Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
V.S. MURTY 7 OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE DEPUTY CHIEF ACCOUNTS OFFICER & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/02/1983
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 403 1983 SCR (2) 404
1983 SCC (2) 115 1983 SCALE (1)169
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh Ministerial Rules, 1961, Rule 3(2)-
Whether the Deputy Chief Accounts Officers N.S. Project, is
the Head of the Department-Seniority-Inter- se seniority of
appellants and respondents, whether will be governed by the
first proviso to Rule 36(e) or by the second proviso
thereto.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants, who were serving in the office of the
Chief Engineer Nagarjuna Unit as officiating Upper Division
Clerks, were transferred to the office of Deputy Chief
Accounts officer,. N.S. Project by an order dated February
8, 1964. Respondents 2 to 108 were initially recruited as
Lower Division Clerks during the period 1959 65 and some of
them were promoted as Upper Division Clerks from 1961
onwards. After their transfer, their services were
regularised by the Chief Engineer, as per his proceedings
dated August 11, 3 1968. This was challenged by some of the
persons similarly situated like the present respondent and
the High Court dismissed the Writ Petition as well as the
writ appeal, holding that the transfer was on administrative
grounds and therefore their length of service in the parent
department had to be taken into account for the purpose of
determining their seniority.
By its order G.O.M.S.. 27 P.W.D. dated February 3,1972,
the State Government accorded sanction to the permanent
retention of the posts set out in the order with effect from
1 4.1967 in the office of the Deputy Chief Accounts officer.
Among other, 38 posts of the Upper Division Clerks were thus
made permanent by this order with a further provision that
the posts so made permanent shall be filled in by personnel
already working in the Accounts organisation. The
appellants, whose services were already regularised were now
made permanent by the Deputy Chief Accounts officer.
Feeling aggrieved by the said orders the respondents
filed a writ petition before the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh which was transferred to the A.P. Administrative
Tribunal. The Tribunal allowing the petition held that the
Deputy Chief Accounts officer had not the powers of the Head
of a Department and was, therefore, not competent to absorb
and retain the appellants in his office and confirm them
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
against the posts made permanent. Hence the appeal by
special leave.
405
Allowing the appeal, tho Court
^
HELD: 1:1. The Deputy Chief Accounts officer DOW
redesignated as Director of Accounts is the Head of
Department for the purpose of Rule 3(2) of Service Rules
and, therefore, the confirmation of the appellants against
the permanent posts of Upper Division Clerk is in order.
[411 E, 415 A-B]
1:2. The Deputy Chief Accounts officer is shown to be
directly working 8 under a secretariat department without
intervention of any higher office. When the office of the
Financial Adviser and Chief Accounts officer under whom the
Dy. C.A.O. was directly working, was declared in 1966 as
Secretariat department, the Dy. C.A.O. was invested with
power of appointing authority which comprehended the power
to appoint persons who would be eligible for pay scales
applicable to the staff in the offices of the Heads of
Department. The unofficial note dated June 11, 1969 of the
F.A. and C.A.O. makes the position clear.
[412 G; 413 A-B]
1:3. Even without reference to Rule 3(2), tho
appellants could be absorbed, in tho instant case.
Appellants were transferred to tho office of Dy. C.A.O. in
1964. Their regularisation was held as valid and regular by
an earlier decision of the A.P. High Court They having
rendered service for eleven long years in the Accounts
organisation before the impugned action was taken, they were
entitled to be absorbed in the department by virtue of tho
proviso in G.O.M.S. 27 dated 3rd February 1972. [415 D,E,F-
H, 416 A]
2.1 The inter-se-seniority of the appellants and the
respondents would be governed by the first proviso to Rule
36(e) and not by the second proviso thereto. This position
not only stands concluded by tho earlier decision of the
A.P. High Court but also by the very orders of transfer.
