Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
S. N. KHARKHANIS & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/03/1974
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
DWIVEDI, S.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 2302 1974 SCR (3) 589
1974 SCC (4) 360
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 309, proviso-integrating two
Class I services by Presidential Resolution--Date of
integration made retrospective by Government’s letter-Legal
validity of subsequent letter.
HEADNOTE:
By Presidential resolution dated 12th August, 1959, the
Government of India, under the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution, combined two services of Central Excise
Service Class I and Indian Customs Service Class I with
effect from 15th August, 1959. AR the petitioners joined
the respective services with effect from 13th July, 1’959.
Later by decision dated 7th April 1970 the Government
decided that a combined list of seniority of officers in the
service should be prepared with reference to April 1, 1959,
as being the date of merger. The petitioners complained
that by reason of this they were excluded from the list of
officers appointed to the initial constitution to the
combined cadre even though they had joined the two separate
services on 13th July, 1959, with the result that persons
junior to them had become seniors.
It was contended that the date of 1st April, 1959 on which
the two services were combined for the purpose of inter se
seniority was an artificial date chosen arbitrarily and is
sought to be given effect to without any legal authority.
HELD : The contention must be upheld. The Government had no
authority to override the Presidential resolution by any
subsequent decision which lacked legal authority and was
violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution. The Presidential
Resolution of 12th August, 1959 which drew its authority
from the proviso to Art. 309 was clear and categorical in
that it not only showed that the question of integration of
the Central Excise Service Class I and the Indian Customs
Service Class I which was older of the two services was
under consideration of the Government of India for quite
sometime but that "the President has now been pleased to
decide that the two services should be constituted into a
single service with effect from 15th August, 1959" and that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
"the services will initially be formed from amongst all the
existing class I officers of the Customs and Central Excise
Services who will henceforth be borne on a single combined
cadre for all purposes". The subsequent decision of the
Government conveyed in the letter of 7th April 1970 had no
legal authority as it was not purported to have been made in
the name or with the authority of the President of India nor
did it in any way seek to amend the Presidential Resolution
of 12th August, 1959 nor did it purport to change the date
on and from which the integration was given effect to. [594
C; 593 B-D]
Since a final decision was taken on 7th April, 1970 the
petitioners could not have come to this Court earlier. [592
H]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 286 of 1970.
Under Art. 32 of Constitution of India- for the enforcement
of Fundamental rights.
S. N. Prasad, for the petitioners.
G. Das and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
590
ARGUMENTS
For the Petitioners: By Presidential resolution dated 12th
August, 1959 the Indian Customs Service Class I and the
Central Excise Service Class I were integrated with effect.
from 15th August, 1959. The resolution also stated that
"the service will initially be formed from amongst all the
existing class I officers of the Customs and Central Excise
Services, who will henceforth be borne on a single combined
cadre for all purposes."
The Government took a decision to change the date of
constitution of the cadre in 1960. On objections having
been raised by the service associations the matter was
referred to the Union Public Service Commission in 1967 and
on the basis of the recommendations of the Commission a
final decision was taken on 7th April, 1970. For the first
time in the letter of 7th April, 1970, 1st April, 1959 was
taken as the date on which, the two services were merged and
the petitioners made representations against the said
arbitrary date. Since after this date some juniors were
promoted, the petitioners approached this Court.
As stated in paragraph 5 of the letter- of 7th April, 1970
by taking the artificial date of 1st April, 1959 the
petitioners have been discriminated against as the direct
recruits of the year 1958 have been included in the initial
constitution of the service and the petitioners who were
direct recruits of the year 1959 and who at the time of the
integration of the two services were existing officers and
formed the cadre of the combined services had not been so
included.
There cannot be any question of leaches as explained above.
For the respondent: The decision to merge the two services
was taken in March 1959 and an official committee was
appointed to determine the inter se seniority. Pending
finalisation of seniority list it was decided to freeze the
position as on a particular point of time. The date chosen
was 1st April, 1959 though the formal resolution to merge
the two services was published on 12th August 1959. The
seniority list published on 6th January, 1960 was based on
the position as it was on 1st April. 1959 and the promotions
made in the service after that date have been ignored,
Direct recruits who joined the Class I service and officers
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
promoted after 1 st April, 1959 did not figure in the
seniority list circulated on 6th January, 1959. The
petitioners who joined Class I service in July 19 59 were
rightly not included in the combined seniority list of 6th
January, 1960.
The petitioners have not raised any objection regarding the
merger from 1959 to 1970 and it was not open to them to
approach this Court after such long delay.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J.-Six petitioners, of whom the 4th peti-
tioner has since died. challenge the decision of the first
respondent, the Union of India, fixing the principles of
seniority of members of the Customs and Central Excise
Service Class I as if the combined Service came into
existence on April 1, 1959, instead of August 15, 1959-the
date on which the Presidential Resolution dated August 12,
1959 said that the combined Service would come into effect.
