Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
H. SRINIVASAMURTHY
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/01/1976
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1104 1976 SCR (3) 256
1976 SCC (1) 817
ACT:
Constitution of India-Articles 14 and 16-Penalty-
Discrimination Civil Service-Departing from Administrative
Policy.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent entered service of the State of Mysore
in 1935 as instructor of Tailoring in the Department of
Public Instruction. In 1949 he went on deputation in the
Polytechnic Institute at Devangere. One K. N. Chetty who was
far junior to respondent was also sent on deputation to
another similar institution in 1949. K. N. Chetty was
absorbed from the date he went or deputation in the new post
but respondent was not so absorbed. In 1955, for no fault of
the respondent, Government passed orders reverting him to
his parent department. In 1956, respondent, was again posted
on deputation. The intervening period between his reversion
and re-posting was treated as leave. On reorganisation of
State respondent’s services were allotted to the new State
of Mysore. The respondent made several representations and
stated that he was discriminated against and treated
differently from K. N. Chetty who was junior to him in the
parent department. The Public Service Commission found that
respondent’s case was on all fours with that of Chetty and
that he deserved similar treatment. The Commission found
that the temporary reversion of the respondent lo his parent
department was not justified. The Government in 1964 ordered
the absorption of the respondent in the Department of
Technical Education from the date of the order subject to
the conditions that he would not be entitled to the benefit
of revision of scales of pay that had been effected in 1957
and 1961 and that he would not be given any more financial
benefit or revision of pay or addition increment for his
previous service.
The respondent filed a Writ Petition challenging these
condition and praying for a direction that he should be
absorbed in the Department of Technical Education from the
date of his initial appointment in 1949, and granted
consequential benefits or the revision of pay scales etc.
The appellant opposed the Writ Petition on the grounds that
the respondent had no legal right to be absorbed in the
Department of Technical, Education with effect from. a
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particular interior date or to be given the revised pay
scales applicable to those borne permanently in the service
of that department. Chetty’s case was sought to be
distinguished on the ground that he was absorbed in the year
1951 as against the respondent’s absorption in 1964 and that
there was a break in the service of the respondent.
The High Court allowed the Writ Petition and issued a
direction that absorption of the respondent in the
Department of Technical Education be given effect from 1949
when he initially assumed duty on deputation. The High Court
also declared that he would be-entitled to all consequential
benefits.
The appellant in an appeal by Special Leave relied on
the judgment of this Hon’ble Court in the case of K. V.
Rajalakshmiah Setty v. State of Mysore [1967] 2 S.C.I. 70.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: In the present case it appears that the State had
evolved a principle pursuant to which all the employees who
came on deputation from the departments to the Polytechnic
excepting the respondent, were absorbed permanently in the
Department of Technical Education with effect from the dates
on which they came on deputation. Even Chetty who was
admittedly junior to the respondent and was identically
situated was accorded the same treatment. It is an
undisputed fact that 6 other employees who were similarly
situated were absorbed from the date on which they initially
joined duty after deputation to the Polytechnic. [259 A-C,
260 D]
256
There was no justification whatever to depart from this
principle of policy in the case of the respondent. His
reversion was not ordered owing to any fault on his part.
The said reversion could not be treated as a break in
service since it was treated as leave, nor did it amount to
reduction in rank. 60 F-H]
The High Court was therefore, justified in granting the
relief, it did to the respondent. 261 Bl
’Rajalakshmiah Setty v. State of Mysore, [1967] 2
S.C.R. 70, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 722 of
1968.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 17th July, 1967 of the Mysore High Court in Writ
Petition No. 989 of 1965.
Narayan Nettar and K. R. Nagaraja for the Appellant.
