Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN AIRLINES CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUKHDEO RAI
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/04/1971
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1828 1971 SCR 510
1971 SCC (2) 192
ACT:
Air Corporation Act, 1953-Sections 44, 45-Regulation framed
under the Act providing terms and conditions of service of
employees--Termination of service in breach of regulations-
Relationship between Corporation and its employees that of
master and servant--Therefore, only entitled to damages.
Regulations-Framed under Air Corporation Act, 1953-Status
of.
Master and Servant-Employees of statutory corporation-
Regulations framed under statute only embody terms and
conditions of service.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is a Corporation set up under the Air
Corporation Act, 1953. The Act authorises the corporation
to appoint officers and, other employees and make
regulations providing the terms and conditions of service of
such officers and employees.
The respondent employed as a motor driver was dismissed from
the service of the Corporation in breach of the procedural
safeguards provided under the regulations. He filed a suit
for a declaration that the dismissal was illegal and void.
The trial court granted the declaration. On appeal the High
Court affirmed the decree holding that the Corporation was
under a statutory obligation to observe the procedure laid
down in the regulations and that not having been done the
order of dismissal was illegal and void and the respondent
continued to be in the employment of the Corporation as if
there was no termination of service. On the question
whether the declaration given by the trial court and upheld
by the High Court could be granted,
HELD: (1) When there is a purported termination of a
contract of service, a declaration that the contract of
service still subsisted would not be made in the absence of
special circumstances, because of the principle that courts
do not ordinarily grant specific performance of service.
This is so, even in cases where the authority appointing an
employee was acting in exercise of statutory authority. The
relationship between the person appointed and the employer
would, in such cases, be contractual i.e., as between a
master and servant, and the termination of that relationship
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would not entitle the servant to a declaration that his
employment had not been validly determined. [512H]
Francis v. Municipal Councillors of Kuala Lumpur, [1962] 3
All E.R. 633, Barber v. Manchester Regional Hospital Board,
[1958] 1 All E.R. 322 and Ridge v. Baldwin, [1964] A.C. 40,
referred to.
But the court would grant a declaration of nullity where the
action complained of is ultra vires or where the appointment
is to an office or status. [513E-F]
Vine v. National Dock Labour Board, [1957] A.C. 488, Bool
Chand v. The Chancellor, [1968] 1 S.C.R. 434 and Vidyodaya
University v. Silva, [1964] 3 All E.R. 865, referred to.
511
(ii) The fact that the appellant Corporation was one set up
under and was regulated by a statute would not take away,
without anything more, the relationship between the
Corporation and its employees from the category of purely
master and servant relationship. [514E]
Vidyodaya University v. Silva, [1964] All E.R. 865 and Dr.
S. B. Dutt v. University of Delhi, [1959] S.C.R. 1236,
referred to.
(iii)The employment of the respondent is not one to an
office or status and neither the Act nor the rules made
under s. 44 by the Central Government lay down any
obligation or restriction as to the power of the Corporation
to terminate the employment of its employees or any proce-
dural safeguards subject to which only such power could be
exercised. [516E]
(iv) This Court has held that there are only three well-
recognised exceptions to the general rule under the law of
master and servant where a declaration would be issued,
viz., (i) cases of public servants falling under article
311(2) of the Constitution; (ii) cases falling under the
industrial law and (iii) cases where acts of statutory
bodies are in breach of a mandatory obligation imposed by a
statute. [517B]
S. R. Tewari v. District Board, Agra, [1964] 3 S.C.R. 55,
Bank of Baroda v. Mehrotra, [1970] 2 L.L.J. 54, Ram Babu
Rathaur v. Life insurance Corporation, A.I.R. 1961 All. 502,
Life Insurance Corporation v. N. Banerjee, (1971] 1 L.L.J.
1, Dr. Gupta v. Nathu, [1963] 1 S.C.R. 721, Kruse v.
Johnson, [1898] 2 Q.B.D. 91 and Rajasthan State Electricity
Board v. Mohan Lal, [1967] 3 S.C.R. 377, referred to.
