Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5847 of 2005
PETITIONER:
State of Punjab & Anr
RESPONDENT:
Balkaran Singh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/10/2006
BENCH:
H.K. SEMA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[With C.A. No. 5854 of 2005 and C.A. No. 5853 of 2005]
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. These appeals by special leave are by the State of
Punjab and its Director of Agriculture. They challenge the
judgments and decrees in three different suits filed by three
officers of the Agricultural Department of the State,
essentially claiming pay at enhanced scale in two of the
suits and seniority over certain others in the third suit. Civil
Appeal Nos. 5847 of 2005 and 5854 of 2005 go together and
the issue involved in C.A. No. 5853 of 2005 is slightly
different though based on the same claim. The suits were
decreed by the trial court. The decrees were affirmed in
appeal. The Second Appellate Court declined to interfere.
Hence these appeals.
C.A. NO. 5847 OF 2005
2. The respondent herein, hereinafter referred to as
the plaintiff, filed Civil Suit No. 665 of 1993 on 20.12.1993
in the Court of Senior Subordinate Judge, Chandigarh
praying for a declaration that the Office Order dated
13.3.1980 passed by the Director of Agriculture, Punjab in
fixing the pay of the plaintiff in the scale of Rs. 940-1850/-
instead of in the scale of Rs.1200-1850/- is illegal, null,
void, arbitrary, without jurisdiction and against the
principles of natural justice and equity, for a declaration
that the plaintiff is entitled for the pay scale of Rs.1200-
1850/- as against Rs. 940-1850/-with effect from 1.1.1978
applicable to the post of Deputy Director of Agriculture and
entitled to the payment of all other service benefits including
yearly increments, arrears and interest thereon at the rate of
18 per cent per annum with effect from 1.1.1978 till the date
of payment with costs of the suit. At the time of the suit,
the plaintiff was working as a Joint Director, Agriculture and
was on deputation in The Punjab Land Development and
Reclamation Corporation Limited. The plaintiff was selected,
according to him, to the post of Deputy Director of
Agriculture. But the order of appointment produced by him
and marked as Exhibit P-1 shows that the plaintiff was
appointed to Punjab Agricultural Services Class-I
temporarily by direct recruitment in the time scale of
Rs.400-30-550/40-750/50-1250 and was posted as Deputy
Director of Agriculture (Pulses), Bhatinda. The plaint
proceeds on the basis that on the recommendations of the
Third Pay Commission, the Government of Punjab revised
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the pay-scales of its employees from 1.1.1978. The pay-
scale of Deputy Directors in all services was given as
Rs.1200-1850/- from the old scale of Rs.400-1250/-. When
this decision to revise the pay-scale was brought to the
notice of the Director of Agriculture, he found that in the
Agricultural Department there was no post of Deputy
Director as such and that the appointment of all those
working as Deputy Directors was only to Punjab Agricultural
Service Class-I and that the scale of pay of Class-I officers in
the original scale of Rs.400-1250/- had been enhanced only
to Rs. 940-1850/-. He therefore made an endorsement that
the revised scale of pay of Deputy Directors in the
Agricultural Department, they being officers of Class-I was
only Rs. 940-1850/- and consequently that amount alone
was payable. It may be noted that this endorsement was
made as early as on 13.3.1980. The plaintiff was being paid
salary only at that scale from 1.1.1978. The plaintiff came to
Court challenging that order only on 20.12.1993, more than
12 years after the order or endorsement. The case of the
plaintiff was that in the case of one Mewa Singh, who was
also a Deputy Director, the Court had passed a decree in the
year 1991 declaring him entitled to the pay-scale of
Rs.1200-1850/- and when that was done and the State
accepted the said decision and paid Mewa Singh, the
plaintiff issued a notice under Section 80 of the Code of Civil
Procedure and that notice not having been responded to by
the defendants, he was filing the suit. It is appropriate to
refer to paragraph 9 of the plaint in this connection. The
plaintiff pleaded:
"That cause of action firstly arose in 1980
when the plaintiff became eligible for the
revised pay scale of Rs.1200-1850/- with
effect from 1.1.1978 as per Annexure P-2,
thereafter the cause of action arose on
23.10.1992, when the pay of Shri Mewa
Singh Sonar was fixed in the scale of
Rs.1200-1850/- by Defendant No.2, but the
plaintiff was not given the same scale and
finally on 16.6.1993, when legal notice
under Section 80 of the Code of Civil
Procedure was served upon the defendants."
