Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION (SECONDARY) & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PUSHPENDRA KUMAR & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/05/1998
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, S. SAGHIR AHMAD, M. SRINIVASAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
W I T H
[C.A No. 2710 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 339/94),
C.A.No. 2711 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No, 2328/94),
C.A.No. 2712 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 2734/94),
C.A.No. 2713 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 2735/94),
C.A.No. 2714 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 16350/94),
C.A.No. 2715 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 1186/94),
C.A.No. 2716 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 348/95),
C.A.No. 2717 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 901/95),
C.A.No. 2718 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 206.9/93),
C.A.No. 2719 of 1998 (arising out of SLP) (C) No. 1062/94),
C.A. No. 2720 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 4100/94),
C.A. No. 2721 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No. 4613/94(,
and C.A.No. 2722 of 1998 (arising out of SLP (C) No.
4614/94)]
J U DG M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL,J.
Special Leave granted.
These appeals relate to appointment on compassionate
grounds of dependents of teaching/non-teaching staff
employed in non Government recognised aided schools and
intermediate colleges in the State of Uttar Pradesh who have
died in harness.
In relation to Government employees the Government of
Uttar Pradesh has made the Uttar Pradesh Recruitment of
Dependents of Government Servants Dying in Harness. Rules,
1974 (hereinafter of a dependent of the deceased Government
Servant dying in harness, who is not already employed by the
Central Government, by State Government or by any
Corporation which comes under the Central Government or the
State Government. For that purpose the normal recruitment
rules are relaxed. The said Rules are, however, not
applicable to the staff employed in Government recognised
aided institutions since they are not Government Servants.
With regard to appointment of dependents of teaching/non
teaching staff of such institutions provision was made for
the first time by Circular dated September 23, 1981 whereby
it was directed that where any Teaching/non Teaching
employee of the non-government aided Secondary Schools dies
in harness untimely and who was appointed
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permanent/regularly in his post, one member of his family
having qualifications prescribed for non teaching post, will
be given employment as early as possible, if he so desires.
It was further directed that the procedure prescribed for
appointment for these posts shall not be strictly adhered to
but it should be necessarily considered that the concerned
person is qualified to be appointed on the non teaching post
under the relevant rules/orders for this purpose. In the
said circular it was also laid down that a person to be
appointed must have completed the age of 18 years at the
time of his appointment and as far as possible the person
shall be considered for the appointment in the same
institution in which the employee at the time of his death
was working and if difficulty is faced in giving appointment
due to non-availability of vacancies in the non-teaching
post then the appointment can be made in any other similar
Secondary School, where such vacancy is available and the
criteria will be that any one member of the family of the
employee dying in harness and possessing requisite
qualifications is given employment without any delay.
Subsequently by notification dated July 30, 1992, the State
Government amended the Regulations made in exercise of the
powers conferred on it under sub-section (4) of Section 9 of
the U.P. Intermediate Education Act, 1921, and inserted
Regulations 101 to 107 after Regulation 100 in Chapter III
of the Regulations. Regulations 101 to 107 were in these
terms :-
"101. The appointing authority
shall not fill any vacancy in the
non-teaching staff of a recognised
aided institution except with the
prior approval of the Inspector.
102 : A vacancy to be caused on
account of retirement of an
employee holding non-teaching post
in a recognised aided institution
shall be intimated three months
before the date of his retirement
and any vacancy occurring due to
death, resignation or for any other
reasons shall be intimated within
seven days from the date of its
occurrence to the Inspector by the
appointing authority.
103 : In case an employee of
teaching or non-teaching staff of a
recognised aided institution who
has been duly appointed in
accordance with the prescribed
procedure, dies in harness one
member of his family not below the
age of 18 years shall be given
appointment to a non-teaching post
notwithstanding anything contrary
in the prescribed procedure for
recruitment if such member
possesses requisite educational
qualifications prescribed for the
post and is otherwise suitable for
appointment.
Explanation.- For the purposes of
this regulation ‘member of family’
shall mean widow/widower, son,
unmarried or widowed daughter of
the deceased.
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NOTE : This regulation and
regulation 104 to 107 shall apply
in respect of those deceased
employees also who dies on or after
January 1, 1981.
