Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ORS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIVANANDA PATHAK & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/02/1998
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO 2567 OF 1998
(ARISING FROM SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL NO. 3512/93)
J U D G M E N T
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, J.
Whether "judicial obstinacy’ can be treated as a form
of "bias" is the question which we intend to answer in these
appeals. As the answer depends upon the peculiar facts
involved in these cases, they are being examined in a little
detail.
2. Leave granted in the Special Leave Petition.
3. These two appeals are directed against the judgment
dated 21st July, 1992 passed by a Division Bench of the
Calcutta High Court comprising of Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar
Sengupta and Mr. Justice Shyamal Kumar Sen.
4. Promotion to the posts of Inspector of Minimum Wages,
Inspector of Trade Unions, other Inspectors, Investigators,
Supervisors, etc, constituting the West Bengal Subordinate
Labour Service, is regulated by Rules made under Article 309
of the Constitution which were first notified on 25.9.1973
and again on 1.8.1988 with certain modifications. It was
provided in the Rules that fifty per cent of these posts
shall be filled up by direct recruitment on the basis of the
results of the West Bengal Miscellaneous Service Recruitment
Examination and the remaining fifty per cent by promotion.
Originally, under the 1973 notification, the eligibility for
promotion was restricted to the following :
(a) Confirmed Upper Division Clerk
of the Labour directorate and of
the shops and establishment
Directorate, Govt. of West Bengal.
(b) Confirmed Labour Welfare Worker
of the Labour Directorate, West
Bengal, who were at least
Matriculates or had equivalent
qualification and had rendered not
less than 10 (ten) years continuous
service as Labour Welfare Workers
under the labour Directorate.
(c) Confirmed Assistant Computers
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in the statistical section of the
Labour Directorate, West Bengal.
5. Subsequently, under the 1998 notification, the
eligibility was a little expanded and the promotion was to
be made from amongst :
(a) Confirmed Upper Division Clerk
of the Labour Directorate, and of
the Shops and Establishments
Directorate.
(b) Confirmed Labour Welfare
Workers of the Labour Directorate,
West Bengal (now placed under the
West Bengal Labour Welfare Board
constituted under the West Bengal
Labour Welfare Fund Act, 1974)
Matriculates or have equivalent
qualification, who were appointed
to the same post prior to the 1st
July, 1976, the date on which the
West Bengal Labour Welfare Board
started functioning, and have
rendered not less than 10 (ten)
years continuous service in the
post of Labour Welfare Workers
under Labour Directorate.
(c) Confirmed Assistant Computers
in the Statistical Section of the
Labour Directorate.
(d) Confirmed Upper Division Clerks
of the regional offices under the
Labour Directorate and under the
Shops and Establishments
Directorate, Government of West
Bengal.
6. Confirmed Assistant computers, thus, constituted, under
both the notifications, one of the feeder posts for
promotion to the posts in the Subordinate Labour Service.
7. Six of such Assistant Computers (hereinafter referred
to as Respondents) filed a Writ Petition (C.O. No. 6584(W)
of 1984) in the Calcutta High Court, setting out therein
that although they were eligible for promotion to the posts
ofInspector, Investigator and Supervisor etc. of the West
Bengal Subordinate Labour Service, the respondents of that
Writ Petition, namely, the State of West Bengal,
Commissioner of Labour and the Joint Labour Commissioner
(Statistics), had promoted only ’the confirmed Upper
Division Assistants’ to those posts in 1978 and their claim
for promotion was completely ignored. It was also stated
that although 48 vacancies were available in the Subordinate
Labour Service in the Labour Commissioner’s Office under the
Labour Directorate, the respondents intended to fill up
those vacancies by promoting only the Upper Division Clerks
and not the persons from other feeder posts, including the
Assistant Computers. It was alleged that although only six
permanent Upper Division Clerks were available, the
respondents, namely, the State Govt., Labour Commissioner,
etc. of that Writ Petition intended to fill up the higher
posts by promoting the temporary Upper Division Clerks and
not the Assistant Computers who being eligible for promotion
to the posts under the West Bengal Subordinate Labour
Service were entitled to be considered for such promotion.
