Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M. K. KRISHNAN NAIR & ORS.ANDK. SUKUMARAN NAIR & ANR.V.M.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/02/1978
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
SHINGAL, P.N.
SINGH, JASWANT
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1978 AIR 747 1978 SCR (2) 864
1978 SCC (1) 552
ACT:
Kerala Judicial Service Rules. 1966-Scope of-judicial
Service bifurcated .into Civil Judicial Service and Criminal
Judicial Service-State Government, if competent to
bifurcate--Classification made under the Rule--if reason-
able.
HEADNOTE:
In the erstwhile State of Travancore Cochin recruitment to
the posts of Munsiffs was governed by the Travancore Cochin
Munsiffs Recruitment Rules, 1953. After the formation of
the new State of Kerala the Kerala Judicial Service
(Recruitment of Munsiffs) Rules, 1957 were framed replacing
the 1953 Rules. By G.O. No. 850 dated September 24, 1959
the 1957 Rules were amended to make District Magistrates and
Sub-Divisional Magistrates, Grades 1 and 11, eligible for
appointment as Sub-Judges and Munsiffs. By G.O. No. 851
dated September 24, 1959 three posts of District Magistrates
land eight posts of Sub-Divisional Magistrates were
constituted into a separate service outside the civil
judiciary so that the incumbents of those costs might
continue in them. It was further provided therein that
those posts would cease to exist when the incumbents vacated
them by retirement or promotion. To further the object of
absorption of the excluded magisterial officers into the
civil judiciary ad hoc rules were framed in February, 1966
providing that the magisterial officers of the former
Tranvancore Cochin State holding posts of District
Magistrates shall be eligible for appointment as Munsiffs in
the Kerala State Judicial Service.
In 1966 the Kerala State Judicial Service Rules (Special
Rules) were framed, r. 5 of which provides that the service
shall consist of officers belonging to category I
Subordinate Judges, which term shall include Subordinate
Judges posted as District Magistrates (Judicial) and
Category II Munsiffs which term shall include Munsiffs
posted as Sub-Divisional Magistrates. Rule 6 provides that
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appointments to Category I will be by promotion- from
Munsiffs and for Category II appointment shall be made
either by direct recruitment from Bar or by transfer from
three named categories, including Additional First Class
Magistrates and Sub-Magistrates.
By a Government Order dated February 12, 1973 (Exhibit P 1)
the State Government bifurcated the then existing Judicial
Service into two services, namely, the Kerala Civil Judicial
Service consisting of Sub-Judges and Munsiffs and the Kerala
Criminal Judicial Service ’consisting of District
Magistrates (Judicial) Sub-Divisional Magistrates,
Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub-Magistrates.
Para 3 of the Government Order provides; (i)that option
will be allowed to all civil judicial officers originally
borne on the Magistracy irrespective of whether or not they
have been confirmed as full members of the Kerala State
Judicial Service to go over to the criminal wing; (ii) that
those who opt to the criminal wing and whose options would
be accepted by Government will be given posting in the new
Criminal Judicial Service, (iii) that all the posts of Sub-
Divisional Magistrates will be
865
released for members of the new Criminal Judicial Service
and the then incumbents in the Posts Of Sub-Divisional
Magistrates will accordingly be posted back as Munsiffs,
with the implementation of the scheme, (iv) that persons who
have been appointed as District Magistrates on or before the
date of implementation of the scheme will be allowed to
continue as such, retaining their membership in the civil
judiciary, till they are appointed to higher Judicial
Service or retire from service, and (v) that if the number
of officers who opt to the criminal wing happens to be in
excess of the number of posts available for accommodating
them in the Criminal Judicial Service, such officers found
in excess will be retained in Civil Judiciary for eventual
absorption in the Criminal Judiciary as and when vacancies
arise consistent with their original seniority in the
criminal wing.
The writ petitioner was originally appointed as a District
Munsiff in the, Kerala Judicial Service and was eventually
confirmed as a Sub-Judge. After the scheme of bifurcation
came into force, he alleged, that he had been, denied option
to go over to the criminal wing )because the option contem-
plated by the scheme had been confined only to those Civil
Judicial- Officers who were "originally home on the
Magistracy ". In his writ petition before the High Court,
the petitioner challenged the constitutional validity of the
scheme on the ground that prior to its introduction, the
posts of District Magistrates and Sub-Divisional Magistrates
on the criminal side, had been integrated with those of Sub-
Judges and Munsiffs on the civil side and that, therefore,
there was art integrated Judicial Service in the State;
after the integration to mark off all the magisterial posts
alone and constitute them into a separate category with a
separate avenue of promotion leaving officers of civil
judiciary to carve out a different channel of promotion was
unjustified, discriminatory and violative of Arts. 14 and 16
of the Constitution, (2) the option given only to Civil
Judicial Officers "originally home on the magistracy" was
unconstitutional because opportunity to exercise similar
option was denied to persons who were not originally home on
the magistracy.
The High Court held (1) that prior to the coming into force
of the scheme, there had been integration of posts of
District Magistrates and the Sub-Divisional Magistrates with
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those of Sub-Judges and Munsiffs and that singling out of
certain posts from the integrated service for a separate
avenue of promotion, would be discriminatory; (2) that
separation of service into two services and the carving out
of separate promotional avenues for the magisterial officers
was discriminatory; and (3) that the two government orders
which restricted the exercise of option to get into criminal
judiciary only to officers originally home on the Magistracy
were discriminatory and hit by Arts. 14 and 16 of the
Constitution.
in appeal to this Court it was contended by the State that
the power of the State to bifurcate its Judicial, services
into two services and, to frame rules governing the service
of each wing could never be disputed, (2) that all officers
belonging to the two wings always constituted separate
cadres of service and there having been no integration there
could be no complaint of discrimination, (3) assuming that a
complete integrated Judicial Service had come into
existence, the classification was based on an intelligible
differential and had reasonable nexus with the object sought
to be achieved by the scheme of bifurcation and (4) that if
the words "originally borne on the magistracy" were
construed to mean that option was intended for the benefit
of all those officers home on the magistracy before this
scheme came into force, hostile treatment, as suggested,
would disappear.
Dismissing the appeals
HELD : .(per majority) (1) It is open to the State
Government to constitute as many cadres in any particular
service as it may choose according to the administrative
convenience and expediency and, therefore, if the State
Government thought of bifurcating its Judicial Service into
two wings--civil and Criminal of framing statutory rules
governing the recruitment and. conditions of service of the
incumbents of each wing, no fault could be found
866
(2) It is not correct to say that prior to the introduction
of the scheme of bifurcation a complete integrated Judicial
Service in the sense that all magisterial posts on the
criminal side (all District Magistrates and Sub-Divisional
Magistrates) had got integrated with the posts of Sub-Judges
and Munsiffs on the civil side. In the absence of such a
complete integrated Judicial Service, it was open to the
State Government to bifurcate the service into two wings-
Civil and criminal-and to provide for a particular type of
option specified therein. [876 B-C]
3(a). The Travancore-Cochin Judicial Service Recruitment of
Munsiffs Rules, 1953, which were in force prior to the
formation of the new State of Kerala, under which the
respondent was recruited as Munsiff, did not specify
Magistrates either as a feeder category or a category for
recruitment. After the formation of the State, for the
purpose of integration of judicial personnel and posts in
the former areas of Malabar and Travancore-Cochin and $be
former State of Madras, several instructions and orders were
issued from time to time. But these had very little to do
with the type of integration of all magisterial posts on the
criminal side with those on the civil side.
G.O.MS851/PUC/(Integration) dated September 24, 1959 and
G.O.Ms.. 850 dated September 24, 1959 and ad hoc Rules for
absorption of T.C. Criminal Judicial Officers dated February
2, 1966 on which the High Court relied appertained to
instructions or orders or rules issued by the Governor in
the context of integration of judicial posts and judicial
personnel drawn from the two integrated units, the Malabar
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Branch and the T.C.Branch. [876 C-H]
(b)Paragraphs 2 and 3 of G.O.Ms 851 and the Rules in
G.O.Ms. 850 cannot be read as leading to the inference that
there was a general integration of all the posts of District
Magistrates and Sub-Divisional Magistrates on the criminal
side with those of sub-Judges and Munsiffs on the civil side
in the entire State. In the first place both these
Government Orders must be understood in the context of the
background in which they were issued, namely, integration of
services and equation of posts of Judicial Officers drawn
from integrated units. Secondly, equation of certain posts
done under earlier orders was modified or revised and while
so modifying or revising the earlier, equation a provision
was required to be made in regard to, three posts of the
District Magistrates and eight posts of Sub-Divisional
Magistrates which were constituted into a separate service
outside civil judiciary with a view to tapper them off to
eventual extinction. A provision to continue the then
incumbents in their posts till then was also required to be
made. In those circumstances it was provided that those
incumbents would continue in their posts until the posts
were vacated by retirement or promotion or absorption into
civil judiciary. A further provision was made that only
such incumbents from among the District Magistrates and the
Sub Divisional Magistrates of the T.C. branch as may be
found to be suitable by the High Court may be taken into
civil judiciary as and when opportunities occurred. The
rules in G.O.Ms. 850 were made merely to enable the High
Court to do so. In other words, the absorption of District
Magistrates and Sub-Divisional Magistrates of the T.C.
Branch into civil judiciary was confined to only a limited
number from amongst the then incumbents of the three posts
of District Magistrates and eight posts of Sub-Divisional
Magistrates who may be found suitable for that purpose by
the High Court. It cannot, therefore, be said that there
was a general integration of posts on the magisterial side
with those on the civil side in the entire State. [878 B-G]
(4) The ad hoc Rules, had a limited operation and cannot
lead to the inference that there was a general integration
of posts on the magisterial side with those on the civil
side in the entire State. These rules were expressly framed
for absorption of Criminal Judicial Officers of the T.C.
