Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANGILAL PINDWAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/07/1996
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
NANAVATI G.T. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCC (5) 60 JT 1996 (6) 162
1996 SCALE (5)38
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 8TH DAY OF JULY, 1996
Present:
Hon’ble Mr.Justice S.C. Agrawal
Hontble Mr.Justice G.T. Nanavati
Aruneshwar Gupta and Manoj K. Das, Advs. for the appellant
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
State of Rajasthan
V.0
Mangilal Pindwal
J U D G M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL, J.
The question that falls for consideration in this
appeal relates to the validity of the amendment introduced
in Rule 244(2) of the Rajasthan Service Rules,1951.(herein
after referred to as the ’the Rule’) by notification dated
March 11, 1976. Rule 244 (2) makes provision for compulsory
retirement of Government servant.
The respondent was employed as an Upper Division Clerk
with the Government of Rajasthan. After he had completed 25
years of qualifying service he was compulsorily retired by
order of the Collector, Ajmer dated March 31, 1973 on
payment of three months’ pay and allowances in lieu of
notice, The said order was passed under sub-rule (2) of Rule
244 of the Rules. Along with the order of Compulsory
retirement a bank draft for a sum of Rs. 1,494/-
representing three months’ pay and allowances was sent to
the respondent. The respondent filed a writ petition in the
Rajasthan High Court Challenging tithe said order of
compulsory retirement. The said writ petition was allowed by
the learned Single Judge of the High Court by order dated
January 17, 1978 on the ground that there was non-compliance
with the provisions of sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 of the Rules
inasmuch as the amount paid to the respondent towards three
months pay and allowances along with the order of compulsory
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retirement was short by Rs. 120/-. On January 28, 1978
notification dated March 11, 1976 was published in the
Rajasthan Gazette. By the said notification sub-rule (2) of
Rule 244 of the Rules was substituted. The said amendment
was operative from August 19, 1972 and was to remain in
force up to September 1, 1975. Under the amended provision
the requirement of payment of three months pay and
allowances in lieu of notice at the time of compulsory
retirement was dispensed with and it was prescribed that on
retirement the Government servant would be entitled to claim
three months pay and allowances in lieu of notice in the
special appeal filed by the appellant State against the
judgment of the learned Single Judge reliance was placed by
the appellant on the said amendment in Rule 44,(2) and it
was urged that in view of the said amendment it was not pre-
requisite that the payment of three months pay and
allowances in lieu of notice should have accompanied the
order of compulsory retirement and that the order of
compulsory retirement could not be invalidated if a shorter
amount was paid or no payment at all was made at the time of
service of the order of compulsory retirement upon the
concerned Government servant. The said contention was
negatived and the special appeal was dismissed by the
Division Bench of the High Court by the impugned judgment
dated April 15, 1980 on the view that the amendment made in
the Rules vide notification dated March 11, 1976 was
invalid. Hence this appeal while granting special leave by
order dated April 14, 1981, this Court imposed the condition
that "whatever be the decision of this Court it shall not
affect the respondent anti the High Court’s decision in his
favour shall remain undisturbed.
On March 31, 1973, the date of the passing of the
order. of compulsory retirement, sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 of
the Rules provided as under :
"(2) The Government, may, after
giving at least three months’
previous notice in writing or by
payment of three months’ pay and
allowances in lieu of such notice
require a Government servant to
retire from the service on the date
on which he completes 25 years of
qualifying service or on any date
thereafter
The said provision was introduced vide notification
dated August 19, 1972
By notification dated September 2, 1975, sub-rule (2)
of Rule 244 of the Rules was substituted by the following
provision:
"(2) The Government, may, after
giving at least three months’
previous notice in writing or by
payment of three months’ pay and
allowances in lieu of such notice
require a government servant to
retire from the service on the date
on which he completes 20 years of
qualifying service or the date on
which he attains the age of 50
years whichever is earlier, or on
any date thereafter".
By a subsequent notification dated November 26, 1975,
Rule 244 of the Rules was substituted with effect from
September 2, 1975. Sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 thus
substituted, read as follows :
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"(2) The Government, may, after
giving at least three months’
previous notice in writing require
a Government servant to retire from
the service on the date on which he
completes 20 years of qualifying
service or the date on which he
attains the age of 50 years
whichever is earlier, or on any
date thereafter :
Provided that such Government
servant may be retired front
service forthwith, and on such
retirement the Government servant
shall be entitled to claim three
months pay and allowances in lieu
of notice.
(ii) The Government may publish the
order of such retirement in
Rajasthan Rajpatra, and the
Government servant shall be deemed
to have retired on such
publication, if he has got been
served with the retirement order
earlier."
The Rajasthan Service (Amendment) Rule, 1976 made by
the Governor under notification dated March 11, 1976, were
published in the Rajasthan Gazette dated January 28, 1978.
The said Rules were brought into force with effect from
August 19.1972 and were to remain in force up to September
1, 1975. By the said Rules sub-Rule (2) of Rule 244 was
substituted by the following provision:
"(2) The Government, may, after
giving at least three months’
previous notice in writing require
a Government servant to retire from
the service on the date on which he
completes 25 years of qualifying
service or on any date thereafter:
Provided that such Government
servant may be retired from service
forthwith, and on such retirement
the Government servant shall be
entitled to claim three months pay
and allowances in lieu of notice."
