Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M.B. MAJUMDAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/08/1990
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
PUNCHHI, M.M.
REDDY, K. JAYACHANDRA (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 2263 1990 SCR (3) 946
1990 SCC (4) 501 JT 1990 (3) 655
1990 SCALE (2)345
ACT:
Administrative Tribunals Act 1985/Central Administrative
Tribunal (Salaries and Allowances and Conditions of Service
of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members) Rules 1985.
Sections 4, 7, 14, 17, 35/Rule 3--Central Administrative
Tribunals-Members-Not equated with High Court Judges/Vice
Chairman of Tribunal for purposes of pay and superannuation
whether valid and legal.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner is a Judicial Member of the Central
Administrative Tribunal. In this writ petition he claims
equality of the Members of the Administrative Tribunal with
the Judges of the High Court, or even the Vice-Chairman of
the Tribunal, in the matter of pay, and age of superannua-
tion.
The Central Administrative Tribunal (Salaries and Allow-
ances and Conditions of Service of Chairman, Vice-Chairman
and Members) Rules, 1985 were framed in exercise of the
powers conferred by section 35(2)(c) of the Administrative
Tribunals Act, 1985. Rule 3 of the Rules specifies Rs.8,000
p.m. as the pay of the Vice-Chairman and the pay scale of
Rs.7300-100-7600 p.m. for a Member. Rule 8 prescribes the
age of superannuation for the Chairman and Vice Chairman at
65, and for any other Member 62 years.
It was contended on behalf of the petitioner that an
arbitrary distinction had been made in the conditions of
service, particularly in regard to pay and age of superannu-
ation, between the Vice-Chairman and the Members; that the
judicial functions discharged by the Vice Chairman and the
Members of the Central Administrative Tribunal were the same
and, therefore, the principle of "equal pay for equal work"
applied, and on that basis Article 14 had been violated; and
that the Administrative Tribunal being a substitute for the
High Court for adjudicating disputes relating to service
matters, the Members of the Tribunal should be equated with
the High Court Judges for all purposes
947
including their pay and age of Superannuation.
S.P. Sampath Kumar v. Union of India, [1987] 1 SCC 124,
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relied upon.
On behalf of the respondent it was contended that all
the functions of the Vice-Chairman and the Members were not
the same in as much as the Vice-Chairman, in addition to
filling the casual vacancy in the office of the Chairman,
also discharged certain administrative functions entrusted
to him by the Chairman.
Dismissing the writ petition, this Court,
HELD: (1) It is the law enacted by Parliament constitut-
ing the Administrative Tribunal which has to be first seen
for the purpose of ascertaining the real nature and status
of the Tribunal and the persons constituting it. [1953 E]
(2) It is not possible for the Administrative Tribunal to
shed off or abandon its heritage and substitute its genes
with those of its choice of a different heritage. [956G]
(3) There is no ambiguity in the provisions of the
Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, and the exact status and
service conditions of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Mem-
bers of the Administrative Tribunal together with the quali-
fications for appointment to these offices have been clearly
spelt out in the Act. [953F]
(4) From the scheme of the Act and the rules flamed
thereunder it is quite clear that their enactment is in the
manner laid down in Article 323-A of the Constitution. From
the scheme it is evident that the Chairman, Vice-Chairman
and Members are not treated as one class for this purpose by
the very enactment which provides for the establishment of
the Tribunals. Such elaborate provisions were unnecessary if
the Tribunal was to be equated with the High Courts and its
members with High Court Judges. 1953D; 954C]
(5) Article 323-A and 323-B themselves require the law
constituting these Tribunals to provide for the pay and
other conditions of service of its Members and, therefore,
the same would he governed in the case of each Tribunal by
the provisions of the statute giving birth to the Tribunal.
These statutes being different, the provisions therein in
this behalf can also be different, which has been left to
the legislative wisdom to decide. [955G-H]
948
(6) Equation of the Tribunal with the High Court was
only as the forum for adjudication of disputes relating to
service matters and not for all purposes such as the one
arising for decision in the present case. [956C]
S.P. Sampath Kumar v. Union of India, [1987] 1 SCC 124,
distinguished & explained.
(7) The foundation of initial equality on which the
argument of discrimination is based, is non-existent. The
parent statute itself shows that they were not born equals.
[956E]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 960 of
1987.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
G.L. Sanghi, B.A. Masodkar, Sunil Dogra and P.H. Parekh
for the Petitioner.
