Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. S. SRINIVASAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/02/1958
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 419 1958 SCR 1295
ACT:
Union Service, Termination of-Servant in quasi-permanent
status-Post kept in abeyance-Ordered to carry the status
while officiating in new appointment under misapprehension-
Validity-Test-Consultation with Federal Public Service
Commission, if mandatory-Servant, if entitled to
Constitutional Protection-Constitution of India, Art.
311(2)-Central Civil Services (Temporary Service) Rules,
1947, rr. 3, 4 and 6(1).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant held the post of a Public Relations Officer,
All India Radio, and was declared to be in quasi-permanent
Service under r. 3 Of the Central Civil Service (Temporary
Service) Rules, 1949. As a measure of war economy the
Government decided to hold the post "in abeyance" and the
appellant was appointed to officiate as Assistant Station
Director in a temporary capacity and was ordered to carry
with him his quasi-permanent status while holding his new
post. On the objection of the Union Public Service
Commission, however, the service of the appellant was
terminated and lie was appointed to a temporary post of
Assistant Information Officer which belonged to a lower
grade. The appellant moved the High Court for a writ of
certiorari. His contention was that as, admittedly, he had
not been called upon to show cause, Art. 311(2) Of the
Constitution was violated. It was contended on behalf of
the respondent that the order permitting the appellant to
carry his quasi-permanent status to his new post having been
made under a misapprehension that the post of Assistant
Station Director belonged to the same grade as that of the
Public Relations Officer, his service was terminable under
the relevant Service Rules :
Held (per Das, C. J., Venkatarama Aiyar, S. K. Das and A. K.
Sarkar, JJ. Bose, J. dissenting), that the post of
Assistant Station Director was not a post in the same grade
as that of the Public Relations Officer and under the
relevant Service Rules he could not carry his quasi-
permanent status to the new post; as the order permitting
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the appellant to carry his quasi-permanent status was passed
under a misapprehension and was not intended to confer on
him that status independently in the new post, his service
was terminable under r. 6(1) of the Rules.
It is well settled that if a servant has no right to the
post and his service can be terminated under the Service
Rules, Art. 311(2) is not attracted. Consequently, the
appellant who was appointed on a purely temporary capacity,
could not seek the protection of Art. 311(2).
1296
Parshotam Lal Dhingra v. Union of India, [1958] S.C.R. 828,
relied on.
Admission is not conclusive proof of the matter admitted,
although it may in certain circumstances operate as an
estoppel. In the present case, as the appellant was in no
way misled as to his quasi-permanent status by the erroneous
order of the Government, no question of estoppel could
arise.
Held, further, that the word ’reduction’ in cl (ii) of r.
6(1) of the Rules is not necessarily confined to abolition
but also includes keeping in abeyance of posts and the word
’certify’ occurring therein does not necessarily imply that
a formal order is essential.
The same scale of pay is not the only test for finding out
if a particular post belongs to the same grade as another
within the meaning of the proviso to cl. (ii) of r. 6(1) of
the Service Rules, nor does the fact that the two belong to
the same class determine the question.
Quasi-permanent status is a creature of the Rules and a
servant who seeks the benefit of r. 3 must be held to be
bound by the proviso to r. 4(b) of the Rules.
State of U. P. v. Manbodhan Lal Srivastava, [1958] S.C.R.
533, held inapplicable.
Per Bose, J.-The order of the Government permitting the
appellant to carry with him the quasi-permanent status he
had in his former post was clearly intended to confer on the
appellant quasi-permanent status in his new post and the
Government could not be allowed to go back upon it although
it may have acted under a mistake, subsequently discovered.
The Commissioner of Police, Bombay v. Gordhandas Bhanji,
[1952] S.C.R. 135, applied.
Moreover, under r. 4(a) of the Rules the Government had the
power to confer such a status without any previous
consultation with the Federal Public Service Commission as
required by r. 4(b) of the Rules, the words ’is required to
be made’ occurring in that rule being only directory and not
mandatory.
State of U. P. v. Manbodhan Lal Srivastava, [1958] S.C.R.
533, Biswanath Khemka v. The King Emperor, [1945] F.C.R. 99
and Montreal Street Railway Company v. Normandin, [1917]
A.C. 170, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 78 of 1957
and Petition No. 81 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 25, 1955, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ
No. 209-D of 1955.
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K.S. Krishnaswamy Aiyanger and C. V. L. Narayan, for the
appellant.
P.A. Mehta, R. Ganapathy Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondent.
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1958. February 18. The Judgment of Das C. J., Venkatarama
Aiyar, S. K. Das and Sarkar, JJ., was delivered by S. K. Das
J. Bose J. delivered a separate judgment.
S.K. DAS J.-On May 1, 1946, Shri K. S. Srinivasan, appellant
before us, was appointed to a post of Liaison Officer, All
India Radio, on a pay of Rs. 350 per month in the scale of
Rs. 350-20-450-25/2-550. The appointment was made on the
recommendation of the then Federal Public Service
Commission, and the advertisement or memorandum of
information for candidates, as it is more properly called,
issued by the Public Service Commission when calling for
applications for the said post, related to the recruitment
for nine posts of Listeners’ Research Officers and nine
posts of Liaison Officers, All India Radio. It was stated
in the said memorandum that the posts were permanent and
pensionable, but would be filled on a temporary basis; the
memorandum further stated that if the persons concerned were
retained in service and confirmed in the posts, they would
be allowed pensionary benefits and would also be eligible to
contribute to the General Provident Fund. In the first
instance the appointments were made on probation for six
months subject to termination on certain conditions
mentioned in para. 4 of the memorandum, which need not be
set out at this stage. The duties of a Liaison Officer were
stated in para. 5 of the memorandum, the main duty being to
organise and conduct publicity for the programmes and other
activities of a Radio Station. The designation Liaison
Officer was later changed to Public Relations Officer, and
along with other posts of Listener Research Officer and
Assistant Station Director, the posts of Public Relations
Officers were upgraded to Rs. 450-25-500-30-800 with effect
from January 1, 1947. On May 23, 1952, the Director
General, All India Radio, passed an order bearing
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No. 2(1)A/50 in which it was stated that whereas the
appellant had been in continuous Government service for more
than three years and a declaration had been issued to him in
pursuance of rr. 3 and 4 of the Central Civil Services
(Temporary Service) Rules, 1949, and whereas an appointment
to the post of Public Relations Officer was required to be
made in consultation with the Union Public Service
Commission and their concurrence to the appointment had been
obtained, the appellant was appointed to the Public
Relations Officer’s grade in a quasi-permanent capacity with
effect from May 1, 1949. On September 3, 1952, however, the
appellant received an order from the said Director-General
in which it was stated that his services would not be
required after October 6, 1952. The appellant was naturally
taken by surprise on receipt of this order and made a
representation on September 8, 1952, in which he stated that
as a quasi-permanent Public Relations Officer he had a claim
to an alternative post in the same grade, so long as any
post in the same grade was held by a Government servant not
in permanent or quasi-permanent service. On September 13,
1952, the appellant was informed by means of an order that
he was appointed to officiate as Assistant Station Director,
Madras (the appellant was then working as Public Relations
Officer, All India Radio, Madras) in a purely temporary
capacity until further orders. On September 19, 1952, the
appellant was informed that his representation dated
September 8, 1952, was under consideration and a suggestion
was made that in the meantime he should apply for one of the
posts of Assistant Station Directors which had been
advertised by the Union Public Service Commission. Then, on
October 4, 1952, the appellant submitted a further
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representation in which he said that under the rules in
question, namely the Central Civil Service (Temporary
Service) Rules, 1949, he was entitled to be retained in
service in a post of the same grade and under the same
appointing authority ; and it was, therefore, not necessary
that he should be reselected for the post of Assistant
Station Director by the Union Public Service Commission, In
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the concluding paragraph of his representation the appellant
stated that in deference to the suggestion made in the
letter of the Director-General dated September 19, 1952, he
was enclosing an application to the Union Public Service
Commission for the post of Assistant Station Director and
if, after due consideration, the Director-General decided
that the appellant should apply for the post of Assistant
Station Director, his application should be forwarded to the
Union Public Service Commission. While Government was
considering the representation of the appellant, the Union
Public Service Commission interviewed in March, 1953,
candidates for the posts of Assistant Station Directors.
