Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR AND OTHERS ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AKHOURI SACHINDRA NATH AND OTHERS ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/04/1991
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 1244 1991 SCR (2) 410
1991 SCC (1) 334 JT 1991 (2) 279
1991 SCALE (1)748
ACT:
Service Law: Bihar Public Works Departments Code: Rule
2-Bihar Engineering Service, Class II-Assistant Engineers-
25 of posts to be filled up by promotion and 75% by direct
recruitment-Seniority promotees and direct recruits-Whether
seniority can be conferred on promotees retrospectively from
a date they were not born in the Cadre.
HEADNOTE:
Under Rule 2 of the Bihar Public Works Department Code,
the Governor of Bihar took a decision on 7.4.1958 providing
that 25% of the posts of Assistant Engineers in the Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II (the Service) were to be
filled by promotion, subject to availability of suitable
hands, from Overseers in the Bihar Subordinate Engineering
Service (Irrigation Department) and 75% of the posts were to
be filled by direct recruitment to the Service. Respondents
no. 1 to 5 in both these appeals were appointed as Assistant
Engineers in the Service on the recommendation of the Bihar
Public Service Commission in the year 1961; and the
appellants (in Civil Appeal No. 233 of 1978(respondents no.
6 to 23 in Civil Appeal No. 232 of 1978), who had been
working as Overseers in the Bihar Subordinate Engineering
Service (Irrigation Department) were promoted to the posts
of Assistant Engineers in the Service in 1962 and
thereafter. However, by orders dated 12.7.1975, 20.1.1976
and 9.4.1977, the Government changed the date of promotion
of the appellants to the dates prior to the appointment of
respondents no. 1 to 5 in the Service, making the former
Senior to the letter.
Respondents no. 1 to 5 filed writ petition before the
High Court challenging the seniority conferred on the
appellants from the retrospective date and contended that
the orders giving promotions to the appellants from a date
earlier to date of their promotion in the Service purported
to affect prejudicially respondents no. 1 to 5’s right
inasmuch as they were appointed to the Service earlier to
the promotion of the appellants; and that the seniority had
to be reckoned amongst the officials working as Assistant
Engineers in the Service from the date of their appointment
or promotion to the said Service. The appellants contended
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that they were entitled to be promoted retrospectively on
the
411
basis of reservation of 25% of the Cadre posts in the
Service till 1958.
The High Court. holding that the orders promoting the
appellants with retrospective effect were bad, quashed the
same and allowed the writ petition. Hence the present
appeals.
On consideration of the legality and validity of the
orders of the Government giving promotions to the appellants
from a date earlier to the date of their entry into the
Service as Assistant Engineers, and its effect on the inter-
se seniority amongst the appellants and respondents no. 1 to
5, who were directly appointed as Assistant Enginers in the
Service before the appellants entered in the said Service.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: 1. The Government Orders dated 12.7.1975, 20.1.1976
and 9.4.1977 which purported to give promotion to the
appellants retrospectively were arbitrary, illegal and
inoperative inasmuch as these seriously affected rspondents
no. 1 to 5. The appellants were not borne in the cadre of
Assistant Engineers even in officiating capacity at time
when rspondents no. 1 to 5 were directly recruited to the
post of Assistant Egineer. As such, the promotee appellants
could not be under any circumstance given seniority over the
directly recruited respondents no. 1 to 5. The judgment of
the High Court in quashing the impugned Government Orders
was, therefore, unexceptionable. [418F-H; 420A]
2.1 No person can be promoted with retrospective effect
from a date when he was not borne in the Cadre so as to
adversely affect others; and amongst members of the same
grade, seniority is reckoned from the date of their initial
entry into the service. [419F]
2.2 Seniority inter-se amongst the Assistant Engineers
in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II would be considered
from the date of the length of service rendered as Assistant
Engineers. Therefore, the appellants could not be made
senior to respondents no. 1 to 5 by the impugned Government
Orders as they entered into the said Service in 1962 and
thereafter by promotion subsequent to respondent no. 1 to 5
who were directly recruited in the quota meant for them.
