Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOVT OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.A. MANICKAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/02/1996
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCALE (2)759
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
C.A.Nos. 4159 AND 4158 OF 1996
(Arising out of S.L.P.(C) NOS. 13848/86 & 4958 -/85:)
Special leave granted.
C.A.No.4126/85:
Learned counsel for the appellant states that the
respondent in this appeal has died and he has instructions
to withdraw this appeal. This appeal is dismissed as
withdrawn.
This is a batch of appeals arising from judgments and
orders of the High Court of Madras. The principal judgment
of the High Court was delivered by a full Bench and that is
the subject matter of C.A.No.352/85. In the other matters
the full Bench judgment was followed.
The respondent in each of these appeals was an employee
of the appellant, State of Tamil Nadu. He was compulsorily
retired from service in the public interest after he had
attained the age on the ground that the provisions of the
rule and the directions of the State Government applicable
to compulsory retirement had not been followed. The full
Bench came to the conclusion that the case of the respondent
had to be upheld and he was related or treated as
reinstated, as the case might with consequential benefits.
The rule in question is Fundamental Rule 56(d), which
reads thus:
"F.R.56(d): Notwithstanding
anything contained in this
rule, the appropriate
authority shall if it is of
the opinion that it is in the
public interest so to do, have
the absolute right to retire
any Government Servant by
giving months pay and
allowances in lieu of such
notice, after he has attained
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the age of fifty years or
after he has completed twenty-
five years of qualifying
service. Any Government
servant who has attained the
age of fifty years or who has
completed twenty-five years or
qualifying service may
likewise retire from service
by giving notice of not less
than three months in writing
to the appropriate authority."
The State Government, by G.O.Ms. No.761 Public
(Services A) Department dated 19.3.1973, gave directions for
the constitution of review committees and the procedure to
be followed for scrutiny in matters relating to compulsory
retirement. Clause 4 thereof reads thus:
"The Government also direct that
cases coming up for retirement
during the first half year of any
year shall be sent up for review
before the 1st July of the previous
year. The case of persons who are
due for review in the second half
of any year shall be sent before
the 1st January of the year."
The High Court posed the question: what is the effect
of not referring the matter of his compulsory retirement to
the review committee six months before the employee attains
the age of 50 years or completes 25 years of service. It
held that there was a duty cast on the heads of departments
to consider every one of the cases of employees who were due
for review in accordance with the instructions and, "in such
circumstances it shall be presumed that if an officer’s name
had not been sent up to the review committee the Heads of
Departments and the Government considered that there were no
grounds for sending up the proposal to the review committee
in respect of that there were no grounds for sending up the
proposal to the review committee in respect of that officer
.............. ..............We are, therefore, of the
opinion that if an officer’s name who is due to attain the
age of 50 years or has completed 25 years of service had not
been sent to the review committee it shall be presumed that
there was no ground for sending his name for consideration
for compulsory retirement and that it is in those
circumstances the competent authority had not referred the
matter to the review committee."
The High Court went on to say that "it may even be
presumed that there was an assessment in favour of further
continuance of the officer and any review subsequent to the
attainment of 50 years of age shall be considered to be a
second review...................."
On a plain reading of the rule and the instructions,
the view taken by the High Court cannot be sustained. The
rule permits the appropriate authority to retire any
Government servant after he has attained the age of 50 years
or after he has completed 25 years of qualifying service.
The rule prescribes a starting point, which is the attaining
of the age of 50 years or the completion of 25 years of
service, but it does not prescribe a terminus ad quem. It
is, therefore, open to the appropriate authority under the
rule to consider the case of a Government servant for
premature retirement at any time after the aforementioned
starting points. The direction contained in the Government
Order aforementioned, even assuming that it is mandatory,
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does not assist the respondents for the only direction is to
the heads of departments to send up cases coming up for
retirement for review : those coming up for retirement
during the first half of any year before 1st July of the
previous year and those due for retirement in the second
half of any year before 1st January of that year. The
direction is not to carry out and complete the review before
such dates.
Learned counsel for the respondents drew our attention
to Explanation-II of the Fundamental Rule which states that
the three months notice may be given before the Government
servant attains the age of 50 years provided that the
retirement takes place after he has attained that age. The
Explanation is only intended to enable the three months’
notice to be given before an officer attains the age of 50
years so that he may be compulsorily retired immediately he
attains that age can assist the respondents.
Learned counsel for the appellant drew our attention to
the judgment of this Court in Union of India & Ors. vs.
Nasirmiya Ahmadmiya Chauhan, 1994 (Suppl.) 2 S.C.C. 537. The
case dealt with a rule and Government instructions similar
to those aforementioned. This Court held that a Government
servant could not say that, though the order of retirement
was justified on the basis of the service record, it was
liable to be quashed since there was a violation of the
Government instructions. The Government instructions were
only guidelines laid down by the Government.
Learned counsel for the respondent cited the judgment
in State of Uttar Pradesh vs. Chandra Mohan Nigam & Ors.,
1978 (1) S.C.R. 521. The rule with which the Court was
concerned was similar to the provisions of Fundamental Rule
56 (d), but the instructions issued by the Government of
India in that case stated:
"Six months before an officer
attains the age of 25, his record
should be carefully examined by the
State Government, or if the officer
is serving under the Central
Government by the Central
Government, and a provisional
judgment formed whether he should
be retired on attaining the age of
55 years."
This Court said that the correct position that emerged from
the rule read with the procedural instructions was: "Once a
review has taken place and no decision to retire on that
review has been ordered by the Central Government, the
officer gets a lease in the case of 50 years upto the next
barrier at 55 and, if he is again cleared at that point, he
is free and untrammeled upto 58 which is his usual span of
the service career."
It will have been noticed that the Government
instructions in Nigam’s case were that the record of the
officer should be examined before he attained the stated age
and it was therefore he attained the stated age and it was
therefore that this Court held as it did. In the case before
us the instructions are not that the service record should
be examined but that heads of departments should send up the
service record of officers who are about to reach the
aforementioned starting points before the stated dates.
In C.A. No.352/85 this Court, when it granted special
leave, noted that the respondent had attained the age of
superannuation and it directed that he would be entitled to
all the necessary benefits flowing from the impugned order
and judgment irrespective of the result of the appeal. That
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direction must stand.
We are of the view that, in the other appeals, if the
respondents have already been paid amounts in excess of what
they should have received by reason of this judgment, such
excess shall not be recovered.
The appeals are allowed accordingly. The judgments and
orders under appeal are set aside and the writ petitions
filed by the respondents dismissed. There shall be no order
as to costs.