Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF JAMMU KASHMIR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MIR GULAM RASUL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/02/1961
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1301 1961 SCR (3) 969
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC1208 (16)
ACT:
Fundamental rights-Equality before law-Breach of law, if
amounts to violation of equal Protection of law-Writ
Petition-No fundamental right involved Duty of High Court-
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 32(2A).
HEADNOTE:
The Government of Jammu and Kashmir on the basis of the
report of the commission of enquiry set up by it demoted the
respondent who had been suspended earlier. The respondent
moved the Jammu and Kashmir High Court under Art. 32(2A) of
the Constitution of India as applied to the State of Jammu
and Kashmir for a writ, inter alia, questioning the validity
of the order suspending and demoting him, alleging violation
of rules of natural justice by the commission of enquiry and
breach of statutes and rules of service. Articles 226 and
311(2) of the Constitution of India bad not been applied to
the State of Jammu
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and Kashmir. The High Court acting under Art. 32(2A) set
aside the orders suspending and demoting the respondent.
Held, that the High Court had no powers to act under Art.
32(2A) of the Constitution of India as the writ petition did
not disclose a violation of any fundamental right.
Held, further, that the breach of a law by the’ Government,
if any, did not amount to a denial of the equal protection
of the laws, as it had not ever been alleged by the
respondent that the benefit of that law had been designedly
denied only to him.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 31 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order date September 27, 1955,
of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court in Misc. Application
No. 23 of 1955.
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Jaswant Singh, Advocate-General for the State of Jammu and
Kashmir and R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji, Rameshwar Nath and P. L.
Vohra, for respondent.
1961. February 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SARKAR, J.-The respondent is a Civil Engineer who held
various positions under the appellant, the Government of the
State of Jammu and Kashmir. On September 8, 1954, while the
respondent was holding the post of Development Commissioner,
he was placed under suspension by an order made by the
appellant on that date. Later, the appellant passed another
order on February 12, 1955, demoting the petitioner to the
post of a Divisional Engineer.
On May 12, 1955, the respondent moved the High Court of
Jammu and Kashmir under Art. 32(2A) of the Constitution of
India as applied to the State of Jammu and Kashmir, for a
writ directing the appellant not to give effect to the order
dated February 12, 1955, and to recognise him as the Chief
Engineer, the substantive post held by him when he was
suspended, with effect from the date of suspension and with
all the emoluments of that office. The High Court issued
the writ as prayed. The State appeals from the judgment of
the High Court,
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In the view that, we think, must be taken of this case, it
is unnecessary to go into the facts a great deal. At one
stage of his career under the appellant, the respondent held
a job of some responsibility in what was called the Sindh
Valley Hydro Electric Scheme. This Scheme was for
generating electric power by dams erected in the Sindyh
water course and for using the water for irrigation
purposes. The work on this Scheme seems to have commenced
some time ago. The respondent was connected with the Scheme
from 1949 till he was transferred from the work in 1953. It
appears that the appellant was dissatisfied with the
Progress of the work and the manner in which it had been
carried out and decided to establish a Commission of Inquiry
(a) to investigate into the reasons for (i) progressive rise
in the estimates, (ii) the defective planning and the delay
in the execution of the work and (iii) the other
irregularities and (b) to fix responsibility upon the
persons concerned and make appropriate recommendations.
Pending the investigation various officers associated with
the planning and execution of the Scheme including the
respondent, were placed under suspension on September 8,
1954. Thereafter on October 20, 1954, a commission was set
up by the appellant consisting of various persons. The
Commission made certain enquiries and eventually submitted
its report to the appellant. The appellant then made the
order demoting the respondent purporting to act on the basis
of the report. It is not necessary to set out the facts any
more.
The respondent, in his application for the writ, questioned
the validity of the orders suspending and demoting him on
these grounds. He alleged that the Commission did not
conduct the enquiry according to the rules of natural
justice. He said that he was not even informed of the
charges against him nor given a proper hearing and that if
he had been given proper opportunity, he would have proved
that he had not been at fault at all. He also said that the
appointment of the Commission could only have been made
under s. 2 of the Public Servants (Inquiries) Act, 1977
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(Kashmir era), and must, therefore, be deemed to have been
so made. He complained that the provisions of this Act were
not observed by the Commission in making the enquiry.
Lastly, he said that the respondent could be reduced in rank
only in accordance with the procedure laid down in the
Kashmir Civil Service Rules passed by the State Council
Order No. 81-C of 1939 and this procedure had not been
followed. In the High Court, the question as to whether
these Rules had the status of law seems to have been debated
at great length. The High Court took the view (that they
had. We will proceed on the basis that the High Court was
right and the allegations made by the respondent in his
petition had been substantiated.
Now, the High Court was moved to exercise its powers under
Art. 32 (2A) of the Constitution. The order made by it
cannot be upheld if it was not justified by that provision.
This is not in dispute. That provision is in these terms:
Art. 32(2A). " Without prejudice to the
powers conferred by clauses (1) and (2), the
High Court shall have power throughout the
territories in relation to which it exercises
jurisdiction to issue to any person or
authority, including in appropriate cases any
Government within those territories,
directions or orders or writs, including writs
in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus,
prohibition, quo warranto and certiorari, or
any of them, for the enforcement of any of the
rights conferred by this Part."
The High Court can then exercise its powers under Art. 32
(2A) only " for the enforcement of any of the rights
conferred by this Part ". The Part referred to is Part III
and the rights conferred by it are the fundamental rights.
Therefore, the High Court can act under cl. (2A) of Art. 32
only to enforce a fundamental right.
The only fundamental right, however, on the violation of
which learned counsel for the respondent could rely in
support of the order of the High Court was that conferred by
Art. 14, namely, the right to the equal protection of the
laws. He said that the
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respondent was entitled to have the procedure prescribed by
the Kashmir Civil Service Rules followed before the order
demoting him could be made and as that procedure was not
followed, his client had been denied the equal protection of
the laws. It seems to us that even if the Rules are a law
and the respondent has not been given the benefit of them,
all that can be said to have happened is that the appellant
has acted in breach of the law; But that does not amount to
a violation of the right to the equal protection of the
laws. Otherwise, every breach of law by a Government would
amount to a denial of the equal protection of the laws. We
are not aware of any authority in support of that
proposition and none has been cited to us. Nor are we able
to find any support for it in principle. It is not the
respondent’s case that other servants of the appellant had
been given the benefit of those Rules and such benefit has
been designedly denied only to him. It seems to us that the
appeal must be allowed on the simple ground that the
respondent’s petition does not show a violation of any
fundamental right. The High Court had no power to act under
Art. 32 (2A) at all.
We think it right to point out that Arts. 226 and 311(2) of
the Constitution of India had not been applied to the State
of Jammu and Kashmir at any material time. No question of
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the respondent’s application being maintainable in view of
these articles, therefore, arises.
The appeal is accordingly allowed. There will be no order
as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
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