Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. S. SHVANANDA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KARNATAKA STATE ROAD TRANSPORT CORPORATION AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/09/1979
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 77 1980 SCR (1) 684
1980 SCC (1) 149
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1614 (17)
RF 1991 SC1789 (4,6)
ACT:
Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) ordinance
1976, Cl. 20(3) of Karnataka Contract Carriages
(Acquisition) Act 1976, Sections 19(3) and 31(2)-Scope and
effect of-Contract carriages acquired-Whether employees have
a vested right of absorption.
General Clauses Act 1597 (X of 1897) S. 6-Repeal of
Statute-Right acquired or accrued unaffected-Mere hope or
expectation of or liberty to apply for acquiring a right nor
preserved.
HEADNOTE:
The Karnataka Contract Carriage (Acquisition)
ordinance, 1976 was promulgated on January 30, 1976 with the
object of acquiring the contract carriages operating in the
State. Sub-clause (3 ) to cl. 20 of the ordinance provided
for absorption of certain categories of employees of
contract carriage operators in the service of the
Corporation, and the ratio for absorption for the different
categories of employees that were entitled to be absorbed.
On the same day, the State Government made an order under
sub-cl. (I) to cl. 20 of the ordinance transferring the
contract carriages that vested in the State Government to
the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation.
This ordinance was subsequently replaced by the
Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act, 1976 which
was published in the Gazette dated March 12, 1976. The
ordinance was repealed by the Act, which re-enacted the
provisions of the repealed ordinance, with a saving clause
in sub-s. (2) of s. 31 for presentation of any thing done or
any action taken. The Act was substantially in similar
terms, except for the difference that the ratio prescribed
by proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance which
laid down the categories of persons who could be absorbed in
the service of the Corporation, was substantially altered
and a new ratio was inserted in the proviso to sub-s. (3) of
s. 19 of the Act. Otherwise, sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of the Act
and sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance were identical in
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every respect. Under the Proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20,
the total strength of the employees of the erstwhile
Carriage operators allowable for absorption was 7.9 per
vehicle while under the proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of
the Act, the ratio worked out to 4.45 per vehicle. Further,
while under the ordinance, conductors were entitled to be
absorbed, the ratio provided under the Act showed that
conductors were not included in the categories of persons
who could be absorbed in the service of Corporation.
The change in the ratio of absorption from 7.9 per
vehicle under. sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance to
4.45 per vehicle under sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of the Act
adversely affected a large number of employees of the
erstwhile contract carriage operators who filed writ
petitions in the High Court,
685
challenging the vires of the proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19
of the Act, which dismissed the writ petitions.
In the appeal and the writ petitions to this Court the
question for consideration was, whether the employees of the
erstwhile contract carriage operators in the State of
Karnataka acquired a vested right of absorption in the
service with the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation
under sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the Karnataka Contract
Carriage (Acquisition) ordinance 1976.
Dismissing the appeal and writ petitions;
^
HELD: 1. The High Court rightly observed that there was
neither anything done nor action taken and, therefore, the
petitioners did not acquire any right to absorption under
sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20. [692 C]
2. The ordinance promulgated by the Governor in the
instant case was a ’legislative act’ of the Governor under
Art. 213(1) and, therefore, undoubtedly a temporary statute,
and while it was still in force the repealing Act was passed
containing the saving clause in s. 31(2)(i) providing that,
notwithstanding such repeal, ’anything done’ or any ’action
taken’ under the repealed ordinance shall be deemed to have
been done or taken under the corresponding provisions of the
Act. [691 C-D]
3. In considering the effect of an expiration of a
temporary Act, it would be unsafe to lay down any inflexible
rule. It requires very clear and unmistakable language in a
subsequent Act of the legislature to revive or re-create an
expired right. If, however, the right created by the statute
is of an enduring character and has vested in the person,
that right cannot be taken away because the statute by which
it was created has expired. In order to see whether the
rights and liabilities under the repealed ordinance have
been put an end to by the Act, ’the line of enquiry would be
not whether the new Act expressly keeps alive old rights and
liabilities under the repealed ordinance but whether it
manifests an intention to destroy them. Another line of
approach may be to see as to how far the new Act is
retrospective in operation. [691 F-G]
State of Punjab v. Mohar Singh, [1955] SCR 893,
referred to
4. (i) Sub-s. (2) of s. 31 of the Act was not intended
to preserve abstract rights conferred by the repealed
ordinance. The legislature had the competence to so re-
structure the ordinance as to meet the exigencies of the
situation obtaining after the taking over of the contract
carriage services. It could re-enact the ordinance according
to its original terms, or amend or alter its provisions.
