which are all for the "pedigree
descendants" only. For them, only the out-houses. As a
result of the amendments they cease to be Government
servants with retrospective effect. Their earlier allocation
to the Panchayat Service is cancelled with retrospective
effect. They become servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats
with retrospective effect. They are treated differently from
those working in taluqa and district panchayats as well as
from the talatis and Kotwals working in Gram and Nagar
Panchayats. Their conditions of service are to be prescribed
by panchayats, by resolution, whereas the conditions of
service of others are to be prescribed by the Government.
Their promotional prospects are completely wiped out and all
advantages which they would derive as a result of the
judgments of the courts are taken away.
Several grounds were urged before us to attack the
constitutional validity of the Amending Act. It was said
that the provisions of the Act were violative of Art. 311.
It was said that the Act was discriminatory. It was urged
that the retrospectivity given to the provisions of the
Amending Act could not cure the discrimination introduced by
the Act and sought to be perpetuated by it. In any case it
was said that the benefits acquired could not be taken away
with retrospective effect. On the other band, it was argued
that there was good reason for the classification and that
in the circumstances of the case, the classification was
legitimately made with retrospective effect.
It is here necessary to recapitulate a few facts. When
the Panchayat Service was initially constituted soon after
the passing of
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the Gujarat Panchayats Act, there were three cadres, the
district cadre, the taluqa cadre and the local cadre.
Secretaries, officers and servants of the old village
panchayats under the Bombay Village Panchayats Act, 1958
became Secretaries, officers and servants of the new Gram
Panchayats under s. 325 (2)(x) of the Gujarat Panchayats
Act, 1961. Talatis and Kotwals, who were Government servants
were Secretaries and officers of the old village panchayats
under the Bombay Village Panchayats Act and so they became
secretaries and officers of the new gram panchayats under
the Gujarat Panchayats Act, 1961. Some municipalities
constituted for municipal districts and municipal boroughs
under the Bombay District Municipal Act and the Bombay
Municipal Boroughs Act as applied to areas in the State of
Gujarat, were converted into gram and nagar panchayats under
s. 307 of the Gujarat Panchayats Act and all officers and
servants in the employ of such municipalities became
officers and servants of interim panchayats and allocated to
the Panchayat Service. Thus, Secretaries and officers of
dissolved municipalities also became Secretaries and
officers of gram and nagar panchayats. District Local Boards
constituted under the Bombay Local Boards Act stood
dissolved on the passing of the Gujarat Panchayats Act and
all officers and servants in the employment of the Board
were deemed to be transferred to the service of the
successor district panchayat under s. 326 of the Gujarat
Panchayats Act. Also allocated to the Panchayat Service were
those Government servants who were transferred to the
Panchayats under s. 157 and such others officers and
servants employed in the State Service as were necessary (s.
206 (iii)). All these Secretaries, officers and servants
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became members of a service under the State as soon as they
were allocated the Panchayat Service. Now, by the Amending
Act, secretaries, p officers and servants of Gram and Nagar
Panchayats who were allocated to the Panchayat service from
the ranks of the ex-municipal employees are sought to be
meted out differential treatment from the other members or
the Panchayat Service, more particularly the Secretaries,
officers and servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats who were
drawn from the ranks of secretaries, officers and servants
of old village panchayats, that is the Talatis and Kotwals
Their status as members of a service under the State is to
go with no option to them. Retrospectivity is sought to be
given to the amending act so that they could not claim that
they were ever Government servants and so could not be made
to cease to be Government servants and so that they could
not claim that they were singled out for differential
treatment, for, if they were never in the Panchayat
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service, they could not complain of being taken out of the
Panchayat Service.
Now, in 1978 before the Amending Act was passed, thanks
to the provisions of the Principal Act of 1961, the ex-
municipal employees who had been allocated to the Panchayat
Service as Secretaries, officers and servants of Gram and
Nagar Panchayats, had achieved the status of government
servants. Their status as Government servants could not be
extinguished, so long as the posts were not abolished and
their services were not terminated in accordance with the
provisions of Art. 311 of the Constitution. Nor was it
permissible to single them out for differential treatment.
