Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 25
PETITIONER:
V.T. KHANZODE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RESERVE BANK OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1982
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KOSHAL, A.D.
CITATION:
1982 AIR 917 1982 SCR (3) 411
1982 SCC (2) 7 1982 SCALE (1)316
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1985 SC 774 (2)
RF 1986 SC1830 (1,8,9,13,37)
RF 1987 SC1399 (20)
R 1988 SC2073 (13)
ACT:
Seniority-Draft combined seniority list fixed by the
Administrative Circular No.8 dated January 7, 1978, Office
Order No. 679 dated April 27,1978 by the Reserve Bank,
whether violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution
of India.
Reserve Bank of India Act, (Act II) of 1974-Section
58(1) & (2), scope of-Whether the power to make regulations
emanate from section 58(1)-Competency of the Central Board
of Directors to make regulations and to issue administrative
circulars in respect of service conditions of staff.
Retrospectivity of the operation of the seniority
scheme, validity of.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Reserve Bank of India (Staff) Regulations,
1948 framed under section 58 of the Reserve Bank of India
Act 1934, the terms and conditions of service of the staff
(including officers) in the Reserve Bank were revised and
regulated from time to time.
Ever since the date of the Staff Regulations of 1948
and even prior thereto, there were "groups" constituted for
the different departments of the Reserve Bank, and officers
were required to exercise irrevocable options for service in
any particular Group. Those who had opted for a service in a
particular Group were to be normally eligible for promotion
in that Group only. The grouping was revised with effect
from April 1951 when employees were asked to exercise their
option with regard to the Group of their choice. In 1951,
the various departments of the Bank were re-classified into
three Groups, Group I, Group II and Group III. This system
of grouping continued until 1955, in which year the Bank
found it necessary to reorganise the Agricultural Credit
Department. Accordingly, the staff attached to the various
departments were regrouped into Groups I, II, III, and IV,
with effect from April 1, 1957. In each of these Groups,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 25
there are six grades of officers based on pay scales,
namely, Grades A, B, C, D, E and F, the lowest being Grade A
and the highest being Grade F. Each Group had its own
seniority list, that is to say, there were four separate
seniority lists, one for each group. The latest of such
lists prior to the draft combined seniority list of 1978 is
dated July 1,1976.
Earlier to the said list dated July 1, 1976, the
Reserve Bank had constituted a Cadre Review Committee in
1970 followed by another Committee. On the
412
basis of the report submitted by the Cadre Review Committee
in October 1972, the Bank issued an Administrative Circular
No. 15 dated May 22, 1974 specifying the decisions taken by
it in the light of the recommendations made by the
Committee. One such decision which the Bank took was to
prepare a common seniority list for and to provide for
inter-group mobility at the lowest level of officers in each
group, namely, Grade A officers, including those who were
promoted to Grade B on or after January 1, 1970. With regard
to higher grades (including officers in Grade B promoted
prior to January 1, 1970), the Bank decided to retain the
"group-wise seniority as at present". The inter-group
mobility in Grades C and D was to be introduced only to a
limited extent, namely, "on a swap basis". It was first to
be introduced in Grade C and thereafter to be extended "in
due course" to the officers in Grade D. The two higher
Grades, namely, Grades E and F were left untouched and no
intention was expressed in the above circular to introduce
either combined seniority or any scheme for inter-mobility
in these grades. In accordance with the decisions expressed
in the Administrative Circular dated May 22, 1974 the Bank
published separate seniority lists of officers in Grade B
and above for the years 1974, 1975 and 1976.
By the Administrative Circular No. 8 dated January 7,
1978, the Bank stated that it had decided to combine the
seniority of all officers on the basis of their total length
of service (including officiating service) in Group I
(Section A), Group II and Group III. The seniority of all
officers in each of the three Groups was to be combined with
effect from May 22, 1974 on the basis of their total length
of service, including officiating service, in the grade in
which they were then posted on a regular basis. The Circular
introduced combined seniority with retrospective effect from
May 22, 1974 (the date of Administration Circular No. 15) as
it was "fair and equitable to the officers as a class". The
effect of this decision is that the group-wise system of
seniority which was in existence for more than 27 years
stands substituted by a combined seniority for officers in
Group I (Grade A) and in Groups II and III with
retrospective effect. That has adversely affected the
existing seniority of officers, particularly of those in
Group I, who are now placed many places below their existing
position of seniority, some by several hundred places.
Hence these twenty five petitions under Art. 32 by the
petitioners, all of whom are officers in Group I, and who
are given their due seniority as on July 1, 1976.
Dismissing the petitions, the Court
^
HELD: 1:1. The Administrative Circular No. 8 dated 7-1-
1978, the Office Order No. 679 dated 22-4-1978 and the draft
combined seniority list are not violative of the rights of
the petitioners under Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. Whether there should be a combined seniority
in different cadres or groups is a matter of policy which
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 25
does not attract the applicability of the equality clause.
[442 D-F]
Reserve Bank of India v. N. C. Paliwal, [1977] 1 SCR
377, applied and followed.
413
1:2. The historical events make it clear that the
various Departments of the Reserve Bank were grouped and
regrouped from time to time. Such adjustments in the
administrative affairs of the Bank are a necessary sequel to
the growing demands of new situations which are bound to
arise in any developing economy. The group system has never
been a closed or static chapter and the officers of the
various groups were not kept, as it were, in quarantine. The
group system has been a continuous process of trial and
error and the impugned scheme of inter-group mobility has
emerged as the best solution of the experience of the past.
Combined seniority has been recommended by two special
committees, whose reports reflect the expertise and
objectivity which was brought to bear on their sensitive
task. [441 B-D]
1:3. Inter-group mobility and common seniority are a
safe and sound solution to the conflicting demands of
officers belonging to Group I on one hand and those of
Groups II and III on the other. Private interest of
employees of public undertakings cannot override public
interest and an effort has to be made to harmonize the two
considerations. No scheme governing service matter can be
fool-proof and some section or the other of employees is
bound to feel aggrieved on the score of its expectations
being falsified or remaining to be fulfilled. [441 D-E]
Arbitrariness, irrationality, perversity and mala fides
will of course render any scheme unconstitutional but the
fact that the scheme does not satisfy the expectations of
every employee is not evidence of these. Vested interests
are prone to hold on to their acquisitions and the Group I
officers have to surrender a part of the benefits which had
accrued to them in a water-tight system of grouping.
Combined seniority is indispensable for the smooth
functioning of the Bank and no organisation can function
smoothly if one section of its officers has an unfair
advantage over others in matters of promotional
opportunities. The reports of the Cadre Review Committee and
the Thareja Committee show that combined seniority has
emerged as the most acceptable solution as a matter of
administrative, historical and functional necessity.
Further, the conclusion to which these committees came were
considered by the Bank when Shri M. Narasimhan, later
India’s Executive Director in the World Bank, was the
Governor and it was after Dr. I.G. Patel, Formerly
Secretary, Economic Affairs, Govt. of India and Deputy
Administrator, United Nations Development Programme, took
over as Governor in December 1977 that the final decision
was taken by the Central Board to introduce inter-group
mobility and combined seniority. [441 E-H, 442 A-B]
2. As regards the retrospective operation given to
Scheme with effect from May 22, 1974, it does appear that
the Board has struck a via media between two extreme
contentions advanced by officers belonging to Group I and
those belonging to Groups II and III. But that was
inevitable and it was the best solution in the peculiar
circumstances of the case. In order to rectify the
imbalances and anomalies caused by the compartmentalised and
group-wise seniority, it was necessary to give retrospective
effect to the Combined Seniority List. Officers belonging to
Group I urged that the Scheme should be brought into effect
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 25
from January 1, 1976, while those belonging to Groups II and
III wanted the Scheme to be brought into effect from January
1, 1970. The Central Board struck a balance by choosing the
date May 22, 1974, because that was the date on which
414
the decision in regard to combining the seniority
retrospectively with effect from January 1, 1970 in regard
to Grade ’A’ and part of Grade ’B’ officers was announced.