[417 A-B]
2:2. The transfers were on administrative grounds and
certainly not at the request of the appellant. Further tho
transferred personnel could not have been considered as on
deputation because if a Government servant is sent outside
his office on deputation, there are certain benefits to
which be would be entitled which in this case are not shown
to have been made available to the appellants. [412 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 263 of
1982.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the Ist September, 1980 of the Andhra Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal Hyderabed in Transferred Petition
No. 1663 of 1976.
A. Subba Rao for the Appellant.
P.P. Rao and G.N. Rao for Respondent No. 1.
T. V. R. Tatachari, and A. V. V. Nair for the
Respondents,
406
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. This appeal by special leave is directed
against the decision in Writ Petition No. 1021 of 1975 filed
in the Andhra Pradesh High court at Hyderabad which came to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
be transferred under para 14 (1) of the Andhra Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal order 1975 and which was numbered as
Transferred Writ Petition No. 1663 of 1976, by which Andhra
Pradesh Administrative Tribunal (Tribunal’ for short)
allowed the writ petition and quashed the orders permanently
absorbing respondents 2 to 10 in the various posts in the
office of Deputy Chief Accounts officer, Nagarjuna Sagar
Project. Respondents 2 to 10 in the High Court are the
appellants in the present appeal, and original petitioners
are respondents 2 to 108. Deputy Chief Accounts officer is
respondent No. 1.
Nagarjuna Sagar Control Board was constituted in the
year 1955 charged with a duty to implement N.S. Project. The
Board had the power to recruit required ministerial staff on
purely temporary basis. On August 1, 1959, a decision was
taken by the Andhra Pradesh Government to disband the
autonomous Board and to convert it into a department of the
Government. On the conversion of the set up of the Board
into a department of the Government it became necessary to
devise ways and means to absorb the employees recruited by
the board. Number of controversies surfaced and to some
extent the present one is one such controversy. There was an
office styled as: The office of the Chief Engineer, N.S. Dam
with the Chief Engineer as Head of the Department.
Appellants were serving in the office of the Chief Engineer,
N.S Dam Unit. By the order dated February 8, 1964 appellants
were transferred to the office of the Pay and Accounts
officer, N.S. Project. At the time of transfer, appellants
were officiating as UDC and were directed to report to the
Deputy Chief Accounts officer, N.S. Project to be posted as
UDCs. Since then appellants have been working in the office
of the Dy. CAO and some of them have been even promoted, may
be temporarily, to the post of Superintendent. By the
G.O.Ms. No. 27 PWD dated February 3, 1972, the State
Government accorded sanction to the permanent retention of
the posts set out in the order with effect from 1.4.1967 in
the office of Dy. CAO. Amongst other 38 posts of UDCs were
thus made permanent by this order. The aforementioned order
further provided that the posts so made permanent shall be
filled in by personnel already working in the Accounts
organisation. It appears that some of the appellants made
407
a representation to the Dy. CAO for the permanent absorption
in A his office. Ultimately by various orders made in
February 1975, appellants were permanently absorbed as UDCs
in the establishment of Dy. CAO and they were given
seniority as provided in Rule 27 of Andhra Pradesh
Ministerial service Rules The respondents 2 to 108 who were
petitioners before the Tribunal were working as UDCs or LDCs
since the inception of their career in the office of Dy.
CAO. They were initially recruited as LDCs during the period
1959-65. Some of them were promoted as UDCs from 1961
onwards. They were aggrieved by the permanent absorption of
the present appellants who were respondents in the High
Court. They accordingly filed the writ petition from which
this appeal arises, contending that the appellants were
holding substantively post of UDC in the office of the Chief
Engineer and they were not transferred but sent on
deputation in the Pay and Accounts office as per the order
dated February 8, 1964 and other like orders by the Chief
Engineer, N.S. Dam and they had a permanent lien in the
parent department and therefore, they could not be absorbed
in the office of the Dy. CAo. It was, therefore, contended
that they may be repatriated to the parent department but in
any event even if these are not to be repatriated they could
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
not claim to be absorbed permanently over the respondents
who have been since the inception of their career working in
the office of Dy. CAO. The specific contention was that the
Dy. CAO not being the Head of the Department, the provision
contained in Rule 3 (2) of Andhra Pradesh Ministerial
Service Rules, 1961 would not be attracted and therefore the
appellants could not be said to have been recruited by
transfer and therefore, could not have been absorbed and
they had no right to either claim any permanent post or
promotion in the office of the Dy. CAO. The submission was
that the permanent retention and absorption of the
appellants adversely affected the promotional prospects of
the present respondents and the retention and absorption and
consequent seniority being contrary to relevant rules must
be struck down as invalid
The learned member of the Tribunal held that the Dy.
