Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 9072 of 1996
PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR & ANR.
RESPONDENT:
BAL MUKUND SAH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/03/2000
BENCH:
S.B.MAJMUDAR & G.B.PATTANAIK & V.N.KHARE & U.C.BANERJEE & R.P.SETHI
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED BY:
S.B.MAJMUDAR
G.B.PATTANAIK
U.C.BANERJEE
R.P.SETHI JJ.
S.B.Majmudar, J.
Leave granted in Special Leave Petition No.16476 of
1993.
Both these appeals, on grant of special leave under
Article 136 of the Constitution of India, are moved by the
State of Bihar, which is common appellant no.1 in both these
appeals. In Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996 the Secretary,
Department of Personnel and Administrative Reforms,
Government of Bihar is appellant no. 2, while in the
companion appeal arising from the Special Leave Petition No.
16476 of 1993, the other contesting appellant is the Special
Executive Officer-cum-Deputy Secretary, Bihar Public Service
Commission, Patna. In both these appeals, a common question
of law arises for consideration, namely, whether the
Legislature of the appellant State of Bihar was competent to
enact the Bihar Reservation of Vacancies in Posts and
Services (for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other
Backward Classes) Act, 1991 (hereinafter referred to as the
Act), in so far as Section 4 thereof sought to impose
reservation for direct recruitment to the posts in the
Judiciary of the State, subordinate to the High Court of
Patna, being the posts of District Judges as well as the
posts in the lower judiciary at the grass-root level,
governed by the provisions of the Bihar Judicial Service
(Recruitment) Rules, 1955. Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996
deals with the question of reservation in the posts in
District Judiciary while the companion appeal deals with the
posts in Subordinate Judiciary at grass-root level under the
District Courts concerned. By the impugned judgment in
Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996, a Division Bench of the High
Court has struck down the terms of the advertisement,
reserving amongst others, 27 out of 54 posts of District
Judges to be filled in by direct recruitment, being ultra
vires the relevant provisions of Article 233 of the
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Constitution of India. It has also struck down the
provisions made in the impugned advertisement fixing up the
upper age limit at 45 years for eligibility for appointment
by way of direct recruitment to these posts. That part of
the controversy no longer survives between the parties in
the present proceedings and, therefore, we need not dilate
on the same. So far as the companion appeal is concerned,
the main judgment was rendered by the Division Bench of the
High Court holding that the aforesaid Act as well as the
earlier Ordinance which preceded the same in so far as they
sought to apply the scheme of reservation of posts for
governing recruitment of persons other than the District
Judges to the Judicial Service of the State were ultra vires
Article 234 of the Constitution. As the controversies
involved in these appeals have to be resolved in the light
of the relevant Constitutional scheme, by an earlier Order
dated 13th May, 1994 of this Court, they were directed to be
listed before a Constitution Bench. Subsequently in view of
the statement made by learned counsel that the matter could
be disposed of by a Bench of three Judges, the matters were
directed to be placed before a three-Judge Bench by an order
dated 12th May, 1995. Thereafter a three-Judge Bench of
this Court by its order dated 6th November, 1997 felt that
the matters raised questions regarding interpretation of
provisions of Articles 233, 234 and 309 of the Constitution
and hence it would be appropriate that they are heard by the
Constitution Bench. That is how these matters have been
placed before this Constitution Bench under the directions
of Honble the Chief Justice of India. Before we proceed to
deal with the rival contentions of learned counsel for the
respective parties in support of their cases, it becomes
necessary to note a few introductory facts. Facts leading
to Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996: This Court, by its order
dated 13th October, 1993 in Civil Appeal Nos. 4561-62 of
1992 in State of Bihar vs. Madan Mohan Singh & Ors., had
quashed the earlier advertisement for filling up the
vacancies of Additional District Judges in the District
Judicial Service of Bihar and directed the appellant State
to fill up the same through a fresh advertisement. In the
mean time, it appears that as the High Court had not agreed
to the suggestion of the State authorities to have
reservation in the posts of District Judges for reserved
category of candidates and had insisted on proceeding with
the recruitment as per the 1951 Rules, styled as the Bihar
Superior Judicial Service Rules, 1951, which were framed by
the Governor of Bihar in exercise of the powers conferred by
the proviso to Article 309 read with Article 233 of the
Constitution of India and which Rules did not provide for
any such reservation, the Governor of Bihar issued the
impugned Ordinance which subsequently became the impugned
Act by which the scheme of 50% reservations for reserved
category of candidates was directed to be applied while
effecting direct recruitment to the posts concerned. On
16th November, 1993, the appellant State requested the High
Court to effect recruitment to the vacancies in the cadre of
District Judges on the basis of the reservation provided by
the Ordinance which subsequently was followed by the Act.