Mrs. Shyamla Pappu and Vineet Kumar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-The circumstances leading to this appeal,
directed against a judgment of the High Court of Mysore, are
as follows:
The respondent herein entered the service of the
Princely State of Mysore in 1935 as Instructor of Tailoring
in the Department of Public Instructions. In 1949, three
occupational Institutes (Polytechnics) at Hassan, Devangere
and Chintamani were started in the State. The respondent was
sent on deputation to serve in the Polytechnic at Devangere
as Instructor in Tailoring and he joined the new post on
November 28, 1949. One Shri K. Narayanaswamy Chetty who was
also an Instructor in Tailoring in the Department of Public
instruction was also deputed to the occupational Institute
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at Hassan and joined duty there on December 1, 1949. This K.
N. Chetty was . far junior to the respondent in service.
Special officer-in-Charge of the three occupational
Institutes considered the names of the respondent and K. N.
Chetty for absorption as Instructors in Tailoring and
recommended for their absorption with effect from the
respective dates of their joining duty, after deputation, in
the Institutes. Accordingly K. N. Chetty was absorbed with
effect from December 1, 1949, but no order was passed in the
case of the respondent despite repeated representations made
by the latter.
In 1953, the then State of Mysore set up the Department
of Technical Education and the Polytechnic at Devangere
became part of that Department. The respondent continued tp
serve on deputation in that Department. In 1955, for no
fault of the respondent, the Government passed orders
reverting him to his parent Department. On June 11, 1956,
the respondent was again posted on deputation as- Instructor
in Tailoring in the Polytechnic at Bellary "on provisional
basis". The intervening period between his reversion and
reposting to the Polytechnic was treated as leave. On the
re-organization of States with effect from November 1, 1956,
his services were allotted to the new State of Mysore. The
respondent continued to make representations to the effect
that like other employees who were taken on deputation from
other Departments, he should also be absorbed in the
Department of Technical Education with effect from November
28, 1949, which was the date on which he initially came on
deputation.
257
His specific grievance was that in any case, he could not be
discriminated against and treated differently from K. N.
Chetty who was junior to him in the parent Department and
came on deputation to the Polytechnic establishment
subsequently. The State Government referred the respondent’s
case to the Public Service Commission who examined it and by
a communication, dated February 2, 1960, made these
recommendations in favour of the respondent:
"It is stated in the Government letter dated 26-
10-1959 that the Director who was the Unit officer for
both the departments ordered the transfer of Sri
Srinivasa Murthy who was fully qualified as Tailoring
Instructor in the Technical Education Department and
there was no need to classify the vacancy post to which
he was transferred under the then existing rules. Along
with him Sri K. Narayanaswamy C: Chetty who was his
junior and possessing similar qualifications was
transferred as Tailoring Instructor in the Technical
Education Department and was absorbed in the same
department by Government in consultation with the
Public Service Commission. The case of Sri
Srinivasamurthy is on all fours with that of Sri
Narayanaswamy Chetty and he is deserving of similar
treatment. D’
In view of the above, and since Sri Srinivasa
Murthy, who was fully qualified was transferred in 1949
by the Director and appointed as Tailoring Instructor
under the rules then in force, and as his reversion at
this distance of time for no fault of his would cause a
great hardship to him, the Commission are of the
opinion that he may be absorbed as Tailoring Instructor
from the date of his appointment as such as has been
ordered in the case of Sri K. Narayanaswamy Chetty."
In the opinion of the Commission, the temporary
reversion of the respondent to his parent department in
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1955-56, was not justified.
Ultimately, the Government by order, dated February 19,
1964, ordered the absorption of the respondent in the
Department of Technical Education in the grade of Rs. 150
with effect from the date of the order, in the vacancy in
which he was working, subject to these conditions.
(a) that he would not be entitled to the benefit
of revision of scales of pay that had been
effected in 1957 & 1961 by way of increments
or weightage benefit accruing . thereunder,
(b) that he would not be given any more financial
benefit or revision of pay or additional
increments for his previous service.
Against this order the respondent made representations
to the Government praying that his absorption should be
related back to 1949 and he be given the benefit of the
revisions of pay scale, including weightage benefit. The
Government did not accept the representation.
