Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P. AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LABH CHAND
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/02/1993
BENCH:
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
SHARMA, L.M. (CJ)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 754 1993 SCR (1) 878
1993 SCC (2) 495 JT 1993 (2) 298
1993 SCALE (1)470
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950 : Article 226-Availability of
alternative remedy-Admissibility of Writ Petition without
exhausting legal remedy available-Order of Single Judge bye-
passing findings of the Division Bench not sustainable.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent served a notice on the Secretary U.P.
Government, for settling his outstanding claims to enable
him to seek voluntary retirement. But the Governor by his
order, compulsorily retired him from service with immediate
effect. Aggrieved by the order of the Governor, the
respondent directly riled a writ petition in the High Court.
The same was dismissed on the ground that the respondent
bye-passed the alternate remedy available to him. The
respondent riled another writ petition in the High Court
which was heard by the Single Judge, was, bye-passing the
order of the Division Bench allowed the writ petition and
quashed the impugned order the directed the U.P. Government
to treat the respondent as having retired voluntarily.
Challenging the said order, the appellants have contended
that the Single Judge could not have over-ruled the
preliminary objections raised on behalf of the appellants;
that since the Division Bench of the same High Court
dismissed the Petition of the respondent for not exhausting
the alternate remedy available, the Single Judge had no
jurisdiction to entertain that writ petition; that
respondent’s issuance of a notice to the Government seeking
permission for the voluntary retirement in the meantime was
untenable; and that the view of the Single Judge that a
departmental disciplinary enquiry pending against the
respondent inhibited the Government from compulsorily
retiring him was also untenable.
Allowing the appeal this Court,
HELD : 1.1. That when a Judge of a Single Judge Bench of a
High
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Court is required to entertain a second writ petition of a
person on a matter, he cannot, as a matter of course,
entertain such petition, if an earlier writ petition of the
same person on the same matter had been dismissed already
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by another Single Bench or Division Bench of the same High
Court, even if such dismissal was on the ground of laches or
on the ground of non-availing of alternate remedy. [889D]
1.2. This judgment should not be understood as coming in the
way of the respondent in approaching the U.P. Public Service
Tribunal for necessary relief in the matter, if he is so
entitled. [890F]
This Singh Nathmal & Ors. v. Mazid, Superintendent of Taxes,
[1964] 655 SCR, relied.
B. Prabhakar Rao & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh and
Ors. etc., AIR 1986 SC 219,227; Danjagu & Ors. v. State of
U.P. & Ors., AIR 1961 SC 1457, 1466 and L. Hirday Narain v.
Income Tax Officer, Bareilly AIR 1971 SC 33, 36, referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 498 of 1993.
From the Judgment and order dated 19.2.92 of the Allahabad
High Court in W.P. No. 7498/90.
A.K Goel for the Appellants.
Labh Chand (In-person) for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALA, J. Leave granted.
Respondent who was in the service of the U.P. Government as
an Executive Engineer, Minor irrigation, Banda, served a
notice dated December 19, 1989 on the Secretary Area
Development-2, U.P. Government, Lucknow seeking from the
Government, settlement of his outstanding claims by March
31, 1990 and grant of permission to him to retire from
service voluntarily from that date. It was stated in that
notice that the respondent’s outstanding claims remaining
unsettled by the Government before March 31, 1990, shall be
settled before June 30, 1990 and he shall
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then be allowed to retire voluntarily. However, changing
his stance, the respondent wrote a letter dated December 20,
1989 to the self-same Secretary seeking grant of the
Government’s permission to retire voluntarily from March 31,
1990 even if his outstanding claims with it were not settled
by that date. But, the Government, did not grant permission
to the respondent to voluntarily retire from its service
with effect from March 31, 1990 as had been sought by him.
Instead, the Governor of U.P. purporting to exercise his
powers under F.R. 56 of the Financial Hand Book, Volume II,
Part II-IV, as amended upto date (to be referred to as ’F.R.