By its communication dated 16th December, 1993, the High
Court of Patna insisted that recruitment to District
Judiciary can be made on the basis of 1951 Rules only. By a
communication dated 5th April, 1994, the High Court informed
the authorities concerned that no reservation of posts in
the district cadre could be implemented and while making
appointments from the members of the Bar for direct
recruitment, preference may be given to the Scheduled Caste
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(for short SC) and Scheduled Tribe (for short ST)
candidates who are of equal merit with general category
candidates. On 7th April, 1994, the High Court intimated
that there are 54 vacancies in the district cadre which had
to be filled up. The State Government, however, issued the
impugned advertisement of 16th June, 1994 by which 50% of
the available vacancies of District Judges were sought to be
filled in from reserved category of candidates and the
remaining 50% posts thereof, i.e. 27, were to be filled in
by the open category candidates. It is this advertisement
which was challenged by the writ petitioners before the High
Court. The High Court, by the impugned judgment as noted
earlier, has allowed the writ petition and quashed the
condition of reservation sought to be imposed by the
impugned advertisement.
Facts leading to Civil Appeal arising out of S.L.P.(C)
No.16476 of 1993: By a proposal dated 30th January, 1991,
the appellant-State consulted the Bihar Public Service
Commission regarding making provision for reservation of
posts in the Subordinate Judicial Service for reserved
category of candidates. The said proposal of the
appellant-State was also placed for consideration of the
High Court but it was not accepted by the High Court by its
communication dated 16th April, 1991, and that resulted in
the impugned Ordinances, being 33 and 34 of 1991, which were
followed by the impugned Act. The original writ
petitioners, who had already appeared at the competitive
examination in April, 1991 moved the High Court challenging
the Ordinances and the latter Act in so far as the scheme of
50% reservation of posts for direct recruitment at grass
root level of the State Judiciary was concerned. As noted
earlier, the aforesaid writ petition was allowed and relief
was granted against the appellants. Rival contentions:
Dr.Dhavan, learned senior counsel appearing for the
appellant-State in Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996, at the
outset, contended that the impugned Act, especially Section
4 thereof, is wrongly held by the High Court to be not
applicable to Judicial Services of the State. He contended
that Judicial Services especially, the Subordinate Judiciary
comprising of district cadre and the cadre of Judges below
the same were part and parcel of the Public Services of the
State and, therefore, on the express terminology of the Act,
Section 4 thereof, became directly applicable to the
recruitment of judicial officers both at the district level
as well as at the level of Subordinate Judiciary below it.
Alternatively, it was submitted that even assuming that the
Act did not apply on its own language, even then, it has to
be held that the State Legislature was perfectly competent
to enact provisions regarding reservation of posts in
Judicial Services of the State in the light of Article 16(4)
of the Constitution of India read with the relevant entry 41
in list II of Seventh Schedule to Constitution. He also
posed the moot question whether the State Legislature has
independent power to enact any provisions regarding
reservation in connection with appointment in Judiciary when
such reservation, after consultation with the High Court,
could not get reflected in the relevant Rules framed by the
Governor under Article 309 read with Articles 233 and 234 of
the Constitution of India. In support of these contentions,
relevant Constitutional scheme was pressed in service. It
was submitted that on a correct interpretation of Article
309 the State Legislature as well as the Governor had ample
jurisdiction to make provision for reservation in connection
with Judicial Service. Under the said Article, paramount
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power in this connection has been vested in the State
Legislature. He then referred to Articles 233 and 234 in
connection with Subordinate Judiciary and placed emphasis on
Article 236 (b) defining the expression Judicial Service
as a service consisting exclusively of persons intended to
fill the post of District Judge and other civil judicial
posts inferior to the post of District Judge. He submitted
that all that the opening part of Article 309 provides is to
the effect that, while making appointments to the cadre of
District Judges or Subordinate Judges of lower judiciary, as
per Articles 233 and 234, consultation of the Governor with
the High Court is necessary. That apart, from these latter
two Articles there is no fetter on the power of the State
Legislature to enact appropriate legislation in this
connection under Article 309. He invited our attention to
List II entry 41 of the Seventh Schedule for submitting that
the State Legislature is competent to make enactment in
connection with appointments to Public Services and
Judicial Service is also a Public Service of the State.
He further submitted that the first part of Article 309 does
not attract Article 234 so far as State Legislatures
paramount powers are concerned.
