Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMJEE PRASAD AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/04/1990
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1300 1990 SCR (2) 468
1990 SCC (3) 368 JT 1990 (2) 225
1990 SCALE (1)742
ACT:
Constitution of India. 1950 Article 14 Last date for
receipt of applications--fixation of b), the Government in
the advertisement-Whether can be struck down.
HEADNOTE:
The State of Bihar published an advertisement inviting
applications for appointments to the junior teaching posts
in medical colleges in the State of Bihar. For the post of
Assistant Professor. only such officers who had worked as
Resident or Registrar in Medical Hospitals recognised for
imparting M.B.B.S. studies by the Medical Council of India
and having three years experience of such post were consid-
ered eligible. The last date for receipt of applications was
fixed as 31st January 1988. Pursuant to the said advertise-
ment. applications from eligible candidates were received
and a select list or panel was prepared for appointments to
the respective posts. The respondents and some other inter-
venors who were working then in the Medical colleges as
junior teachers challenged the State action in fixing the 3
1st of January 1988 as the cut-off date for receipt of
applications for the advertised posts. as they had by then
not completed three years which was prescribed as the requi-
site experience. It was contended by them that the cut-off
date was arbitrarily fixed and was therefore violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution. The High Court took the view
that the State Government in fixing the 31st January 1988 as
the cut-off date. had deviated from its usual practice of
fixing the cut-off date as 30th of June of the relevant
year. Hence this appeal by the State of Bihar by special
leave.
It is contended by the State that the decision of the
High Court was based on an erroneous premise that the cut-
off date for eligibility purposes was ’always’ fixed as 30th
of June of the relevant year in the past.
Allowing the appeal, this Court.
HELD: The past practice was to fix the last date for
receipt of applications a month or one and a half months
after the date of actual publication of the advertisement.
Following the past practice the State
469
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Government fixed the last date for receipt of applications
as 31st January 1988. These who had completed the required
experience of three years by that date were. therefore.
eligible to apply for the posts in question. [474G-H]
The choice of date cannot be dubbed as arbitrary even if
no particular reason is forth-coming for the same unless it
is shown to be capricious or whimsical or wide-off the
reasonable mark. The choice of ’the date for advertising the
post had to depend on several factors, e.g.. the number of
vacancies in different disciplines. the need to fill up the
posts. the availability of candidates etc., [475C-D]
Merely because the respondents and some others would
qualify for appointment if the last date for receipt of
applications is shifted from 31st January 1988 to 30th June
1988. is no reason for dubbing the earlier date as arbitrary
or irrational. [475D]
The High Court was clearly in error in striking down the
Government’s action of fixing the last date for receipt of
application as 31st January 1988 as arbitrary. [475E]
Municipal Board, Pratabgarh & Anr. v. Mahendra Singh
Chawla & Ors., [1982] 3 S.C.C. 331; Union of India & Anr.
v. M/s. Parameswaran Match Works & Ors., [1975] 1 S.C.C. 305
and Uttar Pradesh Mahavidyalaya Tadarth Shikshak Niyamitika-
ran Abhiyan Samiti, Varanasi v. State of Uttar Pradesh &
Ors., [1987] 2 S.C.C. 453, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1837 of
1990.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17.1.1989 of the Patna
High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 4276 of 1988,
A. Sharan for the Appellants.
Pankaj Kalra and Pramod Swarup for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI, J. Delay condoned. Special leave granted.
This appeal arises out of the decision of the Patna High
Court
470
whereby it struck down the selection made for appointments
in the junior teaching posts in medical colleges in the
State and directed a fresh selection list to be prepared
after shifting the last date for receipt of applications to
30th June, 1988. The facts giving rise to this appeal,
briefly stated, are as under.
