Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
STATE BANK OF INDIA AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V. PARTHASARATHY ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/11/1992
BENCH:
[KULDIP SINGH AND P.B. SAWANT, JJ.]
ACT:
Civil Services:
State Bank of India-Promotion to the post of Head Clerk-
Circular No. 42-Clause Three options-Outside the city-within
city and within the same office-Debarment on refusal of
third and final offer-Local Head Office and five other
offfices to be considered as one Unit-Final offer made in
one such office Whether valid and debars the optees
permanently on refusal to accept.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-Bank issued Circular No. 42 containing an
understanding reached with the Staff-union laying down the
policy for promotion of clerks to the post of Head Clerks.
As per clause 1(d) of the Circular the employees who decline
to accept Head Clerk s post at a branch office outside the
city in which they work, will have a further option when a
vacancy arises at any one of the Bank’s offices within that
city. However, this was subject to the condition that at the
material time there was no other senior employee who had
similarly declined the post outside his branch office, in
which case the senior-most would have the first choice. It
was further provided that if an employee declines to accept
the post of Head Clerk at an office within the same city,
his case would be considered only when a vacancy arises at
his office. This was also subject to the condition that
there was no senior employee similarly situated at the
material time. If the third and final offer is declined,
there would be a permanent debarment of promotion.
Since there were six offices at the Madras Local Head
Office, a common seniority was maintained and all the six
offices were considered as one office, viz. local Head
Office of which the other five offices were only parts.
The Respondents declined their first, second and final
offers, though indisputably the final offer was made to them
for being posted in an office forming part of the local Head
Office. Both the Respondents moved the High Court by way of
Writ Petitions and the High Court took the view that the
final offer made was not in the same office and so they were
entitled to be posted as Head Clerks in the same office.
Being aggrieved by the said two decisions of the High
Court, the appellant-Bank preferred the present appeals.
On the question of interpretation of clause 1(d) of the
circular in question:
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD :1. The High Court’s interpretation of cl. 1(d) of
the Circular that the third offer made was not in the office
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
where the Respondents were working and therefore their
refusal to accept the post did not exhaust the third option
and they were entitled to be posted as Head Clerks in the
Office where they were working is incorrect in view of the
fact that the local Head Office was split into six different
offices which together constituted one unit. By refusing to
accept the third and final offer, the Respondents had
clearly exhausted all the three options and had become
permanently debarred from seeking promotion to the post of
Head Clerk. [366-E-G]
2. This Court does not intend to interfere with the
appointment of the respondents to the post of Head Clerk in
the Regional Office in the facts and circumstances of these
matters which show that in one case a fortuitous appointment
had arisen due to death of an employee within almost a month
of the Respondent’s refusal to accept the offer, and in the
other case, the Respondent has already been accommodated in
the post of Head Clerk in the Regional Office itself.
However, this would not be treated as a precedent and this
would not affect the interpretation of clause 1(d) of the
Circular, placed by this Court. [366-H; 367-A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 4799
4800 of 1992.
From the Judgments dated 4.3.1992 and 8.4.1992 in
Madras High Court in W.P. No. 246/92 and W.A. No. 349 of
1992.
G. Ramaswamy Attorney General, K. Sankaran, A.
Rangananthan and A.V. Rangam for the Appellants.
M.K. Ramamurthi, M.A. Krishnmoorthy, M.A. Chinnaswamy,
H. Subramaniam and Ms. C. Ramamurthi for the Respondents.
Rajendra Sachhar, Ambrish Kumar and M.D. Pandey for the
Inter-vener.
The Order of the Court was delivered:
Intervention application is allowed.
Leave granted.
Civil Appeal No. 4799 of 1992.
2. The controversy in this case is in a narrow compass.
The appellant-Bank issued Staff Circular No. 42 containing
an understanding reached with the Bank staff-union laying
down the policy for promotion of clerks to the post of Head
Clerks. Clause 1(d) of the said circular states as follows:
Employees who decline to accept
Head Clerk’s post at a Branch
Office outside their place of
service, i.e., outside their city,
will again be offered the
appointment only when a vacancy
arises at any one of the offices
within that city, provided that at
the material time there is no other
senior employees at that office who
had earlier declined a posting
outside his Branch, as a Head Clerk
in which case the senior-most
employee will first be offered the
appointment. Also, if an employee
declines to accept the post of a
Head Clerk at an office within the
same city, his case for appointment
as Head-Clerk will be considered
only when a vacancy arises at his
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
office, in the order of his
seniority. His case cannot be
considered for a vacancy at any of
the other offices in the city."
3. It will be apparent from the above provision of the
said clause that those employees who decline to accept the
Head Clerk’s post at a branch office which is outside the
city in which they work will have a further option. Such
employees would be offered the post of Head Clerk again but
only when a vacancy arises at any one of the Bank’s offices
within that city. This is of course subject to the condition
that at the material time, there is no other senior employee
who had similarly declined the post outside his branch
office, in which case, the senior-most would have the first
choice. The further provision of this rule and with which we
are concerned in the present case is as follows. If an
employee declines to accept the post of Head Clerk at an
office within the same city his case for appointment as Head
Clerk would be considered only when a vacancy arises at his
office. This is also subject to the condition that there is
no senior employee similarly situated at the material time.
