Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4424 of 2002
PETITIONER:
HARSHENDRA CHOUBISA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/07/2002
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & P.Venkatarama Reddi.
JUDGMENT:
P.VENKATARAMA REDDI
Leave granted.
Appeals are taken on file and are being disposed of by this
common judgment.
The first five appeals are filed against the judgment of the learned
Single Judge of Rajasthan High Court in Writ Petition No. 6256 of 1999.
That writ petition was filed by one Chandan Singh Beniwal who is one of the
respondents herein. He was an applicant for the post of Gram Sewak cum
Paden Sachive in Barmer District. The applications for the said posts were
invited by various Zila Parishads pursuant to the circular issued by the State
of Rajasthan (Rural Development and Panchayati Raj Department) on
22.02.1999. The circular lays down, inter alia, the selection procedure
including the modalities of holding written test and preparation of merit list.
The said circular was issued in exercise of the power conferred on the
Government under the proviso to Rule 273 of Rajasthan Panchayati Raj
Rules, 1996. Para 7 of the Circular provides for addition of certain marks to
the marks scored in the written examination. 10% additional marks are to be
given to the residents of State of Rajasthan, 10% for the residents of the
concerned district and 5% for the residents of rural areas in that district. It
appears that the result of the written examination was declared on October 30,
1999. As the said Chandan Singh could not get selected he filed a writ petition
questioning the circular dated 22.02.1999 insofar as it provides for bonus
marks to the applicants belonging to the districts and the rural area of the
concerned district. By the time the writ petition came up for hearing before
the learned Single Judge, a Full Bench of the High Court decided on
21.10.1999 in Deepak Kumar Suthar’s case that giving of weightage on the
ground of residence in the district and rural areas by adding bonus marks is
unconstitutional. The Full Bench struck down a similar circular issued in the
context of appointment of teachers in the Education Department. However,
the Full Bench gave prospective effect to the judgment and also declined to
grant relief to the writ petitioners for the reason that even if bonus marks were
excluded, they will not stand to gain. This judgment was followed by another
Full Bench which examined the validity of a similar circular in relation to the
selections to the posts of teachers by Zila Parishads. It may be stated that the
correctness of the later Full Bench judgment rendered on 18.11.1999 has been
questioned in this Court either by the State or by the aggrieved parties. The
appeals against the judgment dated 18.11.1999 have been disposed of today
by us by a common judgment.
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The judgment in Deepak Kumar Suthar’s case has been applied
to the selection of Gram Sewaks by the impugned judgment dated
27.02.2001. The High Court directed preparation of a fresh merit list of
candidates without adding bonus marks on account of residence of any
candidate. With this direction, the writ petition was disposed of on
27.02.2001. Apprehending that this judgment would affect them, many of the
candidates appointed in various Zila Parishads pursuant to the impugned
selection have sought permission of this Court to file SLPs. Accordingly, the
permission has been granted and that is how the first five SLPs/appeals are
before us.
SLP No. 17740/2001 has been filed by Zila Parishad, Bikaner
against the order of the Division Bench of the High Court dated 19.12.2000 in
Civil Special Appeal No. 1593 of 2000. That was an appeal filed by the Zila
Parishad against the judgment of learned Single Judge in Writ Petition No. 5
of 2000 which was disposed of on 27.07.2000. The learned Single Judge
followed the judgment of the Full Bench in Deepak Kumar’s case and
disposed of the writ petition with a direction that "whenever respondents
proceed with the selection process, they must ensure compliance of the law
laid down by the Full Bench in Deepak Kumar’s case".
In the wake of the two judgments referred to above, the State
Government (Panchayati Raj Department) by an order dated 12.6.2001 issued
instructions to the Chief Executive Officers of Zila Parishads directing them
to recast the merit list of the Gram Sewaks appointed after 21.10.1999 (i.e.the
date of judgment in Deepak Kumar’s case) by excluding the bonus marks and
regulate the appointments accordingly. The question, therefore, turns on the
validity of the impugned notification insofar as it provides for bonus marks of
10% + 5% on the basis of residence in the district and the rural areas of the
district. It may be stated that the bonus marks provided for the residence in
the State has not been challenged by any of the parties.
In the counter affidavit filed by the Additional Chief Executive Officer,
Zila Parishad, Chittorgarh on behalf of the State of Rajasthan, the preferential
treatment in favour of residents of the district and rural areas of the district
concerned is sought to be justified on two grounds which are substantially the
same as those urged in the Teachers’ cases disposed of today.
Firstly, it is contended that the persons selected from the urban areas
and relatively forward districts are reluctant to work in far flung areas and
areas inhabitated by tribals. It is stated in the counter :
"Even if the posts are filled from the best
available talent, tendency is to migrate to the urban
areas whenever any vacancy arises in urban and
forward districts. The rural areas and areas
inhabitated by tribals remain perpetually without
effective Gram Sewaks".
Secondly, it is submitted that the candidates hailing from the ’local area’
know the local language and dialect well and therefore in a better position to
mingle and communicate with the local populace which in turn leads to good
governance at the grass root level.