There was nothing to show that the appellants could be
deemed to be recruited in 1958 quota and that these
vacancies were carried forward. [419G; 418E-F]
A.K. Subraman and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors.,
[1975] 1 SCC 319, relied on.
412
V.B. Badami v. State of Mysore and Ors., [1976] 1 SCR
815 and Gonal Bihimappa v. State of Karnataka, [1987] Supp.
SCC 207, held inapplicable.
D.K. Mitra and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors., [1985]
Supp. SCC 243, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 232-233
of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 19.7.1977 of the
Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 756 of 1977.
Ashok Sen, Shankar Ghosh, Tapas Ray, Ms. S. Janani, Ms.
Minakshi, Mrs. Urmila Kapoor, D. Goverdhan, Rakesh K.
Khanna, Salman Khurshid, R.P. Singh, D.D. Mishra, Mrs. G.S.
Mishra and D.P. Mukherjee for the appearing parties.
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The Judgment of the Court was delievered by
RAY, J. These two appeals were filed against the common
judgment and order dated 29th July, 1978 made by the
Division Bench of the High Court at Patna in C.W.J.C. No.
756 of 1977 whereby the High Court quashed the orders of the
government contained in Annexures 8, 9 and 10 to the writ
petition. The facts unfurled from the writ petition are as
follows:
The respondent Nos. 1 to 5 in these appeals (the
petitioners in the writ petition) were directly appointed in
the Bihar Engineering Service Class II as Assistant
Engineers of the Irrrigation Department on the
recommendation of Bihar Public Service Commission and were
posted in River Valley Project in 1961. The respondent Nos.
6 to 23 in C.A. No. 232 of 1978 (who are appellants in C.A.
No. 233 of 1978 and respondent Nos. 5 to 22 in the writ
petition) were working at that time as overseers in the
Bihar Subordinate Engineering Service (Irrigation
Department). On 7th April, 1958 the the Governor took a
decision under rule 2 of the Public Works Department Code
that 25% of the posts in the Bihar Engineering Service,
Class II shall be filled up by promotion, subject to
availability of suitable hands. Thus, out of the total
vacancies in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II, 75% of the
vacant posts as determined by the Government will be filled
up by direct recruitment and 25% of the vacant posts will be
filled up by promotion subject to availability of suitable
candidates. By notification dated
413
18th July, 1964/27th August, 1964, respondent Nos. 6 to 13
in C.A. No. 232 of 1978 (appellant Nos. 1 to 8 in C.A. No.
233 of 1978 and respondent Nos. 5 to 12 in the writ
petition) who were members of the Bihar Subordinate
Engineering Service (Overseers) were promoted to the post of
Assistant Engineer in Class II and by another notification
dated 21st July, 1969, respondent Nos. 14 to 23 in C.A. No.
232 of 1978 (appellant Nos. 9 to 18 in C.A. No. 233 of 1978
and respondent Nos. 13 to 22 in the writ petition) were also
promoted to Bihar Engineering Service, Class II as Assistant
Engineers. On February 25, 1969, a seniority list of
Assistant Engineers was published by the Department wherein
the names of the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 (the petitioners)
were mentioned at Sl. Nos. 170, 199, 208, 211 and 226 and
the names of the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 (respondent Nos. 5
to 22 in writ petition) were mentioned at Sl. Nos. 253, 254,
256 to 262, 687 to 695 and 701 respectively The respondent
Nos. 6 to 23 were thus shown as juniors to the respondent
Nos. 1 to 5 (the petitioners). The respondent Nos. 6 to 23
feeling aggrieved by the said seniority list made
representations claiming seniority over respondent Nos. 1 to
5. On 3rd May, 1972 the State of Bihar constituted a
Committee known as Ramanand Committee by a resolution to
consider the inter se seniority of Civil Engineers including
the Assistant Engineers. On April 19, 1973 the Ramanand
Committee submitted a report making certain recommendations.
