Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6847 of 1997
PETITIONER:
M.D. U.P. LAND DEV. CORPN. AND ANR.
RESPONDENT:
AMAR SINGH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/04/2003
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V.PATIL & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003(3) SCR 266
The following Order of the Court was delivered :
This appeal is a directed against the order of the Devision Bench of the
High Court. In short and substance, the facts leading to filing of this
appeal are:
The appellant-Corporation took a decision to prepare a panel of 25 posts of
Assistant Project Managers. Pursuant to the said decision the Corporation
wrote a letter to the Vice Chancellor, Agricultural University on 9.11.1990
seeking names of B.Sc.(Agr) graduates for the purpose. Thereafter, letters
were issued to the candidates for the purpose of training of one year for
the ’Million Wells Scheme’ with a fixed stipend of Rs.1200 per month. The
State Government on 22.2.1993 gave sanction for creation of 30 new and
temporary posts of Assistant Manager under a new World Bank Project, i.e.,
U.P. Sodic Land Reclamation Project. The candidates who were selected, were
thereafter appointed as Assistant Managers after serving for sometime. Out
of 32 candidates selected 6 persons approached the High Court by filling a
Writ Petition seeking regularisation of their services with a grant of
regular pay-scales. The learned Single judge allowed the Writ Petition and
gave direction to regularise their services and also to grant pay-scale
applicable to the post of Assistant Manager. Initially the Writ Petition
was allowed in the absence of representation by the Corporation, but after
hearing on the application made for recalling the order passed by the
learned Single Judge, the same order was passed upholding the direction
given for regularisation on grant of pay-scales. Aggrieved by the order of
the learned Single Judge, the appellant-Corporation filed Special Appeal
before the Division Bench of the High court. The Division Bench did not
find any merit in the appeal and in that view, concurring with the order of
the learned Single Judge, dismissed the Special Appeal. Hence this appeal.
In order to appreciate the rival contentions, we think it appropriate to
refer to certain documents. The notes and order dated 2/11/1990/ prepared
by the Director of Corporation, on which a claim is made by the respondents
herein, reads thus:
"Work is proposed to be assigned. Therefore, actually only 13 employees
would be available for the work of the Asset. Project Managers while under
the Million Wells Scheme a total number of 16 employees are required. In
this way 3 employees of Grade-3 would have to be appointed. Keeping in view
that in future also other projects may be received by the Corporation and
several employees of this grade may be required on a short notice, it is
proposed that by inviting names from the Agriculture Universities or by
advertising a penal of 25 persons be prepared for appointment of trainees.
The posts would be filled according to the need from this panel. On being
available the panel of trainees, the advantage would be that the work of
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the employees appointed from within this pane! shall be judged for one year
as trainees and (later on) for one year on probation and on finding the
work satisfactory and on the requirement they would be absorbed in the
corporation otherwise the option not to appoint them would remain open.
On the above points Ka, Kha, Ga, Ghha the marked proposal for approval
please."
It appears, pursuant to the said note and order, the General Manager of the
Corporation addressed letters to few institutions and universities seeking
names of the candidates for recruitment to the post of Assistant Project
Manager, (Group-3). One such letter reads as follows:
In this Corporation around 25 posts of Assistant Project Managers (Group-3)
under pay scale of Rs. 1230-2080 are likely to be created in future. The
management of the Corporation has decided that for the purposes of
recruitment on those posts, a panel of B.Sc. (Agr.) Agricultural graduates
be prepared. The selected candidates will be kept on training for one year
and thereafter on probation for another year.
Therefore, you are requested to send a list of agricultural graduates B.Sc.
(Agr.) alongwith their complete addresses who have passed out in last two
years from your university. By this way candidates will be informed for
their examination/interview. Name of those candidates who are doing higher
studies, may not be included in the said list. Early action in this regard
will be highly appreciated.
After receipt of the names of the candidates in response to the letters
referred to above, the selected candidates were given letters on February
9, 1991. One such letter reads:
"Kindly refer to letter no. L.D.C../90-91/Assistant Managers/(P)/ 2275-B
dated 14.1.91 issued by this office. You are required to attend the office
of Sr. Deputy Manager, Jaunpur (Reclamation Development Project Million
Wells Scheme, 88/A Charka Colony, Hussainabad, Jaunpur) for training by
25.2.91. During the period of training you will be paid Rs. 1200 (twelve
hundred only) per month as training allowance. Besides this nothing shall
be payable. Travelling expenses shall be paid, if done exclusively, for the
Corporation. No travelling expenses will be paid for the first
contribution.