3. As noticed, the claim of plaintiff was that he had
been appointed as a Deputy Director even initially and the
revised scale of pay of Deputy Directors had been shown in
the concerned Order as Rs.1200-1850/- and consequently,
he is entitled to salary at that scale from 1.1.1978 as per the
recommendations of the Third Pay Commission accepted by
the State of Punjab and brought into effect.
4. The defendants filed a written statement denying
the claim of the plaintiff that he was appointed as a Deputy
Director. It was pointed out with reference to the Order of
appointment relied on by the plaintiff himself, that he was
temporarily appointed to the post of Punjab Agricultural
Service Class-I officer, on a scale of pay of Rs.400-1250/-
and that scale had been revised with effect from 1.1.1978
only to Rs. 940-1850/- and hence the plaintiff was not
entitled to the higher scale of pay as claimed by him. It was
further pleaded that the post of Deputy Director in which
the plaintiff was intermittently working was only an
interchangeable post manned by Class-I officers in the
Punjab Agricultural Service. It was also pleaded that going
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by Rule 11 of the Punjab Agricultural Service (Class-I) Rules,
1974, the position of Deputy Director was not a promotion
post for a Class-I Officer and consequently the claim of the
appellant that he was holding a post higher than that of a
Class-I officer, was untenable. It was an interchangeable
post that he was holding and he had himself worked as
Class-I officer during his career and had also occasionally
worked as Deputy Director. It was pleaded that the decision
in Mewa Singh’s case had no application and could not be
made use of for grant reliefs to the plaintiff. It was also
specifically pleaded that the suit was barred by limitation,
the cause of action for the relief of declaration having arisen
as early as on 13.3.1980 and the suit having been filed only
on 20.12.1993. It was also pleaded that no decree could be
granted for so-called arrears from 1.1.1978 as claimed in the
plaint. We may incidentally notice that the plaintiff has not
quantified or valued any arrears as due to him.
C.A. NO. 5854 OF 2005
5. The facts of this case are also on a par with the
litigation giving rise to C.A. No. 5847 of 2005. Here, the
plaintiff, who was appointed as a Class-II officer was
promoted as Class-I Officer on a scale of pay of Rs.400-
1250/- by Order dated 10.6.1977 and was posted as Deputy
Director, Agriculture (I.C.D.P.), Mukhtasar. The Civil Suit
No. 894 of 1993 was filed on 25.11.1993. The prayers in the
plaint are identical with the ones in Civil Suit No. 665 of
1993 giving rise to C.A. No. 5847 of 2005. The claim is also
made on the same basis. The suit was resisted on the same
lines by the defendants. The question that has to be tackled
herein is the same as the one arising in C.A. No. 5847 of
2005 including the question of limitation and hence no
separate discussion is needed.
C.A. NO. 5853 OF 2005
6. The respondent- plaintiff filed Civil Suit No. 82 of
1993 on 6.5.1993 praying for a declaration that he was
legally entitled to be placed at Serial No. 12 instead of at
Serial No. 20 in the seniority list prepared in the year 1980
of the Punjab Agricultural Service Class-I (Administrative)
officers of the Agricultural Department issued by the Punjab
Government on 26.2.1980 and for a mandatory injunction
directing the defendant \026 State of Punjab, to fix the seniority
of the plaintiff at Serial No. 12 in the Seniority List of Class-I
Officers of the Agricultural Department prepared in the year
1980 and granting the plaintiff proforma promotions in
accordance with his actual seniority in the Department with
retrospective effect after placing him at Serial No. 12 in the
Seniority List. He also prayed for a mandatory injunction
directing the defendant to release the arrears of his pay and
emoluments along with interest at the rate of 18 per cent per
annum from the dates when they became due till their
actual recovery in view of his denied promotions to which he
was legally entitled to and also to grant him all the service
benefits and arrears from the back date to which he was
found legally entitled to in the facts and circumstances of
the case.