The State of Bihar published an advertisement inviting
applications for appointment to the posts of (i) Assistant
Professor (clinical subject); (ii) Registrar; (iii) Assist-
ant Clinical Pathologist; (iv) Anesthetist; (v) Resident
Medical Officer and (vi) Demonstrator (Tutor) in non-clini-
cal subject for different Medical Colleges and Medical
College Hospitals in the State of Bihar. For the post of
Assistant Professor only such officers who had worked as
Resident or Registrar in Medical Hospital recognised for
imparting M.B.B.S. studies by the Medical Council of India
and having three years experience of such post were consid-
ered eligible. The last date for receipt of the application
was fixed as 31st January, 1988. Pursuant to the said adver-
tisement applications were received from eligible candidates
and the select list or panel was prepared for appointments
to the respective posts. The respondents and some interven-
ors who held appointments as junior teachers in one or the
other Medical Colleges in the State questioned the validity
of the State’s action of inviting applications for prepara-
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tion of a list for appointments to the advertised posts
mainly on the ground that the last date for receipt of
applications fixed as 31st January, 1988 (hereinafter called
’the cut-off date’) deprived them of the opportunity to
compete for the posts as they did not complete the requisite
experience criterion of three years by that time. It was
contended that this cut-off date was arbitrarily fixed and
was, therefore, violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
The High Court took the view that the State Government had
deviated from its usual practice of fixing the cut-off date
as 30th of June of the relevant year. This is clear from the
following observation made by the High Court:
" ..... advertisement in the past including one in the
year 1983 (Annexure-1) always fixed 31st June as the date
"
......
(Emphasis supplied)
The use of the word ’always’ indicates that the High Court
was under the impression that in the past the cut-off date
was always fixed as 31st June (it should be 30th June) for
the preparation of the panel for appointments to the posts
in question. Elsewhere also in the judgment there are obser-
vations which disclose that the High Court laboured
471
under the belief that the cut-off date was always fixed as
30th of June of the relevant year. This becomes obvious from
the following criticism also:
"If the State is determined to achieve such a goal and is
ready to make its activity predictable it is a welcome sign
but such desired predictability can equally be achieved by
adhering to the schedule of the past and maintaining 30th
June of the years as the last date for the application. If
they had not followed any rule in the past and they propose
to follow a rule in this regard in future, they can do so
without causing any violation to any legal right of any
incumbent by at least showing adherence to the reckoning
date which until now had been the last date of the month of
June of the year." (Emphasis supplied)
On this line of reasoning the High Court came to the conclu-
sion’that the State Govermnent had acted arbitrarily in
fixing the last date fox receipt of applications as 31st
January, 1988 under the advertisement published on 29th
December, 1987. The High Court while upholding the conten-
tion based on Article 14 further observed "we would have
ignored the arbitrariness in taking 31st January of the year
as the reckoning date had we not taken notice of recalci-
trance of the, respondents in taking no step in the years
intervening the selection in the year 1983 and the present
selection". The High Court, therefore, felt satisfied that
there was no rationale in departing from the past practice
and selecting 31st January, 1988 as the last date. It is
felt that in all fairness 30th of June of the year would be
’the .preferable date’ for reckoning the eligibility of the
candidates. The State Government was, therefore, directed to
shift the last date for receipt of the applications from 3
1st January 1988 to 30th June, 1988 and to prepare a fresh
panel thereafter and make appointments to the posts in
question therefrom.
The State of Bihar feeling aggrieved by this order has
approached this Court by special leave. The learned counsel
for the State submitted that the decision of the High Court
was based on an erroneous premise that the cut-off date for
eligibility purposes was ’always’ fixed as 30th of June of
the relevant year in the past. In order to dispel this
assumption made by the High Court without examining the past
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advertisements the State Government has placed before us the
advertisements issued from 1974 to 1980 which shows that
different cut-off dates were fixed under these different
advertisements and at no time in the past between 1974 and
1980 was 30th of June fixed as the
472
relevant date. It is true that the High Court did not have
the benefit of the earlier advertisements but it is equally
true that there was no material on the record of the High
Court for concluding that in the past the cut-off date was
’always’ fixed as 30th of June of the relevant year. From
the copies of the advertisements from 1974 to 1980 it tran-
spires that generally the cut-off date was fixed between one
to one and a half months after the date of issuance of the
advertisement. In the year 1983 for the first time the cut-
off date was fixed as 30th June, 1983. On some occasions in
the past the cut-off date was extended, depending on the
facts and circumstances obtaining at the relevant point of
time. It, therefore, becomes obvious from this documentary
evidence that the factual premise on which the High Court
has based its judgment is clearly erroneous. The High Court
was in error in thinking that in the past the cut-off date
was always fixed as 30th of June of the relevant year. In
fact except for a solitary occasion in 1983 when the cut-off
date was fixed as 30th June, 1983, at no other time in the
past was that date fixed as the last date for receipt of the
applications. No advertisements were admittedly issued after
1983 and before the advertisement in question. The present
advertisement was published on 29th December, 1987 and the
last date for receipt of applications was fixed thereunder
as 3 ist January, 1988 leaving a time gap of a little over a
month. As pointed out earlier, on a perusal of the adver-
tisements issued from 1974 to 1980 it becomes obvious that
normally the cut-off date was fixed one or one and a half
months after the date of advertisement. It was, therefore,
not the uniform practice of the State Government to fix the
cut-off date for eligibility purposes as 30th of June of the
relevant year as was assumed by the High Court. Once it is
found that the High Court has based its decision on an
erroneous assumption of fact, the decision cannot be allowed
to stand.