That would offend Art. 14 of the Constitution. An attempt
was made to justify the purported differentiation on the
basis of history and ancestry, as it were. It was said that
Talatis and Kotwals who became Secretaries, officers and
servants, of Gram and Nagar Panchayats were Government
servants, even to start with, while municipal employees who
became such secretaries, officers and servants of Gram and
Nagar Panchayats were not. Each carried the mark or the
’brand’ of his origin and a classification on the basis of
the source from which they came into the service, it was
claimed, was permissible. We are clear that it is not. Once
they had joined the common stream of service to perform the
same duties, it is clearly not permissible to make any
classification on the basis of their origin. Such a
clarification would be unreasonable and entirely irrelevant
to the object sought to be achieved. It is to navigate
around these two obstacles of Art. 311 and Art. 14 that the
Amending Act is sought to be made restrospective, to bring
about an artificial situation as if the erstwhile municipal
employees never became members of a service under the State.
Can a law be made to be destroy today’s accured
constitutional P rights by artificially reverting to a
situation which existed seventeen years ago? No.
The legislation is pure and simple, self-deceptive, if
we may use such an expression with reference to a
legislature-made law. The legislature is undoubtedly
competent to legislate with retrospective effect to take
away or impair any vested right acquired under existing laws
but since the laws are made under a written Constitution,
and have to conform to the do’s and don’ts of the
Constitution neither prospective nor retrospective laws can
be made so as to contravene Fundamental Rights. The law must
satisfy the requirements of the Constitution today taking
onto account the accrued or
320
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acquired rights of the parties today. The law cannot say,
twenty years ago the parties had no rights, therefore, the
requirements of the Constitution will be satisfied if the
law is dated back by twenty years. We are concerned with
today’s rights and not yesterday’s. A legislature cannot
legislate today with reference to a situation that obtained
twenty years ago and ignore the march of events and the
constitutional rights accrued in the course of the twenty
years. That would be most arbitrary, unreasonable and a
negation of history. It was pointed out by a Constitution
Bench of this Court in BS. Yadav and others etc. v. State of
Haryana and others etc.(1) Chandrachud CJ., speaking for the
Court, "Since the Governor exercises the legislative power
under the proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution, it is
open to him to give retrospective operation to the rules
made under that provision. But the date from which the rules
are made to operate, must be shown to bear either from the
face of the rules or by extrinsic evidence, reasonable nexus
with the provisions contained in the rules, especially when
the retrospective effect extends over a long period as in
this case". Today’s equals cannot be made unequal by saying
that they were unequal twenty years ago and we will restore
that position by making a law today and making it
retrospective. Constitutional rights, constitutional
obligations and constitutional consequences cannot be
tempered with that way law which if made today would be
plainly invalid as offending constitutional provisions in
the context of the existing situation 3 cannot become valid
by being made restrospective. Past virtue (constitutional)
cannot be made to wipe out present vice (constitutional) by
making retrospective laws. We are, therefore, firmly of the
view that the Gujarat Panchayats third Amendment) Act, 1978
is unconstitutional, as it offends Arts. 311 and 14 and is
arbitrary and unreasonable. We have considered the question
whether any provision of the Gujarat Panchayats (Third
Amendment) Act, 1978 might be salvaged. We are afraid that
the provisions are so interwined with one another that it is
well-nigh impossible to consider any life saving surgery.
The whole of the Third Amendment Act must go. In the result
the Writ Petition Nos 4266-70 are allowed with costs
quantified at Rs. 15,000. The directions given by the High
Court, which we have cor firmed, should be complied with
before June 30, 1983. In the meanwhile, the employees of the
Panchayats covered by the appeal and the Writ Petitions will
receive a sum of Rs. 200
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per month over and above the emoluments they were receiving
before February 1, 1978. This order will be effective from
February 1, 1983 The interim order made on February 20, 1978
will be effective upto January 31, 1983. The amounts paid
are to be adjusted later.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
Petitions allowed.
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