Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUDHIR KUMAR JAISWAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1994
BENCH:
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
BENCH:
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 2750 1994 SCC (4) 212
JT 1994 (3) 547 1994 SCALE (2)808
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HANSARIA, J.- 1st of August of the year concerned has been
fixed as the date with reference to which the eligibility of
persons desirous of sitting in competitive examination for
recruitment to the Indian Administrative Service/Indian
Foreign Service etc., qua their age for which both minimum
and maximum is normally fixed, is being determined. This
cut-off date had been fixed when the Union Public Service
Commission had been conducting only one written examination
which used to be normally after 1st August. The Commission,
however, felt the necessity of holding a preliminary
examination which normally takes place before 1st day of
August. Even so, the eligibility of the applicant,
regarding satisfaction of the age requirement continued to
be ascertained with reference to his age as on 1st August of
the year concerned.
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2. The aforesaid cut-off date came to be challenged before
various Central Administrative Tribunals, one of which is
Central Administrative Tribunal at Allahabad. The Tribunal
in its earlier decisions rendered, inter alia, in OA Nos.
778 of 1991 and 881 of 1991 on 19-9-1991 did not find
anything arbitrary in taking 1st August as the cut-off date
despite holding of the preliminary examination before that
date. Indeed, in two OAS which had been filed by the
respondent himself before the aforesaid Tribunal which were
registered as OA Nos. 168 of 1990 and 1161 of 1992 and came
to be decided on 7-5-1993, the Tribunal had not accepted the
contention of the respondent that fixation of 1st August was
arbitrary. A different view has, however, been taken in the
present impugned judgment by the same Tribunal by holding
that 1st of August as the cut-off date is arbitrary. The
appellants, namely, the Union of India and the Union Public
Service Commission have assailed the legality of this
decision.
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3. That there can be no arbitrariness in fixation of even.
a cut-off date is not disputed before us by the learned
Additional Solicitor General who has appeared for the
appellant. This stand has been correctly taken, because
after Article 14 has spread its wings in the field of
administrative law following what was principally held in
Maneka Gandhi case’ no stand can be taken by any
administrative authority that it can act arbitrarily.
Indeed, even before the decision in Maneka Gandhi’ law was
that no administrative authority has absolute discretion to
decide a matter within its competence the way it chooses.
This has been the accepted position and this Court had cited
with approval what had been stated in this regard in United
States v. Martin Wunderlich2 the relevant part of which
reads as below:
"Law has reached its finest moments when it
has freed men from unlimited discretion of
some ruler, some civil or military official,
some bureaucrat. ... Absolute discretion is a
ruthless master. It is more destructive of
freedom than any of man’s other inventions."
4. Insofar as fixation of cut-off date is concerned, the
same can be regarded as arbitrary by a court if the same be
one about which it can be said that it has been "picked out
from a hat", as was found to be by this Court in D.R. Nim v.
Union of India3 because of which fixation of 19-5-1991 as
the date for the purpose concerned was held to be invalid.
5. As to when choice of a cut-off date can be interfered
was opined by Holmes, J. in Louisville Gas & Electric Co. v.
Clell Coleman4 by stating that if the fixation be "very wide
of any reasonable mark", the same can be regarded arbitrary.
What was observed by Holmes, J. was cited with approval by a
Bench of this Court in Union of India v. Parameswaran
1 Maneka Gandhi v.Union of India, (1978)1 SCC248:AIR 1978
SC 597
2 342 US 98:96 LEd113 (1951)
3 AIR 1967 SC 1301: (1967) 2 SCR 325
4 277 US 32: 72 L Ed 770 (1927)
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Match WorkS5 (in paragraph 10) by also stating that choice
of a date cannot always be dubbed as arbitrary even if no
particular reason is forthcoming for the choice unless it is
shown to be capricious or whimsical in the circumstances.
It was further pointed out where a point or line has to be,
there is no mathematical or logical way of fixing it
precisely, and so, the decision of the legislature or its
delegate must be accepted unless it can be said that it is
very wide of any reasonable mark.
6. The aforesaid decision was cited with approval in D. G.
Gouse and Co. v. State of Kerala6; so also in State of
Bihar v. Ramjee Prasad to which decision we shall have
occasion to refer later also.
