Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 19
PETITIONER:
GIAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/12/1961
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 219 1962 SCR (3) 515
ACT:
Public Servant-Tehsildar in Punjab-Removal from service-
Financial Commissioner, if competent to remove-Punjab Land
Revenue Act, 1887, s.9-Punjab Tehsildari Rules, 1932-
Government of India Act, 1935 (25 & 26 Ged. 5 ch.42),s. 241-
Government of India (Comencement and Transitory Provisions)
Order, 1936 cl. 15 (2)--Adaptation of Indian Laws Order
1937.
HEADNOTE:
The Punjab Tehsildari Rules, 1932, were framed under s. 9
of the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887, by the Financial
Commissioner. They conferred authority upon the Financial
Commissioner to appoint and to remove Tehsildars from
service. After the enactment of the Government of India
Act, 1935, s. 9 was amended by the Adaptation of Indian Laws
Order, 1937, and the power of the Financial Commissioner to
make such rules was abrogated. The appellant, who was a
Tehsildar, was dismissed by the Financial Commissioner in
1953. The appellant contended that the Financial
Commissioner was not competent to remove him from service as
his powers to make rules regarding appointment and removal
from service of Tehsildars were abrogated and the Tehsildari
Rules lost their vitality as they were not preserved by the
Government of India Act, 1935, or by the Adaptation Order.
Held, (per Gajendragadkar, Subba Rao, Hidayatullah and Shah,
JJ., Dayal, J., contra.) that notwithstanding the abrogation
of the powers of the Financial Commissioner to frame rules,
the Tehsildari rules, 1932 continued in force and the
Financial Commissioner was competent to remove the appellant from
Service. By the combined operation of cl. 15 (2) of the
Government of India (Commencement and Transitory Provisions
Order, 1936, and the Adaptation Order, 1937, the condition
of service applicable to civil servants remained unaltered,
until other provisions were made under the Government of
India Act, 1935. Though s. 241 of the Government of India
Act,1935 provided that the conditions of service of persons
serving in connection with the affairs of a province, were
to be such as may be prescribed by rules made by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 19
Governor, or by persons authorised by him, s. 241 was itself
Subject to cl. 15(2) of the 1936 Order. It was not shown
that
516
these rules were superseded or abrogated by the Civil
Service Rules made by the Government of Punjab in 1941.
Per, Dayal, J.-The Financial Commissioner was not the
competent authority to remove the appellant from service.
Section 241 (1) which provided that the Governor would be
the appointing and consequently the dismissing authority for
all civil servants in the service of the Province abrogated
the Tesildari Rules which were inconsistent with it and cl.
15 (2) of the Transitory Order, 1936, did not save them.
Even if cl. 15 (2) preserved these Rules, the reference to
the Financial Commissioner therein had to be read as refe-
rence to the Governor in view of para. 7 of the Adaptation
Order. The Civil Service Rules framed by the Government in
1941 governed the conditions of service of Tehsildars and
Naib Tehsildars and the Tehsildari Rules ceased to be opera-
tive from 1941 even if they continued to be effective till
then in view of the provisions of the Transitory Order.
From April 1, 1953, the Punjab Civil Service Rules, 1953,
were in force which applied to the case and the Financial
Commissioner was not shown to be one of the authorities
prescribed by the Government in the rules regulating the
appointment and conditions of service of Tehsildars and Naib
Tehrildars.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 515 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 3, 1958,
of the Punjab High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 82 of
1957.
Bhagat Singh Chawla and K. R. Choudhri, for the appellant.
S. M.. Sikri, Advocate-General for the State of Punjab,
Gopal Singh and P. D. Menon, for the respondents.
1961. December II. The Judgment of Gajendragadkar, Subba
Rao, Hidayatullah and Shah, JJ., was delivered by
SHAH, J.-Sardar Gian Singh-hereinafter Called the appellant-
was recruited in 1927 as a Naib Tehsildar in the Revenue
department of the Province of Punjab. He was confirmed in
that rank in 1939. In 1946, he was promoted to the rank of
officiating Tehsildar and was posted as
517
Tehsildar at Hansi in the district of Hissar on September
22, 1947, and since then he held the post of Tehsildar at
diverse places.
On August 20 , 1952, the appellant was served with a charge
sheet by the Financial Commissioner, Punjab containing
eleven heads of charges of, misappropriation, misconduct,
irregularities and dereliction of duties committed by him.
The Deputy Commissioner, Hissar was appointed to hold a
departmental enquiry into those charges. On August 28,
1953, the appellant was served with a notice to show cause
why on the findings recorded by the enquiry officer, he
should not be dismissed from service. The appellant
submitted hi,; explanation. The Financial Commissioner by
order dated October 26, 1953 ordered that the appellant be
dismissed from service. An appeal preferred against that
order was dismissed and application to the Government of
Punjab to revise the order of the appellate authority also
proved infructuous. The appellant then presented a petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution to the High Court of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 19
Punjab for an order quashing the order of dismissal con-
tending inter alia that (a) reasonable opportunity was not
given to the appellant either before the enquiry officer or
before the Financial Commissioner to rebut the allegations
contained in the charge sheet, and (b) that the Financial
Commissioner was incompetent to pass the order of dismissal.
Bishan Narain, J., who heard the petition rejected the first
plea, but in the view of the learned Judge, the Financial
Commissioner ceased to have any power to make rules
regulating the appointment and dismissal of Tehsildars
because of the amendment of the Punjab Land Revenue Act,
1887 by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws)
Order, 1937 and the authority derived by the Financial
Commissioner under those rules to dismiss Tehsildars was
also abrogated, and therefore the order of the Financial
Commissioner dated October 26, 1953 was void and of no
effect. In appeal under cl. 10
518
of the Letters Patent, a Division Bench of the High Court
reversed the order passed by the Bishan Narain, J. The High
Court held that by virtue of, cls. 9 and 10 of the
Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937,
the rules framed under the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887
continued to remain in operation even after the Act was
amended by the Adaptation of Indian Laws Order, 1937 and the
Financial Commissioner remained invested with the power to
dismiss the appellant from service. The High Court
accordingly dismissed the petition of the appellant. The
appellant has appealed to this Court against the order of
the High Court with certificates of fitness under Art. 133
of the Constitution.