7. Subsequently, the plaint was amended and the
State of Punjab, the original Defendant was ranked as
Defendant No.1 and four other officers in the Agricultural
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Department were impleaded as Defendants 2 to 5. One
officer Sukhdev Singh, who was shown as senior and
promoted earlier and with reference to whom a specific relief
was claimed was not impleaded apparently on the basis that
he had since retired. The plaintiff also included in the
amended plaint a further prayer as regards the seniority list
of the years 1984 and 1985 and seeking the placing of the
plaintiff at Serial No. 15 instead of at Serial No. 21.
8. In addition to the factual position that was
identical with the other two suits, in that the plaintiff was
also recruited initially only as a Class-I officer in the Punjab
Agricultural Service, one further fact that was relied on by
the plaintiff was that though he had been placed in the
revised scale of pay at Rs.940-1850/-, he had filed a suit
being Civil Suit No.461 of 1991 challenging the order fixing
his revised scale of pay of Rs.940-1850/- and claiming that
he was entitled to arrears of pay at the scale of Rs. 1200-
1850/- and the same was decreed in his favour, upholding
his prayer and directing that payment of salary including
arrears be paid to him in the scale of Rs.1200-1850/- and
that the said decision had become final. In view of the said
decision, it was the contention of the plaintiff that the first
defendant could not deny the seniority that would be due to
him based on the higher pay thus drawn by him as against
the officers who were placed in a lower scale of pay.
9. It may be noted that the plaintiff had pleaded that
the cause of action arose in his favour on the refusal of the
defendant-State to grant the relief claimed by him in the
plaint by sending a notice under Section 80 of the Code of
Civil Procedure and that the cause of action had also arisen
earlier on 3.10.1991 as the plaintiff’s previous suit was
decreed by the trial court.
10. The suit was resisted by the first defendant-State
by contending that the plaintiff was recruited temporarily
only as an officer in Punjab Agricultural Service Class-I on a
scale of pay of Rs.400-1250/- and he could be fitted only in
the revised scale of pay of Rs.940-1850/- and that his
seniority cannot be re-fixed as claimed by him since even in
the recruitment he was placed junior to those officers. The
State, no doubt, had to concede that the decree in Civil Suit
No. 461 of 1991 had become final. It was pleaded that the
present suit was barred by limitation and that the seniority
that was fixed in the year 1980 and in the years 1984 and
1985 could not be upset or revised in the suit filed in the
year 1993 and that merely because the State has been
forced to give the plaintiff a higher scale of pay, the plaintiff
could not claim seniority over other officers. All the
necessary parties have not been impleaded. The suit was
liable to be dismissed. Defendant No.2 was removed from
the array of parties. Two of the other defendants filed a
written statement, more or less, along the same lines as that
of the State.
11. In all the three suits, the trial court raised issues
as to whether the respective plaintiff would be entitled to the
revised scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/- instead of at Rs.940-
1850/- and whether the suits were barred by limitation. In
the suits giving rise to C.A. No. 5847 of 2005 and C.A. No.
5454 of 2005, the trial court held that in view of the letter
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sanctioning the revised pay scale indicating the scale of pay
of Deputy Directors as Rs.1200-1850/-, the endorsement of
the Director of Agriculture that the revised scale of pay of
Rs.940-1850/- alone was payable was wrong. The court
shut its eyes to the contention that the plaintiffs were only
recruited as Punjab Agricultural Service Class-I officers on a
scale of pay of Rs.400-1250/- and the revised scale for that
pay was only Rs.940-1850/- and that the post of Deputy
Director held by the plaintiffs was an interchangeable post
and the plaintiffs themselves had held the post of Class-I
officers during all these years alternately and that in the
light of Rule 11 of the relevant rules, the plaintiffs could not
be considered to be holding any promotional post. The trial
court purported to rely upon the decision in Civil Suit No.