It was, again, on that date that the Bank had announced that
a similar decision in regard to the remaining grades of
officers was under its consideration. Thus, at least on May
22, 1974 it was known to officers of all grades that a
combined seniority list was due to be brought into force. If
a certain section officers succeeded in obtaining
promotional benefits thereafter, the imbalance introduced
thereby in the services of the Bank and the consequent
dissatisfaction had to be rectified. That could only be done
by not recognising the accelerated promotions obtained in
the intervening period by a certain class of officers. Any
scheme of seniority is bound to produce isolated aberrations
and that fact cannot justify the argument that the entire
scheme is for that reason violative of the guarantee of
equality. [442 F-H, 443 A-D]
3:1. The power to frame service conditions is not
derived from clause (j) of section 58(2) of the Reserve Bank
of India Act, 1934. Section 58(2) (j) refers to staff funds
and superannuation funds and it cannot comprise service
conditions. Clause (j) cannot be split up to read: "the
constitution and management of staff: and superannuation
funds for the officers and servants of the Bank". It hardly
makes any sense that way. What the clause means is: "the
constitution and management of staff and superannuation
funds for the officers and servants of the Bank". An
important subject like the service conditions of the staff
could not have been provided for in such a dubious and
indirect manner. Nor indeed, could it have been described as
"constitution and management of staff". A rule of seniority
cannot properly fall under such a head. [426 A-D]
Reserve Bank Employees Association v. Union of India,
1980 (2) S.L.R. 167 approved.
3:2. Where a specific power is conferred without
prejudice to the generality of a power already conferred,
the specific power is only illustrative and cannot restrict
to width of the general power. Therefore, the ambit of the
general power conferred by sub-section (1) cannot be
attenuated by limiting it to matters specified in sub-
section (2) of section 58, the provisions whereof are not
exhaustive of the power of the Central Board to make
regulations. [426 D-F]
Emperor v. Shibnath Banerjee, 72 I.A. 241; Omparkash v.
Union of India, A.I.R. 1971 SC 771, 773, 774, referred to.
4:1. The doctrine of ultra vires in relation to the
powers of a statutory corporation has to be understood
reasonably and so understood, "whatever may fairly be
regarded as incidental to, or consequential upon, those
things which the Legislature has authorised ought not
(unless expressly prohibited) to be held by judicial
construction to be ultra vires". The Central Board of
Directors of the Reserve Bank has the power to make service
regulations under section 58(1) of the Act. The Board is
vested with power to make regulations in order to provide
for all matters for which provision is necessary or
convenient for the
415
purpose of giving effect to the provisions of the Act and it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 25
is not only convenient but manifestly necessary to provide
for the service conditions of the Bank’s staff in order to
give effect to the provisions of the Act. It cannot be
denied that the power to provide for service conditions of
the staff is at least incidental to the obligation to carry
out the purposes for which Bank was constituted. [426 G-H,
427 A-D]
Armour v. Liverpool Corporation, 1939 (1) Ch.D. 422,
434, 435; Attorney General v. Great Eastern Ry. Co., 5
Appeal Cases 473, quoted with approval.
4:2. There is no doubt that a statutory corporation can
do only such acts as are authorised by the statute creating
it and that, the powers of such a corporation cannot extend
beyond what the statute provides expressly or by necessary
implication. If an act is neither expressly or impliedly
authorised by the statute which creates the corporation, it
must be taken to be prohibited. But, section 58(1) being in
the nature of an enabling provision under which the Central
Board "may" make regulations in order to provide for all
matters for which it is necessary or convenient to make
provisions for the purposes of giving effect to the
provisions of the Act, the Central Board has the power to
frame regulation relating to the conditions of service of
the Bank’s staff. If it has that power, it may exercise it
in accordance with section 58(1) or by acting appropriately
in the exercise of its general power of administration and
superintendence. [428 E-F, G-H, 429A]
4:3. By section 7(2) of the Reserve Bank of India Act,
the general superintendence and direction of the affairs and
business of the Bank are entrusted to the Central Board of
Directors, which is empowered to exercise all powers and do
all acts and things which may be exercised or done by the
Bank. Matters relating to the service conditions of the
staff are, pre-eminently, matters which relate to the
affairs of the Bank. It would therefore be wrong to deny to
the Central Board the power to issue administrative
directions or circulars regulating the conditions of service
of the Bank’s staff. To read into the provisions of section
58 (1) a prohibition against the issuance of such
administrative directions or circulars is patently to ignore
the scope of wholesome powers conferred upon the Central
Board of Directors by section 7 (2) of the Act. While
issuing the administrative circular governing the staff’s
conditions of service, the Central Board of Directors has
neither violated any statutory injunction nor indeed has it
exercised a power which is not conferred upon it by the
statute. The circular is strictly within the confines of
section 7 (2). [429 A-E,G-H, 430 A]
Sukhdev Singh v. Bhagatram, [1975] 3 SCR 619,
reiterated.
4:4. So long as staff regulations are not framed under
section 58 (1), it is open to the Central Board to issue
administrative circulars regulating the service conditions
of the staff, in the exercise of power conferred by section
7 (2) of the Act. The power to frame rules or regulations
does not necessarily imply that no action can be taken
administratively in regard to a subject-matter on which a
rule or regulation can be framed, until it is so framed. The
only precaution to observe in the cases of statutory
corporations is that they must act within the framework of
their charter. Its express provisions and necessary
implications must at all events be observed scrupulously.
[430 A-B, 431 A-B]
416
T. Cajee v. U. Jormanik Siom, [1961] 1 SCR 750; B.N.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 25
Nagarajan v. State of Mysore, [1966] 3 SCR 682, explained
and applied.
4:5. Any action taken by the Central Board of Directors
under section 7 (2) is subject to the directions given by
the Central Government under section 7(1), just as any
regulation framed by it under section 58 is subject to the
previous sanction of the Central Government. In either case,
the Central Board has to abide by the decision or directions
of the Central Government. There can, therefore; be no
apprehension that, by taking action under section 7 (2), the
Central Board may circumvent the condition on which the
power conferred by section 58 can be exercised by it. The
overall authority of the Central Government acts as a
restraining influence on any action taken by the Central
Board, whether it acts under one or the other provision of
the Act. [431 B-D]
5:1. A consideration of the entire material on the
subject, including the correspondence that has transpired
between the Reserve Bank and the Central Government and in
particular the Memorandum of January 21, 1949, makes it
clear that the Staff Regulations of 1948 were not framed in
the exercise of power conferred by section 58 of the Act and
that they were not made with the previous sanction of the
Central Government. Whereas section 58 (1) envisages the
making of regulations "with the previous sanction of the
Central Government", the Regulations of 1948 do not purport
to have been made with such sanction. Indeed, in so far as
the ex facie aspect of the matter is concerned, the
Regulations of 1948 have not been made under section 58 at
all. The statement contained in paragraph 9 of the counter
affidavit of the Deputy Manager dated March 30, 1980 that
the Memorandum of January 21, 1949 contains a "factual
mistake" to the effect that the Staff Regulations (which
would include the Regulations of 1948) were made with the
approval of the Central Government, correctly clarifies the
position. It is one thing to infer that the Regulations had
the approval of the Central Government since no objection
was raised by it to the making of the Regulations and quite
another that they were made with its previous sanction. [431
F-H, 433 B-D]
Reserve Bank Employees Association v. Union of India,
1980 (2) S.L.R. 167 (Cal.); Emperor v. Shibnath Barerjee; 72
I.A. 241; Om Parkash v. Union of India A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 771,
773, 774; Reserve Bank of India v. N.C. Paliwal,[1977] 1 SCR
377; Bimal Kumar Shome v. P.C. Bhattacharya, Misc. Petition
No. 206 of 1967 decided on August 6, 1969 (Bombay H.C.) R.M.
Joshi v. The Reserve Bank of India, Civil Writ No. 876 of
1974 decided on March 19, 1980 by a Full Bench (Delhi H.C.),
approved
5:2. Since the Staff Regulations of 1948 are in the
nature of administrative directions, it was competent to the
Central Board to alter or amend them by an administrative
circular. No lack of statutory powers is involved in that
process. Under section 7(2), the Central Board has the power
to provide for service conditions of the Bank’s staff by
administration circulars, so long as they do not impinge
upon any Regulations made under section 58 of the Act. [433
F-G, 434 A]
417
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 4158-4182 of
1978.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 25
(Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)
F.S. Nariman, B.R. Agarwala and P.G. Gokhale for the
Petitioners.
B. Sen, I.N. Shroff and H.S. Parihar for Respondents
Nos. 1 & 2.
R.K. Garg, S. Balakrishnan and M.K.D. Namboodiry for
Respondent No. 3.
