Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
M. D. SHUKLA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/02/1970
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 117 1970 SCR (3) 515
1970 SCC (1) 419
CITATOR INFO :
R 1977 SC 747 (6)
ACT:
States Reorganisation Act 37 of 1956 ss. 115, 116, 117-
Bombay Re-organisation Act 11 of 1960, ss. 81, 82 & 83-
Permanent employees of Saurashtra and Kutch States allotted
to Bombay State after passing of Act 37 of 1956 but posted
in districts of Saurashtra and Kutch-Allotted to Gujarat
State after passing of Act 11 of 1960-Transferred to
Secretariat--Government order regularising their services in
Secretariat and fixing their pay and
seniority--Regularisation whether amounted to ’absorption’
within meaning of Bombay Allocated Government Servants’ (Ab-
sorption. Seniority, Pay and Allowances) Rules,, 1957,-R.
138 of Bombay Civil Services Classification and Recruitment
Rules, 1939 as amended’ in 1957 whether violated by such
regularisation.
HEADNOTE:
Prior to November 1, 1956 the appellants were holding
permanent posts in the ministerial service of the
Secretariats of the Part B State of Saurashtra and the Part
C State of Kutch. By virtue of s. 8 of the States
Reorganisation Act 37 of 1956 the new State of Bombay which
included the territories of the States of Saurashtra and
Kutch was formed. Under s. 115(1) of the Act the appellants
were allotted to serve in connection with the affairs of the
new State of Bombay. BY the proviso to, s. 115(7) it was
provided that ’conditions of service applicable immediately
before the appointed day to the case of any person allotted
to another State shall not be varied to his disadvantage
except with the previous approval of the Central
Government’. Section 116 provided for the continuance of
officers in equivalent posts. By s. 117 power was conferred
upon the Central Government to give directions to State
Governments for the purposes of ss. 114, 115 and 116. The
Act authorised the Central Government to establish one or
more Advisory Committees to advise the Government on the
division and integration of the services in the new States
and for ensuring fair and equitable treatment to all persons
affected by the provisions of s. 115 and for proper
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
consideration of any representation made by those persons.
A large majority of the members of the ministerial branch of
the Secretariats of the State of Saurashtra and Kutch were
unwilling to be posted in the Secretariat of the new State
of Bombay. A large majority out of them including the
appellants were accordingly posted in the districts of the-
former States of Saurashtra and Kutch. Under the Bombay
Reorganisation Act 11 of 1960 the States of Gujarat and
Maharashtra were carved out of the territory of the new
State of Bombay. Sections 81, 82 and 83 of the 1960 Act
were substantially the same as Ss. 115, 116 and 117 of the
1956 Act. The services of the appellants were under s. 81
of the Act allotted to the newly constituted State of
Gujarat. The State of Gujarat transferred the appellants
from the districts to the Secretariat. After consulting the
Public Service Commission it issued on August 19, 1966 an
order "regularising" the services of the appellants and
fixing their pay and seniority. The officers of the
Secretariat who before the, passing of the said order
constituted the ministerial service filed a petition in the
High Court challenging its validity. The High Court allowed
the petition mainly on two grounds, namely : (i) that the
appellants were not absorbed-in the ministerial services of
the Secretariat within the meaning
516
of the Bombay Allocated Servants’ (Absorption, Seniority,
Pay and Allowances) Rules, 1957; (ii) that r. 138 of the
Bombay Civil Services Classification and Recruitment Rules,
1939 as amended in 1957 allowed recruitment to the
Ministerial Staff of the Secretariat by nomination after an
examination or by promotion from the Lower Division and it
was not open to the Government to adopt any other method.
The High Court’s ,,decision was challenged in appeal before
this Court. The Court noted that no equivalence had been
established between the ,posts in the Secretariats of the
States of Saurashtra and Kutch and the posts in the new
State of Bombay or later in Gujarat and that there had been
no integration of the services by the Central Government.
It was conceded before the Court that the State had the
authority to -transfer, subject to the Constitution and the
rules made under Art. 309, -any public servant to render
service which by his training and aptitude he was competent
to do.
HELD : (i) The fact that the expression ’absorption’ had not
been used in the impugned order would not justify the
inference that there was no intention to absorb the former
Saurashtra and Kutch State personnel in the Secretariat.
