Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4129 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission
RESPONDENT:
P. Chandra Mouleesware Reddy & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/09/2006
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Dalveer Bhandari
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Sinha, J.
Leave granted.
Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission (for short, ’the
Commission’) is in appeal before us aggrieved by and dissatisfied with the
judgment and order of a Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature of
Andhra Pradesh dismissing a writ petition filed by it from an order of the
Andhra Pradesh State Administrative Tribunal dated 15.10.2004 directing it
to make recruitment from the selection list to the nine posts of Deputy
Superintendent of Police as only ten out of nineteen posts advertised therefor
had been filled up.
The Commission advertised nineteen posts for recruitment to the post
of Deputy Superintendent of Police. Pursuant thereto and in furtherance
thereof, applications were filed, inter alia, by the Respondent Nos.1 to 3
herein. The State, however, asked the Commission to fill up only ten posts.
An exercise was carried out accordingly by the Commission purported to be
in terms of Rule 6 of the Public Service Commission Rules.
Aggrieved by and dissatisfied therewith, the Respondent Nos. 1 to 3
filed an Original Application before the Andhra Pradesh Administrative
Tribunal (Tribunal). The Tribunal noticed that the Respondent Nos. 1 to 3
pursuant to the advertisement of the Commission appeared at the written
examination. They had also appeared at the interview. At that stage only,
the State of Andhra Pradesh directed the Commission to fill up only ten
posts, which was complied with.
It is not disputed that nineteen posts were vacant. The vacancies were
notified in terms of Rule 3 of the Andhra Pradesh Police Service Rules. It is
also not denied or disputed that the said posts were to be filled up both by
way of direct recruitment as also by promotion in the ratio of 1:2. In not
filling up the said posts, according to the Respondents, the provisions of the
said Rules have been violated.
In its counter affidavit, the State contended :
"According to the programme of selections to be
made by the Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission
among other things being equal that Government in the
case of State Services should send to Andhra Pradesh
Public Service Commission estimates of the number of
candidates to be selected for each service. The estimate
of the number of candidates required should cover a
period of 12 months following the dates on which the
lists of selected candidates are due to be communicated
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to the appointing authorities according to the programme.
As the appointing authorities are not adhering to the time
schedule and not notifying the vacancies to the A.P.
Public Service Commission in time, which results in
delay in making recruitment in the State Government
Offices the following instructions were issued :
"The matter has been reviewed and it is hereby
ordered that 1/3 of the vacancies in respect of retirements
in the particular year of recruitment in respect of the
posts which are within the purview of the A.P. Public
Service Commission for making direct recruitment shall
be notified in advance to the Andhra Pradesh Public
Service Commission in order to hasten up the recruitment
and to enable the Commission to programme its selection
suitably."
In Rc.No.564/G3/97, dt.8.7.97, the Director
General and Inspector General of Police, Andhra
Pradesh, Hyderabad has addressed the General
Administration (Ser) Department with a request to notify
19 backlog vacancies of Deputy Superintendent of Police
Category-2 for direct recruitment but not the vacancies
that would arise in future and he has also extended the
same letter to the Andhra Pradesh Public Service
Commission which in turn notified the vacancies for the
purpose of inviting applications from the open market.
However on the presumption that they were to be
filled up for future recruitment, Government in Home
Department have given directions to the Andhra Pradesh
Public Service Commission that only 10 vacancies for
the post of Deputy Superintendent of Police instead of 19
vacancies be notified as per Govt. Memo No.1946/Ser-
A/90-1, dt.18.12.90, which is a mistake of fact i.e., vide
impugned Government Letter No.21701/Pol.E/A1/99-1
dt.2.6.99."