V.C. Mahajan, K. Swami and Ms. A. Subhashini for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VERMA, J. This writ petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution by a Judicial Member of the Central Administra-
tive Tribunal purports to be a sequal of this Court’s deci-
sion in S.P. Sampath Kumar v. Union of India, and Ors.,
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[1987] 1 SCC 124. The petitioner contends that the decision
in Sampath Kumar’s case (supra) equates the Central Adminis-
trative Tribunal with the High Court and therefore, its
Chairman has to be equated with the Chief Justice of a High
Court and the Vice-Chairman and Members must be equated with
the sitting Judges of the High Court in all respects. It is
contended that while the Vice-Chairman have been equated
with sitting Judges of the High Court, the Members have not
been so equated in their pay and other conditions of serv-
ice. It is further contended that a distinction has been
made in the conditions of service, particularly the pay and
age of superannuation between the Vice-Chairmen and the
Members, which is arbitrary and therefore, the Members also
should be given the same pay as the Vice-Chairmen and their
age of superannuation should also be the same i.e. 65 years
as that of the Vice-Chairmen. It is urged that the judicial
functions discharged by the Vice-Chairmen and the
949
Members of the Central Administrative Tribunal are the same
and therefore, the principle of "equal pay for equal work"
applies. Violation of Article 14 of the Constitution is
alleged on this basis.
Part XIV-A containing Articles 323-A and 323-B were
inserted in the Constitution of India by the Constitution
(Forty-second Amendment) Act, 1976 enabling the setting up
of Administrative Tribunals and Tribunals for other matters
by legislative enactments.
The Central Administrative Tribunal has been constituted
under Section 4 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) with a Chairman,
Vice-Chairmen and Members-judicial and administrative. The
qualifications for appointment of Chairman, Vice-Chairmen or
other Members are prescribed by Section 6 of the Act. Sec-
tion 7 provides that the Vice-Chairman or, as the case may
be such one of the Vice-Chairman as the appropriate Govern-
ment may, by notification, authorise in this behalf, shall
act as the Chairman in the event of any vacancy in the
office of the Chairman for any reason whatsoever, or when
the Chairman is unable to discharge his functions for any
reason. Section 8 prescribes the term of office of the
Chairman, Vice-Chairman or other Members as five years from
the date on which he enters upon his office with eligibility
for re-appointment for another term of five years provided
that no Chairman or Vice-Chairman shall hold the office
after he has attained the age of 65 years and any other
Member, the age of 62 years. Section 10 of the Act provides
for the salaries and allowances and other terms and condi-
tions of service of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and other Mem-
bers to be such as may be prescribed by the Central Govern-
ment. Section 17 confers on the Tribunal the same jurisdic-
tion, powers and authority in respect of contempt of itself
as a High Court has under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971.
But for this specific provision, the Tribunal would not have
the power of the High Court in this behalf. Section 18
provides for distribution of business amongst the Benches of
the Tribunal. Section 28 excludes the jurisdiction of courts
except the Supreme Court or any Industrial Tribunal, Labour
Court or other authority, constituted under the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 or any other corresponding law for the
time being in force in relation to matters over which the
Tribunal has been conferred jurisdiction. Section 35 con-
tains the rule-making power of the Central Government while
Section 36 gives power to the appropriate Government to make
rules to carry out the provisions of the Act and particular-
ly, for the matters specified therein. The specified pur-
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poses for which the Central Government can make rules speci-
fied in Section 35(2)(c) include
950
the salaries and allowances payable to, and the other terms
and conditions of the Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and other
Members. The rules framed under the Act are to be laid
before the Parliament. It is not necessary to give further
details of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, the
provisions of which were considered at length in Sampath
Kumar’s case (supra) and now stand amended in accordance
with the observations of this Court in that decision.
The Central Administrative Tribunal (Salaries and Allow-
ances and Conditions of Service of Chairman, Vice-Chairmen
and Members) Rules, 1985 (hereinafter referred to as ’the
rules’) were framed in exercise of the powers conferred by
Section 35(2)(c) of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985.
Rule 3 therein, as it now exists, specifies Rs.9,000 p.m. as
the pay of the Chairman; Rs.8,000 p.m. as the pay of the
Vice-Chairman; and the pay scale of Rs.7300-100-7600 per
mensem for a Member. As earlier indicated, the age of super-
annuation prescribed in Section 8 of the Act for the Chair-
man and Vice Chairman is 65 years and for any other Member,
62 years. The petitioner’s grievance is that the pay of any
other Member of the Tribunal and his age of superannuation
should be Rs. 8,000 p.m. and 65 years respectively as in the
case of Vice-Chairmen, since the Members and Vice-Chairmen
discharge identical judicial functions. The question is:
Whether the principle of "equal pay for equal work", relied
on by the petitioner, is applicable to this situation or
there is any hostile discrimination against the Members of
the Central Administrative Tribunal, as alleged by the
petitioner. If the petitioner’s contention be correct, then
would arise the question of relief which can be granted. The
prayer made in this petition is to direct an amendment in
the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 and the rules framed
thereunder, to prescribe the same pay and age of superannua-
tion for the Members as in the case of the Vice-Chairman.