Branch belonging to the separate service constituted under
the relevant Government orders to the Kerala State Judicial
Service. Whatever provision had been made in these rules,
was merely for the purpose of absorption of such of the
Criminal Judicial Officers of the T.C. Branch who were
constituted into a separate service outside civil judiciary.
[878 G-H, 879 B-C]
867
(5) The Kerala State Judicial Service Rules (Special Rules)
do not at au show that there was or has been any integration
of the posts of District Magistrates and Sub-Divisional
Magistrates with those of Sub-Judges and Munsiffs, as
suggested by the petitioner. The manner in which the two
categories of the service have been described in r. 5 and
the manner in which the various sources of recruitment to
each of the categories of service have been provided for in
r. 6 show that the original status of Subordinate Judges and
Munsiffs as ,officers belonging to the civil side of the
judiciary has been distinctly retained. The very fact that
the expression ’Subordinate Judges’ is said to include a
Subordinate Judge posted as District Magistrate and that the
expression ’Munsiffs’ is said to include Munsiffs posted as
Sub Divisional Magistrates, clearly shows that the rule
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making authority intended that notwithstanding that those
officers may be posted as District Magistrates (Judicial) or
Sub-Divisional Magistrates, they would be retaining their
status as judicial officers on the civil side. As regards
rule 6 recruitment by transfer can be made from three named
sources : Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub
Magistrates constituted one such source of recruitment. The
note below r. 20 is merely an enabling provision which
enables the Government to post any member of Category I as
District Magistrate and any member of Category 11 as Sub-
Divisional Magistrates under ss. 10, 12 and 13 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure. [879 H, 880 A-E]
(6) Having regard to the object for which the scheme of
bifurcation had been recommended by the High Court, namely,
to secure better administration of justice on the criminal
side, the option contained in the phrase "orginally home on
the Magistracy" in para 3(1) was and is intended for the
benefit of all those officers who were borne on the
magistracy and had worked as Magistrates at any time before
or just prior to the scheme being put into ,operation. The
complaint of hostile treatment is devoid of substance and
the Government Orders do not violate either Art. 14 or Art.
16. [883 C-D]
(7) Unless a complete integrated Judicial Service in the
manner suggested by the petitioner had come into existence
in the State of Kerala, there would be no question of
invoking the concept of hostile discrimination under Arts.
14 and 16 for, it is well settled that a question of denial
of equal treatment or ,opportunity can arise only as between
members of the same class. Articles 14 and 16 will not be
attracted at all unless persons who are favourably treated
form part of the same class as those who received
unfavourable treatment. [875 D-E]
Per Shinghal, J.
The finding of the High Court that there was integration of
the posts is correctand does not call for interference.
[886 F]
(1) The Rules and Orders made full provision for the
integration of all ,categories of Judicial Officers in the
service or services of the State. The Kerala Judicial
Service (Recruitment of Munsiffs) Rules, the Kerala State
Higher Judicial Service Rules and the Kerala Subordinate
Megisterial Service Rules covered all categories of posts
and officers. Assuming that the case of an individual
officer remained to be finalised for purposes of his
appointment or the fixation of his seniority or pay in the
integrated set up, it cannot be said that the process of
integration remained incomplete [886 D-E]
(2) There is nothing in order Exhibit P 1 order which could
be said to impinge on the right to equality guaranteed by
Art. 14 of the Constitution in so far as the bifurcation of
the integrated judicial Services into criminal and civil
wings is concerned. There is nothing to show that the
creation of the two services denied equality of opportunity
in matters of public employment within the meaning of Art.
16. What Exhibit P 1 does is to convey the constitution of
a separate wing for the criminal judiciary and civil
judiciary for the better administration of justice and the
framing of separate rules for the two services. ’Similarly
Exh. P 2 is an order implementing the earlier order, Exh.
P 1, and ,cannot be said to be violative of Arts. 14 and 16.
[887 D-H]
868
(3) There is nothing in the Constitution or any other law to
prevent the State from creating one or more State services,
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or to divide an existing service into two or more services,
according to its requirement. In this case, although, it
wag thought in 1956 that an integrated service would meet
the requirement them High Court felt that it was necessary
to separate the civil and criminal wings of the Subordinate
Judiciary. The scheme of bifurcation was brought into exis-
tence at the instance of the High Court to secure better
administration of justice. There is nothing in the Kerala
Civil Judicial Service Rules, 1973, which could be .said to
be discriminatory or violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the
Constitution, The rules deal with the constitution of the
service, the method of appointment, recruitment of members,
training of officers etc. [888 A, C, E-F]
(4) The argument that the classification in favour of only
those Civil Judicial Officers who were originally borne on
the magistracy, was a classification based on intelligible
differentia is untenable. Even for the purpose of achieving
that object, there could be no reason why those Civil
Judicial Officers who, though not originally borne on the
magistracy, had acquired sufficient experience of
magisterial work after their appointment as Magistrates as a
result of the integration of the services after the
formation of the State, should have been left out. The
classification made by Exhibits P 1 and P 2 between those
Civil Judicial Officers who were originally borne on the
magistracy and those who came over to the Magistracy
thereafter, but before the constitution of the criminal wing
of the judiciary, is not a permissible classification and it
cannot be said to be correlated to, or to subserve. the
object of providing an efficient service to man the posts
belonging to the Kerala Criminal Judicial Service [890 C-E]
(5) The offending part of the impugned orders and rules
which restrict the option to officers originally borne on
the magistracy is severable from the rest’ of the provisions
and the High Court clearly erred in striking down the order%
and the rules in their entirety. [890 G]
(6) Once it is held that the bifurcation was valid, and
there was justification for prescribing the requirement of
previous Magisterial experience, it would not be permissible
to challenge it with reference to Arts. 14 & 16 of the
Constitution on the ground that it carved out separate
promotional avenues in the Magisterial section of the
judiciary. [890 H, 891 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2047 of
1974.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated 8-
2-1974 of the Kerala High Court in O.P. No. 3639 of 1973 and
Civil Appeal No. 2040 of 1974
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
8th February 1974 of the Kerala High Court in O.P. No. 3639
of 1973.
L. N. Sinha and K. M. K. Nair for the Appellant in CA No.
2047/74,
T. S. Krishna Moorthy Iyer, N. Sudhakaran and V. D. Khanna
for the Appellant in CA. 2048 of 1974.
T. C. Raghavan and P. Keshava Pillai for the Respondents in
both the appeals.
The following Judgments were delivered
869
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These two appeals by special leave-one by
the State of Kerala (Original Respondent No. 1) and the
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other by M/s K. Sukuniaran Nair and 0. J. Antony (Original
Respondents No. 3 and 4, being Judicial Officers on the
Criminal Side)-are directed against the judgment and order
of the Kerala High Court of February 8, 1974 in O.P. (Writ
Petition) No. 3639 of 1973, whereby the High Court quashed
two Government Orders dated February 12, 1973 and September
18, 1973 (being Exhs. PI and P2) bifurcating the Judicial
Service of the Kerala State into two Wings-Civil and
Criminal-and the two sets of Statutory Rules, the Kerala
Civil Judicial Service Rules 1973 and the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Service Rules 1973 (being Annexures III and IV to
the additional counter-affidavit of the State dated November
26, 1973) framed for the two Wings of the Judicial Service
thus formed, as being violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the
Constitution.
The challenge to the constitutional validity of the two
Government Orders Exhs. P2 and the two sets of Rules
Annexures III and IV mentioned above arose at the instance
of Shri M. K. Krishnan Nair (original Petitioner, being a
Judicial Officer on the Civil Side) in these circumstances :
The Original petitioner was appointed as Munsiff in the
Kerala Judicial Service on June 10, 1958 and was confirmed
in that post on July 1, 1961. While serving as Munsiff, lie
was posted as Sub Divisional Magistrate, Alwaye, and was for
some time put :In full additional charge of the post of
District Magistrate (Judicial), Ernakulam, from January 16,
1963 to January 31, 1963. He was then transferred and
posted as Munsiff, Vaikom, and on October 3, 1968 was
promoted as Sub Judge in which post lie was subsequently
confirmed. At the material time when the scheme of
bifurcation of the Kerala Judicial Service into two Wings-
Civil Wing and Criminal Wing-was sought to be put into
operation, he had been transferred and was posted as Land
Reforms Appellate Authority at Kozhikode. The petitioner’s
case was that prior to February 12, 1973, as a result of
several Government Orders, Statutory Directions and Rules
issued under Arts. 234 and 237 of the Constitution from time
to time, the posts of District Magistrates, and Sub
Divisional Magistrates on the Criminal Side has been
integrated with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs on the
Civil Side respectively and a complete integrated Kerala
State Judicial Service had come into existence but on or
about February 12, 1973, in consultation with the Kerala
High Court, the State of Kerala decided to halve a scheme to
bifurcate and constitute two separate Wings for the Civil
and Criminal Judiciary respectively in the State, the former
consisting of Sub Judges and Munsiffs and the latter
consisting of the District Magistrates (JudiLal), Sub
Divisional Magistrates, Additional First Class Magistrates
and Sub Magistrates, that the two services should be
designated as, Kerala Civil Judicial Service and Kerala
Criminal Judicial Service, and that Rules for the said two
new services would be issued separately. This decision of
the State Government is to be found in Government Order MS
24/73/Home dated February 12, 1973, at Exh. PI. For
implementing the aforesaid scheme of bifurcating the
Judiciary into two wings, the G.O. at Exh. PI also contains
certain directions in 17-119 SCI/78
870
para 3 thereof, namely-(a) that option will be allowed to
all Civil Judicial Officers originally borne on the
Magistrate irrespective of whether or not, they have been
confirmed as full members in the Kerala State Judicial
Service to go over to the Criminal Wing (para 3 (i) ) ; (b)
that those who opt to the Criminal Wing and whose options
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would be accepted by the Government will be given posting in
the new Criminal judicial Service only to the posts they
would held oil the basis of their original rank in the
Magistracy and not with reference to their present position
in the State Judicial Service (para 3(ii) ); (c) that all
the posts of Sub Divisional Magistrates will be released for
members of the new Criminal Judicial Service and the present
incumbents in the posts of Sub Divisional Magistrates will
accordingly be posted back as Munsiffs, with the
implementation of the scheme (para 3(iii) ); (d) that
persons who have been appointed-as District Magistrates on
or before the date of implementation of the scheme will be
allowed to continue as such, retaining their membership in
the Civil Judiciary, till they are appointed to the Higher
Judicial service or retire from service. (para 3(iv) ); (e)
that if the number of officers who opt to the Criminal Wing
happens to be in excess of the number of posts available for
accommodating them in the Criminal Judicial Service, such
officers found in excess will be retained in the Civil
Judiciary for eventual’ absorption in the Criminal Judiciary
as and when vacancies arise, consistent with their original
seniority in the Criminal Wing (Para 3 (v) and (f) that the
options once exercised shall be final (para 3(vi) Two months
period from the date of the Order was allowed for the
officers to exercise their option. AL;cording to the
petitioner by way of implementing the aforesaid scheme 15
officers exercised their option to go over to the Criminal
Wing but the option of one Smt. P. Komalavally, not being
unconditional, was not accepted while the options of all the
remaining 14 Were accepted. in accordance with para 3(iii)
of Ext. PI all the posts of Sub Divisional Magistrates were
released for the members of tile Criminal Judiciary and in
accordance’ with para 3(v) as the number of officers whose
options were accepted was 14 and only 9 posts of Sub
Divisional Magistrates were released and became available
immediately, the senior most five officers out of the 14
were retained in their posts in the Civil Judiciary for
their eventual absorption in the Criminal Judiciary as and
when vacancies would arise consistent with their original
seniority in the Criminal Wing. This partial implementation
of the scheme has been recorded in the G.O. MS 157/73/Home
dated September 18, 1973 at Exh. P2. As was decided in
G.O. dated February 12, 1973 (Exh. PI), the two new sets of
Rules called the Kerala Civil Judicial Service Rules, 1973
and the Kerala Criminal Judicial Service Rules, 1973 (being
Annexures III & IV respectively to the counter-affidavit of
the State dated November 26, 1973) goveming.the
constitution, recruitment, qualifications, probation, tests,
posting and transfers of the incumbents in each of the two
services came to be framed in due course and these Rules
were brought into force with effect from September 18, 1973.