[692 A]
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(ii) When the ordinance came to be replaced by the Act,
the Corporation felt that the number of employees of the
erstwhile contract carriage operators was too large for its
requirements. The legislature, therefore stepped in and
reduced the scale of absorption in the proviso to sub-s. (3)
of s. 19 from 7.9 per vehicle to 4.45 per vehicle. [694G]
5. The object of s. 31(2)(i) is to preserve only the
things done and action taken under the repeated ordinance
and not the rights and privileges acquired and accrued on
the one side, and the corresponding obligation or liability
686
incurred on the other side, so that if no right acquired
under the repealed ordinance was preserved, there is no
question of any liability being enforced. It is unlike the
usual saving clauses which presented unaffected by the
repeal, not only things done under the repealed enactment
but also the rights acquired thereunder. [693 C, D]
6. (i) Every person eligible for absorption had to
fulfil three conditions, viz., (1) he had to be a workman
within the meaning of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947; (2)
he should have been, immediately before the commencement of
the ordinance, exclusively employed in connection with the
acquired property, and (3) he had to come within the ratio
provided in the proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20. The whole
object of inserting sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance
was to obviate the unemployment of persons suitable for
employment, for which purpose, the Corporation had
necessarily to screen the applicants. [693 G]
(ii) It was only if the employee was willing to be
absorbed in the service of the Corporation that the
Corporation could absorb him in service, provided the other
conditions specified in sub-cl. (3 ) to cl. 20 were
satisfied. [694 E]
(iii) Thus it is clear that several steps had to be
taken by the authorities before identifying and determining
the persons who could be absorbed in the service of the
Corporation, in accordance with sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the
ordinance, which indicates that automatic absorption of the
employees of the erstwhile contract carriage operators was
not legally permissible. [694 F]
7. The distinction between what is and what is not a
right presented by the provisions of s. 6 of the General
Clauses Act. is often one of great fineness. What is
unaffected by the repeal of a statute is a right acquired or
accrued under it and not a mere ’hope or expectation of’, or
liberty to apply for acquiring a right. [692 G]
Director of Public Works v. Ho Po Sang, [1962] 2 All.
ER 721 PC, referred to.
8. The Act substitutes a ’new’ proviso in sub-s. (3) of
s. 19 in place cf the old proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20
of the ordinance, altering the whole basis of absorption.
The new proviso is given a retrospective effect, and it
holds the field from the notified date i.e., January 30,
1976. The proviso in subcl. (3) to cl. 20 laying down a
particular ratio of absorption, is pro tanto avoided by an
express enactment of a ’new’ proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19
which is entirely inconsistent with it. When an ordinance is
replaced by an Act which is made retrospective in operation,
anything done or any action taken under the ordinance stand
wholly effected. [695 C]
9. (i) The employees of the former contract carriage
operators in normal course filled in the pro forma giving
their service particulars and reported to duty. This was in
the mere ’hope or expectation’ of acquiring a right. The
submission of these ’call reports’ by the employees did not
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subject the Corporation to a corresponding statutory
obligation to absorb them in service. [692 C]
(ii) The meeting of the Committee set up by the
Government for laying down the principles for equation of
posts and for determination of inter-sc seniority, met on
June 2, 1976. The Committee decided that even in the
687
case of helpers-cleaners, there should be a ’trade test’ and
the staff cleared by the Committee for the posts of helper
’B’, helper ’A’ and assistant artisans should be on the
basis of their technical competence, experience, ability
etc. The Committee also decided that all other employees of
contract carriage operators, who were eligible for
absorption, should be interviewed by that Committee for the
purpose of absorption on the basis of experience, ability
duties and responsibilities. These norms were not laid down
till June 2, 1976 Till their actual absorption, the
employees of the erstwhile contract carriage operators had
only an inchohate right. [692 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2411 of
1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 26-7-1978 of the Karnataka High Court in Writ Petition
No. 10203/ 77.