Petitioners 2, 3, 4 & 6 were appointed as probationary
Superintendents of Central Excise Class I in the Central
Excise Service lass with effect from July 13, 1959 on the
result of the combined competitive
591
examination held by the second respondent, the Union Public
Service Commission, in 1958: (vide notification of the
Government of India (Central Excise Establishment) dated
August 4, 1959). Similarly, petitioners 1 & 5 were 1959, as
probationary Assistant Collectors of Customs in the Indian
Customs Service Class I on the result same date, namely,
from July 13, of the combined competitive examination held
by the second respondent in 1958: (vide notification of the
Government of India (Customs Establishment) dated August 4,
1959). The petitioners say that contrary to the
Presidential Resolution of August 12, 1959, creating the
combined Service of Customs and ,Central Excise, Class 1,
comprising of all the existing members of both the Services
as from August 15, 1959, the impugned decision of the
Government which prescribed the principles of seniority of
members of the two individual Services as if the combined
Service came into existence on April 1, 1959, would affect
their seniority as they would be considered to be appointed
only after the constitution of the combined Service, when in
fact they were members of one or other of the two Services
on the date when the combined Service was created. As the
combined list of seniority of Officers in the Service was
prepared with reference to April 1, 1959 as being the date
of the merger, the petitioners complain that they were
excluded from the list of Officers appointed to the initial
constitution of the Indian Customs and Central Excise
Service Class 1, even though they had joined the two
separate Services on July 13, 1969, as a consequence of
whichpersons who would be juniors, if the
principles of seniority were made applicable tothem, have
become senior and have been promoted by overlooking their
claims. When the impugned letter,dated April 7, 1970 gave
time tilltime till May 15, 1970, calling on any member of
the service to point out any factual mistakes or errors in
the application of the principles enunciated in the said
letter, it appears all the petitioners made representations
in which they asserted that the integrate on of the two
Services having taken place on August 15, 1959, and not on
April 1, 1959, they were entitled to be included in the
initial constitution of the combined Service and on the
application of the principles enunciated in the, said letter
no distinction could be made between in the direct recruits
appointed to the Indian Customs Service Class-I a and the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
Central Excise, Service Class I in the years 1955 to 1958
and the direct recruits appointed to the said two Services
in the year 1959 In their representations the petitioners
had claimed that they be placed above respondent 3 and
requested that till this matter was decided persons from the
combined seniority list below Serial No 73 should not be
made, but in spite of this request, even before the date
calling for representations expired, some Officers were
promoted an May 11, 1970, without considering their claims.
The first respondent in its counter affidavit stated that
the idea of having a separate Class I Service for the
Central Excise Department was mooted for the first time in
1944, )tit the final constitution of the. Central Excise
Service Class I took place only with effect from July 1,
1955; that after the idea of constituting a Central Excise
Service was mooted in 1944 the first respondent says that
training in central excise work was given to Officers
recruited to the Indian Customs Service and
592
even right from 1950 the notification issued by the second
respondent for the combined I. A. S. Examination stated that
the direct recruitment was to the Indian Customs and Excise
Service even though there was no such service in existence
upto July 1, 1955 and that even after the formation of the
Service with effect from July 1, 1955, and upto its
subsequent integration with the Indian Customs Service in
1959 the notification issued by the second respondent stated
that the recruitment was to the Indian Customs and Central
Excise Service Class I and not to the Indian Customs Service
and the Central Excise Service separately, though the actual
allocation of the candidates between the two- Services was
made by the Department of Revenue. It was also stated that
the order constituting the Central Excise Service Class I
with effect from July 1, 1955, provided that future
vacancies in the grade of Superintendent of Central Excise
Class I will be filled up by direct recruitment and
promotion in the ratio of 1:1 and that when the final
decision to merge the Indian Customs Service Class I and the
Central Excise Service Class I was taken by the Government
in March 1959, an Official Committee was set up to make
recommendations regarding the determination of inter se
seniority in the merged service of the officers in position
in the two constituent Services at the time of integration.
As the finalisation of the seniority list was expected to
take some time it was felt desirable to freeze the position
of officers in the two departments as on a particular point
of time so that changes introduced thereafter in one Service
did not affect the members of the other Service ,on a
lasting and irretrievable basis. Accordingly the date,
April 1, 1959, was chosen though the formal resolution to
merge the two Services was published only on August 12,
1959. The counter of the Union of India further stated that
as the seniority principles enunciated by the
Government in their letter of January 6, 1960 had raised a
controversy, the Government referred the matter to the
second respondent under Art. 320 (3) (b) of the
Constitution, and ultimately the letter of April 7, 1970 was
issued accepting not only the principles evolved by the
second respondent, but also the date April 1, 1959, as the
date on which the integration of Services were to come into
effect as previously indicated in the first respondent’s
letter of January 6, 1960.