[521 F]
In the absence of determination of equivalent posts under
the orders of the Central Government, the State of Gujarat
was competent, as a matter of provisional arrangement to
absorb the former Saurashtra and Kutch States personnel in
the ministerial establishment of the Gujarat State Secre-
tariat. In terms the order said that the persons named
therein "should be treated to have been regularly appointed
in the posts shown against their names in column 4 of the
statement" appended to the order. That clearly amounted to
absorption. [521 G-H]
(ii) The High Court was wrong in holding that the impugned
order was bad because it contravened r. 138 of the
Recruitment Rules.
Assuming that r. 138 requires the State to follow a certain
method for recruitment to the ministerial service, that rule
made under Art. 309 of the Constitution cannot take away the
statutory right vested in the personnel of the former
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
Saurashtra and Kutch States which they acquired under s.
115(7) of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 to hold posts
in the new State which we-re equivalent and on terms which
were not, unless previous approval of the Central Government
was obtained, disadvantageous. Since the arrangement which
was made by the Gujarat Government must be regarded as
provisional and to ensure so long as the Central Government
did not make a final decision, it was not open to the
officers of "the Secretariat to challenge the authority of
the Government of Gujarat either to transfer officers from
the Districts and to post and assign them duties in the
Secretariat or to fix their pay and seniority among the
officer of the Secretariat performing ministerial duties.’
[523 G-524 B]
N. Raghavendra Rao v. Deputy Commissioner, South Kanara,
Mangalore, [1964] 7 S.C.R. 549 and Union of India & Anr.
v. P. K. Roy & Ors. [1968] 2 S.C.R. 186, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 458 of 1969.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 1, 1968 of the
Gujarat, High Court in Special Civil Application No. 1499 of
1966.
517
M. C. Chagla, S. K. Dholakia, Vineet Kumar and J. R. Nana-
vati, for the appellants.
S. T. Desai, B. D. Sharma and S. P. Nayar, foe respondent
No. 1.
S. S. Shukla, for respondents Nos. 2 to 148.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. Certain officers in the ministerial branch of the
Secretariat Service of the State of Gujarat moved a petition
in the High Court of Gujarat for an order directing the
State Government to treat its order dated August 19, 1966 as
"illegal, void and of no effect" and to forbear from
enforcing its order treating the persons whose names were
specified in the annexure to the order as servants of the
"Secretariat cadre". The High Court of Gujarat granted the
petition and declared the order dated August 19, 1966,
invalid. With certificate granted by the High Court this
appeal has been filed.
Prior to November 1, 1956, the appellants were holding
permanent posts in the ministerial service of the
Secretariats of the Part B State of Saurashtra and the Part
C State of Kutch. By virtue of s. 8 of the States
Reorganization Act 37 of 1956 the new State of Bombay, which
included the territories of the States of Saurashtra and
Kutch, was formed. Section 115 of the States Reorganisation
Act made provisions relating to services other than All-
India Services. By sub-s. (1) of s. 115 it was enacted,
inter alia, that every person who immediately before the
appointed day was serving in connection, with the affairs of
any of the existing States specified therein shall, as from
that day, be deemed to have been allotted to serve in
connection with the affairs of the successor State to that
existing State. By the proviso to sub-s. (7) it was
provided that conditions of service applicable immediately
before the appointed day to the case of any person allotted
to another State shall not be varied to his disadvantage
except with the previous approval of the Central Government.
Section 116 provided for the continuance of officers in the
same posts. By s. 117 power was conferred upon the Central
Government to give directions to Any State Government that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
may appear to be necessary for the purpose of giving effect
to -the provisions of ss. 114,115 and 116 of the Act.
Under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, the appellants
were allotted to serve in connection with the affairs of the
new State of Bombay. In exercise of the powers under Art.
309 of the Constitution, the Government of Bombay sanctioned
certain rules called "The Allocated Government Servants’
(Absorption, Seniority, Pay & Allowances) Rules, 1957".
Those rules governed the servants who were allotted to the
State of Bombay on reorganisa-
518
tion. A large majority of the members of the ministerial
branch of the Secretariat of the States of Saurashtra and
Kutch were, it appears, unwilling to be posted in the
Secretariat of the new State of Bombay. They were
accordingly posted in the districts of the former States of
Saurashtra and Kutch.