The Tribunal, therefore, opined that mistake on the part of the State
being admitted, the applicants were entitled to the reliefs prayed for. It was
furthermore observed that the State before issuing the direction to the
Commission should have consulted the Director General of Police and, thus,
its decision was arbitrary. In regard to the stand of the Appellant, the
Tribunal observed :
"Though the APPSC was acting at the specific
instance of the first respondent i.e. Government, and it is
not its own fault that not filling up the 19 vacancies
occurred, still the action itself has to be declared as
arbitrary and illegal on account of the basis of the action.
In the facts and circumstances of the case, it is
declared that the APPSC ought to have selected 19
candidates strictly following the rule of reservation
instead of 10 candidates. It is also further declared that
the first and second respondents ought to have selected
19 candidates as against 10 candidates actually by
following the rule of reservation."
The writ petition filed by Appellant was dismissed by a Division
Bench of the High Court stating :
"The only submission made by the learned counsel
for the writ petitioner is that at this stage, after a lapse of
7 years, if the direction of the Tribunal is to be
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implemented it would involve a great deal of exercise on
the part of the Service Commission as the examination
was conducted not only for the posts of Deputy
Superintendent of Police but to 18 other categories of
posts belonging to the same group. This argument, in our
considered opinion, is only to be stated as rejected, as
there is a constitutional obligation of the Service
Commission to conduct the examination to enable the
State to fill up the various posts to be filled up by the
State. Such an obligation necessarily involves a onerous
exercise, but that cannot be an excuse to decline the
discharge of an obligation mandated by the Constitution
of India."
Submission of Mr. G. Prabhakar, learned counsel appearing on behalf
of the Commission before us is that as the selection process having been
completed on 20.8.2000 the Tribunal should not have directed filling up of
nine vacancies in September, 2003 as in terms of Rule 6 of the Public
Service Commission Rules, the remaining vacancies were to be filled up
only in the next year. It was submitted that if the direction is to be carried
out, the same will have a cascading effect.
Mr. P.P. Rao, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the
Respondents, on the other hand, would submit that the candidate should not
suffer owing to a mistake on the part of the State.
Indisputably, by reason of Advertisement No.5 of 1998, nineteen
posts of Deputy Superintendent of Police Category-2 in Police Service in the
pay scale of Rs.3880-8140 were notified. Selection process ensued in
furtherance thereof. The State of Andhra Pradesh by a letter dated 2.6.1999,
however, asked the Commission to send recommendation for only ten
vacancies in the said category for the purpose of direct recruitment, stating :
"According to the orders issued in Govt. Memo
No.1946/Ser.A/90-1, Dt.18.12.90, 1/3 of the vacancies in
respect of retirements in a particular year of recruitment
in respect of the posts which are within the purview of
A.P.P.S.C. for making direct recruitment, shall be
notified A.P.P.S.C.; and not on the basis of the total No.
of substantive vacancies in the Dept. from its inception.
Accordingly the D.G. & I.G.P. has been requested to
send revised proposals and his proposals were awaited.
As the matter stood thus, it is not clear as to how the
estimate of 19 posts of D.Ss.P. were cleared by Fin. &
Plg. Dept. and advertised by A.P.P.S.C. later, as stated in
the letter third cited, without the confirmation by this
Dept.
Subsequently, A.P.P.S.C. has also called for
estimate of vacancies upto 31.8.1998 in the letter second
cited. Govt. have furnished the estimate i.e. 10
vacancies, keeping in view the instructions issued in
Govt. Memo 1946/Ser.A/90-1, Dt.18.12.90 are also
taking into consideration the vacancies arose upto
31.8.1998."
The finding of the Tribunal and consequently that of the High Court,
in that, it was a mistake on the part of the State to issue the aforementioned
direction. The same is not in dispute.
The State of Andhra Pradesh, we may notice, did not question the
order of the Tribunal. The Commission was required to carry out fresh
exercise in compliance of the directions of the Tribunal. For the said
purpose, no fresh selection process was to be undertaken. If the State did
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not have any objection to fill up the said posts realizing the mistake
committed by it; we fail to see any reason as to why the Commission should
have felt aggrieved by the order of the Tribunal.
