Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VASANT KRISHNARAO PATURKAR & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
D. R. MAJRAMKAR & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/04/1974
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1502 1974 SCR (3) 857
1975 SCC (3) 162
ACT:
States’ Reorganisation Act, 1956--S. 115 and 117--Whether
High Court can decide issues of gradation seniority etc. of
officers allotted to the bilingual state of Bombay after
reorganisation of States.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants and the first 19 respondents. and respondents
22 to 24 are the employees in the Agriculture Dept. of the
State of Maharashtra following reorganisation of states.
Respondents 1 to 19 were the original petitioners in S.C.A.
No. 1354/70. They were officers of the former
Hyderabad--State. They prayed in their application for a
writ to set aside the Bombay Government’s Resolutions dated
17th February 1958 and 16th May 1969 and the provisional
gradation List of 27th September 1969 and the Promotion
orders of 5th and 6th June 1970 and other consequential
reliefs.
The Bombay High Court disposed of the application on merits
in favour of the appellants. The orders of the High Court
affected the interests of the present appellants.
Before the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court, appellant
No. 1 and three other officers lodged an application
impleading the State of Maharashtra and 88 other respondents
including the present respondent 1 to 19. Respondents 1 to
19 and others contested the application before the Nagpur
bench unsuccessfully. The Nagpur bench allowed the writ
application and quashed the resolution of the Government
dated 9-9-1960 and combined Seniority List of 22-8-62 and
quashed the order of absorption of the petitioners and
respondents 3 to 89.
The respondents, who were Agricultural officers from
Hyderabad Region, Preferred an appeal against the judgment
of the Nagpur High Court before the Supreme Court. They
were, allowed to withdraw the same without prejudice to all
parties affected to make representations to the Government
in accordance with 1 1 5 of the States Reorganisation Act
1956.
The Government of Maharashtra made a new gradation list on
27-9-69 and allowed certain consequential orders of
promotion on 5th and 6th June, 1970. This, therefore led to
the Special Civil Application No. 1354 of 70 at the instance
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of respondents 1 to 19.
The appellant and another person had also filed Special
Civil Application No. 1126/71 in the Nagpur Bench for
quashing the resolution of Bombay Government of 16th May
1969 on certain grounds. That matter is still pending in
the Nagpur Bench. The respondents 1 to 19 were impleaded as
respondents in that application but they-did not file any
affidavits in support of their case. When the matter came
up for hearing, the appellants knew that another petition in
the same subject was already decided by the Bombay High
Court. The appellants took immediate steps in the Bombay
High Court but failed to obtain any favourable orders.
although they prayed for rehearing of the writ petition.
The problem is a difficult one to decide gradation,
seniority etc. when officers of 3 different States are
alloted to the new bilingual state of Bombay under the
provisions of the States Reorganisation Act. Setting aside
the impugned judgment and order of the Bombay High Court and
directing restoration of the Special Civil Application No.
1354/70 and disposal of the same in accordance with law,
HELD : (1) There is sufficient guideline in Part X of the
States Reorganisation Act 1956 and also in Part VIII of the
Bombay Reorganisation Act 1960
858
that the Government of India is the final authority in the
matter of division and integration of services among the new
states to ensure a fair and equitable treatment to all
persons affected by the reorganisation including proper
consideration of any representation made by concerned
persons. further it is well settled that the Central
Government under See, 115 of the Act has to determine the
principles governing equation of posts and prepare common
gradation lists by integration of services and in doing so
to ensure fair and equitable treatment to all persons
concerned. [860 H; 861 A-B]
D.Rajian Raj and Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. A.I.R.
1974 S.C. 457, N. SubbaRao etc, v. Union of India & Ors.
[1972] 2 S.C.C. 862; and Union of Indiaand another v. P. K.
Roy & Ors. [1968] 2 S.C.R. 186, referred to.
(ii)The High Court cannot clothe upon itself the authority
for performing the functions which are specifically and
expressly intended to be the duty of the Central Government
under the Act. Therefore, the High Court was not right in
directing the State Government to do that which under the
provisions of the Act is within the domain of the Central
Government and secondly, in fixing a ’lime limit for action
and if the same is exceeded, directing an automatic entitle-
ment to the second relief as to equation, absorption and
fixation of seniority as prayed for by respondents 1 to 19.
[861 D]
(111)In the present case, although the High Court
observed that there, was sufficient cause for rehearing the
special Civil application; it wrongfully did not give any
opportunity to the petitioners and the State of Maharashtra
to canvass their respective points of view against the writ
petition. Under the circumstances, this Court directs
rehearing of the special civil application no. 1354/70 after
giving opportunities to all the parties concerned. [862 C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :-Civil Appeal No. 1227 of
1972.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
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the 9th December, 1971 of the Bombay High Court in Special
Civil Application No. 1354 of 1970.
M. N.. Pliadke, Naunit Lal and Lalita Kohli, for the
appellant.
