Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SALABUDDIN MOHAMED YUNUS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/09/1984
BENCH:
MADON, D.P.
BENCH:
MADON, D.P.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1905 1985 SCR (1) 930
1984 SCC Supl. 399 1984 SCALE (2)573
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950, Articles 19 (1) (f), 19
(5), 31
Hyderabad Civil Service Regulations Rule 299 (1) (b)
and State Government Notification dated February 3, 1971
Pension-Right to-A fundamental right-Whether could be
curtailed or taken away by the State by an executive order.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was employed in the service of the former
Indian State of Hyderabad prior to the coming into force of
the Constitution of India. On the coming into force of the
Constitution of India, the said State became a part of the
territory of India as a Part State and the Appellant
continued in the service of that State, till he retired from
service on January 21, 1956. The appellant claimed that he
was entitled to be paid the salary of a High Court Judge
from October 1, 1947 and also claimed that he was entitled
to receive a pension of Rs. 1,000 a month in the Government
of India currency being the maximum pension admissible under
the rules. Both the aforesaid claims were negatived by the
Government.
The Appellant thereupon filed a writ petition in the
High Court against the Respondent-State of Andhra Pradesh,
which was the principal successor State to the erstwhile
State, which was contested under Regulation 6 of the
Hyderabad Civil Service Regulations which were applicable in
the case of the Appellant and that claim to pension was to
be regulated by the rules in force at the time when the
Government servant retired from the service of the
Government. Under clause (b) of Regulation 313, the maximum
pension ordinarily admissible for superior service to which
the Appellant belonged was to be Osmania Sikka Rs. 1,000 a
month. The Hyderabad Civil Service Regulations were replaced
with effect from October 1, 1954 by the Hyderabad Civil
Services Rules and under clause (b) of Rule 299 (which later
became clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 299) the maximum
pension ordinarily admissible for superior service was to be
Rs. 1,000 a month,
931
During the pendency of the writ petition, the
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Government by a Notification dated February 3,1971 amended
clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 299, with retrospective
effect from October 1, 1954. The expression ’Rs. 1,000 a
month in the said clause (b) was substituted by the
expression ’Rs 857.15 a month". This amendment was made in
exercise of the powers conferred by the proviso to Article
309 read with Article 313 of the Constitution of India.
The Single Judge who heard the Appellant’s writ
petition rejected the claim made by the Appellant with
respect to salary on the ground that the said claim had been
negatived by the Government as far back as 1955 and merely
by making representations to the Government he could not
keep the said claim alive. He however held that in view of
the judgment of this Court in Deokinandan Prasad v. State of
Bihar and Others [1971] Supp. S.C.R 634 the right to receive
pension was property and was a fundamental right and that it
had accrued to the Appellant on the date when he retired and
could not be affected by a rule made subsequently under the
proviso to Article 309, and allowed the writ petition to the
extent that the Appellant was entitled to get his future
pension at the rate of Rs. 1,000 a month in the Government
of India currency from the date of filing of the said writ
petition and arrears of pension at the same rate for a
period of three years prior to the filing of the said writ
petition.
The Respondent-State filed a Letters Patent Appeal, and
the Division Bench held that this Court in Deokinandan
Prasad’s case did not hold that a pensioner was entitled to
any pension that he demanded but all that was done in the
said case was to direct the State to consider properly the
claim of the pensioner for payment of pension according to
law, and relying upon its earlier decisions in State of
Andhra Pradesh v. Ahmed Hussain Khan and State of Andhra
Pradesh v. S. Gopalan upholding the validity of the
amendment made in clause (b) of Rule 299 (1) by the
Notification dated February 3, 1971, allowed the appeal and
dismissed the writ petition of the appellant.
