Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNIKAT SANKUNNI MENON
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/04/1967
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
WANCHOO, K.N.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 81 1967 SCR (3) 470
ACT:
Constitution of India-Articles 14 and 16-Rajasthan
Secretariat Service (Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules,
1956, providing for special and Higher Grade for an
Assistant Secretary in the Rajasthan Secretariat Service an
promotion as Deputy Secretary in the Secretariat-Also pro-
viding for a special pay but the same grade for a member of
the Rajasthan Administrative Service on promotion as Deputy
Secretary in the Secretariat-Whether amounting to
discrimination or denial of equality of opportunity.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Rajasthan Civil Services (Unification of Pay
Scales) Rules & Schedules, 1950, a person serving in the
Rajasthan Secretariat, on appointment as Deputy Secretary,
was placed in a specified pay-scale and was, in addition,
entitled to - a Special Pay. Under the same Rules a member
of the Rajasthan Administrative Service, on appointment as
Deputy Secretary, was also entitled to draw salary in the
same pay-scale and a similar Special Pay. The 1950 Rules
were superseded by the Rajasthan Secretariat Service
(Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules & Schedules, 1956, by
which it was provided that for Assistant Secretaries in the
Secretariat Service there would be a number of selection
posts of Deputy Secretaries on an increased pay scale
without any Special pay Furthermore, the scales applicable
to the members of Administrative Service on appointment as
Deputy Secretary were also ’revised upwards though not to
the same extent as for those in the Secretariat Service and
in their case the principle of Special Pay on such
appointment was continued. The rules were revised again in
1961 and 1966 whereby higher pay-scales were introduced to
apply to members of each service on appointment to the post
of a Deputy Secretary but the system of a special pay on
such appointment, was continued only for members of the
Administrative Service.
The appellant, who was an Assistant Secretary in the
Secretariat Service- and had been promoted as a Deputy
Secretary, filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution claiming that the words "without special pay"
in the 1956 Rules, applicable in respect of his Service may
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be declared invalid and violative of Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution. The High Court dismissed the Petition.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended, inter alia
that Articles 14 and 16 were violated because, (i) the
Rules, on the fare of them, showed that in the case of
members of the Secretariat Service appointed as Deputy
Secretaries, no special pay was admissible, while such pay
was admissible to members of the Administrative Service when
holding similar posts; and (ii) the definition of "Special
Pay" in Rule 3(31) of the Rajasthan Civil Service Rule,,,
1951, showed that it was meant to be additional pay in
consideration, inter alia, of the specially arduous nature
of duties and that if the post of Deputy Secretary was
considered as involving such duties for members of the
Administrative Service, there was no reason to hold that the
same post was not equally arduous for members of the
Secretariat Service.
HELD : There was no discrimination under Article 14 or any
denial
4 3 1
of equality of opportunity under Article 16. (1) The Rules,
as applicable from time to time to members of the
Secretariat Service on appointment to the posts of Deputy
Secretaries, were, at no stage made less favourable than the
Rules previously applicable to them and could not be held to
be vitiated in any manner, if considered by themselves in
the light of rights which the members of the Secretariat
Service possessed from time to time. [435C-D; 438E-F]
The appellant came to the post of a Deputy Secretary from
the Secretariat Service which is a service distinct and
separate from the Administrative Service. The methods of
recruitment qualification, etc., of the two
Services are not identical. In their ordinary time-scale,
the two Services do not carry the same grades. Even the
posts, for which recruitment in the two Services is made,
are to a major "tent, different. The members of the
Secretariat Service are meant to be employed in the
Secretariat only, while members of the Administrative
Service are mostly meant for posts which are outside the
Secretariat though some posts in the Secretariat can be
filled by members of that service. In such a case, where
appointment is made to the posts of Deputy Secretaries of
government servants belonging to two different and separate
Services, there can arise no question of a claim that all of
them, when working as Deputy. Secretaries, must receive
identical salaries, or must necessarily both be given
special pay. It is entirely wrong to think that every one,
appointed to the same post, is entitled to claim that he
must be paid identical emoluments as any other person
appointed to the same post, disregarding the method of
recruitment, or the source from which the Officer is drawn
for appointment to that post. No such equality is required
either by Art. 14 or Art. 16 of the Constitution. [435F-
436B]
All India Station Masters’ and Assistant Station Masters’
Association & Others v. General Manager, Central Railways
and Others,, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 311; Mohanlal Bakshi v. Union
of India A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 1139, relied on.