Dr.Dhavan, relying upon the second part of Article
235, stated that despite the full control of District
Judiciary being vested in the High Court, the right of
appeal and other conditions of service of Members of
Subordinate Judiciary as laid down by any competent law
which would include legislative enactment as well as
statutory rules are clearly saved pro tanto at least at the
second level, after appointments are made at the grass-root
level in the Judiciary and when the further question arises
as to how the conditions of service of such appointees are
to be governed and controlled. Dr.Dhavan, therefore,
submitted that it is not as if the power of State
Legislature to enact appropriate provisions is totally
excluded because of the enactment of Articles 233 to 235.
Dr.Dhavan tried to highlight his submission by contending
that if the power of State Legislature to enact appropriate
provisions regarding appointments of Members of Subordinate
Judiciary is held totally excluded by Article 234, and to
that extent Article 309 be held out of picture, then the
following anomalies may arise in the working of these
provisions.
1) Judicial Service as defined by Article 236(b)
will get truncated in its operation.
2) The second anomaly pointed out by Dr.Dhavan was
that power to legislate, which must be given full effect,
would get excluded without there being any express
exclusion.
3) The third anomaly pointed out by Dr.Dhavan was that
though under the Constitution, the scheme of separation of
power is devised to separate the Executive from the
Judiciary, this scheme does not extend to oust the
legislative power. If it is held that Article 234 ousts the
legislative power for making suitable enactments on the
topic covered therein then, to that extent, an anomalous
position would arise not contemplated by the Constitutional
scheme.
Dr.Dhavan next contended that on the express language
of Article 234, only the rule making power of the Governor
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is fettered but not the legislative power of the State.
Dr.Dhavan next submitted that if legislative
interference in the process of selection and appointment of
direct recruits to Subordinate Judiciary as per Article 234
is completely ruled out that being the first level or the
grass-root level of the Subordinate Judiciary then another
patently anomalous situation would arise. That under
Article 235 second part such statutory provisions to be
enacted by competent Legislature are clearly contemplated so
far as conditions of service of judicial officers are
concerned and then when we turn to the apex level, namely,
of the district cadre manned by District Judges there is no
express ouster of legislative interference under Article
233. Thus the plenary power of the Legislature would be
operative qua the highest posts in the hierarchy of District
Judiciary while for the grass-root level it will be ruled
out. Dr.Dhavan then invited our attention to the decisions
in M.M.Gupta & Ors. etc. vs. State of Jammu & Kashmir &
Ors., (1982) 3 SCC 412 paras 28 to 32 as well as in State of
Kerala vs. Smt.A.Lakshmikutty & Ors., (1986) 4 SCC 632 at
page 647 in para 22 to highlight the scope of the term
consultation which should be effective consultation. He
then invited our attention to the impugned Act especially
Sections 2 (c), 4 and 16 having overriding effect over all
other rules in force and submitted that such establishments
under the State would include even Judiciary as laid down
by the definition of Section 2(n). He, however, fairly
conceded that neither in the Rules of 1951 regarding
appointments to district cadre as per Article 233 nor under
the Rules of 1955 for recruitment to cadre of Subordinate
Judiciary as laid down by Article 234, there is any
provision for 50% reservation of posts and, therefore, he
submitted that this entire case depends upon competence of
the impugned Act which had to be enacted because there was a
stalemate on this subject as the High Court did not agree
with the suggestion of the Governor for suitable amendment
to these Rules under Articles 233 and 234. He ultimately
submitted, that the reasoning of the High Court that the Act
does not cover Judicial Service is patently erroneous and
that this Act is not bound by any fetters of Articles 233 or
234 and is an exercise of paramount legislative power
conferred on the State authorities under Article 309 first
part read with entry 41 List II of Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution. He, therefore, submitted that the Act must be
permitted to have full play.
In support of his contentions Dr.Dhavan placed strong
reliance on the decision of a Constitution Bench of this
Court in the case of B.S.Yadav & Ors. v. State of Haryana
& Ors. etc. (1981) 1 SCR 1024. Dr.Dhavan, therefore,
submitted that the impugned judgment of the High Court,
being contrary to the Constitutional scheme, requires to be
set aside.
