Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2294-2329 of 2008
PETITIONER:
Union Public Service Commission
RESPONDENT:
Dr. Jamuna Kurup & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/02/2008
BENCH:
CJI K. G. Balakrishnan & R. V. Raveendran & J. M. Panchal
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Reportable
CIVIL APPEAL NO 2294-2329 OF 2008
(Arising out of SLP(Civil) Nos. 1255-90 of 2005)
K.G. BALAKRISHNAN, CJI.
Leave granted. Heard counsel.
2. The Union Public Service Commission (for short ’UPSC’) has filed
these appeals against the judgment dated 26.4.2004 of a learned Single
Judge of Delhi High Court in WP (C) Nos. 4787-4823/2004.
3. The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (respondent no.38 herein, for
short ’the Corporation’ or ’MCD’) had sent a requisition to UPSC the
appellant herein for recruiting 45 Ayurvedic Vaids (that is, Medical Officers
\026 Ayurved). As the process of selection by UPSC was likely to take
considerable time the Corporation issued an advertisement dated 18.10.2000
inviting applications for contract appointment (on the basis of a walk-in
interview) on a fixed salary of Rs.10,000/- for a period of six months or till
such time such posts are filled on regular basis through UPSC, whichever
was earlier.
4. It is stated that respondents 1 to 37 (for short ’respondents’) applied
for such contractual employment and were appointed in April, 2001. The
letters of appointment on contract basis were issued to respondents in terms
of the advertisement. As the UPSC selections was delayed, the contract
appointment of respondents were renewed for periods of six months each by
office orders issued in October 2001, May 2002, October 2002, May 2003
and October 2003.
5. By advertisement dated 13.3.2004 (corrected on 27.3.2004) UPSC
advertised 45 posts of Ayurvedic Vaids. The term regarding age limit in the
said advertisement prescribed that the age limit of the candidate (as on
1.4.2004) should not exceed 35 years. It further provided :
"Age is relaxable for employees of Municipal Corporation of Delhi
up to five years\005 Age is relaxable up to five years for SC/ST, and
up to three years for OBC in respect of vacancies reserved for
them. Age is also relaxable for employees of the Government of
India and Union Territories upto five years."
6. Respondents filed WP(C) Nos.4787-4823/2004 in Delhi High Court
seeking a direction to the Corporation to regularize their services in the
vacant posts of Medical Officer (Ayurved) with effect from the respective
dates of their initial appointment. Alternatively, they prayed that if the High
Court was of the view that they could be regulated only pursuant to UPSC
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selection process, then to grant them due weightage for the service rendered
by them on contract basis, and also extend the age relaxation by five years to
those who were aged more than 35 years and had worked on contract basis
for three years. They also sought a direction to the Corporation to extend the
benefit of regular pay scale with consequential benefits and perks attached to
the regular post of Ayurvedic Vaids, from the date of their initial
appointment. However, when the writ petitions came up for hearing, the
respondents (Writ petitioners) submitted that they would be satisfied if two
directions were issued, the first being that those who had become overaged
should be given the benefit of age relaxation and second, they should not be
replaced by persons other than regular appointees.
7. The learned Single Judge was of the view that the writ petitioners
were entitled to the said two limited reliefs. Therefore, he disposed of the
writ petitions by order dated 26.4.2004 directing that those writ petitioners
who had crossed 35 years would be entitled to the benefit of age relaxation
corresponding to the number of years they had worked as contractual
Medical Officers (Ayurved) under the Corporation and should be treated as
eligible with reference to age requirement. He also directed that the services
of the writ petitioners should not be replaced by anyone save and except
those appointed on regular basis after undergoing the selection process.
8. The UPSC chose to approach this Court by filing SLPs against the
order of the learned Single Judge, bypassing the remedy of appeal to the
Division Bench, in view of the pendency of a similar issue before this Court
in SLP (C) No. 15714/2003 (UPSC vs. Girish Jayantilal Vaghela). The
special leave petitions from which these appeals arise, were originally
tagged to Vaghela’s case on 19.1.2005, but by a subsequent order dated
1.12.2005, they were delinked and ordered to be heard separately.
9. The UPSC contended that the term ’age is relaxable for employees of
Municipal Corporation of Delhi’ in the advertisement dated 13.3.2004, is
intended to refer only to regular and permanent employees of MCD. It was
also contended that being short term contract employees, the respondents
cannot claim to be ’employees of MCD’. For this purpose reliance was
placed on the decision of this Court in UPSC vs. Girija Jayantilal Vaghela \026
2006 (2) SCC 482, wherein this Court held that persons working on short
term contract basis cannot claim the status of Government Servants. UPSC
submitted that on a similar interpretation, ’employees of MCD’ will not
include contract employees.
10. The learned counsel appearing for the respondents submitted that the
decision in Vaghela did not apply to the respondents as they did not claim to
be government servants. He submitted that the respondents claimed age
relaxation as employees of MCD which was specifically provided in the
advertisement. We have already noticed that the UPSC advertisement (No.
SPL-03-2004) clearly specified that the age limit of 35 years was relaxable
for employees of Municipal Corporation of Delhi, up to five years.
Therefore, the only question that arises for consideration is whether the word
’employees of MCD’ should be construed as referring only to permanent or
regular employees of MCD as contended by UPSC or to all employees of
MCD including contract employees, as contended by respondents.