Furthermore, under the various Service Rules themselves a
member of the Secretariat Service on appointment as Deputy
Secretary was allowed a special higher grade, while a member
of the Administrative Service continued on his old scale and
only got an extra salary of Rs. 1501- per month by way of
Special Pay. In such a case, no question can arise of
holding that a member of the Secretariat Service must also
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be granted a special pay in addition to being placed in the
higher grade. ’Special Pay’ does not arise out of any
inherent quality of being arduous in the nature of the post
itself. Thus, when special pay was granted to a member of
the Administrative Service on appointment as Deputy
Secretary, the reason might be that the post was considered
more arduous in nature than the post which would beheld by
him, if he had continued on a regular post borne on the
cadre of his Service. In the case of an Assistant Secretary
in the Secretariat Service, the post of a Deputy Secretary
was already designated as a selection post for him on a
grade, and there could be no question of his being granted a
on the basis that the post Deputy Secretary is more arduous
in nature than the post of Assistant Secretary [437D-F;
438C-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 274 of 1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 18, 1965 of the Rajasthan High Court in D. B. Civil
Writ Petition No. 336 of 1964.
Brijbans Kishore and D. P. Gupta, for the appellant.
432
G.C. Kasliwal, Advocate-General for the State of
Rajasthan and K. Baldev Mehta, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The appellant, Unikat Sankunni Menon, was in
the service of the Rajasthan Government in the Secretariat
after Rajasthan was constituted as a State. The pay and
grades of the posts in the Secretariat were governed by the
Rajasthan Civil Services (Unification of Pay Scales) Rules
and Schedules framed by the Rajpramukh under Article 309 of
the Constitution of India. Under those Rules, an Assistant
Secretary to Government drew pay in the scale of Rs. 250-25-
400-E.B.-25-500 and was, in addition, entitled to a special
pay of Rs. 501-. A Deputy Secretary to Government drew pay
in the scale of Rs. 500-25-700 and was, in addition,
entitled to a special pay of Rs. 100/-. Subsequently, the
Rajasthan Secretariat Service Rules, 1954 were framed by the
Rajpramukh under Article 309 of the Constitution of India
and were brought into force with effect from 10th January,
1955. Under these Rules, the appellant became a member of
the Rajasthan Secretariat Service (hereinafter referred to
as "the R.S.S."). He was, at that time, holding the post of
an Assistant Secretary which carried the time-scale of Rs.
250-25-400-EB-25-500. He was also drawing a special pay of
Rs. 75/- per month. By the notification dated 25th May,
1956, the Rajpramukh, again acting under Art. 309 of the
Constitution of India, promulgated Rajasthan Civil Services
(Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules and Schedules, 1956.
Under these Rules, the grades of pay applicable to Deputy
Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries were revised. The
posts of Assistant Secretaries were shown as belonging to
the ordinary time-scale of the R.S.S., carrying the grade of
Rs. 250-25-500-EB-25-750 with a special pay of Rs. 75/-.
Further, it was laid down that there will be selection posts
for members of the R.S.S. which were indicated as posts of
Deputy Secretaries to Government by putting this designation
in brackets, and a new scale of Rs. 500-30-740-EB30-800-50-
900 without special pay was prescribed for these selection
posts. In the remarks column, there was a note that, on
promotion as Deputy Secretary, an Officer will receive Rs.
5001- or a minimum increase of Rs. 150/- on his basic pay as
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Assistant Secretary whichever is higher. These were the
Rules in force when, on 10th January, 1959, the appellant
was appointed as Deputy Secretary. On that date, he was
drawing a salary of Rs. 475/p.m. in the ordinary time scale
of the R.S.S. and was also getting a special pay of Rs. 75/-
, as he was holding the post of an Assistant Secretary to
Government. Consequently, on his appointment as Deputy
Secretary, which was a selection post for the R.S.S., his
salary was fixed at Rs. 650/-. Under the formula laid down
in the remarks column, mentioned above, the salary
admissible to him
433
came to Rs. 625/-, but, since in the new grade fixed for the
selection posts there was no stage at Rs. 625/-, his pay was
fixed at Rs. 650/- at the next higher stage above the amount
calculated in his case on the basis of the formula laid down
in the remarks column. This procedure was adopted under the
Government instructions. Subsequently, the grades for the
posts of Dy. Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries were
again revised by the Governor of Rajasthan under the proviso
to Article 309 of the Constitution by promulgating the
Rajasthan Civil Services (Revised Pay) Rules, 1961. Under
these Rules, the grade applicable to Assistant Secretary to
Government belonging to the R.S.S. was prescribed as Rs.
360-25-560-30-590-EB-30-860-900. The Rules also indicated
that this revised scale had been prescribed as a result of
merging the special pay in the grade pay itself. The grade
for Deputy Secretaries to Government was also revised to Rs.