7. In this context, it would also be useful to state that
when a court is called upon to decide such a matter, mere
errors are not subject to correction in exercise of power of
judicial review; it is only its palpable arbitrary exercise
which can be declared to be void, as stated in Metropolis
Theater Co. v. City of Chicago8 in which Justice McKenna
observed as follows:
"It may seem unjust and oppressive, yet be
free from judicial interference. The problems
of government are practical ones and may
justify, if they do not require, rough
accommodations, illogical, it may be, and
unscientific. But even such criticism should
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not be hastily expressed. What is best is not
always discernible; the wisdom of any choice
may be disputed or condemned. Mere errors of
government are not subject to our judicial
review. It is only its palpably arbitrary
exercises which can be declared void......"
The aforesaid was noted by this Court in Sushma Sharma v.
State Of Rajasthan9 in which case also reasonability of
fixation of a date for a particular purpose had come up for
examination.
8. Having known the legal parameters within which we have
to function, let it be seen whether fixation of 1st August
as cut-off date for determining the eligibility of
applicants qua their age can be held to be arbitrary despite
preliminary examination being conducted before that date.
As to why the cut-off date has not been changed despite the
decision to hold preliminary examination, has been explained
in paragraph 3 of the special leave petition. The sum and
substance of the explanation is that preliminary examination
is only a screening test and marks obtained in this
examination do not count for determining the order of merit,
for which purpose the marks obtained in the main
examination, which is still being held after 1st August,
alone are material. In view of this, it cannot be held that
continuation of treating 1st August as the cut-off date,
despite the Union Public Service Commission having
introduced the method of preliminary examination which is
held
5 (1975) 1 SCC 305: AIR 1974 SC 2349
6 (1980) 2 SCC 410: AIR 1980 SC 271
7 (1990) 3 SCC 368
8 57 L Ed 730 (1912): 228 US 61
9 1985 Supp SCC 45: 1985 SCC (L&S) 565: AIR 1985 SC 1367
216
before 1st August, can be said to be "very wide off any
reasonable mark" or so capricious or whimsical as to permit
judicial interference.
9. Let it now be seen as to why the Bench in the impugned
judgment despite the earlier decisions referred earlier, has
accepted the case of the respondent. A perusal of the
judgment shows that the Bench relied on an office memorandum
issued by the Government of India on 4-9-1979 to come to its
decision. It is enough to observe that what is stated in
this memorandum, which is apparently executive in nature,
cannot override the statutory provisions finding place
either in Regulation 4(ii) of IAS (Appointment by
Competitive Examination) Regulations, 1955 or Rule 6(a) of
Civil Services Examination Rules, 1992. According to us,
this is so elementary a point that an adjudicatory body like
the CAT could not have, in any case was not expected to
have, made the mistake of relying on the same as it runs
counter to the aforesaid statutory provisions. This is not
all. The aforesaid office memorandum came to be explained
or modified by another office memorandum of 14-7-1988, which
has made it clear that insofar as civil service examinations
are concerned, it is the later date which is crucial in
between two dates, namely, 1st January and 1st August. So,
no reliance could have been, in any case, placed on what had
been stated in this regard in the office memorandum of 4-9-
1979.
10. Shri Jain, learned counsel for the respondent, being
conscious of the weakness of the legal stand taken by the
Tribunal, urged that equity should come to the respondents’
assistance because of the view taken by this Court in Mohan
Kumar Singhania case10 to which the Tribunal has also
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referred in its judgment. We have applied our mind to this
aspect. We are not persuaded to agree with Shri Jain,
because what happened in Singhania case10 was different. We
have taken this view also because the impugned judgment has
left room to think it was inspired by some oblique motive.
Though in putting this on record, we have not felt happy but
we have felt called upon to do so because the Allahabad
Bench itself of the CAT had rejected the self same
contention of the respondent himself in the two OAs referred
earlier. In view of this, the present Bench was not
justified in refusing to make a reference to a larger Bench
to decide the point to which effect a prayer had been made
by the appellants. The Bench ought to have referred the
matter to a larger Bench also because of two decisions of
that Bench itself taking different view, more so, as it was
deciding a point relating to conduct of examination by an
important body like Union Public Service Commission, and
that also for examinations conducted for selecting IAS and
IFS Officers. The reference to larger Bench was eminently
called because the earlier decisions of the Tribunal were
based on the judgments of this Court in Ramjee Prasad case7
in which the reasonableness of cut-off date examined related
to filling up posts, as in the case at hand.
10 Mohan Kumar Singhania v. Union Of India, 1992 Supp (1)
SCC 594
217
11. For the aforesaid reasons, equity does not demand any
favour to be shown to the respondent. The result is that
appeal is allowed with costs by setting aside the impugned
order of the Tribunal. Cost assessed as Rs 10,000. The
respondent would not be treated or deemed to have passed the
examination in question and whatever benefit of the same was
given to him pursuant to Tribunal’s directions shall stand
cancelled.
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