P.R. Mridul, Mrs. Shobha Dikshit and Mrs. Urmila Kapoor
for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. These are 25 petitions under Article
32 of the Constitution of India challenging the decision of
the Reserve Bank of India as regards the introduction of
common seniority and inter-group mobility amongst different
grades of officers belonging to Group I (Section A), Group
II and Group III, with retrospective effect from May 22,
1974. That decision or order is contained in Administration
Circular No. 8 dated January 7, 1978 as also in Office Order
No. 679 dated April 27, 1978 and has been acted upon in the
draft combined seniority list of officers in Grade ’B’
(appointed as such prior to January 1, 1970) and in Grades
’C’, ’D’, ’E’ and ’F’ The contention of the petitioners is
that the aforesaid circular, office order and combined
seniority list are violative of their fundamental rights
under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution, and are also
ultra vires the power, jurisdiction and competence of the
Reserve Bank of India, being without the authority of law
and in contravention of the provisions of the Reserve Bank
of India Act, 1934.
The facts leading upon the impugned decision dated
January 7, 1978, the office order dated April 27, 1978, and
the draft combined seniority list are as follows: The
Reserve Bank of India (Respondent No. 1) was established
under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, hereinafter
referred to as "the Act". Under the Reserve Bank of India
(Staff) Regulations, 1948 framed under section 58 of the
Act, the terms and conditions of service of the staff
(including officers) of the respondent Bank were
418
revised and regulated. These Regulations were amended from
time to time. Provisions regarding record of service,
seniority and promotion are contained in Regulations 27 to
30 (Chapter III), which read thus:
"27. Record of Service: A record of service shall be
maintained by the Bank in respect of each employee
at such place or places and shall be kept in such
form and shall contain such information as may be
specified from time to time by the Chief Manager.
28. Seniority: An employee confirmed in the Bank’s
service shall ordinarily rank for seniority in his
grade according to his date of confirmation in the
grade and an employee on probation shall
ordinarily rank for seniority among the employees
selected along with him in the same batch
according to the ranking assigned to him at the
time of selection.
29. Promotion: All appointments and promotions shall
be made at the discretion of the Bank and
notwithstanding his seniority in a grade, no
employee shall have a right to be appointed or
promoted to any particular post or grade.
30. (1) An employee transferred from one appointment
to another or confirmed in a grade or
appointment higher than his substantive grade
or appointment, shall be liable to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 25
reverted with out notice at any time within
one year of such transfer or confirmation.
(2) An employee who has been appointed to
officiate in a higher grade or appointment,
or whose confirmation in a higher grade or
appointment is subject to his undergoing
probation for any specified period or
otherwise, shall be liable to be reverted
without notice at any time when he is so
officiating or undergoing probation.
(3) Nothing in sub-regulations (1) and (2) shall
affect the provisions of Regulation 47."
419
Ever since the date of the Staff Regulations of 1948
and even prior thereto, there were "groups" constituted for
the different departments of the Reserve Bank, and officers
were required to exercise irrevocable options for service in
any particular Group. Those who had opted for a service in a
particular Group were to be normally eligible for promotion
in that Group only. The grouping was revised with effect
from April, 1951 when employees were asked to exercise their
option with regard to the Group of their choice. In 1951,
the various departments of the Bank were re-classified into
three Groups, Group I, Group II and Group III. This system
of grouping continued until 1955, in which year the Bank
found it necessary to reorganise the Agricultural Credit
Department. Accordingly, the staff attached to the various
departments were regrouped into Groups I, II, III and IV,
with effect from April 1, 1957. In each of these Groups,
there are six grades of officers based on pay scales,
namely, Grades A, B, C, D, E and F, the lowest being Grade A
and the highest being Grade F. Each Group had its own
seniority List, that is to say, there were four separate
seniority lists, one for each group. The latest of such
lists, prior to the impugned combined seniority list, is
dated July 1, 1976.
The Reserve Bank had constituted a Cadre Review
Committee in 1970, comprising Shri Justice J.L. Nain, then a
sitting Judge of the Bombay High Court, Shri V. Isvaran,
I.C.S. (Retd.) and Prof. N.S. Ramaswamy, a Management
Expert. The Committee submitted a report in October 1972, on
the basis of which the Bank issued Administration Circular
No. 15, dated May 22, 1974, specifying the decisions taken
by it in the light of the recommendations made by the
Committee. One such decision which the Bank took was to
prepare a common seniority list for and to provide for inter
group mobility at the lowest level officers in each group,
namely, Grade A officers, including those who were promoted
to Grade B on or after January 1, 1970. With regard to
higher grades (including officers in Grade promoted prior to
January 1, 1970), the Bank decided to retain the "group-wise
seniority as at present". The inter-group mobility in Grades
C and D was to be introduced only to a limited extent,
namely, "on a swap basis": It was first to be introduced in
Grade C and thereafter to be extended "in due course" to the
officers in Grade D. The two higher Grades viz. Grades E and
F were left untouched and no intention was expressed in the
above
420
circular to introduce either combined seniority or any
scheme for inter-mobility in these grades. In accordance
with the decisions expressed in the aforesaid circular dated
May 22, 1974, the Bank published separate seniority lists of
officers in Grade B and above for the years 1974, 1975 and
1976. The petitioners, all of whom are officers in Group I,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 25
were given their due seniority as of July 1, 1976.
By the impugned Administration Circular No. 8, dated
January 7, 1978, the Bank stated that it had decided to
combine the seniority of all officers on the basis of their
total length of service including officiating service) in
Group I (Section A), Group II and Group III. The seniority
of all officers in each of the three Groups was to be
combined with effect from May 22, 1974 on the basis of their
total length of service, including officiating service, in
the grade in which they were then posted on a regular basis.
The Circular introduced combined seniority with
retrospective effect from May 22, 1974 (the date of
Administration Circular No. 15) as it was "fair and
equitable to the officers as a class".
Briefly stated, the effect of this decisions is that
the group-wise system of seniority which was in existence
for more than 27 years stands substituted by a combined
seniority for officers in Group I (Grade A) and in Groups II
and III with retrospective effect. That has adversely
affected the existing seniority of officers, particularly of
those in Group I, who are now placed many places below their
existing position of seniority, some by several hundred
places.
According to the petitioners, the Reserve Bank has no
power, competency or jurisdiction to introduce the impugned
scheme which discriminates against officers in higher posts,
adversely affecting their vested and existing rights of
seniority. The scheme, according to them, is without any
rational and far from furthering the efficient functioning
of the Bank, it will affect it adversely by compelling
officers to leave positions in which they had acquired long
and valuable experience and work in posts for which they
possess no expertise. For example, for the Department of
Banking Operations and Development (in Group II), the
emphasis was laid on the commercial banking experience of
officers whereas, for recruitment and selection in the
Agricultural Credit Department (in Group III), the emphasis
was on experience in co-operation and agricultural finance.
That is why the Bank had laid the pre-condition that the
421
selected officer should give a specific and irrevocable
undertaking to serve in the Group for which he was selected.
Another grievance of the petitioners is that although the
Bank has stated in paragraph 9.2.1 of the impugned Circular
that the seniority of officers will be combined on the basis
of their total length of service, the seniority list has in
fact, been prepared in a very arbitrary and iniquitous
manner. In a large number of cases, it is alleged, the
actual service rendered by the officers concerned has been
arbitrarily reduced and adjusted in the length of service of
other officers, and the latter have been nationally treated
as officiating in higher grades from dates much prior to
their actual promotions to those grades. In some cases, on
the other hand, officiation in higher posts has been wholly
ignored. This has generally resulted in accelerated and
discriminatory benefit being conferred upon officers mostly
belonging to Groups II and III, vis-a-vis the petitioners
and the other officers in Group 1. The petitioners apprehend
that a large number of officers who have been promoted since
January 1, 1976 against normal vacancies in their own
departments on the basis of their experience and expertise
of the relative work are likely to be reverted and replaced
by officers from other groups, mostly from Group III, who
were selected for the specific job requirements of that
group and who have no experience of the work done in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 25
Group 1 departments. The petitioners also challenge the
retrospective effect given to the impugned circular from May
22, 1974 as irrational and arbitrary. Further, according to
them, the said circular dated January 7, 1978, the Office
Order dated April 27, 1978 and the combined seniority list
are violative of the Reserve Bank (Staff) Regulations. 1948.