Shri Dwivedi, learned senior counsel appearing for the
appellant-State in the companion Civil Appeal submitted that
though the High Court in para 9 at page 11 has referred to a
three-Judge Bench judgment of this Court in All India
Judges Association & Ors. etc. vs. Union of India & Ors.
etc., AIR 1993 SC 2493, giving special status to judicial
officers, the said observations cannot whittle down the
power of reservation available to the State authorities
under Article 16 (4) and that question was not examined in
the said case as it did not fall for consideration. He
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submitted that a conjoint reading of Sections 2(c) and 2(n)
clearly shows that the Act is meant to apply also to
Judicial Service of the Bihar State. He next contended
that question of reservation of posts in a cadre which is
already established by the State authorities in exercise of
their powers under Article 309 is not covered by Articles
233 to 235. That question is covered by Article 16
sub-article (4) and none of the aforesaid provisions curtail
that enabling power available to the State authorities. In
this connection, he also invited our attention to entry 11A
of List III of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution dealing
with constitution and organisation of all courts, except the
Supreme Court and the High Courts, and submitted that scheme
of reservation of posts would remain sustained under these
provisions and also as per the Legislature enacted under
entry 41 of List II. He submitted that once the court is
constituted, it would comprise of all cadres of judicial
officers to man the courts and the formation of cadres and
constitution of the courts also permitted provisions for
creation of reserved posts to comprise in such cadres. This
exercise has nothing to do with the question of appointment
on available vacancies in posts borne on established cadres
in Judicial Service. According to Shri Dwivedi, the
establishment of cadres and creation of posts in the cadres
is a stage prior to the one contemplated by Articles 233 to
235 dealing with the subsequent question as to how actual
appointments of deserving candidates are to be effected to
fill up vacancies in already created posts in the concerned
cadres. In short, the submission of Shri Dwivedi was that
question of creation of posts to be filled up by reserved
candidates or open category candidates was in the domain of
the State authorities especially, the Legislature which can
enact appropriate statutory provisions in discharge of
constitutional obligation under Article 16(4) read with
entry 41 of List II of Seventh Schedule as well as entry 11
A of List III and once the general category posts as well as
the reserved category posts are made available to the High
Court for being filled in, thereafter, it will be for the
High Court to proceed according to Articles 233 and 234 of
the Constitution of India and in that exercise the State
Legislature will have no say. He, therefore, contended that
the High Court in the impugned judgment was patently in
error in taking the view that statutory provision of
reservation of posts for reserved category candidates in the
Subordinate Judiciary under its control was in any way ultra
vires or illegal. Shri Dwivedi, in support of his
contentions, gave written submissions whereby, amongst
others, he invited our attention to Article 320 sub-article
(4) which excludes reservation expressly from the powers and
functions of the Public Service Commission. He submitted
that Article 234 requires the Governor for framing rules to
consult the High Court as well as the Public Service
Commission and when it cannot make any provision regarding
reservation under Article 16 sub-article (4), by analogy,
consultation of the High Court also under the very same
Article 234 would not permit the High Court to deal with
Article 16 sub- article (4). In other words, question of
reservation is outside the ken of Article 234. Shri
Dwivedi, also in support of his contentions, placed reliance
on various decisions of this Court to which we will make a
reference at an appropriate stage. Shri Dwivedi next
contended that even under the Bihar Judicial Service
(Recruitment) Rules, 1955 (hereinafter referred to as the
1955 Rules) especially, Rules 19 & 20 reservation of posts
in lower judiciary is contemplated; that these Rules are
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made by the Governor in consultation with the High Court and
the Public Service Commission.
Shri Dwivedi next contended that, in any case, the
High Court in the impugned judgement was not called upon to
consider the further question whether there cannot be any
reservation to the posts in district cadre and the stand of
the High Court that if candidates of equal merit are there,
then preference can be given to SC and ST candidates, was
correct or not. That the only question before the High
Court was whether the impugned Act could validly apply to
provision of reservation of posts in the District Judiciary.
He, therefore, submitted that the observations in para 24 of
the impugned judgment, in any case, are required to be set
aside as redundant and uncalled for. It was accordingly
submitted by Shri Dwivedi that the appeal deserves to be
allowed.