If you do not attend upto 25.2.91 in that case, your selection shall be
deemed as cancelled.
Copy to :
1. Sr. Deputy Manager, Jaunpur under Reclamation Development Project,
Million Wells Scheme, 88/a Charka Colony, Hussainabad, Jaunpur with a view
to make arrangement for training and enable the trainees to contribute."
The relevant portions of the letter of Joint Secretary, U.P. Government
dated 22nd February. 1993 addressed to the Joint Director of the
Corporation is to the following effect:
With reference to the above mentioned subject vide your D.O. letter No.
1647 dated 24.12.92 I have been directed to state that in all 260 posts of
different categories were created for the U.P. Land Development Corporation
Limited, against which at present 140 posts are already occupied by the
incumbents as mentioned in Column 5 and.balance 120 posts are vacant,
however, while keeping them suspended, in lieu thereof permission is hereby
given to fill up 107 temporarily newly created posts as mentioned in column
6 for implementation of the U.P. Sodic Land Reclamation Project sponsored
by the World Bank."
xxx xxx xxx
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5. So far as 120 vacant posts of the Corporation are concerned, they
shall remain suspended and before filling the same in future prior approval
from the Financial Department of the Government shall be obtained.
6. While filling up the newly created post the corporation shall ensure
that instead of filling the same enmasse they would be filled up from time
to time according to the need by taking the surplus employees from the
Agricultural Directorate and the Command Area projects on deputation."
On 4/8/1993 the Corporation resolved to discontinue the ’Million Wells
Scheme’ with effect from 31/3/1994. This Court granted special leave on
29/11/1999 and stayed the impugned judgment of the High Court. On 18/
2/2000 the Corporation terminated the services of three respondents that
lead to filing a separate Writ Petition with which we are not concerned in
this appeal.
Mr. Sunil Gupta, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the appellant-
Corporation urged that the learned Single Judge as well as the Division
Bench of the High Court committed serious error in direction regularisation
of services of the respondents when the "Million Wells Scheme’ came to an
end with effect from 31/3/1994 and the appointments of the respondents were
not made as against any sanctioned post; their appointments as Assistant
Managers were on a temporary basis, for the purpose of ’Million Wells
Scheme’: with the closure of the Scheme the Respondents’ services could not
be continued or regularised. According to him, the Division Bench of the
High Court did not correctly and completely read the internal note or order
dated 2/11/1990, the letters addressed by the Corporation to the University
dated 9/11/1990 and the very Government order dated 22/2/1993 giving
sanction for temporary posts against which the respondents were appointed;
because of the same the conclusions arrived at by the Division Bench of the
High Court are unsustainable. In support of his contention that with the
closure of a project work or the scheme coming to an end, the employees
appointed for the purpose of a scheme or a project work do not have any
vested right and they cannot insist or claim for regularisation of their
services. He cited few decisions of this Court : (1) Jawahar La! Nehru
Krishi Vishwa Vidyalaya, Jabalpur, M.P. v. Bal Kishan Soni and Ors., [1997]
5 SCC 86 ; (2) Ashwani Kumar and Ors. v. State of Bihar and Ors., [1997] 2
SCC 1 ; (3) State of U.P. and Ors. v. Ajay Kumar, [1997] 4 SCC 88 and (4)
Committee of Management, Arya Nagar Inter College, Arya Nagar, Kanpur
through its Manager and Am: v. Sree Kumar Tiwary and Am:, [1997] 4 SCC 388.
Per contra, Mr. K..B. Sinha, Learned Senior Counsel representing the
respondent urged in support and justification of the impugned judgment and
order. According to him, names of the respondents were called for from the
Universities ; the respondents were qualified and have rendered
satisfactory service for about three years without any complaint and merely
because they were sent for training under ’Million Wells Scheme’, it could
not be taken that their services were temporary for the purpose of that
scheme alone. He added that even after training of one year, they were
allowed to continue in service and under the circumstances, learned Single
Judge as well as the Division Bench of the High Court were right in giving
the directions to regularise their services and granting pay scales to
them.
