Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TAKHATRAY SHIVDATRAY MANKAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/04/1969
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 143 1970 SCR (1) 244
1969 SCC (2) 120
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC1233 (13)
R 1989 SC1843 (4,10,11,12,14)
ACT:
Saurashtra Covenanting States Servants (Superannuation age)
Rules 1955-Fixing age of retirement at 55 years unless for
special reasons otherwise directed by Govt.-These words mean
that retirement age can be extended beyond 55 years-Rule
would be invalid if interpreted as giving power to Govt. to
retire a person earlier than 55 years because it does not
lay down a minimum period of service-That interpretation
should be placed which makes Rules valid and not invalid-
Conditions were varies to disadvantage when r. 161(c) (2)
(ii) (1) of Bombay Civil Service Rules, 1959 was applied to
person previously governed by Saurashtra Rule-When done
without assent of President this was in violation of s.
115(7) of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant originally joined the service of the State of
Junagadh in 1934 and was after the merger of that State in
Saurashtra confirmed in September, 1956 as an executive
engineer in the service of the latter State. Rule 3(i) of
the Saurashtra Covenanting States Servants (Superannuation
age) Rules 1955 provided : "A Govt. servant shall, unless
for special reasons otherwise directed by Govt. retire from
service on his completing 55 years of age." After the merger
of Saurashtra in the bilingual State of Bombay the old
Bombay Civil Service Rules were applied to Saurashtra area
with effect from January 7, 1957. On July 1, 1959 the
Bombay Civil Service Rules, 1959 were promulgated. Accord-
ing to r. 161 (c) (2) (ii) (1) the age of retirement for
class 1 Engineers in the State Service was fixed at 55 years
but it was further laid down that they "may be required by
the Government to retire on reaching the age of 50 years, if
they have attained to the rank of Superintending Engine." On
the formation of the State of Gujarat the appellant’s
’services were transferred to that State but the Bombay
Rules continued to apply. Under the Bombay Rule aforesaid,
namely, r. 161(c)(2)(ii)(1) the Government of the State of
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Gujarat retired the appellant at the age of about 53 years.
The appellant filed a writ petition in the High Court. The
High Court took into account s. 115(7) of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 but held that since the Saurashtra
Rule 3(i) also empowered the ’State Government to retire the
appellant at an age earlier than 55 years there was no
variation of conditions of service to his disadvantage under
the Bombay Rule and therefore the latter rule was not
invalid for want of Presidential assent. The High Court
took the view that the expression "unless for special
reasons otherwise directed by Government" in r. 3 (i)
of the Saurashtra Rules meant that the Government could for
special reasons retire a Government servant before he had
attained the normal superannuation age of 55 years. Against
the High Court’s judgment dismissing his writ petition the
appellant came by special leave, to this Court.
HELD : Rule 3(i) of the Saurashtra Rules, if construed of
interpreted in the manner in which it had been done by the
High Court, would bring it into direct conflict with Moti
Ram Deka’s case as well as other cases decided by this
Court. In Moti Ram Deka’s case it was laid down that if any
rule permitted the appropriate authorities to retire compul-
sorrily a civil servant without imposing a limitation in
that behalf that such
245
civil servant should have put in a minimum period of
service. that rule would be invalid and the so-called
retirement ordered under the said rule would amount to
removal of the civil servant within the meaning of Art.