104 : The Management or Principal
or the Head Master, as t he case
may be, of the recognised aided
institution shall submit a report
giving the name, post held, scale
of pay, date of appointment, date
of death, name of the employer
institution of the deceased and the
name, educational qualifications
and age etc. of the family members
thereof to the inspector within
seven days from the date of
occurrence of death. The inspector
shall register the particulars of
the deceased in a register to be
maintained by him.
105 : A member of the family of
the deceased employee referred to
in regulation 104 shall submit an
application to the concerned
Inspector for appointment to a post
in the non-teaching cadre. The
application shall be considered by
a Committee and after the Committee
has recommended his appointment,
the Inspector shall send the
application to the Management or
the Principal or the Head Master,
as the case may be, of the
institution where the applicant is
to be employed in accordance with
the provisions contained in
regulation 106 for issuing
appointment order. The Committee
shall comprise :
1. Inspector : Chairman
2. Accounts Officer in the office
of : Member
District Inspector of Schools
3. District Basic Siksha Adhikari
: Member
106 : The appointment of the
family member of the deceased
employee shall be made, as far as
possible, in the same institution
where the deceased employee was
serving at the time of his death.
If there is no vacancy in non-
teaching cadre in such institution,
the appointment shall be made in
another recognised aided
institution of the district where
there is such vacancy :
Provided that if such vacancy
for the time being does not exist
in any recognised aided institution
of the district concerned, the
appointment shall be made against a
supernumerary post in the
institution where the deceased was
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working at the time of his death.
Such supernumerary post shall be
deemed to have been created for
this purpose and be continued till
a vacancy becomes available in that
institution or in any other
recognised aided institution in the
district and in such case the
service rendered by the incumbent
of the supernumerary post shall be
counted for the fixation of pay and
retirement benefits.
107 : The appointment letter shall
be issued under intimation to the
Inspector by the recognised aided
institution to which the
application for issuing appointment
letter is sent by the Inspector
within a period of one month from
the date of receipt of the
application."
The respondents in these appeals are dependents of
persons who were employed as teaching/non-teaching staff in
non-government recognised aided schools/intermediates
colleges in Uttar Pradesh. The said employees died in
harness. Applications were submitted by the respondents in
these appeals, who are the dependents of deceased employees,
before the District Inspector of Schools for giving
appointment on compassionate grounds. In most of these
appeals the District Inspector of School passed order for
their being appointed on a Class IV post and on that basis
orders of appointment were issued. After their appointment
on a class IV post, they filed writ petitions in the
Allahabad High Court seeking appropriate writ
direction/order for being appointed on a Class III post on
the ground that they possess the requisite qualifications
for appointment on class III post of Clerk. In Civil Appeal
arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 1186 of 1994 the District
Inspector of Schools had offered a class IV post to the
applicant and dissatisfied with the said offer he filed a
writ petition in the Allahabad High Court for a direction
for being appointed on a class III post of Clerk. In Civil
Appeal arising out of the S.L.P.(C) No. 2734 of 1993 no
decision was taken by the District Inspector of Schools on
the application of the applicant and he filed writ petition
in the Allahabad High Court wherein he sought a direction
from the High Court directing the District Inspector of
Schools to appoint him on the post of Clerk. All the writ
petitions have been allowed by the High Court by the
impugned judgments. In case where appointment had ben made
on a class IV post, the High Court has quashed such orders
and has directed that the appointment of the applicant be
made on a class III post provided he possesses the necessary
qualifications for such pst and that such appointment may be
made in any institutions in the district and if there is no
such vacancy, then a supernumerary post should be created.
In the other two appeals where the appointment had not been
made, the High Court while allowing the writ petitions has
directed that the appointment be made on a class III post
provided the applicant possesses the qualifications for the
post and that if no post is available in any institution in
the district a supernumerary post should be created for that
purpose.
Beling aggrieved by the said judgments of the High
Court, the State has filed these appeals.