And
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 4473-4474,
4415, 4488, 4528, and 4539 of 1978.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution). D
G. B. Rikar, K. R. Nagaraja and Mrs. Gayathri Balee for
the Petitioner (In WP. 4473-4474, 4488, 4539/78).
R. B. Datar and Navin Sinha for the Petitioner (In WP.
4415 and 4528 and for-Appellant in CA 2411/78).
V. A. Sayield Mohammad and N. Nettar for the State of
Karnataka and for Respondent No. 3 in WPs. 4473-4474, 4488,
4528 and 4539 and C.A. 2411/78.
L. N. Sinha, Attorney General, K. K. Venugopal,
Additional Solicitor General, V. A. Sayied Mohammad and
Vineet Kumar for Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation
(in All W.P.s & C.A.).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J:-This appeal, by special leave, directed against
a judgment of the Karnataka High Court dated July 26, 1978
and the connected petitions under Art. 32 of the
Constitution, raise a common question. It would, therefore,
be convenient to dispose them of by this common judgment.
The short question involved in these cases is, whether
the employees of the erstwhile contract carriage operators
in the State of Karnataka acquired a vested right of
absorption in service with the Karnataka State Road
Transport Corporation under sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the
Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) ordinance 1976.
688
It will be convenient to refer in the first place to
the legislative changes. On January 30, 1976 the Karnataka
Contract Carriages (Acquisition) ordinance, 1976 was
promulgated by the Governor of Karnataka under cl. (1) of
Art. 213 of the Constitution. The said ordinance was
promulgated with the object of acquiring contract carriages
operating in the State and for certain matters connected
therewith. On the same day, i.e., on January 30, 1976 the
State Government issued a notification under cl. 4(1) of the
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ordinance vesting every contract carriage owned or operated
by such contract carriage operator, along with permit, in
the State Government absolutely free from all encumbrances.
On the same day, the State Government made an order under
sub-cl. (1) to cl. 20 of the ordinance transferring all the
contract carriages that vested in the State Government under
the notification issued under sub-cl. (1) to cl. 4 of the
ordinance, to the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Corporation’). Sub-clause
(3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance provided for absorption of
certain categories of employees of contract carriage
operators in the service of the Corporation. It also
provided the ratio for absorption for different categories
of employees that were entitled to be absorbed in the
service of the Corporation.
The ordinance was subsequently replaced by the
Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act, 1976, Which
was published in the gazette on March 12, 1976. The
ordinance was repealed by the Act, and it re-enacted the
provisions of the repealed ordinance, with a saving clause
in sub-s. (2) of s. 31, for preservation of anything done or
action taken. The Act was substantially in similar terms
except for the difference that the ratio prescribed by
proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance, which
laid down the categories of persons who could be absorbed in
the service of the Corporation, was substantially altered
and a new ratio was inserted in the proviso to sub-s. (3) of
s. 19 of the Act. Otherwise, sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of the Act
and sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance were identical in
every respect. Under proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20, the
total strength of the employees of the erstwhile contract
carriage operators allowable for absorption was 7.9 per
vehicle, while under proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of the
Act the same works out to 4.45 per vehicle. Further, while
under the ordinance conductors were entitled to be absorbed,
the ratio provided under the Act shows that conductors are
not included in the categories of persons who can be
absorbed in the service of the Corporation.
689
It appears that although as many as 785 contract
carriages were A notified for acquisition, only 601 vehicles
were actually acquired. The change in the ratio of
absorption from 7.9 per vehicle under sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20
of the ordinance to 4.45 per vehicle under sub-s. (3) of s.
19 of the Act adversely affected a large number of employees
of the erstwhile contract carriage operators. A large number
of writ petitions were, therefore, filed in the High Court
challenging the vires of the proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19
of the Act on various grounds, but by the judgment under
appeal the High Court has repelled all the contentions.
Thereafter, the remaining writ petitions were all withdrawn.
The appeal is against the judgment of the High Court
and the employees have also directly approached the Court
under Art. 32.
Before dealing with the contention advanced in the
appeal, it is necessary to set out the relevant provisions.