By a letter dated March 28, 1973 the, petitioner was
required to forward his option in terms of the aforesaid
scheme, but since under
871
para 3(i) of Exh. PI he was not eligible, to exercise the
option, as A he was not "originally borne on the
Magistracy", he sent a reply stating that "the question of
option does not arise" in- Ms case. But according to him,
several of his juniors in Judicial Service, who Were
originally recruited in the Magisterial service, opted to
the Criminal Wing, to their advantage of being posted as
District Magistrate (Judicial) and he had been denied that
opportunity because the option contemplated by the scheme of
bifurcation has been confined or restricted to only those
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Civil Judicial Officers "originally borne on the Magistracy"
and, therefore, the scheme of bifurcation with such res-
tricted option suffers from the vice of hostile
discrimination against Judicial Officers like him who were
intially recruited on the Civil Side. The ’petitioner
raised a two-fold contention by way of challenging the
constitutional validity of the scheme of bifurcation as
contained in Exh. Pl. the partial implementation thereof as
recorded in Exh. P2 and the two sets of Rules framed for
the two Wings of the Judicial service formed pursuant to the
scheme. In the first place, according to him, prior to the
introduction of the aforesaid scheme of bifurcation there
had come into existence one integrated Judicial Service for
the State of Kerala- as a result of several Government
orders, Statutory Directions, and Rules issued under Arts.
234 and 237 of the Constitution from time to time in which,
posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates
had been integrated ’with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs
respectively and, therefore, after such integration, to mark
off all the Magisterial posts alone and constitute therein
into a separate category with a separate avenue of
promotion, leaving the officers and posts of Civil Judiciary
to carve out a different channel of promotion was
unjustified; discriminatory and violative of Arts. 14 and 16
of the Constitution : secondly, the scheme of bifurcation as
contained in Exh. PI, in so far as it confined the option
only to Civil Judicial Officers "originally borne on the
Magistracy", was unconstitutional and discriminatory as
opportunity to exercise. similar option was denied to
persons like him who were not "originally borne on the
Magistracy" but were recruited under the Travancore-Cochin
Munsiff’s Recruitment Rules, 1953. It was contended that
there was no rational justification for confining-the option
only to those-who were "originally borne on the Magistracy"
and that the whole scheme of bifurcation had been geared to
irrational classification and the impugned orders and the
Rules resulting in the disintegration of an integrated
service deserved to be quashed.
On the other band, on behalf of the State of Kerala and
original respondents 3 and 4 (being officers borne on the-
Criminal side) it was disputed that there was any complete
integration of the posts of District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional Magistrates with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs
on the Civil Side or that an integrated Judicial Service for
the State had come into existence as contended by the
petitioner. It was pointed out by the State of Kerala in
its counteraffidavit dated November 17, 1973, that the
former set of posts were not Civil Judicial posts coming
within the meaning of "Judicial Service" as defined in Art,
236 (b) of the Constitution and further
872
that though under G.O. Ms 368/Home dated April 28, 1959,
issued by the Government of Kerala under Art. 237 the
provisions of Arts. 234 and 235 of the Constitution had been
made applicable to all classes of Judicial Magistrates with
effect from May 1, 1955 meaning thereby that all classes of
Judicial Magistrates as regards their recruitment, posting,
promotion etc. had been brought under control of the High
Court, no specific provisions had been made in the Rules
fixing the qualifications and method of appointment to the
posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magisirates
and further there was no provision, which required that only
a Sub Judge shall be posted as a District Magistrate and
that under Rule 5 read with Rule 20 of the Kerala State
Judicial Service Rules (Special Rules), 1966, Sub Judges, as
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a matter of practice, used to be posted as-District Magis-
trates and Munsiffs as Sub Divisional Magistrates but such
postings did not deprive them of their status as Sub Judges
or Munsiffs in the Judicial Service. In other words, it was
contended that in the absence of a complete integrated
Judicial Service, there was no question of disintegrating
the service as a result of the scheme contained in Exh. PI
being put into operation. It was further contended that the
decision to bifurcate the Kerala State Judicial Service into
two Wings--Civil Wing and Criminal Wing as per Exh. PI-was
taken in consultation with the High Court of Kerala in
deference to the considered view of the High Court that
experience showed that the erstwhile practice of posting sub
Judges as District Magistrates and Munsiffs as Sub
Divisional Magistrates needed a revision, first on the
ground that the persons working as Sub Magistrates and
Additional First Class Magistrates will make better Sub
Divisional Magistrates and District Magistrates and,
secondly, on the ground that the practice was bound to cause
justifiable heartburning and discontentment among the mem-
bers of the Magisterial Service, for, it meant that all but
a very few Sub Divisional Magistrates and Additional First
Class Magistrates would have to retire as such, without any
chances of promotion, and that with few chances of
promotion, direct recruitment from the Bar would be
difficult and of poor quality. The classification into two
Wings as contemplated by the scheme was thus a reasonable
classification based on an intelligible differentia and the
same had reasonable nexus with the object sought to be
achieved, namely, to secure better administration of justice
on the criminal side. It was further contended that the
Option specified in para 3(i) of Exh. P-1 was to operate
qua the existing incumbents in service and not in future as
was clear from the fact that the two sets of Statutory Rules
(Annexures III and IV) did not and do not provide for any
option whatsoever and as such these Rules were in any event
free from any blemish.
After tracing the history of the Statutory Rules and
Government Orders, issued from time to time, relating to the
separation of judiciary from executive and principally
relying upon Instructions contained in G.O. Ms
851/PUB/(Integration) dated September 24, 1959, Rules made
under Art. 234 as contained in G.O. MS 850 dated September
24, 1959, ad hoc Rules for absorption. of T.G.
873
Criminal Judicial Officers under Art. 234 read with Art. 309
dated February 2, 1966 and the Kerala State Judicial Service
Rules (Special Rules) dated October 5, 1966, the High Court
came to the conclusion that there was an integration of the
posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates
with those of. Sub Judges and Munsiffs and an absorption of
the Magisterial posts into the Civil Judiciary and that,
therefore, the singling out of certain posts from the
integrated service for a separate avenue of promotion would
be discriminatory. The High Court held that the Government
Orders at Exhs. PI and P2 by which two separate wings,
namely, Civil and Criminal, were constituted in the
Judiciary of the State were invalid on two grounds: (a) that
the separation into two wings and the carving out of sepa-
rate promotional avenues in the Magisterial section of the
Judiciary, which had been integrated with and absorbed into
the Civil Judicial posts, was discriminatory and irrational;
and (b) that Exhs. PI and P2 which restricted the exercise
of option to get into the Criminal Judiciary only to
officers borne on the Magistracy were discriminatory and hit
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by Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution. In coming to this
conclusion the High Court placed strong reliance on a
decision of this Court in State of Mysore v. Krishna Murthy
& Ors.(1) Accordingly, by its judgment and order dated
February 8, 1974, the High Court quashed and set aside the
Government orders at Exhs. PI and P2 as also the two sets
of Statutory Rules, being Annexures III and IV governing the
recruitment and conditions of service of the said two wings.
It is this judgment and order of the High Court that has
been challenged by State of Kerala in Civil Appeal No. 2047
of 1974 and by original respondents Nos. 3 and 4 (being
Judicial Officers oil the Criminal Side) in Civil Appeal No.
2048 of 1974.
In support of the appeals, counsel for the appellants
contended that the power of the State Government to
bifurcate its Judicial Services into two wings-Civil and
Criminal-and to frame ’separate, Statutory Rules governing
the recruitment and conditions of service of the incumbents
of each wing could never be disputed and as such the two
sets of Rules being Annexures III and IV, especially when
neither contains any provision for exercising any option by
any Judicial Officer, could not be questioned under Arts. 14
and 16 of the Constitution. As regards the scheme of
bifurcation of Kerala Judicial Service into two wings, Civil
and Criminal, containing an option given to the officers’
’Originally borne on the Magistracy’ as envisaged in Exhs.
