Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2652-2654 of 1995
PETITIONER:
P. TULSI DAS AND ORS.
RESPONDENT:
GOVERNMENT OF A.P. AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/10/2002
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & H.K. SEMA
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2002 Supp(3) SCR 306
The Judgment of the Court was delivered
Leave granted in special leave petition (C) Nos. 3699-3710, 7808 and
21533-21580 of 1995.
The above appeals have been filed against the common order of the Larger
Bench of the Andhra Pradesh Administrative Tribunal at Hyderabad dated 27th
April, 1994 in O.A. Nos. 50430-50441 of 1991 etc., whereunder by a
majority, with the dissenting opinion recorded by the Chairman, the
challenge to the constitutional validity of Sections 2 and 3 of the Andhra
Pradesh Educational Service Untrained Teachers (Regulation of Services and
Fixation of Pay) Act, 1991 (Act No. 14 of 1991) (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’) came to be rejected.
The facts which lead to the passing of the said enactment, resulting in the
order under challenge may briefly be stated for a proper appreciation of
the contentions of the parties on either side. After the formation of the
State of Andhra Pradesh the State Government framed a composite set of
rules called Andhra Pradesh Educational Rules, 1966 in exercise of the
executive powers available for the State. The Schools in the State for the
purpose of those Rules were classified into three categories: Elementary
Schools for classes 1st to 5th; Upper-Primary Schools for classes 6th and
7th and Secondary Schools for classes 8th, 9th and 10th. In several schools
there were combined classes from elementary stage to secondary stage also,
though in some schools classes upto upper-primary alone were conducted. For
SSLC trained teachers (in short SGBT Teacher) the scale of pay at the time
of introduction of 1966 Rules was Rs. 80-150. In the Telangana area earlier
the scales were lower and classification was also said to be different. The
scale of pay for a Graduate B.Ed, known as School Assistant was Rs.
130-250. In addition to the other academic qualification, the teachers’
training certificate or B.Ed, degree, was also an eligibility criteria for
appointment as SGBT teacher or School Assistant, as the case may be,
respectively.
In G.O.M.S. No. 910, Education dated 27th April, 1970, Statutory Rules were
said to have been framed revising the scale of pay with effect from
19-3-1969 and the scale of pay of SGBT teacher were said to have been
revised to Rs. 96-200. Likewise the scale of pay of a School Assistant was
also revised to Rs. 150-300. But during the relevant point of time in the
year 1967, the scale of pay of SGBT with Matriculation and Teachers
Training Certificate was Rs. 80-150 and of the School Assistant with
Graduation and B.Ed, degree was Rs. 150-250. Due to dearth of trained
graduates in Science and Mathematics with Mulki qualification for
appointment as teachers in Telangana area the Government in G.O. No 257
Education dated 10-2-1967 accepting the proposals of the Director of
Schools, Education, passed orders that untrained graduates in those
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subjects may also be appointed in the minimum pay of Rs. 130 in the scale
of pay of Rs. 130-250 with usual allowances admissible for a trained
graduate teacher for a period of two years from the date of the said order.
Keeping in view the fact that previously and at the time of issuance of the
said Government Order such untrained graduates, untrained intermediates and
matriculates who were being appointed only on a pay of Rs. 100 in the scale
of pay of Rs. 80-150, the Government issued G.O. 2069 Education dated
9-10-1967 that untrained teachers in any part of the State may be appointed
at the minimum of the scale applicable and they will not be eligible to
draw any increments in the scale till they acquire the necessary
qualification prescribed for the post. Since the Government Order dated
10-2-1967 was with reference to the appointment of untrained graduates at
the minimum scale of pay of Rs. 130-250 with usual allowances in respect of
Science and Mathematics subjects only the untrained graduates appointed to
teach the subject of Humanity were not paid at the same scale but were
being paid at Rs. 100 which was being paid to such untrained teachers prior
to 10-2-1967. After the Revision of scales of pay in the year 1970, noticed
(supra) some of the untrained graduates appointed as School Assistants to
teach subjects in Humanities filed W.P. No. 2295 of 1973 before the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh and by a judgment dated 23rd June, 1975 the High
Court held that the untrained graduate teachers in Humanities were also
entitled to get minimum scale of pay of Rs. 130 in the time scale of Rs.
130-250 as in the case of untrained graduates appointed to teach Science
and Mathematics. This decision was not challenged further by the
authorities of the State Government. By the time the High Court rendered
the judgment the scale of pay then in force at Rs. 130-250 was further said
to have been revised as Rs. 150-300 w.e.f. 19-3-1970 and the High Court,
therefore sustained the claim for the revised scale of pay.