Consequently, they prayed for the following reliefs:
"(a) for a writ of Mandamus
commanding the Respondents to
promote the petitioners to the
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next higher posts, namely,
Inspectors, Investigators and
Supervisors etc. in the West
Bengal Subordinate Labour
Service under the Labour
Directorate, Government of
West Bengal and also further
commanding the Respondents not
to promote the temporary
and/or non-confirmed Upper
Division Clerks to the said
posts;
(b) for a Writ of Certiorari
directing the Respondents to
produce the records of this
case to this Hon’ble Court, so
that conscionable justice may
be rendered;
(c) A Rule in terms of prayers (a)
and (b);
(d) An interim order of injunction
restraining the Respondents
and/or their agents from
giving any promotion to the
said higher posts namely
Inspector, Investigator,
Supervisor etc, in the West
Bengal Subordinate Labour
Service under the Labour
Directorate, Government of
West Bengal till the disposal
of the Rule;
(e) Any other order and/or orders
as your Lordships may deem fit
and proper."
8. This Writ Petition came up for hearing before Mr.
Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta (since retired), who, by
judgment dated 21.8.1984, allowed it with the following
operative order :
"In my judgment this is a clear
case of arbitrary and
discriminatory action on the part
of the respondents in depriving at
least 9 persons from their
legitimate promotion in the West
Bengal Subordinate Labour Service.
In the result, this application
must be allowed. The decision
and/or the orders or promotion, if
made on the basis of the approved
lists, are set aside. The
respondents are directed to give
promotion the West Bengal
Subordinate Labour Service on the
basis of the integrated Gradation
List (Flag "A" in the file) and
shall give promotion to the
Assistant Computors including the
writ petitioners in the West Bengal
Subordinate Labour Service. They
are directed to issue the orders of
promotion forthwith in terms of
this order. The respondents shall
give promotion to the Assistant
Computor including the writ
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petitioners to the Subordinate
Labour Service with effect from
13th March, 1980 when 29 Upper
Division Clerks were promoted
ignoring the claim of the Assistant
Computors according to the
seniority determined on the basis
of the said Rules.
Let this order be carried out
within two weeks from the date of
communication of this order."
9. The direction to promote the present respondents,
namely the Assistant Computors to the Subordinate Labour
Service with effect from 13.3.1980 was obviously given for
the reason that it came out during the course of the
proceedings that the Government, in the meantime, had filled
up 31 posts on 13.3.1980 by promoting 29 Upper Division
Clerks and 2 Labour Welfare Workers. By another order passed
on the same date, namely on 13.3.1980, five promotions more
(two Assistant Computors and 3 Labour Welfare Workers) were
made.
10. This judgment was challenged by a number of affected
employees (about 32 employees), who filed an appeal
(F.M.A.T. No. 3213 of 1984) before the Division Bench and
the latter, namely, the Division Bench, by its judgment and
order dated 17.1.1985, allowed the appeal by the following
order:
"After hearing the learned
Advocates of the parties and after
considering the facts and
circumstances of the case, we
modify the impugned order of the
learned Trial Judge and direct that
the authorities concerned shall
consider the cases of promotion to
the West Bengal Subordinate Labour
Service of the appellants as also
of the writ petitioners and the
added respondents in accordance
with law and the prescribed rules
including the appointment rules,
within three months form date.
It is made clear that we have
not expressed our opinion on the
merits of the respective cases of
the parties.
This order virtually disposes
of the appeal. The appeal is
treated as on day’s list and both
the appeal and the application are
disposed of as above. There will be
no order for costs."
11. By this order, the direction passed by Mr. Justice Ajit
Kumar Sengupta for promotion of Assistant Computers, and
that too with effect from 13.3.1980, was substituted by a
fresh direction that the cases of Assistant Computers as
also those of others would be considered in accordance with
law and the prescribed rules, including the appointment
rules.
12. In compliance of this direction, the State of West
Bengal and other appellants before us, after due
consideration, promoted 40 employees drawn from all the
three categories of feeder posts, including those namely,
the present respondents, who had filed Writ Petition (C.O.
No. 6584 of 1984), by two orders. (i) Order No. 1187 G.E.
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dated 16.4.1985 and (ii) Order No. 1832 G.E. dated 6.6.1985
to various posts in the Subordinate Labour Service.
