Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5397 of 1997
PETITIONER:
C/M. ST. JOHN INTER COLLEGE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GIRDHARI SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/03/2001
BENCH:
G.B. Pattanaik & D.P. Mohapatra
JUDGMENT:
PATTANAIK,J.
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This appeal is directed against the Judgment of the
Allahabad High Court, allowing the writ petition filed by
the private respondents. The respondents who were the
employees of the appellant institution, filed the writ
petition, challenging the orders of termination dated
13.1.1989 passed by the Management. The sole ground of
attack was that the prior approval of the competent
authority, as required under Section 16G(3)(a) of the Uttar
Pradesh Intermediate Education Act, 1921 (herein-after
referred to as the Act), not having been taken, the order
of termination, is invalid and inoperative. The High Court,
following the majority judgment of the said Court in the
case of J.K. Kalra vs. R.I.G.S. and Ors. set aside the
order of termination of services of the private respondents,
passed by the Managing Committee. The institution is a
minority institution within the ambit of Article 30 of the
Constitution, is not disputed. In the circumstances, the
question that arises for consideration is whether the
provisions of Section 16G(3)(a) of the Act would have
application to the minority institutions. The Full Bench of
Allahabad High Court in Kalra in its majority judgment,
after considering the provisions of Section 16G(3)(a) of the
Act and the Regulations framed thereunder, came to hold that
there are sufficient guidelines available to the authority
under the said provision for according or refusing the
approval to the decision of the Committee of Management,
and, therefore, there is no reason to hold that the
provisions will have no application to the minority
institution.
Mr. P.P. Rao, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for the appellant, contended that the conclusion of the High
Court that Regulation 44 provides enough guidelines for
exercise of the powers for approval or disapproval of the
decision of the Management, is on the face of it
unsustainable inasmuch as the said Regulation 44 merely
prescribes the time period within which the appropriate
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authority is required to communicate his/her decision to the
Management and further provides that if complete papers have
not been received, then the approving officer may require it
to resubmit its proposal in complete form. But there is no
whisper, indicating the criteria on which the approving
officer is required to take his decision, and, therefore,
the High Court committed error in relying upon the aforesaid
Regulation, as the guidelines for exercise of power by the
approving authority. Mr. Rao further contended that
provisions of Section 16G(3) of the Act, conferring power of
approval on the District Inspector of schools, having been
found to be inadequate, the Uttar Pradesh legislature
enacted Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education Services
Commission and Selection Board Act, 1982 (U.P.Act No. 5 of
1982). Under the 1982 Act, the power of approval has been
conferred on the Commission that is to say the U.P.Secondary
Education Services Commission, established under Section 3
of the said Act and no teacher would be dismissed or removed
from the service or reduced in rank unless prior approval of
the Commission had been obtained. Section 30 of the
aforesaid Act of 1982, exempts the applicability of the said
Act to the minority institutions. The legislative intent,
therefore, is crystal clear that the provisions regarding
the prior approval of any competent authority in a case
where teacher of an institution is dismissed, removed or
reduced in rank, will not apply to a minority institution.
This being the position, the impugned judgment of the High
Court, interfering with the order of termination of the
employee of the minority institution, passed by the Board of
Management, is wholly unsustainable and, therefore, the said
judgment is liable to be interfered with by this Court.
Mr. O.P. Sharma, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for the respondents, on the other hand contended that the
provisions of Section 16 G(3)(a) of the Act is merely a
provision to check the arbitrary and capricious acts of the
Management in interfering with the service conditions of
employees of the institution. Such regulatory measure does
not in any way affect the rights of the minority to
establish and administer educational institution of their
choice, engrafted under Article 30 of the Constitution.