Section 9 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887, as it was
originally enacted, stood as follows :
"The Provincial Government shall fix the
number of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars to be
appointed, and the Financial Commissioner may
make rules for their appointment and
dismissal".
Under s. 9 read with s. 28 of the Act, rules were framed in
1932 by the Financial Commissioner, Punjab, and authority to
appoint Tehsildars and to remove them from service was, by
these rules, conferred upon the Financial Commissioner.
After the enactment of the Government of India Act, 1935, s.
9 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act was amended by the
Adaptation of Indian Laws Order, 1937, and the power of the
Financial Commissioner to make rules under s. 9 was
abrogated by the deletion of the words in that section
following the word "appointed". Section 28 which authorised
the Financial Commissioner to make rules to regulate
appointments, duties, emoluments, punishments etc. of
officers amongst others of Kanungos, Zaildars, Inamdars and
village officers, was also amended
519
and that power was entrusted to the Provincial Government.
Undoubtedly, by the amendment ’of s. 9, the Financial
Commissioner was deprived of the power to make rules for
appointment and removal of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars,
and on account of the repeal, except as to transactions past
and completed, the power may in the absence of a provision
to the contrary, be considered as if it had never existed.
But the vitality of the Tehsildari Rules and of the powers
of the authorities competent thereunder after the Government
of India Act, 1935 was enacted, rested upon certain
provisions made by virtue of the authority conferred by that
Act. By s.310 of the Act, to facilitate the transition from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 19
the Government of India Act, 1915 and from the provisions of
Part XIII. of the Act of 1935 to the provisions of Part 11,
power was conferred upon His Majesty, by Order-in-Council
among others to direct that the provisions of the Government
of India Act, 1935, shall, during such limited period as may
be specified in the order, have effect subject to such
adaptations and modifications as may be so specified. In
exercise of this power, on July 3, 1936, the Government of
India (Commencement and Transitory Provisions) Order, 1936
was promulgated and by el. 15(2) it was provided:
"Until other provision is made under the now
Act, the conditions of service applicable to
any person or any class of persons appointed
or to be appointed to serve His Majesty in a
civil capacity in India shall be the same as
were applicable to that person or, as the case
may be, to persons of that class immediately
before the commencement of Part III of the new
Act."
By el. 12(d) of the Adaptation of Indian Laws Order, 1937
issued in exercise of authority granted by s. 293, it was
provided, in so far as it is material, that
520
"No repeal effected by this order shall affect
the operation of sub-paragraph (2) of
paragraph fifteen of the Government of India,
(Commencement and Transitory Provisions)
Order, 1936."
By the combined operation of cl. 15(2) of the Commencement
and Transitory Provisions Order, 1936 and the Adaptation of
Indian Laws Order, 1937, the conditions of service
applicable to civil servants continued to remain unaltered,
until other provisions were made under the Government of
India Act, 1935. Again, the Adaptation of Indian Laws
Order, 1937 expressly provided by cl. 9 that the rules
framed under the Act-adapted or modified shall not be
rendered invalid. By that clause which provided:
"The provisions of this order which adapt or
modify Indian laws so as to alter the manner
in which, the authority by which, or the law
under or in accordance with which, any powers
are exercisable, shall not render invalid any
notification, order, commitment, attachment,,
bye-law, rule or regulation duly made or
issued, or anything duly done, before the
commencement of this order
;...................................
Notwithstanding the abrogation of the powers of the
Financial Commissioner to frame rules, the Tehsildari Rules,
1932 remained in force.
And by cl. 10 which provided:
"Save as provided by this order, all powers
which under any law in force in British India,
or in any part of British India, were
immediately before the commencement of part
III of the Government of India Act, 1935
vested in, or exercisable by, any person or
authority shall continue to be so vested or
exercisable until other provision is made by
521
some legislature or authority empowered to
regulate the matter in question."
The authority of the Financial Commissioner under the rules
which remained in force by virtue of cl. 9 was exercisable
except as provided by the Adaptation of Indian Laws order,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 19
1937. By s. 241 (2) of the Government of India Act, 1935,
the conditions of service, in the case of persons serving in
connection with the affairs of a Province, were to be such
as may be prescribed by rules made by the Governor, or by
persons authorised to make rules for that purpose. But this
provision was, till other- provisions were made, subject to
cl. 15 (2) of the Commencement and Transitory Provisions
Order, 1936. Clause 7 of the Adaptation of Indian Laws
Order on which reliance was placed by counsel for the
appellant in support of his contention that the Governor
alone could exercise the powers of dismissal under the Rules
because he was the corresponding authority, does not also
assist the appellant. The clause applies only to those
cases where an authority competent at the date of passing of
any Indian law, to exercise any powers or authorities or
discharge any functions, ceased to exist and a corresponding
new authority was constituted by or under any Part of the
Government of India Act, 1935 : the clause did not apply
where only the powers of an authority were vested in another
authority, the former authority not otherwise ceasing to
function. The condition of service of civil servants having
remained unaltered even after the Government of India Act,
1935 was brought into operation by virtue of the
Commencement and Transitory Provisions Order 1936, and the
Adaptation of Indian Laws Order having made express
provision saving the rules as well as the authority granted
under the rules to the Financial Commissioner, the order of
the Financial Commissioner dismissing the appellant from
service was not unauthorised.
522
The contention of counsel for the appellant that by the
enactment of s. 241 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
civil servants serving a Province could be dismissed after
that Act was brought into operation only by the Governor of
the Province and by no other authority has therefore no
force.
