Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMESH PRASAD SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/11/1977
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1978 AIR 327 1978 SCR (1) 787
1978 SCC (1) 37
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1981 SC1041 (11)
R 1981 SC1829 (34)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Articles 14 and 16-Appellant
appointed as an Executive Engineer temporarily by promotion
by virtue of his specialised qualification in the absence of
any rule made prescribing qualification for the post of
Executive Engineer-Powers of the authorities in such cases
to appoint persons to posts-Whether non-consideration of the
cases of respondents 3 to 28 who were mere graduates in
Engineering violates Arts. 14 and 16.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a B.Sc. Engineering degree-holder in Tele-
Communication was appointed as an Assistant Engineer (Tele-
Communication) in September 1963 by the Bihar State
Electricity Board and was sent abroad to the headquarters of
M/s. Brown Boveri and Co. Ltd., Badan, Switzerlind for six
months’ specialised training in power line carrier, tele-
metering and tele-control equipment in the modern power
system. On his return the appellant was deputed to look
after the entire telecommunication system of the Board. In
June 1968, the Board felt the necessity of maintenance of
efficient communication service between the vital centres of
generation, utilisation and administration for ensuring
reliability and continuity in power supply which would
facilitate quick supervision and checking of the then
existing arrangements oil the generating stations receiving
sub-stations and distributing areas as also the necessity of
proper supervision and handling by trained and qualified
personnel of I large number of wave-change-over
communication equipments on 33 KW Transmission line which
had been installed in the Tele-Communication SubDivision of
the Board at Patna and were maintained and aligned with the
help of special electronic instruments. The Board,
therefore, accorded Sanction to the creation of a temporary
Tele-Communication Division with headquarters at Patna and
also to the creation of a temporary post of Executive
Engineer (Tele-Communication). As per the recommendation of
its expert Selection Committee to the effect that the
appellant was fit to be promoted to the rank of the
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Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication) in view of the fact
that he had consistently good record of service, possessed
the degree in Tele-Communication Engineering, had undergone
special training in Switzerland in TeleCommunication, had
ever since his return from Switzerland been satisfactorily
performing the onerous and complex duties assigned to him
and had been looking after the entire Tele-Communication
system of the Board and had thus acquired a valuable
practical experience in that field which was necessary to
man the post of Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication), the
appellant was appointed temporarily on promotion to the post
of Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication).Thereupon
respondents 3 to 28 who areAssistant Electrical Engineers
appointed, as such. earlier to the appellant challenged the
said appointment in the Patna High Court averring that the
promotion of the appellant was mala fide; they were seniors
to the appellant and possessed the requisite qualifications;
their cases must have been considered by the Board; and
their supersession is in violation of guarantee of equality
of opportunity enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. The High Court quashed the said orders and
held that the case of respondents 3 to 28 who were seniors
to and had better experience and academic career than the
appellant bad been unjustifiably ignored by the Board
violating the protection of equal opportunity guaranteed
under Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution. In appeal by
certificate. respondents 3 to 28 though served did not
choose to appear. Respondents 1 and 2 contended : (i) that
Tele-Communication is a highly specialized subject quite
distinct from that of general electricity-, (ii) that
respondents 5 to 28 who were merely graduates of Science in
Electrical Engineering were not qualified for the post of
Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication). Respondents
788
3 and 4 who had only studied telecommunication as one of the
subjects in their final B.Sc. Engineering Examination also
were not equally qualified; (iii) that they had no right to
maintain the writ petition; and (iv) that there was no
question of any breach or violation of the guarantee of
equality of opportunity contained in Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
HELD : (1) The process of rule making is a protracted and
complicated one involving consultation with various
authorities and compliance with mani fold formalities.
Exigencies of administration at times require immediate
creation of service or posts and any procrastination in that
behalf cannot but prove detrimental to the proper and
efficient functioning of public departments. In such like
situations, the authorities concerned would have the power
to appoint or terminate administrative personnel under the
general power of administration vested in them. In the
absence of rules, qualifications for a post can validly be
laid down in the self same executive order creating the
service or post and filling it tip according to those
qualifications. [792 A-D]
B. N. Nagarajan & Ors. v. State of Mysore & Ors. [1966] 3
SCR 682 and T. Cajee v. U. Jormanik Siem & Anr. [1961] 1 SCR
750 at 764, followed.