The appellant appeared before the Commission on March 26,
1953. On April 18, 1953, the appellant was informed that
the Union Public Service Commission had not selected him and
the appellant was again informed that "it was not possible
to continue him in service." The appellant made fresh
representations to the effect that the order purporting to
terminate his service on the ground that the Union Public
Service Commission had not selected him for the post of
Assistant Station Director, was an illegal order inasmuch as
the appellant held a quasipermanent status and was entitled
to hold a post in the grade of Assistant Station Directors,
as long as anyone not in permanent or quasi-permanent
service continued to hold such a post. To these representa-
tions the appellant received a reply to the effect that
Government had decided to keep in abeyance the post of
Public Relations Officer held by him and therefore it was
not possible to retain him in that post and the appellant
was given an opportunity to show cause why his service
should not be terminated on the expiry of the period of
notice with effect from Jul ’18, 1953. A reply was asked
for within 15 days. In reply, the appellant again pointed
out that having been given a quasi-permanent status he was
entitled to be retained in service under the rules governing
Government servants holding such status, and the termination
of his service would be in violation of
165
1300
Article 311 of the Constitution. On July 3, 1953, the
appellant received a memorandum dated June 9, 1953. This
memorandum said: " Shri Srinivasan’s representation has now
been considered by Government. As the posts of Public
Relations Officers form a cadre by themselves and do not
belong to the cadre of Assistant Station Directors, he
cannot claim any protection in the post of Assistant Station
Director on account of his being quasi-permanent as Public
Relations Officer. Shri Srinivasan may please be informed
accordingly."
On July 10, 1953, the appellant made a fresh representation,
this time to the Secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs, in
which he repeated his former objections and contended that
the proposed termination of his service was irregular,
unjust and illegal. He submitted that the order terminating
his service was in contravention of Art. 311 of the
Constitution and he further said that "though the posts of
Public Relations Officer and Assistant Station Director were
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not declared to be in the same cadre, there can be no
dispute that the posts are in the same grade. " On August
17, 1953, the appellant received a memorandum to the effect
that the notice of the termination of his service as
Assistant Station Director dated April 18, 1953, as
subsequently amended by corrigenda dated May 12,1953, and
July 3, 1953, was withdrawn, and it also stated that the
notice dated May 26, 1953, asking the appellant to show
cause why his service should not be terminated was
cancelled. This was followed by an order dated December
14,1953. This order has in important bearing on the points
urged before us and must be quoted in full:
" S. No. 41(R)
Government of India,
Director General, All India Radio.
No. 1 (113)-SI/52. New Delhi,
the 14th December, 1953.
ORDER.
In this Directorate Order No. 2(1)-A/50, dated the 23rd May,
1952, Shri K. S. Srinivasan, then officiating
1301
Public Relations Officer, All India Radio, was appointed to
that post in a quasi-permanent capacity with effect from the
1st May, 1949. Subsequently, in August 1952, all posts of
Public Relations Officers, except the one in the External
Services Division, were held in abeyance. As the post of
Public Relations Officer belongs to the same grade as
Assistant Station Director carrying identical scales of pay
Shri Srinivasan was appointed Assistant Station Director in
the External Services Division with effect from the 22nd
September, 1952. Under the provision contained in the
Ministry of Home Affairs Office Memorandum No. 54/136 /51-
NGS, dated the 24th April, 1952, Shri Srinivasan will carry
with him the quasi-permanent status of his former post of
Public Relations Officer while holding the post of Assistant
Station Director.
(Sd.) M. Lal,
Director-Geiieral."
A copy of the order was also sent to the Secretary, Union
Public Service Commission. Unfortunately, the appellant
soon found that his troubles did not end with the order
dated December 14, 1953. On August 31, 1955, the appellant
was informed by the then, Secretary, Miniistry of
Information and Broadcasting, that the Union Public Service
Commission had objected to his appointment as Assistant
Station Director, holding that such appointment was contrary
to the regulations; the appellant was then asked that he
should relinquish the post of Assistant Station, Director
and accept a temporary post of Assistant Information Officer
in the Press Information Bureau or, in the alternative, he
should " clear out In may be stated here that the post of
Assistant Information Officer offered to the appellant
carried a scale of pay lower than that of an Assistant
Station Director, namely Rs. 350-25-500-30-620. As this new
offer deprived the appellant of his quasi-permanent status
and also amounted to a reduction in his rank, the appellant
immediately sent fresh representations to the Home Ministry,
Director-General, and the Minister for Information and
Broadcasting. On September 7, 1955, the appellant received
the final order
1302
of Government, which is the order complained of in the
present appeal. That order was in these terms:
" Shri Srinivasan was declared quasi-permanent in the grade
of Public Relations Officer, All India Radio (Rs.
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450-25-500-EB-30-800) with effect from the 1st May, 1949.
In 1952, all the posts of Public Relations Officer excepting
one in the External Services Division were held in abeyance
as a measure of economy. The only post that survived the
economy drive was assigned to the permanent incumbent.
ShriSrinivasan would have had to be retrenched in 1952; for
quasi-permanency does not preclude retrenchment and there
was no other officer in the grade of Public Relations
Officer who was non-quasi-permanent and who could have been
discharged in preference to him. He was irregularly
transferred as Asst. Station Director, in an officiating
capacity. He applied for one of the posts of Assistant
Station Director when they were advertised by the Union
Public Service Commission in 1953, but was rejected.
Subsequently, lie was allowed to carry also irregularly, the
quasi-permanent status in the grade of Public Relations
Officer while holding the post of Assistant Station
Director, vide Directorate General, All India Radio’s order
No. I (I 13) 81/52 dated the 14th December, 1953. The Union
Public Service Commission have not accepted this transfer as
it is in contravention of the Union Public Service
Commission (Consultation) Regulations. Since he has been
rejected for the post of Assistant Station Director in an
open selection and also since the Union Public Service
Commission have not accepted his transfer, the Government of
India regret that they are unable to allow him to continue
in the post of Assistant Station Director. He is,
therefore, required to relinquish charge of the post of
Assistant Station Director immediately.
" To save him the hardship of retrenchment, the question of
offering Shri Srinivasan alternative employment has been
considered. There is no intention of reviving the posts of
Public Relations Officer that were held in abeyance in 1952.
For publicity and
1303
public relations work of All India Radio, a few poste of
Assistant Information Officer in the scale of Rs.
350-25-500-EB-30-620 have been sanctioned on the strength of
the Press Information Bureau and it is proposed to absorb
him on temporary basis, against one of these posts. The
absorption in this post also, is subject to the approval by
the Union Public Service Commission to whom a reference has
been made. Meanwhile, after relinquishing the charge of the
post of Assistant Station Director, he should report himself
for duty to the Principal Information Officer, Press
Information Bureau, New Delhi. The question of fixation of
his pav in the grade of Assistant Information Officer., With
a view to protecting his present salary will be taken up
after he has joined duty"
The appellant continued to make some more representations
which were, however, rejected, and on October 11, 1955, an
order was passed transferring the appellant to the Press
Information Bureau as officiating Assistant Information
Officer with immediate effect and the appellant was directed
to hand over charge of the post of Assistant Station
Director immediately and to take over his post in the Press
Information Bureau forthwith. The validity of this order,
which is also challenged in the present appeal, necessarily
depends on the validity of the earlier order dated September
7, 1955.