Allowing the Appeal to this Court,
^
HELD: The relevance placed by the Division Bench upon
its earlier decision in the two writ appeals (Ahmed Hussain
Khan and S. Gopalan) was misconceived. The two appeals arose
out of separate writ petitions filed by two Government
servants who had joined the service of the former Indian
State of Hyderabad and retired after the States
Reorganization Act, 1956 had come into force. This Court
allowed the two Appeals and reversed the said judgment of
the Division Bench, held that the letter dated April 28,
1973 from the Joint Secretary to the Government of India,
Cabinet Secretariat did not amount to a previous approval
granted by the Central Government to the amendment made by
the Notification dated February 3, 1971 to clause (b) of
Rule 299 (1) and that, the Notification was invalid and
inoperative so far as it concerned persons referred to in
sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 115 of the States
Reorganization Act, 1956. [936D-G]
In the instant case, the Appellant had retired prior to
the appointed day, November 1, 1956. He therefore did not
fall under either sub-section (1) or
932
sub-section (2) of section 115 and the proviso to sub-
section (7) of that section had no application to him. The
amendment to the Rules, so far as he was concerned, did not,
therefore, require any previous approval of the Central
Government even though thereby the conditions of the service
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were being varied to his disadvantage. [937F-G]
2. Pension being a fundamental right, it could only be
taken away or curtailed in the manner provided in the
Constitution, [938E]
In the instant case, the fundamental right to receive
pension according to the rules in force accrued to the
Appellant when he retired from service. By making a
retrospective amendment to the said Rule 299 (1) (b) more
than fifteen years after that right had accrued to him, what
was done was to take away the Appellant’s right to receive
pension according to the rules in force at the date of his
retirement or in any event to curtail and abridge that
right. To that extent, the said amendment was void. [938H;
939A]
3. The Appellant was entitled to succeed in view of the
judgment of this Court in Deokinandan Prasad’s case. The
Division Bench of the High Court has misunderstood the ratio
of that decision. It was held in that case that pension is
not a bounty payable at the sweet will and pleasure of the
Government but is a right vesting in a Government servant
and was property under clause (1) of Article 31 of the
Constitution and the State had no power to with hold the
same by a mere executive order. It was also held that this
right was also property under sub-clause (f) of clause (1)
of Article 19 of the Constitution and was not saved by
clause (5) of that Article, and that this right of the
Government servant to receive pension could not be curtailed
or taken away, by the State by an executive order. [937H;
938A-D]
4. The fact that sub-clause (f) of clause (1) of
Article 19 and Article 31 have been omitted from the
Constitution by the Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment
Act,) 1978 with effect from June 20, 1979 was immaterial
because on the date when the said Notification was issued,
these provisions were part of the Constitution. [939B-C]
5, The Supreme Court reversed and set aside the
Judgment of the Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court and restored the order passed by the Single Judge of
that High Court. The Supreme Court directed the State of
Andhra Pradesh to pay to the Appellant the amounts due to
him according to the Judgment of the Single Judge of the
High Court within one month and pay to him pension in future
at the rate of Rs. 1000 per month in the Government of India
currency. [939D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2629 of
1977.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the
933
2nd February, 1976 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ
Appeal No. 628 of 1974.
A. Subba Rao for the Appellant.
U.R. Lalit, and G. Narasimhulu for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MADON, J. The Appellant joined the service of the
Former Indian State of Hyderabad prior to the coming into
force of the Constitution of India. On the coming into force
of the Constitution of India on January 26, 1950, the former
Indian State of Hyderabad became a part of the territory of
India as a Part State and the Appellant continued in the
service of that State. He retired from service on January
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21, 1956, as Secretary to the Government of Hyderabad, Legal
Department. The Appellant claimed that he was entitled to be
paid the salary of a High Court Judge from October 1, 1947,
being the date from which the recommendations of a Pay and
Service Commission which had been set up had been
implemented up to the date of his retirement from service.
