Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6588 of 2003
PETITIONER:
U.P. State Sugar Corporation Ltd. & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Sant Raj Singh & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/05/2006
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & P.P. Naolekar
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
WITH CIVIL APPEAL NO. 8237-8238 of 2003 &
CIVIL APPEAL NO\005\0052656 \005\005.OF 2006
[@ S.L.P. (C) No. 18327 of 2004]
S.B. Sinha, J :
Leave granted in S.L.P.
Whether educational qualification can be considered to be a relevant
criteria for the purpose of payment of wages is the question involved in these
appeals which arise out of a judgment and order dated 11.12.2002 passed by
a Division Bench of the High Court of Uttaranchal at Nainital in C.M.W.P.
No. 235(M/S) of 2001allowing the writ petition filed by the Respondent
herein and an order dated 13.5.2003 refusing to review the said order.
Doiwala Sugar Company Limited (Company) was having a sugar mill
at Maholi. There exists a post of Assistant Laboratory Incharge in all the
sugar mills. The post carried certain grades. The wages of the employees in
the sugar factory in the State of Uttar Pradesh used to be governed by the
terms of awards of the Wage Board appointed by the Government of India
from time to time. An award was made by U.P. Sugar Wage Board in the
year 1970 prescribing different scales of pay for different categories of
employees working in all the Vaccum Pan Sugar Factories in the State of
Uttar Pradesh. Educational qualifications were laid down as criteria for
classifying the employees in different grades, which are as under:
(a) for the post of Laboratory Incharge Supervisory A1, - Degree in
Science with Physics and Chemistry and Mathematics as subjects
and Associate Membership of National Sugar Institute, Kanpur or
any other equivalent qualification.
(b) for the post of Laboratory Incharge, Supervisory A-II, \026 Degree in
Science with Physics and Chemistry as subjects and at least two
years practical experience in the sugar industry.
However, it was prescribed that in the event the laboratory Incharge,
i.e., Supervisory Grade A-II were having the educational qualification of
less than a Degree, he would be placed in Supervisory B Grade.
The Legislature of the State of U.P. enacted the Uttar Pradesh Sugar
Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1971 to provide, in the interest of the
general public, for the acquisition and transfer of certain sugar undertakings
and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto.
"Appointed Day" in the said Act was defined to be 3rd July, 1971. In
terms of Section 3 of the said Act, on the appointed day, every scheduled
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undertaking shall, by reason thereof, stand and be deemed to have stood
transferred to and vest and be deemed to have vested absolutely in the U.P.
State Sugar Corporation Limited (for short "the Corporation"). Section 16 of
the said Act provided that every person working in any of such sugar mills
which stood vested under the said Act shall on and from the date of such
acquisition become an employee of the Corporation and shall hold his office
or service therein by the same tenure, at the same remuneration and upon the
same terms and conditions and with same rights and privileges as to pension,
gratuity and other matters as he would have held the same on the appointed
day if the undertaking had not been transferred to and vested in the
Corporation and shall continue to do so until his employment in the
Corporation is terminated or until his remuneration or other terms and
conditions of services or revised or altered by the Corporation under or in
pursuance of any law or in accordance with any provision which for the time
being governs his service.
The provisions of the said Act, however, were implemented in phases
On or about 3.2.1984, an order was issued by the Corporation in terms
whereof certain categories of employees like Assistant Engineers,
Manufacturing Chemists and Laboratory Incharges posted in various units of
the Corporation who had been drawing salary in Supervisory Grade A-I and
A-II Grade of the Wage Board of the Sugar Industry were placed in the
Corporation scale of pay with effect from 1.2.1984. The scale of pay for
such Laboratory Incharge was fixed at Rs. 550-1200 for those who had
earlier been working on the initial pay scale of Rs. 375-1000 in terms of the
recommendations of the Wage Board. However, those who have been
working in the pay scale of Rs. 355-755 were put in the scale of Rs. 500-
1000. A revision of pay was effected by the Corporation by a notification
dated 23.10.1984 in terms whereof those laboratory incharges who had
earlier been put in the pay scale of Rs. 550-1200 were put in the pay scale of
Rs. 900-1770 and those who had been placed in the pay scale of Rs. 500-
1000 were placed in the pay scale of Rs. 770-1600. It had, however, been
clarified that pay scale of Rs. 900-1770 would be admissible only to those
laboratory incharges who possessed B.Sc. Degree with Post Graduate
Diploma of Sugar Technology from National Sugar Institute and all other
laboratory incharges under Supervisory A-I or A-II would be entitled for the
Corporation revised pay scale of Rs. 770-1600.