The appellant refused to accept the lower post of Assistant
Press Information Officer and on October 19, 1955, he made
over charge under protest. On November 25, 1955, the
appellant filed a petition, numbered Writ Petition 209-D of
1955 in the Punjab High Court in which he prayed for the
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issue of a writ of certiorari or any other appropriate writ
for quashing the orders
dated September 7, 1955, and October 11, 1955, and
asked for an order directing his reinstatement as Assistant
Station Director in the External Services Division of the
All India Radio, the post which he was holding when the
orders complained of were passed. This petition was
summarily dismissed by the Punjab High Court on the same
date. The appellant then
13O4
moved the said High Court for a certificate for leave to
appeal to this Court. That application was also dismissed
on March 16, 1956. Thereupon, the appellant moved this
Court for Special Leave and obtained such leave on April 23,
1956. While moving the application for special leave,
learned counsel for the appellant stated that without
prejudice to the contentions of either party, the appellant
would take up the posts of Assistant Information Officer in
the Press Information Bureau pending disposal of the appeal.
On April 22, 1956, the appellant also filed a petition under
Art. 32 of the Constitution and in this petition the
appellant has challenged the order date September 7, 1955,
on the ground that the order violates the provisions of
Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
The present judgment will govern the appeal by special leave
as also the petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution. It
will be convenient to take up the appeal first. The main
question for decision in the appeal is whether the impugned
orders violate the constitutional guarantee given by Art.
311 (2) to the appellant, who is admittedly the holder of a
civil post under the Union. The true scope and effect of
Art. 311 of the Constitution was fully considered in a
recent judgment of this Court in Parshotam Lal Dhingra v.
Union Of India (1), pronounced on November 1, 1957, and it
was there held by the majority as follows ( we are quoting
such observations only as have
a bearing on the present case):
" Shortly put, the principle is that when a servant has a
right to a post or to a rank either under the terms of the
contract of employment, express or implied, or under the
rules governing the conditions of his service, the
termination of the service of such a servant or his
reduction to a lower post is by itself and prima facie a
punishment, for it operates as a forfeiture of his right to
hold that post or that rank and to get the emoluments and
other benefits attached thereto, But if the servant has no
right to the post, as where he is appointed to a post,
permanent
(1) [1958] S. C. R. 828.
1305
or temporary, either on probation or on an officiating basis
and whose temporary service has not ripened into a quasi-
permanent set-vice as defined in the Temporary Service
Rules, the termination of his employment does not deprive
him of any right and cannot, therefore, by itself, be a
punishment. One test for determining, whether the
termination of the service of a government servant is by way
of punishment is to ascertain whether the servant, but for
such termination, had the right to hold the post. If he had
a right to the post as in the three cases hereinbefore
mentioned, the termination of his service will by itself be
a punishment and fie will be entitled to the protection of
Art. 31 1. In other words and broadly speaking, Art. 311 (2)
will apply to those cases where the government servant, had
he been employed by a private employer, would be entitled to
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maintain an action for wrongful dismissal, removal or
reduction in rank. To put it in another way, if the
government has, by contract, express or implied, or, under
the rules, the right to terminate the employment at any
time, then such termination in the manner provided by the
contract or the rules is, prima facie and per se, not a
punishment and does not attract the provisions of Art. 311."
Therefore, the critical question is-did the appellant have a
right to the post of Assistant Station Director, which he
was holding, when the impugned orders were passed ? If he
had such a right, the impugned orders will undoubtedly be
bad because they deprive the appellant of that right
inasmuch as they terminate his service in the post he was
holding and reduce him to a lower post. Admittedly,there
was no proceeding against the appellant for disciplinary
action and he had no opportunity of showing cause against
any such action. If, on the contrary, the appellant had no
right to the post he was holding and under the rules
governing the conditions of his service his service was
liable to be terminated, then the appellant is not entitled
to the protection of Art. 31 1. On behalf of the appellant
the contention is that under the Civil Services (Temporary
Service) Rules, 1949 he held a
1306
quasi-permanent status in the post of Public Relations
Officer to which he was first appointed and he carried that
status to the post of Assistant Station Director to which he
was later appointed; therefore, he had a right of which he
could not be deprived except in accordance with those rules,
and the impugned orders were passed in derogation of those
rules. Furthermore, it is contended on behalf of the
appellant that the Union Public Service Commission failed to
appreciate the, correct legal position and their opinion,
officious or otherwise, was neither decisive nor binding on
Government or the appellant.
On behalf of the Union of India, respondent before us, it
has been conceded that the Central Civil Services (Temporary
Service) Rules, 1949 are the relevant rules governing the
conditions of the appellant’s service. But the argument is
that the impugned orders are in consonance with those rules
and the service of the appellant who was in quasi-permanent
service in the post of Public Relations Officer was liable
to termination under r. 6 (1) (ii), because (1) a reduction
had occurred in the number of posts of Public Relations
Officers available for Government servants not in permanent
service, and (2) the post of Assistant Station Director to
which the appellant was appointed in a purely temporary
capacity was not a post of the same grade as the specified
post held by the appellant so as to entitle him to the
benefit of the proviso to r. 6 (1) (ii). On behalf of the
respondent it has been further submitted that the order
dated December 14, 1953 was issued under a misapprehension
and when the correct position was rightly pointed out by the
Union Public Service Commission, Government passed the
impugned order of September 7, 1955 and by way of mitigating
the hardship of the appellant who was faced with the
prospect of immediate unemployment offered him the post of
Assistant Information Officers Post created for the per-
formance of duties similar to those of the whilom Public
Relations Officer.
These are the rival contentions which fall for consideration
by us, We must at this stage read the
1307
relevant rules called the Central Civil Services (Temporary
Service) Rules, 1949, hereinafter to be referred to as the
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Temporary Service Rules. Rule 2 defines certain terms used
in the Temporary Service Rules. We are concerned with two
of such terms-" quasipermanent service " and " specified
post ". " Quasipermanent service " means " temporary service
commencing from the date on which a declaration issued under
rule 3 takes effect and consisting of periods of duty and
leave (other than extraordinary leave) after that date " ; "
specified post " means " the particular post, or the
particular grade of posts within a cadre, in respect of
which a Government servant is declared to be quasi-permanent
under rule 3 ". Rule 3, which we must read in full, is in
these terms:
" A Government servant shall be deemed to be in quasi-
permanent service:
(i) if he has been in continuous Government service for
more than three years, and
(ii) if the appointing authority, being satisfied as to his
suitability in respect of age, qualifications, work and
character for employment in a quasi-permatient capacity, has
issued a declaration to that effect, in accordance with such
instructions as the Governor-General may issue from time to
time."
Rules 4 and 6 (1) are also important for our purpose and
must be reproduced in full.
" Rule 4. (a) A declaration issued under rule 3 shall
specify the particular post or the particular grade of posts
within a cadre, in respect of which it is issued, and the
date from which it takes effect.
(b) Where recruitment to a specified post is required to be
made in consultation with the Federal Public Service
Commission no such declaration shall be issued except after
consultation with the Commission."
" Rule 6. (1) The service of a Government servant in quasi-
permanent service shall be liable to termination-
(i) in the same circumstances and in the same
166
1308
manner as a Government servant in permanent service, or
(ii) when the appointing authority concerned has ,certified
that a reduction has occurred in the number of posts
available for Government servants not in permanent service:
Provided that the service of a Government servant in quasi-
permanent service shall not be liable to termination under
cl. (ii) so long as any post of the same grade and under the
same appointing authority as the specified post held by him,
continues to be held by a Government servant not in
permanent or quasipermanent service:
Provided further that as among Government servants in quasi-
permanent service whose specified posts are of the same
grade and under the same appointing authority, termination
of service consequent on reduction of posts shall ordinarily
take place in order of juniority in the list referred to in
r. 7."