Life Insurance Corporation of India v. Mukherjee, [1964] 5
S.C.R. 528, distinguished.
Barot v. S. T. Corporation, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 40, explained.
(V) Though made under the power conferred by statute, the
regulations merely embody the terms and conditions of
service in the Corporation but do not constitute a statutory
restriction as to the kind of contracts which the
Corporation can make with its servants or the grounds on
which it can terminate them. That being so, and the
Corporation having undoubtedly power to dismiss its
employees, the dismissal of the respondent was with
jurisdiction and although it was wrongful in the sense of
its being in breach of the terms and conditions which
governed the relationship between the Corporation and the
respondent, it did subsist. [520D]
(vi) The present case, therefore, did not fall under any of
the three well-recognised exceptions laid down by this
Court; hence the respondent was only entitled to damages and
not to the declaration that his dismissal was null and void.
[520E]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No. 1171 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 27, 1966
of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Appellate Decree
No. 195 of 1964.
G. B. Pai, O. C. Mathur, J. B. Dadachanji, C. S.
Sreenivasa Rao and Bhajan Ram Rakhini, for the appellant.
Urmila Kapoor, Janardan Sharma and R. K. Khanna, for
respondent.
512
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
shelat J.-Prior to August 1953, the respondent was employed
as a motor driver in Airways (India) Ltd. On the passing of
the Air Corporation Act, XXVII of 1953, and consequent
thereupon of the taking over of the existing air companies,
including the Airways (India) Ltd., by the appellant-
Corporation, he became the employee of the appellant-
Corporation. On January 13, 1956, he was suspended on
certain charges. On being found guilty of those charges
after an enquiry had been held, he was dismissed by an order
dated February 6, 1956.
The respondent filed a suit alleging that the enquiry had
been conducted in breach of the procedure laid down by the
Regulations made by the Corporation under sec. 45 of the
Act, and that therefore, the dismissal was illegal and void.
The Trial Court accepted the contention and granted a
declaration that his service continued as the order
dismissing him was null and void. That decree was upheld by
the first appellate court. In a second appeal in the High
Court, it was conceded that the Regulations applied to the
respondent’s case, and that the procedure therein laid down
for terminating his service was not complied with. The
Corporation’s contention, however, was that the only relief
to which the respondent was entitled to was damages and that
a declaration, such as the one granted by the Trial Court,
could not be given. The High Court rejected that contention
holding, that the Corporation was under a statutory
obligation to observe the procedure laid down in the
Regulations, and that not having been done, the order of
dismissal was illegal and void and the respondent continued
to be in the employment of the Corporation as if there was
no termination of service. This appeal, founded on a
certificate granted by the High Court, is directed against
its aforesaid judgement and decree.
It being an admitted fact that the respondent’s service was
terminated in breach of the procedural safeguards provided
in the Regulations, the question for determination is
whether in cases, such as the one before us, a declaration
given by the Trial Court and upheld by the High Court could
be granted.
It is a well settled principle that when there is a
purported termination of a contract of service, a
declaration, that the contract of service still subsisted,
would not be made in the absence of special circumstances
because of the principle that courts do not ordinarily grant
specific performance of service. This is so, even in cases
where the authority appointing an employee was acting in
exercise of statutory authority The relationship between the
person appointed and the employer would in such cases
513
be contractual, i.e., as between a master and servant, and
the termination of that relationship would not entitle the
servant to a declaration that his employment had not been
validly determined. (see A. Francis v. Municipal Councillors
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of Kuala Lumpur and Barber v. Manchester Regional Hospital
Board (2).
"Cases of dismissal fall into three classes", said Lord Roid
in Ridge v. Baldwin. (3) firstly, dismissal of a servant by
his master, secondly, dismissal from office held during
pleasure, and thirdly, dismissal from office where there
must be something against a man to warrant his dismissal.