It was alleged that a revised seniority list was prepared
wherein the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were shown juniors to the
respondent Nos. 6 to 23. This, of course, has been denied
in affidavit-in-counter filed on behalf of the Government
(appellants in C.A. No. 232 of 1978, respondent Nos. 6 to 9
in C.A. 233 OF 1978, and respondent Nos. 1 to 4 in the writ
petition). On 21st of July, 1975, an order was made whereby
the date of promotion of respondent Nos. 6 to 13 was changed
from 21st July, 1962 to 27th February, 1961 thereby making
the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 juniors to respondent Nos. 6 to
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13. This order is contained in annexure 8 to the writ
petition. In other words, the respondent Nos. 6 to 13 were
promoted retrospectively from the State against it but the
State government instead of redressing their grievances made
another order on January 20, 1976 (annexure 9 to the writ
petition) re-fixing the seniority of respondent Nos. 6 & 7
promoting them to the Bihar Engineering Service with effect
from December 19, 1958. Again, to the prejudice of the
respondent Nos. 1 to 5, an order was passed by the State
Government by which the date of promotion of respondent Nos.
14 to 23 was pushed back to February 27, 1961 making them
also senior to the respondent Nos. 1 to 5. This order is
contained in annexure 10 to the writ petition.
414
The respondent Nos. 1 to 5, therefore, filed a writ
petition in the High Court at Patna being Civil Writ
Petition No. 756 of 1977 challenging the seniority conferred
on the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 (respondent Nos. 5 to 22 in
the writ petition) by annexures 8, 9 and 10 on the ground
that these orders were wholly arbitrary illegal, void and
inoperative and ineffective and so prayed for appropriate
writ for quashing those orders.
A counter-affidavit was filed on behalf of the State
Government. In Para 3(iii) of the said affidavit, it has
been averred that till 1957, 25% of the vacancies in Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II, were being filled up by
promotion from the Bihar Subordinate Engineering Service
(commonly known as ‘Overseers’). Subsequently, in the year
1958, it was decided that 25% of the cadre posts in the
Bihar Engineering Service, Class II Both permanent and
temporary, shall be reserved for being filled up through
promotion from the members of the Bihar Subordinate
Engineering Service. It has been further averred in para
3(iv) that all the posts of temporary Assistant Engineers to
which the Overseers were entitled to be promoted on the
basis of 25% reservation in the cadre were not filled up by
promotion of Overseers, only 3 overseers were given
promotion with effect from 19.12.1958 vide order No. A/P1-
409-64-1-14294 dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. In the said affidavit
it has also been stated that on a careful examination of the
matter it was found that on the basis of total number of
posts of Assistant Engineers in the Department, the
Overseers were entitled to 60 posts on the basis of 25%
reservation till 1958, out of which they were already given
33 posts and 27 more posts of Assistant Engineers were still
due to them and accordingly by an order dated 20th January,
1976 the 21 Overseers who had earlier been given promotion
as temporary Assistant Engineers from later dates in 1960,
1961 and 1962 by the order dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. were given
promotion, with effect from 19.12.1958. Due to this
correction, respondent Nos. 6 and 7 and one Shri
Mithileshwari Sahay (since retired) were promoted as
temporary Assistant Engineers with effect from 19.12.1958 in
partial modification of the Government order dated
18.7.64/27.8.64 and another order dated July 12, 1975. It
has been further stated that as a result of this
modification in the dates of promotion as Assistant Engineer
who by the order dated 20th January, 1976 were allowed
promotion as temporary Assistant Engineers with effect from
19.12.1958 as against promotions from later dated in 1960,
1961 and 1962 given to them by earlier Government Order
dated 27.8.1964 and order dated 21.7.1969. It has also been
stated that the respondent Nos. 6 and 7 were entitled to
promotion in 1958 and respondent Nos. 8 to 23 to promotions
in
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415
1960 and 1961, on the basis of the reservation of 25% of the
cadre post in the Bihar engineering Service, Class II, for
promotion of Overseers from the Bihar Subordinate
Engineering Service. It has been further averred that as
against 21 consequential vacancies, the case of only 17
Overseers was modified accordingly in supersession of the
earlier Government order dated 18.7.64/27.8.64 and
respondent Nos. 8 to 13 were given promotion as temporary
Assistant Engineer with effect from 27.2.1961, from which
date the promotion was due to them on the basis of the quota
by a Government Order No. 10501 (annexure 8 to the writ
petition) dated July 12, 1975 and No. 17328 dated November
8, 1975 respectively. It has also been stated that the
seniority list that was prepared and published in 1969 was
tentative.