As rule 6(1) refers to r. 7, we may as well quote that
rule.
" Rule 7. (1) Subject to the provision of this rule, a
Government servant in respect of whom a declaration has been
made under rule 3, shall be eligible for a permanent
appointment on the occurrence of a vacancy in the specified
posts which may be reserved for being filled from among
persons in quasi-permanent service, in accordance with such
instructions as may be issued by the Governor-General in
this behalf from time to time.
Explanation:-No such declaration shall confer upon any
person a right to claim a permanent appointment to any post.
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(2) Every appointing authority shall, from time to time,
after consultation with the appropriate Departmental
Promotions Committee, prepare a list, in order of
precedence, of persons in quasi-permanent service who are
eligible for a permanent appointment. In preparing such a
list, the appointing authority shall consider both the
seniority and the merit of the
1309
Government servants concerned. All permanent appointments
which are reserved undersub-rule(1) under the control of any
such appointing authority shall. be made in accordance with
such list: Provided that the Government may order that
permanent appointment to any grade or post may be made
purely in order of seniority."
Now, it is beyond dispute and in fact, admitted that the
appellant held a quasi-permanent status in the grade of
posts known as Public Relations Officers. The order dated
May 23, 1952, stated in clear terms that (i) a declaration
had been issued in respect of the appellant in pursuance of
rr. 3 and 4 of the Temporary Service Rules, (ii) concurrence
of the Union Public Service Commission had been obtained and
(iii) the grade of posts in respect of which the appellant
held quasi-permanent status was the Public Relations
Offlcers grade. Under r. 4 a declaration issued under r. 3
shall specify the particular post or the particular grades
of posts within a cadre in respect of which it is issued and
the date from which it takes effect. A ’cadre’, according
to Fundamental Rule 9(4), means the strength of a service or
a part of a service sanctioned as a separate unit. Some
indication of what is meant by a grade can be obtained from
art. 29 of the Civil Service Regulations: that article
states-
" 29. Grade and Class-Appointments are said to be in the
same " Class " when they are in the same Department, and
bear the same designation, or have; been declared by the
Government of India to be in the same class. Appointments
in the same class are sometimes divided into "Grades"
according to pay. Note:-Appointments do not belong to the
same Class or Grade unless they have been so constituted or
recognised by proper authority. There are no Classes or
Grades of Ministerial Officers."
It is, therefore, clear that so far as the posts known as
Public Relations Officers, All India Radio, are concerned,
they formed a grade and the appellant held a quasi-permanent
status in that grade. Rule 6(1) of the Temporary Service
Rules lays
1310
down how the service of a Government servant in quasi-
permanent service can be terminated. We are concerned in
this case with cl. (ii) of the said rule. That clause says
that the service of a Government servant in quasi-permanent
service can be terminated " when the appointing authority
concerned has certified that a reduction has occurred in the
number of posts available for Government servants not in
permanent service ". Learned counsel for the appellant has
very strongly submitted that there was no reduction within
the meaning of the clause in the present case, far less any
certification of such reduction. Learned counsel for the
respondent has urged with equal vehemence that there was a
reduction within the meaning of the clause and the
appointing authority had certified such reduction.
Before considering the true scope and effect of the relevant
clause, it is necessary to say a few words about the
Temporary Service Rules. At the same time the Rules were
published, Government also issued a memorandum explanatory
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of the Rules. It was therein stated that the term ’quasi-
permanent’ service had been evolved with the object of
attaching certain benefits to such service and with regard
to r. 4(a) the memorandum stated-,, Under Rule 4(a) a
Government servant has to be declared as quasi-permanent in
respect of a particular post; such a post may be an isolated
one or it may be a post in a cadre consisting of several
posts. In case where a cadre is split up into several
grades it may belong to one such grade within the cadre. A
Government servant who is declared as quasi-permanent in
respect of a particular post may be shifted from one post to
another within the cadre or grade concerned due to reduction
in post or other causes. Such shifting does not affect his
rights." As to r. 6(1) the memorandum gave the following
explanation: This rule relates to the security of tenure of
a quasi-permanent Government servant. It should be noted
that except in the event of reduction in the number of posts
in the cadre or grade concerned, the termination of service
of a quasi-permanent Government servant will have to be made
in the same manner
1311
as the case of permanent Government servants For example, if
the services are to be terminated on grounds of indiscipline
or inefficiency, it will be necessary to institute formal
proceedings against him. He has also got a superior right
of retention in service over that of purely temporary
employees, in the grade in which he is quasi-permanent.
The question before us is whether the impugned order of
September 7, 1955, was in consonance with r. 6(1). This
question has two aspects-first, the true scope and effect of
el. (ii) and second, the effect of the proviso thereto. We
take up first cl. (ii). Was there a reduction in the
present case within the meaning of cl. (ii) ? We think that
the answer must be in the affirmative. In the order dated
December 14, 1953, which was an order in favour of the
appellant, it was clearly stated that in August 1952, all
the posts of Public Relations Officers, except the one in
the External services Division, were held in abeyance. In
the impugned order of September 7, 1955, it was stated that
in 1952 all the posts of Public Relations Officers excepting
one in the External Services Division were held in abeyance
as a measure of economy and the only post that survived the
economy drive was assigned to a permanent incumbent. In his
representation dated July 10, 1953, the appellant himself
admitted that as per Director General, All India Radio’s
memorandum dated May 21, 1953, he was informed that " it was
decided to keep the post in abeyance ". Learned counsel for
the appellant has sought to draw a distinction between
’keeping a post in abeyance’ and ’reducing a post’ and has
suggested that the latter expression means abolishing a post
permanently or temporarily whereas the former expression
merely suggests not filling the post for the time being.
Words and phrases necessarily take their meaning from the
context in which they are used. In cl. (ii) the expression
used is " reduction...... in the number of posts available
for Government servants not in permanent service."Learned
counsel for the respondent has rightly pointed out that the
entire clause should be read to understand what is meant by
reduction, and
1312
in that context, reduction is not necessarily confined to
abolition, permanent or otherwise. He has given an
illustration to clarify the meaning. Assume that the
permanent holder of a post goes on deputation; the post then
becomes available for temporary or quasi-permanent officers.
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When, however, the permanent man returns from deputation,
there is a reduction in the number of posts available for
Government servants not in permanent service. We agree with
learned counsel for the respondent that the word reduction
in the context of cl. (ii) is not necessarily confined to
abolition, and keeping certain posts in abeyance comes
within the expression. It may be further pointed out that
in the order of September 7, 1955, it was clearly stated
that Government had no intention of reviving the posts of
Public Relations Officers kept in abeyance since 1952;
therefore, for all practical purposes the posts have been
abolished.
We do not think that there is any charm in the word
’certifies’ which occurs in cl. (ii). It is clear that the
appellant was informed, as far back as May, 1953, by a
memorandum from the appointing authority that it was decided
to keep the post (which the appellant held) in abeyance.
There is nothing in the clause which prevents the appointing
authority from certifying by means of a memorandum instead
of by a mere formal order.
Now, we come to the far more important question of the
effect of the proviso to cl. (ii). The crucial point in
that connection is whether the post of Assistant Station
Director, to which the appellant was appointed in a purely
temporary capacity on September 13, 1952, was a post within
the same grade or cadre as the posts of Public Relations
Officer. If it is in the same grade or within the same
cadre, the appellant will retain his quasi-permanent status
and the shifting, to use the words of the explanatory
memorandum quoted earlier, will not affect his rights. This
point has caused ,us considerable anxiety, and on a very
careful consideration we have reluctantly but ineluctably
come to the conclusion that the post of Assistant Station
1313
Director is not in the same grade or cadre as the posts of
Public Relations Officers.