311(2) of the- Constitution. The principle is that the rule
relating to compulsory retirement of a Government servant
must not only contain the outside limit of superannuation
but there must also be a provision for a reasonably long
period of qualified service which must be indicated with
sufficient clarity. For example if 55 years have been
specified as the age of superannuation and if it is sought
to retire the servant even before that period it should be
provided in the rule that he could be retired after he has
attained the age of 50 years or he has put in service for a
period of 25 years. [248 G-249 G]
On the above principle rule 3 (i) of the Saurashtra Rules
would have to be declared invalid if the expression "unless
for special reasons otherwise directed by Government" is so
construed as to give a power to order compulsory retirement
even before attaining the ’age of 55 years. A statutory
rule, however, should be so interpreted as to make it valid
and not invalid. The correct interpretation of Rule 3(i) is
that it gives power to the Government to allow a Government
servant to remain in service even beyond the age of 55 years
for special reasons; so construed the Rule would not be
invalid and the appellant could not under it have been
retired before be had attained the age of 55 years. By
applying the Bombay Rule his conditions of service were
varied to his disadvantage because he could then be
compulsorily retired as soon as he attained the age of 50
years. As the previous approval of the Central Government
was not obtained in accordance with the proviso to s. 115(7)
of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, the Bombay Rule
could not be made applicable to the appellant. [249 G-250 C]
The appellant was thus entitled to remain in service until
he attained the age of 55 years and the impugned order
directing his retirement was invalid and ineffective. [250
E-F]
Bholanath J. Thaker v. State of Saurashtra, A.I.R. (1954)
S.C. 680, referred to.
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Moti Ram Deka etc. v. General Manager N.E.F. Railways
Maligaon, Pandu etc. [1964] 5 S.C.R. 683, State of Bombay v.
Saubhag chand M. poshi, [1958] S.C.R. 571, P. Balakotaiah v.
Union of India, [1958] S.C.R. 1052, Dalip Singh v. State of
Punjab, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 88 and Gurdev Singh Sidhu v. State
of Punjab & Anr. [1964] 7 S.C.R. 587, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 409 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment -and order dated
July 5, 1963, of the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil
Application No. 827 of 1961.
R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
G. L. Sanghi, S. K. Dholakia and R. N. Sachthey, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, Y. This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the Gujarat High Court dismissing a petition
under L83Sup.CI/69-2
246
Art. 226 of the Constitution by which the order, retiring
the appellant from service before he had attained the age,
of 55 years, had been challenged.
The appellant had joined the service of the erstwhile State
of Junagadh on August 1, 1934. That State merged into the
State of Saurashtra on January 20, 1949. The appellant
continued to remain in the service of that State having been
confirmed as an Executive Engineer on September 24, 1956.
On the merger of Saurashtra in the new billingual State of
Bombay on November 1, 1956, the appellant was absorbed in
the service of the said State. On the bifurcation of the
State of Bombay on May 1, 1960, he was assigned to, the
State of Gujarat and was absorbed as a permanent Executive
Engineer there. On October 12, 1961 the State of Gujarat
made an order retiring the appellant from the service with
effect from January 12, 1962. On that date he had not
attained the age of 55 years but he was about 53 years old.
This, order was made ’in exercise of the powers conferred by
Rule 161 of the Bombay Civil Service Rules, 1959. The order
of retirement was challenged by the appellant by means of a
writ petition which was dismissed.
It is common ground that when the appellant was in the
,service of the erstwhile State of Junagadh his conditions
of :service were governed by the Junagadh State Pension and
Parwashi Rules which had been made by the ruler of the State
who exercised sovereign legislative powers. According to
those rules the age of superannuation was 60 years. Before
the inclusion of the Junagadh State in the State of
Saurashtra the Rajpramukh had promulgated an Ordinance
called the Saurashtra State Regulation of Government
Ordinance 1948. By s. 4 of that Ordinance all the laws in
force in the covenanting States prior to their integration
were continued in force in the State of Saurashtra until
repealed or amended under S. 5. Notwithstanding this the
Saurashtra Government adopted and applied the Bombay Civil
Service Rules which were then in force in the State of
Bombay by an order dated September 23, 1948. This Court in
Bholanath ,J. Thaker v. The State of Saurashtra(1) held
that the Rules as regards the age of superannuation which
prevailed in the covenanting State which in that case was
the State of Wadhwan continued to govern those government
servants who had come from that State and had been absorbed
in the services of the State of Saurashtra. In view of that
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-decision the State of Saurashtra made the Saurashtra
Covenanting State Servants (Superannuation age). Rules,
1955, hereainafter called the "Saurashtra Rules", in
exercise of the power conferred by Art. 309 of the Consti-
tution. Rule 3(i) provided
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 680.
247
"A Govt. servant shall, unless for special
reasons otherwise directed by Govt. retire
from service on his completing 55 years of
age."