Since the Regulation provides the criteria for exercise of
power by the approving authority, the said provision
contained in Section 16 G(3)(a) can neither be held to be
contravening Article 30 nor does it contravene Article 14
and as such the majority judgment of Allahabad High Court in
Kalras case correctly lays down the law and the same does
not require any interference. According to Mr. Sharma, the
Regulation provides an elaborate procedure to be followed by
the punishing authority and the fact that the regulation
further provides that the approving authority can call for
all the necessary papers which is obviously intended for the
purpose of satisfying that the punishing authority has
followed the prescribed procedure and, therefore, it must be
held that sufficient guidelines are available for exercise
of power under Section 16 G(3)(a) of the Act. Consequently,
the Division Bench of the High Court in the impugned
judgment, has rightly followed the majority view in the Full
Bench decision in Kalras case and there is no infirmity in
the same. Mr. Sharma further urged that Section 32 of the
U.P. Act 5 of 1982, unequivocally indicates that the
provisions of the Intermediate Education Act, 1921 and the
regulations made thereunder, in so far as they are not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Act or the
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regulations or rules made thereunder shall continue to be in
force for the purpose of selection, appointment, promotion,
dismissal, removal, termination or reduction in rank of a
teacher. In this view of the matter, Section 16G(3)(a) of
the Act must be held to be continuing in force, which would
govern the cases of dismissal, removal or termination or
reduction in rank of a teacher of those institutions, which
do not come within the purview of 1982 Act. Consequently,
the minority institution being excluded from the purview of
1982 Act by virtue of Section 30, the provisions of Section
16G(3)(a) must apply and as such the order of termination
without prior approval, as contained therein, must be held
to be invalid.
The correctness of the rival submissions would depend
upon the interpretation of relevant provisions of the Uttar
Pradesh Intermediate Education Act, 1921, the regulations
framed thereunder, the Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education
Services Commission and Selection Board Act, 1982, Article
30 of the Constitution of India and in this context relevant
decisions of this Court will have to be borne in mind. It
would, therefore be appropriate at this stage to extract
some of the relevant provisions. Prior to the Intermediate
Education Act, 1921 came into force, the educational
institutions including the High Schools and Intermediate
education were all under the supervision of the Allahabad
University. It was however felt that it would be expedient
to establish a Board to take the place of Allahabad
University in regulating and supervising the system of High
School and Intermediate education in the united provinces
and for that purpose, the Intermediate Education Act, 1921
was enacted which extended to whole of the Uttar Pradesh.
The expression institution has been defined in Section
2(b) to mean a recognised Intermediate College, Higher
Secondary School or High School and includes where the
context so requires, a part of an institution, and Head of
Institution means the Principal or Head Master, as the case
may be, of such institution. The expression Recognition
has been defined in Section 2(d) to mean recognition for the
purpose of preparing candidates for admission to the Boards
examinations. Section 15 of the Act empowers the Board to
make regulations for the purpose of carrying into effect the
provisions of the Act. Under Section 16A, the authority to
manage and conduct the affairs of the institution vest with
the Committee of Management. Section 16G provides that
persons employed in a recognised institution shall be
governed by such conditions of service, as may be prescribed
by Regulations. Under Section 16G(3)(a) no teacher could be
discharged or removed or dismissed from service or reduced
in rank without the prior approval in writing of the
Inspector and under Section 16G(3)(b) the Inspector may
approve or disapprove or reduce or enhance the punishment or
approve or disapprove of the notice for termination of
service proposed by the management. Sections 16G(3)(a) and
16G(3)(b) are extracted hereinbelow in extenso:
Sec.16G(3)(a): No Principal, Headmaster or teacher may
be discharged or removed from service or reduced in rank or
subjected to any diminution in emoluments, or served with
notice of termination of service except with the prior
approval in writing of the Inspector. The decision of the
Inspector shall be communicated within the period to be
prescribed by regulations. 16G(3)(b): The Inspector may
approve or disapprove or reduce or enhance the punishment or
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approve or disapprove of the notice for termination of
service proposed by the management:
Provided that in the cases of punishment, before passing
orders, the Inspector shall give an opportunity to the
Principal, the Headmaster or the teacher to show cause
within a fortnight of the receipt of the notice why the
proposed punishment should not be inflicted.