Counsel submitted that in any event, fresh rules governing
the civil services in the Punjab having been framed in 1941
by the Government of the Province of Punjab, the Tehsildari
Rules, 1932 even if they were not superseded by the amend-
ment made by the Adaptation of Indian laws Order, 1937 in
the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887 stood expressly repealed,
and the powers of the Financial Commissioner to dismiss a
Tehsildar could not thereafter, be exercised. But the plea
that fresh rules were framed in 1941 in supersession of the
Punjab Tesbsildari Rules, 1932 was not advanced in the High
Court. In 1941, fresh Civil Services Rules applicable to
the Punjab were undoubtedly promulgated; it is however
unnecessary to consider whether under the Punjab Civil’
Service Rules, 1941 the Governor alone was competent to
dismiss from service a public servant of the Provincial
Service or subordinate Service or officers holding special
posts or any other Government servant or class of Government
servants to whom those rules applied. It was expressly
enacted in r. 1 4 that the Civil Services Rules were not to
apply to any person for whose appointments and conditions of
service special provision was made by or under any law for
the time being in force. Special provision did in fact
exist for the appointments and Condition of service of
Tehsildars Under the law for the time being in force and
those rules are not shown to have been superseded or
abrogated by the Civil Services Rules. Counsel for the
appellant asserted that Tehsildars belonged to the
Subordinate Services, Class III, and the rules framed in
1941 under s. 241 of the Government of India Act superseded
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 19
the Tehsildari Rules,
523
of 1932. The Advocate General appearing for the State of
Punjab submitted that Tehsildars were not included in the
Subordinate Services, because no notification in that behalf
was issued. As we have already observed, the question as to
the effect of the rules framed in 1941 under s. 241 of the
Government of India Act was never raised or argued before
Bishan Narain, J., nor before the High Court in appeal. It
is difficult for this Court to entertain any plea depending
for its adjudications on notifications said to be issued by
the Government from time to time, raised for the first time
in appeal, when such notifications have never been brought
to our notice.
On the whole, we are of the view that the record does not
support the contention that the Punjab Tehsildari Rules were
not in operation at the date of dismissal. There is also
nothing to show that the Financial Commissioner was not
invested at the material time with the power to dismiss a
Tehsildar.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-I regret my inability to agree with the
view that the Punjab Tehsildari Rules of 1932 applied to the
service of Tehsildars and Naib Tebsildars in 1953.
The appellant was an officiating Tehsildar in 1953 in the
State of Punjab, when he was dismissed by the Financial
Commissioner, Punjab, on October 26, 1953. Having failed to
get the order changed as a result of his appeal and a
revision to the Government, be field a petition under Art.
226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Punjab and
prayed for his reinstatement from the date of his dismissal
by the issue of an appropriate writ. Among the grounds in
support of his prayer, the petition mentioned that the
Financial Commissioner was not competent authority to order
the dismissal of a Tehsildar in view of Rule 2.14 of the
Punjab Civil Services Rules, (hereinafter called the Civil
Services Rules), read with Chapter XV,
524
the Rules being framed under Art. 309 of the Constitution.
It was contended on behalf of the State that the
petitioner’s terms and conditions of service were governed
by the Punjab Tehsildari Rules, 1932 (hereinafter called the
Tehsildari Rules) which empowered the Financial Commissioner
to appoint and dismiss Tehsildars.
Bishan Narain, J., who heard the petition, allowed it
holding that the Tehsildari Rules ceased to operate since
the amendment of s. 9 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887
(Act.XVII of 1887), hereinafter called the Revenue Act), by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order,
1937, (hereinafter called the adaptation Order), which
deleted that part of the section which empowered the
Financial Commissioner to make rules for the appointment and
removal of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars, and in’the
exercise of which power the Tehsildari Rules had been made
by the Financial Commissioner, there being nothing in the
Government of India Act, 1935, (hereinafter called the Act)
or in the Adaptation Order preserving the validity of these
Rules notwithstanding the repeal of the relevant provision
in s. 9 of the Revenue Act. He observed in his order :
"It is nobody’s case that the Punjab Civil
Service Rules made after the 1935 Act Contain
any provision which keeps these rules of 1932
alive and in force. Neither is it the
respondent’s case that after the amendment of
Section 9 of the Punjab Act the Governor or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 19
the Provincial Government ever delegated the
power of appointments and dismissals of
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars to the Finan-
cial Commissioner."
The Tehsildari Rules, therefore, according to him, being
inoperative after the commencement of the Act, could not
have become operative under the
525
Constitution, by virtue of the provisions of Art. 372 of the
Constitution. Holding that the Civil Services Rules which
governed all States services governed the services of
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars and that nothing in those
Rules empowered the Financial Commissioner to appoint or
dismiss a Tehsildar, he allowed the petition, ordering that
the appellant’s dismissal was void and of no legal effects.
The State preferred a Letters Patent Appeal. The grounds of
appeal mentioned that the Tebsildari Rules were in force on
January 25, 1950, in view of ss. 292 and 293 of the Act and
also s. 18 (3) of the Indian Independence Act, and
thereafter under Art. 372 of the Constitution, and that the
finding that the conditions of service of Tehsildars were
governed by the Civil Services Rules was wrong.
The appellate judgement considered that the Tehsildari Rules
were made either in The exercise of the powers conferred by
the Government of India Act, 1919, or in the exercise of the
powers conferred by the Revenue Act, and came to the
conclusion that in the former case they continued to be
effective rules in view of s. 276 of the Act, and Art. 313
of the Constitution, it being not shown that those rules had
been replaced by another set of rules or those rules were
inconsistent with the provisions of the Act or the Constitu-
tion and that in the latter case the rules continued to be
in force by virtue of paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Adaptation
Order which made it clear that the Financial Commissioner
who had the power to appoint or dismiss a Tehsildar
continued to exercise those powers, those powers having been
not abrogated or withdrawn. The Letters Patent Appeal was
consequently allowed and the writ petition was dismissed.