Having pursued the impugned order in the light of the documents referred to
above and keeping in view the rival contentions urged on either side, we
are of the view that the impugned judgment and order of the High Court
cannot be sustained for the reasons more that one. The internal note and
order of the Corporation, which is made the basis for the claim that 25
posts were available on a regular basis, is itself not correct. At this
stage we may observe that the internal note and order dated 2/11/1990 was
prepared by the Director of the Corporation for his own purpose, but
strangely enough a copy of the same was produced by the respondents in the
Writ Petition. We fail to understand how ,the copy of this internal note
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and order came to the hands of the respondents. Apart from the fact whether
such an internal note itself could give any right to the respondents, the
very reading of the same does not give an impression that it is indicated
to create 25 posts on a regular basis. It only states that a panel of 25
persons be prepared for training, taking note of the future possible
requirement of persons working in the project. The Division Bench of the
High Court has misread this document. The letter dated 9/11/1990 addressed
to the Vice Chancellor of Agricultural University seeking names of the
candidates for recruitment to the post of Assistant Project Manager
(Group-3) itself shows that 25 posts of Assistant Project Managers are
likely to be created in future for that purpose; the Corporation had
decided that a panel of B.Sc. (Agr.) graduates be prepared; the selected
candidates would be given training for one year and thereafter, they would
be put on probation for another year. A request was made in the letter to
send a list of agricultural graduates B.Sc. (Agr.) By the letters addressed
to respondents individually dated February 9, 1991 they were asked to
attend the office of Senior Deputy Manager, Jaunpur (Reclamation
Development Project, Million Wells Scheme) for training by 25/2/1991;
during the period of training, they would be paid Rs. 1200 per month as
training allowance. A copy of the said letter was also given to the Senior
Deputy Manager, Jaunpur (Reclamation Development Project, Million Wells
Scheme). We may say that this letter does not say more than calling the
candidates to join for the purpose of training, that too under the ’Million
Wells Scheme’.
The letter dated 22/2/1993 of the Joint Secretary, U.P. Government
extracted above, in clear terms states that 260 posts of different
categories were created for the appellant-Corporation, against which 140
posts were already occupied by the incumbents and 120 posts were still left
vacant ; those 120 posts were kept suspended and in lieu thereof permission
was given to fill 107 posts temporarily newly created for the purpose of
U.P. Sodic Land Reclamation Project sponsored by the World Bank. From these
documents it is clear that the respondents were never recruited as against
regularly sanctioned posts on a regular basis. Reading of these documents
and the contentions raised on either side go to show that the appointments
of the respondents were temporary under the ’Million Well Scheme’ afore-
mentioned. When the work of the scheme had come to an end, the respondents
were not entitled to claim regularisation of their services. Even though
their services were continued after 31/3/1994 by virtue of an interim order
passed in the Writ Petition, they cannot claim benefit of regularisation of
their services as a matter of right. This Court in State of Himachal
Pradesh v. Nodha Ram and Ors., AIR (1997) SC 1445. in para 4 has stated
thus:
"4. It is seen that when the project is completed and closed due to non-
availability of funds, the employees have to go along with its closure. The
High Court was not right in giving the direction to regularise them to
continue them in other places. No vested right is created in temporary
employment. Directions cannot be given to regularise their services in the
absence of any existing vacancies nor can directions be given to the State
to create posts in a non-existent establishment. The Court would adopt
pragmatic approach in giving directions. The directions would amount to
creating of posts and continuing them despite non-availability of the work.
We are of the considered view that the directions issued by the High Court
are absolutely illegal warranting our interference. The order of the High
Court is, therefore, set aside."
In clear and certain terms it is stated that when the project comes to
close, the employees who are working in the project will not get any vested
right. In other words, once the project comes to an end, services of the
employees also come to an end. The other decisions cited by the learned
counsel more or less are to the same effect.
In view of what is stated above, the impugned order, in our view, cannot be
sustained. Hence, the impugned judgment and order is set aside. The appeal
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is allowed, but, with no order as to costs.
However, the learned Senior Counsel for the respondents submitted that some
of the juniors working under the same scheme have been retained in service
and the services of the respondents were terminated. He also submitted that
the respondents having served the Corporation without any complaint for
about three years, their services may be availed of as and when such
opportunity arises. We are of the view that the question whether juniors to
the respondents are retained in service or not, does not arise for our
consideration in this appeal. As far as the request that their services
could be availed of for some other project, all that we can say is that it
is for the respondents to approach the Authorities and if the Authorities
find them suitable and it is permissible in law to assign them such work,
it is open for them to do so, but we cannot give such a direction in that
regard.