Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3079 of 2000
PETITIONER:
JAWAHAR LAL SAZAWAL & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF J & K & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/02/2002
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
RUMA PAL, J.
The appellants in this appeal have sought to assert
their status as employees of the State Government of
Jammu and Kashmir with the same rights, privileges and
benefits available to other State employees. The High
Court has denied the appellants’ claims on the ground that
they had voluntarily surrendered their status as
Government servants in 1963 under Article 207 of the
Jammu and Kashmir Civil Service Regulations, 1956
(referred to hereafter as the Regulations) and that in any
event their claim was barred by delay and laches.
It is not in dispute that each of the appellants had
been appointed prior to 1963 as permanent Government
servants under the Jammu and Kashmir Civil Services
(Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules, 1956 (hereafter
referred to as ’the Rules’) and were serving in different
capacities in industrial units which were being run by the
Department of Commerce and Industries of the State
Government.
In 1963, the State Government formed a Board of
Directors for the administration of these industrial units by
its order No. 189/C of 1963 dated 10th August 1963. The
Board of Directors was constituted by-
i) Prime Minister - Chairman
ii) Sh.Karnail Singh, - Vice-Chairman
Hon. Advisory to
Govt. for Planning
and Industries
iii) Sh.S.M.Agha,IAS - Managing Director
iv) Sh. Amar Singh, IAS Member (Ex-officio)
Director of Industries
v) Sh.S.A.S. Qadir,IAS - do-
Registrar Cooperatives
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vi) Sh. Ghulam Ahmad - do-
Financial Controller
The order also provided for the the re-designation of the
officers Incharge of the industrial concerns as Managers in the
respective concerns. All Managers were placed under the
overall control of the Managing Director and the Board of
Directors.
On 3rd October 1963, the Jammu and Kashmir Industries
Ltd., the respondent No. 2 herein (hereinafter referred to as
the company) was incorporated as a private limited company
under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1977. The main
object of the company as mentioned in Clause III (a) of its
Memorandum of Association was :
"To run, manage, administer the State
Industrial Undertakings as may be
notified by the Governor in a manner as
would ensure their economic working" .
On 8th October 1963, the Governor issued
instructions by which some industrial undertakings of the
State Government including the three in which the
appellants had been appointed were "notified to be
entrusted to the company in pursuance of clause III (a) of
the Memorandum of Association of the Company". The
effect of this ’entrustment’ of the Industrial undertakings
to the Company will be discussed after completing the
narration of facts. It only needs to be noted at this stage
that even after this "entrustment" the appellants continued
working in the industrial undertakings in which they were
initially appointed and continued to enjoy the same
benefits of service with regard to emoluments, leave and
pension as other Government employees.
In 1966, a notification was issued by the Governor
introducing Note 6 which amended Rule 52 of the Rules
and sought to provide that thenceforward the employees
of the erstwhile Sericulture Department who were entitled
to pensionary and other benefits as government servants
were to be treated as employees of the Company.
This was challenged in 1968 by some of the
employees of the Sericulture Department who had, like the
appellants herein, been permanently appointed to
industrial units under the State Government before
formation of the Company. The main submission of the
petitioners in that case was that their services had only
been entrusted to the Company and that they continued to
enjoy the same status as other Government servants. The
challenge was upheld by a Division Bench of the High
Court of Jammu and Kashmir in Sheik Ghulam Quadir
& Ors. v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Others . It
was held that "the conditions of service of a Government
servant could not be terminated altogether except under
and in accordance with Article 126 of the Jammu and
Kashmir Constitution nor could the nature of his service
be converted from one form to another resulting in a
complete transformation of the character of the service. It
was said:
" In the instant case if the petitioners are
to be treated as employees of the
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company the character and nature of
their service is completely changed and
they would cease to enjoy the immunity
and protection given to them by S.126
of the State Constitution; and if a
Government servant who is entitled to
protection under section 126 is suddenly
deprived of this protection without any
notice then such an action cannot but be
held to be either as a termination of his
service or a reduction in rank."
The Court also rejected the arguments of the
respondents based on Article 207 of the Regulations that
consequent upon the formation of the Company the
Sericulture Department was abolished and that the
services of the Government employees had been
transferred to the Company. The Court found that there
was nothing on record to show that the petitioners had in
fact been discharged from Government service nor was
any notice given to them in this regard nor were they
given any option to take compensation or to opt to be
appointed under the Company. The procedure under
Article 207 of the Regulations not having been followed,
the impugned notification could not be sustained. The
amending note was accordingly struck down and a writ of
mandamus was issued directing the respondents to place
the petitioners in the same position as they were before the
impugned amendment was made. The decision of the
High Court was rendered in 1969.
