Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7523 of 2001
PETITIONER:
PAVANENDRA NARAYAN VERMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANJAY GANDHI P.G.I. OF MEDICAL SCI. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/11/2001
BENCH:
G.B. Pattanaik & Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
RUMA PAL, J.
Leave granted.
The appellant has challenged the decision of the High Court
of Allahabad dismissing his writ petition and upholding an order
passed by the respondent No. 1 terminating the appellants
services.
The appellant was temporarily appointed on 10th April 1996
to the post of Joint Director (Materials Management) of
respondent No. 1. Clauses 3 and 4 of the letter of appointment
provided:
3. This appointment is temporary and can
be terminated on one months notice from
either side or in lieu of this notice on
payment of a sum equivalent to one months
salary.
4. You will be on probation for a period
of one year from the date of appointment
and the probation period may at the
discretion of the competent authority be
curtailed or extended by such period as
deemed necessary.
The period of probation was extended on 23rd June 1997 for a
period of six months w.e.f. 30th April 1997. This was subsequently
further extended for a period of three months w.e.f. 30th October
1997. On 6th February 1998, the impugned order of termination
was issued. The language used in the order reads:
.During the period of our work (sic)
and conduct was found satisfactory and
therefore, your probation was extended for a
period months (sic) w.e.f. the forenoon of
30.4.1997 vide office order
PG/DIR/DC/479/97 dated 23.6.1997. Again
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
vide office order No. 811 PG/DIR/DC dated
27th October 1997 your probation period
was further extended for three months w.e.f.
the forenoon of 30th October 1997. Even
during thus (sic) extended period of
probation your work and conduct has not
been found to be satisfactory.
Therefore, under terms & conditions No. 3
and 4 of the above referred appointment
letter, dated services are hereby terminated
with immediate effect and for the period a
cheque No. VR/00/5856 dated 5.2.1998 for
Rs.11.070 (Rupees eleven thousand seventy
only) in lieu of on (sic) months notice is
enclosed.
According to the appellant, the order was punitive and cast a
stigma on the appellant and could not be sustained without a full
scale departmental inquiry. It has been argued that the termination
order was founded upon allegations of misconduct against the
appellant. A summary inquiry had been held by the respondents in
which a charge-sheet had been issued to the appellant. The inquiry
officer had submitted a report to the respondents, a copy of which
was not made available to the appellant, but immediately after the
completion of the inquiry the impugned order of termination had
been passed. In support of the submission that the order was
punitive, our attention was drawn by the appellant to statements
made in the counter affidavit filed by the respondent before the
High Court where the respondents have alleged that the appellants
integrity and honesty were doubtful.
The respondents have submitted that the inquiry was held
merely to assess the appellants fitness for being continued on
probation. The respondents claimed to have received various
complaints regarding the discharge of the appellants duties and in
order to give the appellant an opportunity of placing the true facts
before the respondent the summary inquiry was held so that the
suitability of the appellant for being confirmed in the post of Joint
Director (Material Management) could be fairly assessed. It was
also submitted that the order was not stigmatic nor punitive and
that no statement in the counter affidavit would change that
position.
The High Court has accepted the submissions of the
respondents and accordingly dismissed the writ petition.
Since the decision in Parshottam Lal Dhingra V. Union of
India , Courts have had to perform a balancing act between
denying a probationer any right to continue in service while at the
same time granting him the right to challenge the termination of
his service when the termination is by way of punishment. The
law has developed along apparently illogical lines in determining
when the termination of a temporary appointee or probationers
services amounts to punishment.
In 1974, Krishna Iyer, J. had said, The need, in this branch
of jurisprudence, is not so much to reach perfect justice but to lay
down a plain test which the administration and civil servant can
understand without subtlety and apply without difficulty.
