Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS ANIL KATIYAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/11/1996
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, G.T. NANAVATI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.C.AGRAWAL. J.;
This appeal relates to appointment on the post of
Deputy Government Advocate in the Central Agency Section in
the Ministry of Law of the Government of India. The
appellant as well as respondent No. 4 are both employed in
the Central Agency Section. The appellant. joined as Asst.
Government Advocate on April 9, 1990, while respondent No. 4
joined the said post on October 5, 1989. Respondent No. 4
was thus senior to the appellant. The post of Deputy
Government Advocate is a selection post on which appointment
is made from amongst Asst. Government Advocates. A
Departmental Promotion Committee [DPC] headed by a member of
the Union Public Service Commission was constituted for
making the selection. The appellant as well as respondent
No. 4 were graded as "very good" by the DPC. and since
respondent No. 4 was senior to the appellant he was selected
and on the basis of the said selection he has been appointed
as Deputy Government Advocate. appellant moved the Central
Administrative Tribunal, Principal Bench, New Delhi
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the Tribunal’) by filing
O.A.No. 2538 of 1994 which has been dismissed by the
impugned judgment dated June 8, 1995.
Before the Tribunal the main contention urged by the
appellant was that the selection was made by DPC on the
basis of the annual confidential Reports [ACRs] of the
appellant and respondent No 4 for the year 1990-91,1991-92
and 1992-93 and that in the ACRs for the year 1990-91 and
1991-92 the appellant was graded as "outstanding" by the
reporting officer as well as the Reviewing Officer and in
the ACR for the year 1992-93 she was graded as "very good"
by the reporting officer as well as the Reviewing Officer
and that respondent No 4, on the other hand, was graded as
"very good" by the Reporting officer as well as the
Reviewing Officer in all the three ACRs. The submission was
that since the appellant had been graded as "outstanding" in
two out of three ACRs by the Reporting Officer as well as
the Reviewing Officer, grading the appellant as "very good"
by DPC was not justified. The Tribunal has held that it was
not expected to play the role of an appellate authority or
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an umpire in the acts and proceedings of the DPC and that it
could not go into the recommendations made by the DPC which
had been accepted by the Government. The Tribunal has, at
the same time, looked into the ACRs of the appellant and has
observed that out of two "outstanding" gradings given to the
appellant one "outstanding" grading does not flow from
various parameters given and the reports entered therein and
that must be the reason why the appellant had been graded as
"very good".
Shri Gopal Subramanium, the learned senior counsel
appearing for the appellant, has submitted that the Tribunal
was in error in observing that one "outstanding" grading
does not flow from various parameters given and the reports
entered and in doing so the Tribunal has assumed the role of
an appellate authority over the Reporting Officer and the
Reviewing officer a course which, according to the Tribunal
itself, could not be adopted by it. The submission is that
the grading has to be made by the Reporting Officer and the
Reviewing Officer and since both have agreed in grading the
appellant as "outstanding" in the ACRs for the years 1990-91
and 1991-92, It was not open to the Tribunal to say that one
of the "outstanding" gradings does not flow from various
parameters given and the report entered therein. As regards
the grading made by the DPC, the submission of Shri Subram
anium is that there is no reason why the appellant should
have been graded "very good" when she had received
"outstanding" remarks from the Reporting Officer as well as
the Reviewing Officer in the ACRs of two out of three Years.
Having regard to the limited scope of judicial review
of the merits of a selection made for appointment to a
service or a civil post, the Tribunal has rightly proceeded
on the basis that it is not expected to play the role of an
appellate authority or an umpire in the acts and proceedings
of the DPC and that it could not sit in judgment over the
selection made by the DPC unless the selection is assailed
as being vitiated by mala fides or on the ground of it being
arbitrary. it is not the case of the appellant that the
selection by DPC was vitiated by mala fides.
The question is whether the action of the DPC in
grading the appellant as "very good" can be held to be
arbitrary. Shri G.L.Sanghi, the learned senior counsel
appearing for the Union Public Service Commission, has
placed before us the confidential procedure followed by the
DPCs in the Union Public Service Commission for giving
overall gradings, including that of "outstanding", to an
officer. Having regard to the said confidential procedure
which is followed by the Union Public Service Commission, we
are unable to hold that the decision of the DPC in grading
the appellant as "very good" instead of "outstanding" can be
said to be arbitrary. No ground is, therefore, made out for
interference with the selection of respondent No. 4 by the
DPC on the basis of which he has been appointed as Deputy
Government Advocate but, at the same time, it must be held
that the Tribunal was in error in going into the question
whether the appellant had been rightly graded as
"outstanding" in the ACRs for the year 1990-91 and 1991-92.
The observations of the Tribunal that out of the two
"outstanding" grading given to the appellant one
"outstanding" grading does not flow from various parameters
given and the reports entered therein, cannot, therefore, be
upheld and are accordingly set aside.
The appeal is disposed of accordingly with no with no
order as to costs.
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