550-30-820-EB-30850-50-1 100. It appears that,
subsequently, there was another revision of scales of pay in
the year 1966, and the latest grade applicable to the
members of the R.S.S. holding the posts of Deputy
Secretaries is Rs. 900-50-1500.
Apart from these various Rules which, from time to time,
were applicable to members of the R.S.S., we may also
indicate the Rules that were applicable to members of the
Rajasthan Administrative Service (hereinafter referred to as
"the R.A.S.") when holding posts of Deputy Secretaries.
Under the Rajasthan Civil Services (Unification of Pay
Scales) Rules and Schedules, 1950, which were in force until
the year 1956, a member of the R.A.S., on appointment as
Deputy Secretary, drew salary in the same grade of Rs. 500-
25-700 with a special pay of Rs. 100/- in the same way as a
member of the R.S.S. When the Rajasthan Civil Services
(Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules & Schedules, 1956 came
into force, this principle was departed from. While laying
down the grades of pay applicable to members of the R.A.S.,
their senior and junior scales were combined into one scale
shown as the time scale of Rs. 250-25-500-EB-25-750 with a
selection grade of Rs. 500-30-740-EB-30-800-50-900 which was
to be admissible personally to Officers who had been
appointed substantively earlier to the grade of Rs. 500-25-
700 vide Government Orders issued on 9th April, 1951 and
19th January, 1955. Then, it was further laid down that
special pay would be admissible on certain posts to Officers
of the R.A.S. on time scale or selection grade, and, amongst
these, were the posts of Deputy Secretaries to Government.
The Rules prescribed a special pay of Rs. 1501- for the
members of the R.A.S. when appointed to posts of Deputy
Secretaries to Government. In the subsequent revision of
grades under the Rajasthan Civil Services (Revised Pay
Scales) Rules, 1961, the grade of the R.A.S. was revised to
Rs. 285-25-510-EB-25-560-30-800 for the ordinary time-scale
and Rs. 550-30-820-EB-30-850-50-950 for
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posts in the senior scale, together with a selection grade
of Rs. 65050-1250. Under these Rules again, it was laid
down that an Officer of the R.A.S. holding a post in the
senior scale on appointment as Dy. Secretary, will be
entitled to a special pay of Rs. 150/Under the last revision
in 1966, a member of the R.A.S., on appointment as Dy.
Secretary, was to draw salary in his regular time-scale of
Rs. 550-30-820-EB-30-850-50-1100, subject to a minimum of
Rs. 640/-, with a special pay of Rs. 1501-. In the case of
a member of the R.A.S. holding a post in the selection grade
applicable to his service, he was to draw the pay in his
selection ,grade with a special pay of Rs. 1501. Thus, in
the case of members of the R.A.S. appointed to posts of
Deputy Secretaries, a special pay remained admissible, while
the principle of granting special pay to members of the
R.S.S. on appointment as Deputy Secretaries was abolished.
It was on the basis of these Rules that the appellant filed
a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution before the
High Court of Rajasthan claiming that the words "without
special pay" in the Rajasthan Civil Services
(Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules & Schedules, 1956 may
be declared as invalid and violative of Articles 14 and 16
of the Constitution. The High Court dismissed the petition
and, consequently, the appellant has now come up to this
Court by special leave.
The claim of the appellant has to be examined in two
different aspects,. The first aspect is that the Rules, as
applicable from time to time to members of the R.S.S. on
appointment to the posts of Deputy Secretaries, were, at no
stage, made less favourable than the Rules previously
applicable. As has been mentioned earlier, under the
Rajasthan Civil Services (Unification of Pay Scales) Rules &
Schedules, 1950, a person serving in the Rajasthan Secre-
tariat, on appointment as Deputy Secretary, was placed in
the time-scale of Rs. 500-25-700 and was, in addition,
entitled to a special pay of Rs. 100/-. When the Rules were
revised for the first time under the Rajasthan Civil
Services (Rationalisation of Pay Scales) Rules & Schedules,
1956, a member of the R.S.S., working on the ordinary time-
scale as Assistant Secretary, became entitled, on ap-
pointment as Deputy Secretary, to pay in the scale of Rs.