Since Dhingra is the Magna Carta of the India civil servant,
although it has spawned diverse judicial trends, difficult to be
disciplined into one single, simple, practical formula applicable to
termination of probation of freshers and of the services of
temporary employees , we have thought it best to refer to the facts
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
of Dhingras case to understand what exactly was meant when the
Court said:
It is true that the misconduct, negligence,
inefficiency or other disqualification may be
the motive or the inducing factor which
influences the Government to take action
under the terms of the contract of
employment or the specific service rule,
nevertheless, if a right exists, under the
contract or the rules, to terminate the service
the motive operating on the mind of the
Government is, as Chagla, C.J. has said in
Shrinivas Ganesh v. Union of India (N)
(supra), wholly irrelevant. In short, if the
termination of service is founded on the
right flowing from contract or the service
rules then prima facie, the termination is not
a punishment and carries with it no evil
consequences and so art. 311 is not
attracted. But even if the Government has,
by contract or under the rules, the right to
terminate the employment without going
through the procedure prescribed for
inflicting the punishment of dismissal or
removal or reduction in rank, the
Government may, nevertheless, choose to
punish the servant and if the termination of
service is sought to be founded on
misconduct, negligence, inefficiency or
other disqualification, then it is a
punishment and the requirements of Art. 311
must be complied with.
In that case the employee had been reverted back from an
officiating post. The records showed that adverse remarks had
been made against the employee in his confidential reports while
he was officiating. These remarks were placed before the General
Manager who said that he was disappointed to read them and
that he should be reverted as a subordinate till he makes good the
shortcomings noticed. The order of reversion was passed by
the General Manager soon after this. When the issue ultimately
came before this Court, this Court upheld the order of reversion,
saying:
He had no right to continue in that post and
under the general law the implied term of
such appointment was that it was terminable
at any time on reasonable notice by the
Government and, therefore, his reduction
did not operate as a forfeiture of any right
and could not be described as reduction in
rank by way of punishment. Nor did this
reduction under Note 1 to R.1702 amount to
his dismissal or removal. Further it is quite
clear from the orders passed by the General
Manager that it did not entail the forfeiture
of his chances of future promotion or affect
his seniority in his substantive post. In these
circumstances, there is no escape from the
conclusion that the petitioner was not
reduced in rank by way of punishment and,
therefore, the provisions of Art. 311(2) do
not come into play at all.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
(Emphasis supplied)
Therefore, although the General Manager had issued the
order of termination on the basis of the adverse reports, the order
was not considered as a punishment because it did not jeopardise
the appellants career prospects. It is also clear from the paragraph
quoted that punishment means the deprivation of a right which the
employee otherwise has. Thus, if he is already in service and is
reverted from an officiating post, although he does not have a
right to continue in the officiating post, he still has a right to be
considered for promotion. If he is on probation or on a temporary
appointment, he has a right to seek new employment if his
appointment or probation is terminated. Anything which
jeopardises these rights would be by way of punishment.
Another Constitution Bench of this Court in Benjamin
(A.G.) and Union of India explained the decision of Parshotam
Lal Dhingra (supra). It followed the two tests mentioned in
Dhingras case viz.
(1) Whether the temporary
Government servant had a right
to the post or the rank, or
(2) Whether he has been visited with
evil consequences.
If punishment were restricted to evil consequences, the
Courts task in deciding the nature of an order of termination
would have been easier. Courts would only have to scan the
termination order to see whether it ex-facie contains the stigma or
refers to a document which stigmatises the officer, in which case
the termination order would have to be set aside on the ground
that it is punitive. In these cases the evil consequence must be
assessed in relation to the blemish on the employees reputation so
as to render him unfit for service elsewhere and not in relation to
the post temporarily occupied by him. This perhaps is the
underlying rationale of several of the decisions on the issue.
In V.P. Ahuja V. State of Punjab and Others cited by the
appellant, the Court construed the language of the order and found
that it was ex-facie stigmatic.
In Krishnadevaraya Education Trust & Anr. v. L.A.
Balakrishna , the first letter of termination mentioned that the
Committee appointed to go into the question of general
performance of each staff had found that the employee, who had
been appointed on probation, was not upto the mark. This was
followed by a second order of termination which did not refer to
the employees performance at all. The Court held that it was
preferable that the order of termination did not mention that the
employees performance was not satisfactory as then the
employer runs the risk of the allegation being made that the order
itself casts a stigma. Nevertheless, the Court held that the
reasons stated in the first order did not mean that the termination
may be by way of punishment because the probationer is on test
and if the services are found not to be satisfactory, the employer
has, in terms of the letter of appointment, the right to terminate the
services.