The High Court, Patna held that no person can be
promoted with retrospective effect from a date when he was
not born in the cadre so as to adversely effect others.
The respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were recruited to the post of
Assistant Engineer, Class II before the respondent Nos. 6 to
23 were promoted to the post of Assistant Engineer, Class
II in the Bihar Engineering Service, Class II. The High
Court, therefore, held that the orders contained in Annexure
8, 9 and 10 promoting the respondent Nos. 6 to 23
(respondent Nos. 5 to 22 in the writ petition) with
retrospective effect are bad and so quashed those Government
orders referred to in the said annexures.
Against this judgment and order made by the High Court,
the instant appeals on special leave were filed.
The sole question which falls for decision in these
appeals is whether the inter-se seniority between the
petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to 5 who are direct recruits
and the Overseers belonging to the Bihar Subordinate
Engineering Service (Irrigation Department) who had been
promoted retrospectively in their 25% quota for the year
1958 as revised by the Government orders mentioned in
annexures 8, 9 and 10 to the writ petition, is arbitrary,
illegal and inoperative as those orders purport to affect
prejudicial the seniority of the petitioners-respondent Nos.
1 to 5 in the service of Bihar Engineering Service, Class
II. It is not disputed that in 1958 under Rule 2 of the
Public Works Department Code, the Government of Bihar took a
decision to the effect that 25% of the posts in the Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II shall be filled up by
promotion, subject to availability of suitable hands. It
also appears from the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of
the Government that in 1958, the the total number of posts
to be filled up by promotion from the Overseers in the Bihar
Subordinate Engineering Service
416
(Irrigation Department) to the post of Assistant Engineer,
in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II was 60 out of which
only 33 posts were filled up by promotion, leaving 27 more
posts of Assistant Engineers to be filled up by promotion
from the Overseers in the Bihar Subordinate Engineering
Service (Irrigation Department). It is also clear from the
averments made in the said counter-affidavit that the
petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were appointed in Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II on the recommendation of the
Bihar Public Service Commission in the year 1961 and the
respondent Nos. 6 to 13 who had been working in the Bihar
Subordinate Engineering Service (Irrigation Department) as
Overseers and having independent charge of the sub-division
were promoted to the post of Assistant Engineer, Class II by
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notification dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. The respondent Nos. 14
to 23 were also promoted by notification dated 21.7.1969.
On the basis of these appointments and promotions in the
post of Assistant Engineer in the Bihar Engineering Service,
Class II, a seniority list was prepared and published in
february, 1969 tentatively wherein the petitioners-
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were shown as senior to respondent
Nos. 6 to 23. However, the Government by its order dated
21st July, 1962 changed the date of promotion of respondent
Nos. 6 to 13 from 21.7.1962 to 27.21961 (Annexure 8 to the
writ petition) thereby making the petitioners-respondent
Nos. 1 to 5 junior to respondent Nos. 6 to 13. On January
20, 1976, the Government passed another order re-fixing the
seniority of respondent Nos. 5 & 6 promoting them to Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II with effect them 19.12.1958
(Annexure 9 to the writ petition). Again an order contained
in Annexure 10 to the writ petition was passed by which the
date of promotion of respondent Nos. 14 to 23 was pushed
back to February 27, 1961, thus making them senior to the
petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to 5. The petitioners-
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 challenged these three Government
orders mainly on the ground that these orders giving
promotion to the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 from a date earlier
to their date of promotion to the post of Assistant Engineer
in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II purport to affect
prejudicially the rights of the petitioners-respondent Nos.