After the integration of the Saurashtra State into the State
of Bombay a resolution was passed by the Government on Janu-
ary 7, 1957 applying the old Bombay Civil Service Rules to
Saurashtra area. On July 1, 1959 the Bombay Civil Service,
Rules 1959, hereinafter called the "Bombay Rules" were pro-
mulgated under Art. 309 of the Constitution. Clause (c)(2)
(ii) (1) of Rule 161 is as follows
"Except as otherwise provided in this Sub-
clause Government servants in the Bombay
Service of Engineers, Class 1, must retire on
reaching the age of 55 years, and may be
required by the Government to retire on
reaching the age of 50 years, if they have
attained to the rank of Superintending
Engineer."
It was under this rule that the order retiring the appellant
was made.
In the High Court the writ petition filed by the appellant
was heard and disposed of with two other similar petitions
in which identical questions had been raised. A number of
points were -raised in the High Court but it is unnecessary
to refer to them because the questions on which the present
appeal can be disposed of are only two : (1) Whether the
appellant was governed by the Saurashtra Rules or the Bombay
Rules and (2) even if the Saurashtra Rules were applicable
could the retirement of the appellant be ordered before he,
had attained the age of 55 years. The High Court rightly
looked at the provisions of s. 115(7) of the States
Reorganisation Act 1956. It is provided thereby that
nothing in the section shall be deemed to affect after the
appointed. day the operation of the provisions of Chapter 1
of Part XIV of the Constitution in relation to ’the
determination of the conditions of service of persons
serving in connection with the affairs of the Union or any
State. The proviso is important and lays down that the
conditions of service applicable immediately before the
appointed day to the case of any person referred to in sub-
section (1) or sub-section (2) (of s. 115) shall not be
varied to his disadvantage except with the previous approval
in the Central Government. The case of the appellant fell
within the proviso and it had, therefore, to be, determined
whether the conditions of service applicable to the
appellant immediately before the appointed day which
admittedly were contained in the Saurashtra Rules had been
varied to his disadvantage, and if so, whether the approval
of the Central Government had been obtained. It was
conceded before the High Court by the, learned
248
Advocate General, who appeared for the State, that no
previous approval of the Central Government had been
obtained to vary the conditions of service of those public
servants who were serving in the State of Saurashtra until
November 1, 1956. The High Court in this situation
proceeded to decide whether by the application of Rule 161
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of the Bombay Rules the conditions of service of the
appellant contained in the Saurashtra Rules had been varied
to his disadvantage. It was argued on behalf of the
appellant that the expression "unless for special reasons
otherwise directed by Government" in Rule 3 (i) of the
Saurashtra Rules provided for extension of the age of
superannuation beyond 55 years and not for reduction
thereof. The Advocate General had argued that what was
meant by the aforesaid words was that Government could, for
special reasons, retire a Government servant before he had
attained the age of 55 years which was the normal
superannuation age. If that was so Rule 161 (c) (2) (ii)
(1) of the Bombay Rules could not be regarded as having
varied the conditions of service contained in the Saurashtra
Rules to the disadvantage of the Government servants. The
High Court was of the view that while framing the Saurashtra
Rules the draftsmen who must have been well aware of the
then Bombay Civil Service Rules which were in the same terms
as Rule 161 of the Bombay Rules could not have framed the
clause in such manner as to introduce an element of
discrimination between Executive Engineers who had been
absorbed from a Covenanting State and those who had been
appointed or recruited directly by the State Government. In
the opinion of the High Court even under the Saurashtra
Rules retirement could be ordered before a person had
attained the age of 55 years. It was, therefore, held that
the conditions in Rule 161 (c) (2) (ii) of the Bombay Rules
had not been shown to be less advantageous or
disadvantageous to the appellant than the conditions in Rule
3 (i) of the Saurashtra Rules by which the appellant was
governed until November 1, 1956. In this manner the proviso
to s. 115(7) of the States ReOrganisation Act 1956 did not
stand in the way of the applicability of the Bombay Rules.