Under Act 11 of 1960 called "The Bombay Reorganisation Act"
the States of Gujarat and Maharashtra were carved out of the
territory of the new State of Bombay. Under s. 81
provisions relating to services other than All-India
Services were made and by S. 82 provisions as to the
continuance of officers in the same posts was made. By s.
83 power was given to the Central Government to give
directions to the States. Those provisions were substan-
tially the same as the provisions of ss. 115, 116 and 117 of
the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. The appellants were
allotted to serve in connection with the affairs of the
State of Gujarat under s. 81 of the Bombay
Reorganisation Act.
The newly constituted State of Gujarat finding a dearth of
experienced officers in the Secretariat transferred the
appellants at ,diverse times between the years 1961, 1962
and 1963 to the Secretariat of the State of Gujarat and
’assigned them duties in connection with the Secretariat
Service. Orders were issued from time to time fixing their
scales of pay and seniority. Apparently the Public Service
Commission raised some objections about an attempted
integration between the officers who were originally serving
in the Secretariat Service, and those who were posted from
the districts. Ultimately on August 19, 1966, the State
Government issued the order to the following effect :
"The question of regularising the appointment to various
posts in the Secretariat Department on and after 1st May
1960 of the drafted persons was under the consideration of
Government for some time. Government is now pleased to
direct, in consultation with the Gujarat Public Service
Commission, that the persons shown in the accompanying
statement should be treated to have been regularly appointed
in the posts shown against their names in column-4 of the
statement with effect from the date shown in column-5 in the
Departments mentioned in column-3 of the statement.
2. As regards fixation of their pay and seniority orders
have already been issued in Government Resolution General
Administration Department No. SCT- 1161-F,
dated 25th April, 1961 and Government Reso-
lution General Administration Department No.
SCT1162-KH, dated 14th March 1964. The
Departments are requested to fix their pay and
seniority accordingly."
519
Appended to the order was a list of 90 persons designating
the departments in which they were posted, posts to which
appointed and the dates from which they were appointed.
The officers of the Secretariat who before the date of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
order constituted the ministerial service then filed the
petition out of which this appeal arises challenging the
validity of the order of the Government. The petition was
,founded on three grounds : (1) that the order violated r.
138 of the Recruitment Rules framed by the Government of
Bombay in 1957; (2) that the order violated the proviso to
cl. (6) of s. 81 in that it altered the conditions of
service of the applicants; and (3) that it violated the
provisions of the Allocated Government Servants’
(Absorption, Seniority, Pay & Allowances) Rules, 1957.
Counsel for the applicants conceded before the High Court
that the transfer of the former Saurashtra and Kutch States
Secretariat personnel to the Gujarat Secretariat per se was
not open to objection. The High Court did not consider
whether the Saurashtra and Kutch States secretariat
personnel had "any rights flowing on account of absorption
and integration of service under the States Reorganisation
Act, 1956 or the Allocated Government Servants’ Rules,,
1957." But the High Court held that since the impugned order
purported to amalgamate the former Saurashtra and Kutch
States personnel with the Gujarat Secretariat Service
contrary to the terms of r. 138 of the Recruitment Rules,
and the Government had no authority to vary the method of
recruitment provided by the statutory r. 138 of the
Recruitment Rules which was mandatory, the orders of
transfer to the Secretariat which was not made in the
process of integration could not operate as absorption under
the Allocated Government Servants’ (Absorption, Seniority,
Pay & Allowances) Rules, 1957. The High Court also observed
that when the ministerial service employees of the former
Saurashtra and Kutch States Secretariats were absorbed in
the districts, integration of the services was complete and
any transfer thereafter to the Secretariat could not and did
not -amount to absorption in equivalent posts.