The Appellant also claimed that he was entitled to receive a
pension of Rs. 1,000 a month in the Government of India
currency being the maximum pension admissible under the
rules in that behalf. Both the aforesaid claims were
negatived by the Government in spite of several
representations made by the Appellant. Ultimately, in order
to enforce the aforesaid two claims, the Appellant filed in
the High Court of Andhra Pradesh a writ petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India, being Writ
Petition No. 1613 of 1972, against the State of Andhra
Pradesh which was the principal successor State to the
erstwhile State of Hyderabad. A learned Single Judge of that
High Court rejected the claim made by the Appellant with
respect to salary on the ground that the said claim had been
negatived by the Government as far back as 1955 and merely
by making representations to the Government he could not
keep that claim alive. So far as the amount of pension
payable to the Appellant was concerned, the defence of the
Respondent was that the amount of maximum pension payable
under the rules in that behalf was not Rs. 1,000 a month in
the Government of India currency but was O.S. Rs. 1,000 a
month, that is, Osmania Sikka Rs. 1,000 Osmania Sikka being
the currency of the former Indian State of Hyderabad) and,
therefore, the Appellant was entitled to receive a pension
of
934
only Rs. 857.15 per month being the equivalent in the
Government cf India currency of O.S. Rs. 1,000.
In order to understand this defence taken by the
Respondent, it is necessary to mention that at the date when
the Appellant joined service, his terms and conditions of
service were governed by the Hyderabad Civil Service
Regulations. Under Regulation 6 of the said Regulations, a
Government servant’s claim to pension was to be regulated by
the rules in force at the time when the Government servant
retired from the service of the Government. Under clause (b)
of Regulation 313, the maximum pension ordinarily admissible
for superior service to which the Appellant belonged was to
be O.S. Rs. 1,000 a month. After the former Indian State of
Hyderabad became a part of the territory of India, Hyderabad
currency was demonetized with effect from April 1, 1953, and
by section 2 of the Hyderabad Currency Demonetization
(Consequential and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1953 (
Hyderabad Act No. 1 of 1953), references express or implied
inter alia in any Regulation in force in the Hyderabad State
immediately before the commencement of the said Act were to
be construed as references to the equivalent amount in the
Government of India currency according to the standard rate
of exchange, namely, 7 O.S. rupees for 6 I.G. rupees,
(Indian Government rupees). The Hyderabad Civil Service
Regulations were replaced with effect from October 1, 1954,
by the Hyderabad Civil Services Rules which were made by the
Rajpramukh of the erstwhile State of Hyderabad in exercise
of the power conferred by the proviso to Article 309 of the
Constitution of India. Under Rule 4 of the said Rules also a
Government servant’s claim to pension was to be regulated by
the Rules in force at the time when he retired from the
service of the Government. Under clause (b) of Rule 299 (now
clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 299) the maximum pension
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ordinarily admissible for superior service was to be Rs.
1,000 a month. The contention of the Respondent was that the
expression ’Rs. 1,000 a month’ in the said clause (b) really
meant O.S. Rs. 1,000 a month and that the qualifying letters
O.S. were omitted by an inadvertent printing error. By a
memorandum, being Memorandum No. 27439/540/Pen.I/69 dated
April 28,1969, the Assistant Secretary to the Government of
Andhra Pradesh, Finance Department, issued an erratum
purporting to correct the sum of Rs. 1,000 mentioned in the
said clause (b) of Rule 299 to O.S. Rs. 1,000. In Writ
Petition No. 3318 of 1969-Dault Rai and
935
Others v. State of Andhra Pradesh-a learned Single Judge of
the said High Court held that there was no error in
mentioning Rs. 1,000 and that what the said erratum
purported to do in fact was to amend the said clause (b) of
Rule 299 which could not be done without the approval of the
Governor of Andhra Pradesh. The said judgment of the learned
Single Judge was affirmed by a Division Bench of the said
High Court in Writ Appeal No. 568 of 1970- State of Andhra
Pradesh v. Daulat Rai and Others. The said Division Bench
also rejected an application made by the State for a
certificate to appeal to this Court and a petition for
special leave to appeal against the said judgment was
dismissed by this Court. In view of this position, the
Respondent’s contention that the Appellant was entitled only
to a pension of Rs. 857.15 per month was bound to fail.
