Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PUNJAB AND HARYANA HIGH COURTCHANDIGARH THROUGH ITS REGISTRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUNDER SHAM KAPOOR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/1997
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, FAIZAN UDDIN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL, J.
The short question that falls for consideration in this
appeal is whether the respondents who were employed as
Revisors in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the High Court’) and were given
the pay scale of Superintendent Grade II with effect from
August 5, 1980 are entitled to the said scale with effect
from January 23 1975.
In the High Court the conditions of service of the
employees were earlier governed by the High Court
Establishment (Appointment and Conditions of Service) Rules,
1952 (hereinafter referred to as "the 1952 Rules"). Under
the 1952 Rules there were posts of Senior Translator and
Junior Translator. Keeping in view the recommendations of
the Pay Commission constituted by the State of Punjab in
1968, when the High Court Establishment (Appointment and
Conditions of Service) Rules, 1973 (hereinafter referred to
as "the 1973 Rules") were made by the High Court, the posts
of Senior Translator and Junior Translator were designated
as Revisor and Translator respectively. The 1973 Rules were
issued vide Notification dated January 23, 1975 and were
published in the Chandigarh Gazette on February 1, 1975.
Under Rules 26, 27 read with Schedule I of the 1973 Rules
Revisors were placed in the scale Rs. 225-500 with a special
pay of Rs. 50 per month and Translators were placed in the
scale Rs. 225-500. Since Rules 26, 27 and 34 and Schedules
I, II and III of 1973 Rules related to salaries, allowances
and pension, etc. of the employees, the same were sent for
approval of the President of India as required under Clause
(2) of Article 229 read with Article 231 of the Constitution
of India. The approval of the President of India was
received vide letters dated September 25, 1985 and October
30, 1985. In the meanwhile, the pay scale of Rs. 225-500 had
been revised to Rs 600-850 with effect from January 1, 1978
and by Notification dated August 5, 1980 Schedule I of the
1973 Rules was substituted. In the substituted Schedule the
posts of Senior Translator and Junior Translator were
mentioned. In the remarks column against the post Senior
Translator the following note was made:-
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"Note: Redesignated as Revisors and
recommended the pay scale of
Superintendent Grade II i.e. Rs.
800-25-850-30-1000/40-1200/50-
1400."
Similarly, as against the post of Junior Translator the
following note was made in the remarks column:-
"Redesignated as Translators and
recommended the pay scale of
Assistants i.e. Rs. 570/- 1080 &
also the selection Grade."
After receiving the approval of the President of India,
Notification dated January 23, 1986 was issued by the High
Court wherein it was notified that Rules 26, 27 and
Schedules I, I(A) and 3 shall come into effect with effect
from September 25, 1985. Feeling aggrieved by the said
Notification dated January 23, 1986, a number of employees
working as Revisors and Translators in the High Court,
including the respondents who were working as Revisors,
filed a Writ Petition (C.W.P. No. 2363 of 1986) in the High
Court wherein they claimed that Rules 26, 27 and Schedules
I, I(A) and 3 should be brought into effect with effect from
March 1, 1974, the date of enforcement agreed to by the
then Chief Justice while approving the draft rules on the
administrative side. The said Writ Petition was disposed of
by the High Court by judgment dated August 6, 1987. The High
Court held that in letter dated September 25, 1985 conveying
the approval of the President of India to Rules 26, 27 and
Schedules I, I(A) and III of the 1973 Rules, it is stated
that the rules shall come into effect from the date of issue
and since the 1973 Rules were issued by Notification dated
January 23, 1975, the said Rules came into effect with
effect from January 23, 1975 and all amendments to the Rules
made between January 23, 1975 and September 25, 1985 were to
take effect from the respective dates on which such
amendments were issued from time to time. The High Court,
therefore, quashed the Notification dated January 23, 1986
and directed that January 23, 1975 be treated as the date of
enforcement of the 1973 Rules and that the pay and allowance
of the petitioners in the said Writ Petition should be fixed
on the basis that the 1973 Rules came into force on January
23, 1975.
Thereafter the High Court issued an order dated
November 17, 1987 whereby the pay of Revisors was fixed as
under:-
Date Scale of Pay
i) 23.1.1975 Rs. 225-15-360/20-500 plus
Rs. 50 p.m. as special pay
ii) 1.1.1976 Rs. 600-20700-25-850/30-
1000-40-1080-40-1120 plus
Rs. 50 p.m. as special pay
iii) 5.8.1980 Rs. 800-25-350-30-1000-40
1200/50-1400 plus Rs. 50
p.m. as special pay
Feeling aggrieved by the said order dated November 17,
1987, the respondents filed another Writ Petition (C.W.P.