It is necessary first to examine the scheme of ss. 115 & 116
of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. Section 115 was
intended to provide for the conditions of service of
employees who immediately before November 1, 1956 were
serving in connection with the affairs of a State and were
allotted to serve in connection with the affairs of another
State. Power to fix the conditions of service was reserved
exclusively to the Central Government. For that purpose the
Central Government was authorised to establish one or more
Advisory Committees to ’advise the Government on the
division and integration of the services in the new States
and for ensuring fair and equitable treatment to all persons
affected by the
520
provisions of S. 115 and for proper consideration of any
representation made by those persons. By the proviso to
sub-s. (7) S. 115 a guarantee was given to every allotted
public servant that his conditions of service shall not be
varied to his disadvantage except with the previous approval
of the Central Government. Section 116 provided for the
continuance of officers in equivalent posts.
This Court in N. Raghavendra Rao v. Deputy Commissioner,
South Kanara, -Mangalore(1) held that the effect of sub-s.
(7) of s. 115 is to preserve the power of the State to make
rules under Art. 309 of the Constitution, but the proviso
imposes -a limitation on the exercise of that power; the
limitation is that the State cannot vary the conditions of
service applicable immediately before November 1, 1956, to
the disadvantage of persons mentioned in sub-ss. (1) & (2)
of s. 115. In the view of the Court the broad purpose
underlying the proviso to s. 115 (7) of the Act was to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
ensure that the conditions of service shall not be changed
except with the prior approval of the Central Government,
that is, before embarking on varying the conditions of
service, the State Governments should obtain the concurrence
of the Central Government.
In Union of India & Anr. v. P. K. Roy & Ors. (2) this Court
held that it is the duty of the Central Government to
integrate the services, but the State may be asked to
prepare a provisional gradation list provided. the Central
Government maintains its control over it.
It is clear that the conditions of service applicable
immediately before the appointed day in the case of any
person who is allotted to another State cannot be varied to
his disadvantage except with the previous approval of the
Central Government. This protection could not be removed by
the rules made by the State subsequent to November -1, 1956,
unless the previous approval of the Central Government was
obtained thereto.
It is true that the ministerial service personnel in the
States of Saurashtra and Kutch, after they were allotted to
the State of Bombay were posted and assigned duties in
various districts in Saurashtra and Kutch. But in the
absence of evidence to show that the previous approval of
the Central Government was obtained, their right to be
absorbed in equivalent posts in the new State of Bombay and
later in the State of Gujarat was not thereby affected. It
appears that there has riot been any equivalence established
between the posts in the Secretariats. of the States of
Saurashtra and Kutch and the posts in the new State of
Bombay and: later in the State of Gujarat to which the
members of the ministerial service of the Secretariats of
former Saurashtra and Kutch States were allotted. The mere
fact that they were posted
(1) [1964] 7 S.C. R. 549.
(2) [1968] 2 S. C. R. 186.
521
and continued to render service in the Districts will not,
in our judgment, affect the right of the personnel to be
absorbed in the equivalent posts in the Secretariat and on
terms not disadvanta-geous to those they were already
entitled except with the previous, approval of the Central
Government.
It was conceded, and rightly, that the State has the
authority to transfer, subject to the Constitution and the
rules made under Art. 309 any public servant to render
service which by his training and aptitude he was competent
to do. Transfer of the personnel from the States of
Saurashtra and Kutch to the Secretariat in the State of
Gujarat and assignment of duties performable by the
ministerial staff in the Secretariat cannot be challenged,
and that because they were posted between 1956 and 1960 in
the Districts they will not be deprived of their statutory
right under s. 115(7) proviso. Posting in the districts was
and must remain purely provisional, until final integration
is made by the Central Government. It is common ground that
no such final integration had been made by the Central
Government.
Two grounds appealed to the High Court in deciding the case-
against the appellants : (1) that the appellants were
transferred to the Secretariat of the State of Gujarat, but
they were not absorbed in the ministerial service of the
Secretariat of the State of Gujarat. In the view of the
High Court there was merely "regularisation" of the
appointment of those persons for the purpose of performing
service in the Secretariat; and (2) that the order dated
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
August 19,. 1966 was-contrary to the Recruitment Rules,
1957.