While matters stood thus a group of teachers belonging to both SGBT and
School Assistant categories teaching the subject in Humanities working in
Zilla Praja Parishad Schools in Nalagonda approached the High Court with a
grievance that they were being denied the benefit on the ground that they
were not graduates in Science and Mathematics, by filing W.P. No. 6387 of
1976. With the constitution of the erstwhile Administrative Tribunal in the
State in exercise of the powers under Article 371-D of the Constitution of
India, the said writ petition stood transferred to the Tribunal as Tr. W.P.
No. 1361 of 1976. When the matters came up before the Tribunal for hearing
it was disposed of by an order dated 15-9-1977 stating that it was not
disputed that the facts of that case and those earlier decided by the High
Court were identical and that the learned Government Pleader appearing also
conceded the position that the case was covered by the earlier decision of
the High Court. Consequently, the Tribunal directed that even the untrained
graduates in Humanities appointed in the Secondary Grade posts in the scale
of pay of Rs. 80-150 should be allowed the minimum of Rs. 130 in the scale
of pay of Rs. 130-250, admissible to trained graduates appointed as B.Ed.
School Assistants posts with effect from 10-2-1967 as a result said to have
been not intended by the Government. Subsequently, several other judgments
came to be rendered following the said decision, as and when claims were
made before the Tribunal. Consequential benefits including the fixation of
seniority on the said position was also granted. The Government without
challenging such orders took up the matter for consideration in the light
of the decision of the Tribunal and by orders dated 12-1-1982 and 20-2-1984
resolved to implement the judgment of the Tribunal individually and to
facilitate the same also created supernumerary posts of B.Ed. Assistants
with retrospective effect to carry out the directions issued by the
Tribunal. Even during January 1976, thousands of posts of B.Ed. Assistants
and SGBT teachers were created. The resultant position was that even SGBT
Teachers who were appointed in the scale of pay of Rs. 80-150 became
entitled to the scale of pay attached to the post of School Assistants on
the plea raised that they have also possessed the same qualification
prescribed for the post of School Assistant. Subsequent to this several
other judgments also seems to have been rendered following the order dated
15-9-1977 in Tr. W.P. No. 1361 of 1976 and all those petitioners also were
able to get payments in the scale of pay attached to the post of School
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Assistants inspite of the fact that some of them were appointed against the
post of SGBT Teachers only. It appears that all orders were not
expeditiously or effectively implemented and thought in the large majority
of the cases they were implemented, some such orders remained unimplemented
also.
The decision rendered in Tr. W.P. No. 1361 of 1976 has become final in the
sense that no challenge was pursued thereafter to the said judgment as also
to the other judgments rendered subsequently following this judgment. With
the constitution of the State Administrative Tribunal under the provisions
and the Administrative Tribunals Act. 1985 w.e.f. I-11-1989, not only some
of the cases pending on the file of the earstwhile Tribunal stood
transferred to the new Tribunal, but several cases were also seem to have
been filed afresh. It was at this stage that the Government suddenly became
alive, though in a belated manner to the possible heavy financial
commitments and serious implications flowing from the various: judgments
considered to be detrimental to the public interest and promulgated the
Andhra Pradesh Educational Service Untrained Teachers (Regulation of
Services and Fixation of Pay) Ordinance, 1991 subsequently replaced by the
Act under challenge. The Preamble to the Act set out in detail the
development of relevant events, from time to time and the passing of the
various Orders by the Government as well as by the Court and the Tribunals,
and reasons which necessitated the promulgation of the Ordinance as well as
the enactment of the law in question.
The Ordinance as well as the Act referred to above was brought into force
w.e.f. 10-2-1967. Sections 2 and 3 which are relevant for our consideration
reads as under:
2. Notwithstanding anything contained in any rule or order of the
Government or any judgment of any Court, Tribunal or other authority, the
untrained graduate teachers in the subjects of Science and Mathematics
appointed in pursuance of G.O. Ms. No. 257 Education Department, dated the
10th February, 1967 and the untrained graduate teachers in the subjects of
Humanities appointed in pursuance of orders of Tribunal in Transferred writ
petition No. 1361/76 dated the 15th September, 1977 who actually handled
eight, ninth and tenth classes in the Secondary Schools of Government Zilla
Praja Parishads or as the case may be, aided managements in the Telangana
area of the State of Andhra Pradesh shall be entitled to the minimum of
Rs. 130 in the time scale of Rs. 130-250 admissible to trained graduate
teachers if they are appointed to posts carrying that scale with effect
from the 10th February, 1967 to 31st December, 1973 and thereafter, their
pay shall be regulated as per their eligibility as untrained graduate
teachers in accordance with the rules and orders in forces.