(2)The doctrine of equality before law and equal
protection of laws and equality of opportunity in the matter
of employment and promotion enshrined in Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution which is intended to advance justice by
avoiding discrimination is attracted only when equals are
treated as unequals or where unequals are treated as equals.
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The guarantee of equality does not imply that the same rules
should be made applicable in spite of differences in their
circumstances and conditions. Although Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution forbid hostile discrimination, they do
not forbid reasonable classification and equality of
opportunity in matters of promotion means equality as
between members of the same class of employees and not equal
between members of separate independent classes. Though the
concept of equal protection and equal opportunity
undoubtedly permeate the whole spectrum of. an individual’s
employment from appointment through promotion and termina-
tion to the payment of gratuity and pension, it has an
inherent limitation arising from the very nature of
constitutional guarantee. Equality is for equals, that is,
who are similarly circumstanced are entitled to an equal
treatment but the guarantee enshrined in Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution cannot be carried beyond the point which
is well-settled by a catena of decisions of this Court. [792
H. 793 A-D]
Md. Usman & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh [1971] 2 SCC
188; AIR 1971 SC 1801; Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri v. The Union
of India & Ors. [1950] SCR 869 at 911 and All India Station
Masters’ & Assistant Station Masters’ Association & Ors. v.
General Manager, Central Railway & Ors. [1960] 2 SCR 311,
316--AIR 1960 SC 384, 386, referred to.
(3) In the instant case :
(a) The High Court was in error in thinking that
respondents 3 to 28 possessed qualifications equal to the
appellant or that they were-eligible for the job. [792 G]
(b)It is evident from the perusal of the proposal for
creation of a TeleCommunication Division at Patna and the
aforesaid recommendation made by the Selection Committee in
favour of the appellant that for ensuring reliability and
continuity in power supply it was absolutely essential that
maintenance of the sophisticated wave-change-over
communication equipments of 33 KW installed by the Board in
the Tele-Communication Sub-Division should be entrusted to
specially trained experienced and qualified officer
possessing specialised theoretical and practical knowledge
of Tele-Communication which is a subject quite distinct from
that of general electricity. It was only the appellant who
possessed degree in B.Sc. Engineering in Tele-Communication,
was separately recruited and specially trained in that line
in Switzerland and thus acquired specialised knowledge
therein and acquitted himself creditably in the field for
789
five years who could be said to possess the requisite
qualification and be considered fit and suitable for the job
in question and not any one of the respondents 5 to 28 who
were mere graduates in electrical engineering or respondents
3 and 4 who had studied tele communication only as one of
the subjects in their final B.Sc. Engineering Examination.
[792 A-G]
(c)The qualification required for the post of Executive
Engineer (Telecommunication) as demonstrably reflected in
the proposal for creation-of that post and the aforesaid
recommendation of the Selection Committee setting out
various factors which went in favour of the promotion of the
appellant appear to be founded on reasonable classification
having an intelligible differential which distinguished the
appellant from respondents 3 to 28 and the differentia had a
reasonable relation to the object sought to be achieved.
[795 D-E]
Respondents 3 to 28 had no. legal right which they could
claim to have been denied to them by an authority which had
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a legal duty to do something. The High Court was not right
in issuing the writ of mandamus. [795 E]
Mani Subrat Jain & Ors. v. State of Haryana & Ors. [1977] 1
SCC 486, applied.
The criterion employed by the concerned authority in
promoting the appellant was not arbitrary or capricious but
was intended to increase the efficiency in the functioning
of the department. It was not based on extraneous or
irrelevant considerations or suffered from any other vice.
[796 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1825 of
1969.
From the Judgment and Decree dated 13-5-1969 of the Patna
High Court, in Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 460/68.
S. C. Agarwala and R. K. Garg for the Appellant.
Sarjoo Prasad and U. P. Singh for Respondent No. 2
For respondents 1 and 3-28 Ex parte.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JASWANT SINGH, J.-This appeal by certificate granted by the
High Court of Judicature at Patna under Article 133(1)(a)
and (b) .of the Constitution is directed against the
judgment and order dated May 13, 1969 of that Court whereby
Civil Writ Petition No. 460 of 1968 filed by respondents 3
to 28 herein was allowed, Notification No. SS/A-1-
103/68/2676/EB dated June 24, 1968 issued by the Bihar
’State Electricity Board, respondent No. 2, appointing the
appellant as officiating temporary Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication), Tele-Communication Division, Patna was
quashed and a writ of mandamus commanding respondent No. 2
to fill up the post of the Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication) after considering the case of respondents 3
to 28 and specially of respondents 3 and 4 along with the
case of the appellant or with the case of any other
Assistant Engineer whose case in the opinion of the Board
may be fit to be ’Considered in the light of the said
judgment was issued.
