Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P. B. ROY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/02/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
GROVER, A.N.
RAY, A.N.
PALEKAR, D.G.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 908 1972 SCR (3) 449
1972 SCC (3) 432
ACT:
Civil Servant--Holding temporary post--Constitution of New
service -’Departmental candidate’ holding temporary post
appointed to permanent post but of a lower grade--If
violative of Art. 311.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was holding a temporary post of Editor in the
Publications Division of the Department of Information and
Broadcasting. The temporary post was sanctioned upto 28-2-
1957. On 16-2-1959, the President of India, in exercise of
the powers conferred by the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution, promulgated the Central Information Service
Rules, 1959. These Rules were meant for the creation of a
Central Information Service with prescribed grades and
strengths, and entry into the service was open to
departmental candidates according to r. 5 for the initial
constitution of the service. The appellant was chosen by
the Selection Committee and was posted as an Assistant
Editor. He challenged the order.
A single Judge of the High Court allowed the petition. On
appeal, in the course of arguments, the question arose
whether the post of Editor was abolished or had ceased to
exist and the respondent was allowed to file an affidavit
stating that the post of Editor had ceased to exist. The
Division Bench then held that there was no question of
demotion or reduction in rank and hence that Art. 31 1 was
not applicable.
In appeal to this Court, it was held
(1) The additional affidavit filed by the respondent did
not introduce anything new but only clarified the position.
[455 E]
(a) There was nothing to show that the temporary post of
Editor in which the appellant was initially appointed had
been continued beyond 28-2-1957 for any period. [455 C]
(b) The question whether the constitution of the Central
Information Service involved fresh appointments to new posts
or its effect was merely to transfer existing employees to
corresponding posts with new designations was already before
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the court. [455 D-E]
(c) The appellant himself never asked for any opportunity
to meet any allegation in the additional affidavit. [454 F-
G]
(2) There is nothing to indicate that on the face of the
impugned order, that the appellant had been demoted as a
measure of punishment. [455 F-G]
(3) it could not be held that the order, which had the
effect of terminating an officiating appointment in which
the appellant had no right to continue-and which gave him a
fresh appointment with a different designation, ’out
permanent tenure and prospects, constituted a
450
violation of either Art. 14 or 16, simply because the
process which resulted in such an order did not have a
similar effect upon the position or rights of any other
person in the Department; especially when, after taking into
account the appellant’s individual case, the Selection Com-
mittee recommended the maximum pay in the class and grade of
the post given to him. [456 A-C]
(4) (a) The new rules had the effect of constituting a new
service with a fair and reasonable procedure for entry into
it., Such a procedure could not be characterized as a device
to defeat the provisions of Art. 311 or a fraud upon the
Constitution simply because the result of subjection to the
process of appraisement of the merits of each candidate may
not meet the expectations of some candidates. [457 F-G]
(b) Article 311 afford-, a reasonable opportunity to defend
against threatened punishment to those already in Government
service. Rule 5 of the Central Information Service Rules
provides a method of recruitment or entry into a new service
of persons who, even though they may have been serving the
Government had no right to enter the newly constituted
service before going through the procedure prescribed by the
rule. The fields of operation of Art. 311 and r. 5 are
quite different and distinct. [457 G-H; 458 A-B]
(c) The definition of ’departmental candidates’ in r. 2(b)
was meant only as an aid in interpreting r. 5 and was not
intended to operate as a fetter on the functions and powers
of the Selection Committee. It does not require that all
persons falling within the definition of ’departmental
candidate’ should be placed in a single class, Under r. 5
the Selection Committee could assign different grades to the
departmental candidates. The post actually held by the
appellant before his selection for appointment to the newly
constituted service did not automatically or wholly
determine the position of a departmental candidate who
offered himself to the process of appraisement of his merits
by the Selection Committee to be made on the totality of
relevant facts. That Committee was presided over by the
Chairman or a Member of the Union Public Service Cornmission
and had officials of the Department on it who were in a
position to correctly evaluate the appellant’s merit’s and
the weight to be attached to his confidential records. [459
B-H]
(5) The appellant’s allegations of mala fides and that he
was the victim of the prejudice and machinations of an
(unnamed) officer in the Transport Ministry, could not
properly be tried in writ proceedings and without impleading
that official. [460 F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2172 of 1968.
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Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 10, 1967 of
the Delhi High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 97-D of
1965.
Frank Anthony, K. B. Rohatgi and P. Parameswara Rao, for the
appellant.
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General of India and S. P. Nayar.
for the respondent.
451
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Beg, J. This is an appeal by grant of a Certificate of the
Delhi High Court under Article 132 read with Article
133(1)(b) and (c) of the Constitution.