Sub-clause (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance read as follows:
"20.(3) Every person who is a workman within the
meaning of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (Central
Act 14 of 1947) and has been immediately before the
commencement of this ordinance exclusively employed in
connection with the acquired property, shall’, on and
from the notified date, become an employee of the
corporation on the same terms and conditions applicable
to the employees holding corresponding posts in the
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corporation. Any person not willing to become such an
employee of the corporation shall be entitled to
retrenchment compensation as provided in the Industrial
Disputes Act:
Provided that the number of workmen that shall
become employees of the corporation under this sub-
section shall not exceed the following scale, the
junior most being excluded:- -
-----------------------------------------------------------
Scale per vehicle
------------------------------------------------------------
1. Drivers . . . . . . . . 1.5
2. Conductors . . . . . . . 2.65
3. Supervision . . . . . . 0.125
4. Higher Supervision staff and Managers . 0.075
5. Ministerial and Secretariat staff . . . 0.8
6. Technical staff including Foreman . . . 2.75
------------------------------------------------------------
690
Sub-section (3) of s. 19 of the Act, which replaced
sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance, provides:
"19.(3) Every person who is a workman within the
meaning of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (Central
Act 14 of 1947) and has been immediately before the
commencement of this Act exclusively employed in
connection with the acquired property, shall, on and
from the notified date, become an employee of the
corporation on the same terms and conditions applicable
to the employees holding corresponding posts in the
corporation. Any person not willing to’ become such an
employee of the Corporation shall be entitled to
retrenchment compensation as provided in the Industrial
Disputes Act.
Provided that the number of workmen that shall become
employees of the Corporation under this sub-section shall
not exceed the following scale, the junior most being
excluded:-
----------------------------------------------------------
Scale per vehicle
----------------------------------------------------------
1. Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5
2. Supervision staff and managers . . . . 0.1
3. Ministerial and Secretariat Staff. . . 0.1
4. Technical staff including foreman. . . 2.75
------------------
4.45"
----------------------------------------------------------
The saving clause to be found in sub-s. (2) of s. 31 of
the Act, so far as material, runs thus:
"31 (2) Notwithstanding such repeal:-
(i) anything done or any action taken under the said
ordinance, shall be deemed to have been done or taken
under the corresponding provisions of this Act."
It is strenuously argued that it is clear from the
language of subcl. (3) to cl. (20) of the ordinance that
there was, by operation of law, automatic absorption of the
employees of the erstwhile contract carriage operators to
the extent provided therein with effect from January 30,
1976, the date on which the notification was issued under
sub-cl. (1) to cl. 4 and the date on which the Government
made an order under sub-cl. (1) to cl. 20. It is submitted
that the words "shall become an employee of the
Corporation", ill sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 are clear and
unambiguous and they must result in the consequence that all
persons employed in connection with the acquired
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691
contract carriages, became employees of the Corporation. It
is said A that, though the process of absorption may take
time, as and when the necessary steps were taken to fit in
such employees falling within the categories mentioned in
the proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20, their absorption
relates back to the notified date, i.e. January 30, 1976. In
other words, the submission was that the legal effect of
absorption of such’ employees under sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of
the ordinance is automatic. That being so, their right of
absorption could not be whittled down by the subsequent
enactment of the new proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of the
Act, inasmuch as they had acquired a vested right to
absorption in the ratio mentioned in sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20
of the ordinance. C
The ordinance promulgated by the Governor in the
instant case was a ’legislative act’ of the Governor under
Art. 213(1) and, therefore, undoubtedly a temporary statute,
and while it was still in force the Repealing Act was passed
containing the saving clause in s. 31(2) (i) providing that,
notwithstanding such repeal, ’anything done’ or any ’action
taken’ under the repealed ordinance shall be deemed to have
been done or taken under the corresponding provisions of the
Act. The enquiry is, therefore, limited to the question
whether anything was done or action taken under the repealed
ordinance. If that be so, a further question arises on the
submission whether the words ’things done’ in s. 31 (2) (i)
reasonably interpreted can mean not only things done but
also the legal consequences flowing therefrom.