We find it difficult to concur with the view of the High
Court. Rule 3 (i) of the Saurashtra Rules, if construed or
interpreted in the manner in which it has been done by the
High Court, would bring it into direct conflict with the law
laid down by this Court in Moti Ram Deka etc. v. General
Manager, N.E.F. Railways Maligaon, Pandu etc.(1), which is a
_judgment of a bench of seven judges of this court. One of
the matters which came up for consideration was the effect
of a service rule which permitted compulsory retirement
without fixing the minimum period of service after which the
rule could be invoked. According to the
(1) [1964] 5 S. C. R. 683.
249
observations of Venkatarama Ayyar, J., in The State of
Bombay v. Saubhagchand M. Doshi(1) the application of such a
rule would be tantamount to dismissal or removal under Art.
311(2) of the Constitution. There were certain other
decisions of this Court which were relevant on this point,
viz. P. Balakotaiah v. The Union of India & Ors.(2) and
Dalip Singh v. The State of Punjab(3).. All these decisions
were considered in Moti Ram Deka’s case(4) and the true
legal position was stated in the majority judgment at page
726 thus :
"We think that if any Rule permits the appro-
priate authority to retire compulsorily a
civil servant without imposing a limitation in
that behalf that such civil servant should
have put in a minimum period of service, that
Rule would be invalid and the so-called
retirement ordered under the said Rule would
amount to removal of the civil servant within
the meaning of Art. 311(2)."
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In Gurdev Singh Sidhu v. State of Punjab & Anr.(5), it was
pointed out that the only two exceptions to the, protection
afforded by Art. 311(2) were,-(1) where a permanent public
servant was asked to retire on the ground-that he had
reached the age of superannuation which was reasonably
fixed; (2) that he was compulsorily retired under the Rules
which prescribed the normal age of superannuation -and
provided a reasonably long period of qualified service after
which alone compulsory retirement could be valid. The basis
on which this view has proceeded is that for efficient
administration it is necessary that public servants should
enjoy a sense of security of tenure and that the termination
of service of a public servant under a rule which does ,not
lay down a reasonably long period of qualified service is in
substance removal under Art. 311(2). The principle is that
the rule relating to compulsory retirement of a Government
servant must not only contain the outside limit of
superannuation but there must also be a provision for a
reasonably long period of qualified service which must be
indicated with sufficient clarity. To give an example, if
55 years have been specified as the age of superannuation
and if it is sought to retire the servant even before that
period it should be provided in the rule that he could be
retired after he has attained the age of 50 years or he has
put in service for a period of 25 years.
Now Rule 3 (i) of the Saurashtra Rules will have to be dec-
lared invalid if the expression "unless for special reasons
other-
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 571. (2) [1958] S.C.R.
1052.
(3) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 88. (4) [1964] 5
S.C.R. 683.
(5) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 587.
250
wise directed by Government" is so construed as to give a
power to order compulsory retirement even before attaining
the age of 55 years. It is well-known that a law or a
statutory rule should be so interpreted as to make it valid
and not invalid. If this expression is confined to what was
argued before the High Court, namely, that it gives power to
the Government to allow a Government servant to remain in
service even beyond the age of 55 years for special reasons
the rule will not be rendered invalid and its validity will
not be put in jeopardy. So construed it is apparent that
the appellant could not have been retired compulsorily under
the Saurashtra Rules before he had attained the age of 55
years. By applying the Bombay rule his conditions of
service were varied to his disadvantage because he could
then be compulsorily retired as soon as he attained the age
of 50 years. As the previous approval of the Central
Government was not obtained in accordance with the proviso
to s. 115(7) of the States Reorganisation Act 1956, the
Bombay rule could not be made applicable to the appellant.
Counsel for the State pressed us to look into certain docu-
ments for the purpose of finding out whether prior approval
of the Central Government was obtained in the matter of
varying the conditions of service of the appellant by
applying the Bombay rules. But none of these documents were
referred to before the High Court and in the presence of a
clear concession by the learned Advocate General we see no
justification for acceding to such a request.
In this view of the matter this appeal must succeed and it
is hereby allowed with costs in this Court. It is declared
that the appellant was entitled to remain in service until
he attained the age of 55 years and that the impugned order
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directing his retirement was invalid and ineffective.
G.C.
Appeal allowed.
251