Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE BANK OF INDIA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S.B.I EMPLOYEES UNION & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/09/1987
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
SINGH, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 2203 1988 SCR (1) 153
1987 SCC (4) 370 JT 1987 (3) 579
1987 SCALE (2)575
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 134A-Certificate
for leave to appeal-Issuance of-Conditions to be satisfied-
Whether Single judge empowered to issue such Certificate on
ground that Division Bench issued Certificate in similar
case.
HEADNOTE:
The employees of the State Bank of India filed a writ
petition in the High Court, questioning the right of the
management to fix the hours of work and of recess and its
right to stagger the period of recess, and for other
consequential reliefs.
A Single Judge of the High Court allowed the petition,
following earlier decisions by the Division Bench of the
same High Court, and also granted a certificate of fitness
under Article 134A of the Constitution to file an appeal in
the Supreme Court, following an earlier order of a Division
Bench granting such a certificate in respect of one of those
earlier decisions.
Revoking the certificate, this Court,
HELD: The certificate contemplated under Article 134A
of the Constitution can only be a certificate which is
referred to in cl. (1) of Article 132 or in cl. (1) of
Article 133 or in sub-clause (c) of cl. (1) of Article 134
of the Constitution. Article 134A does not constitute an
independent provision under which a certificate can be
issued. It is ancilliary to Articles 132(1), 133(1) and
134(1)(c). [155E]
The High Court can issue a certificate only when it is
satisfied that the conditions in Article 132 or Article 133
or Article 134, as the case may be, are satisfied. [156F]
The instant case does not fall either under Article
132(1) or under sub-clause(c) of Article 134(1) as it
neither involves a substantial question of law as to the
interpretation of the Constitution nor is it a crimi-
154
nal proceeding. It can only fall, if at all, under Article
133(1) and,therefore, the certificate could not have been
issued by reason of cl.(3) of Article 133 of the
Constitution. [155E-F]
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The fact that in a similar case a certificate had been
issued by a Division Bench of the High Court did not empower
the Single Judge to issue the certificate under Article
133(1) in a case decided by him. The restriction placed by
cl. (3) of Article 133 could not be got over by relying upon
the order of the Division Bench. [156G-H]
The petition of appeal to be treated as Special Leave
Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution and posted
for preliminary hearing. [157A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Miscellaneous
Petition No. 19065 of 1987.
IN
Civil Appeal No. 1713 of 1987.
From the Judgment and order dated 11.6.1987 in Writ
Petition No. 389 of 1981
F. D. Damania, Atul Tewari and Ms. Bina Gupta for the
petitioners .
The following order of the Court was delivered:
O R D E R
The certificate on the basis of which this appeal is
filed is issued by a learned Single Judge of the High Court
of Bombay under Article 134A of the Constitution in respect
of an order passed by him in a Writ Petition in which the
employees of the State Bank of India had questioned the
right of the management to fix the hours of work and the
hours of recess and its right to stagger the period of
recess and had prayed for other consequential reliefs. The
learned Single Judge allowed the petition following certain
earlier decisions of the High Court rendered by the Division
Benches. He however proceeded to grant a certificate of
fitness to file an appeal against his decision before this
Court following an earlier order of a Division Bench
granting such a certificate in respect of one of those
earlier decisions. He issued the
155
certificate under Article 134A of the Constitution without
referring to A the Article under which the appeal could be
filed. Article 134A of the Constitution reads thus:
"134A. Every High Court, passing or making a
judgment, decree, final order, or sentence,
referred to in clause ( 1) of article 132 or
clause ( 1) of article 133, or clause ( 1) of
article 134,-
(a) may, if it deems fit so to do, on its own
motion; and
(b) shall, if an oral application is made. by
or on behalf of the party aggrieved, immediately
after the passing or making of such judgment,
decree, final order or sentence,
determine, as soon as may be after such passing or
making, the question whether a certificate of the
nature referred to in clause ( 1) of article 132,
or clause ( 1) of article 133 or, as the case may
be, sub-clause (c) of clause (1) of article 134,
may be given in respect of that case."
The certificate contemplated under Article 134A of the
Constitution can only be a certificate which is referred to
in clause ( 1) of Article 132 or in clause ( 1) of Article
133 or in sub-clause (c) of clause ( 1) of Article 134 of
the Constitution. This is quite obvious from the language of
Article 134A of the Constitution. This case does not fall,
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either under Article 132(1) or under sub-clause (c) of
Article 134(1) as it neither involves a substantial question
of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution nor it
is a criminal proceeding. It can only fall. if at all, under
Article 133(1) of the Constitution. Article 133 of the
Constitution reads thus:
"133. (1) An appeal shall lie to the Supreme
Court from any judgment, decree or final order in
a civil proceeding of a High Court in the
territory of India if the High Court certifies
under Article 134A-
(a) that the case involves a substantial
question of law of general importance; and
(b) that in the opinion of the High Court the
said
156
question needs to be decided by the Supreme Court.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in article 132,
any party appealing to the Supreme Court under
clause ( 1) may urge as one of the grounds in such
appeal that a substantial question of law as to
the interpretation of this Constitution has been
wrongly decided.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in this article,
no appeal shall, unless Parliament by law
otherwise provides, lie to the Supreme Court from
the judgment, decree or final order of one Judge
of a High Court."
Clause (3) of Article 133 says that notwithstanding
anything in that Article no appeal shall unless Parliament
by law otherwise provides lie to the Supreme Court from the
judgment, decree or final order of one Judge of the High
Court. Before the introduction of Article 134A of the
Constitution by the Forty-fourth Amendment of L) the
Constitution there was no express provision in Articles 132,
133 and 134 of the Constitution regarding the time and
manner in which an application for a certificate under any
of those articles could be made before the High Court. There
was also a doubt as to the power of the High Court to issue
a certificate suo motu under any of those articles. Article
134A was enacted to make good the said deficiencies. Article
134A does not constitute an independent provision under
which a certificate can be issued. It is ancillary to
Article 132(1), Article 133(1) and Article 134(1)(c) of the
Constitution. That is the reason for the use of words "if
the High Court certifies under article 134A" in Article
132(1) and Article 133(1) and for the use of words
"certifies under article 134A" in Article 134(1)(c). The
High Court can issue a certificate only when it is satisfied
that the conditions in Article 132 or Article 133 or Article
134 of the Constitution as the case may be are satisfied. In
the instant case such a certificate could not have been
issued by reason of clause (3) of Article 133 of the
Constitution by the learned Single Judge.
The fact that in a similar case a certificate had been
issued by a Division Bench of the High Court consisting of
two Judges in a case decided by the Division Bench did not
empower the Single Judge to issue the certificate under
Article 133(1) of the Constitution in a case decided by him.
The restriction placed by clause (3) of Article 133 of the
Constitution could not be got over by relying upon the order
of the Division Bench.
157
We, therefore, revoke the certificate This petition of
appeal A may, however, be treated as a Special Leave
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Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution and posted
for preliminary hearing.
N P V
158