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The learned counsel for the appellants has pointed out
that the aforesaid directions given by the High Court
regarding the appointment of dependents of teaching/non-
teaching staff in non-government recognised aided schools
and colleges on a class III post and for creating a
supernumerary post for that purpose has given rise to
immense practical problems. It has been submitted that in
the State of U.P. about 4500 non-government recognised aided
institutions are running and there are about 1.25.000
teaching and non-teaching employees, out of which the number
of clerks in an institution is between 1 to 3. It has been
submitted that based on the mortality rate of 1% of the
number of persons dying a harness in each year would come to
1250 approximately. It has also been pointed out that the
number of vacancies occurring on the post of clerk due to
retirement and death (at the rate of 2% and 1% respectively)
comes to 330 in a year. The learned counsel has invited out
attention to the conditions of the services as contained in
clauses 2(2) of Chapter 3 of the Regulations made under
Section 16G of the U.P. Intermediate Act, which provides
that fifty by promotion amongst the working Clerk and Class
IV employees in the Institution. It is submitted that out of
330 vacancies on the post of Clerk occurring in a year on
account of retirement and death, 165 will have to be set
apart for promotion of working Clerk and Class IV employees
and only 165 posts would be available for making appointment
by direct recruitment. Appointment of dependents of deceased
teaching-non-teaching staff on compassionate grounds can be
made only on these posts which can be filled by direct
recruitment and as a result all the vacancies occurring in a
year would be taken by such dependents of deceased
teaching/non-teaching staff dying in harness. Since
supernumerary posts would have to be created for making such
appointment, no post would ever be available for direct
recruitment of other persons who are eligible for
appointment. It has also been pointed out that during the
pendency of these matters in this Court, Regulations 101,
103, 104, 106 and 107 have been amended and Regulation 105A
has been inserted in the Regulations by notification dated
February 2, 1995. In Regulation 106, as amended, it has been
prescribed that if vacancy in non-teaching cadre for the
time being does not exist in any recognised aided
institution of the district concerned, then the appointment
shall be made against a supernumerary non-teaching post of
class IV category and such supernumerary post shall b e
deemed to have been created for his purpose and be continued
till a vacancy becomes available in that institution or in
any other recognised aided institution of the district and
in such case, the service rendered by the incumbent of the
supernumerary post shall be counted for fixation of pay and
retirement benefits. As a result of the amendment made by
notification dated February 2, 1995, in the event of a non-
teaching post being not available, the appointment of the
dependent of a deceased member of the teaching/non-teaching
staff dying in harness, can be made only on a Class IV post
by creating a supernumerary post.
The question for consideration is whether in the
absence of the amendment that was made in the Regulations
vide notification dated February 2, 1995, it was incumbent
for the authorities to appoint the dependents of a member of
the teaching/non-teaching staff in a non-government
recognised aided institution dying in harness on a class III
post even though no post was available for such appointment
in the institution in which the deceased employee was
employed or any other institution in the district and for
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that purpose a supernumerary post in Class III post was
required to be created. In the impugned judgments the High
Court has taken the view that under the regulations as they
stood prior to amendment by notification dated February 2,
1995 a supernumerary post in Class III was required to be
created for appointing the dependent of a member of the
teaching/non-teaching staff in a non-government aided
institution dying in harness. The said view of the High
Court has been assailed by the appellants in these appeals.
The object underlying a provision for grant of
compassionate employment is to enable the family of the
deceased employee to tide over the sudden crisis resulting
due to death of the bread earner which has left the family
in penury and without any means of livelihood. Out of pure
humanitarian consideration and having regard to the fact
that unless some source of livelihood is provided, the
family would not be able to make both ends meet, a provision
is made for giving gainful appointment to one of the
dependents of the deceased who may be eligible for such
appointment. Such a provision makes a departure from the
general provisions providing for appointment on the post by
following a particular procedure. Since such a provision
enables appointment being made without following the said
procedure, it is in the nature of an exception to the
general provisions. An exception cannot subsume the main
provision to which it is an exception and thereby nullify
the main provision by taking away completely the right
conferred by the main provision. Care has, therefore, to be
taken that a provision for grant of compassionate
employment, which is in the nature of an exception to the
general provisions, does not unduly interfere with the right
of other persons who are eligible for appointment of seek
employment against the post which would have been available
to them, but for the provision enabling appointment being
made on compassionate grounds of the dependent of a deceased
employee. In Umesh Kumar Nagpal v. State of Haryana, 1994
(4) SCC 138, this Court has taken note of the object
underlying the rules providing for appointment on