If the third and the final offer for the post of Head Clerk
is declined, there is a permanent debarment of the
promotion. One more thing necessary to be stated before we
come to the facts of the present case is that the appellant-
Bank has a local Head Office at Madras. In 1972, it was
split into two - the local Head Office and Madras Main
Branch. In 1976-77, there was a further splitting up of the
local Head Office and the Main Branch and ultimately in
1979, the Madras Local Head Office was divided into
following six offices as part of the same Head Office:
"(i) Local Head Office
(ii) Madras Main Branch
(iii) Overseas Branch
(iv) Regional Office, which is
called Zonal Office
(v) The Commercial Branch
(vi) Siruthozhil Branch"
4. There is no dispute that as far as the Clerks and
the Head Clerks in all the six parts of the same local Head
Office are concerned, a common seniority list is maintained.
The effect of the aforesaid arrangements for the purposes of
the clause 1(d) is that "the employees" in the said clause
means the employees in all the said six parts of the local
Head Office. In other words, if a vacancy for a Head Clerk
occurred at any of the said six offices, it was considered
to be a vacancy in one office, viz.,the local Head Office of
which the other five offices were only parts.
5. It appears that respondent Parthasarathy was working
as a clerk in the Madras Regional Office (now called Zonal
Office) which is, as will be clear from above, a part of the
Local Head Office itself. On 21st August, 1973, he was
offered the post of Head Clerk at Deva Kottain which is
outside Madras city. This offer was declined by him. On 1st
July, 1980, he was offered the post of Head Clerk in the
Sowkarpet branch office in the same city which was less than
2 kms, from his Regional office where he was working. He
declined the said offer too. He was then entitled to be
considered for posting as Head Clerk only in his office
which meant in any of the six parts of the local Head
Office, that being the third and the final offer that could
be made to him. The third offer was made to him for the
post of Head Clerk at the Overseas branch, and that being
part of the same local Head Office, he was bound to accept
it. However, he declined the third and the final offer also,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
and issued a lawyer’s notice to the Bank contending that the
Overseas branch was different from the Regional office where
he was working and, therefore, the offer given to him was
contrary to the said clause 1(d). The allegations made in
the notice were of course denied by the bank.
6. On 6th September, 1983, one A. Nizamuddin who was
working as Head Clerk in the Regional office passed away and
that post became vacant. On 24th September, 1983, the
respondent filed a writ petition before the High Court for
quashing the third and the final offer made to him on 4th
August 1983, and for a direction for posting him in the
Regional office where the vacancy had occurred. The High
Court took the view that the third offer made was not for
the post of the Head Clerk in the same office where the
respondent was working and, therefore, his refusal to accept
the post did not exhaust the third option and he was
entitled to the vacancy created by Nizamuddin’s death in the
Regional office where the respondent was working. We are
afraid this interpretation is incorrect in view of the
position explained above with regard to the local Head
Office which was split into six different offices which
together constituted one unit. The respondent, when he was
offered the third option in the Overseas branch, was offered
the post in the same office where he was working, the
Regional office being as much a part of the Head Office as
the Overseas branch. By refusing to accept the said third
and the final offer, the respondent had clearly exhausted
all his three options and had become permanently debarred
from seeking promotion to the post of Head Clerk.
7. We, however, do not interfere with the appointment
of the respondent to the post of Head Clerk in the Regional
office in the facts and circumstances of the case which show
that a fortuitous appointment had arisen within almost a
month of his refusal to accept the offer. This, however,
will not be treated as a precedent nor does it affect the
interpretation that we have placed on the clause 1(d) as
above.
Civil Appeal No. 4800 of 1992
In this case also, the respondent Sampath was working
as a Clerk in Madras Regional Office. The first offer of the
post of Head Clerk was made to him on 6th August, 1973 at
Mudukulathur branch which is in Madras city. This was
declined by him. On 12th May, 1980, he was given the second
offer for the post of Head Clerk at Air Force Station
branch, Tambaram which was in Madras city. The third and
final offer was made to him on 4th August, 1983 to the post
of Head Clerk in the Stationery department of the Madras
Local Head Office. There is no dispute that Stationery
department of the Local Head Offfice and the Regional Office
form part of one unit, viz., Madras Local Head Office. The
respondent declined this offer as well, and on 23rd January,
1984 filed a writ petition in the High Court for quashing
the third offer and for posting him in his office, viz.,
Regional Office as the Head Clerk. The learned Single Judge
of the High Court quashed the order making the third offer
and allowed the petition following the earlier decision in
Parthasarathy’s case with which we have dealt with earlier.
The Division Bench of the High Court also confirmed the
order.
For the reasons we have given in C.A.No. 4799 of 1992,
we are unable to accept the interpretation given by the
High Court on clause 1(d) of Staff Circular No. 42. However,
if in the present case, the respondent has already been
accommodated in the post of Head Clerk in the Regional
Office itself, we do not intend to interfere with the same.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
It is nonetheless made clear that it is the interpretation
that we have placed on the said clause that will prevail and
not the interpretation placed by the High Court.
With these observations, the appeals are allowed only
to the extent that the interpretation placed by the
appellant-Bank on clause l(d) of the Staff Circular No. 42
is correct and the decision of the High Court on the point
is incorrect. There will be no order as to costs.
G.N. Appeals allowed