56’), issued an Order dated January 6, 1990 compulsorily
retiring the respondent from the, Government service with
effect from 6.1.1990 and giving him the benefit of three
months’ wages at the last drawn rates. No doubt, that order
of compulsory retirement of the respondent was challenged by
him in a Writ Petition, W.P. No. 1980 of 1990 filed before
the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. But, a Division
Bench of that Court, refused to entertain that Writ Petition
and dismissed it by its Order dated March 29, 1990, which
read :
"Learned Counsel for the State has produced
the record and has also filed counter
affidavit to which rejoinder affidavit has
been filed. However, after looking into the
record we are of the opinion that it is not a
fit case in which the petitioner should be
allowed to bye-pass the alternative remedy
available to him before the U.P. Public
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Services Tribunal. On account of this
alternative remedy being available to the
petitioner this petition is dismissed in
limine. Interim order if any to vacate."
The validity of the said order of dismissal of the Writ
Petition made by the Division Bench of the High Court was
not questioned by the respondent in any appeal or any other
legal proceeding. The respondent did not also choose to
approach the U.P. Public Services Tribunal, to seek reliefs
respecting the order of his compulsory retirement although
the Division Bench of the High Court had dismissed his Writ
Petition for not availing of the alternative remedy before
that Tribunal.
Curiously, the respondent resorted to the course of filing a
second Writ Petition before the same High Court challenging
over again the very Order of the U.P. Government by which he
had been compulsorily retired
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and sought reliefs thereto. That second Writ Petition
registered as W.P. No. 7498 of 1990, it appears, did not
come up for hearing before a Division Bench of the High
Court as had happened with the earlier dismissed Writ
Petition. Instead, it has come up for hearing before a
single Judge Bench of the High Court. By his Order dated
February 19, 1992 the learned single Judge constituting that
single Judge Bench allowed the Writ Petition, quashed the
impugned order by which the respondent (the Writ Petitioner)
had been compulsorily retired under F.R. 56 and directed the
U.P. Government to treat the respondent as having retired
voluntarily from March 31, 1990 and to pay his salary for
the period elapsed between the date of his compulsory
retirement and the date from which he wished to voluntary
retire. It is the sustainability of this Order of the
learned single Judge made in the second Writ Petition of the
respondent which is challenged by the State of U.P. and its
Chief Engineer in the present appeal by the Special Leave.
Mr. A.K. Goel, the learned counsel for the appellants
assailed the Order under appeal on diverse grounds. First,
he urged that the learned single Judge of the High Court
could not have overruled the preliminary objection raised on
behalf of the appellants that the second Writ Petition of
the respondent impugning the Order by which he had been
compulsorily retired was liable to the rejected in limine
when his first Writ Petition by which he had impugned the
self-same Order, had been dismissed by a Division Bench of
the same Court for having sought to invoke the writ
jurisdiction of the High Court without availing of the
alternate remedy before the U.P. Public Services Tribunal.
Secondly, he urged that the view of the learned single Judge
of the High Court that the respondent’s issuance of a notice
to the Government seeking permission for his voluntary
retirement from a future date made the Government loose its
power to compulsorily retire him in the meantime, was
untenable. Thirdly, he urged that the view of the learned
single Judge of the High Court that a departmental
disciplinary enquiry pending against the respondent
inhibited the Government from compulsorily retiring him
under F.R. 56, was again untenable. The respondent who
appeared in person could not meet the grounds on which the
Order under appeal was assailed. Nor does his written
submissions could be regarded as helpful in meeting those
grounds.
The first ground urged in support of the appeal if merits
our
882
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acceptance that that ground by itself would be sufficient
for disposal of this appeal, cannot be disputed. However,
we are not oblivious to the fact that that ground, to merit
our acceptance, has to be necessarily founded on valid
reasons. Hence our endeavour here would be to find whether
the said ground is founded on reasons and if so, whether
they are valid.
There are two reasons on which the first ground is founded.
They are
(i) The learned Judge of the High Court, as
a High Court even if assumed to have had
discretionary power to entertain a second Writ
Petition under Article 226 of the Constitution
notwithstanding the fact that an earlier
similar Writ Petition had not been entertained
by the sat= Court because of the non-
exhaustion of an alternate statutory remedy
available to the petitioner in the matter, he
could not have entertained the second Writ
Petition unless it was found that the
discretion already exercised by the High Court
in refusing to entertain the earlier Writ
Petition was either arbitrary or otherwise
unwarranted.