Finally, this Court in H.F. Sangati V. Register General,
High Court of Karnataka and Others dealt with the question
whether an order terminating the appointment of a probationer
Munsif could be considered to be punitive. In that case during the
period of probation, several adverse remarks had been made in the
confidential records of the probationer. The Administrative
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
Committee of the High Court considered these confidential
records and came to the conclusion that the appellant was not fit
to be confirmed in the post of a judicial officer. They
recommended to the High Court accordingly. The High Court
accepted the recommendation at a Full Court meeting and referred
the matter to the State Government. The State Government
accepted the recommendation and discharged the probationer
from service. The order of termination mentioned that the
employee was unsuitable to hold the post of Munsif. The Court
held that the order did not cast any stigma on the employee and
was not punitive.
But the law does not rest there. In Shamsher Singh v. State
of Punjab, the Courts were asked to look behind the form of the
order to find out whether the termination was in substance
punitive. So when a full scale inquiry is held against a probationer
or a temporary appointee and he is found guilty, an order
terminating his services for this reason has been seen as punitive
and bad. It is this search for the substance behind the form of
the order of punishment which has lead to some apparently
conflicting decisions.
Thus some Courts have upheld an order of termination of a
probationers services on the ground that the enquiry held prior to
the termination was preliminary and yet other courts have struck
down as illegal a similarly worded termination order because an
inquiry had been held. Courts continue to struggle with
semantically indistinguishable concepts like motive and
foundation; and terminations founded on a probationers
misconduct have been held to be illegal while terminations
motivated by the probationers misconduct have been upheld. The
decisions are legion and it is an impossible task to find a clear
path through the jungle of precedents.
As observed by Alagiriswamy, J. in S.P. Vasudeva V. State
of Haryana and Others 1976 (1) SCC 236, at p. 240:
After all no government servant, a
probationer or temporary, will be discharged
or reverted, arbitrarily, without any rhyme or
reason. If the reason is to be fathomed in all
cases of discharge or reversion, it will be
difficult to distinguish as to which action is
discharge or reversion simplicitor and which
is by way of punishment. The whole
position in law is rather confusing.
One of the judicially evolved tests to determine whether in
substance an order of termination is punitive is to see whether
prior to the termination there was (a) a full scale formal enquiry
(b) into allegations involving moral turpitude or misconduct (c)
which (c) culminated in a finding of guilt. If all three factors are
present the termination has been held to be punitive irrespective of
the form of the termination order. Conversely if any one of the
three factors is missing, the termination has been upheld.
The three factors are distinguishable in the following passage
in Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab (supra) where it was said:
Before a probationer is confirmed the
authority concerned is under an obligation to
consider whether the work of the
probationer is satisfactory or whether he is
suitable for the post. In the absence of any
rules governing a probationer in this respect
the authority may come to the conclusion
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
that on account of inadequacy for the job or
for any temperamental or other object not
involving moral turpitude the probationer is
unsuitable for the job and hence must be
discharged. No punishment is involved in
this. The authority may in some cases be of
the view that the conduct of the probationer
may result in dismissal or removal on an
inquiry. But in those cases the authority
may not hold an inquiry and may simply
discharge the probationer with a view to
giving him a chance to make good in other
walks of life without a stigma at the time of
termination of probation. If, on the other
hand, the probationer is faced with an
enquiry on charges of misconduct or
inefficiency or corruption, and if his services
are terminated without following the
provisions of Article 311(2) he can claim
protection.
(Emphasis supplied)
Thus in Benjamins case (supra), complaints had been
received against a temporary employee. A notice had been sent to
the employee to show cause why disciplinary action should not be
taken against him. The inquiry officer was appointed but before
the inquiry was completed, the services of the employee were
terminated with one months salary in lieu of notice. The
Constitution Bench upheld the order of termination and drew a
distinction between a preliminary inquiry and a departmental
inquiry. It was held that a preliminary inquiry held to satisfy the
Government whether there was no reason to dispense with the
services of the temporary employee should not be mistaken for a
departmental inquiry held to decide whether punitive action
should be taken.
In State of Uttar Pradesh and Another V. Kaushal
Kishore Shukla , the employee had been appointed on a
temporary basis for a fixed tenure. During the period of his
service, adverse entries were made in his character roll.
Complaints were also received by the auditors of the employer. A
summary inquiry was held. It was found that the auditors
complaint was correct. The employee was transferred to another
post. He did not join and the employer terminated his services.
This Court, while upholding the order of termination, said that the
mere fact that prior to the issue of the termination an inquiry was
held against the employee did not make the order of termination
into one of punishment.