On this point it is necessary to refer to some earlier
history regarding the reorganisation of the All India Radio
in 1944. The reorganisation, as enunciated in letter No. K-
404/2397 dated December 15/28, 1944 from the Government of
India, Ministry pf Information and Broadcasting, was in
three parts: (1) revision of the scales of pay of certain
existing posts ; (2) creation of some additional posts; and
(3) creation of certain new categories of posts. The posts
of Liaison Officer and Listeners’ Research Officer came
within the third category and nine posts were created under
each head. The posts of Assistant Station Directors came
within the first two categories. In 1950 Government made
necessary declaration in respect of the cadres on the
programme side of the All India Radio in their letter No.
17(83)/49-BI dated March 20, 1950. The cadres so
constituted included that of Assistant Station Directors :
that cadre consisted of the following posts: (a) Assistant
Station Directors; (b) Instructor (Programmes); (c)
Assistant Director of Programmes; (d) Listener Research
Officer; (e) Officer on Special Duty (Kashmir); and (f)
Officer Special Duty (Hyderabad)-the last two being tempo-
rary. The Public Relations Officers were not put in the
cadre of Assistant Station Directors. Exactly the same
position is envisaged in paragraph 129 of Chapter IV,
Section 1, of the A. 1. R. Manual, Vol. 1. Under Fundamental
Rule 9(31)(c) a " post is said to be on the same time-scale
as another post on a time-scale if the two time-scales are
identical and the posts fall within a cadre, or class in a
cadre, such cadre or class having been created in order to
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fill all posts involving duties of approximately the same
character or degree of responsibility, in a service or
establishment, or group of establishments". It is worthy of
note that two conditions must be fulfilled for the
application of Fundamental Rule 9(31)(c): one is that the
two time scales must be identical and the other is that the
two posts must fall in the same cadre or class in a cadre.
Paragraph 129 referred to above states in terms that
1314
only four categories of posts mentioned therein fall within
the cadre of Assistant Station Directors, and those
categories do not include Public Relations Officers.
Learned Counsel for the appellant has referred us to
Appendix I of the A. I. R. Manual, Vol. 11, which gives the
scales of pay and classification of posts in the All India
Radio. He has pointed out that in that appendix the posts
of Assistant Station Directors (no. 77), Listener Research
Officer (no. 78) and Public Relations Officer (no. 79) all
come within Central Services, Class II, and bear the same
scale of pay and they also belong to the Programme side. We
have already pointed out that the same scale of pay is not
the only test; nor does the fact that all the above
mentioned posts belong to Class 11 determine the question
whether they belong to the same grade or cadre. We have
referred to the constitution of the cadre of Assistant
Station Directors in 1950, which shows clearly enough that
Public Relations Officers do not belong to that cadre. Many
anomalous results will follow if the scale of pay or
classification of the service, were taken to be the sole
test for determining whether the posts belong to the same
grade or cadre. The appendix referred to by learned counsel
for the appellant shows that the post of Assistant Director
of Monitoring Services bears the same scale of pay and also
belongs to Class 11 ; yet it is not suggested that that post
has any cadre or grade affinity with the posts of Assistant
Station Directors. A chemist (no. 106) and an Assistant
Engineer (no. 105) have the same scales of pay and both
belong to Class 11; but they do not belong to the same grade
or cadre; otherwise a strange result will follow in that a
chemist holding a quasi-permanent status will be entitled to
be appointed as an Engineer, on the reduction of the
chemist’s post.
On behalf of the appellant it has been next argued that the
order dated December 14, 1953, contains a clear admission to
the effect that the post of Public Relations Officer belongs
to the same grade as Assistant Station Director, and the
order shows that it was made after unofficial consultation
with the Ministry
1315
of Information an Broadcasting. It is contended that this
admission should be accepted as an admission of fact and
held binding on the respondent, particulary when the
respondent has not produced the particular order by which a
separate cadre, if any, of Public Relations Officers might
have been created, in order to disprove the correctness of
the admission. We are unable to accept this argument. An
admission is not conclusive proof of the matter admitted,
though it may in certain circumstances operate as an
estoppel. It is not suggested that a question of estoppel
arises in this case (a point which we shall again advert
to); at best, it may be said that the respondent having once
admitted that the post of Public Relations Officer belonged
to the same grade, the admission casts upon the respondent
the burden of proving that what was deliberately asserted on
December 14, 1953, is not a fact. It is unfortunate that
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this case was summarily dismissed in the High Court and the
respondent was not called upon to make an affidavit and file
the necessary documents at that stage. We have now a copy
of the letter dated December 15/28, 1944 by which the nine
new posts of Liaison Officer (later designated as Public
Relations Officer) were created and the letter dated March
20, 1950, by which the cadre of Assistant Station Directors
was declared. These letters we have already referred to,
and they leave little room for doubt in the matter: they
show clearly enough that the posts of Public Relations
’Officers do not belong to the same grade or cadre as the
posts of Assistant Station Directors. As a matter of fact.-
the respondent said so in the memorandum of June 9, 1953,
though later, on December 14, 1953, a different statement
was made. It has been submitted before us that even in the
impugned order of September 7, 1955, the respondent does not
say that a mistake was made; the respondent merely states
that the appellant was’ irregularly transferred as Assistant
Station Director and was irregularly allowed to carry a,
quasi-permanent status to the new post. We think that the
impugned order of September 7, 1955, must
167
1316
be read as a whole, and so read, it shows that Government
had earlier made a mistake in thinking that the posts of
Public Relations Officers belonged to the same grade or
cadre as the posts of Assistant Station Directors, and the
mistake was rectified when the Union Public Service
Commission pointed it out.
We shall now consider the further question if the order
dated December 14, 1953, can be read as a separate or
independent declaration in favour of the appellant in
respect of the post of an Assistant Station Director, under
rr. 3 and 4(a) of the Temporay Service Rules. We shall
consider this question from four points of view: (1) whether
on the terms of the order itself, it can be read as an
independent declaration under the relevant rules; (2)
whether the relevant authority intended the order as an
independent declaration under rr. 3 and 4(a) and if the
parties thereto understood the order in that sense; (3) if
the order is so read, whether consultation with the Public
Service Commission was necessary under r. 4(b); and (4)
whether any estoppel arises out of the order.