Learned counsel appearing for the Intervenors in
I.A.No.20, on the other hand, tried to support the case of
reservation for SC and ST candidates relying on Rule 20 of
1955 Rules so far as the recruitment to Subordinate
Judiciary was concerned. Learned counsel for the
intervenors in I.A.No.10 representing Other Backward Class
(for short OBC) candidates adopted the arguments of
Dr.Dhavan and Shri Dwivedi in support of the impugned Act
and the scheme of reservation thereunder. Learned counsel
appearing for the Intervenors as per I.A.No.11 tried to
support reservation for SC and ST candidates under the Act
and even dehors it. While intervenor in I.A.Nos. 4 and 9
representing general category candidates supported the
decision of the High Court. The main reply to the
contentions of learned counsel for the appellants emanated
from learned senior counsel Shri Thakur appearing for the
High Court of Patna. He submitted, in the first instance,
that the impugned Act is not wide enough to apply to
Judiciary. He tried to support this contention on the basis
of reasoning which appealed to the High Court in the
impugned judgment. He alternatively contended that Section
4 of the impugned Act, if applied to judicial officers, will
ex facie become invalid being repugnant to the composite
scheme of Articles 233 to 235. To highlight this
alternative contention, he contended as under : 1. Article
309 has no application to Subordinate Judiciary. It gets
excluded by the triology of Articles 233 to 235 which
represent a complete Code amongst themselves. 2. Once
Article 309 is excluded, legislative power under Article 309
first part also gets excluded qua the field covered by the
aforesaid triology of the Articles. 3. These three
Articles themselves are the only source of power to make
rules or law as seen from second part of Article 235 as well
as Articles 233 and 234. 4. Rules made under Article 234
by the Governor after following the procedure laid down
thereunder would relate to service also as contemplated by
Article 233. 5. Second part of Article 235 only can permit
suitable legislation by the State authorities governing the
conditions of service of already recruited judicial officers
whether at the grass-root level or even at the apex level of
the District Judiciary in exercise of its legislative power
under Article 309 read with entry 41 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule. In order to support his contention that
Article 309 does not apply to recruitment to the Judicial
Service, he invited our attention to Article 187 dealing
with Secretarial Staff of Legislature, Article 148 dealing
with Service regulations of the Comptroller & Auditor-
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General of India, Article 146 dealing with Service under the
Supreme Court, Article 229(2) dealing with Services under
the High Court and Article 324(5) dealing with Service
regulations of Election Commission and submitted that in all
these Articles, special provisions are made for enacting
appropriate rules and even statutes covering the topics
mentioned therein. But so far as Article 234 is concerned,
it is not subject to the law of Legislature as found in the
aforesaid other Articles. To a pointed query by us Shri
Thakur, learned senior counsel for the High Court of Patna,
after taking appropriate instructions, submitted that in
principle the High Court of Patna has already accepted
reservation of 14% posts for SC and 10% for ST candidates
for being recruited at the lowest level of the District
Judiciary. Shri Thakur also placed reliance on decisions of
the various High Courts and of this Court to which we will
make a reference at an appropriate stage. Shri Thakur,
further submitted that Section 4 of the impugned Act, in
express terms, seeks to regulate appointments to the
existing posts in the cadre of District Judiciary as well as
in the Subordinate Judiciary. To that extent it directly
impinges upon the provisions of Articles 233 and 234, which
amongst them, represent a complete Code in connection with
appointment to Subordinate Judiciary. He further submitted
that it is fallacious to contend that reserving posts for a
given class of candidates would be at a stage prior to the
question of recruitment and appointment as contemplated by
Articles 233 and 234 of the Constitution. That once posts
are already created for being filled up in a given cadre the
authority of the State in this connection would come to an
end. For creation of such cadres and sanction of posts
appropriate legislation can be enacted or even the Governor,
in exercise of his independent power under Article 309, can
promulgate Rules. But once posts are already created in a
Judicial Cadre and when the question of filling up vacancies
in the existing sanctioned posts in district cadre or
subordinate cadre arises, direct recruitment has to be done
on the recommendation of the High Court as laid down by
Article 233 (2) and recruitment in the vacancies in the
cadre of Subordinate Judiciary has to be done as per the
1955 Rules framed by the Governor in consultation with the
High Court under Article 234 and in no other manner. That
for regulating this process there is no question of any
legislative interference by exercise of any paramount power.
He, therefore, contended that the view of the High Court in
the impugned judgment is well sustained on the
Constitutional scheme and calls for no interference. He,
however, fairly submitted that so far as the 1955 Rules are
concerned, by the consent of the High Court the rule making
power has been exercised by the Governor permitting the
reservation for SC and ST candidates in recruitment governed
by the said Rules and which recruitment has to be resorted
to for filling up vacancies in posts of Subordinate Judges
and the Munsiffs. He also fairly stated that the High Court
is consistently following the provision of reservation for
direct recruitment in these categories of posts to the
extent of 14% being reserved for SC and 10% being reserved
for ST candidates but nothing more. So far as the impugned
Act is concerned, it goes far beyond this permitted scheme
of reservation under the relevant Rules of 1955 and seeks to
impose a blanket reservation of 50% for SC, ST and OBC
candidates. That such a statutory provision flies in the
face of Articles 233 and 234 of the Constitution of India
and cannot be sustained and accordingly rightly been voided
by the High Court. Points for determination: In the light
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of the aforesaid rival contentions, the following points
arise for our determination: 1. Whether the impugned Act
of 1991 on its express language covers Judicial Service of
the Bihar State; 2. If the answer to point no.1 is in the
affirmative, whether the provisions of the impugned Act,
especially, Section 4 thereof in its application to
Subordinate Judiciary would be ultra vires Articles 233 and
234 of the Constitution of India and hence cannot be
sustained; 3. In the alternative, whether the aforesaid
provisions of the Act are required to be read down by
holding that Section 4 of the Act will not apply to direct
recruitment to the posts comprised in the Bihar Superior
Judicial Service as specified in the Schedule to the Bihar
Superior Judicial Service Rules, 1951 as well as to Bihar
Judicial Service governed by the Bihar Judicial Service
(Recruitment) Rules, 1955, comprising of the posts of
Subordinate Judges and Munsiffs under the District
Judiciary; and 4. What final order?