It is in the third category of cases that an employee cannot
be dismissed without first letting him know what is alleged
against him and hearing his defence or explanation. He
added that in a case of purely master and servant
relationship, the servant is not entitled to say that he was
not heard by his master before his dismissal. Such a ques-
tion of being heard or not can only arise where the
authority employing the servant is under some statutory or
other restriction as to the kind of contract which it can
make with its servants or the grounds on which it can
dismiss them. Ile question, therefore, would be whether the
relationship between the Corporation and the respondent was
any thing else than that of master and servant, or whether
the Corporation was under some statutory limitation or
obligation by reason of which it could not terminate his
service except by complying with such an obligation. The
decision in Vine v. National Dock Labour Board (4)
illustrates a case where the court would grant a declaration
of nullity. That was a case of lack of power in the Board
to delegate its disciplinary function to a committee which
dismissed the employee-an action which was held ultra vires,
and therefore, a nullity. A similar consequence also
follows where the appointment is to an office or status,
such as the vice-chancellorship of a university, as was the
case in Bool Chand v. The Chancellor (5), where this Court
held that the tenure of office held by the appellant could
not be terminated without informing him of the allegations
made against him and without hearing him or giving him an
opportunity to give an explanation.
There is, on the other hand, the case of Vidyodava Univer-
sity v. Silva (6) where a teacher appointed by the
University was found not to be holding such an office or
status and where it was held that the University, though
established under a statute, was under no statutory
obligation or restriction, subject to which only it could
terminate the service of the teacher. The service
(1) [196213 All E.R. 633.
(3) [1964] A.C. 40 at 65.
(5) [1968]1 S.C.R. 434.
33-1S.C.India 71
(2) [1958] 1 All E.R. 322.
(4) [1957] A.C. 488.
(6) [1964] 3 All E.R. 865.
514
of the respondent was brought to an end by a resolution of
the University Council set up under the statute establishing
the University. The resolution was admittedly passed
without hearing the teacher. Under the statute, the Council
was empowered to institute professorships and every
appointment was to be by an agreement in writing between the
University and the professor and was to be for such period
and on such terms as the Council might resolve. Under sec.
18(e) of the Act, the Council had the power to dismiss an
officer or a teacher on grounds of incapacity or conduct
which in the opinion of not less Than two-thirds of the
members of the Council rendered him unfit to be an officer
or a teacher of the University. Such a resolution with the
requisite majority was passed. The Act gave no right to the
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teacher of being heard by the Council. The Privy Council
held that the mere circumstance that the University was
established by the statute and was regulated by statutory
enactments contained in the Act did not mean that the
contracts of employment made with teachers, though subject
to sec. 18(e), were other than ordinary contracts of master
and servant, and therefore, the procedure of being heard
invoked by the respondent was not available to him and no
writ could be issued against the University. (see also Dr.
S. B. Dutta. v. University of Delhi (1) The fact, therefore,
that the appellant-Corporation was one set up under and was
regulated by Act XXVII of 1953 would not take away, without
anything more, the relationship between it and its employees
from the category of purely master and servant relationship.
Are there then in the Act any provisions which impose upon
the Corporation any statutory restriction or obligation
which limits its power of terminating that relationship ?
The Act was passed to facilitate acquisition by the Air Cor-
porations of undertakings belonging to certain existing air
companies and to make further and better provisions for the
operation of air transport services. By sec. 3, two
corporations, the Indian Airlines and Air India
International, were set up as bodies corporate, having
perpetual succession. Sec. 8(1) provides that for purposes
of discharging its functions under the Act each of the
corporations shall appoint a general manager and subject to
such rules as may be prescribed in this behalf may also
appoint such number of officers and employees as it may
think necessary. Its second sub-section provides that:
"Subject to the provisions of section 20,
every person employed by each of the
Corporations shall be subject to such
conditions of service and shall be entitled to
such remuneration and privileges as may be
determined
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 1236, at 1244.
515
by regulations made by the Corporation by
which he is employed."
Sec. 20 provides that:
"Every officer or other employee of an
existing air company-employed by that company
prior to the first day of July, 1952, and
still in its employment immediately before the
appointed date shall-become as from the
appointed date an officer or other employee,
as the case may be, of the Corporation in
which the undertaking has vested and shall
hold his office or service therein by the same
tenure, at the same remuneration and upon the
same terms and conditions and with the same
rights and privileges as to pensions and
gratuity and other matters as he would have
held the same under the existing air company
if its undertaking had not vested in the Cor-
poration and shall continue to do so unless
and until his employment in the Corporation is
terminated or until his remuneration, terms or
conditions are duly altered by the
Corporation."