In considering the effect of an expiration of a
temporary Act, it would be unsafe to lay down any inflexible
rule. It certainly requires very clear and unmistakable
language in a subsequent Act of the legislature to revive or
re-create an expired right. If, however, the right created
by the statute is of an enduring character and has vested in
the person, that right cannot be taken away because the
statute by which it was created has expired. In order to see
whether the rights and liabilities under the repealed
ordinance have been put an end to by the Act, ’the line of
enquiry would be not whether’, in the words of Mukherjea J.
in State of Punjab v. Mohar Singh(1), ’the new Act expressly
keeps alive old rights and liabilities under the repealed
ordinance but whether it manifests an intention to ’ destroy
them’. Another line of approach may be to see as to how far
the new Act is retrospective in operation.
It is settled both on principle and authority, that the
mere right existing under the repealed ordinance, to take
advantage of the pro- 11 visions of the repealed ordinance,
is not a right accrued. Sub-section
692
(2) of s. 31 of the Act was not intended to preserve
abstract right conferred by the repealed (ordinance. The
legislature has the competence to so re-structure the
ordinance as to meet the exigencies of the situation
obtaining after the taking over of the contract carriage
services. It could re-enact the ordinance according to its
original terms, or amend or alter its provisions.
What were the ’things done’ or ’action taken’ under the
repealed ordinance ? The High Court rightly observes that
there was neither anything done nor action taken and,
therefore, the petitioners did not acquire any right to
absorption under sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20. The employees of the
former contract carriage operators in normal course filled
in the pro form giving their service particulars and
reported to duty. This was in the mere ’hope or expectation’
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of acquiring a right. The submission of these ’call reports’
by the employees did not subject the Corporation to a
corresponding statutory obligation to absorb them in
service. As a matter of fact, nothing was done while the
ordinance was in force. The Act was published on March 12,
1976. on May 29, 1976, the Corporation sent up proposals for
equation of posts to be filled in by the employees of the
former contract carriage operators. The meeting of the
Committee set up by the Government for laying down the
principles for equation of posts and for determination of
inter-se seniority, met on June 2, 1976. The Committee
decided that even in the case of helpers-cleaners, there
should be a ’trade test’ and’ the staff cleared by the
Committee for the posts of helper ’B’ helper ’A’ and
assistant artisans should be on the basis of their technical
competence, experience, ability etc. The Committee also
decided that all other employees of contract carriage
operators who were, eligible for absorption, should be
interviewed by that p Committee for the purpose of
absorption on the basis of experience, ability, duties and
responsibilities. These norms were not laid down till June
2, 1976. Till their actual absorption, the employees of the
erstwhile contract carriage operators had only an incohate
right.
The distinction between what is, and what is not a
right preserved by the provisions of s. 6 of the General
Clauses Act is often one of great fineness. What is
unaffected by the repeal of a statute is a right acquired or
accrued under it and not a mere ’hope or expectation of’, or
liberty to apply for, acquiring a right. In Director of
Public Works v. Ho Po Sang(’) Lord Morris speaking for the
Privy Council observed:
"It may be, therefore, that under some repealed
enactment, a right has been given, but that, in respect
of it, some
693
investigation or legal proceeding is necessary. The
right is then unaffected and preserved. It will be
preserved even if a process of quantification is
necessary. But there is a manifest distinction between
an investigation in respect of a right and an
investigation which is to decide whether so to right
should be or should not be given. On a repeal the
former is preserved by the Interpretation Act. The
latter is not." (Emphasis supplied)
It must be mentioned that the object of s. 31(2) (i) is to
preserve only the things done and action taken under the
repealed Ordinance, and not the rights and privileges
acquired and accrued on the one side, and the corresponding
obligation or liability incurred on the other side, so that
if no right acquired under the repealed ordinance was
preserved, there is no question of any liability being
enforced.
Further, it is significant to notice that the saving
clause that we are considering in s. 31(2) (i) of the Act,
saves things done while the ordinance was in force; it does
not purport to preserve a right acquired under the repealed
ordinance. It is unlike the usual saving clauses which
preserve unaffected by the repeal, not only things done
under the repealed enactment but also the rights acquired
thereunder. It is also clear that even s. 6 of the General
Clauses Act, the applicability of which is excluded, is not
intended to preserve the abstract rights conferred by the
repealed Ordinance. It only applies to specific rights given
to an individual upon the happening of one or other of the
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events specified in the statute.
