Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FATEH CHAND SONI
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/12/1995
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCC (1) 562 JT 1995 (9) 523
1995 SCALE (7)168
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
[WITH Civil Appeals Nos. 4312 of 1994 and 4313 of 1994]
J U D G M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL, J. :
The common question which falls for consideration in
these appeals is whether seniority in the Selection Scale in
the Rajasthan Police Service (for short ‘the Service’) is to
be fixed on the basis of date of appointment to the
Selection Scale or on the basis of seniority in the Senior
Scale irrespective of the date on which appointment is made
to the Selection Scale.
Recruitment to the posts in, and conditions of service
of persons appointed to the Service is governed by the
Rajasthan Police Service Rules, 1954 (hereinafter referred
to as ‘the Rules’). Originally, the Service consisted of
posts in the Ordinary Time Scale and Posts in the Senior
Scale as indicated in Schedule I to the Rules. In 1966
Schedule I to the Rules was amended and out of the posts in
Senior Scale 3 posts were kept for officers drawing pay
personally in Selection Grade. In 1974 the number of posts
in the Selection Scale was increased to 14 and in 1978 it
was increased to 19. In 1985 the said number was increased
to 30. By virtue of notification dated April 19/20, 1988
issued under Rule 6 of the Rules the posts in the Service
fall in four scales, viz., junior scale, Senior Scale,
Selection Scale and superintendent scale. The number of
posts in the Selection Scale was reduced from 30 to 22 and 8
posts were placed in the Super Time Scale.
Km. Badam Bairwa and Hari Ram Meena (appellants in
Civil Appeal No. 4313 of 1994) and Fateh Chand Soni
(respondent No.1 in the appeals) were all appointed to the
Service by direct recruitment and were promoted to the
Senior Scale. In the Senior Scale respondent No. 1 was
senior to the said appellants. On the basis of
recommendations made by the Selection Committee constituted
under Rule 32 of the Rules all these three appellants were
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
promoted to Selection Scale by order dated April 27, 1989.
The said appointment of these appellants was on the basis of
seniority-cum-merit. The said order dated April 27, 1989,
has been described as promotion order. Km. Badam Bairwa and
Hari Ram Meena were appointed to the Selection Grade on
posts reserved for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled
Tribes. Respondent No. 1 was appointed to the Selection
Scale by order dated January 24, 1991. In the Seniority List
dated June 30, 1990 seniority in the Selection Scale was
fixed on the basis of date of appointment to the Selection
Scale. Feeling aggrieved by the fixation of the seniority in
the said seniority list in respect of Selection Scale,
respondent No. 1 filed a Writ Petition (C.W.P. No.3939 of
1991) in the Rajasthan High Court at Jaipur Bench wherein he
challenged the seniority list dated June 30, 1990 in so far
as it related to the seniority in the Selection Scale and
sought a direction for maintaining the seniority of the
incumbents of the Senior Scale even after the grant of the
Selection Scale. Respondent No. 1 also assailed the validity
of Rule 8 of the Rules as well as the reservation policy
dated February 10, 1975 and the 100 point roster system
dated July 9, 1985 as being ultra vires Article 16(4) of the
Constitution.
The said Writ Petition filed by respondent No. 1 has
been allowed by the High Court by the impugned judgment
dated September 21, 1993. The High Court has held that there
is/are no separate post/posts in the Selection Scale and
that grant of Selection Scale to certain number of officers
working in the Senior Scale so as to avoid stagnation and to
keep interest of the officers in the Service intact does not
involve promotion in the eye of law and that if, for any
reason, a junior officer is granted Selection Scale in
preference to his senior, it will not have any impact on the
seniority position and it will not affect the position of
the officers who were otherwise senior in the Senior Scale.
Since the High Court was of the view that there is no
separate post in the Selection Scale, it did not consider it
necessary to examine the validity of Rule 8 of the Rules and
the reservation policy and 100 point roster system. The High
Court quashed that seniority list dated June 30, 1990 and
directed that the seniority list be prepared afresh in the
light of the decision.
Civil Appeal No. 4311 of 1994 had been filed by the
State, Civil Appeal No. 4312 of 1994 had been filed by
Kundan Lal Sharma and Civil Appeal No. 4313 of 1994 has been
filed by Km. Badam Bairwa and Hari Ram Meena. Prahlad Rai
Jawaria was also one of the appellants in Civil Appeal No.
4313 of 1994, but, at the time of hearing of the appeal, the
learned counsel appearing for the said appellant stated that
he does not wish to press the appeal on his behalf and the
appeal, in so far as the said appellant is concerned, has
been dismissed.
Seniority in the Service is governed by Rule 33 of the
Rules. The relevant provisions of the said rule are as under
:-
"Rule 33. Seniority:- Seniority of
persons appointed to the lowest post of
the Service or lowest categories of
posts in each of the Group/Section of
the Service, as the case may be, shall
be determined from the date of
confirmation of such persons to be said
post but in respect of persons appointed
by promotion to other higher posts in
the Service or other higher categories
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
of posts in each of the Group/Section in
the Service, as the case may be, shall
be determined from the dated of their
regular selection to such posts.