Hoverer, during the pendency of the Appellant’s writ
petition, by a Government Notification dated February 3,
1971, the said clause (b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 299, as it
had then become, was amended with retrospective effect from
October 1, 1954. By this amendment the expression Rs. 1000 a
month’ in the said clause (b) was substituted by the
expression ’Rs. 857.15 a month’. This amendment was made in
exercise of the powers conferred by the proviso to Article
309 read with Article 313 of the Constitution of India. The
learned Single Judge who heard the Appellant’s writ petition
held that in view of the Judgment of this Court in
Deokinandan Prasad v. State of Bihar and Others the right to
receive pension was property and was a fundamental right
guaranteed both by Article 19(1)(f) and Article 31 (1) of
the Constitution of India and that it had accrued to the
Appellant on the date when he retired and could not be
affected by a rule made subsequently under the proviso to
Article 309. The learned Single Judge, there. fore, allowed
the said writ petition to the extent that the Appellant was
entitled to get his future pension at the rate of Rs. 1,000
a month in the Government of India currency from the date of
the filing of the said writ petition and arrears of pension
at the same rate for a period of three years before the
filing of the said writ petition, namely April 13, 1972. The
learned Single Judge made no order as to the costs of the
said writ petition.
The Respondent filed a Letters Patent Appeal against
the judgment of the learned Single Judge, being Writ Appeal
No. 628
936
of 1974. The Appellant did not file any cross appeal. The
Division Bench Which heard the said appeal held that in
Deokinandan Prasad’s case this Court did not hold that a
pensioner was entitled to any pension that he demanded but
all that was done in the case was to direct the State to
consider properly the claim of the pensioner for payment of
pension according to law. It further relied upon its
decision given in Writ Appeal No. 835 of 1974- State of
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Andhra Pradesh v. Ahmed Hussain Khan-heard along with Writ
Appeal No. 920 of 1974-State of Andhra Pradesh v. S.
Gopalan-In which the same Bench had held that the amendment
made in the said clause (b) of Rule 299 (1) by the said
Notification dated February 3, 1971, was valid. The Division
Bench accordingly allowed the said appeal and dismissed the
Appellant’s said writ petition with no order as to the
costs. lt is against this judgment and order of the Division
Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court that the present
Appeal has been filed by the Appellant by Special Leave
granted by this Court.
We find that the reliance placed by the Division Bench
upon its earlier decision in the two writ appeals referred
to above was misconceived. Those two appeals arose out of
separate writ petitions filed by two Government servants who
had joined the service of the former Indian State of
Hyderabad and had retired after the States Reorganization
Act, 1956 (Act XXXVII of 1956), had come into force. The
contentions of those two Government servants was that the
conditions of service applicable immediately before the
appointed day, namely, November, 1, 1956, to per sons
referred to in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) of section
115 of the said Act could not be varied to their
disadvantage except with the previous approval of the
Central Government by reason of the proviso to sub-section
(7) of the said section 115, and that as the approval of the
Central Government had not been obtained to the said
Notification, the said amendment was invalid. This
contention was upheld by a learned Single Judge of the High
Court. The Division Bench had, however, held in the above
two appeals that a letter dated April 28, 1973, from the
Joint Secretary to the Government of India, Cabinet
Secretariat, Department of Personnel and A.R., amounted to
the previous approval of the Central Government within the
meaning of the proviso to sub-section (7) of the said
section 115. The said two Government servants thereupon
filed appeals in this Court by special leave granted
937
by it, being Civil Appeal No. 2627 of 1977-Ahmed Hussain
than v. State of Andhra Pradesh and Civil Appeal No. 2628
of 1977-S. Gopalan v. State of Andhra Pradesh. This Court
allowed those two Appeals and reversed the judgment of the
Division Bench holding that the said letter dated April 28,
1973, did not amount to a previous approval granted by the
Central Government to the amendment made by the said
Notification dated February 3, 1971, to the said clause (b)
of Rule 299(1) and that therefore, the said Notification was
invalid and inoperative so far as it concerned persons
referred to in sub-sections (1) and (2) of the section 115.
Sub-section (1) of section 115 refers to every person who
immediately before the appointed day, namely, November 1,
1956, was serving in connection with the affairs of the
Union under the administrative control of the Lieutenant-
Governor or Chief Commissioner in any of the then existing
States of Ajmer Bhopal, Coorg, Kutch and Vindhya Pradesh, or
was serving in connection with the affairs of any of the
then existing States of Mysore, Punjab, Patiala and East
Punjab States Union and Saurashtra, and was on the appointed
day deemed to have been allotted to serve in connection with
the affairs of the successor State to that existing State.