It is against this order that the appellant has filed this
appeal by certificate granted by the High Court.
526
It is contended for the appellant that the Tehsildari Rules
ceased to be operative from the commencement of the Act and
in any case, ceased to be operative from the 1st of April
1941 when the Civil Services Rules made by the Governor came
into force and that therefore the Financial Commissioner was
not competent to dismiss the appellant.
It has not been urged for the respondent in this Court that
the Tehsildari Rules were framed under the Government of
India Act of 1919 and that therefore they continued to be in
force in view of s. 276 of the Act, and Art. 313 of the
Constitution. The contention, even if it had been raised,
could not have succeeded, as a Rule empowering ;a Financial
Commissioner to appoint and dismiss Tehsildars could not
have been consistent with the provisions of s. 241 of the
Act which laid down that, except as expressly provided by
the Act, appointments to the Civil services or any civil
posts under the Crown in India would be made in the case of
services of a province and posts in connection with the
affairs of a province by the Governor or such persons as he
may direct.
It has not been urged before us, that the Government aid,
subsequent to the enforcement of the Act pass any order
empowering the Financial Commissioner to appoint and dismiss
Tehsildars.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 19
The order of the Financial Commissioner was supported on
behalf of the State on the provisions of paragraphs 9 and 10
of the Adaptation Order of 1937 and rule 1.4 of the Civil
Services Rules, 1941, and at the further hearing, in connec-
tion with the effect of paragraph 7 of that Order to which
no reference had been made at the first hearing, on the
provisions of cl. (2) paragraph 15 of Government of India
(Commencement and Transitory Provisions) Order, 1936
(hereinafter
527
called the Transitory, Order), and paragraph 12 of the
Adaptation Order. The contention really is that the
Tehsildari Rules continued to be valid both in view of
paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Adaptation Order and the
Transitory Order till such time as the Governor made the new
rules and that the Tehsildari Rules continued to be in force
after the 1st of April 1941 since the Tehsildars were
persons for whose appointment and conditions of service
special provision had been made under those rules.
I shall first deal with the effect of the provisions of the
Adaptation Order on the Tehsildari Rules.
Section 292 of the Act reads
"’Notwithstanding the repeal by this Act of
the Government of India Act, but subject to
the other provisions of this Act, all the law
in force in British India immediately before
the commencement of part III of this Act shall
continue in force in British India until
altered or repealed or amended by a competent
Legislature or other competent authority."
Section 293 of the Act reads
"His Majesty may by Order in Council to be
made at any time after the passing of this Act
provide that, as from such date as may be
specified in the Order, any law in force in
British India or in any part of British India
shall until repealed or amended by a competent
Legislature or other competent authority, have
effect subject to such adaptations and
modifications as appear to His Majesty to be
necessary or, expedient for bringing the
provisions of that law into accord with the
provisions of this Act and, in particular,
into accord with the
528
provisions thereof which reconstitute under
different names governments and authorities in
India and prescribe the distribution of
legislative and executive powers between the
Federation and the Provinces :
Provided that no such law as aforesaid shall
be made applicable to any Federated State by
an Order in Council made under this section.
In this section the expression law’ does not
include an Act of Parliament, but includes any
ordinance, Order, bye-law, rule or regulation
having in British India the force of law.
It is in the exercise of the power conferred by this section
that the Adaptation Order was issued. Such provisions of
the existing law were to continue in force as were
consistent with the Act. Power was vested in His Majesty
under s. 293 of the Act to modify the provisions of existing
laws in such manner as may be necessary for bringing them
into accord with the provisions of the Act and, in parti-
cular, to bring them into accord with the provisions of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 19
new Act which reconstituted under different names,
governments and authorities in India.
Paragraph 3 of the Adaptation Order provided that the laws
mentioned in the Schedules would have effect subject to the
adaptations and modifications directed by those Schedules
until they are repealed or amended by a competent authority
or by a competent Legislature.
Section 9 of the Revenue Act was modified by the Adaptation
Order. Before such modifications, it read:
"The Provincial Government shall fix the
number of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars to be
appointed and the Financial Commissioner may
make rules for their appointment and removal".
620
The Adaptation Order substituted the word State’ for,, the
word ’Provincial’. and omitted the words after the word
appointed.’ It follows that the power of the Financial
Commissioner to make rules for the appointment of Tehsildars
and Naib Tehsildars did not exist any longer, the provisions
for such a power having been repealed by the Adaptation
Order. The consequence. of such a repeal is that such a
power would be deemed to have never existed in the Financial
Commissioner and that the rules framed by him would be
deemed to be rules framed without any jurisdiction to make
them. This is not really disputed and has the support of
the observations in Watson v. Winch(1). The Revenue Act,
after amendment, did not provide about the appointment of
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars. This must have been in view
of the statutory provision existing for the purpose in sub-
s. 1 of s. 241 of the Act whose relevant portion is:
"Except as expressly provided by this Act,
appointments to the civil services of, and
civil posts under, the Crown in India, shall,
after the commencement of Part III of this
Act, be made:-
x x x x x
(b) in the case of services of province, and
posts in connection with the affairs of a
provinces by the Governor or such person as he may direct
."
It is to be noticed that the modifications made by the
Adaptation Order to ss. 7 and 8 deleted the provisions
empowering the State Government to remove the officers it
could appoint under the provisions of those sections.
Paragraph 9 of the Adaptation Order reads:
"The provisions of this Order which adapt or
modify Indian laws so as to alter the manner
in which, the authority by, which-, or the law
under or in accordance with which,
(1) (1916) 1 K. B. 688.
any powers are exercisable, shall not render
invalid any notification, order commitment
attachment, bye-law, rule or regulation duly
made or issued, or anything duly done, before
the commencement of this order; and any such
notification, order, commitment, attachment,
bye-law, rule, regulation or thing maybe
revoked, varied or undone in the like manner
to the like extent and in the like circum-
stances as if it had been made, issued or done
after the commencement of this Order by the
competent authority and under and in accor-
dance with the provisions then applicable to
such a case."