Maholi Sugar Mill belonging to the Company vested in the
Corporation with effect from 28.10.1984. The First Respondent herein was
appointed in the Sugar Mill on 1.3.1981. He was not possessed of the
qualification of Degree in Science. His services were taken over in terms of
the provisions of the Act with effect from the date of nationalisation of the
sugar mill. It is not in dispute that his scale of pay stood protected in terms
of Section 16 of the Act.
The First Respondent being in Supervisory Grade-B at the time of
acquisition of the factory was, thus, not entitled to be placed in the
Corporation pay scale. He was, therefore, continued to be paid in the pay
scale prescribed by the Sugar Wage Board even after 28.10.1984.
One B.P. Srivastava, working in another mill which also vested in the
Corporation, had been getting A-II Grade before nationalisation thereof. His
pay was protected.
With a view to remove certain anomalies allegedly a Selection
Committee was constituted by the Corporation on or about 28.3.1985. The
Committee for the said purpose called seven candidates for interview. It is
stated that the basis for calling the said candidates for interview is not
known. Shri Shyam Sunder Shukla was also one of the candidates called for
interview. By reason of recommendations made by the said Committee,
four employees out of the seven called for interview including Shri Shukla
were placed in the revised pay scale of Rs. 770-1600 meant for laboratory
incharge in the Corporation. Shri Shukla was placed in the Corporation
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scale in Bijnore unit of the Corporation. The First Respondent herein
thereafter was transferred to a unit of the Corporation at Rohana Kalan. He
continued to be placed in the Supervisory B-Grade and had been drawing
salary in the prescribed scale of pay therefor. The Third Sugar Wage Board
was constituted. It made its recommendations on 31.1.1991. The said
recommendations were given retrospective effect and retroactive operation
from 29.12.1989. In terms of the said recommendations, category B-Grade
was not prescribed. The First Respondent was also placed in Supervisory A-
Grade. He was, however, not placed in the Corporation Scale of Pay. He
was transferred from the said Rohana Kalan Unit to Maholi Unit again.
In the year 1996, he filed a writ petition before the High Court of
Allahabad inter alia praying therein for grant of scale of pay which was
being paid to Shri B.P. Srivastava and Shri Shukla. The State of
Uttaranchal having been created, the said writ petition was transferred to the
High Court of Uttaranchal. By reason of the impugned order, the High
Court directed the Appellants to pay similar pay scale of Rs. 2000-3500 from
the date from which Shri B.P. Srivastava and Shri Shyam Sunder Shukla
were being paid. Civil Appeal Nos. 6588 and 8237 of 2003 have been filed
against the said order. An application for review was filed which was
rejected by an order dated 13.5.2003. Civil Appeal No. 8238 and Civil
Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 18327 of 2004 have been filed against the
said order.
The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Appellant submitted
that the High Court committed a manifest error insofar as it failed to take
into consideration that the cases of both Shri B.P. Srivastava and Shri Shyam
Sunder Shukla stood absolutely on different footings. It was contended so
far as the case of Shri B.P. Srivastava is concerned, he having already been
drawing a higher scale of pay, the same was required to be protected in terms
of Section 16 of the Act and insofar as the case of the said Shri Shyam
Sunder Shukla is concerned, he was placed on a higher scale of pay by a
Committee. It was submitted that as the First Respondent was not
possessing the requisite qualification, he could not have been placed on a
higher scale of pay.
Mr. Dinesh Dwivedi, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of
the First Respondent, urged that when the First Respondent entered into
service, no such qualification was prescribed. The laboratory incharges
performed the same nature of duty and in that view of the matter the
educational qualification prescribed for the said post was wholly immaterial.
The learned counsel urged that the Wage Board having made a distinction in
the scales of pay based on educational qualification and the same having
been withdrawn by the same authority which came into force with effect
from 29.12.1989, at least from the said date the First Respondent should
have been placed in the Corporation Scale of Pay.