S. C. Agarwala, K. K. Singhvi, R. K. Garo, S. S.
Bhattnagar and Y. J. Francis, for respondent Nos. 10 & 14.
M. C. Bhandare and M. N. Shroff, for respondent Nos. 20--24.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by-
GOSWAMI, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of the High Court of Bombay of 9th December,
1971, in Special Civil Application (S.C.A.) No. 1354 of 1970
under Article 226 of the Constitution. The appellants and
the first nineteen respondents and respondents 22 to 24 are
at present the employees in the Agriculture Department of
the State of Maharashtra following reorganisation of States
on 1st November, 1956.
Respondents 1 to 19 were the original petitioners in S.C.A.
No. 1354 of 1970. They were officers from the former
Hyderabad State piior to the States Reorganisation Act,
1956, (briefly called the Act). They prayed in their said
application for a writ to set aside the Bombay Government’s
Resolutions of 17th February, 1958 and 16th May, 1969 and
the provisional gradation list of 27th September, 1969 and
the promotion orders of 5th and 6th June, 1970
859
and other consequential reliefs. They had impleaded in the
said application five respondents, the first two being the
State of Maharashtra and the Director of Agriculture,’
Maharashtra and the remaining three respondents were the
three Agricultural Officers impleaded in a representative
capacity by leave of the High Court under order 1, rule 8,
Civil Procedure Code. These respondents (Nos. 3 to 5) did
not ;appear to contest the. application in the Bombay High
Court and it is alleged that they had no interest in the
matter and were in collusion with the appellants. Even the
first two respondents, namely, the State of Maharashtra and
the Director of Agriculture, went by default, although a
belated prayer to enter appearance had been made through
counsel on behalf of the State of Maharashtra after
commencement of arguments, on the day of final hearing,
which ’was, however, rejected by the. High Court. The
application was then disposed of, ex parte, on merits by the
High Court in favour of the applicants. It is not disputed
that the order of the High Court directly affects the
interests of the present appellants, who ’are Agricultural
Officers from the Madhya Pradesh region.
From Bombay we may now turn to the Nagpur Bench of the said
High Court. There the appellant No. 1 and three other
Agricultural Officers lodged a Special Civil Application No.
361 of 1964 impleading the State of Maharashtra and 88 other
respondents, including the present respondents 1 to 19.
Respondents 1 to 19 and others contested the application
before the Nagpur Bench unsuccessfully. The Nagpur Bench of
the High Court allowed the Writ application by its judgment
and order dated 6th December, 1967 and the operative part of
the same may be quoted.
"Accordingly, we allow the petition and quash
the resolution of the Government dated 9-9-
1960 and combined seniority list issued by the
Government on 22-8-1962. If the State
Government wants to alter the basis of equa-
tion originally fixed on 17-2-1958, an
opportunity to make representation against the
proposed alteration has to be given to the
persons likely to be affected. The State
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Government will now take an appropriat
e action.
The neces sary correspondence of quashing of
these two orders is that the intermediate
order of absorption which is necessary step
after inter se seniority and gradation list
can be compiled is also to be quashed.
Accordingly, we quash the order of absorption,
so far as these petitioners and respondents
No. 3 to 89 are concerned, dated 11.5.
1962. . . . .
The respondents, who were Agricultural Officers from
Hyderabad region,, preferred an appeal against the judgment
of the Nagpur Bench being No. 1366 of 1968 in this Court.
They were, however, allowed by this Court on 23rd January,
1969, to withdraw the same "without prejudice to all parties
affected to make representations to the Government in
accordance with section 115 of the States Reorganisation
Act,. 1956"
860
After the above order of this Court, it is said that many
Agricultural Officers made representations to the Government
of India under section 115 of the Act. The Government of
Maharashtra passed a Resolution of 16th May, 1969,
purporting to be an order giving new equation of posts in
the Agricultural Department in pursuance of which a
gradation list was made on 27th September, 1969. Then
followed certain consequential orders of promotion of 5th
and 6th June, 1970. This, as already noticed, led to the
Special Civil Application No. 1354 of 1970 at the instance
of respondents, 1 to 19 and the operative part of this
impugned order of 9th December, 1971, is in the following
terms :-
"For the reasons stated in the accompanying
judgment, the Court makes absolute with costs
the rule granted by it on 30.6.70 in terms of
the prayer (a) of the petition. The Court
further directs that if respondent No. 1 fails
to decide the question of equation of posts
held by the petitioners in the former
Hyderabad State in accordance with law, and
the observations in this Judgment within three
months from 9.12.71, Respondent No. 1 shall
equate the posts of Agricultural Assistant of
the former Hyderabad State in the scale of’
Rs. 176-300 with the posts of Agricultural
Officer, Grade I of the former Bombay State in
the scale of Rs. 210-10-300 and to absorb the
petitioners and to fix their seniority on that
basis with effect from the 1st day of November
1956". . .