Provided :-
(i) X X X
(ii) X X X
(iii) That the persons selected and
appointed as a result of a selection,
which is not subject to review and
revision, shall rank senior to the
persons who are selected and appointed
as a result of subsequent selection.
Seniority inter-se of persons
selected on the basis of seniority-cum-
merit and on the basis of merit in the
same selection shall be the same as in
the next below grade, and
(iv) X X X
(v) X X X"
Seniority in the Selection Scale has to be fixed as per
the aforesaid provisions contained in Rule 33 if appointment
to the Selection Scale is treated as promotion from Senior
Scale to Selection Scale. The High Court has held that the
said appointment cannot be treated as promotion for the
reason that when an officer in the Senior Scale is granted
Selection Scale, he neither leaves the post which was
already held by him nor he occupies any new post and the
post held by him remains the same and he starts getting the
pay in Selection Scale instead of Senior Scale which, by
itself, cannot confer a higher status or rank. According to
the High Court, the grant of Selection Scale to Senior Scale
officers does not exalt his status, rank or honour and an
officer does not stand elevated to any superior or
commanding position over other Senior Scale officers. The
High Court has also referred to the fact that the post of
Additional Superintendent of Police held by Senior Scale
officers and officers who are being paid in the Selection
Scale is interchangeable and such change or replacement and
substitution by posting and transfer in the Service is a
matter of routine and merely because the Government follows
the process of selection to identify the officers to whom
the Selection Scale is to be granted cannot confer a higher
status so as to make it a case of promotion.
The High Court, in our opinion, was not right in
holding that promotion can only be to a higher post in the
service and appointment to a higher scale of an officer
holding the same post does not constitute promotion. In the
literal sense the word "promote" means "to advance to a
higher position, grade, or honour". So also "promotion"
means "advancement or preferment in honour, dignity, rank,
or grade". [See : Webster’s Comprehensive Dictionary,
International Edition, p. 1009]. "Promotion" thus not only
covers advancement to higher position or rank but also
implies advancement to a higher grade. In service law also
the expression "promotion" has been understood in the wider
sense and it has been held that "promotion can be either to
a higher pay scale or to a higher post". [See : Union of
India & Anr. v. S.S. Ranade, 1995 (4) SCC 462 at p. 468].
In Lalit Mohan Deb v. Union of India, 1973 (3) SCC 862,
the pay scale of all the Assistants in the Civil Secretariat
in Tripura was Rs. 80-180 and on the basis of the
recommendations of the Second Pay Commission appointed by
the Government of India the scales were revised and 25% of
the posts were placed in the Selection Grade in the scale of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
Rs.150-300 and the rest continued in the old pay scale of
Rs. 80-180. For the purpose of filling the Selection Grade
posts a test was held and those who qualified in the said
test were appointed to the Selection Grade. The Assistants
in the Selection Grade and the Assistants in the old pay
scale were doing the same type of work. This Court observed
that "provision of a Selection Grade in the same category of
posts is not a new thing" and that "a Selection Grade is
intended to ensure that capable employees who may not get a
chance of promotion on account of limited outlets of
promotions should at least be placed in the Selection Grade
to prevent stagnation on the maximum of the scale" and that
"Selection Grades are, therefore, created in the interest of
greater efficiency". The Court took note of the fact that
the basis for selection of some of the Assistants to the
Selection Grade scale was seniority-cum-merit which is one
of the two or three principles of promotion widely accepted
in the administration and, therefore, the creation of
Selection Grade in the category of Assistants was not open
to challenge. In that case, the Court had proceeded on the
basis that the appointment to the higher grade amounted to
promotion.
The Rule governing appointment to the Selection Scale
in the Service also envisage that such appointment
constitutes promotion. The relevant provision is contained
in Rule 28(A) of the Rules which prescribes the criteria,
eligibility and procedure for promotion to Junior, Senior
and other posts encadred in the Service. Under sub-Rule (5)
of Rule 28(A) promotion from the lowest post or category of
post in the Service to the next higher post or category of
post in the Service is required to be made strictly on the
basis of seniority-cum-merit. Sub-Rule (6) of Rule 28(A)
provides that selection for promotion to all other higher
posts or higher categories of posts in the Service shall be
made on the basis of merit and on the basis of seniority-
cum-merit in the proportion of 50:50. Sub-rule (7) reads as
under :
"(7). Selection for promotion to the
highest post/posts in the State Service
shall always be made on the basis of
merit alone:
Provided that :-
(a) in a Service or Groups or Sections
thereunder, where there are only two
scale e.g. junior scale or Senior Scale
and there is only one promotion then
promotion shall be made on the basis of
seniority-cum-merit alone.