13. Two years later, the same persons, namely, the present
respondents, except Smt, Shyamali Ghatak (nee Chakraborty),
who had earlier filed Writ Petition (C.O. No. 6584 of 1984),
filed another Writ Petition (registered as Matter No. 1449
of 1987) in the Calcutta High Court, praying that they may
be paid arrears of salary and allowances with effect from
13.3.1980 in terms of the judgment and order dated 21.8.1984
passed by Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta. This Writ
Petition was disposed of by Mr. Justice Prabir Kumar
Majumdar by his judgment and order dated 22.4.1988 by
observing, inter alia, as under :"
"I have considered the respective
submissions of the parties. It
appears that the order of the
learned trial judge made on the
earlier writ petition dated August
24, 1984 was modified and it was
observed by the court of appeal
that :
’After hearing the learned
advocates of the parties and
after considering the facts
and circumstances of the case,
we modify the impugned order
of the learned Trial Judge and
direct that the authorities
concerned shall consider the
cases of the promotion to the
West Bengal Subordinate Labour
Services of the appellants as
also of the Writ Petitioners
and the added respondents in
accordance with law and the
prescribed rules including the
appointment rules within the
three months from date.’
Therefore, it was a direction
of the court of appeal upon the
concerned authorities to consider
the cases of the appellants, writ
petitioners as also the added
respondents in accordance with law
and the prescribed Rules including
the appointment rules. Therefore,
it appear to me that whatever
entitlement, so far as the writ
petitioners are concerned, is there
in the relevant rules, the
petitioners will get it and their
claim to the benefits as also
seniority will be considered
accordingly and in complying such
authorities concerned will comply
with the direction of the court of
appeal as also the learned trial
court so far modified by the Court
of Appeal.
In the facts and circumstances
of the case, I do not see any
ground to interfere in this case
and the authorities will be free to
consider the case of the writ
petitioners as also other persons
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concerned with the matter in
accordance with the directions
contained in the order of the
appeal court in F.M.A.T. No. 3213
of 1984.
The writ petition is thus
disposed of."
14. This judgment was challenged before the Division Bench
which, at the time of hearing, incidentally, comprised of
Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta and Mr. Justice Shyamal
Kumar Sen and they, by their impugned judgment dated
21.7.1992, allowed the appeal with the direction that the
respondents (appellants before us) shall treat the Assistant
Computors to have been promoted to the Subordinate Labour
Service with effect from 13.3.1980. It was further directed
that although they will not be entitled to any arrears of
salary with effect from that date, their basic pay in the
scale of pay would be fixed by treating 13th March, 1980 as
the date of their promotion without, however, affecting the
seniority and other benefits of the persons already promoted
to the Subordinate Labour Service. The pay so fixed, was
made payable to them with effect from July, 1992.
15. It is this judgment which is challenged before us in
both the appeals.
16. Learned counsel appearing on behalf of State of West
Bengal as also the counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellants in the connected appeal have assailed the
judgment not only on merits but also on the technical plea
that Mr. justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta having expressed his
views when he had decided, as a Single-Judge, the first Writ
Petition, namely C.O. No. 6584(W) of 1984, should not have
sat in the Division Bench to hear the appeal in the same
matter between the same parties though initiated on a
subsequent Writ Petition. It is contended that although the
direction of Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta to the effect
that the Assistant computors (some of the respondents
herein) shall be promoted with effect from 13.3.1980, had
ceased to exist as the appeal against the judgment, in which
this direction was contained, was disposed of by the
Division Bench by issuing a fresh direction, the respondents
herein, filed another Writ Petition seeking enforcement of
the old direction of Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta by
requiring the State Government to pay to them, the arrears
of salary of the higher post with effect from that date,
namely, 13.3.1980. It is contended that the learned Single-
Judge having disposed of this Writ Petition by observing
that the direction issued by the Division Bench alone was
enforceable, no interference was called for in the matter
but Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta reiterated his earlier
view and held that the respondents shall be treated to have
been promoted to the Subordinate Labour Service with effect
from 13.3.1980.