Before we deal with the aforesaid points for
determination, it will be necessary to keep in view the
relevant provisions of the Constitution which have a direct
impact on the resolution of the controversy projected by
these points. Constitutional Scheme: Part XIV deals with
Services under the Union and the States. Chapter I
comprising of Articles 308 to 313 deals with Services, while
Chapter II covering Articles 315 to 323 deals with Public
Service Commissions. Article 308 defines the expression
State, which shall not include the State of Jammu &
Kashmir. However, the relevant Article for our present
purpose is Article 309 which reads as under : 309.
Recruitment and conditions of service of persons serving the
Union or a State Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, Acts of the appropriate Legislature may
regulate the recruitment, and conditions of service of
persons appointed, to public services and posts in
connection with the affairs of the Union or of any State:
Provided that it shall be competent for the President
or such person as he may direct in the case of services and
posts in connection with the affairs of the Union, and for
the Governor of a State or such person as he may direct in
the case of services and posts in connection with the
affairs of the State, to make rules regulating the
recruitment, and the conditions of service of persons
appointed, to such services and posts until provision in
that behalf is made by or under an Act of the appropriate
Legislature under this article, and any rules so made shall
have effect subject to the Provisions of any such Act.
A mere look at this Article shows that it is expressly
made subject to other provisions of the Constitution and
subject to that, an appropriate Legislature or Governor can
regulate the recruitment and conditions of service of
persons appointed to public services and posts in connection
with the affairs of the State concerned. Proviso to that
Article permits the Governor of the State to fill up the
gap, if there is no such statutory provision governing the
aforesaid topics. For that purpose, the Governor may make
rules regulating the recruitment and the conditions of
service of persons appointed to such services and posts
until provision in that behalf is made by or under an Act of
the competent Legislature which may intervene and enact
appropriate statutory provisions for the same. The manner
of recruitment to the services contemplated by Article 309
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is provided by Chapter II dealing with the Public Service
Commissions. Article 320 deals with Functions of Public
Service Commissions enjoining them to conduct examinations
for appointment to the services of the Union and the
services of the State respectively. That naturally has a
direct linkage with the types of Services contemplated by
Article 309. Special Scheme for Judicial Services in Part
VI (Chapters V & VI):
It is pertinent to note that independently of general
provisions of Article 309, the Constitution has made special
provisions for certain Services. Even if they may be part
of public services, still separate Constitutional schemes
are envisaged for regulating recruitment and conditions of
services of officers governed by such Services. Let us have
a glance at such specially dealt with Services. Part VI of
the Constitution dealing with the States, separately deals
with the executive in Chapter II, the State Legislature
under Chapter III and thereafter Chapter IV dealing with the
Legislative Powers of the Governor and then follows Chapter
V dealing with the High Courts in the States and Chapter VI
dealing with the Subordinate Courts. It is in Chapter VI
dealing with the Subordinate Courts that we find the
provision made for appointment of District Judges under
Article 233, recruitment of persons other than the District
Judges to the Judicial Services under Article 234 and also
Control of the High Court over the Subordinate Courts as
laid down by Article 235. Article 236 deals with the topic
of Interpretation and amongst others, defines by sub-
article (b) the expression judicial service to mean a
service consisting exclusively of persons intended to fill
the post of District Judge and other civil judicial posts
inferior to the post of District Judge. It becomes,
therefore, obvious that the framers of the Constitution
separately dealt with Judicial Services of the State and
made exclusive provisions regarding recruitment to the posts
of District Judges and other civil judicial posts inferior
to the posts of the District Judge. Thus these provisions
found entirely in a different part of the Constitution stand
on their own and quite independent of part XIV dealing with
Services in general under the State. Therefore, Article
309, which, on its express terms, is made subject to other
provisions of the Constitution, does get circumscribed to
the extent to which from its general field of operation is
carved out a separate and exclusive field for operation by
the relevant provisions of Articles dealing with Subordinate
Judiciary as found in Chapter VI of Part VI of the
Constitution to which we will make further reference at an
appropriate stage in the later part of this judgment. We
may also refer at this stage to Article 146 dealing with
Services under the Supreme Court which lays down the
procedure for appointment of officers and servants of the
Supreme Court and provides under sub-article (2) thereof
that subject to the provisions of any law made by
Parliament, the conditions of service of officers and
servants of the Supreme Court shall be such as may be
prescribed by rules made by the Chief Justice of India or by
some other Judge or officer of the court authorised by the
Chief Justice of India to make rules for the purpose.