The Adaptation Order modifies the law under which the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 19
Tebsildari Rules were framed. The result of the provisions
of paragraph 9 of Adaptation Order is that the Tehsildari
Rules were not rendered invalid, and that, for the purpose
of revoking, varying or undoing the rules, they were to be
deemed to be made under the Act. There is nothing in this
paragraph to provide that the rules must continue in the
same form in which they exist, even if they were
inconsistent with the provisions of the Act. Such could not
have been provided by the Adaptation Order and has not been
provided. The provisions of this paragraph apply when
specified modifications are made by the Order not when the
Act itself affects similar provisions of the Indian Law. If
something contrary to the rule has already been provided in
the act, no further occasion for making that change in the
rule by a competent Legislature or authority arises. A
subsequent change by a competent authority is contemplated
only when no change has already been made in those rules on
account of the provisions of the Act. The Tehsildari Rules
therefore became inoperative in so far as they provided that
the Financial Commissioner could appoint and dismiss
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars, as such a provision was
inconsistent
531
with the provisions of s. 241 of the Act, which vests the
power of appointment in the Governor or in any, other person
in accordance with his directions. The power of appointment
carries with it the power of dismissal.
In Pradyat Kumar v. Chief Justice of Calcutta(1) this Court
had to consider whether the Chief Justice of the Calcutta
High Court had power to dismiss an employee of the High
Court. In this connection, it was not disputed that the
Chief Justice was the authority for appointing the
appellant. But it was contended that he had not the power
to dismiss. The contention was that the appellant was a
public servant governed by the Civil Services (Classifica-
tion, Control and Appeal) Rules of 1930, as amended from
time to time and that those rules continued to apply even
after the Government of India Act, 1935, and later when the
Constitution of India came into force. It was not disputed
that ,dismissal’ was a matter falling within "condition of
service’ of a public servant as held by the Privy, Council
in North West Frontier Province v. Suraj Narain Anand(2),
and that the power of making rules relating to the
conditions of service of staff of the High Court was vested
in the Chief Justice of the High Court under s. 242(4) taken
with s. 241 of the Act and also under Art. 229(2), of the
constitution. It was however contended that the Chief
Justice of the High Court had not framed any such rules and
that therefore, by virtue of s. 276 of the Act and Art. 313
of the constitution, the Civil Services Rules continued to
apply to the appellant. In considering the contention
raised, this Court said at page 288 :
"It will be noticed that cl. 8 (of the Letters
Patent of the High Court, 1865, as amended in
1919) specifically vests in the Chief Justice
the power of appointment, but makes no mention
of the power of removal
(1) A.I.R. 1956 &C. 285.
(2) A.I.R. 1949 PC. 112,
532
or of making regulations or provisions. But
it is obvious from the last portion of el. 4
that such power was taken to be implicit under
el. 8 and presumably as arising from the power
of appointment."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 19
It was again said at the same page in considering the powers
of the Supreme Court of Calcutta under the Charter of 1774
"The power of removal or of taking other
disciplinary action as regards such appointees
was not in terms granted. But there is
historical evidence to show that the power of
appointment conferred under the Charter was
always understood as comprising the above
powers. "
And again, it was said:
,"Thus it is clear that both under the Charter
of the Supreme Court as well as under the
Letters Patent of the High Court, the power of
appointment was throughout understood as
vesting in the High Court or the Chief
Justice, the complete administrative and
disciplinary control over its staff, including
the power of dismissal."
It was further said, at page 291:
",It must be mentioned, at this stage, that so
far as the power of dismissal is concerned,
the position under the Constitution of 1950 is
not open to any argument or doubt. Article
229(1) which in terms vests the power of
appointment in the Chief Justice is equally
effective to vest in him the power of
dismissal.
This results from s. 16, General Clauses Act
which, by virtue of Article 367(1) of the
Constitution applies to the construction of
the word "appointment’ in Art. 229(1).
Section 16(1) General Clauses Act, clearly.
"provides
533
that the power of ,appointment’ includes the
power to suspend or dismiss’.
Paragraph 7 of the Adaptation Order reads:
"Subject to the forgoing provisions of this
order, any reference by whatever form of words
in any Indian Law in force immediately before
the commencement of this order to an authority
competent at the date of the passing of that
law to exercise any powers or authorities, or
discharge any functions, in any part of
British India shall, where a corresponding new
authority has been constituted by or under any
Part the Government of India Act, 1935, for
the time being in force, have effect until
duly repealed or amended as if it were a
reference to that new authority."
I am of opinion that in view of paragraph 7 of the
Adaptation Order quoted above, reference to to the Financial
Commissioner in the Tehsildari Rules dealing with the
appointment and removal of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars be
taken to be a reference to the new authority constituted
under the Act for their appointment and dismissal. The
authority for appointment and dismissal was the Financial
Commissioner. Corresponding new authority, i. e., a now
authority which has power to appoint and dismiss the
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars, is the Governor, in view of
s. 241 of the Act, and therefor-,, reference to the
Financial Commissioner in the Rules should be taken to be a
reference to the Governor, or to such authority as be
appointed by the Governor for the purpose, so long as those
rules continued to be in force subsequent to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 19
commencement of part III of the Act, i.e. till they are
repealed or amended by new rules. do not agree with the
contention for the State that since the office of the
Financial Commissioner did continue to exist; the provisions
of paragraph 7 of the Adaptation Order cannot be applied.
The word ’new’ with reference to the authority, does,
534
not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the office in
which a particular authority. was vested under the old law
must cease to exist and that it is only then that any
reference to that old authority would be taken to be a
reference to the now authority on which that power is
conferred. In my opinion, the expression ’corresponding new
authority’ means a new authority on which the power which
was exercised by the earlier authority had been conferred.