On 24th July 1972, a second writ petition filed by
some other employees of the Government Silk Weaving
Factory: Ghulam Mohamad & Ors. v. State of J & K &
Ors. ( W.P 107/1967) seeking a declaration that the
petitioners continued as Government servants was
disposed of without any reference to the earlier decision
in Ghulam Quadir’s case in the following terms:
" It is now well settled that a writ for a
mere declaration does not lie. It is also
well established that unless there is a
demand and refusal a petition for issue
of a writ is not maintainable.
In the present case there is no
allegation that any demand for grant of
a right which is available to the
petitioner has been denied by the State.
The petitioner not having retired
and the occasion for State refusing to
treat the petitioner as a Government
employee not having arisen, the
present petition is, in our opinion
premature. It is accordingly dismissed.
This will not, however, preclude
the petitioner from seeking appropriate
remedy in case the right claimed by
him is denied by the Government at a
later stage."
In the meanwhile the Company framed its own
service rules which were entitled ’ J&K Industries Service
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Regulations’ (hereinafter referred to as the Industries
Regulations). Nevertheless the appellants along with other
similarly situated employees continued to be given
benefits of revision of grades and dearness allowance
which were paid to the other Government servants of the
State. Thus, when the revision of pay scales of
Government employees was made on the basis of the 1973
Chatterjee Wage Committee Report, the appellant’s
salaries were also revised. An attempt to deny the
appellants dearness allowance on par with the civil
servants was aborted when instructions were issued in
1974 granting them the dearness allowance at the same
rates as other Government servants. This state of affairs
continued till 1979.
In 1979 the State Government set up another
Committee to examine the wage structure of employees of
Public Sector Corporations. The Committee which came
to be known as the Rajan Committee, submitted its final
report in 1980. The report was accepted by a decision of
the Cabinet on 22nd April, 1980. On the basis of this
Cabinet decision the Governor issued an order on 26th
April, 1980 pursuant to which the Company issued two
orders both dated 8th May, 1980 one relating to the cost of
living allowance and the second relating to fixation of
wages. A third order was issued by the company on 10th
November,1980 seeking to lay down that the leave of
regular employees of the Company would be allowed "as
per the Factories Act and not as per Leave Rules of the
Corporation which were applicable to them in the past".
All three orders in effect denied the employees like the
appellants parity of service conditions with Government
employees.
In 1981 the appellants challenged the orders dated 8th
May, 1980 and 10th November, 1980 under Article 32 of
the Constitution before this Court. According to the
appellants when the matter was heard on 22nd March,
1982, this Court was of the view that the appellants should
approach the High Court first. As such the appellants
withdrew the writ petition under Article 32 and
immediately filed a writ petition under Article 226 before
the High Court (SWP 236/82) challenging the order of the
Governor dated 26.4.1980 as well as the orders dated
8.5.80 and 10.11.80 and asking for a direction on the
respondents:
".to treat the petitioners as
Government employees and deem the
petitioners and their co-employees
governed by Service Rules and
Regulations which are applicable to the
State employees and the petitioners be
held entitled to the same salary,
emoluments D.As, leave etc. as would
be available to the government servants
under the State Government".
Some other employees, who are not appellants
before us, filed a similar writ petition before the High
Court (SWP No. 287/82). Yet a third group of employees
filed a writ petition : Waryam Chand vs. State of J & K
- (SWP No. 549/83) raising the same issues.
Waryam Chand’s (SWP 549/83) case came to be
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listed separately and was dismissed by a Single Judge on
29.6.88. The other two writ petitions (SWP 236/82 and
SWP 287/82) were placed before another Learned Judge
who referred the issue for consideration by a larger bench.
In 1998, the Division Bench dismissed both the writ
petitions by the order impugned before us.
The impugned decision directly conflicts with the
earlier decision of the same High Court in Ghulam
Quadir’s case (supra) on the issue as to the status of
Government employees like the appellants. The decision
in Ghulam Quadir has remained unchallenged by the
State respondents till today and was binding on the Court.
In the absence of some distinguishing feature it should
have been followed. It was not even referred to. We
could have allowed the appeal before us on this short
ground, but since the issue raised affects a large number of
employees, it is necessary to decide the issue on merits.
On the merits we may start by reaffirming the
statement of the law laid down by this Court in Roshan
Lal Tandon V. Union of India that:
"once appointed to his post or office the
Government servant acquires a status
and his rights and obligations are no
longer determined by consent of both
parties, but by statute or statutory rules
which may be framed and altered
unilaterally by the Government."
