Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WASIM BEG
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/03/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, D.P. WADHWA.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
Leave Granted.
The appellant was appointed as Assistant Manager in the
respondent-U.P. State Leather Development and Marketing
Corporation on 22.11.1974.
On 10th of January, 1978 the appellant was selected and
appointed as Divisional Manager in the respondent-
Corporation. The letter of appointment which is dated 10th
of January, 1978 states as follows :-
"...........
His appointment will be on
probation for a period of one year
which can be extended at the
discretion of the Managing
Director. His services are liable
to be terminated on one month’s
notice or salary in lieu thereof.
He will be governed by the Service
Rules of the Corporation........."
The appellant continued to work as Divisional Manager
of the respondent-Corporation till 21st of April, 1981 when
he was re-designated as Works Manager. He continued
thereafter in the said post. In April 1983 he was allowed to
cross the Efficiency Bar.
It is the contention of the respondent that initially
the work of the appellant was good but subsequently his work
and performance deteriorated as a result of which the
Corporation had to suffer losses. The appellant was given
several warnings but his performance did not improve. At the
meeting of the Board of Directors of the respondent-
Corporation held on 8th of February, 1985, the entire
service record of the appellant together with the report of
the Managing Director was placed before the Board. After
perusing the report and the service record of the appellant,
the Board took a decision to terminate the services of the
appellant. This decision was confirmed at the next meeting
of the Board of Directors held on 31st of March, 1985.
Thereupon, an order dated 31st of March, 1985 was
issued terminating the services of the appellant. The order
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stated that the appellant was discharged from the service of
the Corporation with immediate effect and that in lieu of
three months’ notice he will be paid three months pay. The
pay for three months was deposited in the account of the
appellant by the respondents.
From 31st of March, 1985 the appellant absented himself
from work and his whereabouts were not known. As the order
of termination could not be served on him, ultimately the
respondent-Corporation published a notice dated 12th of
April, 1985 in Hindi newspaper ’Amar Ujala’ published from
Agra to the effect that the services of the appellant had
been terminated as per Board’s Resolution No, 57.19 and the
registered order dated 31.3.1985 and that in lieu of three
months’ notice three months’ pay had been deposited in the
appellant’s personal savings account.
The appellant filed a writ petition against the order
of termination in the High Court of Allahabad on 18th the
April, 1985 being Writ Petition No. 5464 of 1985. In this
writ petition the High Court granted on 19th of April, 1985,
an interim stay of the order of termination. However, since
the appellant did not join service after the stay order, the
High Court vacated the stay order on 6th of November, 1985
observing that the appellant would be entitled to full
salary in case he succeeds.
The writ petition has been ultimately dismissed by the
High Court by its impugned order dated 29.4.1997. The High
Court has upheld the order of termination on the ground that
the appellant was a probationer on the date of termination
of his services n 31st of March, 1985. Hence termination by
three months’ notice was a valid termination.
The Service Rules which were in force at the time of
the appellant’s appointment as Divisional Manager were Model
Service Rules for State Enterprises which were adopted by
the respondent-Corporation by a resolution dated 30th of
July, 1976. The relevant Rule relating to appointment on
probation was as follows :-
"Any employee regularly appointed
for the first time or promoted to
any post in the corporation shall
be placed on probation for a period
of one year from the date of
joining the new post.
The performance of the employee in
the new post will be watched during
the probation and the appointing
authority will issue a certificate
of having satisfactorily completed
the probation at the end of the
period. The appointing authority
has discretion to appointing
authority has discretion to extend
the period of probation without
assigning any reason therefore."
The relevant Rule relating to confirmation was as
follows :-
"Confirmation:
An employee directly appointed or
promoted to any post in the
Corporation shall be deemed to have
become a confirmed employee in that
grade after he has successfully
completed the period of probation.