Paragraph 10 of the Adaptation Order reads:
"Save as provided by this order, all powers
which under any law in force in British India,
or in any part of British India, were
immediately before the commencement of Part
III of the Government of India Act, 1935,
vested in, or exercisable by any person or
authority shall continue to be so vested or
exercisable until other provision is made by
some legislature or authority empowered to
regulate the matter in question."
The only paragraph which has a bearing on the exercise of
powers in this Order is paragraph 7. The result of reading
paragraphs 7 and 10 together is that if a new authority had
been constituted for the exercise of any powers or discharge
of any functions, those powers will no more remain vested in
the old authority, but when no such corresponding new
authority has been constituted, the old authority will
continue to exercise those powers till other provision is
validly made.
I am therefore of opinion that the provisions of paragraph
10 of the Order are not to be constructed in a way to make
the old authority continue to exercise that power, when the
Government of India Act itself constitutes another authority
for that purpose. If the Adaptation Order be so construed,
the adaptation made by the Order would hardly
535
be in furtherance of the provisions of s. 293 of the Act.
In this connection I may quote the very apposite
observations in Pradyat Kumar v. Chief Justice of Calcutta
(1) at page 290 :
"The continued application of the Civil
Services Rules without such adaptation would
result in the anomalous position, that
although the 1935 Act specifically vests in
the Chief Justice the power of appointment and
of framing rules regulating conditions, of
service including the power of dismissal and
hence thereby indicates the Chief Justice as
the authority having the power to exercise
disciplinary control, he has no such disci-
plinary control merely because he did not
choose to make any fresh rules and was content
with the continued application of the old
rules."
The same anomaly would arise under the present case if in
spite of the Act vesting the power of appointment and of
making rules in the Governor, he be deemed to have lost that
power merely because he did not frame any fresh rules.
Section 310 of the Government of India Act, 1935 reads thus
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 19
:
"(1) Whereas difficulties may arise in
relation to the transition from the provisions
of the Government of India Act, to the pro-
visions of this Act, and in relation to the
transition from the provisions of Part XIII of
this Act to the provisions of Part II of this
Act :
And whereas the nature of those difficulties,
and of the provision which should be made for
meeting them, cannot at the date of the
passing of this Act be fully fore seen
(1) A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 285.
536
Now therefore, for the purpose of facilitating each of the
said transitions His Majesty may by Order in Council-
(a) direct that this Act and any provisions
of the Government of India Act still in force
shall, during such limited period as may be
specified in the Order, have effect subject to
such adaptations and notifications as may be
so specified :
(b) make, with respect to a limited period
so specified such temporary provision as he
thinks fit for ensuring that, while the
transition is being effected and during the
period immediately following it, there are
available to all governments in India and
Burma sufficient revenue to enable the
business of those governments to be carried on
; and
(e) make, such other temporary provisions
for the purpose of removing any such
difficulties as aforesaid as may be specified
in the Order.
(2) No Order in Council in relation to the
transition from the provisions of Part XIII of
this Act to the provisions of Part 11 of this
Act shall be made under this section after the
expiration of six months from the
establishment of the Federation, and no other
Order in Council shall be made under this
section after the expiration of six months
from the commencement of Part III of this
Act."
Paragraph 15 of the Transitory Order reads :
"(1) For a period of twelve months from the
date of the commencement of Part III of the
new Act a person who immediately before the
said date was holding an office under the
Crown in India shall Act be disqualified
537
from continuing to hold that office by reason
of the fact that he is not a British subject
and that no declaration entitling him to hold
the office has been made under section two
hundred and sixty-two of the new Act.
(2) Until other provision is made under the
new Act, the conditions of service applicable
to any person or any class of persons
appointed or to be appointed to serve His
Majesty in a civil capacity in India shall be
the same as were applicable to that person or,
as the case may be, to persons of that class
immediately before the commencement of Part
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 19
III of the new Act."
The provisions of cl. (2) of the above paragraph are in
furtherance of the provisions of cl. (c) of sub-s.(1) of s.
310, and not in view of cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 310, as
those provisions do not direct in any way that any
provisions of the Government of India Act 1935, or of the
Government of India Act of 1919 would have effect subject to
certain specified adaptations and modifications and during
any limited period. It follows that these provisions do not
affect the operation of s. 241 (1) of the Act empowering the
Government to make appointment. In fact its operation could
be affected only by any express provision in the Act itself.
Power of appointment includes power of dismissal.
It is true that the conditions of service include the
provisions prescribing the circumstances in which a
government servant be dismissed or removed from service.
But the previous conditions of service will continue only
till such time as other provision is made under the Act.
When the Act already provided by s. 241 (1) that the
Governor would be the appointing authority, the natural
consequence of which was that the Governor would be the
authority to dismiss there was nothing
538
the provisions of this sub-paragraph-for the conditions of
service relating to dismissal to be operative subsequent to
the coming into force of the Act. Even if it be construed
that the provisions of this sub-paragraph justified the
continuance of the Tehsildari Rules till other provisions
were made under the Act reference to the Financial Commis-
sioner in these Rules will be taken to be reference to the
Governor in view of paragraph 7 of the Adaptation Order as
already held by me. It is contended for the State that
nothing in the Adaptation Order will affect these provisions
in view of cl. (d) of paragraph 12 of the Adaptation Order
which reads :
"(For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby
declared that)-
no repeal effected by this order shall affect
the operation of sub-paragraph (2) of para-
graph fifteen of the Government of India
(Commencement and Transitory Provisions)
Order, 1936."
This clause simply provides for the provisions of sub-
paragraph(2) of paragraph 15 of the Transitory order to be
not affected by any repeal made by the Adaptation Order, but
does not provide that the provisions of this sub-paragraph
would not be affected by the provisions of the Act itself or
of the Adaptation Order which do not repeal any law. It
follows therefore that in the construction of the rules
laying down the conditions of service, the provisions of
paragraph 7 of the Adaptation Order which do not repeal any
law will have to be applied and that therefore reference to
the Financial Commissioner in these rules will be taken to’
be a reference to the Governor.