In exercise of powers conferred upon the Governor under
the provisions of the Uttar Pradesh Intermediate Education
Act read with the Amendment Act of 1958, the Governor has
framed a set of regulations in respect of matters covered by
Sections 16A, 16B, 16C, 16E, 16F and 16G of the Intermediate
Education Act, 1921. In the case in hand, the relevant
regulation for our purpose is Regulation 44, which is
extracted hereinbelow in extenso:
Regulation 44: The Inspector or Regional Inspectress
shall communicate his/her decision to the management within
six weeks of the receipt of its proposal in complete form
for action mentioned in sub-section (3)(a) of Section 16G of
the Act. If incomplete papers are received from the
management the approving officer shall require it to
resubmit its proposal in complete form within two weeks, and
the period of six weeks prescribed in this regulation shall
be reckoned from the date on which complete papers are
received by the approving officer. These papers shall
either be sent by registered post or by special messanger.
The Uttar Pradesh legislature enacted the Uttar Pradesh
Seconday Education Services Commission and Selection Board
Act, 1982 essentially for the purpose of establishing
Secondary Education Services Commission as well as Selection
Board for selection of teachers in the institutions
recognised under the Intermediate Education Act of 1921.
The statement of objects and reasons appended to the
relevant Bill is extracted hereunder:
The appointment of teachers in secondary institutions
recognised by the Board of High School and Intermediate
Education was governed by the Intermediate Education Act,
1921 and regulations made thereunder. It was felt that the
selection of teachers under the provisions of the said Act
and the regulations was sometimes not free and fair.
Besides, the field of selection was also very much
restricted. This adversely affected the availability of
suitable teachers and the standard of education. It was,
therefore, considered necessary to constitute Secondary
Education Service Commission at the State level, to select
Principals, Lecturers, Headmasters and L.T. Grade teachers
and Secondary Education Selection Boards at the regional
level, to select and make available suitable candidates for
comparatively lower posts in C.T./J.T.C./B.T.C. grade for
such institutions.
(2).Under Section 16-G(3) of the Intermediate Education
Act, 1921, Managements were authorised to impose punishment
with the approval of District Inspectors of Schools in
matters pertaining to disciplinary action. This provision
was found to be inadequate in cases where the management
proposed to impose the punishment of dismissal, removal or
reduction in rank and so it was considered necessary that
this power should be exercised subject to the prior approval
of the Commission or the Selection Boards, as the case may
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be, which would function as an independent and impartial
body.
(3).Since the State Legislature was not in session and
immediate action was considered necessary with a view to
setting up the Commission and the Selection Boards, the
Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education Services Commission and
Selection Boards Ordinance, 1981 (Uttar Pradesh Ordinance
No. 8 of 1981) was promulgated by the Governor on July 10,
1980.
Section 21 of the aforesaid Act of 1982 puts
restrictions on dismissal, removal or reduction in rank of
teachers and the aforesaid provision has a vital bearing in
the present case, which is therefore quoted in extenso:
Section 21: Restriction on dismissal, removal or
reduction in rank of teachers: (1)No teacher specified in
the Schedule shall be dismissed or removed from service or
reduced in rank and neither his employment may be reduced
nor he may be given notice of removal from service by the
management unless prior approval of the Commission has been
obtained.
Provided that, where reference for prior approval of the
Inspector was made in accordance with sub-section (3) of
Section 16-G of the Intermediate Education Act, 1921, before
January 1, 1984, no prior approval of the Commission shall
be necessary and such reference shall be dealt with in
accordance with the provisions of that Act as if this Act
had not come into force. (2).No teacher other than a
teacher specified in the Schedule shall be dismissed or
removed from service or reduced in rank and neither his
emoluments may be reduced nor he may be given notice of
removal from service by the management unless prior approval
of the Board has been obtained.
Provided that where reference for prior approval of the
Inspector was made in accordance with sub-section (3) of
Section 16G of the Intermediate Education Act, 1921 before
the commencement of this sub-section, no prior approval of
the Board shall be necessary and such reference shall be
dealt with in accordance with the provisions of that Act as
if this Act had not come into force.
(3)Every order of dismissal, removal or reduction in
rank or removal from service or reduction in emoluments of a
teacher in contravention of the provisions of sub-section
(1) or sub-section (2) shall be void.
Date of enforcement Sub-section (1) and (3) of
Section 21 come into force on 1.1.1984 vide Noti.