The argument of Shri B.A. Masodkar and Shri G.L. Sanghi
in support of the petition is that the Members and the
Vice-Chairman of the Central Administrative Tribunal belong
to the same class since they discharge identical judicial
functions and there is no rational nexus of the classifica-
tion made between them with the object sought to be
achieved. It is urged that the Tribunal is one entity com-
prising of the Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and Members which has
been substituted for the High Court in respect of the juris-
diction conferred on the Tribunal and therefore, there is no
justification for discriminating between them in the matter
of pay and other conditions of service.
951
In the counter-affidavit of the respondent, it has been
stated that all the functions of the Vice-Chairman and the
Members are not the same inasmuch as the Vice-Chairman, in
addition to filling the casual vacancy in the office of the
Chairman, also discharges certain administrative functions
entrusted to him by the Chairman while no such administra-
tive function is discharged by any Member. It is stated that
the office of the Vice-Chairman and any other Member cannot,
therefore, be treated as the same or in one class. Shri V.C.
Mahajan, learned counsel for the respondent contended that
Sampath Kumar’s case (supra) does not lend any support to
the petitioner’s contention and in this context the observa-
tions made therein actually negative the petitioner’s stand.
It was also urged that the relief claimed for a direction to
amend the aforesaid Act and the rules framed thereunder
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cannot be granted, which alone is the relief claimed in the
writ petition.
was rightly not disputed by learned counsel for the
petitioner that the relief specifically claimed in the
petition of a direction to amend the Administrative Tribu-
nals Act, 1985 and the rules flamed thereunder to equate the
Members of the Tribunal with the Vice Chairman in the matter
of pay and age of superannuation cannot be granted- For this
reason, it was urged on behalf of the petitioner that the
relief may be suitably moulded to grant the same benefit for
the Members of the Tribunal if the allegation of hostile
discrimination is accepted. it is not necessary for us to
deal further with this aspect since we have no doubt that
the plea of violation of Article 14 of the Constitution,
raised by the petitioner, is untenable and must fail.
The sheet-anchor of petitioner’s case is the decision of
this Court in Sampath Kumar’s case (supra). We will present-
ly show that the decision in Sampath Kumar’s case (supra)
does not support the petitioner’s claim in this petition. It
is significant to note that the age of superannuation of
High Court Judges is 62 years while that of the Chairman and
Vice-Chairman of the Tribunal is 65 years and of any other
Member is 62 years. No attempt has been made on behalf of
the petitioner to justify the fixation of age of superannua-
tion of the Chairman and the Vice-Chairman as 65 years if
they are to be equated with the Chief Justice and sitting
judges of the High Court who retire at the age of 62 years
only. In respect of the age of superannuation, the Members
of the Tribunal are at par with the Chief Justice and the
Judges of the High Court. Obviously, it is for this reason
that an attempt was made to claim the equality with the
Vice-Chairman of the Tribunal who gets Rs.8,000 p.m. as pay
like a High Court Judge but retires at the higher age of 65
years. This disparity itself indicates that
952
the Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and Members of the Tribunal are
not equated with the Chief Justice and Judges of the High
Court for all purposes which, in substance, is the founda-
tion of the petition.
The contention of Shri D .A. Masodkar, learned counsel
for the petitioner, is that the Administrative Tribunal
being a substitute for the High Court for adjudicating
disputes relating to service matters the Members of the
Tribunal should be equated with the High Court Judges for
all purposes including their pay and age of superannuation.
He contends that the lower pay and age of superannuation of
the Members of the Tribunal is discriminatory and violates
Article 14 of the Constitution. His argument is that the
Members should be equated in this behalf with the Vice-
Chairman whose pay is equal to that of a puisne Judge of the
High Court. However, no attempt was made to justify on this
reasoning the higher age of superannuation of the ViceChair-
man being 65 years against 62 years of a High Court Judge.
Shri G.L. Sanghi supported the petition and contended that
the Tribunal being one body, the persons constituting it
cannot be bifurcated into separate categories and the pay
and age of superannuation of all of them should be the same.
He adds that the Members and the ViceChairman should have
the same pay and age of superannuation while the slightly
higher pay of the Chairman was justified as in the case of
the Chief Justce vis-a-vis the puisne Judges of the High
Courts.