461 of 1991 and the fact that the State was forced to
concede the scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/- to Mewa Singh,
the plaintiff therein, to hold that all those officers of Class-I
who at one time or the other worked as Deputy Directors,
would be entitled to the scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/-. It
was not borne in mind that Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991 was
not a representative action, though of course it related to an
officer similarly situated and the decision in that suit might
have evidentiary value but could not be understood as
barring a proper enquiry into the contentions by the trial
court. On the issue of limitation, the trial court stated that
the relief of declaration was not barred by limitation because
the right to seek the fixation of pay as per rules could not be
held to be barred by limitation presumably on the ground
that it was a recurring cause of action. The issue was
disposed of in a most unsatisfactory and cursory fashion by
the trial court even without advertence to the relevant article
of the Limitation Act. In the third suit, the trial court relied
entirely on the earlier decree in Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991
and proceeded to upset the seniority list of 1980 in the suit
of the year 1993 by a judgment dated 7.8.1997 and granted
a declaration that Mewa Singh, the plaintiff therein, is
entitled to be placed at Serial No.12 instead of at Serial No.
20 in the seniority list issued on 26.2.1980 and at Serial No.
15 instead of at Serial No. 21 in the seniority list prepared in
the year 1984-85. The State was directed to consider the
case of the plaintiff for fixation of seniority as claimed by the
plaintiff. In the event of grant of the said seniority, it was
directed that the plaintiff would be entitled to all the benefits
of service. He shall be posted as per the seniority. An order
was to be passed within two months from the date of the
decree.
12. The State appealed against these decrees. The
appellate court simply followed the line adopted by the trial
court without a proper and independent application of mind
and confirmed the decrees. It noticed that the seniority list
was issued in the year 1980 and in the year 1984, but
stated that at that stage it was not established that the post
of Deputy Director enjoys higher rank and status as
compared to the other officers and since a finding in that
regard was recorded only on 3.10.1993 in the prior suit, the
present suits could be held to be within time. Thus the
appeals were dismissed.
13. The State filed Second Appeals before the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana. The High Court, we are
constrained to point out, without a proper application of
mind, simply dismissed the Second Appeals, without even
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considering or attempting to answer properly the issues that
arose for decision in the case. It appears to us that in
matters relating to service, the jurisdiction of the Civil Court
cannot be considered to be so wide that it would enable it to
sit in appeal over disciplinary proceedings, over the
quantum of punishment imposed, over the entries in
confidential records, and so on, in respect of which reliefs
are seen to be freely granted by the courts in the States of
Punjab and Haryana. In the case of grant of reliefs in
matters relating to services, we feel that the High Court
ought to make a deeper scrutiny of the decrees to see
whether the Civil Court has overstepped its jurisdiction in
granting the reliefs instead of simply rejecting the Second
appeals on the basis that concurrent findings have been
rendered by the trial court and the first appellate court. In
the case on hand, the High Court made no attempt to see for
itself whether on the basis of the rules and the arguments
put forward on behalf of the State, the respective plaintiffs
could be fitted in the scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/- and in
the third suit where the earlier decree became final, whether
the reliefs claimed could be granted merely on the ground
that there was an earlier decree in favour of the plaintiff
therein granting him a higher scale of pay. Similarly, the
question of limitation was disposed of even without referring
to the relevant article in the schedule to the Limitation Act
that had application and without considering whether it was
open to any court to upset a seniority list of the year 1980 in
a suit of the year 1993 even when all the affected parties
were not impleaded or were not before the Court. It is for
these reasons that we are constrained to observe that the
Second Appeals were dismissed in a cursory and most
unsatisfactory manner by the High Court. The State has
challenged these decisions by way of these Civil Appeals.
14. The respondent in Civil Appeal No.5853 of 2005
died pending the appeal in this Court and his legal
representatives were brought on record. Their counsel was
also heard.