1 to 5 in as much as they were appointed to the post of
Assistant Engineer in the Bihar Engineering Service, Class
II earlier to the promotion to the said post of the
respondent Nos. 6 to 23. It has also been submitted in this
connection that he seniority has to be reckoned amongst the
officials working as Assistant Engineers in the Bihar
Engineering Service, Class II from the date of their
appointment on promotion to the said Service. The
petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to 5 being appointed earlier
directly in the quota of direct recruits than the promoted
respondents who were promoted later cannot be given
417
seniority in service to the petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to
5 and it was contended that the impugned orders are wholly
illegal and unwarranted and so the High Court has rightly
quashed the said orders. It has been further urged in this
connection that the State can promote its employees with
retrospective effect provided such retrospective promotion
does not affect the right and seniority already earned by
others. The petitioners-respondent Nos. 1 to 5 who were
senior to the petitioners-respondents Nos. 6 to 23 were made
junior to them by the said Government orders as contained in
Annexure 8, 9 and 10 to the writ petition. It has,
therefore, been contended that the promotion to the
respondent Nos. 6 to 23 was illegal and arbitrary as the
same had prejudicially affected the petitioners-respondent
Nos. 1 to 5 in regard to their seniority.
The High Court while rendering its judgment relied on
the decision in the case of A.K. Subraman and Ors. v. Union
of India and Ors., [1975] 1 SCC 319 specially on the
observation made therein as under:
"Once the Assistant Engineers are regularly
appointed to officiate as Executive Engineers
within their quota they will be entitled to
consideration in their own rights as Class I
Officers to further promotions. Their "birth
marks" in their earlier service will be of no
relevance once they are regularly officiating in
the grade of Executive Engineer within their quota."
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The High Court held that no person can be promoted with
retrospective effect from a date when he was not born in the
cadre so as to adversely affect others.
It is the admitted position that the respondent Nos. 6
to 23 were working as Overseers in the Bihar Subordinate
Engineering Service and were promoted to the post of
Assistant Engineer in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II
much after the petitioners-respondents Nos. 1 to 5 were
directly recruited and appointed on the basis of the
recommendation of the Bihar Service Commission, to the post
of Assistant Engineers in 1961 and as such they have been
working in the grade of Assistant Engineers much before the
respondent Nos. 6 to 23. Undoubtedly, on the basis of the
order of the Governor in 1958, the posts of Assistant
Engineers are to be filled up from two sources i.e. by
direct recruitment as well as by promotion from Overseers
working in the Bihar Subordinate Engineering Service and the
ratio of the vacan-
418
cies to be filled up has been fixed as 75% from the direct
recruits and 25% from the promotees. It has been urged on
behalf of the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 that in view of the
quota rule the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 who were promoted in
the quota set out for promotees in respect of the vacancies
of 1958 shall be taken to be promoted in 1958
notwithstanding that they have been actually promoted long
after 1958 and after the direct recruits i.e. respondent
Nos. 1 to 5 were recruited directly to the post of Assistant
Engineers. In other words even though the respondent Nos. 6
to 23 have been promoted after the date of recruitment of
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 to the post of Assistant Engineer,
still then the promote respondent Nos. 6 to 23 should be
deemed to be senior to the direct recruit respondent Nos. 1
to 5 as they were promoted in the vacancies for 1958 quota
set up for promotees. In support of this submission the
decision in V.B. Badami etc. v. State of Mysore and Ors.,
[1976] 1 SCR 815 as well as Gonal Bihimappa v. State of
Kanataka, [1987] Supp. SCC 207 were cited at the bar. In
both these cases the promotees occupied the quota of direct
recruits as direct recruits were not available to fill up
the quota meant for them. It was held that direct recruits
who were appointed within their quota subsequently were
entitled to the vacancies within their quota which had not
been filled up and they would become senior to the promotees
The promotees would be pushed down to later years when their
appointment could be regularised as a result of absorption
in their lawful quota of those years. The promotees cannot
claim any right to hold promotional posts unless the
vacancies fall within their quota. These cases have no
application in the instant case in as much as the direct
recruits i.e. respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were recruited in their
quota i.e. the quota meant for them. This being so, the
decision in these two cases has no application to the
instant case. Moreover, there is nothing to show that the
respondent Nos. 6 to 23 who were promoted in 1962 and
thereafter i.e. subsequent to the direct recruits i.e.