A confirmed employee may be
discharged from the service of the
corporation under the orders of the
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competent authority on three months
notice or by giving 3 months salary
in lieu thereof. The competent
authority for purposes of this Rule
will be the next higher level than
the appointing authority for that
category of post. The competent
authority on getting a
recommendation from the appointing
authority for the discharge of a
confirmed employee with reasons
therefore, may give an opportunity
to the employee concerned for
explaining himself before coming to
a decision.
This provision in the Rules should
obviously be sparingly and
discreetly used only top weed out
inefficient employees who is spite
of a number of warnings and
admonition have failed to correct
themselves or employees who are in
the opinion of the Board of
Directors or the Managing Directors
as the case may be not suitable for
continued employment of the
Corporation. The discharge shall be
only on grounds of continued
inefficiency or dishonestly,
serious dereliction of duty or
moral turpitude and is not to be
considered as a punishment under
the disciplinary
proceedings............"
A confirmed employee could be discharged by giving
three months’ notice or by giving three months salary in
lieu thereof under the circumstances set out in the Rule
relating to confirmation. However, in the case of he
discharge of an employee during the period of probation the
notice required is 30 days of notice in writing or a sum
equal to 30 days’ substantive pay plus dearness allowance.
The discharge of a confirmed employed is permissible on the
grounds set out in the said Rule after hearing the employee.
With effect from 1st of January, 1981, the U.P. State
Leather Development and Marketing Corporation Limited
General Rules came into force replacing the earlier Service
Rules. Under the new Rules of 1981 also there were Rules
which provided for probation and confirmation. The relevant
Rule relating to appointment on probation was as follows :-
"Any employee regularly appointed
for the first time or promoted to
any post in the Corporation shall
be placed on probation for a period
of one year from the date of
joining the new post. The
performance of the employee in the
new post will be watched during the
probation and the appointing
authority will issue a certificate
of having satisfactorily completed
the probation at the end of the
period. The appointing authority
has discretion to extend the period
of probation for two years without
assigning any reason therefor.
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After the expiry of three years’
probationary period if the employee
is not confirmed, he will have a
right to represent his case to the
Board whose decision shall be
final."
Discharge during the period of probation as under the
earlier Rules was by 30 days notice in writing or sum equal
to one month’s substantive pay plus dearness allowance. The
Rule relating to confirmation under these Rules was as
follows :-
"An employee directly appointed or
promoted to any post in the
Corporation shall be deemed to have
become a confirmed employee in that
grade after he has successfully
completed the period of probation.
A confirmed employee may be
discharged from the service of the
Corporation under the orders of the
competent authority on three
months’ notice or by giving 3
months salary in lieu thereof. The
competent authority for purposes of
this Rule will be next higher
level than the appointing authority
for that category of post. The
competent authority of getting a
recommendation from the appointing
authority for the discharge of a
confirmed employee with reasons
thereof, may give an opportunity to
the employee concerned for
explaining himself before coming to
a decision.
This provision in the Rule should
obviously be sparingly and
discreetly used only to weed out
inefficient employees who in spite
of a number of warnings and
admonition have failed to correct
themselves or employees who are in
the opinion of the Board of
Directors or the Managing
Directors, as the case may be, not
suitable for continued employment
of the Corporation.
The discharge shall be only on
grounds of continued inefficiency
or dishonesty, serious dereliction
of duty or conviction by a court
involving moral turpitude and is
not be considered as a punishment
under the disciplinary proceedings.
........................"
The appellant was appointed on probation as Divisional
Manager on 10.1.1978. The letter of appointment mentioned
that his probation was for a period of one year. under the
earlier Service Rules then in force, the respondents had the
discretion to extend the period of probation without
assigning any reason therefor. But there was no such order
extending the period of probation of he appellant. A s per
the Rule relating to probation, the appointing authority was
required to issue tot he appellant a certificate of having
satisfactorily completed probation at the end of the
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probationary period. No such certificate has been issued.