It was, however, argued by the learned counsel for the
respondents that the State Government should not be permit-
ted to introduce new facts in the form of advertisements
issued from 1974 to 1980. We do not think that such a tech-
nical approach would be justified for the simple reason that
the assumption of fact made by the High Court is not borne
out from record. No material was placed before the High
Court to justify the conclusion that 30th of June of the
relevant year was ’always’ fixed as the cut-off date in the
past. The High Court’s assumption of fact is, therefore,
based on no evidence at all. We have, therefore, thought it
fit to permit the State Government to place material on
record to justify its contention that the High Court had
committed a grave error in assuming that in the past the
cut-off date was always fixed as 30th of June of the rele-
vant year.
473
It was next contended that this Court should not inter-
fere in exercise of its extra-ordinary Jurisdiction under
Article 136 of the Constitution. In support of this conten-
tion reliance was placed on the observations of this Court
in Municipal Board. Pratabgarh & Anr. v. Mahendra Singh
Chawla & Ors., [1982] 3 SCC 331 wherein this Court while
correcting an error of law refused to interfere with the
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decision of the High Court directing reinstatement of the
workman on the finding that the termination order was in-
valid. That was, however, a case where the Court came to the
conclusion that the employee was a capable hand and his
services were actually needed by the appellant Municipal
Board. It was in those special circumstances that this Court
while correcting the error refused to interfere with the
order of reinstatement. The decision, therefore, turned on
the special facts of that case.
The appellant invited our attention to two decisions of
this Court, namely, Union of India & Anr. v. M/s. Pararnes-
waran Match Works & Ors., [1975]1 SCC 305 and Uttar Pradesh
Mahavidyalaya Tadarth Shikshak Niyamitikaran Abhiyan Samiti,
Varanasi v. State of U.P. & Ors. [1987] 2 SCC 453 in sup-
port of its contention that the High Court was in error in
holding that the State had acted arbitrarily in fixing the
cut-off date. In the first mentioned case by Notification
No. 162 dated 21st July, 1967, which superseded the earlier
notifications, provision was made that if a manufacturer
gave a declaration that the total clearance from the factory
will not exceed 75 million matches during a financial year,
he would be entitled to a concessional rate of duty.This
Notification was amended by Notification No.205 dated 4th
September, 1967, clause (b) whereof confined the concession,
inter alia to factories whose total clearance of matches
during the financial year 1967-68, as per declaration made
by the manufacturer before 4th September, 1967, was not
estimated to exceed 75 million matches. Thus, the conces-
sional rate of duty could be availed of only by those who
made the declaration before 4th September, 1967. The re-
spondent was not a manufacturer before 4th September, 1967
as he had sought for a licence on 5th September, 1967 and
was therefore, in no position to made the declaration before
4th September, 1967. The respondent, therefore, challenged
the cut-off date of 4th September, 1967 as arbitrary. Deal-
ing with the contention, this Court observed as under:
"In the matter of granting concession or exemption from tax,
the Government has a wide latitude of discretion. 1t need
not give exemption or concession to everyone in order
474
that it may grant the same to some. As we said, the object
of granting the concessional rate of duty was to protect the
smaller units in the industry from the competition by the
larger ones and that object would have been frustrated, if,
by adopting the device of fragmentation, the larger units
could become the ultimate beneficiaries of the bounty."
