Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE BANK OF INDIAN STAFF ASSOCIATIONAND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE BANK OF INDIAN AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/04/1996
BENCH:
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
BENCH:
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1685 1996 SCC (4) 378
JT 1996 (4) 100 1996 SCALE (3)249
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
WRIT PETITION NO. 713 OF 1995
State Bank of India Staff Association
and another
V.
State Bank of Indian and others
J U D G M E N T
FAIZAN UDDIN, J.
1. The parties in the aforementioned Civil Appeal and the
Writ Petition are the same with the distinction that in the
Civil Appeal, the appellants have challenged the order dated
July 17, 1995 passed by a Division Bench of the Allahabad
High Court, Bench Lucknow, dismissing the Writ Petition no.
1662 (M/B) of 1995, filed by the appellants on the ground
that the same was not maintainable as the earlier Writ
Petition no. 400 (S/B) of 1995 was dismissed as withdrawn
without permission to file a fresh petition for the same
relief. While the Writ Petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution of Indian pertains to the relief for quashing
of the letter dated May 3, 1995 issued by the respondents to
the General Secretary of the SBI Staff Association, Lucknow
Circle and also for a writ of mandamus commanding the
respondents not to interfere with the affairs of the
petitioner Association and to negotiate with the
appellant/petitioner No. 2 Mr. M.R. Awasthy who Claims to be
the General Secretary of the State Association. The
appellants and the petitioners being the same, they shall
hereinafter be referred to as the appellants.
2. The facts in brief as they emerge from the memo of
appeal and the writ petition are that the State Bank of
India, respondent No. 1 is divided into 13 local Head
Offices including one at Lucknow. These Head Offices are
called Circles of the respondent Bank. In all the circles
there is a Circle Management consisting of Chief General
Manager and General Managers. The appellant No. 1 - The
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State Bank of India Staff Association (hereinafter referred
to as the Staff Association’) is an affiliate of the All
India State Bank of India Staff Federation (hereinafter
referred to as the Staff Federation’), a registered Trade
Union. under The Trade Unions Act. 1926 (hereinafter
referred to as the ’Act’). The Staff Association represents
the workmen / employees of Lucknow Circle. According to the
appellants, there is an Office of the Staff Association in
each circle as well as in each branch of respondent Bank
throughout the country. The Staff Association represents the
workmen / employees of the respective circles through its
lawfully elected Office bearers in accordance with the
Constitution and Bye-laws of the Staff Association , having
a right to negotiate to industrial matters as the Circle
Associations and their duly elected members are recognized
by the respondents. Further case of the appellants is that
according to the Code, the Joint Consultative Committee
comprising the Management and the representatives of the
Staff Association is constituted at two levels, namely, (1)
at the Central Level with respondent No. 1 and (2) in each
local Head Office of the Circle of respondent No. 1, which
are called as a Central Consultative Committee and Circle
Consultative Committee of the Bank respectively. The Central
Consultative Committee is represented through the Staff
Federation and the Circle Consultative Committee is
represented though the Circle Staff Association.
3. Further case of the petitioners is that in the Circle
General Body Meeting of the Staff Association held at Lajpat
Bhawan, Kanpur on October 16, 1994 M.R. Avasthi, appellant
No. 2 was elected as General Secretary of the Staff
Association for a period of three years, in accordance with
the bye-laws and Constitution of the Staff Association. The
said election of appellant No. 2 as General Secretary was
further confirmed by the Central Committee held at Vrindaban
on November 19, 1994, by reason of which M.R. Awasthi, the
appellant No. 2 has a legitimate right to represent the
Staff Association, appellant No. 1 and about 16,000 workmen
/ employees of the Circle Management. But the respondent No.
3, the Assistant General Manager (Personnel) of the State
Bank of India, Lucknow by his impugned letter dated May 3,
1995, communicated to the General Secretary, the appellant
No. 2 herein, that in view of the advise received from the
Central Office, the Management shall not negotiate with Shri
M.R. Awasthi. appellant No. 2 on any matter of the Union /
Association as Shri M.R. Avasthi had already retired from
the Bank on January 31, 1995. It is the legality and
propriety of this letter which is under challenge herein.