3. Notwithstanding any Government order, judgment, decree or order of
any court, Tribunal or other authority, the supernumerary posts created in
the B.Ed., scale of Rs. 130-250 in accordance with the orders issued by the
Government in Memos, No. 1630/H-1/81-3, dated the 12th January, 1982 and
also on the 20th February, 1984 in place, of the Secondary Grade posts of
teachers in the time scale of Rs. 80-150 shall and shall be deemed always
to have- been secondary grade posts in the time scale of Rs. 80-150 with
subsequent increases due to revision of pay scales from time to time and
accordingly;
(a) at excess amount already sanctioned and paid to the incumbents by
creating supernumerary posts as aforesaid shall be recovered in such manner
and in such number of instalments as the Director of School Education may,
by order, direct;
(b) the teachers working in such supernumerary posts shall not be entitled
for counting their service in the B.Ed., scale for the automatic
advancement scheme formulated in G.O.Ms. No. 164, Finance dated, the 1st
June, 1982;
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(c) any benefit given to the teachers referred to in clause (b) in
accordance with the said Government order shall stand cancelled from the
date of extending such benefit and any among drawn in pursuance of such
benefit shall be recoverable in the manner specified in clause (a);
(d) no suit or other proceedings shall be maintained or continued in any
Court, Tribunal or other authority against the Government or any person or
the authority whatsoever for creation of supernumerary posts for the
teachers referred to in clause (b) and also such pending proceedings shall
abate forthwith and
(e) no court shall enforce any decree or other directing the pay fixation
on par with the posts of teachers created for the subjects of Mathematics
and Science in accordance with G.O.Ms. No. 257 Education Department, dated
the 10th February, 1967."
Since the provisions of the Act not only purported to disturb the state of
affairs prevailing as on the date of the Act but proceeded to deprive the
benefits already accrued and acquired by the class of petitioners by giving
retrospective effect to the Act w.e.f. 10-2-1967 and further by providing
also for the recovery of the amounts already paid otherwise than in terms
of the Act and in the manner specified therein. Hence, the petitioners
approached the Tribunal seeking for striking down the provisions contained
in Sections 2 and 3 of the Act. As noticed earlier the Chairman of the
Tribunal who was in the minority sustained the challenge made by the
appellants to provisions contained in Section 2, Section 3(a) and (e).
Though Section 3(b) was held to be valid, in view of Sections 2 and 3 held
to be bad, sub-section (b) to (d) was considered not capable of surviving
in isolation. Section 3(b) related to the grant of benefit of automatic
advancement, scheme, in special grade Posts. So far as the remaining two
Members who constituted the Bench are concerned, they rendered separate
opinions upholding the validity of the Act. One Member while dissenting
from the view expressed by the Chairman was of the view that discriminatory
and offending part of the enactment can be set right if the words "the
Telangana Area of occurring in Section 2 of the Act is alone struck down to
make it applicable uniformly to the entire State. The other Member who also
expressed his dissent with the opinion of the Chairman but purported to
agree with the Member who upheld the validity subject to the modification
in Section 2 noticed above, assigned further reasons high-lighting certain
anomalies, lapses and mistakes which according to him crept into the matter
resulting in the passing of indiscriminatory orders not really justified on
the facts of the cases which were brought before the Tribunal from time to
time. Hence these appeals.
Mr. L. Nageshwar Rao, learned senior counsel for the appellants urged that
the enactments in question brought into force with retrospective effect
from 10-2-1967 takes away the vested rights of the appellants and
consequently suffers the vice of hostile discrimination, arbitrariness and
expropriation of vested rights and, therefore, are liable to be struck down
as violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India. It was
also urged by the learned senior counsel that insofar as the Act purports
to destroy the rights acquired under the orders of the High Court as also
the judicial orders passed by the statutory Tribunals, it tends to encroach
into the judicial sphere and consequently is liable to be struck down. A
new point, not raised before the Tribunal based on alleged violation of
Articles 202 and 203 of the Constitution, though was sought to be urged,
was not permitted to be raised at this stage, Per contra Mrs. K.