CAO. had not the powers of the Head of a Department. It was
not therefore, within his competence to absorb and retain
the appellants in his office and confirm them against the
posts made permanent by the G.O.Ms. No. 27 dated February 3,
1972. As a corollary it was held that the various orders
made in February 1975 permanently
408
transferring, absorbing and retaining and consequently
granting seniority to the appellants were violative of the
rules and were struck down. Hence this appeal by the
original respondents 2 to 10
Appellants indisputably were working as UDCs for a
period of more than 3 years before they came to be
transferred by the Chief Engineer to the office of Dy. CAO
in February 1964.
This order clearly shows that the transfer was for
administrative convenience. No where the orders recite that
the transfer was at the request of the transferred personnel
The order is the usual short cryptic government order which
recites that the UDCs whose names were set out in the order
were transferred to P.A.O.’s office, N.S. Project. The order
directs all the transferred UDCs to report for duty to Dy.
CAO, N.S. Project immediately on their relief. The language
of this order leaves no room for doubt that the head of the
department under whom the appellants were working
transferred them for administrative reasons and for
exigencies of service. Complying with this order, the
appellants reported for duty to the Dy. CAO and since then,
except appellant No. 9, the rest of them have been
continuously working as UDC and have earned temporary
promotion as Superintendent. So far there is no controversy.
The Tribunal nowhere examined the power of the Chief
Engineer, N.S. Dam Project to transfer persons working under
him to the office of Dy. CAO. It must therefore, be assumed
that he had the power to transfer appellants to the office
of the Dy. CAO. It does not transpire from the record that
the transfer was at the request of transferees. lt does not
appear that these persons held the lien in the parent
department. It does not transpire from the record that they
were given any proforma promotions in the parent department.
Virtually, since the transfer, they have been treated as
part and parcel of the establishment of Dy. CAO. The
appellants were holding the post of UDC for a period of more
than 3 years prior to their transfer from the offices of the
Chief Engineer to the office of the Dy. CAO. Indisputably,
therefore, when they were transferred and occupied the
identical post in the office of the Dy. CAO, some of the
respondents working in the office of the Dy. CAO would have
been adversely affected because in the absence of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
appellants, if it became necessary to have more posts in the
409
category of UDC, obviously some of the LDCs working in the
office of the Dy. CAO could have been promoted. This becomes
manifest from the judgment of a Division Bench of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeal No. 96 of 1970. After the
appellants were transferred, their services were regularised
by the Chief Engineer as per his proceedings dated August
11, 1968. This proceeding was challenged by some of the
persons similarly situated like the present respondents on
the ground that the present appellants had come on
deputation and not on transfer and they cannot be given
seniority over those who joined service in N.S. Dam Unit
from the inception of their career. The learned Single Judge
dismissed the petition holding that the present appellants
were transferred on administrative ground; that the
temporary posts which they filled in were converted into
permanent posts and the appointments of the appellants in
those posts were regularised. It was held that the transfer
was on administrative ground, and therefore, their length of
service in the parent department had to be taken into
account for the purpose of determining their seniority. On
this finding, the writ petition was dismissed, and the
appeal met with the same fate. Thus the first challenge
failed. Appellants were thus given seniority over
respondents in the office of the Dy. CAO. We have serious
doubts whether the Tribunal had jurisdiction to reopen the
settled question about the status of the present appellants
in the office of the Dy. CAO, which would incidentally be
the effect of the judgment of the Tribunal. We would
presently examine the contention which has found favour with
the Tribunal and which in our opinion is wholly untenable.
