Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COL. LAL RAMPAL SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/10/1965
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 820 1966 SCR (2) 53
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC 846 (9)
R 1987 SC 82 (7)
ACT:
Indian State-Retirement pension fixed by Ruler in relaxation
of Rewa State Pension and Gratuity Rules-Ruler’s act whether
’law’ or ’grant’--Succeeding Government whether bound to
continue payment.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent held various offices under the Government of
the erstwhile Rewa State. By an Order made on April 3,
1948;, the Ruler allowed him to, retire on a full pension of
Rs. 350/- per month as a special case, and the breaks in his
service were also condoned. The State of Rewa was later
merged with the State of Vindhya Pradesh and the appropriate
authority passed orders reducing the respondent’s pension.
Vindhya Pradesh later became a part of the State of Madhya
Pradesh. The respondent moved a petition in the High Court
of Madhya Pradesh for a writ of certiorari in which he
prayed that the orders reducing his pension be quashed. The
High Court decided in his favour whereupon the State of
Madhya Pradesh appealed- to this Court.
The questions that fell for determination in the appeal were
whether the Order of the Ruler of Rewa amounted to ’law’,
and whether, if not ’law’, it was a grant which the
succeeding Government must be deemed to have accepted since
it made payments in terms of it for several years.
HELD : (i) From the terms of the Order in question it was
clear that the Ruler purported to act under the Rewa State
Rules. This would appear from the reference to ’full
pension’, condonation of the ’breaks in service’ and
’special case, in the said order. This would also appear
from the fact that the Order granted the respondent certain
advance increments which could only have been done to
justify the full pension of Rs. 350/- per month under the
rules. Obviously under the rules the respondent would have
been entitled to a smaller pension in view of the breaks and
if the increments had not been granted. The Ruler was not’.
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therefore, acting in exercise of his sovereign power and in
disregard of the rules; on the contrary he was purporting to
act in terms of the rules. That being so it had to be held
that the Order in question was not a law but an executive
order passed in terms of the rules. It was open to the
succeeding Government to set aside that order by another
executive order. [54 G-H; 55 B]
(ii) what the Ruler did by his Order of April 3, 1948 does
not appear to have been to make a grant but to have passed
an Order purporting to act under the Rules. If that Order
was not justified by the rules it was liable to be set aside
by another order duly made under them. Pension is
furthermore normally always a matter of grace. It is
implicit in the grant of a pension that it may be
subsequently reviewed. The succeeding State was hence
competent to review the order even if it had paid the
pension for sometime in terms of it. [55 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No. 736 of
1963.
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Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Order, dated
November 12, 1960, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Petition No. 265 of 1958.
B. Sen, M. N. Shroff and I. N. Shroff, for the
appellants.
A. P. Singh Chohan and A. D. Mathur, for respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sarkar, J. This is the third case in the series and it
arises out of a petition for a writ of certiorari moved in
the High Court of Madhya Pradesh to quash -certain orders
reducing the pension granted to the respondent Col. Lal
Rampal Singh by an order of the Ruler of Rewa before that
State had merged in the United State of Vindhya Pradesh.
The High Court of Madhya Pradesh took the same view as in
the Nagod case (Civil Appeal No. 738 of 1963) in which
judgment has been delivered earlier in the day. The
subsequent fortunes of the United State have been described
in that judgment. Here also the question is whether the
order of the Ruler of Rewa was law.
The respondent held various offices in the Government of
Rewa. By an order made on April 3, 1948 and published in an
extraordinary issue of the Rewa Raj Gazette the Ruler stated
that "Col. Lal Rampal Singh entered State service-on 21st
November, 1922 and he is now anxious to retire. I find that
he has. put in a service of more than 25 years up to date,
and, as such, he is allowed to retire on a full pension of
Rs. 350 per month of his last grade, as a special case with
effect from the date of this order, and the so-called breaks
in his service, if there be any, are hereby condoned."
The respondent in his petition stated that in Rewa the Ruler
had made a set of rules, which was called "Rewa State
Pension and Gratuity Rules" for grant of pension to Rewa
State Civil Servants. He however added that the Ruler was
not bound by those Rules as he was a sovereign Ruler. It
seems to us quite clear from the terms of the order that the
Ruler purported to act under the Rewa State Rules. This
appears from the reference in the order to "full pension",
condonation of the "breaks in his service’ and "special
case". This also appears from the fact that the Order
granted the respondent certain advance increments which
could only have been done to justify the full pension of Rs.
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350 per month under the Rules. Obviously, under the Rules
the respondent would have been entitled to a smaller pension
in view of the breaks and if the
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increments had not been granted. The Ruler was not,
therefore, acting in the exercise of his sovereign power and
in disregard of the Rules; on the contrary, he was
purporting to act in terms of the Rules. That being so, it
has to be held that the Order of April 3, 1948 is not a law
but an executive order passed in terms of the Rules. It is
open to the succeeding Government to set aside that order by
another executive order. What appropriate order can be
passed by the Government of India is not a, question that
arises it the present moment. The respondent’s rights under
the Rewa State Rules, accepting it as a law binding on the
Indian Union, are not in the least affected. He is,
however, not entitled to any rights except those which the
Rules justify. The first contention of the respondent,
therefore, that the order of April 3, 1948 is a law which
can only be altered by another law duly passed by the Union
or other competent legislature must fail.
Another point raised was, that if the order was not a law,
it was a grant and that as the Indian Union had paid the
respondent in terms of the order up, to March 27, 1953, it
must be deemed to have accepted that grant and it cannot now
deprive the respondent of his right of property under the
grant. It seems to, us that this contention is ill-founded.
What the Ruler did by his order of April 3, 1948 does not
appear to have been to make a grant but to have passed an
order purporting to act under the Rules. If that order was
not justified by the Rules, it was illegal and is liable to
be set aside by another order duly made under them. Pension
is furthermore -normally always a matter of grace when there
is no law governing. It is implicit in the grant of a
pension that it may be subsequently reviewed. Therefore the
grant of the pension-assuming that to be the correct view to
take-must always have been subject to alteration. The
succeeding State was hence competent to review the order
even if it had paid the pension for sometime in terms of it.
In the result, in our view, the appeal must be allowed and
we order accordingly. There will be no order for costs.
Appeal allowed.
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