The Rule relating to Confirmation states that the employee
shall be deemed to have become confirmed employee after he
has successfully completed the period of probation. The
deemed confirmation depends on satisfactory completion of
probation. The High Court has taken the view that since no
certificate has been issued by the respondents at the end of
one year about the appellant having satisfactorily completed
his period of probation, he remained on probation for a
period of seven years till 1985 when his services were
terminated by the order of 31st of March, 1985.
We find from the affidavit in reply which was filed by
the respondents in the writ petition before the High Court,
that the respondents have nowhere contended that the
appellant was on probation or that his order of discharge is
on the basis that he was a probationer. On the contrary, in
paragraph 8 of the affidavit of Shri N.D. Singhal, Assistant
Secretary of the respondent-Corporation, which was filed
before the High Court, it is stated that an employee of the
Corporation first placed on probation and before the expiry
of the probationary period no notice or pay in lieu of
notice is required to be given (sic.). This (i.e. notice or
pay in lieu of notice) is required to be given only when the
services of the employee concerned are confirmed.
In the said affidavit the respondent-Corporation has
also reproduced extracts from the report submitted by the
Managing Director in the meeting of the Board of Directors
held on 8th of April, 1985. The Managing Director has stated
in the report, inter alia, as follows :-
"Shri Wasim Beg who had joined this
Corporation of 24.11.1974 as Asstt.
Manager and was promoted to the
post of Divisional Manager in the
scale of pay Rs. 800-1450 (revised
Rs. 1350-3100) per month w.e.f.
10.1.79 on a regular basis. He was
put in charge on regular
basis..................."
The date 10.1.1979, as the date from which the
appellant worked on regular basis, is significant because it
shows the end of the probationary period of one year from
the date of hi appointment on 10.1.1978. The respondent-
Corporation, therefore, did not contend before the High
Court, however, has held that the appellant was a
probationer on the basis of the Service Rule which was then
in force.
Whether an employee at the end of probationary period
automatically gets confirmation in the post or whether an
order of confirmation or any specific act on the part of the
employer confirming the employee is necessary, will depend
upon the provisions in the relevant Service Rules relating
to probation and confirmation. There are broadly two sets of
authorities of this Court dealing with this question. In
those cases where the Rules provide for a maximum period of
probation beyond which probation cannot be extended, this
Court had held that at the end of the maximum probationary
period there will be deemed confirmation of the employee
unless Rules provide to the contrary. This is the line of
cases starting with State of Punjab v. Dharam Singh (1968
[3] SCR 1), M.K. Agarwal v. Gurgaon Gramin Bank & Ors.
(1987) Supp. SCC 643), Om Prakash Maurya v. U.P. Cooperative
Sugar Factories Federation, Lucknow & Ors. (1986 Supp. SCC
95), State of Gujarat v. Akhilesh C. Bhargav & Ors. (1987
[4] SCC 482).
However, even when the Rules prescribe a maximum period
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of probation, if there is a further provision in the Rules
for continuation of such probation beyond the maximum
period, the courts have made an exception and said that
there will be no deemed confirmation in such cases and the
probation period will be deemed to be extended. In this
category of cases we can place Samsher Singh v. State of
Punjab & Anr. (1974 [2] SCC 831) which was the decision of a
Bench of seven judges where the principle of probation not
going beyond the maximum period fixed was reiterated but on
the basis of the Rules which were before the Court, this
Court said that the probation was deemed to have been
extended. A similar view was taken in the case of Municipal
Corporation, Raipur v. Ashok Kumar Misra (1991 [3] SCC 325).
In Satya Narayan Athya v. High Court of Madhya Pradesh &
Anr. (1996 [1] SCC 560), although the Rules prescribed that
the probationary period should not exceed two years, and an
order of confirmation was also necessary, the termination
order was issued within the extended period of probation.
Hence the termination was upheld.