4. The respondents have resisted the appeal and Writ
petition by contending that according to the practice
followed by the Bank since decades only a serving employee
may represent the Union in bilateral discussions with the
Bank which practice is recognized by the Staff Federation
also. They have taken the stand that on account of the fact
that Bank being a credit institution cannot deal with a
person who is not regard to be bound by the declaration of
secrecy and fidelity by which other serving employees are
bound and also because the Act no where lays down that the
employer are bound to have negotiations with the Trade Union
nor the members of such Unions are entitled to insist upon
their presence in negotiations with the Employers. The
respondents have taken the plea that though outsiders may be
admitted as members of the Trade Unions and its office
bearers, but the Act does not restrict the Employer s right
or option to have negotiation only with such of the Office
bearers who are its serving employees specially in a
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commercial concern like Banking Industry. The respondents
have stated that the Code of Discipline, relied upon by the
appellants does not entitle such office bearers to claim any
right of representation and negotiation with the Bank. The
respondents have taken further stand that M.R. Avasthi,
appellant No. 2 having retired from the service of the Bank
on January 31, 1995 has no right to negotiate with the
Management on behalf of the Union / Staff Association and
the Management is within its right and authority to decline
to negotiate with him.
5. The application filed by the Staff Federation for
intervention has been allowed by us to The Staff Federation
has taken the same stand as is taken by the respondents and
have supported the respondents in toto, it is stated on
behalf of the Staff Federation that it is the central
organization of the employees of the State Bank of India and
circle level Unions/Associations including the First
Petitioner who are affiliated with it, the aims and objects
of which are laid down in its Rules and the Constitution. It
deals with all policy matters and the decisions of the Staff
Federation is absolutely binding on all the affiliates. The
Staff Federation has emphatically stated that the accepted
policy followed since decades is that none but a serving
employee has to represent Federation or Circle
Union/Association at all levels in bilateral forums. The
Staff Federation has pressed into service past instances for
such policy. It is stated that in 1991 when one Mr Charles
Coutto, the then General Secretary of Bombay Circle Union
had ceased to be an employee, and claimed to represent the
Bombay Circle Union in bilateral forums, it was M.R. Awasthi
, the appellant No. 2 who was then the President of the
Federation as well as the General Secretary of Staff
Association Lucknow, who full endorsed the aforesaid
practice of representation by a serving employee only. The
Federation, therefore, rejected claim of Charles Coutto in
view of the decision as contained in letter dated April 26,
1991 (Annexure-B) to which M.R. Awasthi was a party. the
said policy was formalized by Federation by amending its
Rules in Council Meeting held on December 23. 1994 under the
chairmanship of M.R. Awasthi, appellant No. 2.
6. Having regard to the present circumstances of the case
and with a view to forge efficiency in Public Utility
Services like Bank and with a view to prevent and remove the
employer and the workmen in day to day working of the
establishment and to promote measures for securing amity and
good relations between them. We proposed the parties it the
Barto also go into the legality of the election of appellant
No. 2. M.R. Avasthi as General Secretary and his continuance
as such even after his retirement from service on January
31. 1995 and the parties were required to address on the
same besides the legality / propriety of the impugned letter
dated May 3, 1995 issued by the respondent No. 3 refusing to
negotiate with appellant No. 2 - M.R. Awasthi - as
representative of the Union / Staff Association.
Consequently, the parties addressed us on the same and have
also submitted written submissions.
7. Learned counsel appearing for the appellants vehemently
urged that even though appellant No. 2, M.R. Awasthi retired
from the service of the respondent Bank on January 31. 1995
on attaining the age of superannuation yet he is entitled
the age of superannuation yet he is entitled to continue as
General Secretary of the Staff Association and represent the
Union and its members in the negotiations to be held with
the Management. He submitted that by virtue of the
provisions contained in Section 6 (e) read with the with
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which the Trade Union is so connected, are also entitled to
be admitted as ordinary or temporary members of the Trade
Union and, therefore, the respondents cannot deny to
negotiate with M.R. Awasthi, the General Secretary of the
Staff Association even after this retirement from service of
the Bank. He also urged that the scheme contemplated under
Section 6 (e) and Section 22 of the Act is identical to the
one as contemplated in Section 36 (i) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 under which a member of the executive or
office bearer of a registered Trade Union who is not an
employee of the industry is also entitled to represent the
workman and on that basis it was contended that the impugned
letter of May 3, 1995 declining to negotiate with M.R.