The learned Judges of the High Court have held that as
a result of the substitution of sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 by
notifications dated September 2, 1975 and November 26, 1975,
provisions of sub-rule (2) of Rule 244, as applicable during
the period from August 19, 1972 till September 1, 1975,
stood substituted and, as a result, the said provisions
ceased to exist and must be treated to have been obliterated
and, therefore, Rule 244(2), as it stood on August 19, 1972,
was no longer available for supersession, amendment or
substitution on March 11, 1976, since the same stood amended
and substituted by new provisions contained in notifications
dated September 2, 1975 and November 26, 1975. The High
Court has placed reliance on the following passages from
Craies on Statute Law and Sutherland and on Statutory
Construction:
"when an Act of Parliament is
repealed, "said Lord Tenterden in
Surtees v . Ellison, "it must be
considered (except as to
transactions past and closed) as if
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it had never existed. That is the
general rule. Tindal C.J. stated
title exception more widely. He
said: "The effect of repealing a
statute is to obliterate it as
completely from the records of the
Parliament as if it had never been
passed and it must be considered as
a law that never existed except for
the purpose of those action which
were commenced, prosecuted and
concluded whilst it was an existing
law."
[Craies on Statute Law, 7th Edn.
pp. 411-412]
"Since an amendatory act alters,
modifies, or adds to a prior
statute, all courts hold that a
repealed act cannot be amended that
is, no court will give effect to a
repealed law because the
legislature attempted to amend
it."
[Sutherland on Statutory
Construction, Voil. I para 1903,
pp. 328-329]
As pointed out by this Court, the process of a
substitution of statutory provision consists of two Steps
first, the old rule is made to cease to exist and, next, the
new rule is brought into existence in its place. [see
Koteshwar Vittal Kamath v, K. Rangappa, 1969 (3) SCR 40, at
p. 48] In other words, the Substitution of a provision
results in repeal of the earlier provision and its
replacement by the new provision. As regards repeal of a
statute the law is thus stated in Sutherland on Statutory
Construction .
"The effect of the repeal of a
statute where neither a saving
clause nor a general saving statute
exists to prescribed the governing
rule for the effect of the repeal,
is to destroy the effectiveness of
the repealed act in future and to
divest the right to proceed under
the statute, which, except as to
proceedings past and closed, is
considered as if it had never
existed." [Vol. I, para 2042,
pp.522-523]
Similarly in Crawford’s Interpretation of Laws it has
been said :
"Effect of Repeal, Generally. - In
the first place, an outright repeal
will destroy the effectiveness of
the repealed act in future and
operate to destroy inchoate rights
dependent on it, as a general rule.
In many cases, however, where
statutes are repealed, they
continue to be the law of the
period during which they were in
force with reference to numerous
matters." [pp.640-641]
The Observations of Lord Tenterden and Tindal C.J.
referred in the abovementioned passages in Craies on Statute
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Law also indicate that the principle that on repeal a
statute is obliterated is subject to the exception that it
exists in respect of transactions past and closed. To the
same effect is the Jaw laid down by this Court. [See :
Qudrat Ullah v. Municipal Board. Bareilly. 1974 (2) SCR 530,
at p. 539]
This means that as a result of repeal of a statute the
statute as repealed ceases to exist with effect from the
date of such repeal but the repeal does not affect the
previous operation of the law which has been repealed during
the period it was operative prior to the date of such
repeal. The effect of the amendments that were introduced
in sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 of the Rules vide notifications
dated September 2, 1975 and November 26, 1975 whereby the
said sub-rule was substituted with effect from September 2,
1975 is that sub-rule (2) which was introduced on August 19,
1972 ceased to exist with effect from September 2, 1975 but
it was operative during the period from August 19, 1972 to
September 1, 1975. It is settled law that a rule made in
exercise of the power conferred by Article 309 of the
Constitution can have retroactive operation. Since sub-rule
(2) of Rule 244 of the Rules, as introduced in August, 1972,
was operative during the period from August 19, 1972 to
September 1, 1975, it could be amended in exercise of the
rule making power under Article 309 of the Constitution so
as to operate during the period from August 19, 1972 to
September 1, 1975. The notification dated March 11, 1976,
by substituting sub-rule (2) of Rule 244 of the Rules,
repealed the said provision that was operative during the
period from August 19, 1972 to September 1, 1975 and
replaced it by another Provision which was to be operative
during the said period. The said notification Cannot be
held to be invalid on the basis that the said amendment
sought to amend a provision which was not in existence. The
Statement of Law in Sutherland on Statutory Construction,
on which reliance was placed by the learned Judges of the
High Court, that a repealed law cannot be amended has no
application in the present case.
For the reasons aforementioned, the judgment of the
High Court dated April 15, 1980, in so far as it holds that
the amendment made in Rule 244(2) of the Rules vide
notification dated March 11, 1976, is invalid, cannot be
upheld and is set aside. The setting aside of the judgment
of the High Court in this regard would note however, affect
the respondent and the decision of the High Court in his
favour shall remain undisturbed. The appeal is disposed of
accordingly. No order as to costs.