After reciting the various contentions, the Tribunal
addressed itself to the question which in its view was a
primary question whether the Dy. CAO was the Head of the
Departments. The Tribunal observed that it is only if it is
held to be office of Head of a Department that the transfer
of the present appellants in one out of 4 vacancies of UDC
under Rule 3 (2) can be justified.
Frankly we are of the opinion that this question hardly
arises in this case, in view of the earlier decision of
Andhra Pradesh High Court determining the status of the
appellants in the establishment of Dy. CAO. However, keeping
aside for the time being the decision of the High Court, we
would proceed to examine the contention which found favour
with the Tribunal on merits
410
The question of ascertaining whether Dy. CAO was the
Head of the Department arises in view of the provision
contained in Rule 3 (2) of the Andhra Pradesh Ministerial
Rules 1961. Before we extract rule 3 (2), it may be
mentioned that rule 4 provides for recruitment by promotion.
Rule 3 (2) provies that ’besides promotion as provided in
Rule 4 the first vacancy out of every four successive
substantive vacancies of Upper Division Clerks in the
offices of Heads of Department and Directorates shall be
reserved to be filled only from among the suitable Upper
Division Clerks working in the subordinate offices of the
concerned Head of the Department or Directorate.’ There is a
proviso which provided that: ’where any Head of the
Department or Directorate has no subordinate office under
its administrative control, the vacancy shall be filled by a
suitable Upper Division Clerk working in the office of any
other Head of the Department or Directorate or any other
subordinate office, as the case may be, in this service.’
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
The Tribunal after referring to this rule took notice
of the recital in the impugned order dated February 28, 1975
wherein the Dy. CAO purported to exercise the power under
Rule 3 (2) of the Andhra Pradesh Ministerial Service Rules.
The Tribunal therefore, concluded that apart from any other
consideration unless all the conditions for attracting Rule
3 (2) are satisfied, the order must fail. Undoubtedly,
before Rule 3(2) could be attracted. it must be shown that
the vacancies in which appellants were absorbed were in the
cadre of UDC and were in the office of the Head of the
Department. If it be so, then out of 4 successive
substantive vacancies, the first one is to be reserved to be
filled in either from amongst suitable Upper Division Clerks
working in the subordinate office or if there is no such
office, then according to the proviso, from the office of
the other Head of the Department of Directorate.
To ascertain whether Dy. CAO is the Head of the
Department, the Tribunal has referred to the definition of
the expression ’Head of a Department’ as set out in Article
6 Chapter Ir of the Andhra Pradesh Financial Code Volume 1,
which provided that ’Head of a Department’ means ’any
authority specially declared by the Government to be the
head of a department’. Assuming that the definition of the
expression ’Head of a Department’
411
in the Financial Code which is relevant to ascertain the
financial A powers of a Head of department, holds good for
all other powers conferred on a Head of a Department under
other rules, this definition merely provides that any one
would be a Head of a Department who is specially declared by
the Government to be the Department. The declaration if and
when made under the Financial Code would be confined to the
Financial Code and unless expressly provided, it cannot be
extended to comprehend the Head of Department under other
rules. With this limitation let us examine whether Dy. CAO
is the Head of the Department.
To begin with the Tribunal records a concession by the
learned Government Pleader appearing for the Dy. CAO that no
order has been issued declaring the office of the Deputy
Chief Accounts officer, Nagarjuna Sagar organisation as Head
of Department, we are a little surprised at the stand taken
on behalf of the Dy. CAO in the High Court and in this
Court. In the High Court an affidavit was filed contesting
the writ petition filed by the present respondents meaning
thereby justifying the order in favour of the appellants.