In reply to the writ petition, a counter-affidavit has
ceen filed on behalf of the Reserve Bank by Shri S. L.
Jathar, Deputy Manager in the Department of Administration
and Personnel, Central Office, Bombay. The case of the Bank,
as disclosed in that affidavit is as follows: The Reserve
Bank of India (Staff) Regulations, 1948, are not statutory
in character, not having been framed under section 58 of the
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934. The said Staff Regulations
did not provide for the division of the staff of the Bank
into different groups but only categorised them as Officers,
Personal Assistants, etc. In view of the growing need for
specialisation in departments handling research work and
developmental activities, a functional segregation of
departments into four groups, with group-wise
422
seniority for Officers, was introduced in the year 1951.
Appendix XII to the Report of the ’Reserve Bank of India
Cadre Review Committee’, which refers to the grouping of the
departments from time to time, shows that the groupings were
not static and fixed but were changed as and when necessary.
Group I was composed of General Departments dealing with the
day-to-day operational functions of the Bank including
accounts and organisational mattres, Group II of Departments
dealing with regulatory and inspection functions over the
money market; Group III of Departments dealing with the Co-
operatives and agricultural Credit institutions; and Group
IV of Research Departments. Each Department had a separate
line of seniority and although the Bank had the right under
the Staff Regulations to post any employee to any group,
each group operated as an independent seniority unit and the
employees were eligible for promotion within their group
only. It was, however, noticed that the group system had
resulted in glaring inequalities in promotional
opportunities in the various Departments, because of the
accelerated pace of expansion of Departments in some of the
Groups wherein relatively junior employees were able to
secure earlier promotions and confirmations. So far as the
non-officers staff was concerned, the Bank took several
steps from time to time to equalise their chances of
promotion. Finally, in pursuance of an agreement with the
All-India Reserve Bank Employees’ Association, which is a
representative Association of Class III employees of the
Bank, the Bank introduced a combined scheme for clerical
staff in May 1972 under which, the separate seniority lists
of clerical employees in Class III were merged into one list
with effect from 7th May, 1972, irrespective of their
respective groups. The validity of that Scheme was
challenged in several High Courts and the matter came up on
appeal to this Court from a decision of the Delhi High Court
which has struck down the Scheme. This Court, in Reserve
Bank of India v. N.C. Paliwal(1) upheld the Scheme. The
’Cadre Review Committee’ whose report was received by the
Bank on October 11, 1972 recommended, broadly, the gradual
introduction of inter-mobility of officers in different
groups and the framing of a common seniority list, except
for officers in specialised groups like Economists,
statisticians, Lawyers and Engineers. According to the
Committee, the most rational basis for drawing up a common
seniority list was to go by the date of entry of each
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 25
officer in a grade in a continuous officiating capacity. The
Bank announced its decision as regards the Committee’s
recommendations, by the Administra-
423
tive Circular dated May 22, 1974. In December 1975, the Bank
appointed a Departmental Committee under Shri C.L. Thareja,
the then Chief Manager of the Bank, to work out the
modalities of integration of the group-wise seniority lists
of officers in the higher grades which had not yet been
integrated. That Committee submitted its report on December
15, 1976. It unanimously recommended simultaneous
introduction of combined to seniority for all grades but,
its members could not agree on the date to be adopted for
integration of the group-wise seniority lists. The Chairman
and one member favoured January 1, 1976 as the date of
integration while the remaining two members favoured January
1, 1970. A Committee of the Central Board of the Bank
decided to appoint May, 22 1974 as the date for integration
as a via media and also because, it was on that date that
the Bank had announced to its officers its decision on
combined seniority, mobility and interchangeability.
Fixation of January 1, 1970 as the date for integration
would have adversely affected the interests of Group 1
officers while the other date January 1, 1976, would have
adversely affected the interests of officers in other
groups.
That is the answer made by the Reserve Bank to the
petition. Originally, the writ petition was filed against
two respondents only; (1) The Reserve Bank of India and (2)
the Chief Manager, Reserve Bank of India, Department of
Administration & Personnel, Central Office, Bombay. The
petitioners did not implead to the petition any of the
officers belonging to the other groups who are likely to be
affected if the relief sought by the petitioners is granted.
Later, by an order dated July 24, 1978, respondents 3 and 4
were allowed to join in the petition on their own
application. Respondent 3, Shri M.P. Saxena, was then the
Deputy Chief Officer, Department of Banking Operations and
Development, New Delhi, while respondent 4, Shri S. Acharya,
was Deputy Chief Officer, Agricultural Credit Department,
Chandigarh.
Respondent 3, whose counter-affidavit has been adopted
by respondent 4, has raised a preliminary objection to the
maintainability of the writ petition on the ground that
hundreds of officers similarly situated who are all
specifically identifiable and who would be prejudicially
affected if the prayers in the writ petitions are granted,
have not been impleaded as respondents. According to him,
this is a case of a few privileged persons trying to retain
their undue privileges at the cost of a scheme introduced to
improve the
424
operational efficiency of the Institution and for the common
good of the officers as a class. Respondent 3 has also
raised the objection that no writ petition can lie under
article 32 to enforce or challenge service conditions which
are purely contractual.
The contentions raised by respondent 3 in his counter-
affidavit may be summed up thus: Groupings and re-groupings
of departments have been undertaken by the Reserve Bank as
and when the need arose in the context of changing
requirements, and all such groupings and regroupings have
been done as a result of administrative decisions and given
effect to through appropriate Administration Circulars.
While the expedient of group-wise promotions based on group-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 25
wise seniority lists served the immediate convenience over a
period of time, this artificial segregation resulted in
compartmentalised approach to questions of policy, impairing
thereby the overall efficiency of the institution as a
whole. Further, it also led to other anomalies and
imbalances, more particularly in promotional opportunities
of the staff attached to different groups. In some groups,
expansion was quicker and greater than in others. It is in
order to meet this situation that several measures were
initiated by the Bank and by the Associations of employees
of various categories. Since these measures did not meet the
situation adequately, the Bank initiated a dialogue with the
respective Associations for introducing a combined seniority
for the various grades in different groups. For officers at
the base level, namely, ’A’ Grade (direct recruits), the
Bank had maintained a common list of seniority in place of
group-wise lists since 1968. Thereafter, groupings and
regroupings have been a continuous process to meet the needs
of the changing situations, and the present scheme of
combined seniority which is one such, has come about as a
matter of administrative, and historical and functional
necessity. The implementation of the scheme of inter-group
mobility is being stalled by the Bank’s internal
administration, which was controlled solely by a small
section of officers drawn from Group-I, which all along had
unfair advantage of accelerated promotions as compared with
officers in Groups II and III. Thus, the petitioners’ plea
is an attempt to perpetuate the unfair and unequal
privileges which they had enjoyed over the years without any
justification and with detriment to Bank’s interests a fact
which has been recognised by an impartial tribunal like the
Cadre Review Committee. The Staff Regulations of 1948 are in
the nature of standardised contractual conditions of
service. They were not framed under section 58 of the Act
and
425
therefore, it is competent to the Bank to alter them by
administrative circulars.
On these pleadings, the three main questions which
arise for our consideration are, firstly, whether the
Reserve Bank of India (Staff) Regulations, 1948 are
statutory in character; secondly, whether it is competent to
the Bank to provide for conditions of service of its staff
by administrative circulars; and, thirdly, whether the
impugned circular and seniority list offend against the
provisions of articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The
contention of the petitioner is that the Regulations were
framed under section 58 of the Reserve Bank of India Act,
1934; that they cannot be altered by administrative
circulars; that conditions of service cannot be framed by
administrative circulars but must be framed by Regulations
made under section 58 of the Act; and that, the impugned
circular and seniority list violate their right to equal
treatment in the matter of their service conditions and
career. The Reserve Bank and the contesting respondents have
joined issue with the petitioners on all these questions.
Turning to the first question, section 58(1) of the
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 provides that:
"The Central Board may, with the previous sanction
of the Central Government, make regulations consistent
with this Act to provide for all matter for which
provision is necessary or convenient for the purpose of
giving effect to the provisions of this Act."
Sub-section (2) of section 58 provides that in particular
and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 25
provision, such regulations may provide for all or any of
the matters mentioned in the various clauses of that sub-
section. Clause (j) refers to "the constitution and
management of staff and supernnuation funds for the officers
and servants of the Bank", while clause (r) refers to the
subject: "generally, for the efficient conduct of the
business of the Bank". Sub-sections (3) and (4) were
inserted in section 58 by Act 51 of 1974. By sub-section
(3), any regulation made under section 58 shall have effect
from such earlier or later date as may be specified in it.
