Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1813 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Union of India and Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Narender Singh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/07/2005
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & H. K. SEMA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
The union of India and the Additional Commissioner of
Police (OPS), New Delhi have questioned correctness of the
order passed by a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court
dismissing writ petition filed by the present appellants as
infructuous.
The controversy lies within a very narrow compass and
is as under:
Respondent (herein referred to as the ’employee’) was
proceeded against departmentally on the charge that on
27/28.2.1996 while posted in the vigilance cell at the
Indira Gandhi International Airport he accepted illegal
gratification for getting two Afghan nationals cleared
through Customs without paying the Customs duty payable. He
was ultimately dismissed by the disciplinary authority by
order dated 7.8.1997. The appeal preferred by him was also
rejected by the appellate authority by order dated
20.11.1997. Challenging these orders the respondent-employee
filed Original Application before the Central Administrative
Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi (in short the
’Tribunal’). By order dated 21.11.2000, the Tribunal quashed
and set aside the order of dismissal dated 7.8.1997 passed
by the disciplinary authority as also the order dated
20.11.1997 passed by the appellate authority. The
respondent-employee was directed to be reinstated forthwith.
The order passed by the Tribunal was questioned by the
present appellant by filing writ petition under Article 226
of the Constitution of India, 1950 (in short ’the
Constitution’). The Division Bench of the Delhi High Court
by its order dated 5.12.2001 dismissed the writ petition as
infructuous by observing as follows:
"We are informed that respondent stands
already reinstated in service pursuant to
Tribunal order dated 21.11.2000 passed in
OA.95/98 rendering this petition as good as
infructuous. But L/C for petitioners still
tried to justify the departmental action. We
are not impressed as petitioner had already
implemented Tribunal order.
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Writ petition is, accordingly, dismissed
as infructuous."
Stand of the appellant in the present appeal is that
the view taken by the High Court is clearly untenable.
Merely because the respondent-employee had been reinstated
in service pursuant to impugned orders that did not render
the petition infructuous.
In response, learned counsel for the respondent-
employee submitted that Tribunal’s order is without blemish
and even on merits there is no scope for interference with
the said order. Even otherwise as has been rightly held by
the High Court after the order of reinstatement the writ
petition had really become infructuous.
The High Court’s order is clearly indefensible. A writ
petition questioning the Tribunal’s order on merits does not
become infructuous by giving effect to the Tribunal’s order.
Merely because the order of reinstatement had been
implemented by the appellant, that did not render the writ
petition infructuous as has been observed by the High Court.
This position was clearly stated in Union of India v. G.R.
Prabhavalkar and Ors. (1973 (4) SCC 183). In para 23 of the
decision it was observed as follows:
"Mr. Singhvi, learned counsel, then
referred us to the fact that after the
judgment of the High Court the State
Government has passed an order on March 19,
1971, the effect of which is to equate the
Sales Tax Officers of the erstwhile Madhya
Pradesh State with the Sales Tax Officers,
Grade III, of Bombay. This order, in our
opinion, has been passed by the State
Government only to comply with the directions
given by the High Court. It was made during a
period when the appeal against the judgment
was pending in this Court. The fact that the
State Government took steps to comply with
the directions of the High Court cannot lead
to the inference that the appeal by the Union
of India has become infructuous."
The expression infructuous means ineffective,
unproductive and unfruitful. It is derived from the Latin
word "fructus" (fruit). By implementing an order, the
challenge to the validity of the order is not wiped out and
is not rendered redundant.
The inevitable result is that the appeal deserves to be
allowed which we direct. The order of the High Court is set
aside and the matter is remitted to it for fresh disposal on
merits. We make it clear that we have not expressed any
opinion on the merits of the case.
Appeal is allowed with no order as to costs.
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