In Radhey Shyam Gupta v. U.P. State Agro Industries
Corporation Ltd. and Another a full scale inquiry was held
into the allegations of bribery against a temporary employee. The
Court set aside the termination because it found that the report
submitted was not a preliminary inquiry report but it was in fact a
final one which gave findings as to the guilt of the employee.
In Dipti Prakash Banerjee V. Satyendra Nath Bose
National Centre for Basic Sciences, Calcutta and Others the
termination order itself referred to three other letters. One of the
letters explicitly referred to misconduct on the part of the
employee and also referred to an Inquiry Committees report,
which report in its turn had found that the employee was guilty of
misconduct. The termination was held to be stigmatic and set
aside.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
The case of Chandra Prakash Shahi v. State of U.P. and
Others related to a constable who was on probation after
successfully completing his training. The constable completed his
period of probation without blemish. One year later, his services
were terminated by issuance of a notice in terms of Rule 3 of the
U.P. Temporary Government Servants (Termination of Service)
Rules, 1975. An inquiry was held into the allegations of
misconduct. The Court found as a fact that the inquiry was not
held to judge the suitability of the constable but with a view to
punish him. The order was held to be punitive and set aside.
Therefore, whenever a probationer challenges his termination
the courts first task will be to apply the test of stigma or the form
test. If the order survives this examination the substance of the
termination will have to be found out.
Before considering the facts of the case before us one further,
seemingly intractable, area relating to the first test needs to be
cleared viz. what language in a termination order would amount to
a stigma? Generally speaking when a probationers appointment is
terminated it means that the probationer is unfit for the job,
whether by reason of misconduct or ineptitude, whatever the
language used in the termination order may be. Although strictly
speaking, the stigma is implicit in the termination, a simple
termination is not stigmatic. A termination order which explicitly
states what is implicit in every order of termination of a
probationers appointment, is also not stigmatic. The decisions
cited by the parties and noted by us earlier, also do not hold so. In
order to amount to a stigma, the order must be in a language which
imputes something over and above mere unsuitability for the job.
As was noted in Dipti Prakash Banerjee v. Satyendra
Nath Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences (supra)
At the outset, we may state that in several
cases and in particular in State of Orissa v.
Ram Narayan Das, it has been held that
use of the word unsatisfactory work and
conduct in the termination order will not
amount to a stigma.
Returning now to the facts of the case before us. The
language used in the order of termination is that the appellants
work and conduct has not been found to be satisfactory. These
_______________
12 AIR 1961 SC 177
words are almost exactly those which have been quoted in Dipti
Prakash Banerjees case as clearly falling within the class of
non-stigmatic orders of termination. It is, therefore safe to
conclude that the impugned Order is not ex facie stigmatic.
We are also not prepared to hold that the enquiry held prior
to order of termination turned this otherwise innocuous order into
one of punishment. An employer is entitled to satisfy itself as to
the competence of a probationer to be confirmed in service and
for this purpose satisfy itself fairly as to the truth of any
allegation that may have been made about the employee. A
charge sheet merely details the allegations so that the employee
may deal with them effectively. The enquiry report in this case
found nothing more against the appellant than an inability to
meet the requirements for the post. None of the three factors
catalogued above for holding that the termination was in
substance punitive exist here.
It was finally argued by the appellant that the intention of
the respondents to punish him was clear from the following
statement in the affidavit filed on their behalf.
It is important to mention herein that even
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
honesty and integrity of the petitioner was
also under cloud as he took undue favours
by misusing his position from the suppliers
and maligned the reputation of the
institute.
That an affidavit cannot be relied on to improve or
supplement an order has been held by a Constitution Bench in
Mohinder Singh Gill v. The Chief Election Commissioner,
New Delhi
.when a statutory functionary makes an
order based on certain grounds, its validity
must be judged by the reasons so mentioned
and cannot be supplemented by fresh
reasons in the shape of affidavit or
otherwise
Equally an order which is otherwise valid cannot be
invalidated by reason of any statement in any affidavit seeking to
justify the order. This is also what was held in State of Uttar
Pradesh v. Kaushal Kumar Shukla (supra):
The allegations made against the
respondent contained in the counter-affidavit
by way of a defence filed on behalf of the
appellants also do not change the nature and
character of the order of termination.
Having held against the appellant on all counts, we dismiss
the appeal but without any order as to costs.
.J.
(G.B.Pattanaik)
.J.
(Ruma Pal)
November 5, 2001.