The circumstances giving rise to this appeal lie in a short
compass. It appears that the appellant who, passed the
final examination of ’Bachelor of Science (Engineering) in
Tele-Communication of the Ranchi University held in August,
1962 was appointed by the Bihar
790
State Electricity Board (hereinafter referred to, as ’the
Board’) as Assistant Engineer (Tele-Communication) in
September, 1963 on a salary of Rs. 245/- per month in the
pay scale of Rs. 220-25-320EB-25-670-EB-30-750. A few weeks
after his recruitment, the appellant was sent by the Board
to the headquarters of Messrs Brown Boveri and Company
Limited, Baden, Switzerland for six months’ specialized
training in power line carrier, tele-metering and tele-con-
trol equipment in the modem power system. On his return
from Switzerland and resumption by him of his duty as
Assistant Engineer (Tele-Communication) the appellant was
deputed to look after the entire telecommunication system of
the Board. In June, 1968, the Board felt the necessity of
maintenance of efficient communication service between the
vital centres of generation, utilization and administration
for ensuring reliability and continuity in power supply
which would facilitate quick supervision and checking of the
then existing arrangements at the generating stations,
receiving sub-stations and distributing areas as also the
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necessity of proper supervision and handling by trained and
qualified personnel of a large number of wave change-over
communication equipments on 33 KW Transmission line which
had been installed in the Tele-Communication Sub-Division of
the Board at Patna and were maintained and aligned with the
help of special electronic instruments. Accordingly, the
Board accorded sanction to the creation of a temporary
Tele-Communication Division with head-quarters at Patna as
also to the creation of a temporary post of Executive
Engineer (Tele-Communication) in the replacement scale of
pay of Rs. 730-35-870-40-1070-EB-45-1250, for the said
Tele-Communication Division with effect from June 22, 1968
to February 28, 1969. Acting on the recommendation of its
expert selection committee to the effect that the appellant
was fit to, be promoted to the rank of the Executive
Engineer Tele-Communication) in view of the fact that be had
a consistently good record of service, possessed the degree
in Tele-Communication Engineering, had undergone special
training in Switzerland in Tele-Communication, had ever
since his return from Switzerland been satisfactorily
performing the onerous and complex duties assigned to, him
and had been looking after the entire Tele-Communication
system of the Board and had thus acquired a valuable
practical experience in that field which was necessary to
man the post of Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication) and
that the Assistant Electrical Engineers of 1960 batch, were
being considered for promotion as Electrical Executive Eng-
ineers, the Board issued the aforesaid notification
temporarily promoting the appellant to the post of Executive
Engineer (Tele-Communication). Thereupon, respondents 3 to
28, who had been appointed as Assistant Electrical Engineers
in September, 1960 moved the High Court at Patna by means of
a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution
challenging the aforesaid notification averring inter alia
that the promotion. of the appellant was mala fide, that
though they were senior to the appellant and possessed the
requisite qualification and two of them viz. Harkishore
Singh and Dina Nath Singh had studied telecommunication as
one of their subjects in the final examination of B.Sc. in
Electrical Engineering, they had not even been considered by
the Board for appointment to the aforesaid post of Executive
Engineer and that they bad been superseded
791
and unreasonably discriminated against in violation of the
guarantee of equality of opportunity enshrined in Articles
14 and 16 of the Constitution. The petition was contested
by the appellant as also the State of Bihar and the Board
who contended that the appellant was holding an extra-cadre
post of Assistant Engineer (Tele-Communication) which was
created separately from that of the other Assistant
Electrical Engineers; that respondents 3 to 28 not being
holders of degree in Tele-Communication (Engineering) were
not qualified for appointment as Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication) and had no right to maintain the petition and
that there was no question of violation of equality of
opportunity guaranteed under Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. On a consideration of the rival contentions
of the parties, the High Court while granting that the
appellant possessed the degree of B.Sc. Engineering in Tele-
Communication; that the post of Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication) might be an extra cadre post as claimed by
the Board and that it was net for the Court but for the
Board to, decide on the basis of the opinion of experts or
selection committee as to who was fit and suitable for that
post, quashed the aforesaid notification promoting the
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appellant mainly on the grounds that neither a separate,
cadre of Executive Engineer (Tele-Communuication) had been
constituted nor had any special qualification been laid down
by the; Board for the post in question and that respondents
3 to 28 who were seniors to and had better experience and
academic career than the appellant had been unjustifiably
ignored by the Board violating the protection of equal
opportunity guaranteed to them under Articles 14 and 16 of
the ’Constitution. It is this judgment that is impugned in
this appeal.
