Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANCHALAKSHRI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VIJAYAKUMAR RAGHUVIRPRASAD MEHTA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/11/1998
BENCH:
S.P.BHARUCHA, G.T.NANAVATI, B.N.KIRPAL
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
NANAVATI.J.
This appeal arises out of the judgment and order
passed by the High court of Gujarat in Special Civil
Application No.6671 of 1997. The High Court upheld the
order of the Gujarat Secondary Education Tribunal whereby
the order of dismissal of respondent No. I passed by the
appellant was set aside, but modified the substituted order
of stoppage of one increment with future effect by directing
stoppage of two increments with future effect.
Respondent No. I was earlier working as a teacher
in Pallavi Vidyalaya. He was declared a surplus teacher on
closure of that institution in 1988. Under direction of the
Director of Education he was absorbed on 25.11.1988 as a
teacher in Durga Vidyalaya run by appellant No. 1. While
joining this new School, respondent No. I did not produce
his service book nor was it forwarded by Pallavi Vidvalaya
to Durga Vidvalaya. He was, however, paid his salary’ in
the revised pay scale of Rs. 1400-2600 as per the last pay
certificate submitted by him. Durga Vidyalaya had earlier
told him to produce his service book as it was necessary for
it to verify fixation of his pay and obtain grant from the
Government. He did not produce it but Pallavi Vidyalaya
forwarded it lo Durga Vidyalaya on 23.11.1992. On
examination Durga Vidyalaya noticed that there were certain
deficiencies and irresularities in if. The endorsement
regarding fixation of his salary in the revised pay scale
was not signed by the competent authority, namely, the
District Education Officer. There was no signature of the
Auditor. Durga Vidyalaya, therefore, by its letter dated
31.7.93 informed him about the said deficiencies and
requested him to get it completed. By letter dated 4.8.93,
he requested Durga Vidyalaya to give to him his last pay
certificate and the service book for that purpose. They
were given to him. Within three days (Saturday and Sunday
intervening) respondent No. I returned the service book and
informed the School Management that all the deficiencies
have been removed. As it was returned within such a short
time, Durga Vidyalaya felt some doubt regarding genuineness
of the signatures of the concerned authorities. So it
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called upon him to disclose names of the persons who had
signed the relevant endorsements. On 24.8.93 he informed
Durga Vidyalaya that the District Education Officer Shri
S.N. Parmar had signed the endorsement. Durga Vidyalaya
then wrote to Shri Parmar to confirm his signature. He
denied that he had signed, the service book. It was found
to be a forged signature. Durga Vidyalaya, therefore, held
an inquiry after giving a show cause notice dated 23.9.93
and as all the charges were proved, with prior approval of
the concerned authority. passed an order of termination of
his service on 15.3.94.
Respondent No. I challenged that order before the
Gujarat Secondary Education Tribunal. The Tribunal held
that the charges were duly proved and the acts committed by
Respondent No. I did amount to a serious misconduct; but as
Respondent No. I had done so because of the delay of about
four years in fixation of his pay in the revised pay scale
and because the service book was given to Respondent No. I
instead of sending it directly to the concerned authorities
and as he was comparatively of young age, termination of his
sendee amounting to his economic death was not called for.
It was of the view that a lenient view should be taken and,
therefore, held that stoppage of one increment with future
effect would be the proper punishment. Accordingly, the
Tribunal partly allowed the application, set aside the order
of termination and modified the penalty by directing
stoppage of two increments with future effect.
Aggrieved by this order passed by the Tribunal the
appellants preferred a writ petition to the High Court of
Gujarat. The High Court agreed with the view of the
Tribunal that the penalty imposed was disproportionate but
found that the penalty of stoppage of one increment with
future effect was rather lenient. It, therefore, modified
that order and imposed punishment of stoppage of two
increments with future effect.
Mr. R.P. Bhat, learned senior counsel for the
appellants, contended that the tribunal having found that
the charges levelled against respondent No. I were proved
and that they constituted serious misconduct ought not to
have interfered with the order of dismissal passed by the
School Management. He further submitted that the three
reasons given by the tribunal for taking a lenient view and
interfering with the order of punishment, namely; (i) delay
in forwarding the service book by Pallavi Vidyalaya to Durga
Vidyalaya resulting in non-fixation of pay for a period of
four years; (ii) the act of Durga Vidyalaya in giving the
service book to respondent No. I for getting the necessary
endorsements made therein and not sending it directly to the
authorities concerned and thereby providing an opportunity
to respondent No. I to commit the act of misconduct; and
(iii) young age of respondent No. I, cannot be regarded as
a good grounds for substituting the order of dismissal with
the order of withholding of one increment only with future
effect. He submitted that the tribunal in doing so clearly
exceeded its jurisdiction. He also submitted that the High
Court without proper application of mind virtually rejected
the writ petition filed by the appellant holding that the
reasons given by the tribunal are cogent and do not call for
interference.