it seems to us that the order itself is very clear and if it
is contrasted with the earlier order dated May 23, 1952 (by
which a declaration was indeed made in favour of the
appellant under rr. 3 and 4 of the Temporary Service Rules
in respect of the post of Public Relations Officer), it is
at once clear that the order dated December 14,1953, is not
a declaration under rr. 3 and 4 of the said rules. What
does the order state in terms ? Firstly, it states that the
appellant was appointed in a quasi-permanent capacity to the
post of Public Relations Officer; secondly, it states that
all the posts of Public Relations Officer are held in abey-
ance except one; thirdly, it states that as the post of
Public Relations Officer belonged to the same grade as
Assistant Station Director carrying identical scales of pay,
the appellant was appointed as Assistant Station Director in
September 1952; and fourthly, it states that under the
instructions contained in a particular office memorandum
issued from the Ministry of Home Affairs the appellant was
entitled to carry the quasipermanent status of his
formerpost of Public Relations
1317
Officer while holding the post of Assistant Station Direc-
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tor. The order means what it in terms states and must
operate according to its tenor; and if the order is read as
a whole, without straining or perverting the language, it
seems clear that it is not a declaration under rr. 3 and 4
of the Temporary Service Rules. It merely gives effect to
the instructions contained in the Home Office memorandum
referred to therein and states that the appellant will carry
with him his quasipermanent status of the former post while
holding the post of Assistant Station Director. It is
obvious that there cannot be a declaration of quasi-
permanent status in two posts of different grades or
different cadres simultaneously and at the same time. The
order dated December 14, 1953, makes it abundantly clear
that the appellant retained his quasi-permanent status in
the former post of Public Relations Officer and on the
mistaken view that the post of Public Relations Officer
belonged to the same grade as Assistant Station Director, he
was allowed to carry the same status while holding the new
post. This is sufficiently borne out by a reference to the
Home Office memorandum No. 54/136/51 N.G.S. dated April 24,
1952, a copy of which has been placed before us. That
memorandum said, " The undersigned is directed to say that a
question has been raised whether a quasi-permanent
Government servant on transfer from one office to another,
should be allowed to retain a lien on the post to which he
has been appointed in a quasi-permanent capacity. A
reference in this connection is invited to subparagraph (c)
of the Explanatory Memorandum of Rule 2 of the Central Civil
Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1949, under which a
government servant who is declared as quasi-permanent in
respect of a particular post can be shifted from one post to
another within the cadre or grade concerned due to reduction
or other causes without his rights being affected. In other
words, if a quasi-permanent employee is transferred from one
office to another within the same grade, he will carry with
him his quasipermanent status. " The order dated December
14, 1953, purported to give effect to the decision embodied
1318
in the aforesaid memorandum, and was in no sense an
independent declaration under rr. 3 and 4 of the Temporary
Service Rules. If it were an independent declaration in
respect of a different and new post, a reference to the
office memorandum was wholly unnecessary; it was equally
unnecessary to recite that the appellant held a quasi-
permanent status in his former post and that the former post
belonged to the same grade as the new post and, therefore,
he carried his former status to the latter post. In the
order itself there is no reference to rr. 3 and 4 and it is
in sharp contrast to the order dated May 23, 1952, which was
indeed a declaration under the said rules. To hold that the
order dated December 14, 1953, is an independent declaration
under rr. 3 and 4 is to tun counter to the entire tenor of
the document.
It is worthy of note that under r. 4(a), a declaration
issued under r. 3 shall specify the particular post or
particular grade of posts within a cadre in respect of which
it, is issued and the date from which it is to take effect.
The order dated December 14, 1953, does not ,state that the
appellant is declared to hold a quasipermanent status with
regard to the post of Assistant Station Director on the
contrary, it, states that he carries with him the quasi-
permanent status of his former post. If the order dated
December 14, 1953, were an independent declaration in
respect of the post of Assist-ant Station Director, it would
have specified that post and also the date with effect from
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which the order was to take effect in regard to that post.
We are therefore satisfied that the order dated December 14,
1953 cannot, on its terms, be treated as a declaration under
rr. 3 and 4 of the Temporary Service Rules.
It may be stated here that learned counsel for the appellant
did not urge that the order dated, December 14, 1953, was an
independent declaration under rr. 3 and 4 or that his client
understood the order in that sense. It is also evident from
the various documents in the record that the order was never
intended to be a declaration under rr. 3 and 4 of the
Temporary -Service Rules; and the appellant himself took the
1319
order as merely giving effect to the office memorandum cited
therein, the main plank of the appellant’s case being that
the post of Assistant Station Director is in the same grade
as the post of Public Relations Officer. The appellant was
appointed to officiate as Assistant Station Director in a
purely temporary capacity until further orders on September
13, 1952,. Even before that date the appellant was asked to
apply for the post of an Assistant Station Director through
the Public Service Commission. On June 9, 1953, long after
the appellant had been appointed to officiate as Assistant
Station Director, he was told that he could not claim ,any
protection in the post of Assistant Station Director on
account of his quasi-permanent status as Public Relations
Officer. Even in the letter which the Ministry of
Information and Broadcasting wrote to the Public Service
Commission on June 22, -1954, it was stated: " The
Commission were not consulted at the time of shifting of
quasi-permanent status of Shri Srinivasan from the grade of
Public Relations Officer to that of Assistant Station
Director in view of the Provision of sub-para. (c) of the
Explanatory Memorandum of Rule 2 of the Central Civil
Service (Temporary Service) Rules which states that a
Government servant who is declared as quasi-permanent in
respect of a particular post may be shifted from one post to
another within the cadre or grade concerned due to reduction
in the number of posts or other causes. Such shifting does
not affect his rights. As the posts of Assistant Station
Director and Public Relations Officer carry the same grade
of pay, consultation with the Commission in this case was
not considered necessary ". This letter makes it abundantly
clear that the appropriate authority never intended the
order dated December 14, 1953 to be a declaration under rr.
3 and 4 of the Temporary Service Rules.
Even the appellant did not take the order in that sense. In
all his representations, the appellant’s plea was that the
post of Public Relations Officer in which ,he, held a quasi-
permanent status was in the same grade as that of Assistant
Station Director and there,fore he carried his status in the
former post to his new
1320
post. He never pleaded anywhere that the order dated
December 14,1953, was an independent declaration in respect
of the post of Assistant Station Director. We refer first
to para. 17 of the appellant’s writ petition to the Punjab
High Court. In that paragraph the appellant said: " That
after four months’ careful ,consideration and discussion
between the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Home
Ministry and the Union Public Service Commission, Government
issued an order dated 14-12-53 declaring that the petitioner
will carry quasi-permanent status in his new post of
Assistant Station Director as per rules relating to the
transfer of quasi-permanent officers. " In paragraph 30 the
appellant again stated that the post of Assistant Station
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Director and Public Relations Officer were constituted and
recognised to be in the same grade and under r. 2(c) of the
Temporary Service Rules the shifting from one post to
another in the same grade did not affect his status; in
other words, the appellant also understood the order dated
December 14, 1953, not as an independent order declaring his
quasi-permanent status in the post of Assistant Station
Director, but merely as giving effect to r. 2(c) of the
Temporary Service Rules by reason of the fact, which now
appears to be incorrect, that the post of Public Relations
Officer was in the same grade as that of Assistant Station
Director. Even in his statement of the case, the appellant
stated-" It may be emphasised that the Government in their
order dated 14-12-53 reiterated the appellant’s quasi-
permanent status in the post of Assistant Station Director,
not on the basis of the appellant’s representation but on
the authority of the Home Ministry’s order No. 54/136/51.
NGS, dated 24-4-52 relating to the lien of quasipermanent
employees ". The reference to the Home Ministry’s office
memorandum shows how the appellant understood the order
dated December 14, 1953.
Rule 4 (b) of the Temporary Service Rules states that when
recruitment to a specified post is required to be made in
consultation with the Public Service Commission, no
declaration under rr. 3 and 4 (a) shall be issued except
after consultation with the
1321
Commission. In the view which we have taken of the order
dated December 14, 1953, it is not really necessary to
decide in the present case whether the provisions of r. 4
(b) are merely directory or mandatory. It is sufficient to
state that the Public Service Commission was not consulted
before the order dated December 14, 1953, was issued, and
the appointing authority did not intend the order as a
declaration under rr. 3 and 4 (a). In State of U. P. v.
Manbodhan Lal Srivastava (1) it has been held that the
provisions of Art. 320(3)(c) of the Constitution, as
respects consultation of the Public Service Commission on
all disciplinary matters affecting a person serving the
Government of India or a State Government, are not mandatory
in spite of the use of the word I shall’ therein. That
decision is founded on the following garounds: (1) the
proviso to Art. 320 itself indicates that in certain cases
or classes of cases the Commission need not be consulted;
(2) the requirement of consulting the Commission does not
extend to making the advice of the Commission binding on
Government as respects disciplinary matters; and (3) on a
proper construction of the Article, it does not confer any
right or privilege on an individual public servant. We may
point out that none of these grounds have any application so
far as r. 4 (b) of the Temporary Service Rules is concerned.