Sec. 44(1) empowers the Central Government to make rules to
give effect to the provisions of the Act and sub-s. (2)
thereof empowers it, in particular and without prejudice to
the generality of that power, to make rules, inter alia,
providing the terms and conditions of service of the general
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manager and such other categories of officers as may be
specified from time to time under s. 8(1). Sec. 45
authorises each of the two Corporations with the approval of
the Central Government and by notification in the Government
gazette to make regulations not inconsistent with the Act or
the rules made under s. 44 "for the administration of the
affairs of the Corporation and for carrying out its
functions" and in particular providing the terms and
conditions of service of officers and other employees of the
Corporation other than the general manager and officers of
any other categories referred to in s. 44.
The effect of these provisions, briefly, is, (1) that sec.
8(1) authorises the Corporation to appoint officers and
other employees, (2) that under s. 8(2) the Corporation is
empowered, subject to s. 20, to lay down the terms and
conditions of service of such officers and employees as it
may determine by regulations made under s. 45, and (3) that
by virtue of s. 20 the officers and employees of the
existing air companies, whose undertakings were taken over
by the Corporations, became, by whom the operation of the
Act, the employees of the Corporation in On a Particular
undertaking was vested. The section ensures that on their
so
516
becoming the employees of the Corporation they would be
governed by the same terms and conditions of service by
which they were governed immediately before the appointed
date until the Corporation altered those terms and
conditions by regulations The power to appoint its
employees. except to the extent of the employees of the
existing air companies becoming by operation of s. 20 its
employees, is vested in each of the two Corporations Each of
them has also the power to lay down the terms and conditions
of service of its employees by regulations and thereby even
alter the terms and conditions, which those who became by
operation of law its employees had in their respective
existing companies, and which, until such alteration, were
ensured to them. Indeed, the power of the Corporation to
terminate the employment of its officers and other employees
was no where disputed; the only dispute raised was as to the
manner in which it could be exercised. It is necessary to
observe in this connection that neither the Act nor the
rules made under sec. 44 by the Central Government lay down
any obligation or restriction as to the power of the
Corporation to terminate the employment of its employees or
any procedural safeguards, subject to which only, such power
could be exercised. The reason is that under the scheme of
the Act such procedural safeguards and other terms and
conditions of service were to be provided for in the
regulations made by the Corporation under sec. 45.
The employment of the respondent not being one to an office
or status and there being no obligation or restriction in
the Act or the rules subject to which only the power to
terminate the respondent’s employment could be exercised,
could the respondent contend that he was entitled to a,
declaration that the termination of his employment was null
and void ?
A case of an analogous nature arose in U. P. State Ware-
housing Corporation Ltd. v. Tyagi. (1) The Agricultural
Produce (Development and Warehousing) Corporation Act,
XXVIII of 1956, with which the Court there was concerned,
provided for the incorporation and regulation of
corporations for development and warehousing of
agricultural produce on cooperative principles. See. 28
empowered State Governments to set up such corporations.
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Sec. 52 authorised the appropriate Government to make rules
and ss. 53 and 54 gave power to the Board set up under the
Act and the corporations respectively to make regulations
consistently with the provisions of the Act and the rules
The respondent there was dismissed from service without
following the procedure laid down in regulation 16(3).
There was no
(1) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 250.
517
question or doubt about the power of the Corporation to
terminate his service. The question was, whether a
declaration to the effect that the termination was invalid
and void on the ground of non-compliance of regulation
16(3), could be granted in the suit filed by the respondent.