17. Learned counsel for the respondents contended that the
direction of the subsequent Division Bench, presided over by
Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta, that the respondents shall
be teated to have been promoted with effect from 13.3.1980
was innocuous inasmuch as neither the arrears of salary
with effect from that date was to be paid nor were they to
affect the seniority of persons already promoted tot he
Subordinate Labour Service. In this situation, it is
contended, it would not be proper to interfere with the
impugned judgment.
18. A copy of the Writ Petition filed before the Calcutta
High Court by the respondents a second time (being Matter
No. 1449 of 1987) has been filed before us. In order to
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indicate the real controversy involved in that Writ
Petition, the relevant paragraphs of that Writ Petitions are
reproduced below :
"Your petitioner sate that
against the aforesaid illegalities
namely the denial of promotion
seniority and other benefits to the
petitioners as prescribed in law, a
writ application was filed on
behalf of the petitioners before
this Hon’ble Court which was
numbered as C.O. 6584 /(W)/84.
After hearing of the parties the
Hon’ble Mr. Justice A.K. Sen Gupta
was pleased to allow the said
application of the petitioners
directing the authorities to give
promotion on the basis of the
seniority. His Lordship was further
pleased to direct the authorities
to give promotion to the Writ
Petitioners to the sub-ordinate
Labour service w.e.f. 13th March,
1980. His Lordship was further
pleased to direct the authorities
to give promotion to the
petitioners to the West Bengal Sub-
Ordinate Labour Service forthwith.
But against the said Judgment of
His Lordship Mr. A.K. Sen Gupta and
Appeal having the Tender No. FMAT
3213 was preferred before this
Hon’ble Court. The Division Bench
after hearing the parties was
pleased to dispose of the said
appeal directing the Respondent
authorities to follow and or to
give promotions in accordance with
the above prescribed rules.
Therefore the judgment and the
order of the Trial Judge stood
upheld. Accordingly, pursuant to
the judgment of the Trial Court,
authorities promoted the Writ
Petitioners on 17.4.85 to the posts
of Investigators/Inspectors under
West Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour
Services, Labour Directorate,
Government of West Bengal and the
petitioners have been posted in
different places in the said posts
where they are new served. A copy
of the Judgment in C.O. No. 6584
(W) / 84 passed by the Hon’ble Mr.
Justice A.K. Sengupta annexed
herewith and along with the order
passed by the Division Bench in
FMAT 3213/84 and marked as Annexure
-
5. Your petitioners state that now
they have been promoted in the West
Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour
Services, but as per the order of
this Hon’ble Court they are deemed
to be promoted and or in service
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since 13th March, 1980.
Accordingly, the petitioners are
entitled to get the seniority and
also the monetary benefits of West
Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour Services
with retrospective effect from 13th
March, 1980.
6. Your petitioners state that
there has been arrear dues to the
petitioners since 13th march, 1980.
The petitioners made several
representations before the
authorities for the payment of the
said arrear dues but the Respondent
authorities have not paid the same
to the petitioners. On 12.12.86,
the petitioners made a written
representation to the Respondent
No. 1 along with the statement of
arrear dues praying immediate
payment of the said arrear dues
from 13.3.80 to 16.4.85 and in that
letter demanding justice. The
petitioners also pointed out that
for the above non-payment of the
arrear dues, the petitioners were
facing acutefinancial troubles. But
until now the authorities have done
nothing for the grant and or
payment of the said dues from 13th
March, 1980 to 16.4.85 to the
petitioners. A copy of the said
representation dated 12.12.86 along
with the statements of the said
arrear dues are collectively marked
as Annexure "B" and B1 to this
application.
7. Your petitioners state that the
authorities denied equal
opportunities of promotion to them.
The authorities gave promotions to
West Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour
Services only from the Upper
Division Clerks, even some of these
clerks were not confirmed. Thus the
authorities denied Computer
Assistants and labour Welfare
workers of the Labour Department
equal promotion seniority and other
benefits for a long time. Thus the
whole activities regarding
promotion was totally illegal and
or malafide. That is why the
Hon’ble Mr. Justice A.K. Sengupta
in C.O. 6384 (W)/84 was pleased to
direct that the petitioners whose
claim for promotion accrued long
ago should be deemed to be promoted
to West Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour
Service on and from 13th March,
1980, because on that date many
junior persons and even unconfirmed
Upper Divisions Clerks were
promoted to the Labour service. But
the petitioners were illegally
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deprived of the said promotion and
or seniority. Thus the petitioners
are entitled to the arrear
financial benefits and Seniority on
and from 13th March, 1980.