The appellant and another person had also filed Special
Civil Application No. 1126 of 1971 in the Nagpur Bench for
quashing the Resolution of the Bombay Government of 16th
May, 1969, on certain grounds. That matter is still pending
in the Nagpur Bench. The respondents 1 to 19 were impleaded
as respondents in that application and although they had
been served, they did not file any return when the said
application came up for hearing at Nagpur on 2nd February,
1972. The learned Government Advocate, however, mentioned
to the court that ’another petition on the same subject had
already been decided by the Bombay High Court. It. is said
that this was the first time when the appellants came to
know of the impugned judgment and took immediately steps in
the Bombay High Court to set aside the order and for
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rehearing the ’writ petition, but failed to obtain
favourable orders.
The problem is indeed ticklish and sensitive concerning
integration, absorption, gradation and fixation of
appropriate seniority of the officers throwing by act of the
State their common lot from different areas, namely, the
former State of Madhya Pradesh, former State of Hyderabad
and the former State of Bombay allotted to the new bilingual
State of Bombay under the provisions of the States
Reorganisation Act. It is, however, clear that there is
sufficient guideline in Part X of the States Reorganisation
Act, 1956 as also later in Part VIII of the Bombay
Reorganisation Act 1960 and,it is served for the Government
of India, advisedly, to be the final authority in the matter
of division and integration of services among
861
the new States to ensure a fair and equitable treatment to
all Persons affected by the reorganisation including proper
consideration of any representation made by concerned
persons. (See section 11,5 and section 117 of the Act and
sections 81 and 83 of the Bombay Reorganisation Act, 1960).
It is well settled that the Central Government under section
115 of the Act has to determine the principles governing
equation of posts and prepare common gradation lists by
integration of services and in doing so to ensure fair and
equitable treatment to all persons concerned. The Central
Government is also required to give opportunities to the
parties affected to make their representations. (See D.
Rajian Raj & Others v. Union of India & others(1); N. Subba
Rao etc. v. Union of India and Others(2) and Union of India
& Anr. v. P. K. Roy & Ors.(3) ).
The High Court cannot clothe upon itself the authority for
performing the functions which are specifically and
expressly intended to be the obligation and duty of the
Central Government under the Act. The High Court is,
therefore. not right in two matters namely, in directing the
State Government to do that which under the, provisions of
the Act is within the domain of the Central Government and
secondly in fixing a time limit for action and, if the same
is exceeded, directing art automatic entitlement to the
second relief as to equation, absorption and fixation of
seniority is prayed for by respondents 1 to 19. This view
of the.High Court is clearly erroneous in view of the
provisions of the Act.
That, however, does not dispose of this matter. Mr. Phadke,
learned counsel for the appellants, raises several questions
before US. Firstly, that the Division Bench of the, High
Court could not sit ill appeal against the Division Bench
decision of the Nagpur Bench which is binding on the
respondents, 1 to 19. Secondly, that there is clear
violation of the principles of natural justice in disposing
of the writ petition by the High Court, ex parte, and in not
reviewing its order when sufficient cause was shown by the
appellants herein. Thirdly, that the High Court should not
have allowed the application under order 1, rule 8, Civil
Procedure Code, and should have insisted upon personal
service of the rule nisi on the affected petitioners in a
service matter of such implications.
Mr. Bhandare, learned counsel for the State of Maharashtra,
also, inter alia, took the point that the Central Government
was a necessary party and the petition should have been
dismissed by the High Court for non-joinder of that
Government.
It is not necessary for us to go into these questions in
view of the High Court’s order of December 24, 1971, in
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Civil Application No. 3261 of 1971, of the State of
Maharashtra and the Director of
(1) A.I.R. 1974 SC 457-1973 (1) SCC 61
(2) 1972 (2) S.C.C. 82
(3) [1968] (2) SCR 186.
862
Agriculture praying for permission to file an affidavit in
reply to the writ petition and for contesting the petition
on merits. The High Court observed "’we are satisfied on
reading these affidavits that there was sufficient cause for
rehearing the Special Civil Application", but on perusal of
the affidavit in re and hearing counsel for the State
rejected the said petition. The High Court also dismissed
the petitioners’ application for rehearing the writ
application.
We are not satisfied that the High Court was right in not
allowing an opportunity to the petitioners as well as to the
State to canvass their respective points of view before, it
against the writ application, particularly so when the
matter had been heard in a representative writ application
and not one of the actually affected persons had been
impleaded as a respondent even to represent their category.
The High Court itself observed, as noticed above, "there was
sufficient cause for rehearing". Without, therefore, going
into the various points raised before us, we set aside the
impugned judgment and order of the Bombay High Court of 9th
December, 1971 and direct restoration of the Special Civil
Application No. 1354 of 1970 to its file for disposal of the
same in accordance with law after giving opportunity to all
the parties concerned. We further direct that respondents 1
to 19 shall take steps in the High Court to implead the
Central Government as well as the present appellants and all
other officers affected by the orders sought to be quashed
in the Special Civil Application No. 1354 of 1970
The appeal is allowed on the terms indicated above. There
will be no order as to costs in this appeal.
S.C.
Appeal allowed.
863