Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4590 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Mohammad Sadiq & Ors
RESPONDENT:
State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/09/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4590 OF 2004
[With Civil Appeal No.4606 of 2004]
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. These appeals are inter-linked and are directed against
common judgment of the Allahabad High Court. By the
impugned judgment the order passed by the learned Single
Judge was set aside.
2. Background facts in a nutshell are as follows:
Retrenched employees of Institute of Engineering and
Rural Technology (for short ’IERT’), 105 in number, filed a writ
petition against the State of U.P. and its functionaries as well
as the IERT praying for quashing the order dated 24.3.1999 by
which it was decided that the Training-cum-Production Centre
of IERT was to be closed down w.e.f. 31.3.1999 and the
workmen employed were to be retrenched after paying
compensation.
While allowing the writ petition the learned Single Judge
gave directions which essentially read as follow:-
"\005The respondents are directed to prepare a
list of the employees who were appointed prior
to 1.10.1986 in the production-cum-training
Centre of IERT, and were working
continuously till the date of their retrenchment
i.e. 31.3.1999 by excluding those who have
retired, or have not given their option for
absorption, to be absorbed in the vacancies in
other polytechnics of the State of Government,
which are recognized and funded or in any
other technical institution, or any post which it
may deem to be fit, in accordance with their
eligibility and after relaxing age and other
terms and conditions of recruitment. As and
when petitioners are offered absorption on any
equivalent post, they will vacate the quarters
occupies by some of them in the premises of
IERT. Since petitioners have accepted
retrenchment compensation, no direction with
regard to payment of salary is required to be
given. The State Government is directed to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
draw the list, prepare the scheme and to offer
appointment by absorption, preferably within a
period of four months. There is no order as
cost."
3. The present respondents questioned correctness of the
order by filing special appeal before the High Court. By the
impugned judgment the High Court allowed the special
appeal. It held that IERT is not an instrumentality of the State
and/or could not be termed to be State Government or a
public Corporation. It was held that the finding of learned
Single Judge that IERT is wholly owned, controlled and
managed by the State Government is not correct.
4. Learned counsel for the appellants submitted that the
basic questions are as follows:-
(a) Whether IERT was an instrumentality of the State.
(b) Whether the Uttar Pradesh Absorptions of Retrenched
Employees of Government/Corporations in Government
Service Rules, 1991 (in short the ’Absorption Rules’) is
applicable to the writ petitioners-appellants.
(c) Whether after receiving compensation, the concerned
employees could question the closure.
5. It was submitted that IERT is registered under the
Societies Registration Act, 1860 (in short the ’Societies Act’)
and in terms of the Absorption Rules the concerned employees
were entitled to be given protection of the Absorption Rules. It
is submitted that the expression "established" means that the
institution has come into existence and, therefore, even
though IERT has been registered under the Societies Act, that
does not mean it is not established or constituted under any
Uttar Pradesh Act.
6. In response, learned counsel for the respondent
submitted that the concept of "established" or "constituted" is
different from a body registered under the Societies Act.
7. The contentions raised need consideration. It has been
accepted that there was no material placed before the High
Court to establish that IERT is an instrumentality of the State.