PI and P2, a two-fold contention was urged before us. In
the first place, it was contended, particularly by counsel
for the appellants in Civil Appeal No. 2048 of 1974-counsel
for the State of Kerala being slightly lukewarm in that
behalf that there had been no integration of the posts of
the Judicial Officers on the Criminal Side with those on the
Civil Side in the State of Kerala at any time and that the
material on which the, original petitioner as well as the
High Court have relied, does not indicate that there was any
such integration between Officers belonging to the two Sides
or that a complete integrated Judicial Service had come into
existence in the State of
(1) A.I.R. 1973 S.C. 1146.
874
Kerala prior to February 12, 1973, that Judicial Officers
belonging to Civil Side as well as Criminal Side always
constituted separate cadres of service, and that, therefore,
there having been no integration between the two there could
be no complaint about any hostile or adverse treatment being
meted out to one class of Officers as against the others in
breach of either Art. 14 or Art. 16 of the Constitution; in
other words. neither Art. 14 nor Art. 16 was attracted to
the facts of the case at all inasmuch as the Officers
belonging to the two wings never were nor are similarly
situated or identically circumstanced. Secondly, it was
contended that even if it were assumed that a complete
integrated Judicial Service had come into existence in the
State of Kerala prior to February 12, 1973, the
classification of Judicial Officers belonging to such
integrated service into two categories or wings, namely,
Civil Wing and Criminal Wing, was based on an intelligible
differentia and the same had reasonable nexus with the
object sought to be achieved by the scheme of bifurcation
and the Rules framed in furtherance of the scheme. It was
pointed out that the justification for bifurcating the
Judicial Service into two wings as also for confining the
option to those Officers who were originally borne on the
Magistracy lay in the considered view of the High Court,
which had been accepted by the State Government, that
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persons who have worked as Sub Magistrates and Additional
First Class Magistrates will make better Sub Divisional
Magistrates and District Magistrates and that a contented,
efficient Criminal Judiciary with attractive promotional
chances was desirable and as such the bifurcation or
classification under Exhs. PI and P2 was reasonable and not
assailable under Art. 14 or Art. 16. As regards the option
contained in Exh. PI, Mr. Lal Narain Sinha, counsel for the
State of Kerala, raised a further alternative contention
that if the words "originally borne on the Magistracy"
occurring in para 3(i) of Exh. PI were construed to mean
that the option was intended for the benefit of all those
Officers who were borne on the Magistracy and worked as
Magistrates at any time but before the scheme was put into
operation (the expression originally’ meaning ’before or
prior to the, scheme’) the hostile treatment as suggested
would disappear. On the other hand, counsel on behalf of
the original petitioner, who has been respondent No. 1 in
both the appeals, supported the view taken by the High Court
Ind pressed it for our acceptance.
It was not and cannot be disputed that it is open to the
State Government to constitute as many cadres in any
particular service as it may choose according to the
administrative, convenience and expediency and, therefore,
if in February 1973, the State of Kerala thought of
bifurcating its Judicial Service into two wings-Civil and
Criminal and further thought of framing separate Statutory
Rules governing the recruitment and conditions of service of
the incumbents of each wing, no fault could be found with
any decision taken by it in that behalf. However, the
gravamen of the original petitioners complaint has been that
an already integrated Judicial service that had come into
existence in the State of Kerala prior to February 12, 1973
as a result of several Government Orders. Statutory
Directions and Rules issued under Arts. 234 and 237 of the
875
Constitution from time to time, has been disintegrated by
the State under the two Government Orders dated February 12,
1973 and September 18, 1973 and Exhs. PI and P2
respectively by putting all the Magisterial posts alone into
one category for a separate avenue of promotion, leaving the
Officers and posts on Civil Judiciary to carve out a
different channel of promotion, which bifurcation or
classification would be irrational, discriminatory and
violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The main
thrust of the petitioner’s arguments has been that the
singling out of certain posts (Magisterial posts) from such
integrated service for a separate avenue of promotion is
discriminatory. The argument of hostile or unfavourable
treatment to officers and posts on the Civil Side of the
Judicial Service is based on the fact that the option to go
over to the Criminal Wing as contained in para 3 (i) of Exh.
PI is confined or restricted to only those officers who were
"originally borne on the Magistracy". The basic postulate
made by the petitioner while advancing these criticisms
against the, Government Orders Exhs. P 1 and P 2 is that
prior to February 12, 1973 a complete integrated Judicial
Service had come into existence in the State of Kerala in
which the posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates on the Criminal Side had been integrated with
those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs on the Civil Side
respectively which postulate is strenuously disputed by the
appellants before us. It is obvious that unless a complete
integrated Judicial Service in the manner suggested by the
petitioner-had come into existence in the State of Kerala
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there would be no question of invoking the concept of
hostile discrimination under Arts. 14 or 16 of the
Constitution, for, it is well settled that a question of
denial of equal treatment or opportunity can arise only as
between members of the same class. In other words, Art. 14
or Art. 16 will not be attracted at all unless persons who
are favourably treated form part of the same class as those
who receive unfavourable treatment. Therefore, in our view,
the principal question that arises for our determination in
these appeals is whether prior to the introduction of scheme
of bifurcation as contained in Exhs. P 1 and P 2, as a
result of several Government Orders. Statutory Directions
and Rules, issued under Art. 234 and 237 of the Constitution
from time to time, there had come into existence one
complete integrated Judicial Service in the State of Kerala
or not ? In other words, had there been an integration of
the posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs as
contended by the original petitioner ? The conclusion of the
High Court that the posts of District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional Magistrates had been integrated with those of the
Sub Judges and Munsiffs in Kerala is based on the following
material : (a) Instruction contained in G. 0. MS 851/
PUC/(Integration) dated September 24, 1959; (b) Rules under
Art. 234 as contained in G. O . MS 850 dated September 24,
1959; (c) Ad hoc Rules for absorption of T. C. Criminal
Judicial Officers under Art. 234 read with Art. 309 dated
February 2, 1966 and (d) Kerala State Judicial Service Rules
(Special Rules) dated October 5, 1966 and according to the
High Court the cumulative effect of the said material was
that a completE integrated Judicial Service for the State
could be said to have bad come into existence. The High
Court derived support for its said conclusion from a Full
Bench Decision of
876
that very Court in P. S. Menon’s(1) case, where the Full
Bench is said to have understood the 1959 Rules and the 1966
Rules as being meant to absorb the personnel occupying the
posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates
into Civil Judiciary by inducting them into that service.
The question is whether on the aforesaid material an
inference can be drawn that there had come into existence a
real and complete integrated Judicial Service in the State
of Kerala in the sense that the posts of District
Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates on the Criminal
Side had got integrated with those of Sub Judges and
Munsiffs on the Civil Side.
At the out set it may be stated that the State of Kerala
comprising the Malabar area of the former Madras State and
the former State of Travancore-Cochin was formed under the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956 with effect from November 1,
1956. Prior to such formation of the new State of Kerala
steps for separating the Criminal Judiciary from the
executive.in defence, to the directive principle of State
Policy contained in Art. 50 of the Constitution had already
been taken in the State of Madras from April 1952 and in
Travancore-Cochin from May 1955, but we are not concerned in
this case with the several steps so taken in that direction
in the two States. It may also be stated that prior to the
formation of the new State of Kerala, as far as the Travan-
core-Cochin area was concerned, there were in operation the
Travancore-Cochin Judicial Service Recruitment of Munsiffs
Rules 1953, which had been issued under Arts. 234 and 238 of
the Constitution, Rule 2 whereof specified the
qualifications for recruitment as Munsiffs, under which the
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original petitioner was recruited as a Munsiff in June,
1958; it is not necessary to refer to these Rules in detail
but it will be enough to notice that these Rules did not
specify Magistrates either as a feeder category or a
category for recruitment. As a result of the formation of
the new State of Kerala steps in the direction of integra-
tion of Judisial personnel and posts obtaining in the
Malabar area of the former State of Madras and the State of
Travancore-Cochin were required to be taken and several
instructions, orders and rules in the matter of equation of
posts based on junctional parity with reference to nature,
power and responsibility of the post, inter se seniority,
promotion etc. were required to be issued from time to time,
but these, it must be observed, will have to be viewed in
proper perspective and context of integration of services of
the two integrating units and that these had very little to
do with the type of integration with which we are concerned
in the case, namely, integration of all the Magisterial
posts on the Criminal Side with those on the Civil Side.
With this background in mind we will now deal with the
material on the basis of which the High Court has recorded
its finding that prior to February 12, 1973 there was
complete integration of the Magisterial posts with those on
the Civil Side in Kerala State,. We may observe at once
that the first three items at (a), (b) and (c) above, really
pertain to instructions of orders or rules issued by the
Governor of Kerala in the context of integration of Judicial
posts and Judicial personnel drawn from the two integrated
units, namely, Malabar Branch and Travancore Cochin Branch.
The G. 0. MS 851 dated September 24, 1959, (being item (a)
as its heading indicates deals with revision or modifi,
cation of previous orders issued by the Governor of Kerala
in the matter
A.I.R. 1970 Kerala 165.