If it be granted that the State was competent ’to transfer
and did transfer the appellants to perform service in
connection with the affairs of the State in the Secretariat,
it is difficult to hold that when the State "regularised"
the service of the appellants in the Secretariat with the
consent of the Public Service Commission there was no
absorption under the Absorption Rules. It is true that the
expression "absorption" has not been used in the order, but
that will not justify an inference that there was no
intention to absorb the former Saurashtra and Kutch States
personnel in the Secretariat. In the absence of
determination of equivalent posts under the orders of the
Central Government, the State of Gujarat was competent, as a
matter of provisional arrangement to absorb the former
Saurashtra and Kutch States personnel in the ministerial
establishment of the Gujarat State Secretariat. In-terms
the order says that the persons named therein "should be
treated to have been regularly appointed in the posts shown
against their names in column-4 of the statement" appended
to the order. That, in our judgment, amounted to
absorption.
522
Original r. 138 of the Bombay Civil Services Classification
and Recruitment Rules, 1939, was deleted and the following
rule was substituted on May 22, 1957. The relevant part of
the rule reads
"138. The ministerial staff in the Secretariat and attached
offices is divided into two Divisions.
(a) Upper; and (b) Lower.
(i) Superintendents : Appointments shall be made by-
promotion from among Senior Assistants.
(ii) Senior Assistants : Appointments shall be made by
promotion from among Junior Assistants.
(iii) Junior Assistants : Appointments shall be made
either : -
(a) by nomination on the results of a competitive
examination held by the Bombay Public Service Commission, or
(b) by promotion from among members of the Lower Division.
Provided that ,not more than one out of every four vacancies
in the posts of Junior Assistants shall ordinarily be filled
by promotion.
(2) To be eligible for appointment by nomination a
candidate must
(i) hold a degree in Arts, law, science, Agriculture or
commerce of a recognised University or possess an equivalent
qualification;
(ii) have attained the age of 18 years; and
(iii) not have -attained the age of 30 years in the case
of members of the Lower Division appointed on the
recommendation of the commission and who have graduated
while in service and in any other case 24 years on the first
day of the month immediately following month in which the
posts are advertised by the Commission.
B. Lower Division
(b) Clerks, clerk-typists, typists : Appointments shall be
made by nomination on the results of a competitive
examination held by the Commission.
523
Provided that suitable members of Class IV services who
while in that service, have passed the Secondary School
Certificate Examination or an examination recognised by
Government as equivalent to that examination, shall be
eligible for appointment to the posts of clerks by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
promotion.
(2) To be eligible for appointment by nomination, a
candidate must -.-
(i) have passed the secondary school certificate exa-
mination or an examination recognised by Government as
equivalent to that examination;
(ii) have attained the age of 18 years; and
(iii) not have attained the age of 23 years on the first
day of the month immediately following the month in which
the posts are advertised by the Commission.
A candidate for the post of clerk-typist or typist must,
also be able to type neatly and accurately at a minimum
speed of 40 words per minute.
The High Court held that recruitment to the ministerial
staff in the Secretariat could only be by nomination or by
promotion from among members of the Lower Division,
nomination being on the result of a competitive examination
held by the Public Service Commission and promotion being
from the subordinate staff. In view of this rule, according
to the High Court, it was not open to the State Government
to adopt any other method of recruitment of the members of
the ministerial staff.
Counsel for the appellants contended that r. 138 only dealt
with the existing servants and did not prevent any
additional members from being amalgamated in the ministerial
staff in the Secretariat. He also contended that the
recruitment did not amount to admission of an officer for
the first time in the service. It is unnecessary for the
purpose of this appeal to consider these arguments. Assum-
ing that r. 138 requires the State to follow a certain
method for recruitment to the ministerial service, that rule
made under Art. 309 of the Constitution cannot take away the
statutory right vested in the personnel of the former
Saurashtra and Kutch States which they acquired under the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956, to hold posts in the ’new
State which were equivalent and on terms which were not,
unless the previous approval of the Central Government was
524
obtained, disadvantageous. Since the arrangement which is
made by the Government of the State of Gujarat must be
regarded as provisional and to enure so long as the Central
Government does not make a final decision, it is not open to
the officers of the Secretariat to challenge the authority
of the Government of Gujarat either to transfer officers
from the Districts and to post and assign them duties in the
Secretariat or to fix their pay and seniority among the
officers in the Secretariat performing ministerial duties.
The appeal must therefore be allowed and the order passed by
the High Court must be set aside. The petition filed by the
respondents Nos. 2 to 148 will stand dismissed. There will
be no order as to costs throughout.
G.C.
Appeal allowed.
525