The two considerations pleaded by the State do not at all appeal to us as
they are based on wrong factual assumptions or sweeping generalizations
which have a tendency to introduce artificial classification without in any way
advancing the avowed objective. We have already rejected such contentions
in the judgment just now delivered in relation to the appointment of primary
school teachers. As it is contended that Gram Sewaks-cum-Secretaries of
Panchayats are concerned with local self governance and therefore different
considerations would apply vis--vis their appointments, we have thought it fit
to refer to and deal with this contention separately in these appeals, though,
we are relieved of the need for detailed discussion in view of our judgment in
the Teachers’ batch of appeals.
Coming to the first ground pleaded by the State, we have no hesitation in
rejecting the same. The place of posting does not depend on the choice of the
public servant. The posting and transfers could be suitably regulated in
administrative interest by the competent authority if there is a will to do so.
The alleged reluctance of the persons hailing from the relatively forward
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districts to work in rural areas or remote places and the so-called tendency to
’migrate’ to urban areas and forward districts is only a ruse to find some
justification for the impugned action. We fail to understand how the
candidates could avoid working in the district in which they are selected and
appointed and manage to get postings in urban areas and forward districts. It
is not the case of the appellants that the posts of Gram Sewaks belong to state-
wide cadre and they can be transferred from one district to another and even
posted in urban areas. Obviously, the appointees have no option but to work in
Gram Panchayat areas within the district in which they were appointed and
deployed. It is not even the case of the State that the candidates belonging to
other districts have a tendency to resign and vacate the office after working
for some time in a backward district. No details are furnished in this regard.
Obviously, therefore, the first reason given by the appellants for giving
weightage to the applicants from the same district is wholly irrelevant and
does not stand a moment’s scrutiny.
The second ground urged by the State is equally irrelevant and
untenable. Most of the reasons given by us in the judgment just delivered in
Teachers’ cases will hold good to reject this plea. No factual details nor
material has been placed before us to substantiate that the spoken language
and dialect varies from district to district. It will not be reasonable to assume
that an educated person belonging to a contiguous district or districts will not
be able to effectively communicate with the people of the district in which he
is appointed or that he would be unfamiliar with the living conditions and
culture of that district. He cannot be regarded as an alien in a district other
than his native district. If any classification has to be done in this regard, it
should be based on a scientific study but not on some broad generalization. If
any particular region or area has some peculiar socio-cultural or linguistic
features warranting a differential treatment for the purpose of deploying
personnel therein, that could only be done after conducting a survey and
identifying such regions or districts. That is the minimum which needs to be
done. There is no factual nor rational basis to treat each District as a separate
unit for the purpose of offering public employment. Above all, it is wrong to
assume that the candidates belonging to rural areas will be better suited to
serve those areas than the candidates living in nearby towns. The criterion of
merit cannot be allowed to be diluted by taking resort to such artificial
differentiation and irrelevant assumptions. On the material placed before us,
we have no hesitation in holding that the addition of bonus marks to the
applicants belonging to the same district and the rural areas of that district
would amount to discrimination which falls foul of Article 14 and 16.
We now come to the question of relief. We are of the view that for
the reasons set out in the judgment delivered by us today in Kailash Chand
Sharma’s case, the judgment of the High Court has to be given prospective
effect so that its impact may not fall on the appointments already made prior
to the date of judgment. That is also the view taken in Deepak Kumar
Suthar’s case which has been followed in the impugned orders of the High
Court. However, in Writ Petition No. 6256 of 1999, the High Court did not
make it clear that the judgment will operate prospectively, though in the other
impugned order the High Court gave effect to the judgment without touching
the appointments made before 21/10/1999. We are of the view that the date of
application of the judgment should be from 27/7/2000 which was the date on
which Writ Petition 5 of 2000 was allowed by the learned Single Judge
holding that the notification in regard to bonus marks for the purpose of
selection of Gram Sewaks was invalid. The other important fact which should
be taken into account in moulding the relief is that at the instance of three
persons who applied for the posts advertised by the Zila Parishads of Barmer
and Bikaner, it is not proper to set aside the entire selection, especially when
none of the appointed candidates were made parties before the High Court.
We are, therefore, inclined to confine the relief only to the parties who moved
the High Court for relief under Article 226, subject, however, to the
application of the judgment prospectively from 27/7/2000. Accordingly, we
direct as follows :
1. The claims of the three writ petitioners who are respondents herein
should be considered afresh in the light of this judgment vis a vis the
candidates appointed on or after 27.07.2000 or those in the select list
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who are yet to be appointed. On such consideration, if those writ
petitioners are found to have superior merit in case the bonus marks of
10% and/or 5% are excluded, they should be offered appointments, if
necessary, by displacing the candidates appointed on or after
27.07.2000.
2. The appointments of Gram Sewaks made upto 26.07.2000 need not be
reopened and re-considered in the light of the law laid down in
the judgment.
The appeals arising out of the SLPs are disposed of accordingly.
The impugned judgments of the High Court stand modified to that extent.
There shall be no order as to costs.