Similar provision is found in Article 229 dealing with
recruitment of officers and servants and the expenses of the
High Courts. Sub-article (2) there of lays down the rule
making power of the Chief Justice of the Court concerned or
by some other Judge or officer of the Court authorised by
the Chief Justice to make rules for the purpose subject to
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the provisions of any law made by any Legislature of the
State. Article 148 deals with Comptroller and
Auditor-General of India. Sub-article (5) thereof deals
with rule making power of the President regarding the
conditions of service of persons serving in the Indian Audit
and Accounts Department and the administrative powers of the
Comptroller and Auditor-General subject to any provisions of
the Constitution or any law made by the Parliament in this
connection. Article 98 deals with Secretariat of
Parliament. Sub- article (3) thereof provides Until
provision is made by Parliament under clause (2), the
President may, after consultation with the Speaker of the
House of the People or the Chairman of the Council of
States, as the case may be, make rules regulating the
recruitment, and the conditions of service of persons
appointed, to the secretarial staff of the House of the
People or the Council of States, and any rules so made shall
have effect subject to the provisions of any law made under
the said clause. Similarly, for Secretariat of State
Legislature, we find Article 187 which deals with separate
secretariat staff for the House or each House of the
Legislature of a State. Sub-article (3) thereof runs
parallel to sub-article (3) of Article 98 and provides that
until provision is made by the Legislature of the State
under clause (2), the Governor may, after consultation with
the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly or the Chairman of
the Legislative Council, as the case may be, make rules
regulating the recruitment, and the conditions of service of
persons appointed, to the secretarial staff of the Assembly
or the Council and any rules so made shall have effect
subject to the provisions of any law made under the said
clause. Article 324 is found in Part XV which deals with
Superintendence, direction and control of elections to be
vested in an Election Commission. Sub-article (5) thereof
provides that subject to the provisions of any law made by
Parliament, the conditions of service and tenure of office
of the Election Commissioners and the Regional Commissioners
shall be such as the President may by rule determine. The
aforesaid Constitutional provisions clearly indicate that
independently of general provisions regarding Services as
mentioned in Part XIV, different types of Services
contemplated by the Constitution in other parts have their
own procedural schemes for recruitment and regulation of
conditions of these Services and therefore, Article 309
found in Part XIV necessarily will have to be read subject
to these special provisions regarding recruitment and
conditions of services of diverse types governed by the
relevant different Constitutional provisions as indicated
herein above. The other Article to which reference is to be
made is Article 16 sub-article (4) of the Constitution which
enables the State to make provision for reservation of
appointments or posts in favour of any backward class of
citizens which, in its opinion, is not adequately
represented in the services under the State. This provision
has to be read with Article 335 which deals with Claims of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to services and posts
and lays down that the claims of the members of the
Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes shall be taken
into consideration, consistently with the maintenance of
efficiency of administration, in the making of appointments
to services and posts in connection with the affairs of the
Union or of a State. Though on the express language of
Article 335, the Other Backward Classes are not included, it
is now well settled by a decision of the nine-member
Constitution Bench of this Court in the case of Indra
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Sawhney & Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors., [1992 Suppl.
(3) SCC 217] that even the Other Backward Classes are also
covered by the thrust of Article 335 of the Constitution of
India and that view is reaffirmed and is followed by a
recent decision of the three-Judge Bench of this Court in
IAs. Nos.35-36 in WP (C) No.930 of 1990 etc. in Indra
Sawhney vs. Union of India & Ors. reported in (2000) 1 SCC
168, wherein Jagannadha Rao, J., speaking on behalf of the
three-Judge Bench highlighted this very position. Thus,
even if under Article 16(4) the State proposes to provide
reservation on the ground of inadequate representation of
certain backward classes in Services, if it is considered by
the appropriate authority that such reservation will
adversely affect the efficiency of the administration, then
exercise under Article 16(4) is not permissible. This is
the Constitutional limitation on the exercise of the
enabling power of reservation under Article 16(4). As we
shall presently show, question whether in the Subordinate
Judiciary covered by Articles 233 and 234 if reservation is
provided, then the efficiency of the judicial administration
will be affected, is a matter within the exclusive purview
of the High Court which shall have to be consulted. Such
consultation is a Constitutional obligation before any Rules
are made for reservation. Before parting with the resume of
relevant Constitutional provisions, we may also refer to
Article 50 which lays down the Directive Principles of State
Policy that the State shall take steps to separate the
judiciary from the executive in the public services of the
State.