An objection was sought to be taken on the ground that there
was an inordinate delay in the petitioners’ presenting the
writ petition after over ten years even though the letter of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
January. 6, 1960, stated that the decision taken by the
Government was final. The petitioners countered this
objection by pointing out, firstly, that the letter of
January 6, 1960 was addressed to the Heads of Departments
who were asked to communicate the decision to those officers
whose names figured in the list and since the petitioners
were appointed after April 1, 1959, their names did not
appear and the decision was not communicated to them,
secondly, the letter of April 7, 1970, itself clearly stated
that everything done earlier by the Government was
provisional. It is, therefore, urged that as right from the
beginning objections had been taken by the, Service
Associations regarding the principles enunciated in the
letter of January 6, 1960, and the Government itself had
called
593
upon the Service Associations by its letter of June 20,
1961, to enunciate the principles they considered fair in
fixing the seniority, in compliance to which objections were
being urged, the petitioners cannot be held to have
committed any leaches. Taking into consideration the
respective contentions it appears to us that having regard
to the stand taken by the Government and the admissions made
by it in the letters subsequently written that the proposals
set out in the letter of January 6, 1960, were to be treated
as provisional, the petitioners could not have come to this
Court earlier till a final decision was made on April 7,
1970. Accordingly the preliminary objection is not
sustainable.
The petitioners’ only objection to the decision of the
Government conveyed in the letter of April 7, 1970, is that
the date, April 1, 1959, on which the two Services were said
to have been merged for the purposes of inter se seniority
was an artificial date chosen arbitrarily and is sought to
be given effect to without any legal authority. It appears
to us that this contention must be upheld. The Presidential
Resolution of August 12, 1959, which draws its authority
from the proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution is clear
and categorical in that it not only shows that the question
of integration of the Central Excise Service Class I and the
Indian Customs Service Class I which was the older of the
two Services was under consideration of the Government of
India for quite some time, but that "The President has now
been pleased to decide that the two services should be
constituted into a single service with effect from the 15th
August, 1959." It also states that "The Service will
initially be formed from amongst all the existing Class I
officers of the Customs and Central Excise Services, who
will henceforth be borne on a single combined cadre for all
purposes." (Emphasis ours). It is not denied that the
petitioners were members of the respective services on
August 15, 1959, and consequently the rules relating to
seniority should be applicable to them in the same way as to
those recruited in 1958. The subsequent decision of the
Government conveyed in the letter of April 7, 1970, has no
legal validity, as it was not purported to have been made in
the name or with the authority of the President of India,
nor does it in any way seek to amend the Presidential
Resolution of August 12, 1959, nor does it purport to change
the date on and from which the integration was given effect
to. On the contrary, three days after the Presidential
Resolution of August 12, 1959, intimating that the President
had decided that the two Services should be constituted into
a single Service with effect from August 15, 1959, and from
henceforth, namely on and from August 15, 1959, all persons
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
borne on the respective Services will be borne on a single
combined cadre, the Deputy Secretary to the Government of
India, Ministry of Finance, wrote to the President of all
India Central Excise Officers Association and the President,
Indian Customs Service Association, informing them that the
Presidential Resolution was published in the Gazette. This
letter further explained the import of that Resolution thus
:
"Since it is the Government’s intention that
so far as possible, the existing normal
expectations of promotion of Officers in the
cadre posts of the two Departments should be
secured, it is proposed to safeguard a
suitable number of cadre
594
posts of the two Departments, based on the
strength of such posts on a particular.date,
to the officers of such Department, for a
limited period. This Particular date. will be
the beginning of the current financial year,
viz. 1st April, 1959. What is. being
safeguarded is the number of posts of
particular status irrespective of whether they
are actually hold by the officers of a Depart-
ment in that Department or elsewhere. This
safeguard will be necessary only in the
supervisory posts of the Deputy Collectors and
above of each Department. Posts arising in
the two Departments after 1st April, 1959,
deputation posts and other ex-cadre posts can
obviously not be the subject of any safeguard.
With the merger, the two services will become
one and officers of the combined service, as a
whole, will be co-sharers of the future
Prospects and vicissitudes of the combined
service."
Even in this letter, 1st April, 1959, has not been shown as
the date on which the two Services were to be integrated,
but only that it was proposed to safeguard a particular
number of posts in the Department on a particular date,
namely, 1st April, 1959. No mention has been made, in
supersession of the Presidential Resolution, that 1st April,
1959 will be the date of the merger of the two, Services.
In any case it is clear that the Government has no authority
to override the Presidential Resolution by any subsequent
decision which lacks legal authority and is violative of
Art. 14 of the Constitution of India.
In this view. the petition is allowed with costs. The
Government is directed to give effect to the Presidential
Resolution of August 12, 1959, in respect of integration of
the two Services from August 15, 1959, and to apply the
principles of seniority to the petitioners as if they were
members of the respective Services which were integrated
after their appointment in July 1959.
P.B.R.
Petition allowed’
595