In Pradeep Kumar Biswas v. Indian Institute of Chemical
Biology and Ors. (2002 (5) SCC 111), it has been clearly stated
that even if a society or institute is registered under the
Societies Act and some functionaries of the State Government
and other members of the institute, such an institute may not
be termed as an instrumentality of the State, if deep and
pervasive control over the affairs of the institute was not with
the State Government. Texts formulated in Ajay Hasia and
Ors. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi and Ors. (1981 (1) SCC 722)
were highlighted. There is basic distinction between a society
and a corporation. In Board of Trustees, Ayurvedic and Unani
Tibia College, Delhi v. State of Delhi (Now Delhi
Administration) and another (AIR 1962 SC 458), it was inter
alia held as follows:
"(9) The first and foremost question is
whether the old Board was a corporation in the
legal sense of that word. What is a
Corporation? Corporations may be divided into
two main classes, namely, corporations
aggregate and corporations sole. We are not
concerned in the present case with corporation
sole. "A Corporation aggregate has been
defined as a collection of individuals united
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
into one body under a special denomination,
having perpetual succession under an artificial
form, and vested by the policy of the law with
the capacity of acting in several respects as an
individual, particularly of taking and granting
property, of contracting obligations and of
suing and being sued, of enjoying privileges
and immunities in common, and of exercising
a variety of political rights, more or less
extensive, according to the design of its
institution, or the powers conferred upon it,
either at the time of its creation or at any
subsequent period of its existence". (Halsbury’s
Laws of England, 3rd Edn. Vol. 9, page 4.) A
corporation aggregate has therefore only one
capacity, namely, its corporate capacity. A
corporation aggregate may be a trading
corporation or a non-trading corporation. The
usual examples of a trading corporation are (1)
charter companies, (2) companies incorporated
by special acts of parliament, (3) companies
registered under the Companies Act, etc. Non-
trading corporations are illustrated by (1)
municipal corporations, (2) district boards, (3)
benevolent institutions, (4) universities etc. An
essential element in the legal conception of a
corporation is that its identity is continuous,
that is, that the original member of members
and his or their successors are one. In law the
individual corporators, or members, of which it
is composed are something wholly different
from the corporation itself; for a corporation is
a legal persona just as much as an individual.
Thus, it has been held that a name is essential
to a corporation; that a corporation aggregate
can, as a general rule, only act or express its
will by deed under its common seal; that at the
present day in England a corporation is
created by one or other of two methods,
namely, by Royal Charter of incorporation from
the Crown or by the authority of Parliament
that is to say, by or by virtue of statute. There
is authority of long standing for saying that the
essence of a corporation consists in (1) lawful
authority of incorporation, (2) the persons to
be incorporated, (3) a name by which the
persons are incorporated, (4) a place, and (5)
words sufficient in law to show incorporation.
No particular words are necessary for the
creation of a corporation; any expression
showing an intention to incorporate will be
sufficient.
10. The learned Advocate for the petitioners
has referred us to various provisions of the
Societies Registration Act, 1860 and has
contended that the result of these provisions
was to make the Board a corporation on
registration. It is necessary now to read some
of the provisions of that Act. The Act is entitled
an Act for the registration of literary, scientific
and charitable societies and the preamble
states that it was enacted for improving the
legal condition of societies established for the
promotion of literature, science, or the fine
arts, or for the diffusion of useful knowledge
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
etc., or for charitable purposes. Section 1 of
the Act states that any seven or more persons
associated for any literary, scientific, or
charitable purpose, or for any such purpose as
is described in Section 20 of the Act may, by
subscribing their names to a memorandum of
association and filing the same with the
Registrar or Joint-stock Companies form
themselves into a society under the Act.
Section 2 lays down that the memorandum of
association shall contain and one of the
particulars it must contain is "the objects of
the society". Section 3 deals with registration
and the fees payable therefor. Sections 5 and 6
are important for our purposes and should be
read in full.
"5. The property, movable and
immovable, belonging to a society registered
under this Act, if not vested in trustees, shall
be deemed to be vested, for the time being, in
the governing body of such society, and in all
proceedings, civil and criminal, may be
described as the property of the governing
body of such society by their proper title.
6. Every society registered under this Act
may sue or be sued in the name of the
president, chairman, or principal secretary, or
trustees, as shall be determined by the rules
and regulations of the society, and, in default
of such determination, in the name of such
person as shall be appointed by the governing
body for the occasion :
Provided that it shall be competent for any
person having a claim or demand against the
society, to sue the president or chairman, or
principal secretary of the trustees thereof, if on
an application to the governing body some
other officer or person be not nominated to be
the defendant."