We have beard learned counsel for the appellant and
respondents ’1 and 2 viz. the State of Bihar and and the
Board but have had not :the advantage of hearing respondents
3 to 28 or any one on their behalf, as they have chosen not
to appear despite personal service.
The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant and
respondents 1 and 2 have vehemently urged that Tele-
Communication is a highly specialized subject quite distinct
from that of general Electricity: that respondents 3 to 28
who were mere graduates of Science in Electrical Engineering
were not qualified for the post of Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication) and had no right to ,maintain the writ
petition out of which the present appeal has arisen and that
in the facts and circumstances of the instant case, there
was no question of any breach or violation of the guarantee
of equality of opportunity contained in Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution as was contended by them. There, is, in
our opinion, considerable force in these submissions.
Regarding the observation of the High Court that in the
absence of rules laying down qualifications for appointment
and promotion to the post of Executive Engineer (Tele-
Communication), respondents 3 to 28 could not be excluded
from consideration for, appointment to that post, we would
like to say that though it cannot be gain said that before
initiation of the proposal for creation of the post of
Executive
792
Engineer (Tele-Communication), respondents 1 and 8 bad not
framed any rules prescribing qualifications for that post,
it cannot be overlooked that it is not obligatory to make
rules of recruitment etc. before a service is constituted or
a post is created or filled up. As is well known, the
process of rule-making is a protracted and complicated one
involving consultation with various authorities and com-
pliance with manifold formalities. It cannot also be
disputed that exigencies of administration at times require
immediate creation of service or posts and any
procrastination in that behalf cannot but prove detrimental
to the proper and efficient functioning of public depart-
ments. In such like situations, the authorities concerned
would have the power to appoint or terminate administrative
personnel under the general power of administration vested
in them as observed by this Court in B. N. Nagarajan & Ors.
v. State of Mysore & Ors(1) and T. Cajee v. U. Jormani Siem
& Anr.(2) It follows, therefore, that in the absence of
rules, qualifications for a post can validly be laid down in
the self same executive order creating the service or post
and filling it up according to those qualifications. In the
instant case, it is evident from a perusal of the proposal
for creation of a Tele-Communication Division at Patna and
the aforesaid, recommendation made by the Selection
Committee in favour of the appellant that for ensuring
reliability and continuity in power supply it was absolutely
essential that maintenance of the sophisticated wave-change-
over communication equipments of 33 KW installed by the
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Board in the Tele-Communication Sub-sion should be entrusted
to specially trained, experienced and qualified officers
possessing specialized theoretical and practical knowledge
of Tele-Communication which is a subject quite distinct from
that of general Electricity and covers according to New
Encyclopaedia Britannica (15th Edition) and Webster’s Third
New International Dictionary all types of communication at a
distance as by cable, radio, telegraph, telephone,
teletypewriter and fascimile. Judged in this background, it
is obvious, that it was only the appellant who possessed
degree in B.Sc. Engineering in Tele-Communication, was
separately recruited and specially trained in that, line in
Switzerland and had thus acquired specialized knowledge
therein and acquitted himself creditably in the field for
five years, who could be said to possess the requisite
qualification and be considered fit and suitable for the job
in question and not any one of respondents 5 to 28 who were
mere graduates in Electrical Engineering, nor even
respondents 3 and 4 who had studied Tele-Communication only
as one of the subjects in their final B.Sc. Engineering
Examination. It is patent, therefore, that the High Court
was in error in thinking that respondents 3 to 28 possessed
qualification equal to the appellant or that they were
eligible for the job.