8. Your petitioners state that they
made series of representations
before the authorities for the
promotion and payment of their
arrear benefits since 13th March,
1980, but the authorities had not
yet paid the said arrear. Thus the
petitioners have been put to
unnecessary financial hardships by
the aforesaid non payment of arrear
dues."
19. The following prayer was made in the Writ Petition :
"10. Your petitioners humbly state
and submit that the authorities
illegally withheld their promotion
for a long time but only pursuant
to the direction and or order of
this Hon’ble Court they got
promotion in the West Bengal Sub-
ordinate Labour service which has
been illegally withheld for a long
time. Therefore, the direction of
this Hon’ble Court that the
petitioners should be deemed to be
promoted since 13th March, 1980
should be complied with by the
authorities by paying all arrear
benefits and or dues to the West
Bengal Sub-ordinate Labour Service
to the petitioners immediately,
otherwise they will suffer
irreparable loss and or injury."
20. The real question which was, therefore, involved in
that Writ Petition was whether the direction given by Mr.
Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta on 21.8.1984 while disposing of
the earlier Writ Petition (C.O. No. 6584/(W) /84) , was in
existence or had ceased to be an operative direction after
the disposal of F.M.A.T. No. 3213 of 1984 by a Division
Bench on 17.1.1985. The ultimate order passed by the
Division Bench in that appeal has already been extracted in
the earlier part of the judgment which would show that the
direction that the respondents shall be promoted with effect
from 13th March, 1980 was set aside and was substituted by a
fresh direction that the cause of the respondents along with
other eligible candidates for promotion to the Subordinate
Labour Service shall be considered in accordance with law
and the prescribed rules including the appointment rules. It
was in pursuance of this direction that the State Government
considered the matter of promotion and by its order dated
16.4.1985, it made promotions of the eligible candidates
drawn from all the three sources (including the respondents
who had filed Writ Petition (C.O. No. 6584/(W)/84), to
various posts in the Sub-ordinate Labour Service. This order
does not indicate that the respondents were promoted with
effect from 13th March, 1980; may be this was not indicated
as that direction had been set aside in appeal by the
Division Bench.
21. When the respondents claimed arrears of salary with
effect from 13th March, 1980 in pursuance of the direction
issued by Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta through a fresh
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petition (Matter No. 1449 of 1987) filed in the Calcutta
High Court, the learned Single Judge did not grant the
relief and instead observed that since the direction issued
by Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta was modified, it was for
the State Government to consider their claims in accordance
with the Rules in terms of directions of the Divisions Bench
(Court of Appeal).
22. An appeal against this judgment was disposed of by a
Division Bench which included Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar
Sengupta. The question which, therefore, arises is whether
Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta could sit in the Division
Bench to decide the appeal against that judgment?
23. All judicial functionaries have necessarily to have an
unflinching character to decide a case with an unbiased
mind. Judicial proceedings are held in open court to ensure
transparency. Access to judicial record by way of inspection
by the litigant or his lawyer and the facility of providing
certified copies of that record are factors which not only
ensure transparency but also instil and inspire confidence
in the impartiality of the court proceedings.
24. Unlike suits, proceedings under Article 226 of the
Constitution are not conducted strictly following the
provisions contained in the Code of Civil Procedure but are
held in accordance with the Procedure devised by the High
Court itself under which a fair hearing is provided to the
parties concerned before a decision is rendered. In other
words, principles of natural justice are observed strictly
in letter and spirit. One of the requirements of Natural
Justice is that the hearing should be done by a Judge with
an unbiased mind.
25. Bias may be defined as a pre-conceived opinion or a
pre-disposition or pre-determination to decide a case or an
issue in a particular manner, so much so that such pre-
disposition does not leave the mind open to conviction. It
is, in fact, a condition of mind, which sways judgments and
renders the Judge unable to exercise impartially in a
particular case.
