Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SENIOR SUPERINTENDENT,R.M.S COCHIN & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. V. GOPINATH, SORTER
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/02/1972
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1487 1972 SCR (3) 530
1973 SCC (3) 867
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC 536 (1)
O 1975 SC1116 (1,2)
R 1982 SC 149 (228)
O 1986 SC 737 (16)
O 1986 SC 999 (11,13,15,17)
ACT:
Civil Servant--Central Services (Temporary Service) Rules
1965, or 5(1) (b) proviso--Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The services of the respondent, a temporary government
servant, were terminated on a particular day, but his.salary
and allowances due till then were not paid on that date.
The High Court held that the termination was not in
accordance with the provisions of r. 5 of the Central
Service (Temporary Service) Rules, 1965.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) Rule 5 (1) (a) gives the Government as well as
the employee a right to put an end to the service by a
notice in writing. Under r. 1 (b) the period prescribed for
such notice is one month. The proviso to the sub-rule
however gives the Government an option not to retain the
employee in service till the expiry of the period of the
notice; but to be effective, the termination of service has
to be simultaneous with the payment to the employee of
whatever is due to him. The operative words of the proviso
are ’the services of any such government servant may be
terminated forthwith by payment’, showing that the payment
is a condition of the termination of service forthwith. [532
D-F]
Since the words used are, plain and unambiguous they must be
construed in their ordinary sense without any considerations
of policy. [532 F-G]
(3)There will always be some time during which the
authority deliberates over, the matter and makes up his
mind, and within that- time, directions can be given that
the pay and allowances of the government servant should be
calculated so that they could be offered to the employee at
the time when the order of termination is served on him.
There is no difficulty in the calculation because the
payment is to be made at the same rates at which he was
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drawing them immediately before the termination of his
services.’ The fore, there is no merit in the contention
that it would be impossible for the authorities to give
effect to th proviso, if payment was to be made
simultaneously with the service on the employee of the order
of termination. [532 H; 533 A-D]
(4)The words of the rule construed in the State of U.P. v.
Dinanath Rai, C.A. No. 1734/68 dt. 11-10-1968, though ’some
what similar to the words of r. 5 only entitled the employee
to pay for the period of the notice but did not lay down any
condition as to when the payment was to be made. [534 F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1706 of
1971.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 5, 1971 of the Kerala High Court in Civil Writ
Appeal No. 534 of 1969.
531
R. H. Dhebar, for the appellants.
A. S. R. Chart, A. K. Gupta, S. C. Agarwal and V. J.
Francis, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mtter, J. The only question involved in this appeal is,
whether the order dated September 25, 1968 terminating the
services of the respondent, a temporary Government servant,
was in accordance with the provisions of Rule 5 of the
Central Service (Temporary Service) Rules 1965, hereinafter
referred to as the ’Rules’.
The services of the respondent appear to have been
terminated on the basis of the directive contained in a
circular dated 12th September 1968 that action should be
taken against every employee who absented himself from duty
on 19th September, 1968. No contention was raised at any
stage that no action could be taken under Rule, 5. This said
rule reads :-
"5.Termination of temporary service,-
(1)(a) The services of a temporary
Government servantwho is not in quasi-
permanent service shall be liable to
termination at any time by a notice in writing
given either by the Government servant to the
appointing authority or by the appointing
authority to the Government servant;
(b)the period of such notice shall be one
month;
Provided that the services of any such
Government servant may be terminated forthwith
by payment to him of a sum equivalent to the
amount of his pay plus allowances for the
period of the notice at the same rates at
which he was drawing them immediately before
the termination of his services, or, as the
case may be, for the period by which such
notice falls short of one month.
xx xx xx
xx."
It is: admitted that payment of the salary and allowances
was not made to the respondent on 25th September, 1968.
According to, the respondent the disbursing officer was
intimated about the order of termination only on the 28th
September when he was supplied with the, necessary funds.
As against this it was alleged in the counter affidavit to
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the writ petition filed by the respondent in the High Court
that one month’s pay and allowances had been sent by money
order to the respondent. The question is,
532
whether the order of termination of service can be sustained
because of absence of payment on the 25th September. The
order was quashed by a learned single Judge of the High
Court and this was upheld by a Division Bench in appeal.
Apart from the authorities which were cited at the Bar, it
appears to us that the rule is capable of the only
interpretation that the order of termination can be upheld
if the requisite amount in terms of the rule was paid into
the hands of the employee of made available to him at the
same time as he was served with the order. Rule, 5 (1 ) (a)
gives the Government as well as the employee a right to put
an end to the service by a notice in writing. Under rule 1
(b) the period prescribed for such notice is one month. The
proviso to sub-r. (b) however gives the Government an
additional right in that it gives an option to the
Government not to retain the services of the employee till
the expiry of the period of the notice : if it so chooses to
terminate the service at any time it can do so forthwith "by
payment to him of a sum equivalent to the amount of his pay
plus allowances for the period of the notice at the same
rate at which he was drawing them immediately before the
termination of his services, or, as the case may be, for the
period by which such notice falls short of one month." At
the risk of repetition, we may note that the operative words
of the proviso are "the services of any such Government
servant may be terminated forthwith by payment". To put the
matter in a nutshell, to be effective the termination of
service has to be simultaneous with the payment to the
employee of whatever is due to him. We need not pause to
consider the question as to what would be the effect if
there was a bonafide mistake as to the amount which is to be
paid. The rule does not lend itself to the interpretation
that the termination of service becomes effective as soon as
the order is served on the Government servant irrespective
of the question as to when the payment due to him is to be
made. If that was the intention of the framers of the rule,
the proviso would have been differently worded. As has
often been said that if "the precise words used are plain
and unambiguous, we are bound to construe them in their
ordinary sense...... and not to limit plain words in an Act
of Parliament by considerations of policy, if it be policy,
as to which minds may differ and as to which decisions. may
vary".-see Craies on Statute Law, Sixth Edition, pages 86
and 92.
