Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 864 of 2007
PETITIONER:
NEW DELHI MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
RESPONDENT:
P.P. GARG & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/2007
BENCH:
Dr.AR. Lakshmanan & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (c) No.15824/2005)
ALTAMAS KABIR, J.
Leave granted.
The New Delhi Municipal Committee was constituted
under the Punjab Municipal Act, 1911. It was later on
renamed and reconstituted as the New Delhi Municipal
Council by virtue of the New Delhi Municipal Council
Ordinance notified on 25th May, 1994, which was later on
replaced by the New Delhi Municipal Council Act, 1994 with
effect from 5th July 1994. The work force of the New Delhi
Municipal Council (hereinafter referred to as the ’NDMC’ ) is
divided between the Civil Engineering Department and the
Electrical Wing. According to the NDMC, a Hot Mix Plant
forms part of the Civil Engineering Wing of NDMC and in
1974 the post of Assistant Engineer (E & M) was created in the
Hot Mix Plant. The role of the Assistant Engineer ( E & M) was
confined to looking after the electrical and mechanical circuits
of vehicles owned by the NDMC whereas Electrical Engineers
working in the electricity wing were looking after the supply
and distribution of electricity in the NDMC area. According
to the NDMC, not only were the two posts different in terms
of nature of duty and qualification, but they also belong to
different departments and enjoy different pay-scales.
The respondents in this appeal had been recruited as
Mechanic (Auto) in the Auto Workshop of NDMC which is a
part and parcel of the electricity establishment and were
enjoying pay-scales as per the recommendations of the Shiv
Shankar Committee. Subsequently, they were appointed to
the post of Assistant Engineer (E & M), which according to the
NDMC formed part of the Civil Engineering Wing having their
independent seniority list, recruitment rules and pay-scales
fixed in accordance with the recommendations made by the
Pay Commission. Consequent upon their promotion to the
post of Assistant Engineer ( E & M), the pay of the
respondents was also refixed from the Shiv Shankar
Committed pay-scale to the pay-scale recommended by the
Pay Commission.
On 27th October, 1997, long after promotion to the post
of Assistant Engineer ( E & M), the respondents filed Writ
Petition No. 4805/1997 in the Delhi High Court inter alia for
issuance of an appropriate writ to direct the NDMC to fix the
pay of the respondents in the Shiv Shankar Committee pay-
scale for their promotional post of Assistant Engineer ( E & M)
with effect from the date of their respective promotions. By his
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judgment dated 21st August, 2003, the Single Judge of the
Delhi High Court allowed the writ petition upon holding that
since the auto workshop of the NDMC had been held by this
Court to be part and parcel of the electricity establishment,
the writ petitioners were entitled to receive the Shiv Shankar
Committee pay-scale. An appeal, being L.P.A.No.34/2004,
preferred by the appellant herein was dismissed by the
Division Bench of the High Court by a very brief order upon
holding that the contention of the appellant that on promotion
the respondents were transferred to the Civil Wing could not
be accepted as even after promotion they were working in the
Auto Workshop itself, which forms part of the Electricity Wing.
Mr. Rakesh Khanna, learned senior counsel appearing
for the NDMC, repeated the stand taken on behalf of NDMC
before the Delhi High Court. He admitted that the writ
petitioners-respondents herein, had been appointed in the
initial stage in the Auto Workshop of NDMC, which admittedly
formed part of the Electrical Wing. The salaries of the writ
petitioners were, therefore, fixed in the pay-scales as
recommended by the Shiv Shankar Committee which had
been accepted by the NDMC. Subsequently, however with the
creation of the post of Assistant Engineer (E & M) in the Hot
Mix Plant, the writ petitioners-respondents consciously
accepted promotion to the post of Assistant Engineer (E & M)
which was created in the year 1974 and formed part of the
Civil Engineering Wing which had different sets of pay-scales
fixed on the basis of the recommendations of the Pay
Commission. After having enjoyed the said scale for about 10
years, the writ petitioners-respondents made a claim for
fixation of their pay-scale according to the recommendations of
the Shiv Shankar Committee pay-scale purportedly on the
ground that since after promotion they were continued to be
stationed in the Auto Workshop, which formed part of the
Electrical Wing, they were entitled to the benefit of the Shiv
Shankar Committee pay-scale.
Mr.Khanna urged that both the Single Judge, as also
the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court, had completely
disregarded the fact that the post of Assistant Engineer ( E &
M) had been created in the Hot Mix Plant which was part of
the Civil Wing, and notwithstanding the posting of the writ
petitioners-respondents in the Auto Workshop, they were part
and parcel of the Civil Wing. Mr. Khanna submitted that the
Delhi High Court had proceeded on the erroneous
assumption that since the writ petitioners-respondents had
been posted in the Auto Workshop even after their promotion
to the post of Assistant Engineer ( E & M), they must be held
to be part of the Electrical Wing of the NDMC. Mr. Khanna
urged that the said basic error in understanding the manner
in which the writ petitioners-respondents had been promoted
and thereafter posted in the Auto Workshop Department, has
resulted in a judgment which is liable to be set aside.