compassionate grounds and has held that the Government or
the public authority concerned has to examine the financial
condition of the family of the deceased and it is only if it
is satisfied, that but for the provision of employment, the
family will not be able to meet the crisis that a job is to
be offered to the eligible member of the family. In that
case the Court was considering the question whether
appointment on compassionate grounds could be made against
posts higher than posts in classes III and IV. It was held
that such appointment could only be made against the lowest
posts in non-manual and manual categories. It was observed
:-
"The provision of employment in
such lowest posts by making an
exception to the rule is
justifiable and valid since it is
not discriminatory. The favourable
treatment given to such dependent
of the deceased employee in such
posts has a rational nexus with the
object sought to be achieved, viz,
relief against destitution. No
other posts are expected or
required to b e given by the public
authorities for the purpose. It
must be remembered in this
connection that as against the
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destitute family of the deceased
there are millions of other
families which are equally, if not
more destitute. The exception the
rule made in favour of the family
of the deceased employee is in
consideration of the services
rendered by him and the legitimate
expectations, and the change in
status and affairs, of the family
engendered by the erstwhile
employment which are suddenly
upturned." (p. 140)
In the said case, this Court has considered the earlier
Judgment in Smt. Sushma Gosain & Ors. v. Union of India &
Ors., 1989 (4) SCC 468. It has been observed that said
judgment ‘has been misinterpreted to the point of
distortion’ and that it does not justify compassionate
employment as a matter of course.
The construction placed by the High Court on the
Regulations governing appointment of dependents of
teaching/non-teaching staff in non-government recognised
aided institutions dying in harness would result in all the
vacancies in class III posts in non-government recognised
aided institutions which are required to be filled by direct
recruitment being made available to the dependents of
persons employed on the teaching/non-teaching staff of such
institutions who die in harness and the right of other
persons who are eligible for appointment to seek employment
on those posts by direct recruitment would be completely
excluded. On such a construction the said provision in the
Regulations would be open to challenge on the ground of
being violative of the right to equality in the matter of
employment inasmuch as other persons who are eligible for
appointment and who may be more meritorious than the
dependents of deceased employees would be deprived of their
right of being considered for such appointment under the
rules. A construction which leads to such a result has to be
avoided. Having regard to the fact that there are large
number of posts falling in class IV and appointment on these
posts is made by direct recruitment, the object underlying
the provision for giving employment to a dependent of a
person employed on teaching/non-teaching staff who dies in
harness would be achieved if the said provision in the
Regulations is construed to mean that in the matter of
appointment of a dependent of teaching/non-teaching staff in
a non-Government recognised aided institution dying in
harness if a post in class III is not available in the
institution in which the deceased employee was employed or
in any other institution in the district, the dependent
would be appointed on a class IV post in the institution in
which the deceased employee was employed and for that
purpose a supernumerary post in class IV may be created. It
the Regulations are thus construed the respondents-
applicants could only be appointed on a class IV post and
they could not seek a direction for being appointed on a
class III post and for creation of supernumerary post in
class III for that purpose. We are, therefore, unable to
uphold the direction given by the High Court in the impugned
judgments whereby the respondents have been directed to be
appointed on a class III post if they possess the requisite
qualifications for such a post and in case no Class III post
is available then a supernumerary class III post be created
for the purpose of such appointment.
In the result, the appeals are allowed, the impugned
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judgments of the High Court are set aside and writ petitions
of the respondents-applicants are disposed of with the
direction that if no class III post is available in the
institution in which the deceased employee was employed or
in any other institution in the district, the said
respondent would be appointed against a Class IV post in the
institution in which the deceased employee was employed and
a supernumerary post in class IV be created for that
purpose. The order passed by the District Inspectors of
Schools for appointment of the respondents-applicants in
appeals, other than Appeal arising out of S.L.P.(c) No. 2734
of 1992, are restored and the respondents-applicants in the
said Appeal should be treated as having been appointed on a
class IV post as per the orders for such appointment that
were issued by the District Inspector of Schools. In
Appeals, arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 2734 of 1993 the
concerned District Inspector of Schools shall consider the
application of the respondent-applicant for appointment and
if no class III post was available on the date of the
passing of the impugned judgment of the High Court, the said
respondent-applicant should be appointed on a class IV post
in the institution in which the deceased employee was
employed with effect from the date of the impugned judgment
of the High Court. No orderIN THE MATTER OF :