258
On April 21, 1965, the respondent filed a writ petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court, for
the issue of a writ of mandamus directing his absorption in
the Department of Technical Education from the date of his
initial appointment therein, namely, November 28, 1949, and
to give him benefits of the revisions of pay scales effected
in 1957 and 1961 and weightage benefits thereunder. The
order dated February 19, 1964, was impugned on the ground
that he had been invidiously discriminated against in the
matter of absorption and appointment, while his junior K.
Narayanaswamy Chetty, whose case was identical in all
respects, and six other officers who were similarly
situated, were absorbed in the Department of Technical
Education with effect from the initial date of joining duty
on deputation. It was contended that in making the impugned
order, contrary to the recommendations of the State Public
Service Commission, the State Government had acted
arbitrarily and in violation of Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution.
The petition was opposed by the appellant, who in its
counter affidavit. contended that the respondent had no
legal right to be absorbed in the service of the Department
of Technical Education from a particular anterior date, or
to be given the revised pay scales applicable to those borne
permanently in the service of that Department. It was
further contended that the case of the respondent did not
stand on the same footing as that of Narayanaswamy Chetty
because the order of Chetty’s absorption was passed in 1951
and that of the respondent’s absorption in 1964, and there
was a break in the service of the respondent in the
Department of Technical Education, in 1955-56. It was stated
that the absorption of the employees which came on :
deputation from a particular date, was a concession which
could not be claimed as of right, and consequently, a writ
of mandamus, as prayed for by the respondent, should not be
issued.
The High Court allowed the writ petition and issued a
direction that the absorption of the respondent in the
Department of Technical Education, be given effect from
November 28, 1949 when he initially resumed duty on
deputation to the Polytechnic at Devangere. The High Court
further declared that he will be entitled to all
consequential benefits from such absorption including the
benefit of revision of pay scales in the years 1957 and 1961
and also weightage benefits.
Hence this appeal by the State.
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Mr. Nettar appearing for the appellant contends that
this case is fully covered by this Court’s decision in K. V.
Rajalakshmiah Setty and Anr. v. State of Mysore and Anr. (1.
The point canvassed by the Counsel is, that the absorption
of K. N. Chetty and five others, with effect from particular
anterior dates, was not made in pursuance of any principle
of policy or statutory rule, but was done as a matter of
concession. It is urged that Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution cannot be invoked to enforce a mere concession.
Counsel has further made an attempt to show that the
respondent and K. N. Chetty were not similarly situated
because there was a break in the respondent’s service with
the Department of Technical Education.
(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 70.
259
As against this, Mrs. Shyamla Pappu submits that in
Rajalakshmiah Setty’s case (supra), the facts were entirely
different. It is emphasised that in the present case, seven
employees had come on deputation from other Departments to
the Polytechnics and all of them, excepting the respondent,
were absorbed permanently in the Department of Technical
Education with effect from the dates on which they came on
deputation. Even Narayanaswamy Chetty, who was admittedly
junior to the respondent, and was identically situated, was
accorded the same treatment. It is urged that this principle
of policy r was ignored in the case of the respondent, and
he was without reason singled out for unfair discriminatory
treatment. It is pointed out that his so-called "reversion"
to the parent Department in 1958 for a short period, was a
misnomer. It was not a reduction in rank, nor a break in the
continuity of his service. Moreover, it was, as the Public
Service Commission found, undeserved and could not, by any
stretch of reasoning, be considered a ground for meting out
discriminatory treatment to the respondent.
We find a good deal of force in the arguments of the
learned Counsel for the respondent.
Rajalakshmiah Setty v. State of Mysore (supra) is
clearly distinguishable from the facts of the present case.