Awasthi, the General Secretary of the Union is wholly
illegal and void. This contention is seriously opposed by
the respondents as well as by the Staff Federation. In order
to appreciate the rival contentions it would be appropriate
to look to the relevant provisions of the Trade Unions Act.
8. Section 6 with its clause (e) of the Act reads thus:-
6. Provisions to be contained in
the rules of a Trade Union.- A
Trade Union shall not be entitled
to registration under this Act,
unless the executive thereof is
constituted in accordance with the
provisions of this Act and the
rules there of provide for the
following matters, namely-
(a) (b) (c) (d).....
(e) the admission of ordinary
members who shall be persons
actually engaged or employed in an
industry with which the admission
of the number of honorary or
temporary member as (Office
bearers) required under Section 22
to form the executive of the Trade
Union.
(f), (g), (h), (i),
(j)............
Relevant part of Section 22 reads
as under:-
22. Proportion of officers to be
connected with the industry:- Not
less than one-half of the total
number of the (office bearer) of
every registered Trade Union shall
be persons actually engaged or
employed in an industry with which
the Trade Union is connected.
It may be noted that Section 6 contemplates two essential
requirements. Firstly, the executive of the Trade Union must
be constituted in accordance with the provisions of the Act
and unless it is so constituted a Trade Union shall not be
entitled to the registration under the Act and Secondly, the
rules of such a Trade Union should provide for the matters
enumerated in clauses (a) to (j) of Section 6. Clause (e) of
Section 6 of the Act provides for admission of honorary or
temporary members (office bearers) also in accordance with
Section 22 of the Act. that being so, the rules of the Trade
Union according to clause (e) of Section 6 should provide
for the admission of ordinary members who shall be persons
actually engaged or employed in the industry with which the
Trade Union is connected and also to provide for the
admission of number of honorary or temporary members as
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office bearers as required by Section 22 of the Act with a
view to form the executive of the Trade Union. A reading of
Section 22 reproduced above would show that it mandates that
at least one half of the total number of office bearers of
the Trade Union should be persons actually engaged or
employed in a industry with which the Trade Union is
connected. That means the number of actually employed office
bearers should in no case be less than half of the total
number of office bearers. The provisions contained in
Section 6 and 22 reproduced above relate to the registration
of a Trade Union and constitution of the executive of the
said Union. The provisions of Sections 6 and 22 indicate
that an ordinary or a temporary member may be an office
bearer but they no where provide that such a member shall
also have a right to negotiate with the management or the
management would be under an obligation to negotiate with an
office bearer of the Union who is no longer in the
employment of the Industry which the Trade Union is
connected.
9. Now coming to the contention that the scheme of Section
6 read with 22 of the Act is similar to that of Section 36
of the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 in terms of which a
workman is entitled to be represented in any proceedings
under the Act by any member of the executive or other office
bearers of a registered Trade Union , even though he is no
longer in the employment of the Industry, it may be pointed
but Section 3 is a complete answer to this submission. It
may be seen that Section 3 of the Industrial Disputes Act
provides for the constitution of Works Committee consisting
of the representatives of the employers and workman engaged
in the establishment. It is significant to note that it
clearly provides that the representatives of workman the
workman engaged in the establishment and in consultation
with the Trade Union if any, registered under the Indian
Trade Unions Act. 1926. under the Industrial Disputes Act,
the Works Committee so constituted is enjoined with the duty
to promote measure for securing and preserving amity and
good relations between the employer and workman and, to that
end, to comment upon the matters of their common interest or
concern and endeavor to compose any material difference of
opinion in respect of such matters. It, therefore, becomes
clear that under the Industrial Disputes Act the
representatives of the workman have to be chosen only from
amongst the workmen already engaged in the establishment and
not an outsider or an ex-workman of the establishment
concerned or any other person. It would, therefore, not be
correct to contend that having regard to the provisions of
Section 36 read with Section 3 of the Industrial Disputes
Act an honorary/temporary member of a private individual is
entitled to represent the workman in the matters aforesaid.