Sub-section (4) requires that every Regulation shall, as
soon as may be after it is made by the Central Board, be
forwarded to the Central Government which, in turn, shall
cause a copy of the same to be laid before each House of
Parliament. Thereafter, the
426
Regulation takes effect in accordance with the
modifications, if any, made by the Parliament.
A side argument may be disposed of briefly. It was
suggested on behalf of the petitioners, though faintly, that
the power to frame service conditions is derived from clause
(j) of section 58 (2) of the Act. It is impossible to accept
this contention. That clause cannot be split up to read:
"the constitution and management of staff; and
superannuation funds for the officers and servants of the
Bank". It hardly makes any sense that way. What the clause
means is: "the constitution and management of staff funds
and superannuation funds for the officers and servants of
the Bank". An important subject like the service conditions
of the staff could not have been provided for in such a
dubious and indirect manner. Nor indeed, could it have been
described as "constitution and management of staff." A rule
of seniority cannot properly fall under such a head. We
endorse the view taken by the Calcutta High Court in Reserve
Bank Employees Association v. Union of India(1) that section
58 (2) (j) refers to staff funds and superannuation funds
and that it cannot comprise service conditions.
But, the provisions of sub-section (2) of section 58
cannot be taken to be exhaustive of the power of the Central
Board to make regulations. It is well-settled that where a
specific power is conferred without prejudice to the
generality of a power already conferred, the specific power
is only illustrative and cannot restrict the width of the
general power. (See Emperor v. Shibnath Barerjee;(2) Om
Parkash v. Union of India(3). Therefore, the ambit of the
general power conferred by sub-section (1) cannot be
attenuated by limiting it to matters specified in sub-
section (2) of Section 58.
Section 58 (1) of the Act confers power on the Central
Board of Directors of the Bank to make regulations in order
to provide for all matters for which provisions is necessary
or convenient for the purpose of giving effect to the
provisions of the Act. It seems to us clear that it is not
only convenient but manifestly necessary to provide for the
service conditions of the Bank’s staff in order to give
effect to the provisions of the Act. The Act was passed in
order to constitute a Bank for achieving economic purposes
of the
427
highest national importance: regulating the issue of Bank
notes, keeping reserves with a view to securing monetary
stability in India and generally to operate the currency and
credit system of the country to its advantage. It is, in our
view, not open to any question either on the basis of reason
or authority that the power to provide for service
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 25
conditions of the staff is at least incidental to the
obligation to carry out the purposes for which the Bank was
constituted. As observed in Armour v. Liverpool
Corporation,(1) "To assist in removing from the minds of its
employees the fear of an unprotected old age, to foster
their happiness and contentment and to procure their good
and efficient service, these are objects which, even if
economic considerations alone count, are incidental, if not
vital, to the proper carrying on of any undertaking as well
by a municipal as any other corporation." The doctrine of
ultra vires in relation to the powers of a statutory
corporation has to be understood reasonably and so
understood, "whatever may fairly be regarded as incidental
to, or consequential upon, those things which the
Legislature has authorised ought not (unless expressly
prohibited) to be held by judicial construction, to be ultra
vires." (See Attorney-General v. Great Eastern Ry. Co.(2)
The Central Board has, therefore, the power to make service
regulations under section 58 (1) of the Act.
Shri Nariman pleads for such a power but his purpose in
doing so is to urge that section 58 (7) is the sole
repository of the power of the Central Board to provide for
the conditions of service of the Bank’s staff. He contends
that statutory corporations like the Reserve Bank of India
have no inherent or residuary powers and that they must seek
and find their powers and obligations in the Charter of
their creation Therefore, the argument proceeds, it is
imperative that regulations governing terms and conditions
of service of the Bank’s staff must be framed under section
58 (1) only and cannot be framed by administrative circulars
issued in the exercise of any non-statutory power authority.
In support of this submission, reliance is placed by
the learned counsel on the statement of law contained in
paragraphs 1326 and
428
1333 (pages 775 and 779) of Halsbury’s Laws of England,
Fourth edition. In paragraph 1326 it is stated that:
"Corporations may be either statutory or non-
statutory and a fundamental distinction exists between
the powers and liabilities of the two classes.
Statutory corporations have such rights and can do such
acts only as are authorised directly or indirectly by
the statutes creating them; non-statutory corporations,
speaking generally, can do everything that an ordinary
individual can do unless restricted directly or
indirectly by statute".
Paragraph 1333 says that:
"The powers of a corporation created by statute
are limited and circumscribed by the statutes which
regulate it, and extend no further than is expressly
stated therein, or is necessarily and properly required
for carrying into effect the purposes of its
incorporation, or may be fairly regarded as incidental
to, or consequential upon, these things which the
legislature has authorised. What the statute does not
expressly or impliedly authorise is to be taken to be
prohibited."
There is no doubt that a statutory corporation can do only
such acts as are authorised by the statute creating it and
that, the powers of such a corporation cannot extend beyond
what the statute provides expressly or by necessary
implication. If an act is neither expressly or impliedly
authorised by the statute which creates the corporation, it
must be taken to be prohibited. This cannot, however,
produce the result for which Shri Nariman contends. His
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 25
contention is not that the Central Board has no power to
frame staff regulations but that it must do so under section
58 (1) only. On that argument, it is material to note that
section 58 (1) is in the nature of an enabling provision
under which the Central Board "may" make regulations in
order to provide for all matters for which it is necessary
or convenient to make provision for the purpose of giving
effect to the provisions of the Act. This provision does not
justify the argument that staff regulations must be framed
under it or not at all. The substance of the matter is that
the Central Board has the power to frame regulations
relating to the conditions of service of the Bank’s staff.
If it has that power, it may exercise
429
it either in accordance with section 58 (1) or by acting
appropriately in the exercise of its general power of
administration and superintendence.
The statement of law in Halsbury puts emphasis on the
limitation on powers of statutory corporations in the light
of the provisions of statutes under which they are
constituted. From that point of view, the provisions of
section 7 (2) of the Act are important. By that section, the
general superintendence and direction of the affairs and
business of the Bank are entrusted to the Central Board of
Directors, which is empowered to exercise all powers and do
all acts and things which may be exercised or done by the
Bank. Matters relating to the service conditions of the
staff are, preeminently, matters which relate to the affairs
of the Bank. It would therefore be wrong to deny to the
Central Board the power to issue administrative directions
or circulars regulating the conditions of service of the
Bank’s staff. To read into the provisions of section 58 (1)
a prohibition against the issuance of such administrative
directions or circulars is patently to ignore the scope of
wholesome powers conferred upon the Central Board of
Directors by section 7 (2) of the Act. Indeed, this section
brings the impugned circular and seniority list within the
rule mentioned in Halsbury; they have the authority of the
statute.
In this behalf, reliance is also placed by Shri Nariman
on a decision of a Constitution Bench of this Court in
Sukhdev Singh v. Bhagatram,(1) Ray, C.J., who spoke for
three members of the Bench, observes in his judgment that
the powers of statutory bodies are derived, controlled and
restricted by the statutes which create them and that any
action of such bodies in excess of their power or in
violation of the restrictions placed on their powers is
ultra-vires. The concurring judgment of Mathew, J. also
contains observations to the same effect (see pages 628, 630
and 659 of the Report). This enunciation of law is to the
same effect as in Halsbury and our answer is the same. While
issuing the administrative circular governing the staff’s
conditions of service, the Central Board of Directors has
neither violated any statutory injunction nor indeed has it
exercised a power which is
430
not conferred upon it by the statute. The circular is
strictly within the confines of section 7 (2).
So long as staff regulations are not framed under
section 58 (1), it is open to the Central Board to issue
administrative circulars regulating the service conditions
of the staff, in the exercise of power conferred by section
7 (2) of the Act. In T. Cajee v. U. Jormanik Siem,(1) a
District Council was constituted under the Sixth Schedule to
the Constitution, for the United Khasi and Jaintia Hills
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 25
District in the Tribal Areas of Assam. The rules in the
Sixth Schedule empowered the District Council to make laws
with respect to various matters regarding the administration
of the District, including the appointment or succession of
Chiefs and Headmen. No law was however made regulating such
appointments. Even so, it was held by this Court that the
District Council had the power to appoint or remove
administrative personnel under the general power of
administration vested in it by the Sixth Schedule.