11. Even the UPSC recruitment advertisement for the subsequent year
(Advertisement No.SPL-54-2005 dated 23.7.2005 issued during the
pendency of these matters) inviting applications for filling 16 posts of
Medical Officers (Ayurved) in the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (and
similar posts in NDMC and Union Territories) provided for age relaxation as
follows :
"AGE : Not exceeding 35 years on normal closing date. Not exceeding 38
years for Other Backward Classes candidates and not exceeding 40 years
for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes candidates in respect of
vacancies reserved for them. Relaxable for central government servants as
per the instructions issued by Government of India including
NDMC/MCD from time to time up to five years. Age is also relaxable for
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employees of NDMC and MCD in respect of the posts in NDMC and
MCD respectively up to five years."
By interim order dated 9.12.2005, this Court permitted the overaged
respondents to sit for the examination in relation to the 2005 advertisement
subject to the condition that the UPSC shall not publish the result until
further orders. By subsequent order dated 9.3.2007, the said interim order
was vacated and UPSC was permitted to publish the results and MCD was
permitted to proceed with the appointment of candidates selected by UPSC.
We are informed that UPSC has neither declared the results nor MCD
proceeded to make appointments. Be that as it may.
12. Recruitment to posts in MCD is governed by the Delhi Municipal
Corporation Act, 1957 (’Act’ for short). Section 90 of the Act contemplates
appointment of persons to either permanent posts or temporary posts.
Section 90(6) provides that the Standing Committee may on the
recommendations of the Commissioner create for a period not exceeding six
months any category A or category B post. Section 92 provides that the
power to appoint employees whether permanent or temporary shall vest in
the Commissioner. Section 96 provides that no appointment to any category
A post shall be made except after consultation with the UPSC, but no such
consultation is necessary for selection for appointment to any acting or
temporary post for a period not exceeding one year. We have referred to
these provisions only to show that employment under the Municipal
Corporation of Delhi could be either permanent/regular or short
term/contractual.
13. The term ’employee’ is not defined in the Delhi Municipal
Corporation Act, 1957. Nor is it defined in the advertisement of UPSC. The
ordinary meaning of ’employee’ is any person employed on salary or wage
by an employer. When there is a contract of employment, the person
employed is the employee and the person employing is the employer. In the
absence of any restrictive definition, the word ’employee’ would include
both permanent or temporary, regular or short term, contractual or ad hoc.
Therefore, all persons employed by MCD whether permanent or contractual
will be ’employees of MCD’. The respondents who were appointed on
contract basis initially for a period of six months, extended thereafter from
time to time for further periods of six months each, were therefore,
employees of MCD, and consequently, entitled to the benefit of age
relaxation. If the intention of MCD and UPSC was to extent the age
relaxation only to permanent employees, the advertisement would have
stated that age relaxation would be extended only to permanent or regular
employees of MCD or that the age relaxation would be extended to
employees of MCD other than contract or temporary employees. The fact
that the term ’employees of MCD’ is no way restricted, makes it clear that
the intention was to include all employees including contractual employees.
Therefore, we find no reason to interfere with the judgment of the High
Court extending the benefit of age relaxation.
14. The learned counsel for appellant submitted that the advertisement
granted age relaxation to employees of MCD and employees of government
of India, and that the words ’permanent’ or ’regular’ were not used either
with reference to ’employees of government’ or ’employees of MCD’. It is
pointed out that in Vaghela (supra), this Court while dealing with persons
employed in identical circumstances, that is ’engaged for a period of six
months from the date of joining or till a candidate selected by UPSC joined
on regular basis’, held that the term ’government servant’ did not refer to or
include persons employed on contract basis. It is argued that on the same
principle, the term ’employees of MCD’ cannot include a contract employee
of MCD. We cannot agree. Vaghela (Supra) related to contract employment
by a government whereas in this case the contract employment is by a
Municipal Corporation. The reason that weighed with this Court in Vaghela
to hold that a contract employee was not a government servant, was in view
of the special connotation of the term ’government servant’. This Court after
referring to the decision of the Constitution Bench in Roshanlal Tandan vs.
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Union of India \026 1968 (1) SCR 185, and the decision in Dinesh Chandra
Sanpma vs. State of Assam \026 1977 (4) SCC 441, held that employment under
the government is a matter of status and not a contract even though
acquisition of such a status may be preceded by a contract; and that contract
employees of the government were governed by the terms of contract and
did not possess the status of government servants nor were governed by
rules framed under Article 309 of the Constitution, nor enjoyed the
protection under Article 311. But a Municipal Corporation is not
’government’, and municipal employees are not government servants
governed by Article 309 to 311. Though permanent employees of municipal
corporation or other statutory bodies may be governed by statutory rules,
they do not enjoy the status of government servants. Therefore, the decision
in Vaghela, rendered with reference to government servants may not be of
any assistance in interpreting the term ’employees of MCD’. In fact, for that
very reason, these matters were de-linked from the hearing of Vaghela.
15. In view of the above, we dismiss these appeals. We also direct UPSC
to declare the withheld results of respondents who had participated in the
examination in pursuance of the interim orders of this Court and grant the
benefit of age relaxation as per the direction of High Court.