While referring to the provisions of Section 36 of the
Industrial Disputes Act, the provisions of Section 3 of the
said Act can not be over- looked or ignored. The provisions
of the Trade Union Act, 1926 have to be harmonized with the
relevant provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. It
has also to be kept in view that the industrial Disputes Act
is a much later Act, which besides other matters,
specifically concentrates on harmonious relations between
the employer and workmen, the disputes between the two and
settlement thereof by negotiations with the assistance of
their respective representatives. It is for all these
reasons and as stated in their counter-affidavit by the
respondents, that a practice and usage is followed by the
respondent-Bank since decades whereby only serving employees
represent the Union in bilateral discussions with the Bank
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and that this practice has been recognized by the Staff
Federation also which is a body to coordinate the activities
of various Unions/Associations of the employees of the State
Bank of India and its associate Banks. This stand of the
respondents has been fully supported by the Staff Federation
- intervener.
10. Here it would be advantageous to look into the relevant
rules and constitution of the State Bank of India Staff
Association. Rules (5), (6) and (9) relate to the membership
of the Union while Rule (14) relates to the Management and
Officers of the Union the relevant parts of said rules read
as under:-
5. None but a permanent employee of
the State Bank of India who is not
below the age of 18 shall be
enrolled as ordinary member of the
Association provided, however, a
member employee promoted to
Supervisory Cadre shall have to
apply for retaining his membership
in the usual manner.
6. Honorary Member- Persons who are
not eligible as members under rule
5 but are in sympathy with the
objects and spirits of the Union
may be elected Honorary Members at
the Triennial or Special Meeting of
the General Council/Central
Committee/Central Working
Committee convened for the purpose.
Besides, considering the cases of
Honorary Membership directly, the
General Council/Central
Committee/Central Working
Committee shall consider all the
individual cases as proposed by the
Circle representatives.
9. Ordinary member after retirement
from the Bank s service shall not
continue to be such members.
(a) None but an Ordinary/Honorary
Member of the Association will be
eligible to occupy or continue in
any post in the Central
Committee/Central Working
Committee/Circle Committee/Unit
Committee. Notwithstanding anything
contains elsewhere in these rules,
a member of the Central
Committee/Central working
Committee/Circle Committee/Unit
Committee will forthwith cease to
be such member if he ceases to be
an Ordinary/Honorary Member.
14. The management of the Union
shall be vested in the Central
Committee which consists of:-
(a) (1), (ii), (iii), (iv), (v),
(vi), (vii), (viii)...............
(ix) One General Secretary elected
by the Circle General Council for
each administrative Circle of the
State Bank of India who shall
belong to any Branch/Office of the
Bank of the Circle for which he is
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elected and one Dy. General
Secretary elected by the Circle
General Council for each Zonal
Office of the State Bank of India.
(x) etc.....................
A cursory look to rule 5 Will make it clear that to become
an ordinary member of the Association one has to be a
permanent employee of the State Bank of India and at the
same time not below the age of 18 years whereas Rule 6
provides that a person who is not a permanent employee of
the Bank as contemplated under Rule 5 but has some sympathy
with the objects and spirits of the Union he may be elected
honorary member at the triennial or special meeting of the
General Council etc.......convened for the purpose. Further,
according to Rule 9 ordinary members after retirement from
the Bank s service shall act continue to be such members
while clause (a) of Rule 9 provides that an
ordinary/honorary member of the Association will be eligible
to occupy or continue in any post in the Central
Committee/Central Working Committee/Circle Committee/Unit
Committee but such ordinary/honorary member of the aforesaid
committees will forthwith cease to be such member if he
ceases to be an ordinary/honorary member, notwithstanding
contained to the contrary in the Rules.
