Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJINDER KAUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PUNJAB STATE & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/08/1986
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1790 1986 SCR (3) 500
1986 SCC (4) 141 JT 1986 86
1986 SCALE (2)203
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1310 (8)
ACT:
Punjab Police Rules, 1934, Vol. 7, Rule 12.21-
Constitution of India, Article 311(2): Temporary constable-
order of discharge from service in innocuous terms-Based on
allegation of misconduct-Whether unconstitutional and liable
to be quashed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a temporary lady constable, was
discharged from service by an order under Rule 12.21 Volume
7 of the Punjab Police Rules 1934 on the allegation that she
was unlikely to prove an efficient police officer. A
representation made by her to the Deputy Inspector General
of Police against that order was rejected. A revision filed
by the appellant against the latter order was dismissed. A
suit filed by her challenging the order of discharge as bad,
arbitrary and against the principles of law was dismissed.
This order was confirmed by the District Judge and the High
Court in appeal.
In the appeal to this Court by special leave it was
contended for the appellant that the impugned order of
discharge from service was made not in accordance with the
said Rule, in accordance with the terms and conditions of
the service, but was made by way of punishment on the ground
of her misconduct, as found on the basis of the
investigation of certain allegations behind her back,
without giving her any opportunity of hearing in the enquiry
or to cross-examine the witnesses.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: The impugned order of discharge, though couched
in innocuous terms and stated to be made in accordance with
the provisions of Rule 12.21, Vol.7 of the Punjab Police
Rules, 1934, was really a camouflage for an order of
dismissal from service on the ground of misconduct as found
on an enquiry into the allegations behind her back. It was
penal in nature as it cast a stigma on the service career of
the
501
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appellant. This order was made without serving the appellant
any chargesheet without asking for any explanation from her
without giving any opportunity to show cause against the
purported order of dismissal from service and without giving
any opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses. It,
therefore, contravenes Art. 311(2) of the Constitution and
is liabie to be quashed and set aside. [503F-G; 504B; 506B-
C]
P.L. Dhingra v. Union of India, [1958] SCR p. 828 at
862, K.H. Phadnis v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] SCR
(Supp.)) p. 118, State of Bihar & Ors. v. Shiva Bhikshuk
Mishra, [1971] 2 SCR 191 at 196, Shamsher Singh & Anr. v.
State of Punjab, [1975] 1 SCR p. 814 at 837 and Anoop
Jaiswal v. Government of India & Anr., [1984] 2 SCR p. 453,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2327 of
1986.
From the Judgment and order dated 10.10.1984 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in R.S.A. No. 2198 of 1984.
K. N. Rai for the Appellant.
R. S . Sodhi for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by E
RAY, J. After hearing the learned counsel for both the
parties and on consideration of the question of law involved
in this petition.
Special Leave is granted. Arguments heard.
The appellant petitioner was appointed as a lady
constable in Hoshiarpur District on 7.5.1979. After
completion of training she was posted in March, 1980 in the
police lines, Hoshiarpur. The Superintendent of Police,
Hoshiarpur discharged the appellant from service by an order
dated 9.9. 1980 under Rule 12.21 volume 7 of the Punjab
Police Rules, 1934. The said order is in the following
terms:
"Lady Constable Rajinder Kaur No. 732 is unlikely
to prove an efficient police officer. She is,
therefore, hereby discharged from the Police Force
Under P.P. 12.21 with effect from today
(9.9.1980).
502
Issue orders in O.R. and all concerned to notice
and necessary action."
This order was made, it has been stated in the
petition, without serving any charge-sheet on her and
without asking her to explain any charge. The order also has
not recorded any reason for her discharge from service.