Even if the contention for the State about the effect of
subparagraph (2) of paragraph 15 of the Transitory Order and
of the various paragraphs of the Adaptation Order be
accepted, the Tehsildari Rules will continue only till
other rules are made
539
by the Governor in the exercise of his power under s.241(2)
of the Act.
The Governor of Punjab made the Punjab Civil Services Rules
under s. 241 of the Government of India Act, 1935. These
rules came into force from April 1, 1941. The learned
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 19
Single Judge held that these rules applied to the appellant
and said that it was nobody’s case that the Civil Service
Rules, made after the 1935 Act, contained any provisions
which kept those Rules of 1932 alive and in force. The
judgment under appeal does not may to the contrary. In fact
it makes no reference to these rules at all.
The learned Advocate General for the State submitted that
these Rules did not apply to the appellant in view of
cl.(ii) of r. 1.4. I do not agree with this contention.
Rule 1.2 reads
"(a) Except as otherwise provided in rule 1.4
infra, or in any other rule or rules, these
rules shall apply to all Government servants
belonging to the categories mentioned below,
who are under the administrative control of
the Punjab Government and whose pay is
debitable to the revenue of the Punjab:-
(1) Members of Provincial Services
(2) Members of Subordinate Services
(3) Holders of Special Posts; and
(4) Any other Government servant or
class of Government servants to whom the
competent authority may, by general or special
order, make them applicable.
(b) These rules shall also apply-
(1) to the persons serving on (i) the staff
attached to the High Court, Lahore, and (ii)
Secretarial staff of the Governor, in respect
of whom powers to frame rules have been
54O
vested in the Chief Justice and the governor
under sections 242 (4) and 305 (2) of the
Government of India Act, 1935, respectively;
and
(2) to the subordinate ranks of the Punjab
Police forces’ appointed under special Acts
relating to those forces in so far as they are
not inconsistent with the provisions in those
Acts (vide s. 243 of the Government of India
Act, 1935)".
Rule 1.3 provides for the competent authority to make rules
inconsistent with these rules in certain conditions by
agreement with the person appointed. Rule 1.4 reads.
"These rules shall not apply to-
(i) Any Government servant between whom and
the Gevernment, a specific contract or
agreement subsists in respect of any matter
dealt with herein to the extent upto which
specific provision is made in the contract or
agreement (vide rule 1.3);
(ii) any person for whose appointment and
conditions of service special provision is
made by or under any law for the time being in
force; and
(iii) any Government servant or class of
Government servants to whom the competent
authority may, by general or special order,
direct that they shall not apply in whole or
in part. One of such classes of Government
servants is that employed only occasionally or
which is subject to discharge at one month’s
notice or less, A list of such Government
servants is given in Appendix 2."
Reliance for the State, as already mentioned, is placed on
cl. (ii) of this rule. It in contended
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 19
541
that the provisions under the Tehsildari Rules for the
appointment and conditions of service of Tehsildars and Naib
Tehsildars amount to special provisions made by or under any
law for the time being in force. If rules existed for any
service, and I presume that they existed for almost all
services, prior to the coming into force of the Civil
Services Rules, Punjab, the interpretation sought to be put
on el. (ii) would make such rules special provisions
contemplated by that clause, and to my mind, the Civil
Services Rules would not then apply to most of the services
and persons holding posts. Such could not have been the
intention of the rule-making power, and such a construction
ought not to be put on el. (ii), unless there be something
which compels such a construction to be placed on this
clause, and which I do not find anywhere in these rules. I
am of opinion that Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars do not
come under this exception. They, according to the Teh-
sildari Rules, constitute the Punjab Service of Tehsildars
and Naib Tehsildars. Clause (ii) does not refer to services
as such, but contemplates individual persons for *hose
appointment special provision is made by or under any law
for the time being in force. It speaks of special
provisions with respect to a person. I find it difficult to
hold that rules applicable to a service come within the
special provisions applicable to a member of that service.
The special provision contemplated by this clause ought to
be made under some law or under the provisions of some law
which has force when the Civil Services Rules apply to the
services and that person. To hold that the Tehsildari Rules
amount to such law will presume’ that they continued in
force after the Civil Services Rules, 1941, have come into
force. No such presumption can be made when this is the
point to be determined.
The Tehsildari Rules were not made under any law which was
in force during the period
542
subsequent to the coming into force of the Civil Services
Rules. They were made under a certain provision of the
Punjab Land Revenue Act. That provision was repealed by the
Adaptation Order in 1937, and therefore, those rules cannot
be said to have been made under any law which was in force
for the time being , since the enforcement of the Civil
Services Rules. I am therefore of opinion that clause (ii)
of r. 1.4 does not apply to the case of the appellant and
that therefore his case is governed by rule 1.2.
The persons who are contemplated under cl.(ii) of rule 1.4
are those with respect to whom the Act or other statutes in
force lay down provisions for appointment and conditions of
service.
The Act itself provides in s. 243 that the conditions of
service of the subordinate ranks of the various police
forces in India shall be such as may be determined by or
under the Acts relating to those forces respectively
notwithstanding anything in the foregoing provisions of the
Act. Reference to this provision is made in sub-cl. (2) of
el. (b) of rule 1.2. There may be holders of Special posts
mentioned in item No. (3) of cl. (a) of rule 1.2 and other
officers under the administrative control of the Punjab
Government to whom the provisions of a. 244 to 247 of the
Act may apply and be thus put out of the, Rule making power
of the Punjab Government. There may be other Acts which lay
down special provisions for the appointment and conditions
of service of persons in the service of the Punjab
Government.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 19
Reference may also be made to Chapter XIV of the Civil
Services Rules, Punjab. Rule 14.1 reads thus :
"Besides the All-India Services which are
under the rule making control of the Secretary
of State the services under the adminis-
543
trative control of the Punjab Government
consist of the following classes :-
(i) the Provincial Services; and
(ii) the Subordinate Services."