In conclusion, Mr. Khanna referred to the judgment of
this Court in the case of R.D. Gupta vs. Lt.Governor , Delhi
Admn. & Ors., reported in (1987) 4 SCC 505, wherein it was
held that the Civil Engineering Department was separate and
self-contained and that the employees of the said department
were not entitled to the benefit of the Shiv Shankar Committee
pay-scale.
On behalf of the writ petitioners-respondents, it was
urged that the writ-petitioners-respondents, who had all along
been working in the Auto Workshop Department of the NDMC,
had been retained in the Auto Workshop after promotion to
the post of Assistant Engineer ( E & M). It was denied that the
said promotional post was part of the Hot Mix Plant or that
the same formed part of the Civil Wing. On the other hand, it
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was the definite contention of the writ petitioners-respondents
that having been recruited in the Auto Workshop, which
admittedly was part of the Electrical Wing of the NDMC, they
had been retained in the Auto Workshop even after their
promotion to the post of Assistant Engineer (E & M) and they
continued to belong to the Electrical Wing and were thus
entitled to the Shiv Shankar Committee pay-scale.
It was urged that the decision in R.D. Gupta’s case
(supra) referred to and relied upon by Mr. Rakesh Khanna
had no application to the facts of the present case since the
writ petitioners claimed to be a part of the Electrical Wing,
whereas in R.D. Gupta’s case it was the Assistant Engineers
(Civil) who had raised grievance before this Court that they
were at par with Electrical Engineers. Appearing for the
respondents, Mrs. Inderjeet Swaroop submitted that the said
decision had been rendered on a totally different set of facts
and had been rightly held by the learned Single Judge not to
be of any help to the NDMC.
From the aforesaid submissions it will be evident that the
only question for decision in this appeal is whether the writ
petitioners-respondents on their promotion to the post of
Assistant Engineer (E & M) were transferred to the Civil Wing
from the Electrical Wing to which they had been originally
recruited. The question as to whether the writ petitioners-
respondents would be entitled to the Shiv Shankar Committee
pay-scale, which is applicable to the Electrical Wing only, will
depend on the answer of the said question.
There is no difficulty with regard to the initial
recruitment of the writ petitioners-respondents in the
Electrical Wing since the Auto Workshop was admittedly a
part of the of the Electrical Wing. The difficulty arose with the
promotion of the writ petitioners to the post of Assistant
Engineer (E &M), which according to the appellant were posts
which were created in the Civil Department in the Hot Mix
Plant. It has been contended on behalf of the NDMC that the
Hot Mix Plant was a part of the Civil Department and the
writ petitioners-respondents had consciously accepted
promotion to the said posts which entailed a transfer of their
services from the Electrical Wing to the Civil Wing of the
NDMC, carrying with it all its consequences.
On behalf of the appellant-NDMC an attempt has been
made to show that the work performed by the writ petitioners-
respondents were confined to looking after the electrical and
mechanical circuits of vehicles owned by the NDMC and
their nature of work could by no stretch of imagination be
compared to the work performed by the electrical engineers
who were looking after the supply and distribution of
electricity in the NDMC area.
Unfortunately, except for a bald statement that the post
of Assistant Engineer (E & M) had been created in the Hot Mix
Plant, which was a part of the Civil Wing of NDMC, there is no
other corroborating evidence to support the said statement.
Nothing has been shown on behalf of NDMC to establish the
stand taken on its behalf that the posts in question had, in
fact, been created in the Hot Mix Plant or that the same
formed part of the Civil Wing. In the said circumstances, the
Single Judge of the Delhi High Court was justified in arriving
at the conclusion that since the writ-petitioners, even after
their promotion to the post of Assistant Engineer( E & M), had
been posted in the Auto Workshop, which forms a part of the
Electrical Wing of the NDMC, they were entitled to the Shiv
Shankar Committee pay-scale. The Division Bench while
considering the appeal also accepted the said position and on
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the same reasoning categorically rejected the contention raised
on behalf of NDMC that the writ petitioners on promotion had
been transferred to the Civil Wing. The Division Bench
observed that such a contention could not be accepted as
even after the promotion, the writ petitioners continued to
work in the Auto Workshop which formed part of the
Electrical Wing.
As indicated hereinabove, nothing has been shown on
behalf of NDMC which could have persuaded us to take a view
which was different from that of the Single Judge and the
Division Bench of the Delhi High Court.
In such circumstances, we see no reason to interfere with
the decision of the High Court and the appeal is accordingly
dismissed but without any order as to costs.