Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5158 of 2007
PETITIONER:
The Regional Manager, APSRTC
RESPONDENT:
N. Satyanarayana and Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/11/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & P. SATHASIVAM
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5158 OF 2007
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 17859 of 2005)
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Challenge in this appeal is to the order passed by a
Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ
Appeal No.874 of 2005 dismissing the appeal filed by the
appellants and thereby upholding the order passed by a
learned Single Judge in Writ Petition No.16244 of 1999 and
some other writ petitions. The present appeal relates to Writ
Petition No.16244 of 1999 which was filed by the respondents.
3. Factual position is almost undisputed. The respondents
were appointed as Conductors w.e.f. 31.10.1996 on daily
wages basis. Although the appointments of the respondents
were on daily wages basis, their services were to be regularized
in a phased manner as and when sanctioned vacancies arose.
Since sanctioned vacancies arose and the respondents had
completed 240 days of service, in terms of policy decision,
their services were regularized w.e.f. 1.8.1987. After passage
of more than a decade, respondents filed a writ petition i.e.
Writ Petition (C) No.16244 of 1999 seeking regularization of
their services from the date of initial appointment with all
consequential benefits. By order dated 18.08.2004, learned
Single Judge disposed of the Writ Petition along with other
cases allowing the writ petitions purportedly following the
decision of this Court in Divisional Manager, APSRTC and Ors.
v. P. Lakshmoji Rao and Ors. (2004 (2) SCC 433).
4. Writ Appeals were filed before the High Court challenging
the learned Single Judge’s order on the ground that on a
misreading of this Court’s judgment in Divisional Manager,
APSRTC and Ors. case (supra) the writ petition was allowed.
5. The Division Bench dismissed the writ appeal holding
that the judgment of this Court in Divisional Manager,
APSRTC’s case (supra) applied to the facts of the case.
6. In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant - Corporation submitted that both the learned Single
Judge and the Division Bench did not appreciate the ratio of
the decision in Divisional Manager, APSRTC’s case (supra) in
the proper perspective and have erroneously held that the
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decision applied to the case of the respondents.
7. There is no appearance on behalf of any of the
respondents in spite of service of notice.
8. The learned Single Judge, while allowing the writ petition
relied on paragraph-18 of the judgment of this Court. The
same reads as follows:
"In view of this peculiar situation and in
order to avoid the anomalies that might
otherwise ensue, while we hold that the
respondent employees have failed to establish
their legal right to get the status of regular
employees right from the date of their initial
appointment on daily-wage basis and the
respective dates of regularization assigned to
the respondents cannot be legally faulted, we
are inclined to mould the relief in modification
of the directions given in the judgments under
appeal and direct as follows:
"If any of the conductors, junior to
the respondents in the relevant senior list
of the concerned Division/Region, have
got the benefit of seniority and
regularization OR are entitled to get the
same by virtue of the judgments that
have become final, then the respondents
who are seniors to them, shall be given
the same benefit on the same principle."
9. It is to be noted that the ratio of the decision in the said
case was to the following effect:
"It is difficult to comprehend the ratio of
the above decision. While purporting to clarify
the order passed in the writ petition by the
learned Single Judge, the Division Bench
imported a totally alien concept of continuous
service within the meaning of Section 25-B of
the I.D. Act which was for the special purpose
of applying the provisions as to lay off and
retrenchment contained in Chapter V-A of the
Act. Moreover, the order in the writ appeal is
as vague as it could be. The expression ’date
of continuous appointment’ makes no sense.
Even if it is taken that the said wording has
been inaccurately used for the words
’continuous service’, still, the direction is
unintelligible. Continuous service within the
meaning of Section 25-B for how long?
Nothing has been specified. In this state of
things, in W.P. No. 24263 of 1998, a learned
Single Judge proceeded on the basis that as
per the decision in W.A. No.705/1995, the
employees were entitled to seek regularization
with effect from the date of initial appointment,
thus, making the clarification given by the
Division Bench virtually otiose.
In the light of the above discussion, we
are of the view that the law laid down or the
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directions given in various writ petitions/writ
appeals are not legally sustainable for more
than one reason. Firstly, wrong criterion
based on Section 25-B of I.D. Act was applied
in case after case. Secondly, the respondents
and other similarly situated employees
approached the Court under Article 226 long
after their regularization, thereby unsettling
the settled position. Thirdly, on the facts of
these cases, it is evident that the services of
the employees who were recruited as
Conductors were regularized within a
reasonable time. The respondent-employees
were, therefore, treated fairly. No service rule
or regularization or any other principle of law
has been pressed into service by the
respondents to claim regularization from an
anterior date i.e. right from the date of their
initial appointment as daily wage employees."
10. Even a bare reading of paragraph-18 of the judgment on
which reliance has been placed by the learned Single Judge
and the Division Bench, it is clear that the relief was moulded
to avoid anomalies and in view of the peculiar situation
involved. This Court categorically held that the orders
impugned in the appeals were not sustainable because the
writ petitions were filed after a long lapse of time. Similar is
the position here. The regularization was done w.e.f. 1.8.1987
and the writ petitions were filed in the year 1999. That being
so and since in the writ petition without any explanation has
been offered for the delayed approach, writ petition should
have been dismissed on the ground of delay and laches.
11. The learned Single Judge and the Division Bench clearly
lost sight of this fact and as rightly contended by learned
counsel for the appellant, misread the judgment of this Court
to grant relief to the respondents. Orders of both the learned
Single Judge and the Division Bench of the High Court need to
be vacated and we direct accordingly.
12. The appeal is allowed but in the circumstances without
any order as to costs.