The other line of cases deals with Rules where there is
no maximum period prescribed for probation and either there
is a Rule providing for extension of probation or there is a
Rule which requires a specific act, on the part of the
employer (either by issuing an order of confirmation or any
similar act) which would result in confirmation of the
employee. In these cases unless there is such an order of
confirmation, the period of probation would continue and
there would be no deemed confirmation at the end of the
prescribed probationary period. In this line of cases one
can put Sukhbans Singh v. State of Punjab (1963 [1] SCR
416), State of Uttar Pradesh v. Akbar Ali Khan (1966 [3] SCR
821), Shri Kedar Nath Bahl v. The State of Punjab & Ors.
(1974 [3] SCC 21), Dhanjibhai Ramjibhai v. State of Gujarat
(1985 [2] SCC 5) and Tarsem Lal Verma v. Union of India and
Ors. (1997 [9] SCC 243), Municipal Corporation, Raipur v.
Ashok Kumar Misra (supra) and State of Punjab v. Baldev
Singh Khosla (1996 [9] SCC 190). In the recent case of
Dayaram Dayal v. State of M.P. and Anr. (AIR 1997 SC 3269)
(to which one of us was a party) all these cases have been
analysed and it has been held that where the Rules provide
that the period of probation cannot be extended beyond the
maximum period there will be a deemed confirmation at the
end of the maximum probationary period unless there is
anything to the contrary in the Rules.
In the present case under the Service Rules in force at
the time when the appellant was appointed on probation,
there was no time-limit on the period up to which probation
can be extended. The appointing authority was required to
issue a certificate of the appellant having satisfactorily
completed the period of probation. The provision relating to
deemed confirmation would come into effect on his
satisfactorily completing probationary period. From the
affidavit filed by the respondent-Corporation as also
looking to the report which was submitted by the Managing
Director to the Board of Directors on 8.2.1985, it is clear
that the appellant was considered by the respondents as
having satisfactorily completed his period of probation on
9.1.1979, an d he was considered as a regular employee form
10.1.1979. In the affidavit of the respondent-Corporation
before the High Court also it has been very fairly stated
that the services of the appellant were satisfactory for the
first few years and his work was very good. It was only
thereafter that serious problems arose regarding his work
and the corporation suffered losses on that account. It is,
therefore, not possible to hold that the appellant remained
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a probationer till his discharge.
The respondents, however, contend that the services of
the appellant have been terminated validly in accordance
with the provisions relating to discharge of employees. On
31.3.1985 when the appellant was discharged the new Service
Rules framed by the respondent-Corporation were in force
which have been set out hereinabove. Under those Service
Rules a confirmed employee can be discharged form service on
three months’ notice or giving three months’ notice or
giving three months’ salary in lieu thereof. In the present
case, the fact that such three months’ notice or three
months’ salary in lieu thereof was given to the appellant
would also indicate that he was treated as a confirmed
employee. As a probationer he would have been entitled only
to 30 days’ notice. The relevant Service Rule set out
earlier further provides that discharge in the case of a
confirmed employee should be only on the grounds of
continued inefficiency or dishonesty, serious dereliction of
duty or conviction by a court. It should be used to weed out
inefficient employees who, in spite of a number of warnings,
have failed to correct themselves or employees who are not,
in the opinion of the Board, suitable for continued
employment. The report of the Managing Director which was
placed before the Board of Directors gives cogent reasons
for his discharge. His conduct in connection with several
contracts has been set out in detail in the report and the
loss occasioned thereby to the respondent-Corporation has
also been set out in detail. It was on the basis of this
report that the Board of Directors decided to terminate the
services of the appellant. The appellant had also been
earlier warned by the Managing Director. Therefore, there is
no breach of this part of the Rule relating to discharge.