26. Bias has many forms. It may be pecuniary bias, personal
bias, bias as to subject matter in dispute, or policy bias
etc. In the instant case, we are not concerned with any of
these forms of bias. We have to deal, as we shall presently
see, a new form of bias, namely, bias on account of judicial
obstinacy.
27. Judges, unfortunately, are not infallible. As human
beings, they can commit mistakes even in the best of their
judgements reflective of their hard labour, impartial
thinking and objective assessment of the problem put before
them. In the matter of interpretation of statutory
provisions of while assessing the evidence in a particular
case or deciding questions of law or facts, mistakes may be
committed bona fide which are corrected at the appellate
stage. This explains the philosophy behind the hierarchy of
courts. Such a mistake can be committed even by a Judge of
the High Court which are corrected in the Letters Patent
Appeal, if available.
28. If a judgment is over-ruled by the higher court, the
judicial discipline required that the Judge whole judgment
is over-ruled must submit to that judgment. He cannot, in
the same proceedings or in collateral proceedings between
the same parties, re-write the over-ruled judgment. Even if
it was a decision on a pure question of law which came to be
over-ruled, it cannot be reiterated in the same proceedings
at the subsequent stage by reason of the fact that the
judgment of the higher court which has over-ruled that
judgment, not only binds the parties to the proceedings but
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also the Judge who had earlier rendered that decision. That
Judge may have his occasion to reiterate his dogmatic views
on a particular question of common law or constitutional law
in some other case but not in the same case. If it is done,
it would be exhibitive of his bias in his own favour to
satisfy his egoistic judicial obstinacy.
29. As pointed out earlier, an essential requirement of
judicial adjudication is that the Judge is impartial and
neutral and is in a position to apply his mind objectively
to the facts of the case put up before him. If he is pre-
disposed or suffers from prejudices or has a biased mind, he
disqualifies himself from acting as a Judge. But frank, J..
of the United States in In re Linahan, 138 F. 2nd 650 says:-
"If, however, ’bias’ and
’particularly’ be defined to mean
the total absence of preconceptions
in the mind of the judge, then no
one has ever had a fair trial and
no one will. The human mind, even,
at infancy, is no blank piece of
paper. We are born with
predispositions....Much harm is
done by the myth that, merely
by.... taking the oath of office as
a judge, a man ceases to be human
and strips himself of all
predilections, becomes a
passionless thinking machine."
(See also Griffith and Street,
Principles of Administrative Law
(1973 Edn.) 155; Judicial Review of
Administrative Action by de Smith
(1980 Edn.) 272; II Administrative
Law Treatise by Davis (1958 Edn.)
130.)
30. These remarks imply a distinction between pre-judging
of facts specifically relating to a party, as against pre-
conceptions or pre-dispositions about general questions of
law, policy or discretion. The implication is that though in
the former case, a Judge would disqualify himself, in the
latter case, he may not. But this question does not arise
here and is left as it is.
31. This Court has already, innumerable times, beginning
with its classic decision in A.K. Karaipak vs. Union of
India AIR 1970 SC 150, laid down the need of "fair play" or
"fair hearing" in quasi-judicial and administrative matters.
The hearing has to be by a person sitting with an unbiased
mind. To the same effect is the decision in S.P. Kapoor vs.
State of Himachal Pradesh AIR 1981 SC 2181. In an earlier
decision in Mineral Development Limited vs. State of Bihar
AIR 1960 SC 468, it was held that the Revenue Minister, who
had cancelled the petitioner’s licence or the lease of
certain land, could not have taken part in the proceedings
for cancellation of licence as there was political rivalry
between the petitioner and the Minister, who had also filed
a criminal case against the petitioner. This principle has
also been applied in cases under labour laws or service
laws, except where the cases were covered by the doctrine of
necessity. In Financial commissioner (Taxation), Punjab vs.
Harbhajan Singh (1996)_ 9 SCC 281, the settlement
Commissioner was held to be not competent to sit over his
own earlier order passed as Settlement Officer under the
Displaced Persons (Compensation & Rehabilitation) Act, 1954.
The maxim Nemo Debet Esse Judex In Propria Sua Causa was
invoked in Gurdip Singh vs. State of Punjab (1997) 10 SCC
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641.