Our attention was also drawn to the fact that the Committee purported
to have been appointed by the Corporation for reasons best known to it
called only seven candidates for interview. The Corporation has not
disclosed as to why the case of the First Respondent had not been considered
by the said Committee. The case of Shri Shyam Sunder Shukla, thus, could
not have been considered by the said Committee and in that view of the
matter as he although is not possessed of a Degree, he having been placed in
the Corporation Scale of Pay, there was absolutely no reason as to why he
should be discriminated.
The doctrine of equal pay for equal work, as adumbrated under Article
39(d) of the Constitution of India read with Article 14 thereof, cannot be
applied in a vacuum. The constitutional scheme postulates equal pay for
equal work for those who are equally placed in all respects. Possession of a
higher qualification has all along been treated by this Court to be a valid
basis for classification of two categories of employees.
In The State of Jammu and Kashmir v. Shri Triloki Nath Khosa and
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Others [(1974) 1 SCC 19], the validity of such a classification came to be
considered before this Court. Chandrachud, J., (as the learned Chief Justice
then was), opined:
"\005Formal education may not always produce
excellence but a classification founded on variant
educational qualifications is, for purposes of promotion
to the post of an Executive Engineer, to say the least,
not unjust on the face of it and the onus therefore cannot
shift from where it originally lay."
Krishna Iyer, J. supplemented stating:
"\005The social meaning of Articles 14 to 16 is neither
dull uniformity nor specious "talentism". It is a process
of producing quality out of larger areas of equality
extending better facilities to the latent capabilities of the
lowly. It is not a methodology of substitution of
pervasive and slovenly medicority for activist and
intelligent \027 but not snobbish and uncommitted \027
cadres. However, if the State uses classification
casuistically for salvaging status and elitism, the point
of no return is reached for Articles 14 to 16 and the
Court’s jurisdiction awakens to deaden such
manoeuvres. The soul of Article 16 is the promotion of
the common man’s capabilities, over-powering
environmental adversities and opening up full
opportunities to develop in official life without
succumbing to the sophistic argument of the elite that
talent is the privilege of the few and they must rule,
wriggling out of the democratic imperative of Articles
14 and 16 by the theory of classified equality which at
its worst degenerates into class domination."
In State of Madhya Pradesh and Another v. Pramod Bhartiya and
Others [(1993) 1 SCC 539] referring to the provisions of Section 2(h) of the
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976, this Court stated:
"13. It would be evident from this definition that the
stress is upon the similarity of skill, effort and
responsibility when performed under similar conditions.
Further, as pointed out by Mukharji, J. (as he then was)
in Federation of All India Customs and Excise
Stenographers the quality of work may vary from post
to post. It may vary from institution to institution. We
cannot ignore or overlook this reality. It is not a matter
of assumption but one of proof. The respondents
(original petitioners) have failed to establish that their
duties, responsibilities and functions are similar to those
of the non-technical lecturers in Technical Colleges.
They have also failed to establish that the distinction
between their scale of pay and that of non-technical
lecturers working in Technical Schools is either
irrational and that it has no basis, or that it is vitiated by
mala fides, either in law or in fact (see the approach
adopted in Federation case)\005"
Yet again in Shyam Babu Verma and Others v. Union of India and
Others [(1994) 2 SCC 521] a 3-Judge Bench of this Court opined:
"\005The nature of work may be more or less the same
but scale of pay may vary based on academic
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qualification or experience which justifies classification.
The principle of ’equal pay for equal work’ should not
be applied in a mechanical or casual manner.
Classification made by a body of experts after full study
and analysis of the work should not be disturbed except
for strong reasons which indicate the classification
made to be unreasonable. Inequality of the men in
different groups excludes applicability of the principle
of ’equal pay for equal work’ to them\005."
In Government of W.B. v. Tarun K. Roy [(2004) 1 SCC 347], it was
clearly laid down that the holders of a higher qualification can be treated to
be a separate class, holding :
"20. Question of violation of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India on the part of the State would arise
only if the persons are similarly placed. Equality clause
contained in Article 14, in other words, will have no
application where the persons are not similarly situated
or when there is a valid classification based on a
reasonable differentia\005."