No. 6895/XV-7-2(25)83 dated 27-12-83.
Section 30 of the said Act provides that nothing in the
Act shall apply to an institution established and
administered by a minority referred to in clause(1) of
Article 30 of the Constitution of India. Section 32, on
which Mr. Sharma, appearing for the respondents relied
upon, provides that those provisions of 1921 Act which are
not inconsistent with the provisions of the 1982 Act or the
rules or regulations made thereunder, the same shall
continue to be in force for the purpose of selection,
appointment, promotion, dismissal, removal, termination or
reduction in rank of a teacher. The aforesaid provision is
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extracted hereinbelow in extenso:
Section 32: Applicability of U.P.Act 11 of 1921.
The provisions of the Intermediate Education Act, 1921 and
the Regulations made thereunder in so far as they are not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Act or the rules or
regulations made thereunder shall continue to be in force
for the purpose of selection, appointment, promotion,
dismissal, removal, termination or reduction in rank of a
teacher.
The very objects and reasons of the aforesaid Act which
have been quoted earlier would indicate that the legislature
thought that the provisions contained in Section 16G(3)(a)
of 1921 Act were inadequate. Since power of approval had
been conferred upon a lower educational authority called the
District Inspector of Schools, it was, therefore, considered
that said power could be conferred upon a Commission which
could function as an independent and impartial body and
thus, the Secondary Education Services Commission came into
existence.
Article 30 of the Constitution confers right on a
minority community to establish and administer educational
institutions of their choice. The rights emanated from
Article 30 are the right to establish an institution and
right to administer it. The right to administer engrafted
under Article 30 would not however confer a right to
maladminister, as was held by this Court in the case of
Bihar State Madarasa Board vs. Madarasa Hanafia, AIR 1990
SC 695. Even though, Article 30 does not lay down any
limitation upon the right of a minority to administer its
educational institutions, but that right cannot be said to
be absolute, as was held by this Court in the case of St.
Xaviers College vs. State of Gujarat, A.I.R.1974 SC 1389
and further the rights must be subject to reasonable
regulations, as was held by this Court in All Saints College
vs. Govt. of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. 1980 SC 1042,
consistent with the national interest. Regulations,
therefore could always be made to maintain educational
character and standard of institution and for that purpose
to lay down qualifications or conditions of service, to
ensure orderly, efficient and sound administration and to
prevent mal-administration, to ensure efficiency and
discipline of the institution and for several other
objectives, which would be for the benefit of the
institution and which would not offend the right engrafted
under Article 30. It would always be permissible to frame
regulations so long as the regulations do not restrict the
right of administration of the minority community but
facilitate and ensure better and more effective exercise of
that right for the benefit of the institution. But such a
regulatory provision will cease to be regulation where power
conferred upon the appropriate authority is uncanalised or
unreasonable. Regulations also cannot go to the extent of
annihilating the right guaranteed by Article 30(1). The
Regulation made for achieving competence of teachers or
maintenance of discipline in the conditions of service or
providing for an appeal against the order of termination and
the like would not be held to be violative of the right to
administer enshrined under Article 30 of the Constitution
but nonetheless if the said provisions confer an authority
on a body which is uncanalised or unreasonable or there is
no guiding principle, then the same cannot be upheld. In
this view of the matter, the State could impose regulations
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even upon a minority institution, which would be in
consonance with Article 30(1) and such regulation must be
reasonable and must be regulative of the educational
character of the institution and conducive to making the
institution an effective vehicle of education for the
minority community. When any regulatory measure is
assailed, it would be obligatory for the Court to find out
as to whether the provision in fact secures a reasonable
balance between ensuring a standard of excellence of the
institution and of preserving the right of the minority to
administer the institution as a minority institution, as was
held by this Court in the case of St. Xaviers college vs.
State of Gujarat, A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1389, but such
regulatory provision if found to have offended the
provisions of Article 14, then the same has to be struck
down, as was indicated in the case of Frank Anthony
Employees Association vs. Union of India AIR 1987 SC 311.
Let us now notice some of the decisions of this Court.