32. The above maxim as also the other principle based on
the most frequently quoted dictum of Lord Hewart C.J. in R.
V. Sussex JJ., ex p. Mc Carthy (1924) 1 K.B. 256, 259, that;
"It is of fundamental importance
that justice should not only be
done but should manifestly and
undoubtedly be seen to be done",
constitute the well-recognised Rule Against Bias.
33. Bias, as pointed out earlier, it a condition of mind
and, therefore, it may not always be possible to furnish
actual proof of bias. but the courts, for this reason,
cannot be said to be in a crippled state. There are many
ways to discover bias; for example, by evaluating the facts
and circumstances of the case or applying the tests of "real
likelihood of bias" or "reasonable suspicion of bias." de
Smith in Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 1980
Edn., 262, 264, has explained that "reasonable suspicion"
test looks mainly to outward appearances while "real
likelihood" test focuses on the court’s own evaluation of
the probabilities.
34. In Metropolitan Properties Co. v. Lannon, (198) W.L.R.
815, it was observed "whether there was a real likelihood of
bias or not has to be ascertained with reference to right
minded persons; whether they would consider that there was a
real likelihood of bias". Almost the same test has also been
applied here in an old decision, namely, in Manak Lal vs.
Prem Chand, Air 1957 SC 425. In that case, although the
Court found that Chairman of the Bar Council Tribunal,
appointed by the chief Justice of the Rajasthan High Court,
to enquire into the misconduct of manak Lal, an advocate, on
the complaint of one Prem chand, was not biased towards him,
it was held that he should not have presided over the
proceedings to give effect to the salutory principle that
justice should not only be done, it should also be seen to
be done in view of the fact that the Chairman, who,
undoubtedly, was a senior advocate and an ex-Advocate
General, had, at one time, represented prem chand in some
case. These principles have had their evolution in the field
of Administrative law but the Courts performing judicial
functions only cannot be excepted from the rule of bias as
the Presiding Officers of the Court have to hear and decide
contentious issues with an unbiased mind. the maxim Nemo
Debet Esse Judex In Propria Sua Causa and the principle
"Justice should not only be done but should manifestly be
seen to be done" can be legitimately invoked in their cases.
35. Applying these principles in the instant case, it will
be seen that although the judgment passed by Mr. Justice
Ajit kumar Sengupta in the first writ Petition in which he
had given a direction that the respondents shall be promoted
with effect from 13.3.1980 was set aside, he (Mr.Justice
Ajit Kumar Sengupta), in the subsequent writ Petition
between the same parties, gave a declaration that the
respondents shall be treated to have been promoted with
effect from 13.3.1980. Significantly, such a declaration was
not prayed for and what was prayed in the subsequent Writ
Petition was a direction to the State Government to pay
arrears of salary of the higher post with effect from
13.3.1980. To put it differently, in the first Writ
Petition, Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta commanded "Promote
the respondents with effect from 13.3.1980"; in the second
Writ Petition, he directed "Treat the respondents as
promoted with effect from 13.3.1980". There is hardly any
difference between the two judgments. In fact, the second
Writ Petition constitutes a crude attempt to revive the
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directions passed by Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sengupta in the
first judgment and, curiously, Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar
Sengupta, sitting in the Division Bench, wrote, a second
time, a judgment which was already over-ruled. He garnished
the judgment by innocuously providing that arrears would not
be payable to the respondents nor will the respondents
affect the seniority of other. But the garniture cannot
conceal the deceptive innocence as it is obvious, on a
judicial scrutiny, that paramount purpose was to re-write
the over-ruled judgment.
36. In view of these facts, we are constrained to observe
that it was not competent for Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar
Sengupta to have presided over the Bench in which the
impugned judgment was passed as he had already expressed his
opinion in the earlier writ petition which was over-ruled.
He should have disassociated himself from that Bench in
keeping with the high traditions of the institution so as
to give effect to the rule that "justice should not only be
done, it should manifestly be seen to have been done" apart
from sitting in appeal, though collaterally, over his own
judgment.
37. The appeals are consequently allowed. The judgment and
order dated 21.7.1992 passed by the division Bench of the
Calcutta High Court is set aside and the Writ Petition
(Matter No. 1449 of 1987) is dismissed without any order as
to costs.