877
of integration of services and equation of posts-former
Travancore-Cochin personnel and those allotted from Madras
Judicial Department. After referring to the previous orders
whereunder the posts of District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional Magistrates grade 1 and 11 of the ’Travancore-
Cochin Branch had been-grouped with the posts of Additional
District and Sessions Judges and Sub Judges and Munsiffs
respectively of the same branch and had been equated with
the posts of Sub Judges and District Munsiffs and Sub
Divisional Magistrates respectively of the Madras Branch for
the purposes of integration of the officers holding these
posts on 1-11-1956 and after referring to the High Court’s
view that it would not be proper to equate the District
Magistrates and the Sub-Divisional Magistrates grade I and
II of Executive origin belonging to the T. C. Branch with
the Civil Judicial Officers and that the two should become
separate until the Magisterial Officers are inducted into
the Civil Judiciary in the manner prescribed under Art. 234
of the Constitution, the G.O. proceeds to state that the
Government had reviewed the matter and were pleased to
accept the advice of the High Court. The G.O. further
proceeds to direct that the District Magistrates and the Sub
Divisional Magistrates I and II grades of. the T.C. Branch
will not be integrated with the Judicial Officers on 1-11-
1956 or promoted to posts in the Civil Judiciary and
accordingly, the earlier G.O. dated May 27, 1958, regarding
the equation of posts in the Judicial Department shall stand
modified to that extent. It appears that while modifying or
revising the earlier equation of posts it became necessary
to make a provision in regard to the three posts of District
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Magistrates and eight posts of Sub Divisional Magistrates by
constituting them as a separate service outside the Civil
Judiciary enabling the then incumbents of those posts to
continue in these posts and, therefore, in paragraph 2 of
the said G.O. it was provided that these three posts of the
District Magistrates and eight posts of the Sub Divisional
Magistrates will constitute a separate service outside the
Civil Judiciary and will taper off to eventual extinction
and that the existing incumbents will vacate the posts
either on retirement or by promotion or otherwise by
absorption in the Civil Judiciary. Paragraph 3 of this G.O.
provided that such among the District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional.Magistrates of the T.C. Branch as may be found by
the High Court as suitable, will be taken to the Civil
Judiciary as and when ,opportunities occur and in order to
enable the High Court to do this, the necessary rules under
Art. 234 of the Constitution were being issued separately.
Simultaneously with the issuance of the said G.O., another
order being G.O. MS 850 dated September 24, 1959 (being item
(b) above) was issued by way of a Notification which
contained the Rules under Art. 234 of the Constitution
framed by the Governor of Kerala after consultation with the
Kerala Public Service Commission and the High Court of
Kerala. These Rules again, as their heading clearly
suggests, deal with induction of Magisterial Officers of
Executive origin of Travancore-Cochin branch into the Civil
Judiciary. By Rule I it was provided that the Salaried
Magisterial Officers of the former Travancore-Cochin State
of two categories i.e. District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional Magistrates grade I and II shall be eligible for
appointment to the two categories of Civil Judicial posts
i.e. to Sub Judges and
878
Munsiffs respectively, provided the said officers possessed
a degree in Law of a University in India or were Barristers-
at Law. Rule 2 provided for a probationary period while
under Rule 3 these Rules became effective immediately.
Placing reliance on paragraphs 2 and 3 of G.O. M.S. 851
dated September 24, 1959 and the Rules mentioned in G.O. MS
850 dated September 24, 1959, the High Court has observed
that induction of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates into Civil Judiciary was contemplated by the,
State Government as per paragraphs 2 and 3 of G.O. & IS 851
and the said Rules in G.O. MS 850 recognised the position
that the District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates
were eligible for appointments in the Civil Judiciary. In
our view paragraphs 2 and 3 of G.O. MS 851 and the Rules in
G.O. MS 850 cannot be read as leading to the inference that
there was a general integration of all the posts of District
Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates on the Criminal
Side with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs on the Civil Side
in the entire State of Kerala. In the first place, both
these Government, Orders Nos. 851 and 850 must be understood
in the context of the background in which they were issued,
namely,, in the context of integration of services and
equation of posts of Judicial Officers drawn from two
integrating units; secondly, the equation of certain posts
done under earlier orders was modified or revised and while
so modifying or revising the earlier equation a provision
was required to be made in regard to the three posts of the
District Magistrates and eight posts of Sub Divisional
Magistrates which were constituted into a separate service
outside Civil Judiciary with a view to taper them off to
eventual extinction and a provision to continue the, then
incumbents thereof in their posts till then was also
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required to be made and in those circumstances it was
provided that those incumbents will continue. in their posts
until the posts were vacated by retirement or promotion or
absorption into Civil Judiciary and a further provision was
made that only such incumbents from among the District
Magistrates and the Sub Divisional Magistrates of the T.C.
Branch as may be found to be suitable by the High Court may
be taken into Civil Judiciary as and when opportunities will
occur and the Rules in G.O. MS 850 were made merely to
enable the High Court to do so. In other words. the
absorption of the District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates of the T.C. Branch into Civil Judiciary was
confined to only a limited number from amongst the then
incumbents of the three posts of District Magistrates and
eight posts of Sub Divisional Magistrates (who were
constituted into a separate service), who may be found
suitable for that purpose by the High Court. It cannot,
therefore, be said that there was a general integration of
posts on the Magisterial Side with those on the Civil Side
in the entire State of Kerala as suggested by the
petitioner. The next item relied upon by the High Court is
item (c), being the Ad hoc Rules dated February 11, 1966,
framed by the Governor of Kerala after consultation with the
Kerala Public Service Commission and the High Court of
Kerala, which is closely connected with the materials at
items (a) and (b) which we have discussed above. These Ad
hoc Rules were expressly framed "for the absorption of
Criminal Judicial officers of the T.C. Branch belonging to
the separate service constituted under G.O. MS 850/851/59
Public
879
(Integration) Deptt. dated September, 24, 1959 and G.0 MS
594/61/ Public (Integration) dated July 24, 1961, to the,
Kerala State Judicial Service"; in other words, whatever
provision had been made in these Rules, which had been
styled as Ad hoc Rules, was merely for the purpose of
absorption of such of the Criminal Judicial Officers of the
T.C. Branch who were constituted into a separate service
outside Civil Judiciary under G.O. MS 850 and G.O. MS7851
both dated September 24, 1959 as would be found to be
suitable by the High Court for inducting into Civil
Judiciary. It is thus clear, that these Ad hoc Rules had a
limited operation and these cannot lead to the inference
that there, was a general integration of posts on the
Magisterial Side with those on the Civil Side in the entire
State of Kerala any more than the two G.0s. MS 850 and 851
can do.
The last item at (d) on which reliance has been placed is
the Kerala State Judicial Service Rules (Special Rules)
dated October 5, 1966. These Special Rules have been framed
by the Governor of Kerala in respect of the members of the
Kerala Judicial Service in exercise of the powers conferred
under Arts. 234 and 235 and the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution and in supersession of all existing rules and
regulations on the subject. Rules 5, 6 and 20 are the
material Rules having a bearing on the question at issue.
Rule 5 which deals with the constitution of the service
states that the service shall consist of officers belonging
to two categories-, namely, Category-I : Subordinate Judges
which term shall include Subordinate Judges posted as
District Magistrates (Judicial) and Category-II : Munsiffs
which term shall include Munsiffs posted as Sub Divisional
Magistrates. Rule 6 deals with the method of appointments
to be made to the aforesaid two categories and the sources
of recruitment for each. As regards Subordinate Judges
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(Category-I) it provides that appointment to this category
will be by promotion from Munsiffs for which a ’select list
shall be prepared’ from among the eligible Munsiffs on the
basis of merit and ability, seniority being considered ,Only
where merit and ability are approximately equal. As regards
Munsiffs (Category-11), it provides that appointment shall
be made either (1) by direct recruitment from Bar ’(2/3rds)
or (2) by transfer (1/3rd) from three named categories
including Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub-
Magistrates. Rule 20 provides that postings and transfers
of the members of the service shall be made by the High
Court and the Note below Rule 20 states that the appointment
and posting of any member of Category-I or Category-11 as
District Magistrate or Sub Divisional Magistrate, as the
case may be, shall be made by Government under Sections 10,
12 and 13 of the Criminal Procedure Code. Strong reliance
was placed on behalf of the original petitioner on the
aspect that Rule 5 while setting out the two ,categories of
the service, defines the expression Subordinate Judges as
including a Subordinate Judge, who has been posted as a
District Magistrate’ and Munsiffs as ’including a Munsiff
posted as a Sub Divisional Magistrate’ and on the further
aspect that under Rule 6 Additional First Class Magistrates
and Sub Magistrates could be appointed as Munsiffs and
according to the petitioner these two aspects that emerge
from Rules 5 and 6 clearly show that there was an
integration of the posts of District Magistrates (Judicial)
and the sub
880
Divisional Magistrates with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs
respectively. It is not possible to accept this contention,
for, in our view the mannor in which the two categories of
the service have been described in Rule 5 and the manner in
which the various sources of recruitment to each of the
categories of service have been provided for in Rule 6
rather show that the original status of Subordinate Judges
and Munsiffs as officers belonging to the Civil Side of the
Judiciary has been distinctly re has been diistinctly
rewarded. The very fact that the expression "Subordinate
Judges" is said to include a Subordinate Judge posted as
District Magistrate and that the expression "Munsiffs" is
said to include Munsiffs posted as Sub Divisional
Magistrates, clearly shows that the Rule-making authority
intended that notwithstanding that these officers may be
posted as District Magistrates (Judicial)-or Sub Divisional
Magistrates they Would be retaining their status as Judicial
officers on the Civil Side. As regards Rule 6, we may point
out that if Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub
Magistrates were the only sources of recruitment to the
posts of. Munsiffs while making appointments by transfer,
there would have been some force in the contention urged on
behalf of the petitioner but that is not so; the recruitment
by transfer can be made from three sources, namely, (1)
Assistant Registrar, Superintendents and Librarian of the
High Court and Sheristadars of District Courts; (2)
Additional First Class Magistrates, Sub Magistrates and
Assistant Public Prosecutors Grade 1 and (3) Superintendents
of the Law Department of the Government Secretariat and
Manager, Office of the Advocate General. In other words,
Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub Magistrates
constitute one such source of recruitment. The Note below
Rule 20 is merely an enabling provision which enables the
Government to post any member of Category-I as District
Magistrate and any member of Category-11 as Sub Divisional
Magistrate under ss. 10, 12 and 13 of the Criminal Procedure
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Code. In our view, therefore, the Kerala State Judicial
Service Rules (Special Rules) dated October 5, 1966 do not
at all show that there was or has been any integration of
the posts of District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs
respectively as suggested by the petitioner. An analysis of
the 1959 Rules under G.O.M.S. 851 together with the 1966 ad
hoc Rules will show that at the highest a partial absorption
of a limited number from out of the then incumbents of the
eleven posts (three of the District Magistrates and eight of
the Sub Divisional Magistrates, who were constituted into a
separate service outside Civil Judiciary) who were to be
found suitable by the High Court into Civil Judiciary, could
be said to have occurred under the said Rules, while under
the Kerala State Judicial Service Special Rules dated Octo-
ber 5, 1966 a practice of posting senior-most Sub Judges and
Munsiffs as District Magistrates and Sub Divisional
Magistrates respectively grew though these Judicial Officers
continued to retain their character as Sub Judges and
Munsiffs in the Civil Judiciary; but experience showed that
the practice needed a revision with a view to achieve better
administration of Criminal justice and it was in deference
to the considered view of the High Court that the State
Government ultimately took a decision to bifurcate and
constitute two Wings of the Judicial Service, namely, Civil
Wing and Criminal Wing and passed the orders
881
at Exhs. PI and P2 respectively and framed the necessary
Statutory Rules (Annexures III ’and IV,governing the
recruitment and conditions of services of the said two
Wings. In our view none of the materials on which reliance
has been placed- by the High Court can lead to the inference
that there had come into existence a real and complete
integrated Judicial Service in the entire State of Kerala in
the sense that all the Magisterial posts on the Criminal
Side (District Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates)
had got integrated with those of Sub Judges and Munsiffs
respectively on the, Civil Side. It is thus not possible to
accept the High Court’s finding in this behalf.