The Appellant had filed a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution for quashing an order dated 10-3-1960 and had
prayed for a consequential order also in the nature of a
mandamus. Information of the impugned order (Annexure ’C’
to the petition), given to the petitioner, reads as follows
"The Union Public Service Commission have in
pursuance of Rule 5 of the Central Information
Service Rules, 1959, recommended Shri P. B.
Roy, at present officiating as Editor in the
Publications Division, for appointment, in a
substantive capacity, to Grade III of the
service at its initial constitution. Shri Roy
is informed that the President has been
pleased to post him as an Assistant Editor in
the Publications Division with immediate
effect".
Those relevant facts, preceding and following the impugned
order, which are admitted by both sides may now be
mentioned.
In 1955, the post of Editor, Publications Division, in the
Department of Information and Broadcasting of the Government
of India (hereinafter referred to as ’,the Department’), was
advertised. The appellant, who had applied for the post,
was selected by the Union Public Service Commission, and, on
its recommendation, was offered a temporary post of Editor
in the Publications Division of the Department on an initial
salary of Rs. 720 per month in the scale of Rs. 720-40-1000
together with the usual allowances. The material terms and
conditions of this employment were:
(i) The post is to be gazetted Class I;
(ii) The temporary post was sanctioned upto
28-2-1957 but was likely to continue;
(iii) Shri Roy (the Appellant) will be
governed by the Central Civil Services
(Temporary Service Rules) and other Rules
applicable to temporary Govt. servants of his
category;
(iv) He was to be on probation for 6 months
which may be extended at the discretion of the
appointing authority.
The Appellant had reported for duty on 1st August, 1956, as
directed. ’On 27-3-1957, the Appellant,s probation was
extended
452
by three months. Immediately thereafter, on 28-3-57, the
Appellant’s services were terminated under Rule 5 of the
Central Civil Services (Temporary Service) Rules 1949,
(Annexure ’D’ to the Rejoinder Affidavit of 20th February,
1964). On 5-3-1957, the Appellant made a representation
against this termination of his service (Annexure ’B’ to the
Rejoinder Affidavit). On 27-4-1957 in response to this
representation, the above-mentioned termination to the
Appellants service was rescinded(Annexure ’F’ to the Re-
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joinder Affidavit). On 28-4-1958, the President was pleased
to terminate the probationary period of the. Appellant and
permitted him to continue in his, post in a temporary
capacity (Annexure ’B’ to the Affidavit supporting the
Petition),
On 16-2-1959, the President of India, in exercise of powers
conferred by the Proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution
of India, promulgated the Central Information Service Rules,
1959 (hereinafter referred to as the Rules), which came into
force on 21-2-1959. These rules were meant for the creation
of a Central Information Service with prescribed grades and
their strengths. Entry into this service was open to
"departmental candidates" by a procedure laid down in Rule5
for the initial constitution of the service. In accordance
with this procedure, the Appellant was required to appear
before a Selection Committee on a given date, and, after
selection, he was posted by the impugned order as indicated
above. On 11-31960, the Appellant assumed charge of the
post thus assigned to him on the recommendation of the Union
Public Service Commission. The Appellant then made a
representation, dated 11-3-1960 (Annexure ’E’ to the
Rejoinder Affidavit), against his appointment in Class II
grade III post. He made other similar representations after
that. His last representation was made on 25-8-1962. the
Appellant received a communication dated 10-12-1962 forward-
ing extract of an order dated 26-11-1962 which said :
"The representation from Shri P. B. Roy has
been carefully considered in the Ministry.
All relevant facts were fully taken into
account, by the Departmental Promotion
Committee, before drawing up the recent panel
of Grade III officers considered suitable for
promotion to Grade II. Shri Roy may be
informed accordingly".
The Appellant, treating this as the rejection of his last
representation, filed his petition on 11-1-1963 which was
allowed by a learned Judge of the Punjab High Court, sitting
on the Circuit Bench at Delhi. A Letters’ Patent Appeal
against this decision had been allowed by a Division Bench
of the Delhi High Court which then granted a certificate on
12-8-1968 for leave to Appeal primarily because it held that
the required test relating to valuation of the subject
matter had been satisfied.
453
The learned Judge who had initially heard the petition had
pointed out that the representation of the Appellant was
first rejected on 29-7-1960 and that it did not matter that
the petitioner had continued making subsequent
representations. The learned Judge had noticed the
explanation that the petitioner could not approach the Court
as he was admitted to a Tuberculosis Clinic in June,. 1961.
The learned Judge, having found that this was not sufficient
to explain the delay between 29-7-1960 and June 1961 was
disposed to reject the petition on the ground of laches.