(ii) The learned single Judge of the High
Court, by entertaining a second Writ Petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution on the
subject matter which was covered by an
earlier Writ Petition dismissed by the
Division Bench of the same Court had given a
go-bye to the well-established salutary rule
of judicial practice and procedure that an
order of a single Judge Bench much less of
Judges of larger Bench of a High Court
refusing to entertain the earlier Writ
Petition in limine even on the ground of
laches. or on the ground of non-availing of
alternate remedy ought not to be interfered
with by an other single Judge or Judges of
larger Benches, except in review or appeal, if
permitted.
As the first ground urged in the support of the appeal is
founded on the said two reasons, our endeavour here would be
to find whether they are valid enough to sustain the same.
883
Reason (i) :- Entertaining by the High Court
of a second Writ Petition under Article 226 of
the Constitution, filed by a person whose
earlier Writ Petition on the same subject-
matter is dismissed for non-exhaustion of
alternate remedy.
When a Statutory Forum or Tribunal is specially created by a
statute for redressal of specified grievances of persons on
certain matters, the High Court should not normally permit
such persons to ventilate their specified grievances before
it by entertaining petitions under Article 226 of the
Constitution is a legal position which is too well-settled.
A Constitution Bench of this Court in Thansigh Nathmal and
Ors. v. A. Mazid, Superintendent of Taxes, [1964] 6 SCR,
655, when had the occasion to deal with the question as to
how the discretionary jurisdiction of a High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution, was required to be
exercised respecting a petition filed there-under by a
person coming before it bye-passing a statutory alternate
remedy available to him for obtaining redressal of his
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grievance ventilated in the petition, has given expression
to the said well settle legal position, speaking through
Shah, J., as he then was, thus
"The jurisdiction of the High Court under Art.
226 of the Constitution is couched in wide
terms and the exercise thereof is not subject
to any restrictions except the territorial
restrictions which are expressly provided in
the Article. But the exercise of the
jurisdiction is discretionary; it is not
exercised merely because it is lawful to do
so. They very amplitude of the jurisdiction
demands that it will ordinarily be exercised
subject to certain self-imposed
limitations......... Where it is open to the
aggrieved petitioner to move another tribunal,
or even itself in another jurisdiction for
obtaining redress in the manner provided by a
statute, the High Court normally will not
permit, by entertaining a petition under Art.
226 of the Constitution, the machinery created
under the Statute to be by-passed, and will
leave the party applying to it to seek resort
to the machinery so set up." (Pages 661-662)
The order of a Division Bench of the High Court refusing to
entertain the earlier Writ Petition of the respondent here
filed under Article 226
884
of the Constitution had been made in exercise of its
discretionary jurisdiction on its view that the petitioner
therein had for redressal of his grievance in that petition
an alternate statutory remedy before the U.P.’ Public
Services Tribunal, an adjudicatory machinery specially
created for redressal of such grievances, cannot be
disputed. What remains, therefore, to be seen is whether
the discretion exercised by the Division Bench in refusing
to entertain the earlier Writ Petition for non-availing of
alternate remedy and dismissing it, could be said to be an
unwarranted exercise of discretion in the light of the said
well-settled legal position governing such matters. As the
alternate remedy which according to the Division Bench was
not availed of by the respondent here before the filing of
his earlier Writ Petition, being that available before the
the Forum of the U.P. Public Services Tribunal, it becomes
necessary for us to see whether that Forum did provide to
the respondent here a remedy which was both adequate and
efficacious. We shall now look into the relevant provisions
of the U.P. Public Services (Tribunals) Act, 1976 (for short
’the Act’) creating the U.P. Public Services Tribunal and
the rules made thereunder as they would the needed light on
the exact nature of the Tribunal, and the adequacy and
efficaciousness of the remedy available with it.