The said decision has been noticed by another Bench of this Court in
M.P. Rural Agriculture Extension Officers Association v. State of M.P. and
Another [(2004) 4 SCC 646] stating:
"22. Furthermore, as noticed hereinbefore, a valid
classification based on educational qualification for the
purpose of grant of pay has been upheld by the
Constitution Bench of this Court in P. Narasinga Rao.
The First Respondent admittedly did not possess the requisite
qualification. He merely claimed a higher scale of pay only because Shri
B.P. Srivastava and Shri Shyam Sunder Shukla had been paid. It has not
been disputed before us that the case of Shri Srivastava stood on different
footing and his scale of pay had to be protected in terms of Section 16 of the
Act. So far as Shri Shyam Sunder Shukla is concerned, we may proceed on
the basis that the Corporation took a wrong decision. The said decision,
however, was not questioned by the First Respondent before the High Court.
No foundational facts had been placed before the High Court in relation
thereto. We would not like to enter into the controversy as to whether his
case could have been considered by the Committee or on what basis the
Committee considered the cases of seven candidates and granted higher
scales of pay to four candidates as the validity thereof is not in question.
Assuming that the Corporation was wrong, the same by itself would not
clothe the First Respondent even legal right to claim a higher scale of pay.
On what basis the Selection Committee selected four employees out of the
seven is not known. Three persons admittedly were not selected. If the plea
put forward by the Respondent is accepted, these employees also would be
entitled to the same scale of pay as given to the said Shri Shukla, although
they have been found to be not fit therefor. Educational qualification was
made the basis for a valid classification in the matter of payment of salary in
a particular scale of pay by the Wage Board itself. Only in the year 1989,
such a classification was obliterated. The First Respondent had been granted
the benefit of the recommendations of the Third Wage Board also. It was a
matter of policy decision for the Corporation to consider as to whether a
particular category of employees should be taken outside the purview of the
pay scales recommended by the Wage Board and place them in a higher
scale of pay. We, therefore, cannot accept the contention of Shri Dwivedi
that only because no such qualification was prescribed at the time of
recruitment, the classification made on that basis would be bad in law. Even
otherwise the said contention is not correct as scale of pay was determined
by the award of the Wage Board.
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Yet again the validity or otherwise of the said policy decision is not in
question. The said policy decision has been taken as far back in 1984. It
cannot be assumed that the First Respondent was not aware of the same.
Despite knowledge, he did not question the validity of such a policy
decision. The matter relating to grant of scale of pay may be based upon a
policy decision of the State.
In State of Orissa and Others v. Balaram Sahu and Others [(2003) 1
SCC 250], this Court opined:
"\005Though "equal pay for equal work" is considered to
be a concomitant of Article 14 as much as "equal pay
for unequal work" will also be a negation of that right,
equal pay would depend upon not only the nature or the
volume of work, but also on the qualitative difference as
regards reliability and responsibility as well and though
the functions may be the same, but the responsibilities
do make a real and substantial difference."
Yet again in Union of India and Another v. International Trading Co.
and Another[(2003) 5 SCC 437], this Court opined:
"\005A party cannot claim that since something wrong
has been done in another case direction should be given
for doing another wrong. It would not be setting a
wrong right, but would be perpetuating another wrong.
In such matters there is no discrimination involved. The
concept of equal treatment on the logic of Article 14 of
the Constitution of India (in short "the Constitution")
cannot be pressed into service in such cases. What the
concept of equal treatment presupposes is existence of
similar legal foothold. It does not countenance
repetition of a wrong action to bring both wrongs on a
par. Even if hypothetically it is accepted that a wrong
has been committed in some other cases by introducing
a concept of negative equality the respondents cannot
strengthen their case\005"
Moreover, Article 14 has a positive concept. Nobody can claim
equality in illegality.
For the foregoing reasons, we are of the opinion that the impugned
judgment cannot be sustained which is set aside accordingly. If any amount
has been paid to the First Respondent, pursuant to or in furtherance of the
judgment of the High Court, the same may be recovered from his salary in
twelve equal monthly instalments.
These appeals are allowed accordingly. The parties shall pay and bear
their own costs of the appeals.