Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HIRA LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DISTRICT JUDGE, GHAZIABAD & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/04/1983
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1212 1984 SCR (2) 739
1983 SCC (3) 371 1983 SCALE (1)388
ACT:
U.P. State Subordinate Service-Reservation for
Scheduled Castes-Appointments should be made in accordance
with roster prescribed.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, a member of the Scheduled Castes,
secured the 7th position in the test and interview held for
filling up six vacancies in the post of stenographer and was
not selected for appointment. The State Government had, by
an order, directed that 18 per cent of the posts in the
subordinate services should be reserved for Scheduled
Castes whenever recruitment was to be made through
competition and also provided that in the roster register of
every 25 vacancies, the 1st 7th, 13th, 19th and 25th
vacancies should be reserved for Scheduled Castes. The stand
taken by the respondents was that while making selection to
the six vacancies in question, no reservation had been
intended to be made in view of the position that the post of
stenographer was covered under Class III service and the
total strength of Class III employees as on the relevant
date was 132 and there were as many as 28 among them
belonging to the Scheduled Castes which was more than 21 per
cent. The petitioner contended that the direction regarding
reservation should have been applied and he should have been
selected for appointment.
Allowing the petition,
^
HELD: That more than 21 per cent of the posts in Grade
III service were being manned by people belonging to
Scheduled Castes at the relevant time is no answer to the
prescription of the roster. It is not known whether some of
the recruits of earlier years already in service belonging
to the Scheduled Castes had come on the basis of overall
merit without reference to reservation. When six vacancies
were being filled up at a time in one year if the roster was
to be followed, one of the posts would indisputably have
gone to the candidate of the Scheduled Castes. As per the
roster, the petitioner was entitled to be appointed against
the first vacancy. [731 E-H; 742-A]
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 4007 of 1982
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
R.K. Jain for the Petitioner.
Prithvi Raj and Mrs. S. Dikshit for the Respondent.
740
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. Petitioner, who offered himself as
a candidate for one of the posts of Stenographer in Hindi,
in the establishment of District Judge of Ghaziabad in the
State of Uttar Pradesh, has come with this petition under
Article 32 alleging the violation of his fundamental rights
enshrined in Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution. He has
pleaded that he is a member of the scheduled castes and the
State Government by a general order in March, 1965 had
directed that "in services subordinate to U.P. Government
for recruitment through competition" 18% of the posts should
be reserved for members of the scheduled castes. He further
alleged that when six vacancies in the post of Stenographer
in Hindi were advertised to be filled up and he offered
himself as a candidate, he was examined in shorthand test on
April 17, 1982, and was shown in the third place in the list
of successful candidates published on April 24, 1982 and was
called to an interview on May 1, 1982. According to him, in
the final list of successful candidates his position was
shown as no. 7 and, therefore, he was not selected. He
complains that he was downgraded from the third place
without justification, and if the Government order of
reservation of 18% had been kept in view, he should have
been selected even if he secured the seventh place in the
merit list.
In the return to the rule, the Additional District
Judge of Ghaziabad has indicated that the petitioner had
secured eighth place in shorthand test and his name figured
as no. 3 in the list of successful candidates as it has been
drawn up in alphabetical order. At the interview he improved
his position and was ultimately shown as no. 7. In the
selection no reservation had been intended to be made in
view of the position that the post of Stenographer is
covered under Class III service and the total strength of
Class III employees in the judgeship of Ghaziabad as on May
1, 1982, was 132 and there were as many as 28 among them
belonging to the scheduled castes which came to more than
21%-3% above the reservation. An assertion was made that the
process of recruitment had been fair and bona fide.
A rejoinder has been filed by the petitioner accepting
the position that "the written test and the interview were
done without any "mala fide" but reiterating the contention
that direction regarding reservation should have been
applied and the petitioner appointed on selection.
741
It is not the case of the answering respondent that
reservation indicated in Government order of 1965 was not
applicable to the relevant recruitment and the assertion of
the petitioner that in the previous years provision of
reservation was implemented has also not been disputed. The
scheme in the Government order contemplates a roster
register for every 25 vacancies and prescribes the following
mode:
(1) 1 reserved for scheduled castes.
(2) 2-6 unreserved.
(3) 7 reserved for scheduled castes.
(4) 8-12 unreserved.
(5) 13 reserved for scheduled castes.
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(6) 14-18 unreserved.
(7) 19 reserved for scheduled castes.
(8) 20-24 unreserved.
(9) 25 reserved for scheduled castes.
Paragraph 2 of the Government order states: "if in any
particular year there are only two vacancies, no more than
one should be considered reserved and if there is only one,
that should be considered unreserved; the reservation shall
be valid up to three years". When six vacancies were being
filled up at a time in one year, if the roster was to be
followed, one of the posts would indisputably have gone to
the candidate of the scheduled castes. The stand taken in
the counter-affidavit that more than 21% of the posts in the
Grade III cadre of the judgeship were being manned by the
people belonging of the scheduled castes at the relevant
time is no answer to the prescription of the roster. It is
not known whether some of the recruits of earlier years
already in service belonging to the scheduled castes had
come on the basis of overall merit without reference to
reservation.
On this premise, if the provision of reservation had to
be kept in view, the petitioner was bound to have been
recruited. We allow he petition. As per the roster, he was
entitled to be appointed
742
against the first vacancy. We, therefore, direct the
appointing authority to appoint the petitioner in that
vacancy and five out of the six who are respondents 3 to 8
before us according to their position in final merit list
shall be retained.
We make no order as to costs.
H.L.C. Petition allowed.
743