Preamble to the Act, declares that it is enacted to provide
for the constitution of tribunals to adjudicate upon
disputes in respect of matters relating to employment of all
public servants of the State of Uttar Pradesh. Sub-section
(1) of Section 3 of the Act provides for constitution by the
State Government two or more State Public Service Tribunals,
each called a State Public Service Tribunal. Sub-section
(2) thereof requires that each Tribunal shall consist of a
Judicial Member and an Administrative Member. Sub-section
(3) thereof requires that the Judicial Member shall be a
serving Judge of the High Court or a person qualified to be
appointed as a High Court Judge while the Administrative
Member shall be a person who holds or has held the post of,
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or any post equivalent to, Commissioner of a Division.
Section 4 of the Act, which provides for reference of claims
to Tribunal for their adjudication reads:
"4. Reference of claims to Tribunal If any
person who is or has been a public servant
claims that in any matter relating to
employment as such public servant his employer
or any officer or authority subordinate to the
employer has dealt with him in a manner which
is not in conformity with
885
any contract, or
(a) in the case of a Government servant,
with the provisions of Article 16 or Article
311 of the Constitution or with any rules or
law having force under Article 309 or Article
313 of the Constitution;
(b) in the case of a servant of a local
authority or a statutory corporation, with
Article 16 of the Constitution or with any
rules or regulations having force under any
Act or Legislature constituting such authority
or corporation;
he shall refer such claim to the Tribunal, and
the decision of the Tribunal thereon shall,
subject to the provisions of Articles 226 and
227 of the Constitution, be final
Provided that no reference shall, subject to
the terms of any contract, be made in respect
of a claim arising out of the transfer of a
public servant :
Provided further that no reference shall
ordinarily be entertained by the Tribunal
until the claimant has exhausted his
departmental remedies under the rules ap-
plicable to him.
Explanation. For the purposes of this
proviso, it shall no be necessary to require
the claimant (in the case of a Government
servant) to avail also of the remedy of
memorial to the Governor before referring his
claim to the Tribunal."
Section 5 of the Act requires the Tribunal to be guided by
principles of natural justice in the matter of consideration
of the references, making it clear that it is not bound by
the procedure laid down in the Code in Civil Procedure, 1908
or the rules of evidence contained in the Indian Evidence
Act, 1872.
Section 6 of the Act expressly bars the filing of suits
respecting matters to be referred for adjudication under
Section 4 of the Act. Section 7 of the Act empowers the
State Government to make rules for carrying
886
all the purposes of the Act.
The U.P. Public Services (Tribunals) Rules, 1975 (to be
referred to as ’the Rules’) which are made by the State
Government contain elaborate procedural rules, needed for
effective adjudication of matters by the Tribunal.
As is seen from the said Preamble, the provisions in the Act
and the Rules, the U.P. Public Services Tribunal is intended
to be an exclusive and and exhaustive machinery or forum for
adjudication of claims of all public servants including the
persons in the service or pay of the State Government, in
matters of their employment, inasmuch as, suits in such
matters are specifically barred by the provisions in Section
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6 of the Act. That Tribunal since composes of a Judicial
Member who is a serving Judge of the High Court or is
qualified to become such Judge and an Administrative Member
who holds or has held the post of, or any post equivalent
to, Commissioner of a Division, it is a statutory Tribunal
of the State possessed of expertise to adjudicate claims of
public servants in matters of their employment. That the
Tribunal in its enquiries being not bound by the technical
rules of procedure under the Civil Procedure Code and the
technical rules of evidence under the Evidence Act, it could
avail of its vast powers of enquiry to redress grievances of
public servants concerning matters of their employment
adequately and efficaciously. The fact that Section 4 of
the Act declares that the decision of the Tribunal is final
subject to the provisions of Articles 226 and 227 of the
Constitution itself shows the nature of high judicial
sanctity attached by statute to such decision.
The respondent had, since filed in the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad, his first Writ Petition, W.P. No.