After the Tribunal quashed the orders and respondents 2 to
10 filed the present appeal, an affidavit has been filed by
one Shri T. Venkatanarayana, styling himself as Director of
Accounts which seems to be the new designation for the
former designation of Dy. CAO opposing the appeal of the
present appellants. He desires the present appeal to be
dismissed on the ground that original transfer orders were
only for one year and there was no order extending the
period of transfer. He also stated that R. v. Surya Rao one
of the appellants left the organisation of Dy. CAO on
February 9, 1977 and was again taken in the year 1975 at his
request. The stand appears to be self-contradictory and it
has left us guessing about this volute face. Out of abundant
caution we have decided to keep aside the stand of the Dy.
CAo in this behalf. More so because there is inexplicable
silence on the point whether the Dy. CAo was not the Head of
the Department.
It is therefore, necessary to independently examine
whether Dy. CAo virtually enjoys the powers of the Head of a
Department, so as to be treated as Head of the Department
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
for the purpose of Rule 3 (2). When the appellants came to
be transferred by the Chief Engineer on February 8, 1964, it
appears that the office of Dy. CAO was administratively
subordinate to the Chief Engineer,
412
N. S. Dam Project. If it were otherwise, the Chief Engineer
could not have transferred the appellants who were borne on
his establishment to the office of the Dy. CAO. As pointed
out earlier, the transfers were on administrative ground and
certainly not at the request of the appellants. Further the
transferred personnel could not have been considered as on
deputation because if a government servant is sent outside
his office on deputation, there are certain benefits to
which he would be entitled, which in this case are not shown
to have been made available to the appellants. They were
transferred from the post of UDC to the corresponding post
of UDC. In 1964 it atleast appears that Dy. CAO was not the
Head of the Department
On, May 3, 1966 by G.O.Ms. No. 178, it was, inter alia,
direct that the staff working in the office of Deputy Chief
Accounts officer and Pay and Accounts offices may be treated
as Ministerial Service and will be given the scales of pay
applicable to the staff in the offices of the Heads of
Departments. lt appears that there was difference in the pay
scales available to the staff in the office of the Head of
the Department and in subordinate offices. By this G.O. the
ministerial staff in the office of Dy. CAO was held eligible
for scales applicable to the staff in the office of the Head
of the Department. This will impart a flavour to the Dy. CAO
as being the Head of Department.
The Governor of Andhra Pradesh made what are styled as
ad-hoc rules for the temporary posts of ministerial staff in
the offices of the Deputy Chief Accounts officer and Pay and
Accounts officers under Financial Adviser and Chief Accounts
officer’s organisation, Nagarjuna sagar Project, in exercise
of the power conferred by the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution. By Rule 1, the General and special Rules
commonly applicable lo the holders of the permanent posts of
the respective categories in the Public Works Department in
the Andhra Pradesh Ministerial Service were made applicable
to the holders of the temporary posts at Superintendents,
UDCs, and Typists and Steno-typists in the office of the
Deputy Chief Accounts officer and Pay and Accounts officers
subject to the modifications set out in the subsequent
rules. One such modification worth noticing is that Dy. CAO
was constituted as appointing authority for the
aforementioned staff in his office. Further the Financial
Adviser and Chief Accounts officer,
413
under whom Dy. CAO was directly working, were declared in
1966 A Secretariat Department. . Accordingly Dy. CAO came
directly under the Secretariat Department, and was invested
with power of appointing authority which comprehended the
power to appoint persons who would for pay scales applicable
to staff in the offices of the Heads of Departments. R
It was however contended that G.O.Ms. No. 335 dated
November 1, 1974 would leave no room for doubt that Dy. CAO
is not the Head of the Department. The preamble of this G.O.
reads as under:
"In the circumstances stated by the Financial
Adviser and Chief Accounts officer, N.S. Project in the
N.O. Note read above, the Dy. Chief Accounts officer,
N.S. Project in is delegated with the following powers
instead of declaring him as the Head of the Department.