15. We shall first deal with the first two suits relating
to the declaration that the plaintiffs therein are entitled to be
placed in the revised scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/-. The
suits filed are for declaration that the order or endorsement
dated 13.3.1980 was illegal and void. The suits were filed
more than 12 years after the order fixing the revised scale of
pay at Rs.940-1850/-. A suit for declaration is governed by
Article 58 of the Limitation Act and the period is three years
and the terminus au quo is "when the right to sue first
accrues".(emphasis supplied) Clearly, the right to seek the
relief of declaration that they are entitled to revised scale of
pay of Rs.1200-1850/-, accrued to the plaintiffs on
13.3.1980, when the endorsement in that behalf was made
by the Director of Agricultural Services and the plaintiffs
were denied revised pay at Rs.1200-1850/- and were paid
only at Rs.940-1850/-. It was not the mere making of an
order, but an action that had immediate impact on the right
of the plaintiffs to recover a higher salary as per their claim.
The cause of action thus clearly arose for the first time.
Thus the suit for declaration was clearly barred by limitation
going by Article 58 of the Limitation Act. The fact that some
other officer had been given a decree for the enhanced
revised scale, does not furnish the plaintiffs in the first two
suits with a fresh cause of action. It is well settled that the
time does not stop to run once it has started to run.
Therefore, the reliance placed on the decree in Civil Suit No.
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461 of 1991 had absolutely no relevance on this question.
Strictly speaking, Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991 also ought not
to have been decreed since that suit was clearly barred by
limitation, since the order sought to be challenged in that
suit of 1991 was also the order dated 13.3.1980. But in
view of the decree passed therein, it is not for us now to go
into the correctness or otherwise of the decision rendered
therein. Suffice it to say that the said decision cannot give
the plaintiffs a fresh cause of action. The time started to
run when the right to sue first accrued to the plaintiff and
that first accrual was clearly on 13.3.1980 and on expiry of
3 years therefrom, the suit for declaration became barred.
16. It was argued on behalf of the plaintiffs, as was
done in trial court, that the cause of action must be held to
be a recurring one and hence the suit must be held to be not
barred by limitation. Reliance was placed on the decision in
Amrit Lal Berry Vs. Collector of Central Excise, New
Delhi & Others [(1975) 4 SCC 714]. That decision arose
from a proceeding under Article 32 of the Constitution of
India. It was not a suit. There was no occasion for this
Court to consider the scope of Article 58 of the Limitation
Act in that Writ Petition. It was only stated that when a
citizen aggrieved by the action of the government
department had approached the Court and obtained
declaration of law in his favour, others, in like
circumstances, should be able to rely on the sense of
responsibility of the department concerned and to expect
that they will be given the benefit of this declaration without
the need to take their grievance to the court. This is hardly
a defence to a plea based on Article 58 of the Limitation Act
in respect of the relief of declaration with respect to an order
which was issued twelve years prior to the suit and which
immediately affected the pay receivable by them. In fact this
Court in S.S. Rathore vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
(1989(4) SCC 582), a decision rendered by seven Hon’ble
Judges, has clearly held in suits relating to service matters,
that "yet, suits out side the purview of the Administrative
Tribunals Act shall continue to be governed by Article 58".
In a series of subsequent decisions, this Court has held that
a suit for declaration in matters relating to a service is
governed by Article 58 of the Limitation Act, 1963. { See for
instance, Mohd. Quaramuddin (Dead) by Lrs. Vs. State of
A.P. [(1994) 5 S.C.C. 118], Vasant Ramchandara
Deshpande Vs. State of Maharashtra & Ors. [(1997) 11
S.C.C. 305], Rajasthan State Road Transport Corporation
& Ors. Vs. Nand Lal [1999 S.C.C. (L & S) 658] }. In State of
Punjab & Ors. Vs. Gurdev Singh [(1991) 4 S.C.C. 1], a three
judge Bench of this Court held that a party aggrieved by the
order, even if it is found to be void, has to approach the
court for relief of declaration that the order against him is
inoperative and void within three years of the order. It is
one thing to say that the plaintiffs might make a claim that
they must also be paid in future at the revised scale of pay
of Rs.1200-1850/- in view of the decision rendered in favour
of another officer of the same department. But that does not
enable them to revive a claim for the relief of declaration
which had become long ago barred. A cause of action once
barred does not get revived in such a case. Moreover, the
decree that was granted in that case was only to the effect
that the plaintiff therein was entitled to the scale of pay of
Rs.1200-1850/- with effect from 1.1.1978, which was
attached to the post of Deputy Director of Agriculture
instead of at Rs.940-1850/-. As we have indicated that was
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not a suit in which Order I Rule 8 of Code of Civil Procedure
was invoked and there was no declaration granted that the
endorsement or order dated 13.3.1980 was illegal and void,
the prayer for which is made in the first two suits. It may be
noticed that Suit No.461 of 1991 was concerned more with
the effect of various disciplinary proceedings initiated
against the plaintiff therein on the claim made by him in
that suit. We are therefore constrained to hold that the
relief of declaration sought for by the plaintiffs in the first
two suits is clearly barred by limitation.