Against this order the appellant made a representation to
the Deputy Inspector General of Police, Jullunder Range. The
said representation was rejected on 17.10.1980. The
appellant filed a revision against the order of the Deputy
Inspector General of Police and the same was also dismissed
on 15.4.1981. The appellant thereafter filed a civil suit
No. 327/ASSJ/82 in the Court of Additional Senior Sub-Judge,
Hoshiarpur on 16.11.1981 challenging the order of discharge
as bad, arbitrary and against the principles of law. The
said suit was dismissed by the Additional Senior Sub-Judge,
Hoshiarpur on 28.2.1983. Thereafter, the appellant Sled an
appeal before the District Judge, Hoshiarpur on 31.3.1983
and it was numbered as Civil Appeal No. 45 of 1983. The said
appeal was dismissed on 7.5. 1984 and the judgment of the
Trial Court was confirmed. A Regular Second Appeal No. 2198
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of 1984 was filed before the High Court of Punjab and
Haryana at Chandigarh.. The said Second Appeal was dismissed
on 10.10.1984. Hence the instant application for grant of
special leave to appeal under Article 136 of the
Constitution has been filed in this Honourable Court by the
appellant.
The main argument advanced on behalf of the appellant
is that the impugned order of discharge from service was
made not in accordance with Rule 12.21 of the Punjab Police
Rules, 1934 in accordance with the terms and conditions of
the service but it was made by way of punishment. An enquiry
was made by Deputy Police Superintendent, Garhshankar as to
the character of the appellant into the allegation that she
stayed at Mahalpur for 1 or 2 nights with one constable,
Jaswant Singh and evidences were recorded therein without
giving the appellant any opportunity of hearing in the
enquiry and without giving her any opportunity to cross-
examine the witnesses and the impugned order was made after
the completion of the investigation on the ground of her
misconduct which casted a stigma on her service career. The
order in question is, therefore, not an innocuous one though
expressed in innocuous terms. It is made by way of
punishment, the ground being her misconduct as found on the
basis of the investigation of certain allegations behind her
back.
It was urged on behalf of the respondents that the
order dis-
503
charging the appellant from service was not made by way of
punishment. The order was made in accordance with the terms
of Rule 12.21 of the said Rules which empowers the
authorities to do away with the service of the constable at
any time within three years of her enrolment, if she is
found unlikely to prove an efficient police officer, by the
Superintendent of Police and no appeal has been provided for
under the Rules against the said order of discharge. It was,
therefore, urged that the order being made in accordance
with the conditions of service of the appellant and so it is
unchallengeable before this Court by filing a special leave
petition to appeal.
Admittedly, the appellant was appointed as a lady
constable on 7.5.1979 and she was posted in March, 1980 in
the police lines, Hoshiarpur after completion of her
training. It has been stated in para 15 of the petition that
on an allegation made by the department against the
appellant that she spent two nights with a constable an
investigation was caused to be made into the said allegation
against her conduct and on the basis of that investigation
the impugned order of discharge was made by the
Superintendent of Police, Hoshiarpur. In para 15 of the
counter affidavit sworn on behalf of respondents it has been
stated that the Superintendent of Police, Hoshiarpur, got
conducted a confidential enquiry through a Deputy
Superintendent of Police regarding the conduct of the
appellant. On an overall assessment of the work and conduct
of the appellant, the Superintendent of Police, Hoshiarpur
came to the conclusion that she was not likely to become an
efficient Police officer and thus passed an order
discharging her from service in accordance with the
conditions of the service. These averments made in para 15
of the counter-affidavit have been verified to be true and
correct to the knowledge of the deponent based upon the
information derived from the record of the case. Thus, it is
clear from these averments that the impugned order of
discharge though stated to be made in accordance with the
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provisions of Rule 12.21 of the Punjab Police Rules, 1934,
is really made on the basis of the misconduct as found on
enquiry into the allegation behind her back by the Deputy
Superintendent of Police, Garhshankar. It is not disputed
that the enquiry was made without serving her the charge-
sheet and without giving her any opportunity to explain the
charges and the allegations levelled against her. The
enquiry was conducted behind her back and on the basis of
the result of the investigation she was discharged from
service. Therefore in these circumstances, it does not lie
in the mouth of the respondents to submit before this Court
that the order is an innocuous one and it is an order made
simply in accordance with the conditions of her
504
service under Rule 12.21 of the said Rules. On the other
hand, in the background of these facts and circumstances it
is crystal clear that the impugned order of discharge from
service of the appellant was made on the ground of her
misconduct and it is penal in nature as it casts a stigma on
the service career of the appellant.
The next question arises is whether the appellant who
is yet to be confirmed in the service and has no right to
the post in question, the impugned order can be assailed as
violative of the protection given by Article 311(2) of the
Constitution. This point has been well-settled by several
decisions of this Court.