11. It may be noticed that M.R. Awasthy, appellant No. 2 was
an ordinary member of the Staff association within the
meaning of Rule 5 of the Staff Association Rules. Being such
ordinary member he was elected as General Secretary of the
Staff Association in the triennial meeting held on October
16, 1994. Admittedly. M.R. Awasthi retired from the service
of the respondent-Bank on January 31, 1995 on attaininng the
age of superannuation. He was not elected as an honorary or
a temporary member in any Special Meeting of the General
Council or of the Committees referred to above convened for
that purpose any time after his retirement. Consequently, in
view of Rule 9 M.R. Awasthi appellant No. 2 cannot
legitimately claim his continuance as an ordinary member and
General Secretary of the Union after his retirement from the
service of the Bank. Clause (a) of Rule 9 further reinforces
this position which contemplates that notwithstanding
anything contained elsewhere in the Rules, a member of the
Central Committee/Central Working Committee/Circle
Committee/Unit Committee will forthwith cease to be such
member is he ceased to be an ordinary/honorary member. Since
M.R. Awasthi ceased to be an ordinary member on his
retirement on January 31. 1995 and since he was not elected
as honorary member at the triennial or a Special Meeting of
the General Council, etc. as contemplated in Rule 6, he
neither remained as ordinary member or as honorary member of
the Association. He therefore, cannot claim a right to
negotiate with the management as a representative of the
Union. Even otherwise he cannot claim such a right in view
of the provisions contained in clause (ix) of Rule 14 (a)
which provide that the General Secretary elected by the
Circle General Council for each administrative circle of the
said Bank should belong to any Branch/Office of the Bank of
the Circle for which he is elected, M.R. Awasthi can be said
to belong either to any Branch/Office of the Bank only if he
is in the employment of the Bank. After the retirement he no
longer belongs to any Branch/Office of the Bank of the
Circle as he would be deemed to have ceased to belong to any
Branch/Office of the Bank. In these facts and circumstances
no case is made out for any interference in the decision
taken by the respondents and conveyed to the appellants
through the impugned letter dated May 3, 1995.
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12. It may also be appropriate to have a look to the
relevant rules of the Federation. Clause (d) of Rule 1 of
the said Rules provides that the jurisdiction of the
Federation shall extend to the whole of the territory of the
Indian Union. Rule 2 lays down the aims and objects of the
Federation and according to clause (b) thereof one of the
aims and objects is to coordinate the activities of the
Union/Associations of the employees of the State Bank of
India and its associate Banks within the Indian Union and
the Unions outside Indian Union and to initiate policies
conductive to the progress and benefit of the affiliated
unions/Associations. sub-clause (v) of clause (e) of Rule 2
contemplates that the decision of the Federation in matters
of policy shall be absolute and binding on all affiliated
Union/Association/Administrative Circle shall have the right
to send any person as delegate to any General Body of the
Federation who is a serving employee of the Further clause
(g) of Rule 20 of the Federation Rules provides for
affiliation to only such Union/Associations of the employees
of the State Bank of India and associate Banks which is run.
managed and led by serving employees. Similarly Rule 21 lays
down that if any of the office-bearer or member of the
Federation, council, representing an affiliated
Union/Association/Circle, ceases to be a serving employee of
the Bank or an office-bearer, etc, shall be deemed to have
become vacated. Thus from the aforementioned federation
Rules it is distinctly clear that the policy of the
Federation by which the appellant No. 1 being its affiliate
is also bound permits representation only by a serving
employee of the Bank and not by a person who ceases to be an
employee of the Bank.
13. The contention that by a resolution passed in the Circle
General Council on October 16, 1994 M.R. Awasthi was elected
as an honorary member of the Association Rules which
resolution was subsequently affirmed / approved in the
meeting of the Central Committee on November 19, 1994 does
not hold good for two reasons. Firstly, no material has been
placed on record to show that there was ant such resolution
as alleged having been approved in the meeting of the
Central Committee on November 19, 1994, whereby M.R. Avasthy
is said to be elected accepted as an honorary member of the
Union after his retirement. Secondly, even if it is assumed
that there was such a resolution the same was premature and
in respect of a non-existing matter which was not obtainable
either on October 16, 1994 or on November 19, 1994 as the
question of M.R. Awasthi being an honorary member would have
arisen only after January 31, 1995 on his retirement
provided he was so elected in accordance with Rule 6 of
Staff Association Rules.