1980 of 1990, challenging the validity of the Order of the
State Government by which he had been compulsorily retired
from Government service and claimed several relief thereto
against the State Government, we have to find whether the
U.P. Public Service Tribunal if had been approached by the
respondent here, could not have, if warranted, invalidated
the Order challenged in the Writ Petition and given the
reliefs sought for therein. If we have regard to the high
status of the members constituting the Tribunal, expertise
possessed by such members to consider the claims of
employees in matters of their employment, vast powers
invested in them to hold exhaustive enquiries and
887
to grant full reliefs in matters relating to their
employment, we cannot but hold that that Tribunal is the
highest forum created by the Act to give full and complete
relief to public servants in matters of their employment,
that too, with expedition. The claims in the Writ Petition
since related purely to matters relating to employment of
the respondent under the State Government, the Division
Bench of the High Court refused to entertain the Writ
Petition on its view that it had been filed by the
respondent here bye-passing the U.P. Public Services
Tribunal. When the Division Bench had refused to entertain
the Writ Petition of the respondent, in exercise of its
discretionary jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
Constitution on its view that the respondent could not have
invoked its extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 of
the Constitution for the redressal of his grievances, bye-
passing the special forum created specifically by a statute
for redressal of such grievances, efficaciously and
adequately, it is not possible for us to think that such
exercise of discretion was unwarranted, particularly when we
have due regard to the settled legal position governing such
matters, to which we have already adverted.
When the second Writ Petition, W.P. No. 7498 of 1990 filed
by the respondent before the said High Court challenging
over again the very Order of the State Government by which
he was compulsorily retired came up for hearing before a
learned single Judge, that learned single Judge
notwithstanding the dismissal by a Division Bench of the
same High Court of his similar Writ Petition filed earlier
on the ground of non-exhaustion of alternate statutory
remedy, the appellants who were respondents in the second
Writ Petition, as was rightly expected of them, raised a
preliminary objection as to its maintainability relying on
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the dismissal Order of the said earlier Writ Petition by a
Division Bench of the same Court. But, the learned single
Judge who overruled that preliminary objection in the course
of his Order now under appeal, entertained the second Writ
Petition on his view that the earlier Writ Petition
dismissed on the ground of non-availing of alternate remedy
by a person was no bar to entertain a subsequent Writ
Petition filed by such person, and sought to derive support
therefore from the decisions of this Court in (i) Daryao and
Others v. State of U.P. and Others, AIR 1.961 SC 1457, 1466;
(ii) B. Prabhakar Rao and Others etc. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh and Others etc. etc., AIR 1986 SC 210, 227 and (iii)
L. Hirday Narain v. Income-tax Office Bareilly AIR 1971 Sc
33, 36
It is true that the decisions to which the learned single
Judge has
888
referred, have ruled that the dismissal of a Writ Petition
in limine on the alternate remedy being available to a
petitioner, does not bar the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Article 226 of the Constitution or the Supreme Court
under Article 32 of the Constitution to entertain subsequent
Writ Petition of the same party in relation to the same
subject matter. But, what has escaped the notice of the
learned single Judge is that they do not Jay down that the
discretion of the High Court to refuse to entertain the
first Writ Petition on the ground of non-exhaustion by him
of a statutory remedy, when had been rightly and properly
exercised, the same could be ignored by the same high Court
when the party whose Writ Petition was dismissed on the
ground of non-exhaustion of a statutory remedy files a
second Writ petition respecting the same subject-matter and
such second Writ Petition could be entertained. Hence, this
reason is quite valid and fully supports the first ground
urged in support of the appeal.
(ii) : Entertaining by the High Court of a
second Writ Petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution, filed by a person
notwithstanding the order of dismissal of his
earlier Writ Petition, on the same matter.
This is one of the two reasons on which the first ground
urged in support of the appeal, is founded. This reason is
not concerned with the discretionary power of the Judge or
Judges of the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution to entertain a second Writ Petition of a
person, whose earlier Writ Petition was dismissed on the
ground of non-exhaustion of alternate remedy but of such
Judge or Judges having not followed the well-established
salutary rule of judicial practice and procedure that an
order of a single Judge Bench or of a larger Bench of the
same High Court dismissing the Writ Petition either on the
ground of laches or non-exhaustion of alternate remedy, as
well, shall not be bye-passed by a single Judge Bench or
Judges of a larger Bench except in exercise of review or
appellate powers possessed by it. In the case on hand, a
Division Bench of the High Court of Allahabad dismissed the
respondent’s Writ Petition challenging the sustainability of
the order of his compulsory retirement from the U.P.