It may be stated that by way of deriving support for its
finding that there had come into existence a complete
integrated Judicial Service in the State of Kerala prior to
February 12, 1973, the High Court has pointed out that in a
Full Bench decision of that Court in P. S. Menon’s case,
(supra), the Full Bench has in connection with the 1959
(Rules in G. 0. MS 851 dated September 24, 1959) observed
that the said Rules had been framed for the absorption of
the personnel, who were occupying the posts of District
Magistrates and Sub Divisional Magistrates into the Civil
Judiciary. The High Court has further pointed out that when
P. S. Menon’s case (supra) was carried to the Supreme Court
in appeal, even this Court in its judgment has referred to
the ad hoe Rules framed on February 11, 1966 as being meant
for absorption of the Criminal Side Judicial Officers of the
Travancore-Cochin Branch who were kept in the separate cadre
into Civil Judiciary. The observations of the Kerala High
Court in the Full Bench decision in connection with the 1959
Rules in G. 0. MS 851 and of this Court in connection with
the 1966 ad hoc Rules are obviously correct, but, as
discussed earlier., both these Rules had a limited operation
effecting a partial absorption of such of the incumbents of
the eleven posts which were kept in a separate cadre who
were to be found suitable by the High Court into Civil
Judiciary; but from this fact it is impossible to draw the
inference that there had come into existence a complete
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integrated Judicial Service in the entire State of Kerala in
the sense that all posts on the Magisterial Side had got
integrated with those on the Civil Side. On the other hand
the very fact that there have been in operation three
separate sets of Rules, namely, (1) the Kerala State Higher
Judicial Service Rules 1961 (dealing only with District and
Sessions Judges) (2) the Kerala Subordinate Magisterial
Judicial Sevice Rules 1962 and (3) the Kerala State Judicial
Service Rules (Special Rules) of October 5, 1966, shows that
there was no integration of the Judicial Magisterial posts
with Judicial Civil posts. If that be so, there will be no
question of singling out of certain posts from any
integrated service for a separate, avenue of promotion under
Exhs. PI and P2 respectively as contended for by the
petitioner and the scheme of bifurcation as contained in
Exhs. PI and P2 cannot be regarded as being violative of
either-Art. 14 or Art. 16. In this view of the matter it is
unnecessary for us to deal with the decision of this Court
in State of Mysore v. Krishna Murthy & Ors. (supra), on
which reliance was placed by counsel for the original
petitioner, for, the ratio of that decision would be
inapplicable to the instant case. in that case on an
examination of the Mysore State Accounts Services’
882
Cadre and Recruitment Rules, 1959, the High Court had come
to tile conclusion, which was accepted by this Court, that
there was a clear and complete integration brought about
between the P.W.D. Accounts unit and the Local Fund Audit.
unit under the common administrative control of the
Controller of State Accounts, the qualifications and status
of the officers of the formerly separate units being
identical, their work being of the same nature, the
recruiting authorities being the same and the standards
observed and tests prescribed for entry into the formerly
separate units being identical and as such the impugned
Notifications which resulted in a striking disparity in the
promotional opportunities between the officers of the two
wings in the, same category were struck down. In the
instant case before us, we are clearly of the view that
prior to the introduction of the scheme of bifurcation as
per Exhs. PI and P2 a complete integrated Judicial Service
in the State of Kerala in the sense that all Magisterial
posts on the Criminal Side (all District Magistrates and Sub
Divisional Magistrates) had got integrated with the posts of
Sub Judges and Munsiffs on the Civil Side, had not come into
existence and, therefore, in the absence of such a complete
integrated Judicial Service having come into existence, it
was open to the State Government to bifurcate the service
into two Wings-Civil and Criminal-in the manner done under
Exhs. PI and P2 respectively and to provide for a parti-
cular type of option specified therein and no violation of
Arts. 14 and 16 is involved.
Alternatively, proceeding on the assumption that a complete
integrated Judicial Service had come into existence in the
State of Kerala prior to the introduction of the scheme of
bifurcation under Exhs. PI and P2 as found by our learned
brother Shri Justice Shinghal, the question that arises for
our determination is whether the scheme of bifurcation as
contained in the said impugned orders with the option
indicated therein and the two sets of Rules framed for
constituting the two wings violate Article 14 or 16 of the
Constitution. As pointed out earlier, the Rules do not
themselves provide for the option and are free from any
blemish of discrimination but the hostile discrimination
complained of centres round the option that is specified in
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the impugned order Exh. PI. The relevant provision of the
impugned order is to be found in para 3 (i) which runs thus:
"3(i) Option will be allowed to all Civil
Judicial Officers originally borne on the
Magistracy, irrespective of whether or not
they have been confirmed as full members of
the Kerala State Judicial Service."
It is pointed out that the aforesaid provision classifies
all Civil Judicial Officers of an integrated service into
two groups, those who were "originally borne on the
Magistracy " and those who were not so borne and the option
to go over to the Criminal Wing of the Judiciary with
chances of promotion upto District Magistrates is confined
only to the Officers belonging to the former group and it
has been urged that the scheme of bifurcation containing
such restricted option is discriminatory as opportunity to
exercise similar option has been denied to the officers
belonging to the other group. On’ the other hand, it was
contended
883
by Mr. Lal Narain Sinha, counsel for the State of Kerala,
that the question whether the option specified in para 3(1)
of Exh. PI was so confided as has been suggested by counsel
for the original petitioner would depend upon the proper
construction of the words "originally borne on the
Magistracy" occurring in the said provision. According to
him the expression ’originally’ can be construed as meaning
"before or just prior to the scheme" and so construed the
phrase "originally borne on the Magistracy" would mean that
the option was intended for the benefit of all these
officers who were borne on the Magistracy and worked as
’Magistrates at any time but before the scheme was put into
operation, with the result that the hostile treatment into
as suggested by the counsel for the original petitioner
would disappear. He pointed out that having regard to the
object for which the scheme of bifurcation had been
recommended by the High Court, namely, ’to secure better
administration of justice on the Criminal Side’, the phrase
"originally borne on the Magistracy" must have been used
with the intention of benefiting all Civil Judicial Officers
who had experience on the Criminal Side at some time or the
other prior to the introduction of the scheme. In our view,
the phrase "orignally borne on the Magistracy" occurring in
para 3(i) is capable of bearing two constructions-one
suggested on behalf of the original petitioner and the other
suggested by Mr. Sinha for the State and it is obvious that
since the construction suggested by counsel for the original
petitioner would lead to unconstitutionality the other
construction which renders the provision free of the vice of
discrimination under Article 14 or 16 will have to be
preferred. There is ample authority of this Court for the
proposition that where two constructions are, possible that
one which leads to unconstitutionality must be avoided and
the other which trends to make provision constitutional
should be adopted, even if straining of language is
’necessary. Moreover, the construction suggested by .W.
Sinha is in accord with the object with which the scheme of
bifurcation was recommended by the High Court. In the
circumstances, we construe the, phrase "originally borne on
the Magistracy" in para 3 (i) of Exh. PI accordingly and
hold that the option contained therein was and is intended
for the benefit of all those officers who were borne on the
Magistracy and had worked as Magistrates at any time before
or just prior to the scheme being put into operation and we
have no doubt that the State of Kerala will give the benefit
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of the option in the manner indicated. Having regard to the
aforesaid construction which we are placing on the phrase
"originally borne on the Magistracy" occurring in para 3 (i)
of Exh. P 1 it is clear that the complaint of hostile
treatment is devoid of any substance and that Exhs. PI and
P2, therefore, do not violate either Article 14 or 16 ’of
the Constitution.
in the result the appeals are allowed and the judgment and
order dated February 8, 1974 of the High Court in O.P. No.
3639 of 1973 are set aside. In the circumstances there will
be no order as to costs.
SHINGHAL, J.-These appeals by special leave are directed
against the judgment of the Kerala High Court dated February
8, 1974. Appeal No. 2047 has been filed by the State of
Kerala, while appeal
884
No. 2048 has been filed by S. Sukumaran Nair and O. J.
Antony who were initially appointed as Magistrates in the
Service of the Travancore-Cochin and Kerala States
respectively. The appellants feel aggrieved because the
High Court has allowed the writ petition of M.K. Krishnan
Nair (a Subordinate Judge)and "struck down in their
entirety" the government orders Ex. PI (dated February 12,
1973) and Ex. P2 (dated September 18, 1973), the Kerala
Civil Judicial Service Rules, 1973, and the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Service Rules, 1973.