No statute or statutory rules have been drawn to our
attention by which the permanent posts held by the
appellants were abolished. The High Court held that the
appellant’s status had been determined under Article 207
of the Regulations . The conclusion is based on an
erroneous interpretation of the Article. To start with the
High Court ignored Article 1-(a) of the Regulations which
clarifies that these
" Regulations are intended to define
the conditions under which Salaries,
Leave, Pension, Travelling or other
allowances are earned by Service in
the Civil Departments and in what
manner they are calculated. They do
not deal otherwise than indirectly and
incidentally with matters relating to
recruitment, promotion, official
duties, discipline or the like."
(Emphasis supplied)
Article 207 is contained in Chapter XVII of the
Regulations which deals with the conditions of grant of
pension. It was, in this context that the Article had been
framed. It deals with pension and its computation. It does
not purport to determine status at all. It reads:
"207. If an officer is selected for
discharge owing to the abolition of his
permanent post he shall, unless he is
appointed to another post the
conditions of which are deemed to be
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at least equal to those of his own, have
the option
(a) of taking any compensation
pension or gratuity to which
he may be entitled for the
service he has rendered; or
(b) of accepting another
appointment on such pay as
may be offered and
continuing to count his
previous service for pension."
It is clear that the Article does not itself provide
for the procedure for abolition of a permanent post nor the
mode of appointment to another post nor for the manner
in which the employee has to exercise the option. It only
provides for the consequences of a permanent post being
abolished, the consequence being that the employee shall
have the option of accepting another appointment in which
event he can count his previous service for the purpose of
calculating the qualifying period for pension. Since there
was in fact no abolition of the Government posts under
Article 207, there was no question of the appellants
exercising any option or surrendering their status under
that Article at all. The reliance by the High Court on
Article 207 to decide the appellants status was, in the
circumstances wholly misplaced.
The High Court also proceeded on the erroneous
assumption, namely, that as a consequence of the "order
dated 8th October 1963 all the Government industrial
undertakings stood abolished with the formation of the
Company". Firstly what is referred to as an ’order’ by the
High Court was not an "order" at all but an "instruction"
under Article 89 of the Articles of Association of the
Company. It had no statutory force. Neither the
Government Industrial Undertakings nor the posts of its
employees could be abolished by such an instruction.
The Governor could not in exercise of powers under the
Articles of Association of the Company abolish industrial
units belonging to the State Government and then transfer
the undertakings to the Company. It would amount to an
unilateral taking over of the industrial units by the
Company without any instrument of transfer being
executed by the State Government either in the form of an
agreement or Statute. In fact and in law there was no
abolition of the posts held by the appellants and none was
intended.
There is nothing in the instructions which could
remotely be construed as an order abolishing the posts
held by the appellants. Had the appellants been appointed
as employees of the Company they should have been
issued letters of appointment by the Company. No
appointment letter was issued to any of the appellants by
the Company. The irresistible conclusion is that the
appellants were and continue to be servants of the State
Government and as permanent residents of the State of
Jammu and Kashmir are entitled under Section 10 of the
State Constitution to be treated on par with other
Government servants in keeping with Article 14 and 16 of
the Constitution of India. By the impugned orders, the
State Government has sought to deny the appellants such
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equality. The impugned orders cannot, therefore, be
constitutionally sustained and must consequently be
quashed.
But should the appellants be denied their right to
relief because of the finding of delay and laches by the
High Court? We think not. The narration of facts clearly
show that there was in fact no delay or laches on the part
of the appellants. Till 1972 at least, the High Court in
Ghulam Mohamad’s case (supra) found the State had not
denied parity of status and the employees were granted the
right to challenge any denial of status if and when it took
place. The appellants were in fact treated on par with
other Government employees till the impugned orders
were issued on the basis of the 1980 Wage Committee
Report. These were challenged in 1981 before this Court
and in 1982 before the High Court by the appellants. The
fact that the High Court took 16 years to dispose of the
matter cannot operate against the appellants. The dismissal
of the writ petitions on the ground of delay and laches is,
in the circumstances, unsustainable.
The decision of the High Court is accordingly set aside
and the appeal is allowed by granting relief to the
appellants as prayed for in their writ petition. Costs to be
paid by the respondent-State to the appellants jointly
assessed at Rs.15000/-( Rupees fifteen thousand only).
.J.
(S. Rajendra Babu)
..J.
(Ruma Pal)
February 27, 2002