But, in view of the decision of the majority of the Full
Bench of the Punjab High Court in S. Gurmej Singh v.
Election Tribunal, Gurdaspur(1), the delay in filing the
petition was overlooked on the ground that, after the
admission of a Writ Petition and hearing of arguments, the
rule that delay may defeat the rights of a party is relaxed
and need not be applied if his case is "positively good".
The learned Single Judge had come to the conclusion, on the
facts stated above, that the petitioner’s case would be
governed by the decision of this Court in Moti Ram Deka &
Ors. v. General Manager, North East Frontier Railway (2 ) ,
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as the petitioner’s prospects and emoluments were adversely
affected by the impugned order.- The learned Judge thought
that the mere fact that the Department was reorganized and
that the petitioner was to be fitted into an appropriate
category by the procedure laid down in Rule 5 did not take
away the effect, that is to say, the loss of his emoluments,
of the procedure to which the petitioner had been subjected.
This view implied that Art. 311 of the Constitution was
attracted by the case despite the above mentioned creation
of the Central Information Service by the rules.
The Division Bench which heard the Appeal of the Union of
India was not inclined to interfere with the discretion of
the learned Single Judge in rejecting the objection to the
petition on the ground of delay. We too will not enter into
this question which was not argued before us.
The Division Bench, after reviewing facts’ leading to the
absorption of the Appellant into a newly constituted Central
Information Service, in accordance with the procedure laid
down in Rule 5 mentioned above, held that the "News and
Information Cadre" of the Department, in which the Appellant
was initially appointed, had been superseded by the cadres
and grades constituted by the rules of the new service. It
overruled the contention of the Petitioner that the effect
of the rules was merely to transfer employees in existing
posts to corresponding posts with new designations. It held
that the Rules did create an altogether new service. It
pointed out that the process of entry into the new service
was of
(1) [1964] P.L.R. p. 589.
(2) A.T.R. 1964 S.C. P. 600.
454
selection of each individual candidate after an examination
of his individual record and qualifications by a Selection
Committee be, fore which he appeared so that there could be
no automatic fitting into some corresponding appropriate
post of a predetermined class and grade. The rules and
process for the constitution of the new service did not
guarantee the class or grade or emoluments enjoyed by any
candidate in a cadre in which he served prior to the setting
up of the new service. It, therefore, held that no question
of demotion or reduction in rank, without observing the
procedure laid down in Art. 3 1 1 of the Constitution, arose
at all in the instant case.
Mr Anthony, appearing on behalf of the Appellant, has
assailed the correctness of the decision of the Division
Bench of the Delhi High Court on five grounds. We will take
up and consider each of these seriatim.
Firstly, it is contended that the Division Bench had erred
in allowing an affidavit to be filed on 26-6-1967 before it,
without affording an opportunity to the Appellant to repel
its contents by filing a counter-affidavit. It was urged
that the result was that an altogether new case, neither
argued before nor referred to by the learned Single Judge,
had been allowed to be raised. This ground is no doubt
mentioned among the grounds on which a certificate of the
fitness for an appeal to this Court was sought. The
Judgment of the Division Bench mentions that, in the course
of arguments, the question arose whether the post of Editor
in the Publications Division was abolished or had ceased to
exist. It appears that an affidavit was then allowed to be
filed before the Division. Bench on behalf of the Union. of
India in which it was stated that two posts of Editors in
the scale of Rs. 720-40-1000 in the Publications Division
had ceased to exist as a consequence of the inclusion of two
posts in the revised grade of Rs. 700-40-1100-50/2-1250 with
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effect from 1-7-1959 in the Central Information Service
constituted from 1-3-1960. There is nothing in the Judgment
or anywhere else to show that the petitioner had asked for
any opportunity to controvert any statement made in the
affidavit dated 26-7-1967 and had been denied that.
The case and the contention on behalf of the Appellant have
been that the new posts in the services are really old posts
in a new garb. This raised what was primarily a question of
law, depending for decision upon an interpretation of the
relevant rules of which the Court takes judicial notice.
The rules certainly did not provide for the continuance of
any ex.-cadre posts outside the new service introduced by
the rules. Facts stated in the Affidavit of 26- 7-1967
could have some bearing on the question whether there were
two posts in the revised scale which could be considered as
corresponding posts. They could, if they had
455
any effect on the respective stands, perhaps help the
Appellant’s case that there was nothing more than a re-
designation of posts with same duties and corresponding
scales. And, this seems to explain why there is nothing to
show that the Petitioner-Appellant asked for an opportunity
to meet any allegation made in the affidavit of 26-7-1967
filed on behalf of the Union.
