Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURJIT GHOSH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHAIRMAN & MANAGING DIRECTOR, UNITED COMMERCIAL BANK & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/02/1995
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 1053 1995 SCC (2) 474
JT 1995 (2) 74 1995 SCALE (1)451
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
1. The appellant was appointed as a Probationary Officer
in the respondent Bank on 4th October, 1971 and confirmed in
that post on 24th February, 1973. In August 1975, the
appellant was charged for having demanded and taken Rs.
1,900/ - as bribe from one Sk. Rahul Amin. fie was
suspended from service on 23rd August, 1975. However, the
suspension was revoked with immediate effect by another
order of 12th December, 1975. Thereafter, he was again
placed under suspension w.e.f 10th July, 1976 when the
Central Bureau of Investigation took up the investigation of
the case. Prosecution was launched against him on 28th
July, 1977 under Section 6 [1] (d) read with Section 5 [2]
of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. The learned
Sessions Judge convicted him of the said offence by his
order of 14th July, 1978. , In appeal, the High Court
reversed the order of conviction and acquitted him of the
charge by its order of 4th December, 1979.
2. It appears that in the meanwhile, the Bank dismissed
the appellant from service by its order of 17th August, 1978
pursuant to the order of the Session’s Court. Against the
said order, the appellant approached the High Court by a
writ petition on 9th February, 1979. On his acquittal by
the High Court on 4th December, 1979, the appellant by his
letter of 11th January, 1980 wrote to the Bank for
reinstating him in service with retrospective effect but the
Bank did not comply with his request. However, the High
Court in the writ petition pending before it, by its order
of 25th June 1980 set aside the order of dismissal from
service and directed the Bank to reinstate the appellant in
service with all consequential benefits.
3. The appellant was reinstated in service pursuant to
this order and was posted as Assistant Manager at the Hazari
Road"’ Branch. On 17th August, 1982, he was transferred to
Assistant General Manager’s [AGM] office, West Bengal
Division-I and on 23rd August, 1982 he was served with a
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letter alleging therein that on 14th August, 1982 while he
was working as Assistant Manager at the Hazari Road Branch,
he had prepared and singed one debit voucher for Rs.4,800/-
being the amount on account of "interest payable on deposit
FDR" mentioning therein the fixed deposit No.223638/108/79.
It was alleged in that letter that the appellant had
obtained a token against the said voucher by presenting it
to the token clerk and had also verified the signature of
the FDR older on the reverse of this voucher, and on this
voucher being posted in the ledger of the ledger Clerk and
passed by the Pass ing Officer in good faith, the appellant
had received a cash amount of Rs.4,800/against the said
voucher etc.
4. The appellant was also placed under suspension from the
date of the service of the said letter i.e., 23rd August,
1982 under Regulation 12 [1] (a) and (b) of the United
Commercial Bank Officers [Discipline and Appeals]
Regulations, 1976 (the Regulations). The departmental in-
quiry was thereafter held with the Manager of the branch of
the Bank as the Inquiry Officer to conduct the inquiry. The
Inquiry Officer by his report dated 28th May, 1985 held the
appellant guilty of two of the charges levelled against him.
On the basis of the said report, the respondent No.2, the
Deputy General Manager, Zonal
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Officer, West Bengal Zone of the Bank by his order dated
14th November, 1985 dismissed the appellant from service.
Aggrieved by the said order the appellant approached the
High Court by way of a writ petition. The learned Single
Judge of the High Court dismissed the same and the Division
Bench in appeal confirmed the said order. It is aggrieved
by the decision of the High Court that the present appeal
has been preferred.
5. Some grievances have been made by the appellant in the
present appeal touching upon the illegalities in the conduct
of the proceedings such as that [a] the disciplinary
proceedings were initiated by an incompetent disciplinary
authority in breach of Regulation 8 [2] (iii) read with
Regulation 3 [g] of the Regulations; [b] the statement of
witnesses recorded earlier were not supplied to him in
breach of Regulation 8 [10] [b] (iii) and [c] he was denied
opportunity to explain circumstances appearing against him
in evidence in breach of Regulation 6 [17] of the Regu-
lations. However, it is not necessary to go into the merits
of the said grievances since we are of the view that one of
the objections taken by the appellant to the dismissal viz.,
that the appellant was deprived of an opportunity to prefer
an appeal provided under-the Regulations, goes to the root
of the dismissal order. The undisputed facts relating to
the said grievance of the appellant are that the
disciplinary action was taken against him by the Deputy
General Manager. As the Regulations stood then, the
disciplinary authority for officers in Grades E, D, C and B
[excepting Divisional Managers in Grade B] was the Divi-
sional Manager/AGM [Personnel] and the appeal against their
order lay to the Deputy General Manager or any other officer
of the same rank. Against the order of the Deputy General
Manager, the review lay to the General Manager. It is not
disputed that the appellant was an officer in Grade D. Hence
in his case, as per the said Regulations, the disciplinary
authority was either the Divisional Manager or the AGM
[Personnel] and if the action was taken by either of them,
he had an opportunity to appeal to the Deputy General
Manager or any other officer of the same rank, and
thereafter he had a further right of review to the General
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Manager. However, since the action against him was taken by
the Deputy General Manager although the Divisional Manager
and AGM [Personnel] were available for taking the action,
the appellant was denied the right of an appeal and also the
right of a review which lay only against the appellate
order. The impugned order of dismissal passed by the Bank,
therefore, suffers from an inherent defect.