Turning to the other ground on which the judgment under
appeal rests viz. the violation of guarantee of equality
enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution, we
would like to reiterate and reemphasize what has been oft
repeated by this Court viz. that the doctrine of equality
before law and equal protection of laws and equality ’of
opportunity in the matter of employment and promotion
enshrined in Articles
(1)[1966] 3 S.C.R. 682.
(2)[1961] 1 S.C.R. 750, 764.
793
14 and 16 of the Constitution which is intended to advance
justice by avoiding discrimination is attracted only when
equals are treated as unequals or where unequals are treated
as equals. (See Md. Usman & Ors. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh(1). The guarantee of equality does not imply that
the same rules should be made applicable to all persons in
spite of differences in their circumstances and conditions.
(See Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri v. The Union of India & Ors.(2)
It is also well recognised that although Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution forbid hostile discrimination, they do
not forbid reasonable classification and equality of
opportunity in matters of promotion means equality as
between members of the same class of employees and not
equality between the members of separate and independent
classes. (See ,111 India Station Masters’ & Assistant
Station Masters’ Association & Ors. v. General Manager,
Central Railway & Ors,(3) It must always be remembered that
though the concept of equal protection and equal opportunity
undoubtedly permeates the whole spectrum of an individual’s
employment from appointment through promotion and termi-
nation to the payment of gratuity and pension, it has an
inherent limitation arising from the very nature of the
constitutional guarantee Equality is for equals, that is to
say those who are similarly circumstanced are entitled to an
equal treatment but the guarantee enshrined in Articles 14
and 16 of the Constitution can not be carried beyond the
point which is well settled by a catena of decisions of this
Court.
The instant case, in our opinion, is completely covered by
the decisions of this Court in State of Jammu & Kashmir v.
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Triloki Nath Kliosa & Ors. (4) (with which both of us had
’something to do at one stage or the other), State of Mysore
v. P. Narasing Rao,(5) Ganga Ram v. Union of India(6) and
the Union of India v. Dr. (Mrs.) S. B. Kohli(T)
In the State of Jammu & Kashmir v. Triloki Nath Khosea &
Ors. (supra) where after integration of diploma holder and
degree holder Assistant Engineers in one class, it was
provided by the J&K Engineering (Gazetted) Service Rules,
1970 that only those Assistant Engineers who possessed a
degree in Engineering would be eligible for promotion to the
post of Executive Engineer and the diploma holder Assistant
Engineers who were rendered ineligible for promotion to the
post of Executive Engineer filed a writ petition challenging
the constitutionality of the rule and the classification on
which it was claimed to be based on the ground that once the
employees are integrated into one class, they cannot for
purposes of promotion be classified again into two different
classes on the basis of educational differences existing at
the time of recruitment, the Constitution Bench held
rejecting the contention of the diploma holder Assistant
Engineers that formal education may not always produce
excellence but a classification founded on variant
educational qualifications is, for purposes of promotion to
the post of an Executive Engineer, to
(1) [1971] 2 S.C.C. 188. (2) [1950] S.C.R. 869, 91 1.
(3) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 311, 316. (4) [1974] 1 S.C.R. 771. ,
(5) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 407. (6) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 481.(7) A.I.R.
1973. S.C. 811.
794
say the least, not unjust on the face of it and the onus
therefore cannot shift from where it originally lay.
The following passages occurring in the leading judgment of
our learned brother Chandrachud, J. in that case are worth
quoting:-
"In order to establish that the protection of
the equal opportunity clause has been denied
to them, it is not enough for the respondents
to, say that they have been treated differ-
ently from others, not even enough that a
differential treatment has been accorded to
them in comparison with others similarly
circumstanced. Discrimination is the essence
of classification and does violence to the
constitutional guarantee of equality only if
it rests on an unreasonable basis. It was
therefore incumbent on the respondents to
plead and show that the classification of
Assistant Engineers into those who hold
diplomas and those who hold degrees is
unreasonable and bears no rational nexus with
its purported object .... On the facts of the
case, classification on the basis of
educational qualifications made with a view to
achieving administrative efficiency cannot be
said to rest on any fortuitous circumstance
and one has always to bear in mind the facts
and circumstances of the case in order to
judge the validity of a classification ....
Educational qualifications have been
recognized by this Court as a safe criterion
for determining the validity of
classification. In State of Mysore v. P.