Moreover, what the fresh affidavit contained about the dis-
appearance of the temporary post given to the Petitioner in
1956 before the Rules came into force flowed logically from
the order of Petitioner’s initial appointment in a temporary
post which was to continue only upto 28-2-1957, unless its
life was shown to have been extended for some definite or
indefinite period. The Petitioner had not averred anywhere
that the post was continued beyond 28-2-1957 for any period
by any order or rule. Indeed, the very argument advanced on
behalf of the Appellant, that his initial post merged in
another corresponding post, implied that the post to which
he was initially appointed at least lost its identity or
could not be deemed to continue without a transmutation.
The question whether the constitution of the Central
Information Service did or did not involve fresh
appointments to new posts but was simply an automatic
process of transmutation by the pooling together of
existing incumbents of certain posts to form a new service,
as the appellants alleged, was already the subject matter of
assertion made in the Rejoinder Affidavit of the Petitioner
and counter-assertions in a reply filed to the Rejoinder on
2-4-1964. The affidavit of 24-6-1967 did not introduce
anything new but only clarified the position still more. We
find no force in the first objection.
Secondly , it is contended that the impugned order
constitutes. on the face of it, a reduction in rank of the
petitioner Looking at the communication dated 10-3-1960, set
out above, we find nothing ,there to indicate that the
petitioner had been demoted as a measure of punishment. To
hold, as it was suggested that we should, that the procedure
laid down by Rule 5 was adopted as a cloak to cover up an
intended reduction in rank and emoluments of an officiating
Editor, by appointing him in a permanent substantive
capacity of a grade, carrying lesser emoluments in the new
service, would necessitate going behind the order ’of 10-3-
1960. At any rate, on the face of it, the order discloses
no such devious action against the Appellant.
Thirdly, it was contended that the impugned order violates
Art. 14 and 16 of the Constitution inasmuch as it places an
employee who was serving as an Editor in a post of lower
grade with less emoluments whereas no such result had
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followed in the case of any other employee in the
Information and Broadcasting
456
Department. We are unable to see how an order which has the
effect of terminating an officiating appointment, in which
the petitioner had no right to continue, and which gives him
a fresh appointment, with a different designation but
permanent tenure and prospects, constitutes a violation of
either Art. 14 or 16 of the Constitution simply because the
process which resulted in such an order did not have a
similar effect upon the position or rights of any other
servant in the Department. Indeed, the Selection Committee
had, apparently after taking into account the special
features of the petitioners individual case, recommended the
maximum pay, in the class and grade of the post given to
him, and the petitioner got this exceptional pay. Even his
prospects improved to the extent that from the precarious
position of a temporary servant he had moved into a
permanent service. It could not be definitely stated that
his position had worsened on the whole. He was at least no
longer subject to the hazards of temporary employment which
could be terminated by a month’s notice at any time. The
results of applying Rule 5 to the facts of individual cases
could not be expected to be identically similar in all
cases.
All candidates were subjected to the same process or pro-
cedure contemplated by Rule 5. It is not the Appellant’s
case that the Selection Committee did not function honestly
or that its proceedings. were vitiated by any defect in its
constitution or of any bias on its part or any unifairness
or inequality of the test applied in judging the merits of
the Appellant as against other candidates. The alleged
defect with the material said to have been used by the
Committee is another matter which we will consider last.
Fourthly, it was urged that Rule 5 mentioned above is itself
void for conflict with the provisions of Article 311 and 14
and 16 of the Constitution.
It was urged that Rule 5 permits violation of Art. 311 of
the Constitution inasmuch as it enables that to be done
indirectly which could not be, done directly. The Rule
reads as follows :-
5. INITIAL CONSTITUTION OF THE SERVICE:-
(1) The Commission shall constitute a
Selection Committee with the Chairman or a
Member of the Commission as President and not
more than three representatives of the
Ministry of Information and Broadcasting as
members, to determine the suitability of
departmental candidates for appointment to the
different grades and to prepare an order of
preference for the initial constitution of the
service:
457
(2) On receipt of the Committee’s report the
Commission shall forward its recommendations
to the Government and such recommendations may
include a recommendation that a person
considered suitable for appointment to a grade
may, if a sufficient number of vacancies are
not available in that grade, be appointed to a
lower grade;
(3) Vacancies in any grade which remain
unfilled after the appointment of departmental
candidates selected under sub-rules (1) and
(2) above shall be filled by direct
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recruitment through the Commission.
Rule 3 indicates that appointments to the newly created’
service could take place either by selection under Rule 5 or
by direct recruitment with which we are not concerned here.
The grades and the fixation of an authorized strength of
each grade are provided for by Rule 4. Only posts in the
first 3 grades are classified as Class I (Gazetted) posts.
Rule 5(2) enables the Selection Committee, to recommend