500-30740-EB-30-800-50-900. It is true that, on such
appointment under these Rules, he was not entitled to any
special pay; but the principle for fixation of pay given in
the remarks column ensured that the pay admissible to the
Officer would certainly be higher than the pay which would
have been admissible if the earlier Rules had continued in
force. The scale of pay prescribed for the post of Deputy
Secretary was higher than the previous scale. Further, on
promotion as Deputy Secretary, every Officer of the R.S.S.
received a minimum increase of Rs. 1501/- on his basic pay
as Assistant Scretary. The fact that the special pay as
Assistant Secretary was
435
ignored in fixing the pay on appointment to the post of
Deputy Secretary did not result in any reduction of the
emoluments to be received under the new scales, as compared
with the emoluments which he would have received if the old
scales had continued to remain in force. The subsequent
revisions in 1961 and 1966 also observed this principle, so
that the Rajpramukh or the Governor of Rajasthan, in
promulgating these various Rules revising the pay scales
applicable to Deputy Secretaries, ensured that no revised
Rule operated to the prejudice of a member of the R.S.S., as
compared with the earlier Rules under which rights had
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vested in him. Further, it was, at no stage, urged that the
Rajpramukh or the Governor was incompetent to promulgate
these revised Rules from time to time in exercise of his
power under Article 309 of the Constitution. The Rules thus
applicable to the member of the R.S.S. on appointment to the
post of Deputy Secretary, against which the appellant made
his grievance in the High Court, cannot be held to be
vitiated in any manner, if considered by themselves in the
light of rights which the members of the R.S.S. possessed
from time to time.
The second aspect, and the one on which reliance was mainly
placed by learned counsel for the appellant in. this appeal,
is that the Rules, on the face of them, show that, in the
case of members of the R.S.S. appointed as Deputy
Secretaries, no special pay is admissible, while special pay
is admissible to members of the R.A.S. when holding similar
posts. It is on the basis of this apparent differentiation
that the appellant urged that Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution were violated when special pay was denied to
the members of the R.S.S., while special pay was admissible
to members of the R.A.S.
There are two reasons why this grievance put forward on
behalf of the appellant has to be rejected. The first is
that the appellant comes to the post of a Deputy Secretary
from the R.S.S., which is a service distinct and separate
from the R.A.S. The methods of recruitment, qualifications,
etc., of the two Services are not identical. In their
ordinary time-scale, the two Services do not carry the same
grades. Even the posts, for which recruitment in the two
Services is made, are, to a major extent, different. The
members of the R.S.S. are meant to be employed in the
Secretariat only, while members of the R.A.S. are mostly
meant for posts which are outside the Secretariat though
some posts in the Secretariat can be filled by members of
the R.A.S. In such a case, where appointment is made to the
posts of Deputy Secretaries of government servants belonging
to two different and separate Services, there can arise no
question of a claim that all of them, when working as Deputy
Secretaries, must receive identical salaries, or must neces-
sarily both be given special pay. It is entirely wrong to
think that every one, appointed to the same post, is
entitled to claim that be
L5 Sup.CI/67----14
436
must be paid identical emoluments as any other person
appointed to the same post, disregarding the method of
recruitment, or the source from which the Officer is drawn
for appointment to that post. No such equality is required
either by Art. 14 or Art. 16 of the Constitution. This
principle was explained by this Court first in the case of
All India Station Masters’ and Assistant Station Masters’
Association & Others v. General Manager, Central Railways
and Others(1). In that case, the question arose about the
rights of promotion of Assistant Station Masters and Guards
already employed in the Railway Service. The Assistant
Station Masters claimed equality of opportunity for
promotion qua the Guards on the ground that they were
entitled to equality of opportunity in the matter of
employment or appointment to any office of the State under
Art. 16(1) of the Constitution. This Court held : "It is
clear that, as between the members of the same class, the
question whether conditions of service are the same or not
may well arise. If they are not, the question of denial of
equal opportunity will require serious consideration in such
cases. Does the concept of equal opportunity in matters of
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employment apply, however, to variations in provisions as
between members of different classes of employees under the
State ? In our opinion, the answer must be in the negative.
The concept of equality can have no existence except with
reference to matters which are common as between
individuals, between whom equality is predicated. Equality
of opportunity in matters of employment can be predicated
only as between persons, who are either seeking the same em-
ployment, or have obtained the same employment." Proceeding
further, the Court held : "There is, in our opinion, no
escape from the conclusion-that equality of opportunity in
matters of promotion, must mean equality as between members
of the same class of employees, and not equality between
members of separate, independent classes." The same
principle was later confirmed in the case of Kishori
Mohanlal Bakshi v. Union of India(2). In that case, persons
appointed to Class 11 of Income-tax Officers claimed that
there was discrimination against them in the matter of pay-
scales, as compared with Income-tax Officers recruited
direct to the Class I Service. The Court, rejecting this
argument, held : "The only other contention raised is that
there is discrimination between Class I and Class II
Officers inasmuch as, though they do the same kind of work,
their pay scales are different. This, it is said, violates
Art. 14 of the Constitution. If this contention had any
validity, there could be no incremental scales of pay fixed
dependent on the duration of an officer’s service. The
abstract doctrine of equal pay for equal work has nothing to
do with Art. 14. The contention that Art. 14 of the
Constitution has been violated, therefore, fails." The claim
of the appellant in the present case that,
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 31 1.
