Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
J. N. ROY BISWAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 2277 1976 SCR (2) 128
1976 SCC (1) 234
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC2037 (7)
D 1979 SC1923 (3)
D 1985 SC1461 (5)
ACT:
Service-Government servant exonerated and reoinstated
after enquiry- Reopening of enquiry If competent.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a Government servant, was suspended
from service in 1960. on receipt of the findings of the
Inquiry officer, a show cause notice was issued. The
appointing authority exonerated the respondent but did not
make a reasoned order. Later, however, the case WAS
reopened. As the de novo recording of evidence progressed
the respondent moved the High Court contending that there
was no power in the Government to re-open a case which had
already been concluded by exoneration and re-instatement.
The High Court granted the relief .
Dismissing the appeal of the sate,
^
HELD.. Had the Government servant misappropriated
government money he should have been punished expeditiously.
But having been exculpated after enquiry, the State could go
at him by re-opening the proceedings only if the rules
vested some such revisory power No rule of double jeopardy
bars the reopening of the case. But once a disciplinary case
has closed and the official re-instated the government
cannot restart the exercise in the absence of specific power
to review or revise vested by rules in some authority. The
basics of the rule of law cannot be breached without a legal
provision or other vitiating factor invalidating earlier
enquiry.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 899 of
1968.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 15th February, 1967 of the Assam and Nagaland High
Court in C. Rule No. 231 of 1965.
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Naunit Lal, for the appellants.
Sukumar Ghose, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Was this virtually valstudinarian
appeal by the Sate against an old and perhaps, by now,
superannuated emyloyee necessary? Litigation by the State
means laying out public resources, in a country of much
poverty and scarce resources, and only if the demanding
justice of a case calls for it should an appeal, otherwise
of inconsequence, be carried to the highest Court. In the
present instance, a veterinary assistant, the respondent
herein, was suspended in 1960 followed by disciplinary
proceedings. An enquiry officer, appointed by the Director
of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Department, conducted the
proceedings, submitted his report of findings adverse to the
respondent, whereupon a show cause notice indicating the
penalty of dismissal was issued. The ’delinquent’ pleaded
innocence by his explanatory statement and the Director, on
a study of the case in the light of the explanation offered,
directed reinstatement in a cryptic order which runs thus:
129
ORDER No. 81 DATED 11-12-62
Shri J. N. Roy Biswas, Manager, East Harinagar
Live stock Farm (Cachar) who was placed under
suspension vide this office order No. 42 dated 23-12-
60, is re-instated in the same post of Manager, at East
Harinagar Livestock Farm with effect from the date the
reports for duty.
Sd/- G. K. Mehra,
Director of Animal Husbandry & Vety.
Department, Assam, Gauhati."
Memo No. PI-918/26822 Dated Gauhati, the 13th Dec.
’62. Copy forwarded to:-
1. Shri J. N. Roy Biswas, Manager, East Harinagar
Livestock Farm (under suspension) C/o Brahmachari
Maharaj Shri Dawarikanath, Ramkrishna Seva Samity,
Chatribari, Gauhati, for information and necessary
action. The findings and orders of the proceeding will
follow.
2 , . . . . .
3
The findings and orders together with the
regularisation of the period of suspension of Shri J.
N. Roy Biswas with effect from 5-1-61 to the date of
his reporting for duty at East Harinagar Livestock Farm
will be communicated separately. The date of joining of
Shri Biswas may be in formed to this office separately.
Sd/- B. K. Das
for Director of Animal Hy. & Vety.
lt is noteworthy that no reasoned findings were
recorded. That particular officer retired and his successor
wrote to the Joint Secretary to Government that from the
materials of the case the ’delinquent’ r merited punishment
and the proceedings be re-opened. This was done and as the
de novo recording of evidence progressed the respondent
moved the High Court under Art. 226 for a writ of
prohibition as, in his submission, there was no power to re-
open a case concluded by exoneration and reinstatement and
the illegal vexation of a second enquiry should be arrested.
This grievance was held good by the High Court which granted
the relief sought.
What is the conspectus of circumstances ? A small
veterinary official, a long enquiry for mis-conduct, a final
direction cancelling suspension and reinstating him, the
likelihood of the man having retired (15 years have gone by)
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and nothing on record to substantiate any fatal infirmity in
the earlier enquiry or dereliction of duty by the
disciplinary authority except that a reasoned record of
findings was to be forthcoming, but did not, because he had
retired in the mean while. No action against the retired
Director for this alleged omission was felt justified and
perhaps was not warranted but with persistent
130
litigative zeal Government has come in appeal to this Court
against the petty official. Had he misappropriated
Government money he should have been punished expeditiously.
But having been exculpated after enquiry, the State could go
at him by re-opening the proceedings only if the rules
vested some such revisory power. None such has been shown to
exist although one wonders why a rule vesting such a
residuary power of a supervisory nature to be exercised in
the event . of a subordinate disciplinary authority not
having handled a delinquent adequately or rightly is brought
to the attention of Government has not been made. No rule of
double jeopardy bars but absence of power under a rule
inhibits a second inquiry by the Disciplinary authority
after the delinquent had once been absolved. The appeal must
fail and is dismissed with costs.
We may however make it clear that no government servant
can urge that if for some technical or other good ground,
procedural or other, the first enquiry or punishment or
exoneration is found bad in law that a second enquiry cannot
be launched. It can be; but once a disciplinary case has
closed and the official re-instated, presumably on full
exoneration. a chagrined Government cannot re-start the
exercise in the absence of specific power to review or
revise, vested by rules ill some authority. The basics of
the rule of law cannot be breached without legal provision
or other vitiating factor invalidating the earlier enquiry.
For the present, this is theoretical because no such deadly
defect is apparent on the record.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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