The extent of delegation of power is irrelevant. It was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
submitted that the recitals herein extracted would put the
matter beyond the pale of controversy that Dy. CAO was not
only not the Head of the Department but as he lacked powers
of the Head of the department certain powers had to be
specifically conferred upon him. On the contrary this would
justify the belief that ’Head of department’ for Financial
Code and for service rules are not terms of co-extensive
connotation and the have different meaning in different
context For example, for service rules the Dy. CAO is
declared an appointing authority, the power usually enjoyed
by Head of a department. But such Head of Department may not
be so declared for the Financial Code. In the G.O. dated
November 1, 1974, it was-considered unnecessary to declare
him Head of a department for Financial Code and, therefore,
certain powers had to be conferred upon him. A perusal of
powers would reveal that they were financial powers one can
be a Head of the Department but whose financial powers. may
be curtailed under the Financial Code. Alternately, one may
not be a Head of a Department for other purposes and yet may
enjoy full financial control if declared to be ’Head of the
Department’ for Financial Code. We are concerned in this
case with the meaning of the expression ’Head of a
department’ in Rule 3 (2). In this connection if the Dy. CAO
is shown to be directly working under a secretariat
department without intervention
414
of any higher office and if it is declared an appointing
authority and the scales admissible to the ministerial
service in its office are those admissible to the staff in
the office of the Heads of Department, there is no escape
from the conclusion that for purposes of Rule 3 (2), he
would be the Head of the Department.
We are fortified this conclusion from U. O. Note dated
June 11, 1969 of the office of Financial Adviser and Chief
Accounts officer which is the secretariat Department under
which Dy. CAO is directly working. The Relevant portion of
the Note may be extracted. It reads as under:
"Hitherto, recruitment to the post of L.D. Clerks,
U.D. Clerks, in Deputy Chief Accounts officers
organisation, Nagarjun sagar Project was done based on
the allotment of candidates who passed Group II.
Services examination of the Andhra Pradesh Public
Service Commission, since, the offices of the Deputy
Chief Accounts officer and Pay and Accounts officers, N
S. Project were considered to enjoy the status of the
Heads of the Department offices. In G. O. Ms. No. 178
PWD, Projects Wing, dated 3.5.1966 orders were issued
that the office of the Financial Adviser and Chief
Accounts officer Nagarjuna sagar Project may be treated
as Secretariat and that the staff working in the
offices of the Deputy Chief Accounts officers and Pay
and Accounts officer may be treated as Ministerial
Service and will be given scale of pay applicable to
staff in the offices of the Heads of Departments.
Further the adhoc-rules issued in G. O. Ms No. 337 PWD
Projects Wing dated 24.9.1968 stipulate that the Deputy
Chief Accounts officer, Nagarjuna sagar Project is the
appointing authority up to the leavel of
Superintendents in his organisation.
If there was any lurcking doubt whether the Dy. CAO is
the Head of the Departments, it stands wholly removed by the
Note extracted herein above. It may be recalled that the
power to deaclare Head of the Department as defined in the
Financial Code vests in the Government and the Government
acts on the advise of the concerned Secretariat Department.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
The concerned department is of Financial Adviser and Chief
415
Accounts officer, which is declared as the Secretariat
Department. And this note shows that the Secretariat
Department meaning thereby the Government treated the Dy.
CAO as the Head of the Department. Therefore. for the
purpose of Rule 3 (2), there is no room for doubt that Dy.
CAO was the Head of the Department.
If Dy, CAO was the Head of the Department then in view
of Rule 3 (2) with regard to the recruitment in the cadre of
UDC first out of every four successive substantive vacancies
is to be filled in from the subordinate offices and
according to the proviso to Rule 3 (2), if there is no
subordinate office, from any other office of the Head of the
Departments or Directorate. There is a recital to that
effect in the impugned order which was questioned on the
short that Dy. CAO was not the Head of the Department. Once
that ground is out of the way. The contention of the
respondents must fail.