In Ms. Neelima Shangla vs. State of Haryana & Ors. [(1986) 4
SCC 268], this Court opined :
"........That was wrong. The names of all the qualified
candidates had to be sent to the government. The reason
given by the Public Service Commission for not
communicating the entire list of qualified candidates to
the government is that they were originally informed that
there were only 28 vacancies. That is not a sound reason
at all. Under the "Rules relating to the appointment of
Subordinate Judges in Haryana", the Public Service
Commission is not concerned with the number of
vacancies at all. Nor is it expected to withhold the full
list of successful candidates on the ground that only a
limited number of vacancies are available. The
Government of Haryana has taken the stand that they
were unable to select and appoint more candidates as the
names of only a few candidates were sent to them by the
Public Service Commission. It now transpires that even
before the Public Service Commission sent its truncated
list to the government, the High Court had already
informed the government that there were more vacancies
which required to be filled. The government not
knowing that the names of several candidates who were
qualified had been withheld from the government by the
Service Commission, wrote to the Service Commission
to hold a fresh competitive examination. If the
government had been aware that there were qualified
candidates available, they would have surely applied
Rule 8 of Part D and made the necessary selection to be
communicated to the High Court. The net result is that
qualified candidates, though available, were not selected
and were not appointed. Miss Neelima Shangla is one of
them. In the view that we have taken of the rules, Miss
Neelima Shangla is entitled to be selected for
appointment as Subordinate Judge in the Haryana Civil
Service (Judicial Branch)."
The candidates, therefore, in our opinion, should not suffer owing to a
mistake on the part of the State. The Tribunal, we have noticed
hereinbefore, directed the Commission to notify the remaining nine
candidates in the merit order following the ’Rule of Reservation’. It was
categorically stated that those who would be appointed in terms thereof
would be able to claim any right only with prospective effect, i.e., from the
date of their actual joining of service. It, therefore, cannot be said that the
order of the Tribunal was in any manner unjustified, arbitrary or
unreasonable. The High Court, thus, in our opinion, rightly refused to
exercise its jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
We may notice that in S.L. Kaul & Ors. vs. Secretary to
Government of India, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, New
Delhi & Ors. [(1989) Supp.1 SCC 147], this Court held that to take a
technical view so as to deprive the candidate of his right of seniority, would
be unjust.
The question was considered at some length by a Division Bench of
this Court in Virender S. Hooda & Ors. vs. State of Haryana & Anr.
[(1999) 3 SCC 693], wherein it was held that the Commission should follow
the instructions of the state provided the same is in accordance with rules.
The policy of the State was to fill up all the nineteen posts. The
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Respondents were, thus, entitled to have their case considered by the
Commission in accordance with merits only. Mistakenly, the State directed
to fill up only ten posts which was realised by it when the Original
Application was filed before the Tribunal. It accepted its mistake in no
uncertain terms.
Rule 6 of the Public Service Commission Rules reads as follows :
"The list of candidates approved/selected shall be
equal to the number of vacancies only including those for
reserve communications/categories notified by the unit
officers/Government. The layout vacancies if any due to
relinquishment/ and non-falling selected candidates shall
be notified in the next recruitment."
Rule 6 of the Public Service Commission Rules, whereupon Mr.
Prabhakar placed reliance, is not of much significance. It operates in a
different field. It will have no application in a case of this nature. The law
cannot be permitted to act unfairly. It cannot be arbitrary. The country is
governed by a Rule of Law and not by men. Thus, although a mistake had
been committed by the State, the same cannot be directed to be perpetrated
only because the Commission will have to undertake the selection process
again and particularly, in view of the fact that the State of Andhra Pradesh
did not question the order passed by the tribunal.
For the reasons aforementioned, we find no merit in this appeal,
which is, accordingly, dismissed with costs quantified at Rs.25,000/- payable
by Appellant in favour of Respondent Nos. 1 to 3.