Delivering the leading judgment of the Bench, Wanchoo, J.,
said that where executive power impinges upon the rights of
citizens, it will have to be backed by an appropriate law;
but where executive power is concerned only with the
personnel of the administration, it is not necessary that
there must be laws, rules or regulations governing the
appointment of those who could carry on the administration
under the control of the District Council. The District
Council had therefore the power to appoint officers by
virtue of the fact that the administration was vested in it.
In B.N. Nagarajan v. State of Mysore(2) Rule 3 of the Mysore
State Civil Services (General Recruitment) Rules, 1957
provided that recruitment to the State Civil Services shall
be made by a competitive examination or by promotion and
that the method of recruitment and qualifications shall be
as set forth in the Rules specially made in that behalf. It
was urged before this Court that no recruitment could be
made to any service until the rules were made. That argument
was rejected on the ground that it is not obligatory under
the proviso to art. 309 to make rules of recruitment before
a service can be constituted and that it was not necessary
that there must be a law in existence before the executive
is enabled to function. It is true that reliance was placed
in that case on the provisions of art. 162, by which the
executive power of a State extends to the matters with
respect to
431
which the legislature of the State has power to make laws.
But the decision is useful for illustrating that the power
to frame rules or regulations does not necessarily imply
that no action can be taken administratively in regard to a
subject matter on which a rule or regulation can be framed,
until it is so framed. The only precaution to observe in the
cases of statutory corporations is that they must act within
the framework of their charter. Its express provisions and
necessary implications must at all events be observed
scrupulously.
It may bear mentioning that any action taken by the
Central Board of Directors under section 7(2) is subject to
the directions given by the Central Government under section
7(1) just as any regulation framed by it under section 58 is
subject to the previous sanction of the Central Government.
In either case, the Central Board has to abide by the
decision or directions of the Central Government. There can
therefore, be no apprehension that, by taking action under
section 7 (2), the Central Board may circumvent the
condition on which the power conferred by section 58 can be
exercised by it. The overall authority of the Central
Government acts as a restraining influence on any action
taken by the Central Board, whether it acts under one or the
other provision of the Act.
Having seen that the Central Board has the power to
provide for service conditions of the staff by issuing
administrative circulars, the next question for
consideration is whether the Staff Regulations of 1948 were
issued under section 58 of the Act. The importance of this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 25
question lies in the fact that, quite clearly, if the 1948
Regulations are statutory, they cannot be altered by
administrative circulars and, in that event, the impugned
circular will not have the effect of superseding them.
Having considered the entire material on this subject
including the correspondence that has transpired between the
Reserve Bank and the Central Government, we find it
difficult to take the view that the Staff Regulations of
1948 were framed in the exercise of power conferred by
section 58. One fact which stands out in this regard is that
whereas section 58 (1) envisages the making of regulations
"with the previous sanction of the Central Government", the
Regulations of 1948 do not purport to have been made with
such sanction. Indeed, in so far as the ex facie aspect of
the matter is concerned, the Regulations of 1948 do not
purport to have been made under section 58 at all. It is
true that this by itself is not conclusive because, failure
to mention the source of power
432
cannot invalidate the exercise of power, if the power is
possessed by the authority which exercises it. But, the
common course of the manner in which the Central Board
exercises its power when it purports to do so under section
58 is not without relevance and has an important bearing on
the question under consideration. The Employees’ Provident
Fund Regulations of 1935, the Note Issue Regulations of 1935
the General Regulations of 1949, the Scheduled Banks’
Regulations of 1951 and the Guarantee Fund Regulations,
which were all framed under section 58, contain a preamble
reciting that they were framed under that section and that
they were framed with the previous sanction of the Central
Government. By way of illustration, we may cite the preamble
of the Reserve Bank of India General Regulations, 1949,
which runs thus:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by section 58
of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (II of 1934) and
in supersession of the Reserve Bank of India General
Regulations, 1935, the Central Board of the Reserve
Bank of India, with the previous sanction of the
Central Government, is pleased to make the following
Regulations..."
It is significant that such a recital is conspicuously
absent in the Regulations of 1948. That renders it safe and
reasonable to accept the statement contained in the counter
affidavit filed on behalf of the Reserve Bank by Shri
Shamrao Laxman Jathar Deputy Manager in the Department of
Administration and Personnel to the effect that the Staff
Regulations of 1948 are not statutory in character, not
having been made under section 58 of the Act of 1934. The
rejoinder affidavit dated July 16, 1979 filed on behalf of
the petitioners by Shri Jamnadas Gupta reiterates the
contention that the Regulations of 1948 were framed under
section 58 (1) with the sanction of the Central Government.
Support is sought to that contention from the correspondence
annexed to the affidavit filed in support of the writ
petition and the correspondence annexed to the rejoinder. Of
particular importance is the statement contained in the
’Memorandum to the Central Board’ dated January 21, 1949,
submitted by the then Governor of Reserve Bank, Shri C.D.
Deshmukh, on the subject of "Reserve Bank of India
Regulations". That Memorandum contains a list of regulations
which were made by the Central Board "with the approval of
the Central Government". The very first item in the list is
"Reserve Bank of India (Staff) Regulations". Having
considered the correspondence bearing on the subject and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 25
particularly the aforesaid Memorandum, we see no reason to
doubt
433
the contention of the Bank that the Regulations of 1948 were
not framed under section 58 and that they were not made with
the previous sanction of the Central Government. The then
Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, Shri C. D. Deshmukh,
a distinguished Economist and Civilian, was perhaps
justified in assuming from the correspondence that the
Central Government has no objection to the proposed
regulations, which explains his statement, that they were
made with the "approval" of the Central Government. But, it
is one thing to infer that the Regulations had the approval
of the Central Government since no objection was raised by
it to the making of the regulations and quite another that
they were made with its previous sanction. The supplementary
affidavit dated March, 1980 which was filed on behalf of the
Reserve Bank by Shri Pradeep Madhav Joshi, Deputy Manager in
the Department of Administration and Personnel, has dealt
fully with the correspondence on the subject of previous
sanction of the Central Government to the Regulations of
1948. We are inclined to accept the statement contained in
paragraph 9 of the said affidavit that the Memorandum of
January 21, 1949 contains a "factual mistake" to the effect
that the Staff Regulations, (which would include the
Regulations of 1948) were made with the approval of Central
Government. We therefore conclude that the Reserve Bank of
India (Staff) Regulations of 1948 were not made under
section 58 of the Act and that, in fact, the Central Board
had not obtained the sanction of the Central Government to
the making of those Regulations.
The High Courts of Bombay,(1) Calcutta and Delhi(2)
have all taken the view that the Staff Regulations of 1948
are not statutory, not having been framed under section 58
of the Act. We endorse the correctness of that view.
Since the Staff Regulations of 1948 are in the nature
of administrative directions, it was competent to the
Central Board to alter or amend them by an administration
circular. No lack of statutory powers is involved in that
process. Under section 7 (2), the Central Board has the
power to provide for service conditions of the Bank’s staff
by administration circulars, so long as they do
434
not impinge upon any Regulations made under section 58 of
the Act.
It now remains to be considered whether the impugned
Administration Circular, No. 8, dated January 7, 1978;
Office Order No. 679, dated April 27 1978; and the draft
Combined Seniority List of officers prepared pursuant
thereto, are violative of the petitioners’ right to equality
in the matter of their service conditions. The salient
features of the impugned Administration Circular may be
summarized thus:
(a) A common seniority and inter-group mobility
is introduced simultaneously in all Grades of
officers attached to Group I (Section A) and
Groups II and III.
(b) The seniority of all officers is combined as
on May 22, 1974, on the basis of their total
length of service (including officiating
service), in the grade to which they were
then posted on a regular basis. In doing so,
the existing inter se seniority of the
officers in the respective groups is
maintained and the subsequent supersessions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 25
for promotion or confirmation in the
respective groups are suitably reflected. The
date of confirmation is not taken into
account for this purpose.
(c) The Circular covers all officers in Group I
(Section A) and Groups II and III who were
appointed to Grade ’B’ prior to January 1,
1970 as well as officers in the higher grades
’C’, ’D’, ’E’ and ’F’. The Circular does not
cover officers in Sections B to L of Group I,
technical officers in Group III and officers
attached to Group IV.