Briefly, we may point out that this very conclusion can
be reached by a slightly different process of reasoning.
Appellants were transferred to the office of Dy. CAO in
1964. The judgment of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh.
practically inter partes, affirms the position that
appellants were transferred and their appointments by
transfer were valid. Their services were regularised and the
High Court held regularisation valid and legal. They were
given seniority over respondents in that orgaoisation. If
appellants have been working for so many years, they were
entitled to be absorbed, if there was no legal bar against
absorption. Their entry in office has been held by the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in the earlier judgment as valid
and regular and they having rendered service for 11 long
years before the impugned action was , taken, they were
entitled to be absorbed in he department. Now the present
dispute arose when by G. O. dated February 3, 1972, 38 posts
in the cadre of UDC were made permanent. That very G.O.
provided that the posts made permanent shall be filled in by
the personnel already working in the Accounts organisation.
Appellants were working in the Accounts organisation since
1964.
Their services were regularised. They were given
seniority. Therefore, at the relevant time in 1975 they were
working in Accounts organisation. They could therefore, be
absorbed without reference to Rule 3 (2). The controversy
arose because Dy. CAO referred to Rule 3 (2) in the impugned
order. In our opinion that
416
was unnecessary. They could claim to be absorbed according
to senitority in the posts made permanent. And therefore,
also the impugned orders were valid but as the Dy. CAO
proceeded to exercise power under Rule 3 (2), we would
uphold the validity for the reasons mentioned in the earlier
portion of the judgment.
Before we conclude, we must advert to one contention,
that as the appellants came at their own request, their
seniority would be governed not by the first proviso to Rule
36 (e) but by the second proviso. The relevant provisos to
Rule 36 (e) cater to the method of determining seniority of
persons transferred on administrative ground or at the
request of Government servant from one department to any
other department. If the transfer was on administrative
ground from one department or office to another, the
seniority of the transferred Government servant shall be
fixed with reference to the date of his first appointment in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
the former department or office from where he is
transferred. If on the other hand, the transfer is at the
request of the concerned Government servant, his seniority
will be determined with reference to the date of his
appointment in the department to which he is transferred.
After referring to these provisos, it was urged that the
appellants were transferred at their re quest and therefore,
their seniority has to be determined with reference to the
date on which they came to be transferred to the
organisation of Dy. CAO. In fact, this contention is
concluded by the earlier decision of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court. Even apart from that there is no merit in the
contention. Appellants were transferred in February 1964 and
we have referred to the transfer order more than once. There
is not the slightest whisper of transfer on request in that
order. But it was urged that initially transfer was for a
period of one year only and the subsequent continuation in
the office of the Dy. CAO does not prescribe the period of
transfer. However, the respondents placed reliance on a
corrigendum issued on March 3, 1964 by which following
sentence was added to the order of transfer dated Feb. 8,
1964. The addition reads as under:
"The above transfers will be for a period of one
year in the first instance."
It was then pointed out that in the subsequent order
the expression used is not ’period of transfer’ but ’period
of deputation’ and an inquary was made whether the further
extension of period was necessary. This appears to us to be
quibeling. Except for appellant 9-R.V. Surya Rao, all the
appellants have been working in the
417
Office of the Dy. CAO since 1964 and it is too late in
the day now to contend that the subsequent extension was at
the request of the appellants Therefore, the seniority would
be governed by the first proviso to Rule 36 (e) and not the
second proviso and that having been done no question arises
for interfering with the same.
As we are of the opinion that the Tribunal was in error
in holding that the Dy. CAO was not the Head of the
Department, the decision of the Tribunal is unsustainable
and must be quashed and set aside. Accordingly this appeal
is allowed, and the decision of the Andhra Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal, Hyderabad in Transferred Writ
Petition No. 1663176 dated September 1, 1980 is quashed and
set aside and the Writ Petition field by the respondents in
the Andhra Pradesh High Court is dismissed with no order as
to costs.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
418