It is not for us to enter into a discussion as to why the
proviso was framed as we find it. It was argued that it
would, in the ordinary course of things, be almost
impossible for the authorities to give effect to the proviso
if payment has to be made at the time the order of
termination is served on the employee. It was submitted
that before any payment can be made by Government,
533
sanction has to be taken and some time must elapse before
the necessary procedure is complied with and money obtained
either from the treasury or a cheque made out to cover the
amount due to the employee. It was also argued that if the
construction given by the High Court to the rule is to be
maintained, the appointing authority could never ask, the
employee to go at once even when it found that it was
necessary in the interest of Government to require him to do
so. It is difficult to contemplate a case in which an
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appointing authority has to make up his mind on the spur of
the moment that a particular employee should be asked to go
immediately. Normally a Government employee is not asked to
go unless some complaint is made against him for some
irregularities detected in his work. This is always
followed by some enquiry into his conduct, however brief, as
it is only as a result of an enquiry that the authority
makes up its mind that it would not be in public interest to
retain the service of the employee any longer. Within the
time which is taken for such deliberation i.e., the
preliminary enquiry, direction can certainly be given that
the pay and allowances of the government servant concerned
should be calculated so that it could be offered to the
employee at the time when the order of termination is served
on him. There can be no difficulty in the calculation
because the payment is to be made "at the same rates at
which he was drawing them immediately before the termination
of his services."
It was suggested on behalf of the respondent that the con-
struction of the rule should be such as would mitigate the
rigour of an order of termination inasmuch as where notice
of a full month is given the Government servant knows that
he will have to find some other employment without delay and
he can make his arrangements accordingly; but if he is to be
asked to leave at once and to depend on the mercy of the
Government as to when it will pay him for the period of the
notice, it would be very hard on the employee. We do, not
think it necessary to express any view as to whether the
rule was so framed on account of any such reason and we must
give effect to the plain meaning of the words of the rule.
Our attention was drawn to a decision of this Court which
had been cited on behalf of the appellant in the High Court-
The state of uttar Pradesh v. Dinanath Rai(1) There the rule
was differently worded. The rule in that case ran as
follows
"In exercise of the powers conferred by the
proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution of
India, the Governor of U.P. is pleased to make
the following general rule
(1) Civil Appeal No. 1734 of 1968 dated 11th
October, 1968.
534
regulating the termination of services of
temporary Government servants
(1)Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
any existing rules and orders on the subject,
the services of a Government servant in
temporary service shall be liable to
termination at any time by notice in writing
given either by the Government servant to the
appointing authority, or by the appointing
authority to the Government servant.
(2)The period of such notice shall be one
month given either by the appointing authority
to the Government servant, or by the
Government servant to the appointing
authority, provided that in the case of notice
of the appointing authority the latter may
substitute for the whole or part of this
period of notice pay in lieu thereof; provided
further that it shall be open to the
appointing authority to relieve a Government
servant without any notice or accept notice
for a shorter period, without requiring the
Government servant to pay any penalty in lieu
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of notice."
In that case this Court had observed
"The rule does not say that the pay should be
given in cash or by cheque at the time the
notice is issued. Knowing the way the
Governments are run, it would be difficult to
ascribe this intention to the rule-making
authority. There is no doubt that the
Government servant would be entitled to the
pay in lieu of notice but this would be in the
ordinary course."
No doubt the language of that rule is somewhat similar to
the words of rule 5 but there is an essential difference.
The rule only means that the pay for 30 days or less may be
substituted for service for the period of the notice. In
other words, the rule entities the employee to pay for the
period of the notice only without laying down any condition
as to when the payment is to be. given.
In this case, as we have already noted, "termination
forthwith" is to be "by payment to the Government servant"
of the sum mentioned. Payment is a condition of the
termination of service forthwith. The, facts of this case
show that the circular which formed the basis of the order
of termination was issued on the 12th September; the
employee, it would appear, had absented himself from duty on
the 19th September. The appointing authority had at least
six days within ’which time, the amount due to the
respondent could have been calculated.
535
In our view, the decisions in Seshavataram A State of
Hyderabad(1) and Venkataswami v. Director of Commerce &
Industries(2) do not help the appellant.
The appeal is therefore dismissed and in terms of the order
granting special leave, the appellant must pay the costs of
the respondent.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1959]-2 L.L.J. 227.
(2) [1959]-2 L.L.J. 702.
536