Article 320 may not be mandatory as against the President;
but a subordinate appointing authority who has to make a
declaration under the rules cannot ignore or abrogate the
very rules under which he has to make the declaration.
Quasi-permanent status is a creature of the rules, and r 4
(b) requires that no declaration under r. 3 shall be made
except after consultation with the Public Service Commission
(when recruitment to a specified post is required to be made
in consultation with the Public Service Commission). An
officer cannot claim the benefit of r. 3 and ignore at the
same time the condition laid down in r. 4 (b); in other
words, he cannot claim the benefit of a part of the rules
and refuse to be bound by the conditions of the other part.
(i) [1958] S.C.R. 533.
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1322
’Now, as to estoppel: in our view, the appellant was’ not
misled in any way as to his quasi-permanent status a status
which he undoubtedly held in the post of Public Relations
Officer; the mistake that was made was in thinking that the
post of Assistant Station Director was in the same grade as
that of Public Relations Officer and then giving effect to
the Home office memorandum, referred to previously, on the
basis of that mistake. We do not think that any question of
estoppel really arises, and in fairness to learned counsel
for the appellant it must be stated that he has not founded
the case on estoppel.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contested the
correctness of the opinion of the Union Public Service
Commission and has suggested that the Commission had
indulged in an officious opinion, because under the Union
Public Service Commission (Consultation) Regulations, it was
not necessary to consult the Commission. Our attention has
been drawn to Regulation 3, which reads as follows so far as
it is relevant for our purpose-
"3. It shall not be necessary to consult the Commission in
regard to the selection for appointment-
(a) to a Central Service, Class 1, of any Officer in the
Armed Forces of the Union or any officer who is already a
member of an All India Service, Central Service,Class 1, a
Railway Service, Class 1.
(b) to a Central Service, Class 11, of any officer
from another Central Service, Class I or from a Central
Service, Class 11 or of any officer in the Armed Forces of
the Union or of a Railway Service, Class II; .............
Note :- In this regulation, the term I officer’ does not
include a person in’ temporary employment’.
The correspondence with the Union Public Service Commission
has now been placed before us. That correspondence shows
that the Union Public Service ’Commission took the view that
Regulation 3 did not apply to an officer who was in
’temporary employment ’ in the sense in which that
expression was used
1323
when the Regulations were made, and " quasi-permanent
servant " as defined in the Temporary Service Rules also
meant temporary service, but subject to certain benefits in
the matter of leave etc., and certain safeguards in the
matter of termination of service. Whether the Union Public
Service Commission is right in this view or not we are not
called upon to decide, particularly when the Union Public
Service Commission is not before us. It is enough for us to
hold that the post of Assistant Station Director is not a
post in the same grade or cadre as that of the Public Rela-
tions-Officer. That being the position, the appellant had
no qutsi-permanent status in the post of Assistant Station
Director and his service was liable to be terminated when
there was a reduction in the number of posts of Public
Relations Officers within the meaning of cl. (ii); nor was
he entitled to the benefit of the proviso to el. (ii) so far
as the post of Assistant Station Director was concerned.
For the reasons given above, we hold that there has been no
violation of the constitutional guarantee under Art. 311 (2)
in the case of the appellant. The appeal must, therefore,
be dismissed.
As to the petition tinder Art. 32 of the Constitution, we do
not think that there has been any such discrimination
against the appellant as is contemplated by Arts. 14 and 16
of the Constitution. It is true that others who did not
hold a qasi-permanent status were subsequently appointed as
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Assistant Station Director through selection by the Union
Public Service Commission. We can only say that it is
unfortunate that the appellant was not so selected ; but
that does not involve the breach of any fundamental right.
In conclusion we wish to say that a art from any
consideration of mere legal right, this is a hard case. The
appellant was in service for about nine years without any
blemish and his service was terminated on the reduction of
certain posts; he was told--wrongly it now appears-that he
had a quasi-permanent status in the post of Assistant
Station Director. The 168
1324
appellant states that the Union Public Service Commission
did not consider his suitability for the post of Assistant
Station Director, because he claimed quasipermanent status
in that post. The correspondence with the Union Public
Service Commission shows that the appellant’s case was not
considered from the promotion quota of 20 % because he held
a post which was not (to use an expression of the
Commission) ’in the field for promotion’. If the appellant
is right in his statement that he was not considered for
direct recruitment because he claimed quasi-permanent
status, then obviously there is an apparent injustice; the
appellant is then deprived of consideration of his claim
both from the promotion and direct quotas. We invite the
attention of the authorities concerned to this aspect of the
case and hope that they will consider the appollant’s case
sympathetically and give him, proper relief.
With these observations, we dismiss the appeal and the
petition, but in the circumstances there will be no order
for costs.
BOSE J.-With great respect I disagree.
The appellant’s services as Public Relations Officer, All
India Radio, were terminated because of the reduction in
that post. There was no other post of equal status in that
grade or cadre, so I agree that he bad no right to any
continuance of employment.
But he was appointed to officiate as Assistant Station
Director in a purely temporary capacity " until further
orders ", on September 13, 1952. (Order No. 1 (101)51/52).
Later, on December 14, 1953, further orders were passed by
the same authority (Order No. (113)-51/52). These orders
confirmed the order appointing the appellant Assistant
Station Director and concluded-
"Under the provision contained in the Ministry of Home
affairs Office Memorandum No. 54 /136/51NGS, dated the 24th
April, 1952, Shri Srinivasan will carry with him the quasi-
permanent status of his former post of Public Relations
Officer while holding the post of Assistant Station
Director.
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This order is a "further order " and, in my judgment, it
clearly and unequivocally makes him " quasipermanent " in
the new post.
It is true that this was done under a mistake which was
discovered at a later date but the mistake is that of
Government and others cannot be made to suffer because of
the unilateral mistake of Government. I had occasion to
observer while delivering the judgment of the Court in The
Commissioner of Police, Bombay v., Gordhandas Bhan i (1),
that-
"Public orders, publicly made, in exercise of a statutory
authority cannot be construed in the light of explanations
subsequently given by the officer making the order of what
he meant, or of what was in his mind, or what he intended to
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do " (and I add in this case, " what he subsequently
discovered "). " Public orders made by public authorities
are meant to have public effect and are intended to affect
the actings and conduct of those to whom they are addressed
and must be construed objectively with reference to the
language used in the order itself."
The principle underlying those observations applies with
equal force here.
Here is a man who was in no way at fault. He had served
faithfully in various capacities from May 1, 1946. His
services were terminated on September 3, 1952, with effect
from October 6, 1952. That was not his fault nor was it the
fault of Government. It was just the fortunes of war. The
post was " reduced " and there was no more room for him. No
one can quarrel with that.
But before the termination took effect he was continued in
service in another post on September 13, 1952, in a purely
temporary capacity " until further orders ". There was
consequently no break and he was still in service on
December 14, 1953, when he was, told that he was quasi-
permanent in the post of Assistant Station Director.
He accepted this position and acted on it and continued to.
serve in it for nearly two years. That,
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 135, 140.
1326
naturally enough, has lessened his chances of seeking other
employment because after a man reaches a certain age it
becomes increasingly difficult to find new employment. I do
not say this was Government’s fault, for no one can be
blamed for not knowing where they are in this wilderness of
rules and regulations and coined words and phrases with
highly technical and artificial meanings; and I think
Government did all they could to assuage the hardships of an
unfortunate situation. But equally, it was not the
appellant’s fault and in a case like this, a broad equity
requires that the one least at fault should not be made to
suffer.
