Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HAV BHAGAT SINGH, ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA & ANR., ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/03/1996
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
VENKATASWAMI K. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1705 1996 SCALE (2)851
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
Writ Petition (C) No. 571 of 1994
J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA, J.
The appeal aforementioned impugns the order of summary
dismissal of a writ petition filed by the appellant in the
High Court of Punjab & Haryana. Though the order only says
"dismissed", it was clearly passed by reason of the judgment
of this Court in Dhan Singh & Ors. vs. State of Haryana &
Ors., 1991 Supp. (2) S.C.C. 190. The writ petition arises
upon facts similar to those in the appeal and it seeks re-
consideration of the aforementioned judgment.
The facts that we state are of the appeal. The
appellant was enrolled as a Sepoy in the Army on 30th
January 1959. He served in the Army until some date in the
year 1976, by which time he had been promoted to the post
of Hawaldar. In 1978 the appellant joined the service of the
State of Haryana (the first respondent) as a clerk.
The Government of Punjab had framed the Punjab National
Emergency (Concession) Rules, 1965, and they were adopted by
the State of Haryana when it was formed. These Rules gave
benefits to persons who had been in military service before
joining Government service. "Military service" was defined
in Rule 2 thus :
"For the purposes of these Rules
the expression Military Service
means enrolled or Commissioned
service in any of the three Wings
of the Indian Armed Forces
(including service as a Warrant
Officer) rendered by a person
during the period of operation of
the proclamation of Emergency made
by the President under Article 352
of the Constitution of India on
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October 26, 1962 or such other
service as may hereafter be
declared as Military Service for
the purposes of these Rules. Any
period of Military Training
followed by Military Service shall
also be reckoned as Military
Service".
On 4th August, 1976, the aforesaid definition was amended by
the State of Haryana so that it read thus :
"For the purposes of these rules
the expression ‘Military Service’
means the service rendered by a
person who had been enrolled or
commissioned during the period of
operation of the proclamation of
Emergency made by the President
under Article 352 of the
Constitution of India on October
26, 1962 in any of the 3 Wings of
the Indian Armed Forces (including
the service as a Warrant Officer)
such other service as may hereafter
be declared as Military service for
the purpose of these Rules. Any
period of Military Training
followed by Military service shall
also be reckoned as Military
Service."
It will be seen that military service as originally defined
meant service, enrolled or commissioned, in the armed forces
rendered during the period of operation of the Emergency.
(The Emergency was that proclaimed in 1962). By the amended
provision military service meant only the service that was
rendered by a person who was enrolled or commissioned in the
armed forces during the period the Emergency remained in
force. The amendment, therefore, curtailed the definition of
military service and excluded therefrom those who had been
enrolled or commissioned before the proclamation of the
Emergency and had served during its operation.
The validity of the retrospective application of the
amended definition of military service came to be considered
by this Court in Ex. Capt. K.C. Arora and Anr. vs. State of
Haryana and Ors., 1984-3 S.C.C. 281. The appellants were
persons who had already entered Government service. It was
held that the amendment "Restricted the benefits of military
service upto January 10, 1968, the date on which the first
emergency was lifted with the result that the vested rights
which had accrued to the petitioners in 1969, 1970 and 1971
have been taken away". The notification amending the
definition of the expression ‘military service’ in Rule 2
was declared to be ultra vires the Constitution insofar as
it prejudicially affected persons who had already acquired
rights.
The validity of the amended definition came up for the
consideration of this Court again in Dhan Singh & Ors. vs.