17. Once the prayer for declaration sought for in the
suits is found to be barred by limitation, it has to be noticed
that the prayer that follows is only consequential on the
relief of declaration. That prayer is to the effect that the
plaintiff is entitled to the pay scale of Rs.1200-1850/- as
against the scale of pay of Rs.940-1850/- with effect from
1.1.1978 and entitled for payment of all other service
benefits including yearly increments, arrears and interest
thereon at the rate of 18 per cent per annum up to the date
of payment with effect from 1.1.1978. It must be noticed
that there is no independent prayer for recovery of arrears of
pay and the prayer is couched in such a manner that it can
be understood only as consequential on the grant of the first
relief. In other words, it is not an independent relief that
could be granted even if the main prayer is declined. In that
view, it has to be held that a consequential relief could not
be granted in view of the fact that the main relief of
declaration sought for has been held to be barred by
limitation.
18. Now coming to the merits of the contention
regarding the revised scale of pay, it has to be seen that the
plaintiffs are governed by the Punjab Agricultural Service
Rules, 1974. Going by the rules, under Rule 11, the post of
Deputy Director is not a promotional post for Punjab
Agricultural Service Officers Class-I. The orders of
appointment relied on by the two plaintiffs also clearly show
that one was temporarily appointed to Punjab Agricultural
Service Class-I, and the other was promoted as Officer
Class-I, but were posted as Deputy Directors. Therefore, the
appointment in one and the promotion in the other of the
plaintiffs are as Agricultural Officers Class-I. Their scale of
pay was Rs.400-1250/-. The said scale of pay has been
revised to Rs.940-1850/-. Therefore, they are entitled to
revised pay only at the scale of pay of Rs.940-1850/- and
not to any other higher pay. It is a fact that in the
communication of the Government, the cadre of Deputy
Directors are shown to be fitted in the revised scale of pay of
Rs.1200-1850/-. But, the Director of Agriculture, obviously
considering the nature of the service in the Agricultural
Department, rightly noting there was no cadre post of
Deputy Director in the department and some Agricultural
Officers, Class-I were posted as Deputy Directors and some
others as Chief Agricultural Officers, etc. only for
administrative reasons and the posts were interchangeable
and the concerned officer remained an officer of Class-I,
endorsed that the scale of pay of Rs.1200-1850/- does not
apply to those working as Deputy Directors in the
Agricultural Department. We find that the correct position
was adopted by the Director of Agriculture and the order or
endorsement made by him on 13.3.1980 was clearly correct
and legal and in the face of the orders of appointment
Exhibit P-1 produced by the plaintiffs, they cannot be heard
to say that they were appointed to a post other than that of
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a Class-I officer in the Punjab Agricultural Service. The
courts below have not considered the rules and the position
emerging therefrom and the position obtaining in the service
while considering this question and thereby they have gone
wrong in their conclusion.
19. It is argued that since in Civil Suit No. 461 of
1991 one other officer who was working as Deputy Director
was found entitled to the revised scale of pay of Rs.1200-
1850/-, all Class-I officers must be given the same pay
cannot be accepted. If such a plea is accepted, it will result
in equals being treated unequals in that those appointed
with the plaintiffs but who have been posted as Agricultural
Officers Class-I or as Chief Agricultural Officers holding
interchangeable posts would only be entitled to the scale of
pay of Rs.940-1850/- and certain persons among Class-I
officers who were fortuitously working as Deputy Directors,
would be getting the higher scale of pay at Rs.1200-1850.