M. K. Krishnan Nair (the Writ Petitioner) was appointed as a
Munsiff in the Kerala Judicial Service on June 10, 1958. He
was confirmed with effect from April 1, 1970 when he was
serving as a Munsiff. He served as Sub-divisional
Magistrate, Alwaye, and held additional charge as District
Magistrate for a few days. He was thereafter posted as a
Munsiff. He was promoted as a Sub-Judge on October 3, 1968
and confirmed on that post. He felt aggrieved because of
the issue of the State Government’s order Ex. P.1 dated
February 12, 1973 for the constitution of separate wings for
the civil and criminal judiciary consisting of Sub-Judges
and Munsiffs on the civil side, and District Magistrates
(Judicial), Sub-divisional Magistrates, Additional First
Class Magistrates and Sub-Magistrates on the criminal side,
which came to be know as the Kerala Civil Judicial Service
’and the Kerala Criminal Judicial Service. The real
grievance of the writ petitioner was that the State
Government had allowed an option to go over to the. criminal
wing to those officers only who were originally borne on the
magistracy and not to his as he did not fulfil that
qualification. It was his contention that several officers
who were junior to him in the judicial. service, but were
originally recruited as Magistates, were unduly benefitted
and were being posted as District Magistrates (Judicial).
The writ petitioner therefore challenged the government
order Ex. P.1, and the other order Ex. P.2 dated September
18, 1973 accepting some of the options, as illegal,
discriminatory, and unfair to those who, like him, were
borne on the civil judiciary. The respondent State,
Sukumaran Nair respondent No. 3, and O. J. Antony respondent
No. 4 traversed the claim of the writ petitioner. As has
been stated, the High Court has allowed the writ petition,
and that has given rise to the two appeals.
The controversy in these appeals thus relates to the
validity of the aforesaid orders and the Kerala Civil
Judicial Service Rules 1973 and the Kerala Criminal Judicial
Service Rules 1973 which were made soon after. It will
however be necessary to make a brief mention of the rele-
vant facts in a chronological order so that the controversy
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may be appreciated in its proper perspective.
Recruitment of Munsiffs in the erstwhile Travancore-Cochin
State, which ultimately merged in the Kerala State, was
governed by the Travancore-Cochin Munsiffs Recruitment
Rules, 1953. The Kerala State was formed on November 1,
1956 and it comprised the Tavancore-Cochin State (excluding
the area which was transferred to the Madras State), the
Malabar district (excluding a small portion thereof)
885
and the Kasaragod taluk of South Kanara district. The
Travancore-Cochin Rules were then replaced by the Kerala
Judicial-Service (Recruitment of Munsiffs) Rules, 1957,
which were made by suitably .amending those Rules. The
problem of integrating the services of the judicial officers
had to be tackled, and the State Government issued G. 0. No.
9585/SI. 5-57/P. D. dated May 27, 1958 for that purpose
which, inter alia, provided the basis for the equation of
posts of the Travancore-Cochin and Madras States. The
equation dealt with all .,categories of posts, namely,
District Judges (Grades I and II), District Magistrates,
Additional District and Sessions Judges, Sub-Judges, Sub-
Divisional Magistrates Grade I,Munsiffs and Sub-divisional ,
Magistrates Grade II, District Munsiffs and Sub-Magistrates.
G.O. MS 850 of September 24, 1959 partially amended the
Kerala Judicial Service (Recruitment of Munsiffs) Rules so
as to make those District Magistrates and Sub-divisional
Magistrates Grades I and II eligible for .appointment as
Sub-Judges and Munsiffs who possessed a degree in law of a
University in India or were, Barristers-at-law. At the-
same time G. 0. MS 851/Pub (Integration) of September 24,
1959 was issued, at the instance of the High Court, which
partially modified G.O. No. 9585 dated May, 1958 in regard
to the equation of posts and reserved 3(4) posts of District
Magistrates and 8 posts of Sub-divisional Magistrates for
constituting them into a separate service outside the Civil
Judiciary so that the incumbents might continue on those
posts. It was however specifically provided that those
posts (outside the Civil Judiciary) would cease to exist
when those incumbents vacated them by retirement or
promotion or otherwise and suitable civil judicial posts
were created in their place where necessary. It was also
directed that those District Magistrates and Sub--divisional
Magistrates (of the Travancore-Cochin) Branch who were found
suitable by the High Court would be taken in the Civil
Judiciary as and when possible.
Special rules were also made for the Kerala State Higher
Judicial Service by a notification dated July 11, 1961.
Notification No. G.O. (M.S.) 718 dated December 16, 1961 was
issued applying the provisions of articles 234 and 235 of
the Constitution, with effect from November 1, 1956, to all
classes of Judicial Magistrates of the State-as they applied
to persons appointed to the Judicial Service, of the State.
That was followed by the Kerala Subordinate Magistrate
Service Rules, 1962. Those Rules provided for the
constitution of a separate service consisting only of
Additional First Class Magistrates and Sub-Magistrates.
It was however still necessary to complete the process of
integration of the services of the judicial officers in the
Kerala State Judicial :Service. Notification No. 3870/c3/66
Home dated February 11, 1966 was therefore issued under
article 234 read with the proviso to article 309 of the
Constitution, making ad hoc rules for the absorption.,of
criminal judicial officers of the Travancore-Cochin Branch
belonging to the separate service constituted under the
aforesaid G.O. MS 850/851/59 of the Public (Integration)
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Department dated September
886
24, 1959 and G.O. MS 594/61 Public (Integration) Department
dated July 24, 1961 to the Kerala State Judicial Service.
It was expressly provided by those rules that the
Magisterial Officers of the former Travancore-Cochin State
holding posts of District Magistrate shall be eligible for
appointment as Subordinate Judges and those holding posts of
Sub-divisional Magistrate shall be eligible for appointment
as Munsiffs in the Kerala State Judicial Service if they
were graduates-inlaw of a University in India or were
Barristers-at-law. It was provided in rule (iii) that the
persons so appointed will thereupon- "become members of the
Kerala State Judicial Services and will on all matters
including probation, discharge, full membership and
promotion be governed by (those) Rules." Provision was also
made for their appointment as District Judges or Subordinate
Judges and for deter-mining their seniority in the
integrated service.
Then came the notification G.O.(P) No. 368/66/Home dated
October 5, 1966 by which special rules were made under
articles 234, 235 and the proviso to article 309 of the
Constitution. Those Rules, were called the Kerala State
Judicial Service Rules, 1966. They provided for two
categories of officers, namely, Subordinate Judges (which
term was to Include Subordinate Judges posted as District
Magistrates (Judicial) and Munsiffs (which term was to
include Munsiffs posted as Sub-divisional Magistrates). It
was expressly provided that Additional First Class
Magistrates and Sub-Magistrates, would be eligible for
appointment as Munsiffs by transfer.
It would thus appear that the above mentioned Rules and
Orders. made full provision for the integration of all
categories of Judicial officers in the service or services
of the Kerala State. The Kerala Judicial Service
(Recruitment of Munsiffs) Rules, the Kerala State , Higher-
Judicial Service Rules and the Kerala Subordinate
Magisterial Srvice Rules covered all categories, of posts
and officers. So even if it were assumed that the case of
any individual officer remained to be finalised for purposes
of his appointment or the fixation of his seniority or pay
etc. in the integrated set up, that could not possibly
justify the argument that the process of integration
remained incomplete. I have therefore no doubt that the
finding of the High Court that there was integration of the
posts which are the subject matter of the present
controversy, is correct, and does not call for interference.
it was in fact expressly conceded by Mr. Lal Narain Sinha on
behalf of the State of Kerala that this was really so,
Counsel for the other side was not able to advance any
satisfactory argument how, in face of the above mentioned
government orders and Rules, it could be said that the work
of integration had not been completed.
The High Court has however struck down the aforesaid orders.
Exs. P1 and P2 and the two sets of Rules of 1973 for two
reasons,--
(i) The formation of the civil and criminal wings out of the
integrated service and carying out of separate promotional
avenues for the Magisterial officers was discriminatory and
irrational.
887
(ii) The restriction of the exercise of the
option to get into the criminal judiciary onl
y
to officers borne (originally) on the
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Magistracy was also discriminatory and
irrational.
I shall therefore proceed to examine these reasons but
before doing so it may as well be mentioned that the High
Court has not really dealt with the two points separately,
or as one different from or independent of the other, but
has examined them together, mainly with reference to the
validity of the order confining the option to those officers
who were originally borne on the Magistracy. In reaching
that conclusion the High Court had drawn on the arguments
which were advanced before it with reference to articles 14
and 16 of the Constitution.
What G.O.M.S. 24/73 Home dated February 12, 1973 (Ex. P. 1)
conveys is the fact that the question of constituting a
separate wing for the "criminal judiciary" and the "civil
judiciary" for the "better administration of justice" had
been engaging the attention of the government for some time
past, that the government had examined the matter in detail
and had decided "in consultation with High Court" to
constitute two separate wings for the civil and criminal
Judiciary respectively consisting of Sub-Judges and Munsiffs
on the, civil side, and District Magistrates (Judicial),
Sub-divisional Magistrates, Additional First Class Magis-
trates & Sub-Magistrates on the criminal side. The rest of
the order deals with the framing of separate rules for the
two services, the exercise of option to go over the criminal
wing (which shall be examined separately), the posting of
those who opted for the new Criminal Judicial Services, the
release of the posts of Sub-divisional Magistrates for
members of that service and the continuance of those who had
been appointed as District Magistrates on or before the date
of implementation of the "Scheme". There is thus nothing in
the order which could be said to impinge on the right to
equality guaranteed by article 14 of the Constitution in so
far as the bifurcation of the integrated judicial services
into criminal and civil wings is concerned. So also, there
is nothing to show that the creation of the two services
denied equality of opportunity in matters of public
employment within the meaning of article 16.