No. 2359 of 1988) in the High Court which was allowed by a
learned single Judge of the High Court by judgment dated
January 28, 1992. The learned single Judge held that under
the 1973 Rules Revisors have been granted the same scale and
special pay as admissible to Deputy Superintendents (who
were subsequently designated as Superintendents Grade II)
and, therefore, the respondents who had filed the Writ
Petition in the High Court are entitled to the same pay
scale as Deputy Superintendent (Superintendent Grade II)
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with effect from January 23, 1975. Letters Patent Appeal
(L.P.A. No. 615 of 1992) filed by the appellant against the
said judgment of the learned single Judge has been dismissed
in limine by a Division Bench of the High Court by its order
dated August 27, 1992. Hence this appeal.
By order dated November 17, 1987, the respondents, as
Revisors, have been given the pay scale of Rs. 800-1400
which is also the pay scale of Superintendents Grade II plus
Rs. 50 p.m. as special pay with effect from August 5, 1980.
The question is whether the respondents are entitled to
claim the same pay scale as that of Deputy Superintendent
(Superintendent Grade II) with effect from January 23, 1975.
The High Court has held that they are so entitled on the
view that under the 1973 Rules they have been given the same
pay scale as that of Deputy Superintendent (Superintendent
Grade II). This view is, however, not borne out by Schedule
I of the 1973 Rules as originally issued vide Notification
dated January 23, 1975. Under Schedule I of the 1973 Rules,
as originally notified, the post of Deputy Superintendent
mentioned at serial No. 2 of the posts in the Group of non-
Gazetted Ministerial Establishment was placed in the scale
of Rs. 275-15-410/20-550 and in the revised grade of 350-25-
500/30/650 with effect from June 6, 1972. The post of
Revisor was mentioned at serial no. 8 in the non-Gazetted
Ministerial Establishment and the pay scale fixed for the
said post was Rs. 225-15-360/20-500. There was a further
provision for special pay of Rs. 50 p.m. for the post of
Revisor. It would thus be seen that in the 1973 Rules, as
originally issued on January 23, 1975, Revisors had not been
placed in the same pay scale of Superintendent Grade II only
by Notification dated August 5, 1980 whereby Schedule I of
the 1973 Rules was substituted and against the post of
Senior Translator it was mentioned in the remarks column :
"Senior Translators have been redesignated as Revisors in
the pay scale of Supdt. Grade II". This would show that till
the Notification dated August 5, 1980 was issued Revisors
had not been given the same pay scale as Superintendent
Grade II. Revisors, therefore, can claim the pay scale of
Superintendent Grade II with effect from August 5, 1980 only
and they were correctly given the said scale with effect
from that date under order dated November 17, 1987. The High
Court was in error in quashing the said order and in
directing that Revisors are entitled to pay scale of
Superintendent Grade II with effect from January 23, 1975.
In order to hold that Revisors are entitled to the same
pay scale as Superintendent Grade II with effect from
January 23, 1975, the learned single Judge has placed
reliance on the earlier judgment of the High Court in Civil
Writ Petition No. 2369 of 1986 wherein it was directed that
the 1973 Rules shall be treated to have come into effect
from January 23, 1975. The said judgment lays down that the
1973 Rules, as issued by Notification dated January 23,
1975, would come into force with effect from January 23,
1975. It also lays down that all amendments to the 1973
Rules made between January 23, 1975 and September 25, 1985
were to take effect from the respective dates on which such
amendments were issued from time to time. Since the
amendment in the Schedule I to the 1973 Rules was made by
Notification dated August 5, 1980, it can only come into
force with effect from the date of issue of the Notification
dated August 5, 1980 and not with effect from January 23,
1975 as held by the learned single Judge in the impugned
judgment. The benefit of the pay scale of Superintendent
Grade II under the Notification dated August 5, 1980 cannot
be extended to Revisors from a date earlier than the date of
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the issue of the said Notification.
For the reasons aforementioned, we are unable to uphold
the judgment of the learned single Judge as well as order
passed by the Division Bench of the High Court. The appeal
is, therefore, allowed, the order dated August 27, 1992
passed in Letters Patent Appeal No. 615 of 1992 as well as
judgment of the learned single Judge dated January 28, 1992
passed in Civil Writ Petition No. 2359 of 1988 are,
therefore, set aside and the Writ Petition filed by the
respondents is dismissed. But in the circumstances there is
no order as to costs.