Section 7 provides for non-abatement of suits
or proceedings and the continuance of such
suits or proceedings in the name of or against
the successor of the person by or against
whom the suit was brought. Section 8 says
that if a judgment is recovered against a
person or officer named on behalf of the
society, such judgment shall not be put in
force against the property, movable or
immovable, or against the body of such person
or officer, but against the property of the
society. Section 10 provides that in certain
circumstances mentioned therein a member of
the society may be sued by the society; but if
the defendant shall be successful in any such
suit brought at the instance of the society and
shall be adjudged to recover his costs, he may
elect to proceed to recover the same from the
officer in whose name the suit was brought, or
from the society. Sections 13 and 14 provide
for dissolution of societies and the
consequences of such dissolution. These
provisions have also an important bearing on
the questions before us and are quoted in full.
"13. Any number not less than three-
fifths of the members of any society may
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
determine that it shall be dissolved, and
thereupon it shall be dissolved forthwith, or at
the time then agreed upon, and all necessary
steps shall be taken for the disposal and
settlement of the property of the society, its
claims and liabilities, according to the rules of
the said society applicable thereto, if any, and,
if not then as the governing body shall find
expedient, provided that, in the event of any
dispute arising among the said governing body
or the members of the society, the adjustment
of its affairs shall be referred to the principal
court of Original civil jurisdiction of the district
in which the chief building of the society is
situate, and the Court shall make such order
in the matter as it shall deem requisite :
Provided that no society shall be
dissolved unless three-fifths of the members
shall have expressed a wish for such
dissolution by their votes delivered in person,
or by proxy, at a general meeting convened for
the purpose :
Provided that whenever any Government
is a member of, or a contributor to, or
otherwise interested in any society registered
under this Act, such society shall not be
dissolved, without the consent of the
Government of the State of registration.
14. If upon the dissolution of any society
registered under this Act there shall remain,
after the satisfaction of all its debts and
liabilities, any property whatsoever, the same
shall not be paid to or distributed among the
members of the said society or any of them,
but shall be given to some other society, to be
determined by the votes of not less than three-
fifths of the members present personally or by
proxy at the time of the dissolution, or, in
default thereof, by such Court as aforesaid :
Provided, however, that this clause shall
not apply to any society which shall have been
founded or established by the contributions of
shareholders in the nature of a Joint Stock
Company."
8. The other crucial question is whether the Absorption
Rules applied to IERT. The relevant provisions in the rules
read as follows:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by the
proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution, the
Governor is pleased to make the following
rules to provide for the absorption in
Government Service of the retrenched
employees of the Government or of Public
Corporations.
THE UTTAR PRADESH ABSORPTION OF
RETRENCHED EMPLOYEES OF
GOVERNMENT OR PUBLIC CORPORATIONS
IN GOVERNMENT SERVICE RULES, 1991.
xx xx xx xx
2(b) "Public Corporation" means a body
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
corporate established or constituted by or
under any Uttar Pradesh Act expect a
University of local authority constituted
for the purpose of Local Self Government
and includes a government Company
within the meaning of Section 617 of the
Companies Act, 1956 in which the State
Government has prepondering interest.
2(c) "Retrenched Employees" means a person
who was appointed on a post under the
Government or a public corporation on or
before October 1, 1986 in accordance
with the procedure laid down for
recruitment to the post and was
continuously working in any post under
the Government or such corporation up
to date of his retrenchment due to
reduction in, or winding up of, any
establishment or the Government of the
Public Corporation, as the case may be
and in respect of whom a certificate of
being retrenched employees has been
issued by his appointing authority."
9. A bare reading of the provisions makes the positions
clear that in order to bring application of the Rules the public
corporation has to be a body corporate established or
constituted by or under any Uttar Pradesh Act.
10. The fundamental requirement is that the corporation
should have been constituted by or under any Uttar Pradesh
Act. Undisputedly, the Societies Act is a Central Act.
11. The impugned judgment of the High Court does not
suffer from any infirmity to warrant interference. The appeals
are dismissed but without any order as to costs.