State of Haryana & Ors., 1991 Supp (2) S.C.C. 190, and this
is the judgment whose reconsideration is sought. It was
argued that the amendment confining military service to
those who had joined during the operation of the Emergency,
that is, between 26th October, 1962, ant 10th January, 1968,
and denying the same benefit to those who had joined prior
to the proclamation of the Emergency was unreasonable,
arbitrary and based on no classification. The contention was
repelled. It was held that the State of Haryana could amend
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the Rules and withdraw the concession in exercise of the
power conferred under Article 309 of the Constitution. It
was open to the State to lay down any rule for determining
seniority in service and the court could not interfere
unless it resulted in inequality of opportunity among
employees belonging to the same class. When a rule was
challenged as denying equal protection, the question for
determination was not whether it resulted in inequality but
whether there was some difference which bore a just and
reasonable relation to the object of the legislation. The
court had to examine whether the classification rested upon
differential discriminating the persons or things grouped
from those left out and whether such differential had a
reasonable relation t the object sought to be achieved. The
Emergency had been imposed in 1962 on account of the
aggression by Chinese forces on Indian territory. In order
to attract young men to join military service at this
critical juncture, the Central and State Governments had
promised them benefits. The young men who had joined the
military service during the Emergency and those who were
already in service and had been compelled to serve during
the Emergency formed two distinct classes. Those who had
joined the army before the proclamation of the Emergency had
chosen the career voluntarily and their service during the
Emergency was as a matter of course. Those who had enrolled
or were commissioned during the Emergency, on the other
hand, had, on account of the call of the nation, joined the
army at a critical juncture to save the motherland. The
latter formed a class by themselves and could not be equated
to those who had joined the army before the proclamation of
the Emergency. Benefits had been promised to persons who had
heeded the call of the nation at that critical juncture
because they had foregone job opportunities. The
differential was, therefore, intelligible and had a direct
nexus to the object sought to be achieved. The amendment
could not, therefore, be held to be discriminatory or
arbitrary.
On 7th October, 1991, the Chief Secretary of the State
of Haryana addressed a circular letter which referred to the
judgment in Dhan Singh’s case and clarified that the
benefits of military service "may not be withdrawn from
those Ex-servicemen who had joined the State Services prior
to the amendment of the rules vide Haryana Government,
Notification No.GSR 182/Const./Art.309/Amd(2)/76, dated the
4th August, 1976 even if they had joined the military
services before emergency i.e. 26.10.1962. However, the
benefit of Military service granted to those Ex-servicemen
who joined army before 26.10.1962 and were appointed to
State services after the issue of Notification dated 4.8.76
may withdrawn".
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
judgment in Dhan Singh’s case required reconsideration
because there was discrimination amongst the homogeneous
class of servicemen. He also submitted that, by issuing the
circular letter dated 7th October, 1991, the State of
Haryana was purporting to regulate the discharge of military
personnel without taking into consideration the fact that it
was necessary to maintain a minimum strength thereof. Our
attention was invited to Rules 7, 8 & 9 of the said Rules
and it was submitted that, regardless of the curtailment of
the definition of military service by the aforestated
amendment, some persons remained unaffected thereby, so that
there was discrimination.
Rules 6 & 7 of the said Rules relate to the period
spent by a Government employee on military service. Rule 8
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deals with a temporary Government servant who, after return
from military service, is employed in Government service.
The appellant was not a Government employee, permanent or
temporary, before he was enrolled in military service and we
are, therefore, not called upon to determine the effect of
Rules 6, 7 and 8. We may, however, point out that each of
these rules uses the expression "military service" and that
expression in these rules must be construed only as defined
by the amendment. The circular letter dated 7th October,
1991, sets out what the combined effect of the cases of K.C.
Arora and Dhan Singh is. There is no question of the State
attempting to regulate the discharge of military personnel
thereby.
The Rules offered benefits to those who joined State
Government service after having seen military service during
the Emergency. It was open to the State to withdraw the
offer, but not qua those who had already accepted the offer
and joined the State Government service. Hence was rendered
the decision in K.C. Arora’s case. The State Government did
not withdraw the offer wholly but restricted it to those who
had enrolled or were commissioned in the armed forces during
the Emergency. The State Government was entitled to do so.
In our view, there is a clear and intelligible difference
between those who had already chosen the armed forces as a
career when the Emergency was declared and those who, in
response to the nation’s call, joined the armed forces after
the Emergency was declared. It was is the country’s interest
at the critical juncture to make service in the armed forces
attractive and compensate those who would otherwise have
chosen other vocations. The grant of benefits to the latter
class while denying them to the former class is in no way
arbitrary or discriminatory.
The Rules did not confer an indefeasible right on all
persons who had served in the armed forces during the
Emergency. Only those of them who had joined the State
Government’s service while the unamended Rules operated
acquired a vested right, by reason of their having accepted
the offer made thereby, which could not be defeated by the
amendment.
The appeal and writ petition must, therefore, fail.
We note with regret that we have received no assistance
from learned counsel for the State and that his explanation
was that he had received no instructions.
The appeal and the writ petition are dismissed. There
shall be no order as to costs.