(d) All promotions to Grade ’C’ and above which
were made on a provisional basis after
January 1, 1976 are to be reviewed
individually in order to ascertain as to
which of the officers may be allowed to
continue in the higher grade on the basis of
their seniority and suitability.
Consequential adjustments are to be made in a
phased and
435
gradual manner in order to ensure that the
operational efficiency of the various
departments and the Bank’s requirements of a
specialised staff of officers are not
adversely affected.
(e) Officers promoted to higher grades prior to
January 1, 1976 are to be allowed to retain
their existing grades, though not necessarily
the same posts, and their seniority is to be
adjusted under a common seniority scheme.
(f) Officers appointed to officiate in the higher
grade on a provisional basis on or after
January 1, 1976 and who are allowed to
continue in such grade on the basis of their
seniority and suitability, are to be
considered for confirmation in the normal
course.
(g) Officers who are in a lower grade but who
rank higher in seniority in the common
seniority list than those who are already
officiating or confirmed in the higher grade,
are to be considered for promotion on the
basis of their suitability.
(h) All future promotions to Grade ’C’ and to the
higher grades are to be made on the basis of
the common seniority list, subject to
selectivity.
(i) Wherever possible, the transfer of officers
from one department or group to another in
the same grade has to be encouraged in order
to enable a broader diffusion of experience
and to prepare a wider base for development
of officers in different departments.
(j) All promotions from Grade ’B’ to ’C’ are to
be made on the basis of seniority-cum-
suitability, with greater emphasis on
suitability. The selections for this purpose
are to be made by the Reserve Bank of India
Services Board.
(k) Selections for promotions to Grade ’D’ and
above are to be made by a Committee of the
Deputy
436
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 25
Governors, who are to give greater
consideration to merit apart from the
aptitude and experience of the officers
concerned.
Office Order No. 679, dated April 27, 1978 was issued
in pursuance of the aforesaid Circular. The Bank announced
by it that the tentative Combined Seniority List of officers
in Grade ’B’ (appointed prior to January 1, 1970) and Grades
’C’, ’D’, ’E’ and ’F’ would be available for inspection upto
May 12, 1978. Officers aggrieved by the tentative Seniority
List were asked to submit their representations within
fifteen days. The tentative Combined Seniority List shows
the proposed position occupied seniority-wise by 644
officers belonging to Group I (Section A) and Groups II and
III.
These writ petitions were filed by the petitioners on
June 10, 1978 in order to challenge the Administration
Circular, the Office order and the Combined Seniority List
referred to above. The 25 petitioners are all officers in
Group I.
The case of the petitioners is that the Administrative
Circular and the draft Combined Seniority list are violative
of their rights under articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution
because; (a) The combined fixation of seniority has the
effect of treating unequals as equals in so far as officers
belonging to different groups are concerned, whose
appointment, recruitment, promotion and seniority had all
along been fixed, accepted and acted upon on a group-wise
basis; and (b) Recruitment, selection and promotion of
officers having been made on a group-wise basis from time to
time and their seniority having been fixed accordingly, the
seniority is now fixed retrospectively from an arbitrary
date viz., May 22, 1974.
These contentions, particularly the first, have to be
answered in the light of historical data governing the
constitution and management of Services under the Reserve
Bank, from time to time. Without an awareness of the history
leading to the events which the petitioners have challenged
as unconstitutional, it will not be possible either to
appreciate their contention or to provide an answer to it.
The Reserve Bank of India was constituted on April 1,
1935 under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934. The main
purpose of constituting the Bank, as stated in the Preamble
437
of the Act was -"To regulate the issue of bank notes and the
keeping of reserves with a view to securing monetary
stability in India and generally to operate the currency and
credit system of the country to its advantage." In course of
time, new functions came to be added as a result of new
measures so as to meet the growing needs of an expanding
economy. During the first decade after the inception of the
Bank in 1935, these functions were carried out through three
departments: The Banking Department, the Issue Department
and the Agricultural Credit Department. The Agricultural
Credit Department was trifurcated into three branches with
effect from August 1, 1945: (i) the Agricultural Credit
Department, (ii) the Department of Research and Statistics
and (iii) the Department of Banking Operations. The first
two branches, which were of a specialised nature, were
grouped together for the purposes of promotions of officers
while the third branch was grouped for that purpose with the
banking group on the General Side. All promotions were made
from two separate common seniority lists, one for the
specialised or technical group and the other for the banking
group. The departments were regrouped again into three
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 25
Groups, with effect from April 1, 1951. Group I consisted of
Staff attached to the Department of Research and Statistics,
Group II of the Staff attached to the Department of Banking
operations, the Department of Banking Development and the
Agricultural Credit Department and Group III of the Staff
attached to the other Departments on the General Side. The
Staff attached to the Agricultural Credit Department was
reconstituted into a new Group, namely, Group IV with effect
from April 1, 1955. The Industrial Finance Department and
the Department of Non-Banking Companies were added to Group
II in September 1957 and March 1966, respectively. Group V
was created for the staff of the Industrial Department Bank
of India with effect from April 1, 1965. The composition of
the five Groups was readjusted on that date to ensure
greater administrative efficiency.
This system of grouping had many drawbacks bearing on
the promotional opportunities of Officers in the various
Groups. To mention but a few, the drawbacks were: (i)
Unequal size of one Group as compared to another, (ii)
Uneven expansion in one Group as compared to another, and
(iii) Earlier confirmations of Officers in one Group as
compared to those in another.
438
In 1955, Group I was the largest of all the three
Groups on the basis of the total number of officers in
Grades ’B’ and above in each of the three Groups. The
subsequent expansion in staff strength has been greater in
Groups II and III than in Group I with the result that by
the end of 1975, the total strength of Officers in Grade ’B’
and above was the smallest in Group I as compared to the
other Groups. The number of officers in Grade ’A’, however,
continues to be the largest in Group I on account of the
operational nature of its functions. While the increase in
the total number of officers in Grade ’B’ and above in Group
I over a period of twenty years was 280%, the corresponding
increase in Groups II and III was 451% and 1100%
respectively. However, the large expansion in Groups II and
III was mainly at the junior officers ’level’ particularly
in Grade ’B’. As regards senior officers i.e. Officers in
Grades ’D’, ’E’ and ’F’ while the expansion in Groups I and
II could be regarded as more or less equal, the expansion in
Group III, particularly in Grade ’D’ was marked. In spite of
this, the total number of posts of senior officers and the
percentage of such posts as compared with those of junior
officers continued to be smaller in Groups II and III.
Officers in Groups II and III also took a longer time
generally for confirmation as the posts against which they
were promoted were either initially sanctioned on a
temporary basis and continued as such for quite sometime
before they were made permanent or the vacancies were caused
by deputation of regular officers to commercial banks, state
co-operative banks, etc. for which no permanent vacancies
were created. On the other hand, Group I had more or less
its normal growth during these years and there was a smooth
flow of normal vacancies. The officers recruited in the
early years of the Bank had also gradually started reaching
the age of superannuation and there was a regular flow of
retirement vacancies. The Officers in Group I had,
therefore, their confirmation quickly and thereby derived
distinct benefits.
Under the Bank’s rules, the seniority of an Officer in
a particular grade was ordinarily dependent on the date of
his confirmation in that grade and although for the purpose
of promotion, the seniority of an officer was given
weightage only within the same group for a notional
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 25
comparison of seniority of officers in different Groups an
officer who was confirmed earlier in one Group as compared
with another who was confirmed later in another Group had an
edge over the latter in matters of service benefits. Such
comparisons
439
arising from promotional imbalances in the various groups
caused resentment among the affected officers. This state of
affairs had long agitated the minds of the officers in
Groups II and III and they brought this state of affairs to
the management’s notice by various representations beginning
from 1968.
The Management of the Bank took several steps from time
to time to correct the promotional imbalances but these
steps did not touch even the fringe of the problem,
especially since, the ad-hoc schemes and proposals were
mainly aimed at correcting imbalances that the lower level.
Ultimately, in face of growing discontentment amongst
officers belonging to Groups II and III, the Management
decided to refer the question to the Cadre Review Committee
(CRC) a which was appointed by the Bank in May 1970. The
Committee was, among other things, required to examine and
make recommendations for the changes desirable in the
existing constitution of the cadres of officers; having due
regard to the need to provide reasonable prospects of
increments and promotion and to ensure such degree of inter-
changeability as administrative efficiency and exigencies of
the Bank’s services demanded. The Committee, under the
Chairmanship of Shri J.L. Nain, a sitting Judge of the
Bombay High Court, submitted its report in October 1972.