This Court, after examining a number of decisions, followed
the decision in S. R. Tewari v. District Board Agra (1)
which laid down that there were only three well recognized
exceptions to the general rule under the law of master and
servant where such a declaration would be issued, namely,
(1) cases of public servants falling under Art. 311(2) of
the Constitution, (2) cases falling under the industrial
law, and (3) cases where acts of statutory bodies are in
breach of a mandatory obligation imposed by a statute, and
held that the case before it did not fall under any one of
the said three exceptions, that the dismissal was wrongful
inasmuch as it was in breach of the terms and conditions of
employment embodied in the regulations and not one of breach
of a statutory restriction or obligation, subject to which
only the power to terminate the relationship depended. (see
also Bank of Baroda v. Mehrotra (2) In S. R. Tewari’s case
(1) this Court noticed with approval the decision of the
High Court of Allahabad in Ram Babu Rathaur v. Life
Insurance Corporation (3) that though the Corporation was a
statutory body, the relations between it and its employees
were governed by contract and were of master and servant and
not subject to any statutory obligation although the
Corporation had framed under its power under the Act regu-
lations containing conditions of service in the Corporation.
A similar view has recently been taken by the High Court of
Calcutta in Life Insurance Corporation v. N. Banerjee (4).
Counsel for the respondent, however, sought assistance from
the decision in the Life Insurance Corporation of India v.
Mukherjee (5). That decision is clearly distinguishable and
can, therefore, give no assistance. Prior to the passing of
the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 the respondent
there was an employee of one of the insurance companies
taken over under the Act. Under his contract of employment,
his service was liable to be terminated without notice if he
was found guilty of fraud, misappropriation etc. but was
entitled to 30 days’ notice if it was terminated for any
other reason. His service was terminated admittedly without
giving him an opportunity to be heard. With the transfer of
the controlled business from the insurer to the Corporation,
the employees of the former became the employees of the
latter and
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 55. (2) [1970] II L.L.J. 54.
(3) A.I.R. 1961 All. 502. (4) [1971] 1 L.L.J. 1.
(5) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 528.
518
were governed under S. 11 (1) of the Act by the same terms
and conditions as before. But under sec. 11 (2), the
Central Government had the power to alter those terms and
conditions. Under this power, the Government issued an
order reducing the remuneration payable to the development
officers and revising their other terms and conditions. Cl.
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(10) of this order empowered the Corporation inter alia to
terminate the services of such an officer, (a) after giving
him an opportunity of showing cause, or (b) without
assigning any reason but with the prior approval of the
Chairman of the Corporation and after giving three months’
notice. Cl. (11) of the order provided that the actual pay
admissible to an officer would be determined in accordance
with the regulations which the corporation would make under
the power reserved to it by the Act. It is thus clear that,
except for the pay and allowances admissible to an officer,
the Order was a self-contained code as regards the other
terms and conditions of service including disciplinary
action. In the meantime, two circulars had been issued by
the managing director which provided that in certain
circumstances the services of an officer could be termina-
ted. As contemplated by cl. (II) of the said Order, the
Corporation framed regulations under sec. 49 of the Act.
Regulation 4(3) incorporated the said circulars as part of
the regulations for purposes of determining the pay
admissible to and the fitment of the development officers.
Thus, the circulars became part of the regulations though
when they were issued they were merely administrative in
character and without any sanction of the Act. The
Corporation claimed that under regulation 4(3), which in-
corporated the said circulars, it had the power to terminate
the service of Mukherjee without assigning any reason.
Negativing that contention, this Court held that s. 11(2)
was paramount and would override any provision of the Order
passed by the Central Government if it was contrary to it.
Next would come the Order, and lastly the regulations which
were subject to the Act and the Order, and therefore, if the
regulations were to be inconsistent with the provisions of
S. 11(2) or the said Order, the regulations would be to that
extent invalid. Therefore, even if the regulations provided
for termination of services they would have to be read
subject to the Order of the Government, and consequently,
the order terminating the service of an officer would have
to be in consonance with the provisions of the said Order.