In that case, the Government of the then State of Mysore, by
a notification dated December 12, 1949, directed that the
promotions of 63 petitioners therein, from the post of
Surveyors as Assistant Engineers were to take effect from
that date irrespective of the dates on which they were put
in charge of sub-divisions. But by a notification dated May
17, 1950, the Government showed a concession to a different
batch of 41 Surveyors, who had been placed in charge of
different sub-divisions between March 1944 and January 1946,
by promoting them as Assistant Engineers, with effect from
the dates of occurrence of vacancies, according to
seniority. In November 1958, another batch of 107 persons
were similarly promoted as Assistant Engineers with
retrospective effect from 1st November 1956, when the new
State of Mysore emerged under the States Reorganization Act.
The petitioners therein filed a writ petition praying for
the issue of mandamus directing the State to fix their
seniority, also, on the basis that they had become Assistant
Engineers from the dates on which the vacancies to which
they-had been posted had occurred. ’
The High Court dismissed petition. On appeal, this
Court ; held that the concession shown to the batch of 41
persons who had been appointed before the petitioners and to
the batch of 107 persons who had been appointed thereafter,
were mere ad hoc concessions and not something which they
could. claim as of right. It was observed that there was no
service rule which the State Government had transgressed,
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nor the State had evolved any principle to be followed in
respect of persons who were promoted to the rank of
Assistant Engineers from surveyors.
It may be noted that the grant of the relief prayed for
by the 63 petitioners, would have unsettled and caused
wholesale alterations of
260
the seniority list with regard to the entire cadre of
Engineers thus affecting persons who were not before the
Court and who would have been r condemned unheard. Further,
acceptance of the petitioners’ contentions would have
unsettled pre-Constitution matters, and it would have been
directly productive of results going against s. 115(7) of
the States Re-organization Act. Furthermore, the petitioners
in that case . claimed to be promoted with’ effect from past
dates. There was no , principle of policy or service rule on
the basis of which they could ‘ claim such promotions as of
right. ’ Lastly, the petitioners in that case were found
guilty of serious laches.
Such impediments in the way of the relief claimed by
the respondent, do not exist in the present case. It appears
to us that the acceptance of the respondent’s contentions in
the present case cannot lead to any untoward results such as
were apprehended in Rajalakshmiah’s case (supra). Indeed, it
has not been shown that the absorption of the respondent
with effect from November, 1949, would adversely affect even
Narayanaswamy Chetty, who was admittedly junior to him in
the parent Department.
On the‘ other hand, it is an undisputed fact that sit
other employees, who were similarly situated, were absorbed
from the dates on which they initially joined duty, after
deputation to the Polytechnics. It is not the case of the
appellant that this principle whereby the absorption in the
Department of Technical Education was related back to the
date on which a person initially came on deputation, was
ever departed from, excepting in the case of the respondent.
This being the case, the High Court was right in holding
that the State Government had evolved a principle "that if a
person was deputed to the Department of Technical Education
from another department and he stayed on in that other
department for a reasonable long time his absorption in that
department should be made to relate back to the date on
which he was initially sent". There was no justification
whatever to depart from this principle of policy in the case
of the respondent, who was, in all material respects, in the
same situation as K. N. Chetty. very rightly, the High Court
has held that his "impermissible reversion" for a short
while in 1955 to the parent department was no ground to hold
that he was not similarly situated as K. Nariayanaswamy
Chetty. This so-called reversion to the parent Department
for a short period- in 1955-56, could not by any reckoning,
be treated as a break in his service, this period having
been treated as leave. Nor did it amount u ’ to reduction in
rank. In any case, this ’reversion’ was not ordered owing to
any fault of the respondent. It is not the appellant’s case
" that the respondent’s work in the Department of Technical
Education
261
was found unsatisfactory or that he was not otherwise
suitable or qualified to hold the post of Tailoring
Instructor in that Department. That he was suitable to be
absorbed in that post, is manifest from the recommendation
of the Public Service Commission and is implicit in the
impugned order, itself.
For the reasons aforesaid, we are of opinion that in
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the special circumstances of this case, the High Court was
fully justified in granting the relief, it did, to the
respondent.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
P.H.P. Appeal dismissed.
262