The Cadre Review Committee expressed the view that
there was irrationality in the way the groupings had been
done and the way in which seniority was being maintained
group-wise and that Group I had an unfair advantage in
matters of promotion over Groups II and III. The Committee
further held that as certain departments were inordinately
large as compared to others, this by itself, in the context
of absence of inter group mobility brought about imbalances
in promotional opportunities. The Committee also recognised
that mobility from one group to another would not only
facilitate removing the imbalances in promotional
opportunities but that it would also lead to "better
operational efficiency". The Committee stressed the need for
a common seniority list for each grade of officers
throughout the Bank, except in respect of the Economic and
Statistics Departments and among lawyers, engineers and
other technical sections of officers. It recommended a
system of promotion from a lower grade to higher grade which
would ensure, among other things, to the largest extent
possible, equality of opportunity of promotion among all
officers in the same grade
440
and effective operation of mobility of officers between
different departments and groups. In regard to the operation
of the combined seniority scheme, the Committee recommended
its immediate introduction for ’A’ and ’B’ grades and within
a period of two years for the ’C’ grade. In regard to the
rest of the grades, namely, ’D’, ’E’ and ’F’, the Committee
recommended the application of this principle mutatis
mutandis and left it to the discretion of the Bank to
introduce it as and when it chose, taking into consideration
the exigencies of the situation. The Committee was also of
the view that it was necessary that mobility and inter-
changeability as between groups among all grades of officers
should be introduced in the shortest time possible.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 25
Following the recommendations of the Cadre Review
Committee, the Bank introduced through an administrative
circular (No. 15, dated 22.5.1974), a combined seniority for
’A’ and part of ’D’ grades, with retrospective effect. In
regard to ’C’ and ’D’ Grades, the circular provided for
mobility and interchangeability on a swap basis, but the
Officers’ Association protested against it and demanded
immediate and simultaneous introduction of combined
seniority and interchangeability for the rest of the grades
also.
Following the persistent demand made by the majority of
the officers, the Bank appointed a Committee comprising Shri
C.L. Thareja, the then Chief Manager, as Chairman, Shri K.
Madhava Das, Chief Officer, Agricultural Credit Department,
Shri P.N. Khanna, Chief Officer, Department of Banking
Operations and Development, and Shri T.D. Katara, Manager,
Bombay Office, to work out the modalities of the
implementation of the combined seniority scheme for grades
’C’ to ’F’ and to determine the operative date for combining
the seniority. The Bank decided that pending the submission
of the report by this Committee, all future promotions
namely those effected from 1.1.1976, will be purely ad hoc
and provisional.
The Thareja Committee, like the Cadre Review Committee,
unanimously recommended the introduction of combined
seniority simultaneously for all grades of officers.
However, on the question of the operative date, it was
divided in its views. Whereas Shri Thareja and Shri Katara,
both Group I officers, recommended that the scheme be given
retrospective effect from January 1, 1976, the
441
other two members representing Groups II and III, were of
the view that it should be given effect from January 1,
1970. The Bank, by the impugned circular, accepted May 22,
1974 as the date from which the combined seniority list was
to have effect.
It is clear from this narration of historical events
that the various Departments of the Reserve Bank were
grouped and regrouped from time to time. Such adjustments in
the administrative affairs of the Bank are a necessary
sequel to the growing demands of new situations which are
bound to arise in any developing economy. The group system
has never been a closed or static chapter and it is wrong to
think that the officers of the various groups were kept, as
it were, in quarantine. The group system has been a
continuous process of trial and error and the impugned
scheme of inter-group mobility has emerged as the best
solution out of the experience of the past. Combined
seniority has been recommended by two special committees,
whose reports reflect the expertise and objectivity which
was brought to bear on their sensitive task. It is clear
that inter-group mobility and common seniority are a safe
and sound solution to the conflicting demands of officers
belonging to Group I on one hand and those of Groups II and
III on the other. Private interest of employees of public
undertakings cannot override public interest and an effort
has to be made to harmonize the two considerations. No
scheme governing service matters can be fool-proof and some
section or the other employees is bound to feel aggrieved on
the score of its expectations being falsified or remaining
to be fulfilled. Arbitrariness, irrationality, perversity
and mala fides will of course render any scheme
unconstitutional but the fact that the scheme does not
satisfy the expectations of every employee is not evidence
of these. Vested interests are prone to hold on to their
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 25
acquisitions and we understand the feelings of Group I
officers who have to surrender a part of the benefits which
had accrued to them in a water-tight system of grouping.
Combined seniority is indispensable for the smooth
functioning of the Bank and no organisation can function
smoothly if one section of its officers has an unfair
advantage over others in matters of promotional
opportunities. The reports of the Cardre Review Committee
and the Thareja Committee show that combined seniority has
emerged as the most acceptable solution as a matter of
administrative, historical and functional necessity. We see
no justification for undoing
442
what these committees have achieved after an objective and
integral examination of the whole issue. We may mention that
the conclusion to which these committees came were
considered by the Bank when Shri M. Narasimhan, later
India’s Executive Director in the World Bank, was the
Governor and it was after Dr. I.G. Patel, Formerly
Secretary, Economic Affairs, Govt. of India and Deputy
Administrator, United Nations Development Programme, took
over as Governor in December 1977 that the final decision
was taken by the Central Board to introduce inter-group
mobility and combined seniority.
In Reserve Bank of India v. N.C. Paliwal, a Combined
Seniority Scheme was introduced by the Reserve Bank of
India, consisting of two parts, one part provided for the
integration of the clerical staff of the General Departments
with the clerical staff of the Specialised Departments,
while the other provided for the switch-over and integration
of the non-clerical staff with the clerical staff in all the
Departments of the Bank. The Delhi High Court set aside the
Scheme on the ground that it violated Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution. While setting aside the judgment of the
High Court, this Court held that the integration of
different cadres into one cadre did not involve violation of
the equality clause and that neither Article 14 nor Article
16 forbids creation of different cadres in Government
service. Whether there should be a combined seniority in
different cadres or groups was, according to the Court, a
matter of policy which did not attract the applicability of
the equality clause. The integration of non-clerical with
clerical services which was effectuated by the Combined
Seniority Scheme was, in the circumstances, held to be not
violative of the guarantee contained in Articles 14 and 16.
As regards the retrospective operation given to the
Scheme with effect from May 22, 1974, it does appear that
the Board has struck a via media between two extreme
contentions advanced by officers belonging to Group I and
those belonging to Groups II and III. But that was
inevitable and we consider it as the best solution in the
peculiar circumstances of the case. In order to rectify the
imbalances and anomalies caused by the compartmentalised and
group-wise seniority, it was necessary to give retrospective
effect to the Combined Seniority List. Officers belonging to
Group I urged that the Scheme should be brought into effect
from January 1, 1976, while those belonging to Groups II and
III wanted the Scheme to
443
be brought into effect from January 1, 1970. The Central
Board struck a balance by choosing the date May 22, 1974,
because that was the date on which the decision in regard to
combining the seniority retrospectively with effect from
January 1, 1970 in regard to Grade ’A’ and part of Grade ’B’
officers was announced. It was, again, on that date that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 25
Bank had announced that a similar decision in regard to the
remaining grade, of officers was under its considerations.
Thus, at least on May 22, 1974 it was known to officers of
all grades that a combined seniority list was due to be
brought into force. If a certain section of officers
succeeded in obtaining promotional benefits thereafter, the
imbalance introduced thereby in the services of the Bank and
the consequent dissatisfaction had to be rectified. That
could only be done by not recognising the accelerated
promotions obtained in the intervening period by a certain
class of officers. Shri Nariman has drawn our attention to
various individual cases of officers in Group I whose old
seniority has gone down by several steps in the new Scheme.
As we have stated earlier, any scheme of seniority is bound
to produce isolated aberrations. That cannot justify the
argument that the entire Scheme is for that reason violative
of the guarantee of equality.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the impugned
Administration Circular, the Office Order and the Combined
Seniority List are not violative of the rights of the
petitioners under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
For these reasons, the Writ Petitions are dismissed,
but there will be no order as to costs.
S.R. Petitions dismissed.
444