In substance, the contention of Shri Masodkar is for
equating the Members of the Tribunal with puisne Judges of
the High Courts in the matter of pay on the assumption that
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the Tribunal is equated with the High Court and with the
Vice-Chairman of the Tribunal in the matter of age of super-
annuation on the basis of equal work. The contention of Shri
G.L. Sanghi is slightly different. He argues that the Tribu-
nal being one entity there is no reason to treat its Members
differently when all of them perform the same judicial
function, the only difference being that the Chairman has
additional administrative functions to discharge.
Part XIV-A of the Constitution of India containing
Articles 323-A and 323-B provides for the constitution of
administrative and other tribunals for the purpose of adju-
dication or trial by these tribunals of disputes relating to
matters specified therein. Article 323-A deals with adminis-
trative tribunals to be constituted for adjudication of
disputes with respect to recruitment and conditions of
service of persons appointed to public services and posts in
connection with the affairs of the Union or of any State or
of any local or other specified
953
authority. The law enacted by. the Parliament for this
purpose may provide for all matters relating to the consti-
tution and functions of the Administrative Tribunals as well
as for exclusion of jurisdiction of all courts, except the
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of India, with respect to
the matters required to be adjudicated by the Administrative
Tribunal. It is for this purpose that the Administrative
Tribunals Act, 1985 has been enacted and Section 28 therein
excludes the jurisdiction of all courts except the Supreme
Court or any Industrial Tribunal, Labour Court or other
authority constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 or any other corresponding law for the time being in
force in relation to matters which the Administrative Tribu-
nal is empowered to adjudicate. The Act also provides for
transfer of all pending cases as provided in Section 29 of
the Act.
In the first place, the assumption in the argument on
behalf of the petitioner that the Tribunal is equated with
the High Court is fallacious. It is not only the service
matters required earlier to the adjudicated by the High
Court but also those by the subordinate courts which are now
to be adjudicated by the Administrative Tribunals. That
apart, Article 323-A itself clearly contemplates that the
Administrative Tribunals constituted thereunder are distinct
from the High Courts and it is the law enacted by the Par-
liament providing for establishment of an Administrative
Tribunal which is to provide for all matters relating to the
jurisdiction, powers, procedure and all supplemental, inci-
dental and consequential matters relating to the Administra-
tive Tribunal. It is, therefore, the law enacted by the
Parliament constituting the Administrative Tribunal which
has to be first seen for the purpose of ascertaining the
real nature and status of the Tribunal and the persons
constituting it. There is no ambiguity in the provisions of
the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 and the exact status
and service conditions of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and
Members of the Administrative Tribunal together with the
qualifications for appointment to these offices have been
clearly spelt out in the Act. This Act provides expressly
for the term of office of the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and
Members in Section 8 and for the salaries and allowances and
other terms and conditions of service by Section 10 read
with Section 35(2)(c) and the rules framed thereunder. The
Central Administrative Tribunal (Salaries and allowances and
Conditions of Service of Chairman, Vice-Chairmen and Mem-
bers) Rules, 1985 have been framed in exercise of the powers
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conferred by Section 35(2)(c) to provide for the salaries
and allowances etc. The scheme of the Act and the rules
framed thereunder is quite clear and their enactment is in
the manner laid down in Article 324-A of the Constitution.
954
The term of office and the age of superannuation, pay and
allowances and other service conditions of the Chairman,
Vice-Chairman and Members are specifically provided in this
manner and from the scheme it is evident that the Chairman,
Vice-Chairman and Members are not treated as one class for
this purpose by the very enactment which provides for the
establishment of the Tribunals. Such elaborate provisions
were unnecessary if the Tribunal was equated with the High
Courts and its Members with High Court Judges. Similarly, a
higher age of superannuation could not have been prescribed
for the Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the Tribunal. Article
323-A of the Constitution itself envisages different provi-
sions in this behalf and not the same as. that of the High
Courts which is the assumption made in the petitioner’s
contention. In fact, the provisions of the Act indicate that
there is no intention of equating the Chairman, Vice-Chair-
man and Members of the Tribunal with the Chief Justice and
Judges of the High Courts for purposes other than those
expressly provided in respect of jurisdiction, power etc.
Section 17 of the Act is a significant indication. By Sec-
tion 17, the Tribunal has been given the power to punish for
contempt of itself and it is provided that for this purpose
the Tribunal shall have, and exercise, the same jurisdic-
tion, powers and authority as the High Court and the refer-
ences in the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, tO a High Court
shall be construed as including a reference to such Tribu-
nal. It is obvious that the need for enacting such a provi-
sion arose only because in the absence of such a provision
conferring on the Tribunal the jurisdiction and power of a
High Court for the purpose of the provisions of the Contempt
of Courts Act, 197 1, the Tribunal would not have the same
jurisdiction or power while adjudicating those very matters
which earlier were to be adjudicated by the High Court.