Amareshwari, learned senior counsel appearing for the respondent-State with
equal vehemence tried to justify the decision of the majority view of the
Tribunal below and urged that the indisputable factual details indicated in
the Preamble to the Act and noticed by the Tribunals also warranted the
interference of the Legislature to set right the anomalies said to have
resulted in the matter. According to the learned senior counsel serious
mistakes, lapses and errors have been committed having grave consequences
both in the matter of enforcement of law as also the effective
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administration and control of the schools resulting in serious financial
problems and, therefore, no exception could be taken to the provisions of
the Act which were meant to set right the whole matter. In substance the
submission was that there was no deprivation of any of the legally acquired
or vested rights, but the Act purported to really deny and discontinue ill-
gotton rights and benefits undeservably obtained. We have carefully
considered the submissions on behalf of both parties.
In State of Gujarat and Anr. v. Raman Lal Keshav Lal Soni and Ors., [1983]
2 SCC 33 a Constitution Bench of this Court had an occasion to deal with
the situation arising out of a retrospective legislation by the Gujarat
State enacting Gujarat Panchayats (Third Amendment) Act, 1978 depriving the
Secretaries, officers and servants of old village Panchayats the status as
members of the State service. It was observed therein, while sustaining the
challenge to the constitutionality of the Act on the ground of unjust
deprivation of vested or acquired rights as follows:
"48. From the summary of the provisions of the Amending Act that has been
set out above it requires no perception to recognise the principal target
of the amending legislation as the category of ’ex-municipal employees’,
who are, so to say, pushed out of the panchayat service and are to be
denied the status of government servants and the consequential benefits.
The ex-municipal employees are virtually the "poor relations", the castle,
the panchayat service, is not for them nor the attendant advantages,
privileges and perquisites, which are all for the "pedigree descendants"
only. For them, only the outhouses. As a result of the amendments they
cease to be government servants with retrospective effect. Their earlier
allocation to the panchayat service is cancelled with retrospective effect.
They become servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats with retrospective
effect. They are treated differently from those working in Taluqa and
District Panchayats as well as from the Talatis and Kotwals working in Gram
and Nagar Panchayats. Their conditions of service are to be prescribed by
Panchayats, by resolution, whereas the conditions of service of other are
to be prescribed by the Government. Their promotional prospects are
completely wiped out and all advantages which they would derive as a result
of the judgments of the courts are taken away.
51. Now, in 1978 before the Amending Act was passed, thanks to the
provisions of the principal Act of 1961, the ex-municipal employees who had
been allocated to the Pachayats service as Secretaries, Officers and
servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats, had achieved the status of
government servants. Their status as government servants could not be
extinguished, so long as the posts were not abolished and their services
were not terminated in accordance with the provisions of Article 311 of the
Constitution. Nor was it permissible to single them out for differential
treatment. That would offend Article 14 of the Constitution. An attempt was
made to justify the purported differentiation on the basis of history and
ancestry, as it were. It was said that Talatis and Kotwals who became
Secretaries, Officers and servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats were
government servants, even to start with, while municipal employees who
became such Secretaries, Officers and servants of Gram and Nagar Panchayats
were not. Each carried the mark or the ’brand’ of his origin and a
classification on the basis of the source from which they came into the
service, it was claimed, was permissible. We are clear that it is not. Once
they had joined the common stream of service to perform the same duties, it
is clearly not permissible to make any classification on the basis of their
origin. Such a classification would be unreasonable and entirely irrelevant
to the object sought to be achieved. It is to navigate around these two
obstacles of Article 311 and Article 14 that the Amending Act is sought to
be made retrospective, to bring about an artificial situation as if the
erstwhile municipal employees never became members of a service under the
State. Can a law be made to destroy today’s accrued constitutional rights
by artificially reverting to a situation which existed 17 years ago? No.
52. The legislation is pure and simple, self-deceptive, if we may use such
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an expression with reference to a legislature-made law. The legislature is
undoubtedly competent to legislate with retrospective effect to take away
or impair any vested right acquired under existing laws but since the laws
are made under a written Constitution, and have to conform to the dos and
don’ts of the Constitution, neither prospective nor retrospective laws can
be made so as to contravene fundamental rights. The law must satisfy the
requirements of the Constitution today taking into account the accrued or
acquired rights of the parties today. The law cannot say, 20 years ago the
parties had no rights, therefore, the requirements of the constitution will
be satisfied if the law is dated back by 20 years. We are concerned with
today’s rights and not yesterday’s. A legislature cannot legislate today
with reference to a situation that obtained 20 years ago and ignore the
march of events and the constitutional rights accrued in the course of the
20 years. That would be most arbitrary, unreasonable and a negation of
history. It was pointed out by a Constitution Bench of this Court in B.S.