Employees in excess of the scale prescribed for the
categories specified under proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19 of
the Act are clearly not entitled for absorption. Though sub-
cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance provided for absorption
of certain classes of employees in a particular ratio with
effect from January 30, 1976, it does not follow that there
was an automatic absorption as from that date. Every such
person eligible for absorption had to fulfill three
conditions, viz., (1) he had to be a workman within the
meaning of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947; (2) he should
have been immediately before the commencement of the
ordinance, exclusively employed in connection with the
acquired property, and (3) he had to come within the ratio
provided in the proviso to sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20. The whole
object of inserting sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the ordinance
was to obviate the unemployment of persons suitable for
employment. For this purpose the Corporation had necessarily
to screen the applicants.
It is necessary to mention that cl. 5 of the Ordinance,
which corresponds to s. 5 of the Act, provided that every
contract carriage 8-625SCI/79
694
operator shall within 15 days from the notified date or
within such further time as the State Government may allow,
furnish to the State Government or any officer authorised by
it in this behalf, complete particulars among others of
persons who were in their employment immediately before the
notified date. It was only after such information was
received that steps had to be taken for the purpose of
ascertaining as to who were entitled to be absorbed in the
service of the Corporation in accordance with sub-cl. (3) to
cl. 20 of the ordinance. The authorities after collecting
the necessary information had to determine not only the
corresponding posts to which the erstwhile employees of the
contract carriage operators could be absorbed in the service
of the Corporation but also their relative seniority, for
the purpose of excluding the employees who were in excess of
the scale for the purpose of absorption.
As sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 itself provides that a person
who is not willing to become an employee of The Corporation
is entitled to retrenchment compensation as provided for in
the Industrial Disputes Act, the authorities were also
required to ascertain as to whether the employee, who was
entitled to be absorbed in service, was willing to become an
employee of the Corporation or not. It was only if the
employee was willing to be absorbed in the service of the
Corporation that the Corporation could absorb him in
service, provided the other conditions specified in sub-cl.
(3) to cl. 20 were satisfied. Thus it is clear that several
steps had to be taken by the authorities before identifying
and determining the persons who could be absorbed in the
service of the Corporation, in accordance with sub-cl. (3)
to cl. 20 of the ordinance.
The very fact that all these Various steps were
necessary to be taken, which necessarily takes time, shows
that automatic absorption of the employees of the erstwhile
contract carriage operators was not legally permissible.
When the ordinance came to be replaced by the Act, the
Corporation felt that the number of employees of the
erstwhile contract carriage operators was too large for its
requirements. The legislature, therefore, stepped in and
reduced the scale of absorption in the proviso to sub-s. (3)
of s. 19 from 7.9 per vehicle to 4.45 per vehicle.
This is, in our judgment, sufficient for the
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determination of the appeal. But, as we have formed a clear
opinion on the other aspect, we do not hesitate to express
that opinion. That contention is of this nature. It is
pointed out that the employees of the erstwhile contract
carriage operators acquired vested right to absorption in
the service of
695
the Corporation by virtue of sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20 of the
repealed ordinance with effect from January 30, 1976, which
cannot be taken away by the proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 19.
Even if-contrary to the decision reached by us, it were
possible to hold that they had some kind of such right, that
right is expressly taken away by the legislature. The
contention does not take note of the fact that by sub-s. (1)
of s. 1 the Act was brought into force with effect from
January 30, 1976, i.e., the date on which the ordinance was
promulgated. The Act substitutes a ’new’ proviso in sub-s.
(3) of s. 1 in place of the old proviso to sub-cl. (3) to
cl. 20 of the ordinance, altering the whole basis of
absorption. The new proviso is given a retrospective effect,
and it now holds the field from the notified date i.e.,
January a 30, 1976. The proviso in sub-cl. (3) to cl. 20
laying down a particular ratio of absorption, is pro tanto
avoided by an express enactment of a ’new’ proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 19 which is entirely inconsistent with it. When an
ordinance is replaced by an Act which is made retrospective
in operation, anything done or any action taken under the
ordinance stand wholly effected.
In the result, the appeal as well as the writ petitions
must fail and are dismissed. There shall be no order as to
costs.
N.V.K. Appeal and Petitions dismissed.
696