However, there is an important safeguard in this Rule
relating to discharge of a confirmed employee. The competent
authority under the Rule is required to give an opportunity
to the employee concerned for explaining himself before
coming to a decision regarding his discharge. The Rule
provides that the competent authority on getting a
recommendation from the appointing authority for the
discharge of a confirmed employee with reasons thereof, may
give an opportunity to the employee concerned for explaining
himself before coming to a decision. Although the word used
is ’may’, in the context it has to be construed as ’shall’
so that the principles of natural justice are complied with
when the principles of natural justice are complied with
when the competent authority considers the question of
discharge of an employee for reasons which are set out in
the Rule. Even if one assumes that the earlier service Rules
apply to the appellant, the earlier service Rules are also
similar and they also require that the employee should be
heard before taking a decision on the discharge of an
employee. This was not done in the present case although
very serious allegations were levelled against the appellant
in the report of the Managing Director, and the appellant’s
conduct in respect of a number of contracts had been
seriously questioned in the report. Apart from anything
else, when the Rules specifically require that an
opportunity of explaining himself should be given to the
employee, the denial of such opportunity is a serious
violation of the principles of natural justice and vitiates
the decision. The order of termination, therefore, cannot
be sustained looking to the relevant Rules, and applying the
e principles of natural justice when the employee and is not
a probationer. The impugned order of termination is,
therefore, set aside.
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We are informed that the appellant would otherwise
retire on superannuation in June 1998. The respondent-
Corporation has also stated that the financial condition of
the Corporation is very poor as it has already incurred
accumulated losses of Rs.669-65 lakhs against the total
paid-up capital of Rs. 573.94 lakhs. The activities of the
Corporation have been partially closed down by Government
Order dated 20.1.1994 and the Corporation has already
resorted to the process of retrenchment of a large number of
employees. Looking to all the facts and circumstances
monetary compensation to the appellant for wrongful
termination would serve the ends of justice. In this
connection, the respondent- Corporation has pointed out that
on 19th of April, 1985, within a forthright of the order of
termination, the appellant moved the High Court obtained an
ad interim order of stay of the impugned order. Despite
obtaining a stay of the impugned order, the appellant did
not work in the respondent-Corporation. The respondents have
stated in their affidavit before the High Court that even
when the appellant came for work after the order of stay, he
did not do any work. He tried to influence the bulk
customers of the respondent-Corporation and insisted that
they break their dealings with the Corporation. The
respondents alleged t hat the appellant tried his best to
create a situation in which the respondent-Corporation would
be compelled to accept him or suffer huge losses. The
appellant was in a senior managerial position. The High
Court, relying upon this affidavit of the respondent as
also after noting that the appellant had not joined the
respondent-Corporation after obtaining the order of stay,
vacated the order of stay on 6.11.1985. The order vacating
stay states, inter Ala, as follows :-
"It has been alleged in paragraph
11 of the counter-affidavit that
the petitioner did not attend the
office soon after the passing of he
termination order dated 31st of
March, 1985. No re-joinder
affidavit has been filed. Taking
all the facts and circumstances
stated in the counter-affidavit, we
are of opinion that the present
case is not fit for granting any
injunction. In the event of success
of the writ petition, the
petitioner will be entitled to
salary for the period his services
remain terminated. We reject the
application and the interim order
of stay dated 19.4.1985 is vacated
."
The appellant has thus not worked in the respondent-
Corporation since the date of his termination. His salary
upto to October, 1985 has been paid to him as directed by
the High Court. The record which is before us does not show
what the appellant has earned from October, 1985 upto date.
But looking to the fact that he has not worked with the
respondent-Corporation and that they stay order which
enabled him to work in the Corporation had to be vacated on
account of the appellant’s conduct which shows that he was
not desirous of working in the respondent’s organisation, in
the totality of circumstances of the present case, a
monetary compesation of Rs. 2 lakhs would be adequate to
compensate the appellant. The respondents are, therefore,
directed to pay to the appellant the sum of Rs.2 lakhs
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within a period of three months from today.
The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs.