Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAI NARAIN MISRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/09/1970
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1318 1971 SCR (2) 392
1971 SCC (1) 30
ACT:
Civil service-Selection Post-Director of Agriculture-Method
of filling up.
HEADNOTE:
The Director of Agriculture in the respondent-State having
retired the State Government wrote to the Public Service
Commission requesting them to select one of the 14 officers
shown in the list accompanying-the letter for being promoted
as Director. The letter stated that the question of
seniority among those officers was still under consideration
and that the list was not arranged in accordance with
seniority. The pay scale of some of the officers in the
list was Rs. 900 to Rs. 1,400 and others Rs. 1,200 to Rs.
1,700. The selection was to be on the basis of merit and
suitability. After examining the records, the Commission
recommended the name of the appellant. The third respondent
filed a writ petition and the High Court held that the third
respondent was senior to the appellant and had greater
merit. The pay scale of both the appellant and the third
respondent was Rs. 1,200 to Rs. 1,700.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD (1) The post of Director of Agriculture is a selection
post and an ex-cadre post. Selection to it is made solely
on the basis of merit and the question of seniority was not
relevant. It is for the State Government to select the most
suitable officer and for discharging that responsibility, it
was open to the Government to seek the assistance of the
Public Service Commission. The use of the word promoted in
the letter was inappropriate but the nature of the post
cannot be changed by the Government using that word.
Therefore, the High Court was not justified in going into
the question of seniority, especially when there was no
complaint of mala fides either on the part of the Government
or the Commission.[393 H; 394 B-C, E-F]
(2) Rule 16 of the Rules regulating the Bihar and Orissa
Agricultural Services Class I promulgated on April 11, 1935
is not superseded by the 1945 Rules which apply to Bihar
Agricultural Service Class 1, Bihar Agricultural Service
Class II, General Provincial Service and special posts
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outside these cadres. The 1935 Rules do not come in the way
of the Government making its selection to the post of
Director, and R. 12 of 1945-Rules is not applicable. [395 F,
G; 396 B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 477 of 1970.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 12, 1970
of the Patna High Court in Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No.
1067 of 1969.
393
S. V. Gupte and U. P. Singh, for the,appellant.
H. R. Gokhale and R. C. Prasad, for respondent Nos. 1 and
2.
D. P. Singh, for respondent No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. The appellant and the third respondent are serving
in the Agricultural Department of the Bihar Government.
Till February 1968 Mr. B. N. Sinha was the Director of the
Agriculture in that State. He retired in February of that
year. On, November 25, 1967, the St-ate Government of Bihar
wrote to the Public Service Commission requesting the
Commission to select one of the fourteen officers shown in
the list accompanying that letter for ’being promoted as
Director of Agriculture. The pay scale of some of those
officers was Rs. 900-1400 and others, Rs. 1200-1700. In
that letter the Government stated that the question of
seniority of those officers is still under consideration and
the list sent was not arranged in accordance with seniority.
The Commission wrote to the Government on April 29, 1968
asking the Government to determine the seniority of those
officer", before it is asked to recommend one of them for
being appointed as Director of Agriculture. The Government
wrote back to the Commission on September 23, 1969 stating
that the question of seniority of those officers cannot be
easily settled as there were some complications and the
Commission should proceed to select one of the officers
mentioned in the list solely on the basis of merit and
suitability.
After examining the records of all the officers concerned,
the, Commission recommended the name of the appellant.
Immediately thereafter the third respondent approached the
High Court with a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution praying that the recommendation of the
Commission may be quashed and the Government asked to make
the appointment in accordance with the rules. The High
Court came to the conclusion that the third respondent is
senior to the appellant and has greater merit than the
appellant. Hence under the rules he was entitled to be
promoted. This is an appeal by certificate against that
discussion. Thereafter the Government appointed the third
respondent to officiate as Director of Agriculture. It
appears that the third respondent is superannuated on the
1st of this month but be has been given a month’s extension.
It was not disputed be-fore us that the post of Director of
Agriculture is a selection post. Therefore the question of
seniority was not relevant in making the selection. It is
for the State Government to select such officer as it
considers as most suitable. In this view we think the High
Court was not justified in going into
394
the question of seniority nor will we be justified in going
into that question. It may be noted that at the time the
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Commission made this recommendation the pay scale of both
the appellant as well as the third respondent was Rs. 1200-
1700.
So far as the question of suitability is concerned, the
decision entirely rested with the Government. In other
words the Government is the sole judge to decide as to who
is the most suitable candidate for being appointed as the
Director of Agriculture. For discharging that
responsibility it was open to the Government to seek the
assistance of the Public Service Commission. In our
judgment the High Court was not justified in calling for the
records of the Public Service Commission and going through
the nothings made by various officers in the Commission as
well as the correspondence that passed between the
Commission and the Government. The High Court overlooked
the fact that the Government sought the assistance of the
Commission and not that of the High ’Court for finding out
the most suitable candidate. In this case there was no
complaint of mala fides either on the part of the Government
or the Commission. That being so the interference of the
High Court in the matter of selection made by the Government
was not called for.
The post of Director of Agriculture is admittedly an ex-
cadre post. The selection to that post is made solely on
the basis of merit. Merely because the Government in its
letter to the Commission used the word "promotion", the High
Court should not have treated the case as one of
"Promotion". The word "Promotion" used in the Government’s
letter was an inappropriate word. What the Government
really meant was selection of a person to be posted as the
Director. The nature of the post cannot be changed by the
Government’s using the word "promotion". The post remains
to be a selection post.
The High Court as also not right in opining that the recom-
mendation made by the Commission was not in accordance with
the rules. The two rules referred to by the High Court are
(1) Rules regulating the Bihar and Orissa Agricultural
Service, Class I promulgated on April 11, 1935 and (2) The
Rules regulating the recruitment to Bihar Agricultural
Service Class 1, the Bihar Agricultural Service Class II,
the General Provincial Service and special posts outside
these cadres promulgated on July 9, 1945. The High Court
has come to the conclusion that 1935 rules were by
implication though not specifically repealed by the 1945
rules. 1935 rules make it clear both in its preamble as well
as by the definition of the, word ",The service" that those
rules do not apply
395
to the appointment to the post of Director of Agriculture.
Further Rule 16 of those rules reads :
"The post of the Director of Agriculture shall
remain outside the cadre of the service, but
subject to the provision of rule 17 below it
may be filled at the discretion of the local
government by a member of the service."
Rule 17 says :
"None but a member of the Indian Agricultural
Service borne on the cadre of the Bihar and
Orissa shall be appointed to the post of the
Director of Agriculture so long as any such
member is available for appointment to the
post and who has not been held by the Govern-
ment of Bihar and Orissa to be permanently
unfit to hold such post,
Provided that whenever the local Government
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consider that no officer of the Indian
Agricultural Service borne on the cadre of
Bihar and Orissa is fit for the post of the
Director, the assistance of the Government of
India shall be sought with a view to procuring
a suitable selection from among the members of
the Indian Agricultural Service in other
provinces before any other person is appointed
to the post."
From a reading of rules 16 and 17 of the 1935
rules, it is clear that the 1935 rules did not
come in the way of the Government making its
selection.
Now coming to the 1945 rules, it is clear from
its preamble that those rules apply only to
(1) the Bihar Agricultural Service Class 1;
(2) the Bihar Agricultural Service Class II
and (3) the General Provincial Service and
special posts outside these cadres. The
reference to the posts outside the, cadres of
Class I and Class II Services, it was
contended on behalf of the appellant as well
as on behalf of the State Government refers to
posts in Class I and Class II in addition to
cadre posts and not to selection posts. It is
not necessary for our present purpose to
decide that question. It is clear from rule
12 of the 1945 rules that these rules do not
apply in the matter of filling up the post of
the Director of Agriculture. That rule reads
:
"Whenever the Governor decides that a vacancy
shall be filled by promotion or transfer of an
officer already in the service of Government,
I a reference shall be made to the Commission
to advise on such selection. The Commission
shall be supplied with the records of the
officer nominated for promotion by the
Director of Agri-
396
culture, together with the records of
officers, if any, who are senior to the
nominated officer."
We are unable to visualise that any service rule could have
provided for the nomination of his successor by an officer
who is about to be superannuated. In our judgment rule 16
of the 1935 rules is not superseded by the 1945 rules.
In the result this appeal is allowed and the writ petition
dismissed. Taking into consideration the fact that the
third respondent is already superannuated we make no order
as to costs in this appeal.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
397