Surely, such a situation cannot be brought about and the
result of the acceptance of the plea based on the decree in
Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991 would be that. Moreover, this
Court cannot be controlled by a wrong decision of a trial
court, unless of course, it operates as res judicata.
Therefore, the plea based on the decree in Civil Suit No. 461
of 1991 is overruled. We have already pointed out that the
said suit was not a representative action. No doubt, the
Government cannot treat different officers of same cadre
differently. But, merely because a decree was passed in
favour of one of them \026 according to us wrongly \026 would not
mean that all others should be given the same relief, when
going by the relevant rules and orders of appointment it is
clear that the plaintiffs are only Class-I officers appointed in
the scale of pay of Rs.400-1250/-, whose pay has been
revised to the scale of pay of Rs.940-1850/-.
20. In the view we have taken, the argument of the
plaintiff based on the Punjab Horticultural Service (Class-I)
Rules, 1990, has no substance. Those rules cannot have
any application to the question involved here. The result of
this discussion would be that the decrees granted by the
courts below in the two suits, i.e., Civil Suit No. 665 of 1993
and Civil Suit No. 894 of 1993 are unsustainable in law and
the decrees deserve to be reversed.
21. Coming to the third suit, Civil Suit No. 82 of
2003, we have found that the prayer in the suit filed on
6.5.1993 is to set at naught the seniority lists published in
the year 1980 and in the year 1984. On the face of it, the
prayer for declaration is barred by limitation. The suit is
governed by Article 58 of the Limitation Act and the impact
of the publication of the seniority list was felt by the plaintiff
on the issue of that list and when others were placed above
him. The cause of action therefore arose in 1980 and in
1984.
22. According to us, the suit is also barred by
acquiescence and estoppel. No one in a service can sleep
over the question of seniority for more than 12 years and
then come to court seeking a relief which will upset the
seniority of a number of persons who had been shown as
seniors in the respective seniority lists. Therefore, on the
face of it, a declaratory relief that will have the effect of
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altering a twelve year old and a nine year old seniority list
could not have been granted by the courts below.
23. Then the only question is whether in view of the
earlier decree in Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991 obtained by the
present plaintiff, he would be placed in a better position
regarding his entitlement to have the seniority list upset at
this distance of time. We have already indicated the scope
of the decree granted in the earlier suit. It merely found that
the disciplinary actions initiated against the plaintiff did not
affect his claim to be given the revised scale of pay of
Rs.1200-1850/- and that he was entitled to it
notwithstanding the endorsement made otherwise by the
Director of Agricultural Services. The fact that he had
obtained such a relief and that relief had become final would
not entitle him or enable him to seek the setting aside of the
seniority list merely on the ground that he had been put on
a higher pay scale than his colleagues who were otherwise
senior to him in service. All those, who will be affected have
also not been impleaded.
24. We do not think it necessary for the purposes of
these appeals to consider how far a Civil Court can enter
into the arena to decide upon the question of inter se
seniority in Government service. We also do not think it
necessary to go into the question of the extent of the
jurisdiction of the civil court, when they entertain suits
relating to matters of service, especially government service,
seeking the expunction of adverse entries, striking down of
punishments imposed by the authority after holding a
proper enquiry, as if the court was sitting in appeal, as to
which scale of pay a person should be fitted in, and so on.
Anyway, these questions will have to be examined as and
when the occasion for it arises. But, we may say that the
civil court cannot assume that it can freely enter the arena
as if it is sitting in appeal over the action of the authorities.
25. Other reliefs claimed in Civil Suit No. 82 of 1993
are consequential to the relief of redrawing of the seniority
list and since we have found that no relief of altering the
seniority list can be given to the plaintiff therein, those
reliefs also cannot be granted. Of course, the decree
obtained by the plaintiff in Civil Suit No. 461 of 1991 which
has become final would not be affected by whatever we have
said in this judgment. But the decree granted in Civil Suit
No. 82 of 1993 has to be reversed.
26. In the result, these appeals are allowed; the
judgments and decrees granted by the courts below are set
aside and all the three suits are dismissed with costs in the
trial court. In the circumstances, the parties are directed to
suffer their respective costs in the first appellate court, in
the second appellate court and in this Court.