The old technically rigid conceptions Of Contract and equity
have given place in modern times to a juster appreciation of
justice, and the fusion of law and equity in one
jurisdiction has resulted in the emergence of a new equity
in England more suited to modern ideas of human needs and
human values. Lord Denning has cited instance after
instance in his book "The Changing Law" to show how this has
come about and how it is still in the process of formation,
flexible and fluid with the drive behind to do real justice
between man and man, and man and the State, rather than to
continue to apply a set of ancient hide-bound technicalities
forged and fashioned in a wholly different world with a
different conscience and very different evaluations of human
dignity and human rights. At pp. 54 and 55 Lord Denning
sums up this new orientation in legal thinking thus:
" In coming to those decisions, the Courts expressly applied
a doctrine of equity whith says a court of equity will not
allow a person to enforce his strict legal rights when it
would be inequitable to allow him to do so.
This doctrine warrants the proposition that the courts will
not allow a person to go back on a promise which was
intended to be binding, intended to be acted on, and has in
fact been acted on."
I am not advocating sudden and wild departure from doctrines
and precedents that have been finally
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settled but I do contend that we, the highest Court in the
land giving final form and shape to the laws of this
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country, should administer them with the same breadth of
vision and understanding of the needs of the times as do the
Courts in England. The underlying principles of justice
have not changed but the complex pattern of life that is
never static requires a fresher outlook and a timely and
vigorous moulding of old principles to suit new conditions
and ideas and ideals. It is true that the Courts do not
legislate but it is not true that they do not mould and make
the law in their processes of interpretation.
Now, what was the position here when looked at broadly and
fairly as an upright and just juryman of plain commonsense
and understanding would do ? Here was a man with several
years of service and with no blemish on his conduct and
reputation. He was about to lose his job. Government felt
that that was bard and sought ways and means to right a
wrong-not wrong in the legal sense, for no one was at fault,
but wrong in the deeper understanding of men who look with
sympathy at the lot of those who have to suffer for no fault
of theirs. Government found, or thought they found, that
they could put him in another post and they actually did so.
They found that in his old post he had certain protections
and they wanted and intended that he should continue to have
them. Under r. 3 of the Temporary Service Rules they found
that they could give him those protections in a very simple
way, namely, by issuing a declaration that he was quasi-
permanent in his new post. He was fully eligible for it.
He had been in continuous Government service for more than
three years. The appointing authority was satisfied of his
qualifications, work and character for employment in a
quasi-permanent capacity. The letters of Government to the
Union Public Service Commission bear that out, quite apart
from the orders of September 13, 1952, and December 14,1953,
which would not have been made if Government had not
considered him a fit and proper person. How can it be
contended that
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Government did. not intend him to have a quasipermanent
position in his new post simply because they said that they
wanted him to have the same protections as he had before ’I,
It is not the mere form of the words that matters but the
meaning that they were intended to convey and do convey.
I am not concerned at this stage with whether Government was
mistaken in thinking that it could confer this status on him
but with what they intended to do as a fact and what they
actually did do.
They said that, he "will. carry with him the quasipermanent
status of his former post of Public Relations Officer while
holding the post of Assistant Station Director." What else
can this mean especially when coupled with their previous
conduct showing, their anxiety to do the just and right
thing by this unfortunate man, except that because he was
protected before he will continue to be protected in the
same way. With the deepest respect I consider it ultra
technical and wrong to construe this as conditional on
Government having the power. The point at this stage is not
whether Government had the right and the power but what they
intended; and about that I have no doubt whatever. They
wanted, and intended, and were straining every nerve, to do
the right and just thing by him and to give him the same
status as he had before, in the matter of pay, in the matter
of service and in the protections that he had in his other
post.
The interpretations that Government put upon their order at
a later date are not relevant to construe it but it is t
matter of satisfaction that Government themselves viewed
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their action in the same light as I am doing now. In their
reply to the Public Service Commission dated June 22, 1954,
Government said
The Commission were not consulted at the time of shifting of
quasi-permanent status of Shri Srinivasan from the, grade of
Public Relations Officer to that of Assistant Station
Director........
It is clear to-- me that Government intended, not merely to
move him from one post to the other, but
1329
also to shift the status and that can mean nothing less than
that they intended him to have this status in the new post.
I turn next to the powers of Government. I agree that if
they had no power their action would be of no avail however
well they may have meant. But r. 4(a) of the Central Civil
Services (Temporary Service) Rules, 1949, gives them that
power. It says that:
A declaration issued under rule 3 shall specify the
particular post...... in respect of which it is issued." It
does not require the declaration to be couched in any
particular form of words or in the shape of a magic
incantation. All that it requires is a simple declaration
and that declaration is to be found in the order of December
14, 1953.
The only question then is whether r. 4(b) renders the
declaration null and void because the Public Service
Commission was not consulted. The rule runs-
" Where recruitment to a specified post is required to be
made in consultation with the Federal Public Service
Commission, no such declaration shall be issued except after
consultation with the Commission." The essence of the
prohibition lies in the words underlined:" Is required to be
made." Just what do these words mean ?
Now I have no doubt that in the ordinary way these words
should be construed to mean what they say, But so, I would
have thought at first blush, do the words in Art. 320(3) of
the Constitution. They are equally emphatic. They are
equally imperative. But this Court held in the State of U.
P. v. Manbodhan Lal Srivastava (1), after a careful
examination of the whole position, that they do not mean
what they seem to say and that they are directive only and
not mandatory.
Nor is this Court alone in so thinking. The Federal Court
construed a similar provision.in s. 256 of the Government of
India Act, 1935, in the same way: (Biswanath Khemka v. The
King Emperor) (2); and so did the Privy Council in a
Canadian case in Montreal
(i) [1958] S.C.R. 533.
(2) [1945] F.C.R. 99.
1330
Street Railway Company v. Normandin (1). Their Lordships
said at page, 175 that when a statute prescribes a formality
for the performance of a public duty, the formality is to be
regarded as directory only if to hold it as mandatory would
cause serious general inconvenience or injustice. Will it
not cause injustice here? Why should we take a narrower
view of a mere set of rules than this Court and the Federal
Court and the Privy Council have taken of the Constitution
and the Act of a Legislature and even of a supreme
Parliament? Why should we give greater sanctity and more
binding force to rules and regulations than to our own
Constitution ? Why should we hesitate to do justice
with firmness and vigour?
If we apply the same principles here, then the words
required to be made " in r. 4(b) lose their sting and the
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way is free and open for us to do that justice for
which the Courts exist.
Here is Government straining to temper justice with mercy
and we, the Courts, are out Shylocking Shylock in demanding
a pound of flesh, and why? because this writ in the bond." I
will have none of it. All I can see is a man who has been
wronged and I can see a plain way out. I would take it.
I am not quarrelling with the interpretation which the
Public Service Commission has placed upon these rules. I
have no doubt that they should be observed, and are meant to
be observed; and I have equally no doubt that there are
constitutional sanctions which can be applied if they are
flouted. But the sanction is political and not judicial and
an act done in contravention of them cannot be challenged in
a Court of Law. It is legally valid. Also, the fact that
Government would not have acted in this way if they had
realised that they were under a directive duty of the
Constitution to consult the Union Public Service Commission
first cannot alter the character of their act or affect its
legal consequences. They had the power and they exercised
it, consequently, their act became binding despite their
mistake. That is how I would interpret the law and
administer justice.
(1) [1917] A.C. 170.
1331
1 would allow the appeal and the petition with costs.
BY COURT : The appeal and the petition are dismissed. There
will be no order as to costs.
Appeal and Petition dismissed.