While pointing out that a classification could be rounded on
a particular date and yet be reasonable, this Court observed
that the choice of a date as a basis for classification
cannot always be dubbed as arbitrary even if no particular
reason is forthcoming for the choice unless the circum-
stances show it to be capricious or whimsical. When it is
necessary for the legislature or the authorities to fix a
line or a date and there is no mathematical or logical way
of fixing it precisely, the decision of the legislature or
authority must be accepted unless it is shown to be capri-
cious or whimsical or wide off the reasonable mark. In the
second mentioned case this Court, while upholding the con-
stitutional validity of section 31-B of the U.P.Higher
Educational Service Commission Act, 1980, answered two
contentions, namely, (1) adoption of the cut-off date in the
said section as 3rd January, 1984 for the purposes of regu-
larisation of the services of ad-hoc teachers appointed by
the management of the affiliated colleges was arbitrary and
irrational and violative of Article 14 inasmuch as equals
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were treated as unequals, and (ii) the Legislature could not
arbitrarily adopt 3rd January, 1984 as the cut-off date for
regularisation of the services of ad-hoc teachers merely
because that was the date on which the 1983 order expired.
Agreeing with the High Court that the fixation of the date
for the purposes of regularisation was not arbitrary or
irrational, this Court observed that the object of section 3
I-B was to regularise the services of ad-hoc teachers ap-
pointed under the 1983 order till 3rd January, 1984.Ad-hoc
teachers who had been appointed prior to that date had legal
sanction and therefore they constituted a distinct class.
This Court, therefore, felt that the legislature could not
have adopted any other basis for purposes of regularisation
and refused to interfere with the High Court’s order.
In the present case as pointed out earlier the past
practice was to fix the last date for receipt of applica-
tions a month or one and a half months after the date of
actual publication of the advertisement. Following the past
practice the State Government fixed the last date for re-
ceipt of applications as 31st January 1988. Those who
had .... the required experience of three years by that
date were, therefore, eligible to apply for the posts in
question. The respondents and some
475
of the intervenors who were not completing the required
experience by that date, therefore, challenged the fixation
of the last date as arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution. It is obvious that in fixing the last date
as 31st January, 1988 the State Government had only followed
the past practice and if the High Court’s attention had been
invited to this fact it would perhaps have refused to inter-
fere since its interference is based on the erroneous belief
that the past practice was to fix 30th of June of the rele-
vant year as the last date for receipt of applications.
Except for leaning on a past practice the High Court has not
assigned any reasons for its choice of the date. As pointed
out by this Court the choice of date cannot be dubbed as
arbitrary even if no particular reason is forthcoming for
the same unless it is shown to be capricious or whimsical or
wide off the reasonable mark. The choice of the date for
advertising the posts had to depend on several factors,
e.g., the number of vacancies in different disciplines, the
need to fill up the posts, the availability of candidates,
etc. It is not the case of any one that experienced candi-
dates were not available in sufficient numbers on the cut-
off date. Merely because the respondents and some others
would qualify for appointment if the last date for receipt
of applications is shifted from 31st January, 1988 to 30th
June, 1988 is no reason for dubbing the earlier date as
arbitrary or irrational. We are, therefore, of the opinion
that the High Court was clearly in error in striking down
the Government’s action of fixing the last date for receipt
of applications as 31st January, 1988 as arbitrary.
It was lastly contended that the State Government had
given an undertaking to the High Court that ’no appointment
shall be made from any previous panel and that, as decided
by this Court, if the panel, which is likely to be prepared
pursuant to the advertisement in question, is allowed,
appointments shall be made from the same panel or if that
panel is not allowed and a new panel is required to be
prepared, as directed by this Court, appointments shall be
made from the same panel’. This undertaking, in our opinion,
cannot preclude the State from challenging the decision of
the High Court.
In the result, this appeal succeeds. The impugned deci-
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sion of the High Court is set aside and the Writ Petition
which has given rise to this appeal will stand dismissed
with no order as to costs throughout.
Y. Lal Appeal
allowed.
476