Consequently, an order terminating the service of an officer
without giving him an opportunity of being heard, as
provided by cl. (10) of the said Order, would be without
power, and therefore, invalid. The Court held the impugned
dismissal as invalid also for the reason that regulation
4(3) provided for determination of pay and allowances and
the fitment of officers in accordance with the principle
laid down in the said circulars, and therefore, the service
of an officer could not be determined under the guise of
519
fitment. That could, therefore, be done only under cl. (10)
of the Order and in accordance with the procedure laid down
in that clause. The order declaring the dismissal invalid
thus was based on the ground that the regulations and the
Order of the Central Government must be read harmoniously
and when so read, the Central Government’s Order gave power
to terminate the service of an officer after following the
procedure there laid down, and consequently, the impugned
dismissal made inconsistently with the provisions of the
said Order was without jurisdiction, and therefore, a
nullity. It is clear that this decision was based on
different facts and on different principles and cannot be
legitimately invoked by the respondent. But the decision in
Barrot v. S. T. Corporation (1) would seem to support the
respondent. There, the order of termination of the
appellant’s service by the Corporation, a body set up under
the Road Transport Corporations Act, 1950, was held to be
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bad in law on account of its being in contravention of cl.
4(b) of the Regulations containing service conditions framed
by the Corporation under the power given to it by the Act.
But the question whether the said Regulations constituted a
statutory obligation subject to which only the power to
terminate the employment could be exercised or not, or the
question whether they took the employment out of master and
servant relationship was not canvassed. Neither the
decision in S. R. Tewari’s case (2) nor any other similar
decision was also it seems, brought to the notice of the
Court.
Nor can counsel derive any aid, from the decision in Dr.
Gupta v. Nathu (3) where the Court was dealing with a by-law
made by the Central Government under powers conferred on it
by the Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952 which
compulsorily amended the bye-laws of the association
recognized under the Act and which vested certain powers on
authorities external to the association. The bye-law in
question was not limited in its application to the members
of the association but to all those who entered into forward
contracts and were governed by its by-laws. But all rules
and regulations made by authorities ill pursuance of a power
under a statute do not necessarily have the force of law.
In Kruse v. Johnson. (4) while considering the validity of a
bye-law made by a country council. Lord Russell described a
bye-law having the force of law as one affecting the public
or some section of the public, imposed by some authority
clothed with statutory powers, ordering something to be done
or not to be done and accompanied by some sanction or
penalty for its non-observance. It validly made such a bye-
law has the force of law within the sphere of its
(1) [1966] 3 S.C.R. 40.
(3) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 721.
(2) [1964] 3 S. C. R. 55.
(4) [1898] 2 Q.B. 91, at 96.
520
legitimate operation. The function of such bye-laws is to
supplement the general law by which the legislature
delegates its own power to make them. In Rajasthan State
Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal (1) where this Court held the
Board, set up under the Electricity (Supply) Act, 54 of
1948, as a State within the meaning of Art. 12 of the
Constitution against which mandamus could issue under Art.
226, emphasised the fact that the Act contained provisions
which empowered the Board to issue directions, the
disobedience of which was punishable as a penal offence. As
observed earlier, under sections 8(2) and 20, the appellant-
Corporation has been given the power to employ its own
officers and other employees to the extent it thinks
necessary on terms and conditions provided by it in regu-
lations made under sec. 45. The regulations contain the
terms and conditions which govern the relationship between
the Corporation and its employees. Though made under the
power conferred by the statute, they merely embody the terms
and conditions of service in the Corporation but do not
constitute a statutory restriction as to the kind of
contracts which the Corporation can make with its servants
or the grounds on which it can terminate them. That being
so, and the Corporation having undoubtedly the power to
dismiss its employees, the dismissal of the respondent was
with jurisdiction, and although it was wrongful in the sense
of its being in breach of the terms and conditions which
governed the relationship between the Corporation and the
respondent, it did subsist. The present case, therefore,
did not fall under an of the three well recognized excep-
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tions, and therefore, the respondent was only entitled to
damages and not to the declaration that his dismissal was
null and void.
In our view, the High Court was in error in upholding the
declaration granted by the Trial Court. The appeal by the
Corporation, therefore, succeeds and is allowed with the
result that the judgment and decree passed by the High Court
is set aside. In the circumstances of the case, however,
there will be no order as to costs.
K. B. N.
Appeal allowed.
(1) [1967] 3 S.C.R. 377.
521