14. Mr Rajiv Dhawan, learned senior counsel for the
intervener supported by the respondents counsel. Mr Harish
Salve and other counsel appearing for the respondents
submitted that the triennial election of the Staff
Association Lucknow Circle had taken place in 1989 and the
next election had become due after 3 years term sometimes in
1992 and according to Rule 38 (a) of Staff Association
Rules, the triennial meeting of the General Council of the
Association should be held within 9 months from the
triennial term unless precluded by law. It was submitted
that if the meeting is not held within 9 months from the
triennial term it can be so held only with the approval of
Registrar of Trade Unions and since the triennial meeting
dated October 16, 1994 in which M.R. Awasthi was elected as
General Secretary was held without such approval of the
Registrar, it was unauthorized and election was invalid. the
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relevant part of Rule 38 (a) reads thus:-
Triennial Meeting of the General
Council-The Triennial Meeting of
the General Council of the
Association shall be held within 9
months from the triennial term
unless precluded by law, any
extension of time beyond 9 months
will require specific approval of
the Registrar of Trade Unions.
Further Rule 42 of the Staff Association Rules relates to
the triennial meeting of the Circle General Council for the
purposes of transacting the business mentioned in various
clauses of the said rule. Clause (iii) of Rule 42 relates to
election of office bearers of the Circle Committee and
delegates of the Triennial General Council of the
Association. The relevant part of Rule 42 reads as under:-
42. Triennial Meeting of the Circle
General Council- The Triennial
Meeting of the Circle General
Council shall be held within 6
months from the close of the
Triennial term unless precluded by
law, any extension of time beyond 6
months will require approval of the
Central Committee/Central Working
Committee of the Association.
15. Admittedly, the triennial election of the Staff
Association. Lucknow Circle became due in 1992. The
triennial meeting of the Circle was however, called on
October 16. 1994 in which M.R. Awasthy, appellant No. 2 is
saud to have been elected as General Secretary when he was
in the service of the Bank. Admittedly the said triennial
meeting was called much after the prescribed period of 9
months as contained in Rule 32(a) and admittedly no approval
of the Registrar of the Trade Union was obtained for calling
the said meeting on October 16, 1994. The said meeting,
therefore, cannot be held to be valid meeting in respect of
the matters transacted in the said meeting. As M.R. Awasthy,
appellant No. 2 is said to have been elected as General
Secretary in the said triennial meeting of the Council it
cannot be said to be a valid election. Again as provided in
Rule 42 of the Staff Association Rules, the triennial
meeting of the Circle General Council has to be held within
6 months from close of Triennial term, unless precluded by
law and extension of time requires approval of the Central
Committee for election of office-bearers of the Circle
Committee, but no such approval of the Central Committee has
been placed on record. The election of appellant No. 2 as
General Secretary will be bad on this account also for this
reason also, therefore, the petition as well as the appeal
would fail.
16. It may be further noticed that some members of the Staff
Association, Lucknow Circle had filed a Writ Petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India before the High
Court of Allahabad which was disposed of by an order dated
December 5, 1994 with a direction to the Registrar of the
Trade Unions, West Bengal to dispose of the representation
of those petitioners to the said writ petition within a
period of six weeks. Consequently the Registrar took up the
matter and after hearing all concerned including the
appellants herein, recorded the finding that the triennial
meeting held on October 16, 1994 was without obtaining prior
approval of the Registrar in accordance with the said rules.
Having gone through the facts and circumstances of the
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present case and Rule 38 and 42 of the Staff Association
Rules we are also of the view that the triennial meeting
held on October 16, 1994 in which M.R. Awasthy, appellant
No. 2 was elected as General Secretary was not a valid
meeting. In view of the facts and circumstances stated above
it is not now necessary for us to go into the question
whether the second writ petition filed by the appellants
before the High Court was maintainable or not.
17. For the reasons stated above, the appeal s well as the
petition fail and are hereby dismissed but without any order
as to costs.