Narasing Rao (supra) where the cadre of
Tracers was reorganized into two, one
consisting of matriculate Tracers with a
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higher scale of pay and the other of non-
Matriculates in the lower scale, it was held
that articles 14 and 16 do not exclude the
laying down of selective tests nor do they
preclude the Government from laying down
qualifications for the post in question.
Therefore, it was open to the Government to
give preference to candidates having higher
educational qualifications. In Ganga Ram v.
Union of India (supra), it was observed that
"the State which encounters diverse problems
arising from a variety of circumstances is
entitled to lay down conditions of efficiency
for promotion in its different departments".
In the Union of India v. Dr. (Mrs.) S. B.
Kohli (supra), as refined a classification as
between an F.R.C.S. in general surgery and an
F.R.C.S. in Orthopaedics was upheld in
relation to appointment to the post of a
Professor of Orthopaedics on the ground that
the classification made on the basis of
requirement of a post graduate degree in
particular speciality was not "without
reference to the objectives sought to be
achieved and there can be no question of
discrimination".
The following observations made in State of
Mysore v. P. Narasing Rao (supra) will also
amply repay perusal :-
"it is well settled that though Article 14
forbids class legislation, it does not forbid
reasonable classification for the purpose of
legislation. Where any impugned rule or
statutory provision is assailed on the ground
that it contravenes
795
Article 14, its validity can be sustained if
two tests are satisfied. The first test is
that the classification on which it is founded
must be based on an intelligible differentia
which distinguishes persons or things grouped
together from others left out of tile group,
and the second test is that the differentia in
question must have a reasonable relation to th
e
object sought to be achieved by the rule or
statutory provision in question. In other
words, there must be sonic rational nexus
between the basis of classification and
tile object intended to be achieved by the
statute or the rule. As we have already
stated, Articles 14 and 15 form part of the
same constitutional code of guarantees and
supplement each other. In other words, Art. 16
is only an instance of the application of tile
general rule of equality laid down in Art. 14
and it should be construed as such. Hence
there is no denial of equality of opportunity
unless the person who complains of
discrimination is equally situated with the
person or persons who are alleged to have been
favoured. Articles 16(1) does not bar a
reasonable classification of employees or
reasonable tests for their selection."
In the instant case, the qualifications required for the
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post of Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication) as
demonstrably rejected in the proposal for creation of that
post and the aforesaid recommendation of the Selection
Committee setting out various factors which went in favour
of the promotion of the appellant appear to be founded oil
reasonable classification having an intelligible differentia
which distinguished the appellant from respondents 3 to 28
and the differentia had a reasonable relation to the object
sought to be achieved. It is, therefore, crystal clear that
respondents 3 to 28 did not stand at par with the appellant
and had no legal right which they could claim to have been
denied to them by an authority which had a legal duty to do
something. With all respect the High Court was in our
judgment therefore, not right in issuing the writ of
mandamus. It would be useful in this context to refer to
the following observations made by this Court in Mani Subrat
Jain & Ors. v. State of Haryana & Ors.(1)
"It is elementary though it is to be restated
that no one can ask for a mandamus without a
legal right. There must be a judicially
enforceable, right as well as a legally
protected right before one suffering a legal
grievance can ask for a mandamus. A person
can be said to be aggrieved only when a person
is denied a legal right by someone who has a
legal duty to do something or to abstain
from doing something. [See Halsbury’s Laws of
England, 4th Ed. Vol. 1, Paragraph 122; State
of Haryna v. Subhash Chander Marwaha(2)
Jasbhai Motibhai Desai v. Roshan Kumar Haji
Bushuur Ahmmed(3) and Ferris : Extra-Ordinary
Legal Remedies. paragraph 198]".
(1) [1977] 1 S.C.C. 486.
(3) [1976] 3 S.C.R. 58.
(2) [1974] 1. S.C.R. 165.
796
in view of the foregoing, we, are unable to hold on the
material, before us that the criterion employed by the
concerned authority in promoting the appellant was arbitrary
or capricious or was not intended to increase the efficiency
in the functioning of the department or was based on
extraneous or irrelevant considerations or suffered from any
other vice. In the result, we allow the appeal, set aside
the judgment of the High Court and uphold the aforesaid
Notification No. SS/AI-103/68/2676-EB dated June 24, 1968
issued by the Board promoting the appellant as officiating
temporary Executive Engineer (Tele-Communication). As
respondents 3 to 28 have not appeared and contested the
appeal, we make no order as to costs.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
797