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 could be deemed to be recruited in
1958 quota as there was nothing to show that these vacancies
were carried forward.
The Government’s orders as contained in annexures 8, 9
and 10 which purport to give promotion to the respondent
Nos. 6 to 23 retrospectively are arbitrary, illegal and
inoperative in as much as these seriously affect the
respondent Nos. 1 to 5. The respondent Nos. 6 to 23 were
not in the cadre of Assistant Engineers even in officiating
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capacity at the time when the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were
directly recruited to the post of Assistant Engineer. As
such, the said promotee respondent Nos. 6 to 23 could not be
under any circumstances, given seniority over the directly
recruited respondent Nos. 1 to 5. The
419
High Court has rightly quoted the observation made by this
Court in the case of A.K. Subraman & Ors. (supra) as
mentioned in the preceding paragraphs.
It is pertinent to mention in this connection, the
observation of this Court in the case of D.K. Mitra and
Ors. v. Union of India and Ors., [1985] Supp. SCC 243. In
this case the petitioners were confirmed as Assistant
Medical Officers in 1962 and 1963 and they were placed in
the higher scale of Assistant Divisional Medical Officers to
the Indian Railways with effect from January 1, 1973.
Thereafter they were appointed as officiating Divisional
Medical Officers in 1972, 1973 and 1974 and they had been
continuing there uninterrupted. Respondent Nos. 4 to 64
were given substantive appointments as Divisional Medical
Officers later on but they were confirmed earlier than the
petitioners because of the zone-wise confirmation given by
the Railway Administration. It was held that the
petitioners should be considered at par for the purpose of
fixing seniority, with those appointed to permanent posts in
a substantive capacity. For the purpose of determining
seniority among promotees, the petitioners should be treated
as having been appointed to permanent vacancies from the
respective dates of their original appointment and the
"entire period of officiating service performed by them
should be taken into account as if that service was of the
same character as that performed by the substantive holders
of permanent posts."
In the instant case, the promotee respondent Nos. 6 to
23 were not born in the cadre of Assistant Engineer in the
Bihar Engineering Service, Class II at the time when the
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were directly recruited to the post
of Assistant Engineer and as such they cannot be given
seniority in the service of Assistant Engineers over the
respondent Nos. 1 to 5. It is well settled that no person
can be promoted with retrospective effect from a date when
he was not born in the cadre so as to adversely affect
others. It is well settled by several decisions of this
Court that amongst members of the same grade seniority is
reckoned from the date of their initial entry into the
service. In other words, seniority inter-se amongst the
Assistant Engineers in Bihar Engineering Service, Class II
will be considered from the date of the length of service
rendered as Assistant Engineers. This being the position in
law the respondent Nos. 6 to 23 can not be made senior to
the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 by the impugned Government
orders as they entered into the said Service by promotion
after the respondent Nos. 1 to 5 were directly recruited in
the quota of
420
direct recruits. The judgment of the High Court quashing
the impugned Government orders made in annexures, 8, 9 and
10 is unexceptionable.
In the premises aforesaid, we confirm the judgment and
order rendered by the High Court. The appeals are,
therefore, dismissed. In the facts and circumstances of the
case, there will be no order as to costs.
R.P. Appeals dismissed.
421
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