6. The respondent-Bank in its submission contended that
although it is true that the Deputy General Manager had
acted as the disciplinary authority when he was in fact
named under the Regulations as an appellate authority, no
prejudice is caused to the appellant because the Deputy Gen-
eral Manager is higher in rank than the disciplinary
authority, viz., the Divisional Manager/AGM [Personnel].
According to the Bank, it should be held that when the order
of punishment is passed by a higher authority, no appeal is
available under the Regulations as it is not necessary to
provide for the same. It was also contended that there is
no right to appeal unless it is provided under the Rules or
Regulations. Although the argument looks attractive at
first sight, its weakness lies in the fact that it tries to
place the Rules/Regulations
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which provide no appeal on par with the Rules/Regulations
where appeal is provided. It is true that when an authority
higher than the disciplinary authority itself imposes the
punishment, the order of punishment suffers from no
illegality when no appeal is provided to such authority.
However, when an appeal is provided to the higher authority
concerned against the order of the disciplinary authority or
of a lower authority and the higher authority passes an
order of punishment, the employee concerned is deprived of
the remedy of appeal which is a substantive right given to
him by the Rules/Regulations. An employee cannot be
deprived of his substantive right. What is further, when
there is a provision of appeal against the order of the
disciplinary authority and when the appellate or the higher
authority against whose order there is no appeal, exercises
the powers of the disciplinary authority in a given case, it
results in discrimination against the employee concerned.
This is particularly so when there are no guidelines In the
Rules/Regulations as to when the higher authority or the
appellate authority should exercise the powers of the
disciplinary authority. The higher or appellate authority
may choose to exercise the power of the disciplinary
authority in some cases while not doing so in other cases.
In such cases, the right of the employee depends upon the
choice of the higher/ appellate authority which patently
results in discrimination between an employee and employee.
Surely, such a situation cannot savour of legality. Hence
we are of the view that the contention advanced on behalf of
the respondent-Bank that when an appellate authority chooses
to exercise the power of disciplinary authority, it should
be held that there is no right of appeal provided under the
Regulations cannot be accepted.
7. The result, therefore, is that the present order of
dismissal suffers from an inherent defect and has to be set
aside.
8. The question, however, is what consequential order
should be passed in the present case. It will not be
fruitful to send the matter back to the Bank for rehearing
of the matter by the named disciplinary authority since the
appellate authority which is the higher authority has
already taken a decision in the matter and it cannot be
expected that the lower authority will take a different
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decision. These proceedings have been pending against the
appellant right from the year 1982 till this day and the
appellant has been out of employment for all these years.
At one stage, the appellant had offered to forego all the
arrears of his salary provided he was reinstated in service
on the post to which he would be entitled at present on the
basis of his continuous service till date. We had suggested
to Shri Gupta appearing for the respondent-Bank to take
instructions in the matter: The respondent-Bank, however,
has chosen to reject the offer and has instead suggested
that the Bank would like to pay compensation to the
appellant since it has lost confidence in him. We have
considered the charges against the appellant and we find
that apart from the fact that much can be said in favour of
the appellant in support of his contention that the charge
has been trumpeted against him. The inquiry also prima
facie suffers from defects as pointed out above, though we
must add that we have not gone into the merits of the said
defects. The appellant is an ex-Army officer. What is
further, the compensation amount, if directed to be paid
would come to about Rs.20 lakhs-.
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The Bank is a nationalised Bank and the money belongs to the
public. A huge amount on this scale cannot be paid to
anyone for doing no work during this long period just
because the Bank feels that it has lost confidence in the
employee. He can certainly be placed in a department where
he has nothing to do with the monetary transactions of the
Bank, such as the establishment section etc., even assuming
that the Bank has reasons to lose confidence in him.
9. We are informed at the Bar that the post to which he
would be entitled would be in Grade Scale IV with the basic
pay of Rs.5,350/- per month which is on par with the
contemporary existing officers of the Bank who have been
promoted to Grade Scale IV on and from 29th May, 1993. We,
therefore, direct as follows[a] the appellant should be paid
a compensation of Rs.50,000/- in lieu of his claim for
arrears of salary; [b] he should be reinstated in service
with continuity of service and without loss of seniority in
the post to which he would be entitled today on the basis of
his continuous service, within four weeks from the date of
receipt of this order.
10. the appeal is allowed accordingly. Since we have
directed the payment of compensation, there will be no
order as to costs.
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