Sub-section (2) refers to every person who immediately
before the appointed day, namely, November, 1 1956, was
serving in connection with the affairs of an existing State
part of whose territories was transferred to another State
by the provisions of Part II of the said Act and who, as
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from that day provisionally continued to serve in connection
with the affairs of the principal successor State to that
existing State. The Appellant in the present Appeal had
retired prior to November 1, 1956. He, therefore, did not
fall under either sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) of the
said section 115 and proviso to sub-section (7) of that
section had no application to him. The amendment to the
Rules, so far as he was concerned, did not, therefore,
require any previous approval of the Central Government even
though thereby the conditions of his service were being
varied to his disadvantage.
That, however, is not the end of the matter, because in
spite of this position, the Appellant is entitled to succeed
in view of the Judgment of this Court in Deokinandan
Prasad’s case which is a decision of a five judge Bench of
this Court. We find that the Division Bench has
misunderstood the ratio of that decision.
938
In that case, this Court held that the payment of pension
does not depend upon the discretion of the State but is
governed by rules made in that behalf and a Government
servant coming within such rules is entitled to claim
pension. It was further held that the grant of pension does
not depend upon an officer being passed by the authorities
to that effect though for the purpose of quantifying the
amount having regard to the period of service and other
allied matters, it may be necessary for the authorities to
pass an order to that effect, but the right to receive
pension flows to an officer not because of the said order
but by virtue of the rules. It was also held in that case
that pension is not a bounty payable at the sweet will and
pleasure of the Government but is a right vesting in a
Government servant and was property under clause (1) of
Article 31 of the Constitution of India and the State had no
power to withhold the same by a mere executive order and
that similarly this right was also property under sub-clause
(f) of clause (1) of Article 19 of the Constitution of India
and was not saved by clause (5) of that Article. It was
further held that this right of the Government servant to
receive pension could not be curtailed or taken away by the
State by an executive order.
Pension being thus a fundamental right, it could only
be taken away or curtailed in the manner provided in the
Constitution. So far as Article 31 (1) is concerned, it may
be said that the Appellant was deprived of, his property, by
authority of law but this could not be said to have been
done for a public purpose nor was any compensation being
given to the Appellant for deprivation of his property,
namely a sum of Rs. 142.85 being the difference between Rs.
1,000 and Rs. 857.15. So far as Article 19 (1) (f) is
concerned, the fundamental right under that sub-clause could
be restricted only as provided by clause (S) of Article 19.
That clause has no application to a right to receive pension
which is property under sub-clause (f) of Article 19 (1) of
the Constitution as held in Deokinandan Prasad’s case. The
said amendment could not by any stretch of imagination be
classified as a law of the nature mentioned in clause (5) of
Article 19. In Deokinandan Prasad’s case it was expressly
held that clause (S) of Article 19 has no application to the
right to receive pension. The fundamental right to receive
pension according to the rules in force on the date of his
retirement accrued to the Appellant when he retired from
service. By making a retrospective amendment to the said
Rule 299 (1) (b) more than
939
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fifteen years after that right had accrued to him, what was
done was to take away the Appellant’s right to receive
pension according A to the rules in force at the date of his
retirement or in any event to curtail and abridge that
right. To that extent, the said amendment was void. The fact
that sub-clause (f) of clause (1) of Article 19 and Article
31 have been omitted from the Constitution by the
Constitution (Forty-forth Amendment) Act, 1978, with effect
from June 20, 1979, is immaterial because both on the date
when the Appellant retired as also on the date when the said
Notification was issued, these provisions were part of the
Constitution.
In the result, we allow this Appeal, reverse the
judgment and set aside the order of the Division Bench of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court appealed against and restore
the order passed by the learned Single Judge. We direct the
State of Andhra Pradesh to pay to the Appellant the amounts
due to him according to the judgment of the learned Single
Judge of that High Court within one month from today and to
pay to him pension in future at the rate of Rs. 1,000 per
month in the Government of India currency.
The Respondent will pay to the Appellant the costs of
this Appeal.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
940