In Kerala Education Bill, 1957, (case 1959 S.C.R., 995) this
Court had observed the Constitutional right to administer an
educational institution by the minority of their choice does
not necessarily militate against the claim of the State to
insist that it may prescribe reasonable regulations to
ensure the excellence of the institutions. In Sidhajbhai
Sabhai and Ors. vs. State of Bombay, 1963(3) S.C.R.837, a
Constitution Bench observed that Regulations made in the
true interests of efficiency of instructions, discipline,
health, sanitation, morality, public order and the like may
undoubtedly be imposed and such regulations are not
restrictions on the substance of the right which is
guaranteed; they secure the proper functioning of the
institution, in the matters educational. In State of Kerala
vs. Very Rev. Mother Provincial, 1971(1) S.C.R., 734, it
had been stated that the right of management in respect of a
minority institution cannot be taken away and vested with
somebody else, as that would be encroachment upon the
guaranteed right but that right is not an absolute one and
it is open to the State to regulate the syllabus of the
examination and discipline for the efficiency of the
institution and the right of the State to regulate the
education or educational standards and allied matters cannot
be denied. In St. Xaviers College Society & Anr. etc.
vs. State of Gujarat and Anr., 1975(1) S.C.R. 173, this
Court had observed: Regulations which would serve the
interest of the students, regulations which would serve the
interests of the teachers are of paramount importance in
good administration. Regulations in the interest of
efficiency of teachers, discipline and fairness in
administration are necessary for preserving harmony among
affiliated institutions. In Lilly Kurian vs. Sr. Lewine
and Ors., 1979(1) S.C.R. 820, the Court had observed:
Protection of the minorities is an article of faith in the
Constitution of India. The right to the administration of
institutions of minoritys choice enshrined in Article 30(1)
means management of affairs of the institution. This
right is, however, subject to the regulatory power of the
State. Article 30(1) is not a charter for
mal-administration; regulation, so that the right to
administer may be better exercised for the benefit of the
institution is permissible; but the moment one goes beyond
that and imposes, what is in truth, not a mere regulation
but an impairment of the right to administer, the Article
comes into play and the interference cannot be justified by
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pleading the interest of the general public; the interests
justifying interference can only be the interest of the
minority concerned." In Frank Anthony Public School
Employees Association vs. Union of India & Ors., 1987(1)
S.C.R. 238, the Court was examining the validity of Section
12 of Delhi School Education Act. Sections 8(1), 8(3), 8(4)
and 8(5) were held not to have encroached upon any right of
the minority to administer their educational institutions.
But Section 8(2) which stipulated that no employee of a
recognised private school shall be dismissed, removed or
reduced in rank nor his services will be terminated except
with the prior approval of the Director was held to have
interfered with the right of the minority, and therefore,
the said provision was held to be inapplicable to the
minority institutions. The aforesaid dictum, no doubt, was
in respect of an unaided minority institution. The
conspectus of the aforesaid decision would indicate that
there would be no bar for the Government to have regulatory
measures for ensuring a standard of excellence of the
institutions and such a measure would not in any way affect
the right of the minority to administer its institutions
engrafted in Article 30 of the Constitution. But
notwithstanding the same, if the so called regulatory
measures conferring power on any specified authority,
without indicating any guidelines for exercise of that
power, then exercise of such power by the appropriate
authority would offend the provisions of Article 14 and
would not be allowed to be retained, as that would amount to
an arbitrary inroad into the right of the minority, in the
matter of administering its institutions. In another words,
if the regulatory provision conferring power on the
educational authority is uncanalised and unguided and does
not indicate any guidelines under which the educational
authority could exercise the said power, then in such a
case, the conferment of a blanket power on the educational
authority would interfere with the right of control of the
employer-minority institution in the matter of exercising
disciplinary control over the employees of the institution.