The other order Ex. P. 2 is G.O.M.S. 157/73 Home dated
September 18, 1973. It makes a reference to order Ex. P. 1
and conveys government’s acceptance of the options exercised
by the officers thereunder and the release of posts for
them. As has been stated, I shall deal with the question of
option separately. It may also be mentioned that the
question,of release of posts has not figured in the
arguments before us at it has not been challenged as
illegal. Ex. P. 2 is therefore an order implementing the
earlier order Ex. P. 1 and cannot also be said to be
violative of article 14 or 16.
888
It has to be appreciated that there is nothing in the
Constitution or any other law to prevent a State from
creating one or more States Services, or to divide an
existing Service into two or more Services, according to its
requirement. In fact article 309 of the Constitution
contemplates the making of Acts or Rules to regulate the
recruitment, and conditions of service of persons appointed,
to public Services and posts, in connection with the affairs
of the State. And there is amply evidence in this case to
show that even though it was thought, on the formation of
the Kerala State on November 1, 1956, that the integrated
services mentioned above would meet the requirements of the
judicial Services, the High Court felt, later on, that it
was necessary to " separate the civil and criminal wings of
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the Subordinate Judiciary." Reference in this connection may
be made to High Court’s letters dated March 4, 1970 and May
12, 1970 which go to show that the scheme of bifurcation was
brought about at the instance of the High Court "to secure
better administration of justice." The High Court, for that
purpose, not only sent its detailed proposals, but also its
proposals for the Rules to be made for the constitution of
the two Services.
As has been mentioned, those rules are the Kerala Civil
Judicial Service Rules 1973, and the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Rules 1973. Both the Rules have been made in
supersession of all the rules and regulations which were
then in force on the subject-matter of the Rules. The
Kerala Civil Judicial Service Rules, 1973 provide, inter
alia, for the constitution of the service by Subordinate,
Judges and Munsiffs, the method of their appointment,
recruitment of members of the Scheduled Castes and Tribes,
the training of officers selected for appointment as
Munsiffs, their minimum qualifications and the period of
production etc. The remaining rule 18 deals with the matter
of "option" of officers to the Kerala Criminal Judicial Ser-
vice, but that is a matter which will be examined
separately. There is thus nothing in the Kerala Civil
Judicial Service Rules 1973 which could be said to be
discriminatory or violative of articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution for any reason.
Much the same is the position regarding the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Service Rules 1073. They also deal with the
matters covered by the Kerala Civil Judicial Service except
that the service consists of District Magistrates, Sub-
divisional Magistrates, Additional First Class Magistrates
and Sub-Magistrates. Rule 18(ii) of the Rule deals with "
options". but that again is a matter which will be examined
separately There is otherwise no reason to think that the
Rules are invalid for
any reason whatsoever.
On the question of the validity of the option given by order
Ex. P.1 (G. 0. MS .24/73/Home dated February 12, 1973) the
controversy before us relates to the following portion of
paragraph 3(i),-
"3(i) option will be allowed to all Civil
Judicial Officers originally borne on the
Magistracy, irrespective of whether or not
they have been confirmed as full members of
the Kerala State Judicial Service."
889
It has been urged that when the Services had been
integrated, it was. discriminatory to treat members of that
Service differently in the matter of appointment to the
Kerala Criminal Judicial Service. For the same reason, the
validity of G.O. MS 157/73/Home (Ex. P 2) has been assailed
as under it the State Government has accepted the option of
the 14 officers mentioned in it.
In so far as the Service Rules are concerned, rule 18 of the
Kerala Civil Judicial Service Rules 1973, provides as
follows,-
"18. Transitory Provisions : Notwithstanding
anything contained in these rules, the
officers whose options to the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Service have been accepted by
Government in G.O. MS 157/73/Home dated
September 18, 1973 shall be allowed to
continue in their present posts in the Kerala
Judicial Service till they are given postings
in the Kerala Criminal Judicial Service."
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The corresponding provision in the Kerala Criminal Judicial
Service Rules 1973 to which objection has been taken is rule
18(ii) which makes a mention of the options of the officers
accepted by the Government in G. 0. MS No. 157/73/Home dated
September 18, 1973 (Ex. P. 2) and their continuance on
their posts in the Kerala Civil Judicial, Service till they
were given suitable postings in the Kerala Criminal Judicial
Service consistent with their original seniority in the
criminal wing.
The State Government has tried to justify the restriction of
the option to go over to the Kerala Criminal Judicial
Service on the basis of the past history and the factual
position prevailing at the relevant time. Mr. L. N. Sinha,
counsel for- the State, has urged that the Rules clearly
show that promotion of a Subordinate Judge is to the rank of
a District Judge and that the fact that sometimes a Subordi-
nate Judge was posted as District Magistrate is not quite
pertinent. He has also urged that no Subordinate Judge has
any particular right to be posted as District Magistrate and
that merely the chance of such a posting is not a
substantial benefit which could invalidate the Rules. Then
it has been pointed out that the statutory Rules do not
themselves provide for the option and are free from any
blemish of discrimination.
It is however well settled that while, in form, article 14
appears to contain an absolute prohibition, it is not realy
absolute, for the doctrine of classification has been
incorporated in it by judicial decision : Makhan Lal
Malhotra and others v. The Union of India.(1) So it is now
no longer in dispute that it is permissible to make a law
making a classification if it is founded on an intelligible
differentia having a rational relation to the object sought
to be achieved by it. It may also not be disputed that the
classification may be based on the objects to be achieved
or, as in Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R.
Tendolkar and others,(2) it may be founded on the difference
between
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 120.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 279 at p. 297.
890
persons or, in a given case, the law may itself provide a
policy or principle for the guidance of the exercise of the
discretion of the Government in the matter of classification
or selection for appointment. It may also be that the
differentiation may be upheld if it arises for historical
reasons e.g. because of the merger of States : Bhaiyalal
Shukla v. State of Madhya Pradesh) (1). But the question is
whether the classification made by order Ex. P. 1 in
confining the option to "all Civil Judicial Officers
originally borne on the Magistracy" is a classification
which is based on an intelligible differentia which dis-
tinguishes those persons from the others, who had been left
out of the option and the differentia has a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved by the order or
the rules giving effect to it
It has been argued, that the classification in favour of
only these Civil Judicial Officers who were originally borne
on the Magistracy, is an intelligible classification based
on ’and intelligible differentia and that it has the object
of providing the criminal wing of the Judiciary, to be
constituted under the Kerala Criminal Judicial Service
Rules, 1973, with only those officers who had some
experience of criminal or magisterial work. But the
argument is not tenable for there could possibly be no
reason, even for the purpose of achieving that object, why
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those Civil Judicial Officers who, though not originally
borne on the Magistracy, had acquired sufficient experience
of the Magisterial work after their appointment as
Magistrate as a result of the integration of the Services
after the formation of the Kerala State should have been
left out. As is obvious, the classification made by the
impugned orders (Exs. P 1 and P. 2) between those Civil
Judicial Officers who were "originally borne on the
Magistracy" and those who came oven to the Magistracy
thereafter, but before the constitution of the socalled
criminal wing of the Judiciary, is not a permissible
classification and it cannot be said to be correlated to, or
to subserve, the object of providing an efficient service to
man the posts belonging to the Kerala Criminal Judicial
Service.
This appears to be the reason why Mr. L. N. Sinha has been
an enough to suggest that the option may not be limited to
the officers who were originally appointed as Magistrates
but may also be made available to all officers having
previous experience as Magistrates. No useful argument has
been advanced for a contrary view and it appears that the
suggestion of Mr. Sinha deserves to be accepted as it win
have the effect of making the provision as to the exercise
of the option above challenge. As it is, the offending
parts of the impugned orders and Rules which restrict the
option of officers originally borne on the Magistracy is
severable from the rest of the provisions and the High Court
clearly erred in striking down the orders and the Rules "in
their entirety".
It may be mentioned in this connection that once it is held
that the bifurcation of the integration Service into Civil
and Criminal Judicial Service was valid, and there was
justification for prescribing the requirement of previous
magisterial experience for the constitution of
(1) [1962] Suppl. 2 S.C.R. 257.
891
the Criminal Judicial Service of the State, it would not be
permissible to challenge it with reference to article 14 or
16 of the Constitution merely on the ground that it carved
out "separate promotional avenues for the Magisterial
Section of the Judiciary." When a separate Criminal Judicial
Service was validly constituted by the two sets of Rules of
1973 and those Rules provided for its composition,
qualifications, recruitment, and method of promotion to
higher posts, it was only reasonable that they should govern
the making of promotions of the members of, the Service. In
fact it has not been urged in this Court that the provision
in the Rules relating to promotion is invalid for any reason
and could be said to be discriminatory or irrational. The,
High Court therefore erred in taking a contrary veiw.
In the result, the appeals are allowed to the extent that
while the impugned orders Exs. P. 1 and P. 2 and the Kerala
Civil Judicial Service Rules 1973 and the Kerala Criminal
Judicial Service Rules 1973 providing for the constitution
of the civil and criminal wings of the Kerala State
Judiciary are held to be valid, that part of those orders
and the Rules which relates to the restriction of the option
to officers originally borne on the Magistracy is invalid
and the High Court’s judgment is upheld to that extent. It
is however clarified that it will be permissible for the
authorities concerned to-suitably amend order Ex. P. 1 and
the Rules so as to make the option to join the Kerala
Criminal Judicial Service available to all those officers
who had previous experience of Magisterial work on the date
when those Rules came into force. For this purpose the
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authorities concerned will no doubt give a fresh opportunity
to those officers who will become eligible to exercise the
option for joining _the criminal Judicial Service as a
result of this judgment. In the circumstances of the case,
no order as to the costs in this Court is necessary.
ORDER
In view of the majority opinion of this Court the appeals
are allowed with no order as to costs.
P. B. R. Appeals allowed.
119 SCI/78-1500-26-8-78-GIPF.
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