It is clear that every service under the Administrative
control of the Punjab Government comes either under the
Provincial Services or under the Subordinate Services. The
Services of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars contemplated by
the Tehsildari Rules must therefore come under the
Subordinate Services for the purpose of rule 14.1. This is
also clear from rules 14.5 and 14.6.
The Tehsildari Rules are with respect to the recruitment and
appointment of Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars and also deal
with the seniority of the members of the service and the
penalties, including the penalty of dismissal, which can be
imposed upon any member of the service by the authorities
mentioned in it, after following the procedure laid down.
The rules, it is obvious, do not refer to many a matter
which affect the service and which are dealt with by the
Civil Services Rules in addition to appointment and
dismissal of government servants. In matters not covered by
the Tehsildari Rules, the Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars
must be governed by the Civil Services Rules. I cannot
contemplate, that there are no rules to govern them in
respect of those matters. It cannot be that these Civil
Rules will apply to Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars in
certain matters and not in matters of appointment and
dismissal. Clause (ii) of rule 1.4 does not make the rules
partially not applicable to the persons contemplated by it.
This consideration supports my interpretation of this clause
to the effect that it does not cover the case of Tehsildars
and Naib Tehsildars.
I find certain rules specifically referring to Tehsildars
and Naib Tehsildars, and this, in my
544
opinion, leaves no room for doubt that the Civil Service
Rules apply to Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars.
Rule 2.16 defines ’duty’. Clause (b) of this rule states
that a Government servant is also treated as on duty under
the circumstances specified in the schedule to Chapter 11.
The schedule referred to mentions in el. (4) of item II that
a Tehsildar or a Naib Tehsildar, in certain circumstances
specified therein, will be treated to be on duty, even
though he may have spent time beyond his sphere of duty.
Rule 5.35 deals with circumstances in which a competent
authority may grant rent-free accommodation to any
government servant. Appendix 7 gives the list of government
servants granted rent-free quarters, as referred to in Note
6 to rule 5.35. Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars are included
among such servants according to Serial entry No. 3.
Rule 8.23 deals with the authorities competent to grant
certain type of leave. These authorities are mentioned in
Appendix 12. At serial No. 7 the entry shows that
Commissioners of Divisions can grant such leave to
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars. Appendix 17, referred to in
rule 8.61 authorises the Deputy Commissioners to grant
casual leave to Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars. Appendix 23
deals with Government Servants’ Conduct Rules, 1935,
referred to in rule 14.8.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 19
I am therefore of opinion that the Civil Service Rules of
1941 governed the conditions of service of Tehsildars and
Naib Tehsildars and that the Tehsildari Rules of 1932 ceased
to be operative from April 1, 1941 even if they continued to
be effective till that date in view of the provisions of the
Transitory Order and the Adaptation Order. The Tehsildari
Rules, therefore were not in force immediately before the
545
coming into force of the constitution and therefore could
not have continued in force after January 26, 1950. Article
313 provided for the continuance of such laws which were in
force immediately before the commencement of the
constitution and which were applicable to any public service
and which service continued to exist after the commencement
of the Constitution. Such laws were to continue until other
provisions were made in that behalf under the constitution.
The Governor of the Punjab, in the exercise of his powers
under the proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution made the
Punjab Civil Service Rules which were to come into force
from April 1, 1953. The rules corresponding to the rules of
1941 referred to by me are similar and therefore, in view of
my opinion that the Civil Services Rules of 1941 applied to
the services of Tehsildars, and Naib Tehsildars also apply
to that ’service.
I may just mention that rule 1.2 describes the categories of
services under the administrative control of the Punjab
Government differently from rule 1.2 of 1941. Members of
Provincial Services were placed in three categories. Those
of classes I and II in the first category, those of class
III in the second and those of class IV in the third
category and schedule to rule 14.5 gives the list of
services declared as Provincial Services, Classes I and II.
Rule 14.6 states that the Specialist Services shall consist
of such Services (other than All India and Provincial
Services, Class I and II) as the Government may from time to
time by notification in the Punjab Gazette declare to be
Specialist Services, and rule 14.7 then provides that
Provincial Services, Class III and IV, include persons to
whom those rules apply and who are not already included in
the Provincial Services Class I and Class II and the
Specialist Services. The Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars
thus come either in the Provincial Services Class III Or
Class IV. The appellant was dismissed
546
by an order of the Financial Commissioner dated October 26,
1953, when the Punjab Civil Services Rules which came into
force on April 1, 19.53 were in force. Rule 14.9 provides
that a competent authority may issue rules specifying the
penalties which may be imposed on members of the services
and the procedure for preferring appeals against the
imposition of such penalties. Appendix 24 to these rules
gives the Punjab Civil Services (Punishment and Appeal)
Rules, 1952. Rule 6 of these rules states that subject to
the provisions 1 of clause(1) of Article 311 of the
Constitution of India, the authorities competent to impose
any of the penalties specified in rule 4 upon the persons to
whom these rules apply, shall be such as maybe prescribed by
Government in the rules regulating the appointment and
conditions of service of such persons. It has not been
shown that the Financial Commissioner is one of the
authorities prescribed by the Government in the rules
regulating the appointment and conditions of service of
Tehsildars and Naib Tehsildars. It follows therefore that
the Financial Commissioner cannot be hold to be a Competent
authority to dismiss Tehsildars, in 1953.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 19
I am therefore of opinion that the dismissal of the
appellant by the Financial Commissioner is illegal. I would
therefore allow the appeal with costs, set aside the order
under appeal and restore the order of the learned Single
Judge, dated April 4, 1957.
By COURT: In view of the opinion of majority, the appeal is
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
547