After a review of earlier cases this Court in B.C.
Chaturvedi Vs. Union of India and Ors. (1995) 6 SCO 749
has held that "The High Court/Tribunal while exercising the
power of judicial review, cannot normally substitute its own
conclusion on penalty and impose some other penalty. If the
punishment imposed by the disciplinary authority or the
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appellate authority shocks the conscience of the High
Court/Tribunal, it would appropriately mould the relief,
either directing the disciplinary/appellate authority to
reconsider the penalty’ imposed, or to shorten die
litigation, it may itself, in exceptional and rare cases,
impose appropriate punishment with cogent reasons in support
thereof" Neither the tribunal nor the High Court in this
case has held that the punishment imposed upon respondent
No. I was shockingly disproportionate. Respondent No. I
was a school teacher. A teacher is expected to maintain
higher standard of honesty and integrity in view of the
position he holds. He committed acts of forgery either
himself or with the help of some other person by forging
signatures of the District Education Officer, the auditor
and the Sanchalak and Principal of Pallavi Vidyalaya. Even
after he was called upon by the School Management to
disclose names of the persons who had put their signatures
in the service book, he had stated that it was signed by the
District Education Officer - Mr. S.M. Pannar. Tnai
statement was raise to his Knowledge. It was on the basis
of me forged endorsements that he wanted to get payments as
per the revised pay scale regularised. Respondent No. I
had thus not only committed a serious misconduct but also a
serious criminal offence. If under such circumstances the
punishment of dismissal was imposed by the School
Management, it cannot be said that it was shockingly
disproportionate to the gravity of the misconduct.
The extenuating factors referred to by the tribunal
for talking a lenient view cannot reasonably lead to the
conclusion that the punishment was highly disproportionate.
Respondent No. I after his absorption in Durga Vidyalaya
was getting his salary- at Rs.l480/- in the revised pay
scale and thus he was not hurt financially as a result of
the delay in forwarding his service book to Durga Vidyalaya
There was no compelling reason for respondent No. I to
indulge in the acts of forgery as he could have obtained the
necessary endorsements by the District Education Officer,
the auditor and others in due course of time. No regard for
truth and the tendency to commit even a criminal act to get
one’s work done are clearly reflected by the acts done by
respondent No. 1. Durga Vidyalaya had not told him to get
the service book completed within a few days. If on a
request made by respondent No. I, Durga Vidyalaya handed
over the service-book to him for getting it completed
instead of sending it directly to the concerned authorities,
it cannot be said that thereby it committed any fault. It
trusted its teacher. It could not have anticipated that he
had a dishonest intention at that time. Thus the second
reason given by the tribunal for interfering with the order
of punishment was not justified. Assuming that respondent
No. I was comparatively young, he had by then put in 8
years’ sendee as a teacher. He was mature enough to realize
the nature of his acts. Thus, there was really no
justification for the tribunal to interfere with the
discretion exercised by the School Management. In view of
the facts and circumstances, there was no justification for
the tribunal to interfere with the punishment imposed by the
School Management. Learned counsel for respondent No. I
relying upon the decision of this Court in Bhagat Ram vs.
State of Himachal Pradesh and Ors. (1983) 2 SCC 442
submitted that penalty not commensurate with the be gravid
of the misconduct has to/considered as violative of Art.
14. He further submitted that dismissal from service being
an economic death, such a severe punishment ought not to
have been imposed upon respondent No. I when by his said
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acts, he was not to gain any additional financial benefit.
Whether he was likely to gain anything or not thereby did
not have much bearing on the gravity- of the misconduct.
The acts committed by him constituted not only a serious
misconduct but also a serious criminal offence. Learned
counsel also relied upon the earlier quoted observations
made by Hansaria. J. in B.C. Chaturvedi case (supra).
Really, they have no relevance to the facts of this case.
this is not a case where the High Court/Tribunal found any
difficulty in granting an appropriate relief to respondent
No. I because of some technicality of rules or procedure
even though justice demanded it. Moreover, the said
observations are no more than an egression of personal view.
What is to be noted is Hansaria, J. agreed with what the
other two learned Judges held as regards the powers of the
High Court/Tribunal to interfere with the order of penalty
passed by the disciplinary authority. Therefore, it would
not be correct to say that this Court in B.C. Chaturvedi’s
case has accepted the view that the High Courts/Tribunals
possess the same power which this Court has under Article
142 of the Constitution for doing complete justice, even in
absence of such a provision .
We therefore allow this appeal, set aside the
judgment and order passed by the High Court and also that of
the tribunal and dismiss the 0. A. filed by respondent No.
1.