Government service, while exercising its discretionary
jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution in that
it took the view that the respondent had the alternate
remedy in the matter before the forum of U.P. Police
Services Tribunal constituted under the Act. There cannot
be any doubt that Order of dismissal of the Writ Petition
could have been reviewed
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by the same Division Bench, in exercise of the recognised
power of review possessed by it. But, as a learned single
Judge constituting a single Judge Bench of the same Court,
who has, in the purported exercise of his jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution bye-passed the Order of
dismissal of the Writ Petition made by a Division Bench by
entertaining a second Writ Petition filed by the respondent
in respect of the subject-matter which was the subject-
matter of earlier Writ Petition, the question is, whether
the well-established salutary rule of judicial practice and
procedure governing such matters permitted the learned
single Judge to bye-pass the Order of the Division Bench on
the excuse that High Court has jurisdiction under Article
226 of the Constitution to entertain a second Writ Petition
since the earlier Writ Petition of the fame person had been
dismissed on the ground of non-availing of alternate remedy
and not on merits.
When a Judge of single Judge Bench of a High Court is
required to entertain a second Writ Petition of a person on
a matter, he cannot, as a matter of course, entertain such
petition, if an earlier Writ Petition of the same person on
the same matter had been dismissed already by another single
Judge Bench or a Division Bench of the same High Court, even
if such dismissal was on the ground of laches or on the
ground of non-availing of alternate remedy. Second Writ
Petition cannot be, so entertained not because the learned
single Judge has no jurisdiction to entertain the same, but
because entertaining of such a second Writ Petition would
render the order of the same Court dismissing the earlier
Writ Petition redundant and nugatory, although not reviewed
by it in exercise of the recognised power. Besides, if a
learned single Judge could entertain a second Writ Petition
of a person respecting a matter on which his first Writ
Petition was dismissed in limine by another learned single
Judge or a Division Bench of the same Court, it would
encourage an unsuccessful Writ Petitioner to go on filing
Writ Petition after Writ Petition in the same matter in the
same High Court, and have it brought up for consideration
before one Judge after another. Such a thing, if is allowed
to happen, it could result in giving full scope and
encouragement to an unscrupulous litigant to abuse the
process of the High Court exercising its writ jurisdiction
under Article 226 of the Constitution in that any order of
any Bench of such Court refusing to entertain a Writ
Petition could be ignored by him with impunity and relief
sought in the same matter by filing a fresh Writ Petition.
This would only lead to introduction of disorder, confusion
and chaos relating to
890
exercise of writ jurisdiction by Judges of the High Court
for there could be no finality for an order of the Court
refusing to entertain a Writ Petition. It is why, the Rule
of judicial practice and procedure that a second Writ
Petition shall not be entertained by the High Court on the
subject-matter respecting which the first Writ Petition of
the same person was dismissed by the same Court even if the
Order of such dismissal was in limine, be it on the ground
of laches or on the ground of non-exhaustion of alternate
remedy, has come to be accepted and followed as salutary
Rule in exercise of writ jurisdiction of Courts.
Hence, we are of the view that this reason which supports
the first ground urged in support of the appeal, to wit,
that the learned single Judge ought not have entertained a
second Writ Petition in respect of the Order of compulsory
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retirement of the respondent, when a Division Bench of the
same Court had refused to entertain a Writ Petition of the
same respondent filed respecting the same subject-matter for
non-availing of the alternate remedy before the forum of
U.P. Public Services Tribunal, is also a valid reason.
As the said valid reasons fully support the first ground
urged in support of the appeal by which the order of a
learned single Judge of the High court is assailed, that
order is liable to be interfered with and set aside.
In the result, we allow this appeal and set aside the Order
of the learned single Judge under appeal and dismiss the
Writ Petition. However, in the facts and circumstances of
the case, this judgment shall not be understood as coming in
the way of the respondent in approaching the U.P. Public
Services Tribunal for necessary relief in the matter, if he
is so entitled in law. No costs.
J.R.J. Appeal allowed.
391