So adjudged, we are unable to find any guideline in Section
16G(3)(a) of the Uttar Pradesh Intermediate Education Act to
be followed by the Inspector in the matter of approving or
disapproving the order of termination of a service of an
employee of the aided educational institution. We are
unable to accept the reasonings of the majority judgment of
the Full Bench of Allahabad High Court that Regulation 44
provides the guidelines. The said Regulation 44 merely
prescribes the period within which the Inspector or Regional
Inspectress is required to communicate his/her decision to
the Management and further in a case where all the papers
have not been received from the Management, the said
Inspector/Inspectress could call for the papers from the
Management. But that by no stretch of imagination can be
held to be providing the guidelines for exercise of power in
the matter of approval or disapproval of the order of
termination passed by the Management. Since no appropriate
guidelines have been provided for exercise of power under
Section 16G(3)(a) of the Act, it must be held that such an
uncanalised power on the Inspector or the Inspectress would
tantamount to an inroad into the power of disciplinary
control of the Managing Committee of the minority
institution over its employees and as such the said
provision would not apply to the minority institution, as
was held by this Court in Frank Anthonys case. In this
view of the matter, the majority view in the Full Bench
Judgment of Allahabad High Court must be held to be
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erroneous and cannot be sustained.
The second submission of Mr. Rao on the basis of the
coming into force of the Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education
(Services Selection Boards) Act, 1982 is also of great
force. The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the
aforesaid U.P. Act No. 5/82, unequivocally indicates that
the earlier provisions contained under Section 16G(3)(a) of
the Intermediate Education Act, 1921 were found to be
inadequate, where the Management proposed to impose the
punishment of dismissal, removal or reduction in rank. In
other words, the legislature thought that the power of
approval or disapproval to an order of punishment imposed by
the management should not be vested with a lower educational
authority like District Inspector of Schools but should be
vested with an independent Commission or Board which could
function as an independent and impartial body. With the
aforesaid objective in view, the legislature having enacted
the Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education (Services Selection
Boards) Act, 1982 and the Service Selection Board having
brought into existence in exercise of power under Section 3
of the aforesaid Act, the power of the Inspector/Inspectress
under Section 16G(3)(a) of the Intermediate Education Act,
1921 no longer could be exercised, as it would be
inconsistent with the provisions of U.P. Act No. 5/82 and
would frustrate the very object for which the legislation
has been enacted. Section 32 of the U.P. Act 5/82
provides:
Sec.32. Applicability of U.P.Act II of 1921.- The
provisions of the Intermediate Education Act, 1921 and the
Regulations made thereunder in so far as they are not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Act (or the rules
made thereunder) shall continue to be in force for the
purposes of selection, appointment, promotion, dismissal,
removal, termination or reduction in rank of a teacher.
MR. Sharma, appearing for the respondents, vehemently
urged before us that though for all other institutions, the
power of approval or disapproval against an order of
termination of an employee of an aided educational
institution had been vested with the selection board under
U.P. Act 5/82, but in respect of the minority institution,
it must be held to have been vested with the
Inspector/Inspectress and that power still vested with those
authorities, notwithstanding the coming into force the U.P.
Act 5/1982. We are unable to accept this submission, as in
our view, there cannot be any rational for conferring the
power of approval or disapproval of an order of termination
of an employee of a minority institution with the
Inspector/Inspectress and with all other institutions with
the Service Selection Board. Having conferred the power of
approval/disapproval with the Selection Board under U.P.
Act 5/82, the legislature made it crystal clear by inserting
Section 30 therein which states: Nothing in this Act shall
apply to an institution established and administered by a
minority referred to in Clause (1) of Article 30 of the
Constitution of India. The legislative intent is thus
apparent that the legislature never intended to subject the
order of termination of an employee of a minority
institution to the approval/disapproval of the Selection
Board. In this view of the matter, it is difficult for us
to hold that an order of termination of an employee of a
minority institution cannot be given effect to, unless
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approved by either the Inspector/Inspectress, as provided in
Section 16G(3)(a) or by the Selection Board, as provided
under U.P. Act 5/82. Under the provisions, as it stand,
the conclusion is irresistible that question of prior
approval of the competent authority in case of an order of
termination of an employee of a minority institution does
not arise. In the aforesaid premises, the majority view in
the Full Bench Judgment of Allahabad High Court is set aside
and this appeal is allowed. The writ petition filed, stands
dismissed.
J. (G.B. PATTANAIK)
J. (D.P. MOHAPATRA)
March 30, 2001.
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