(2) A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 11 39.
437
on appointment as Deputy Secretary, he must be held entitled
to receive special pay on the ground of being placed on
parity with the members of the R.A.S., has, therefore, to be
rejected.
The second ground, which shows that the claim made on behalf
of the appellant has no basis, is that, under the various
Service Rules themselves, a member of the R.S.S., on
appointment as Deputy Secretary, is given pay in a grade
specially and separately fixed for the posts of Deputy
Secretaries, while a member of the R.A.S., is not placed in
that grade at all. Thus, under the latest Rules, a member
of the R.S.S., on appointment as Deputy Secretary, draws
salary in the grade of Rs. 900-50-1500. On the other hand,
a member of the R.A.S., appointed as Deputy Secretary, is
not granted pay in this scale. In his case, he continues to
draw his salary in the scale applicable to him in the R.A.S.
and is allowed a special pay of Rs. 1501-. This special pay
allowed to a member of the R.A.S. is, therefore, not in
addition to the pay in the grade specially prescribed for
the posts of Deputy Secretaries. That grade is much higher
than the grade applicable to the member of the R.A.S. which
continues to apply to him on his appointment as Deputy
Secretary, and it is only in addition to that lower time-
scale that a member of the R.A.S. is allowed the special pay
of Rs. 1501-. It is thus clear that the method of fixation
of salary for members of the two Services, on appointment as
Deputy Secretaries, is quite different. A member of the
R.S.S. is allowed a special higher grade, while a member of
the R.A.S. continues on his old scale and only gets an extra
salary of Rs. 1501- per month. In such a case, no question
can arise of holding that a member of the R.S.S. must also
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be granted a special pay in addition to being placed in the
higher grade of pay prescribed for the post of Deputy
Secretaries when that post is held by the member of the
R.S.S.
In this connection, learned counsel for the appellant drew
our attention to Rule 7(3 1) of the Rajasthan Civil Service
Rules, 1951, framed under Article 309 of the Constitution,
defining special pay. The definition given in the Rule is
that "Special Pay" means an addition of the nature of pay,
to the emoluments of a post or of a government servant,
granted in consideration of :-
(a) the specially arduous nature of the
duties,
(b) a specific addition to the work or
responsibility; or
(c) the unhealthiness of the locality in
which the
work is performed.
It was urged by learned counsel that, if the post of Deputy
Secretary was considered as involving specially arduous
nature of duties for members of the R.A.S., there is no
reason to hold that that post is not equally arduous for
members of the R.S.S. and, consequently, there would be no
justification for denying special pay
438
to members of the R.S.S. holding such a post, when special
pay is granted to members of the R.A.S. It appears to us
that this submission is made on a misconception of the scope
of this Rule. The Rule, in defining special pay, envisages
an addition of the nature of pay to the emoluments of either
a post or of a government servant and, consequently, it is
clear that a special pay is to be granted, if a person is
appointed to a post which is specially arduous in nature as
compared with the earlier post held by him. Similarly, it
may be granted to a government servant who is appointed to a
post involving specially arduous duties as compared with the
posts to be held by him ordinarily, while continuing in the
Service in which he holds his permanent appointment.
Special pay does not arise out of any inherent quality of
being arduous in nature of the post itself. Thus, when
special pay is granted to a member of the R.A.S. on
appointment as Deputy Secretary, the reason may be that the
post is considered more arduous in nature than the post
which would be held by him, if he had continued on a regular
post borne on the cadre of his Service. In the case of a
member ,of the R.S.S., the post of a Deputy Secretary is
already designated as a selection post for hi-in and in view
of this difference between the post to which he is
appointed, as compared with the post of -an Assistant
Secretary earlier held by him, he is granted a special and
higher grade, so that there is no question of his being
granted a special pay on the basis that the post of Deputy
Secretary is more arduous in nature than the post of
Assistant Secretary. The Rules, ,as framed, are, thus,
based on well-recognised principles for granting salary to
members of different Services, even when they are -appointed
to the same post. In these circumstances, no question
arises of any discrimination under Art. 14 of the
Constitution, or ,of any denial of equality of opportunity
under Art. 16 of the -Constitution. The appeal has no force
and is dismissed, but, in the circumstances of this case, we
make no order as to costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
439
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