Yadav v. State of Haryana, Chandrachud, CJ, speaking for the Court held:
(SCC head-note)
Since the Governor exercises the legislative power under the proviso to
Article 309 of the Constitution, it is open to him to give retrospective
operation to the rules made under that provision. But the date from which
the rules are made to operate must be shown to bear either from the face of
the rules or by extrinsic evidence, reasonable nexus with the provisions
contained in the rules, especially when the retrospective effect extends
over a long period as in this case.
Today’s equals cannot be made unequal by saying that they were unequal 20
years ago and we will restore that position by making a law today and
making it retrospective. Constitutional rights, constitutional obligations
and constitutional consequences cannot be tampered with that way. A law
which if made today would be plainly invalid as offending constitutional
provisions in the context of the existing situation cannot become valid by
being made retrospective, Past virtue (constitutional) cannot be made to
wipe out present vice (constitutional) by making retrospective laws. We
are, therefore, firmly of the view that the Gujarat Panchayats (Third
Amendment) Act, 1978 is unconstitutional, as it offends Articles 311 and 14
and is arbitrary and unreasonable. We have considered the question whether
any provision of the Gujarat Panchayats (Third Amendment) Act, 1978 might
be salvaged. We are afraid that the provisions are so intertwined with one
another that it is well nigh impossible to consider any life-saving
surgery. The whole of the Third Amendment Act must go......."
In Ex-Capt. K.C. Arora and Anr, v. State of Haryana and Ors., [1984] 3 SCC
281 the principles laid down by the above Constitution Bench were followed,
while striking down an amendment to the Punjab Government National
Emergency (Concession) Rules taking away acquired or accrued fundamental
rights with retrospective effect, as offending Article 14 and 16 of the
Constitution of India. The retrospective amendment of the Rules in the said
case had the effect of depriving the benefit of military service beyond a
particular date with retrospective effect thereby taking away the vested
rights which accrued to the petitioner and this was declared to be ultra
vires the Constitution and struck down.
In Chairman, Railway Board and Ors. v. C.R. Rangadhamaiah and Ors., [1997]
6 SCC 623 yet another Constitution Bench of this Court had an occasion to
deal with the validity of a retrospective amendment to the service rules
adversely affecting the pension of the employees who already stood retired
on the date of the notification issued by way of an amendment, on the view
that the pension admissible was under the Rules in force at the time of
retirement, and that reduction of the pension as admissible with
retrospective effect was held to be arbitrary and unreasonable, after an
exhaustive review of case law of the subject.
On a careful consideration of the principles laid down in the above
decisions in the light of the fact situation in these appeals we are of the
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view that they squarely apply on all fours to the cases on hand in favour
of the appellants. The submissions on behalf of the respondent-State that
the rights derived and claimed by the appellants must be under any
statutory enactment or rules made under Article 309 of the Constitution of
India and that in other respects there could not be any acquisition of
rights validly, so as to disentitle the State to enact the law of the
nature under challenge to set right serious anomalies which crept in and
deserved to undone, does not merit our acceptance. It is by now well
settled that in the absence of Rules under Article 309 of the Constitution
in respect of a particular area, aspect or subject, it was permissible for
the State to make provisions in exercise of its executive powers under
Article 162 which is co-extensive with its Legislative powers laying
conditions of service and rights accrued to or acquired by a citizen would
be as much rights acquired under law and protected to that extent. The
orders passed by the Government, from time to time beginning from February
1967 till 1985 and at any rate upto the passing of the Act, to meet the
administrative exigencies and cater to the needs of public interest really
and effectively provided sufficient legal basis for the acquisition of
rights during the period when they were in full force and effect. The
orders of the High Court as well as the Tribunal also recognised and upheld
such rights and those orders attained finality without being further
challenged by the Government, in the manner known to law. Such rights,
benefits and perquisites acquired by the Teachers concerned cannot be said
to be rights acquired otherwise than in accordance with law or brushed
aside and trampled at the sweet will and pleasure of the Government, with
impunity. Consequently we are unable to agree that the Legislature could
have validly denied those rights acquired by the appellants
retrospectively, not only depriving them of such rights but also enact a
provision to repay and restore the amounts paid to them to State. The
provisions of the Act, though can be valid in its operation ’in future’ can
not be held valid in so far as it purports to restore status quo ante for
the past period taking away the benefits already available, accrued and
acquired by them. For all the reasons stated above the reasons assigned by
the majority opinion of the Tribunal could not be approved in our hands.