This Court has stated in no uncertain terms in the case
of P. L. Dhingra v. Union of India, [1958] SCR p. 828 at 862
as follows:
"But even if the Government has, by contract or
under the rules, the right to terminate the
employment without going through the procedure
prescribed for inflicting the punishment of
dismissal or removal or reduction in rank, the
Government may, nevertheless, choose to punish the
servant and if the termination of service is
sought to be founded on misconduct, negligence,
inefficiency or other disqualification, then it is
a punishment and the requirements of Article 311
must be complied with."
This decision has been relied upon by this Court in the
case of K.H. Phadnis v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] SCR
(Supp.) p. 118 where it has been held that even in the case
of reversion of an employee who has been repatriated from
the temporary post of Controller of Food Grains Department
to his parent department of Excise and Prohibition, to which
he had a lien might be sent back to the substantive post in
ordinary routine administration or because of exigencies of
service. Such a person may have been drawing a salary more
than that of his substantive post but when he is reverted to
the parent department the loss of salary cannot be said to
have any penal consequences. The matter has to be viewed as
one of substance and all relevant factors have to be
considered in ascertaining whether the order is a genuine
one of accidence of service in which a person sent from the
substantive post to a temporary post has to go back to the
parent post without any aspersion against his character or
integrity, or whether the order amounts to a reduction in
rank by way of punishment.
505
lt has been further observed by this Court in the case
of State of Bihar & Ors. v. Shiva Bhikshuk Mishra, [1971] 2
S.C.R. 191 at 196.
"The form of the order is not conclusive of its
true nature and it might merely be a cloak and
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camouflage for an order founded on misconduct. It
may be that an order which is innocuous on the
face and does not contain any imputation of
misconduct is a circumstance or a piece of
evidence for finding whether it was made by way of
punishment or administrative routine. But the
entirety of circumstances preceding or attendant
on the impugned order must be examined and the
overriding test will always be whether the
misconduct is a mere motive or is the very
foundation of the order."
In the case of Shamsher Singh & Anr. v. State of
Punjab, [1975] 1 S.C.R. p.814 at 837 it has been observed as
under:
"No abstract proposition can be laid down that
where the services of a probationer are terminated
without saying anything more in the order of
termination than that the services are terminated
it can never amount to a punishment in the facts
and circumstances of the case. If a probationer is
discharged on the ground of misconduct, or inef-
ficiency or for similar reason without a proper
enquiry and without his getting a reasonable
opportunity of showing cause against his discharge
it may in a given case amount to removal from
service within the meaning of Article 31 l (2) f
the Constitution."
lt has been observed by this Court in the case of Anoop
Jaiswal v. Government of India & Anr., [1984] 2 S.C.R. p.453
as under:
"Where the form of the order is merely a
camouflage for an order of dismissal for
misconduct it is always open to the Court before
which the order is challenged to go behind the
form and ascertain the true character of the
order. If the Court holds that the order though in
the form is merely a determination of employment
is in reality a cloak for an order of punishment,
the Court would not be debarred, merely because of
the form of the order, in giving effect to the
rights conferred by law upon the employee."
506
On a conspectus of all these decisions mentioned
hereinbefore, the irresistible conclusion follows that the
impugned order of discharge though couched in innocuous
terms, is merely a camouflage for an order of dismissal from
service on the ground of misconduct. This order has been
made without serving the appellant any charge-sheet, without
asking for any explanation from her and without giving any
opportunity to show cause against the purported order of
dismissal from service and without giving any opportunity to
cross-examine the witnesses examined, that is, in other
words the order has been made in total contravention of the
provisions of Article 311(2) of the constitution. The
impugned order is, therefore, liable to be quashed and set
aside. A writ of certiorari be issued on the respondents to
quash and set aside the impugned order dated 9.9.1980 of her
dismissal from service. A writ in the nature of mandamus and
appropriate directions be issued to allow the appellant to
be reinstated in the post from which she has been
discharged. The appeal is thus allowed with costs. The
authorities concerned will pay all her emoluments to which
she is entitled to in accordance with the extant rules as
early as possible in any case not later than eight weeks
from the date of this judgment.
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P.S.S. Appeal allowed.
507