Similarly, Section 30 of the Act provides that all proceed-
ings before a Tribunal shall be deemed to be judicial pro-
ceedings within the meaning of Sections 193, 219 and 228 of
the Indian Penal Code, 1860. This provision also is unneces-
sary if the petitioner is right in contending that the
Tribunal is equated with the High Court for all purposes and
must be treated as a deemed High Court with all the, logical
consequences.
It is, therefore, not possible for the Administrative
Tribunal to shed off or abandon its heritage and substitute
its genes with those of its choice of a different heritage.
In our opinion, this alone is sufficient to indicate that
the petitioner’s assumption is fallacious and his attempt to
be treated as a deemed High Court Judge cannot be accepted.
Apart from the obvious fallacy already indicated, the peti-
tioner’s claim, if accepted, would result in appointment of
some
955
deemed High Court Judges contrary to the express provision
made in the Constitution for appointment of High Court
Judges.
During the course of heating, it was pointed out that
mere substitution of a different forum for adjudication of a
dispute does not result in conferring on the new forum the
status of the substituted forum for purposes other than the
jurisdiction and power to adjudicate that dispute unless
their status be otherwise equal. To illustrate, Section 115
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CPC by amendment in some states empowers the District Courts
instead of the High Court to decide revisions thereunder,
but that does not equate the District Court with the High
Court. No attempt was made on behalf of the petitioner to
answer this.
The slightly modified argument of Shri G .L. Sanghi for
achieving the same purpose also does not bear close scruti-
ny. The Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, itself makes a
distinction between the Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Members.
The age of superannuation of the Chairman and Vice-Chairman
is 65 years while that of the Members is 62 years. Similar-
ly, there is difference in their salaries. They are not
treated to be in one class for this purpose by the Act
itself. It cannot, therefore, be said that all of them
constitute one class since the Tribunal is one. The case of
the Chairman was distinguished by learned counsel on the
basis that his position was akin to that of the Chief Jus-
tice of the High Court. However, the age of superannuation
of the Chief Justice and the puisne Judges of the High Court
is the same which pattern is not maintained in the Act. A
provision is made in the Act for discharge of certain admin-
istrative functions of the Chairman by the Vice-Chairman and
not by the Members and similarly, there is provision only
for the Vice-Chairman to fill a casual vacancy. The founda-
tion of initial equality on which the argument of discrimi-
nation is based, is non-existent. The parent statute itself
shows that they were not born equals.
There is also no merit in the casual argument that there
is a proposal for higher pay and age of superannuation for
Members of Tribunals for other matters constituted in ac-
cordance with Article 323-B of the Constitution. The basic
fact to be remembered is that Articles 323-A and 323-B
themselves require the law constituting these Tribunals to
provide for the pay and other conditions of service of its
Members and, therefore, the same would be governed in the
case of each Tribunal by the provisions of the statute
giving birth to the Tribunal. These statutes being differ-
ent, the provisions therein in this behalf can also be
different which has been left to the legislative wisdom to
decide.
956
Considerable emphasis was laid on behalf of the peti-
tioner on S.P. Sam path Kumar’s case (supra) to contend that
the Tribunals constituted under Article 323-A have been
equated with the High Courts. It is sufficient to say that
in Sam path Kumar (supra), the question before us in the
present petition did not arise for consideration and the
observation therin cannot be torn out of context. On the
contrary, certain observations in para 22 of that judgment
indicate that the retiring age of 62 years or 65 years, for
the Members, Chairman and Vice Chairman was treated to be in
accord with the pattern of the enactment on the basis that
the Members and Chairman or Vice-Chairman were in different
categories. Equation of the Tribunal with the High Court
therein was only as the forum for adjudication of disputes
relating to service matters and not for all purposes such as
the one arising for decision in the present case. We are
unable to accept that the decision of this Court in S.P.
Sampath Kumar (supra) supports the contention before us in
this petition.
As a result of the aforesaid discussion, we have no
hesitation in holding that the equality claimed by the
Members of the Administrative Tribunal with the Judges of
the High Courts or even the Vice Chairman of the Tribunal in
the matter of pay and age of superannuation does not exist
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being contrary to the pattern and scheme of the parent
statute establishing the Tribunal and, therefore, the very
foundation for the argument of discrimination being non-
existent, the petition must fail.
Consequently, the petition is dismissed. In the circum-
stances of the case, the parties will bear their own costs.
R.S.S. Petition dismissed.
957