The provisions of Section 2 and 3(a) insofar as they purport to take away
the rights from 10-2-1967 and obligates those who had them to repay or
restore it back to the State is hereby struck down as arbitrary,
unreasonable and expropriatory and as such is violative of Articles 14 and
16 of the Constitution of India. No exception could be taken, in our view,
to the prospective exercise of powers thereunder without infringing the
rights already acquired by the appellants and the category of the persons
similarly situated whether approached courts or not seeking relief
individually. The provisions contained in Section 2 have to be read down so
as to make it only prospective, to save the same from the
unconstitutionality arising out of its retrospective application.
So far as the claim of benefits under the automatic advancement scheme
formulated in GOMS No. 164, Finance and Planning Department, dated 1st
June, 1982 is concerned we are unable to agree with the stand taken for the
appellants that any service rendered could entitle the appellants or the
class of persons similarly placed, to claim the benefit of the automatic
advancement scheme. It is well settled that a person holding a lesser grade
of post can be made to be incharge of a higher post and be paid also the
scales of pay permissible for the higher grade or category of post but that
will not make the said person entitled to claim to be a regular member or
incumbent of the post to claim consequential benefits for any advanced
career or promotion as if he is a regular incumbent to the said post. Even
any one of the appellant or the class of persons similarly situated when
assert a claim for the benefits of the said scheme they will have to
strictly comply with the requirement of the conditions stipulated therefor
in the scheme and cannot by virtue of the services rendered in a post
pursuant to the concession shown to appoint them in the higher category of
posts with a limited purpose and object as the aim automatically become
entitled to count such service for claiming the benefits under the special
scheme.
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The provisions contained in Section 3 mandates that the supernumerary posts
created in the B.Ed. Grade of Rs. 130-250 pursuant to the orders noticed
therein shall be deemed always to have been Secondary Grade Posts of
teachers in the time scale of Rs. 80-150 with subsequent increases due to
revision of pay scales from time to time, accordingly. The reasons
assigned, supra would apply with equal force to invalidate this
retrospective reclassification by a fiction to nullify the lawful rights
acquired during the past period and justify only prospective application
and accordingly read down, as in the case of Section 2 of the Act. In view
of the conclusions arrived at on the eligibility or otherwise to claim the
benefit of the automatic advancement scheme there is no need or warrant to
interfere with the stipulations contained in Section 3(c) and (d). In the
light of and to the extent of relief granted to the appellants in this
Judgment, Section 3(e) also cannot have any such force and effect to
deprive the rights accrued to and acquired by the appellants and persons
similarly placed.
The appeals are partly allowed, accordingly.
In the light of the above orders passed granting relief to all persons
similarly placed as the appellants no further orders are necessary on the
application for impleadment.
C.A. No. 5208 of 2000
The above appeal has been filed against the judgment of a Division Bench of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court dated 9th September, 1997 in Writ Appeal No.
931 of 1997 whereunder the Court while allowing the appeal of the
respondent directed the appellants to give the benefits of due scale of pay
of Rs. 320-580 as revised from time to time with effect from due date. By a
separate judgment in C.A. Nos. 2652-2654 of 1995 etc., we have dealt with
the constitutional validity of the Andhra Pradesh Education Service
Untrained Teachers (Regulation of Services and Fixation of Pay) Act, 1991
(A.P. Act No. 14 of 1991) and upheld the rights of teachers who were
appointed as SGBT Teachers to be entitled to the pay scales of School
Assistants for the period prior to the said Act. The Teacher/concerned in
this appeal also would be entitled to the benefits, to the extent such
benefits have been allowed in favour of the appellants in the other
appeals, and nothing more. If the order of the High Court purports to give
anything more than what was held permissible in respect of others, the
order in W.A. No. 931 of 1997 shall stand modified to bring it in
conformity with our decision in the connected appeals.
Consequently the appellants shall work out the monetary benefits as are due
to the respondent in this appeal in the light of the Judgment rendered by
us in the connected appeal i.e. CA Nos. 2652-54 of 1995 etc., it is also
made clear that the claim of the respondents is sustained only to the
extent of availing the monetary benefits and not for any substantive
appointment to the post of school Assistants, as such. With this
clarification of the correct position of law and modification in the light
of the other judgment rendered by us, this appeal shall stand finally
disposed of.