(b) in a Service or Groups or Sections
thereunder, where there are three scales
e.g. junior scale, Senior Scale and
Selection Scale and there are two
promotions then promotion shall be as
under:-
(i) first promotion on the basis of
seniority-cum-merit.
(ii) second promotion on the basis of
seniority-cum-merit and merit in the
proportion of 50:50.
(c) in Services or Groups or Sections
thereunder, where there are more than
tow promotions then first promotion
shall be made on the basis of seniority-
cum-merit alone and promotions to
subsequent higher posts shall be made on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
the basis of seniority-cum-merit and
merit in the proportion of 50:50 except
to the highest post.
Provided further that if the
Committee is satisfied that suitable
persons are not available for selection
by promotion to highest post/posts
strictly on the basis of merit in a
particular year, selection by promotion
to highest post/posts on the basis of
seniority-cum-merit may be made in the
same manner as specified in these
Rules."
The said provision (especially clause (b) of the
Proviso) would show that the Rules contemplate that
appointment to the post in the Selection Scale does not
constitute promotion under the Rules.
The High Court has referred to the decision of this
Court in Dayaram Asanand Gursahani v. State of Maharashtra &
Ors., 1984 (2) SCR 703, wherein, after considering the
resolution of the State Government sanctioning the post of
District Judge in the Selection Grade, this Court has held
that the said resolution did not indicate that there was any
process of promotion by selection or otherwise from the
cadre of District Judges to the Selection Grade District
Judges. In the particular facts of that case it was held
that mere nomenclature given to the extended pay scale as
the Selection Grade pay scale does not lead to the inference
that there is an element of selection involved in
sanctioning it and that it should be treated as just an
extended pay scale which forms part of the pay scale. The
position in the present case is, however, different. Here
the Selection Scale is a separate scale and is not an
extension of the Senior Scale. Moreover appointment to the
Selection Scale is made by selection on the basis of merit
and seniority-cum-merit in accordance with Rule 28(A) of the
Rules.
It must, therefore, be concluded that appointment to
the Selection Scale of an officer in the Senior Scale in the
Service constitutes promotion and seniority in the Selection
Scale has to be fixed in accordance with Rule 33 of the
Rules on the basis of the date of selection and a person
selected and appointed as a result of an earlier selection
would rank senior to a person who is selected and appointed
as a result of a subsequent selection. Since the appellants
were selected and appointed on the basis of earlier
selection in 1989 while respondent No. 1 was selected and
appointed on the basis of a subsequent selection in 1991,
the appellants would rank senior to respondent No. 1 in the
Selection Scale. The direction given by the High Court for
revising the seniority list of the officers in the Selection
Scale of the Service on the basis of their seniority in the
Senior Scale cannot, therefore, be upheld and has to be set
aside. The seniority of officers in the Selection Scale of
the Service has to be fixed as per Rule 33 on the basis of
date of selection.
Shri R. Mohan, the learned senior counsel appearing for
the respondent No. 1, has agitated the question regarding
the validity of Rule 8 dealing with reservation for
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and has submitted that
such reservation in the matter of promotion to the higher
post is impermissible in view the decision of this Court in
Indira Sawhney & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors., 1992 Supp.
(3) SCC 217. The said contention cannot be accepted since in
Indira Sawhney (supra) this Court has indicated that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
existing provisions providing for reservation can continue
to operate for a period of five years from the date of the
said decision.
Shri Mohan has also submitted that provision for
reservation for Scheduled Castes and Schedules Tribes can be
made only against posts in the cadre and not against
vacancies and that under Rule 8 of the Rules and the
Reservation Policy and the 100 point roster such reservation
is made on the basis of vacancies and that Km. Badam Bairwa
and Hari Ram Meena have been promoted against vacancies
reserved for the Schedules Castes and the Scheduled Tribes.
Shri Mohan has placed reliance on the decision of the
Allahabad High Court in J.C. Malik & Ors. v. Union of India
& Ors., 1978 (1) SLR 844 which has been approved by this
Court in R.K. Sabharwal v. State of Punjab, 1995 (2) SCC
945. We find no merit in this contention. In his writ
petition respondent No. 1 has not challenged the promotion
of Km. Badam Bairwa and Hari Ram Meena to the Selection
Scale and therefore, this contention about the basis for
reservation does not fall for consideration in this case.
Moreover in R.K. Sabharwal (supra) this Court has directed
that the interpretation given by the Court about the working
of the roster and the findings on this point shall be
operative prospectively which means that actions that have
been taken prior to the decision in R.K. Sabharwal (supra)
cannot be assailed on the basis of the law laid down in the
said decision.
For the reasons aforementioned, the appeals are
allowed, the judgment of the Rajasthan High Court dated
September 21, 1993 is set aside and the Writ Petition filed
by respondent No. 1 is dismissed. But in the circumstances
there is no order as to costs.