Legislative powers under Articles 245, 246 are subject
to other provisions, including Articles 233, 234 and 235:
We may also refer to Part XI of the constitution, especially
Chapter I dealing with Legislative Relations laying down the
Distribution of Legislative Powers. Article 245 deals with
Extent of Laws made by Parliament and by the Legislatures
of States. Sub-article (1) thereof provides that Subject
to the provisions of this Constitution, Parliament may make
laws for the whole or any part of the territory of India,
and the Legislature of a State may make laws for the whole
or any part of the State. Thus, the legislative powers of
Parliament and the Legislature of the State are expressly
made subject to other provisions of the Constitution.
Similarly, Article 246 laying down the category of
subject-matter of laws made by Parliament and by the
Legislatures of States enumerated in Lists I, II and III of
the Seventh Schedule will also have to be read subject to
Article 245. Meaning thereby, if other provisions of the
Constitution cut down or exclude the Legislative powers of
Parliament or State Legislature qua given topics, then those
other provisions have to be given their full play and
effect.
Articles 233, 234 and 235: So far as recruitment to
District and Subordinate Judiciary is concerned, we have
therefore, to turn to the twin Articles found in Chapter VI
of Part VI dealing with Subordinate Courts. The relevant
two articles read as under : 233. Appointment of Judges:
(1) Appointment of persons to be, and the posting and
promotion of, district judges in any State shall be made by
the Governor of the State in consultation with the High
Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State.
(2) A person not already in the service of the Union
or of the State shall only be eligible to be appointed a
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district judge if he has been for not less than seven years
an advocate or a pleader and is recommended by the High
Court for appointment.
234. Recruitment of persons other than district
judges to the judicial service: Appointments of persons
other than district judges to the judicial service of a
State shall be made by the Governor of the State in
accordance with rules made by him in that behalf after
consultation with the State Public Service Commission and
with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to
such State. (Emphasis supplied)
Article 233 dealing with appointment of District
Judges, on its own express terminology projects a complete
scheme regarding the appointment of persons to District
Judiciary as District Judges. In the present appeals, we
are concerned with direct recruitment to the cadre of
District Judges and hence sub-article (2) of Articles 233
becomes relevant. Apart from laying down the eligibility
criterion for candidates to be appointed from the Bar as
direct District Judges the said provision is further hedged
by the condition that only those recommended by the High
Court for such appointment could be appointed by the
Governor of the State. Similarly, for recruitment of
judicial officers other than District Judges to the Judicial
Service at lower level, complete scheme is provided by
Article 234 wherein the Governor of the State can make such
appointments in accordance with the rules framed by him
after consulting with the State Public Service Commission
and with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation
to such State. So far as the Public Service Commission is
concerned, as seen from Article 320, the procedure for
recruitment to the advertised posts to be followed by it is
earmarked therein. But the role of the Public Service
Commission springs into action after the posts in a cadre
are required to be filled in by direct recruitment and for
that purpose due intimation is given to the Commission by
the State authorities. They have obviously to act in
consultation with the High Court so far as recruitment to
posts in Subordinate Judiciary is concerned. Of course, it
will be for the High Court to decide how many vacancies in
the cadre of District Judges and Subordinate Judges are
required to be filled in by direct recruitment so far as the
District Judiciary is concerned and necessarily only by
direct recruitment so far as Subordinate Judiciary is
concerned. This prime role of the High Court becomes
clearly discernible from Article 235 which deals with the
control of the High Court over the Subordinate Judiciary and
also of Subordinate Courts. The said Article provides as
under: 235. Control over subordinate courts. The control
over district courts and courts subordinate thereto
including the posting and promotion of, and the grant of
leave to, persons belonging to the judicial service of a
State and holding any post inferior to the post of district
judge shall be vested in the High Court, but nothing in this
article shall be construed as taking away from any such
person any right of appeal which he may have under the law
regulating the conditions of his service or as authorising
the High Court to deal with him otherwise than in accordance
with the conditions of his service prescribed under such
law.
It is in the light of the aforesaid relevant scheme of
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the Constitution that we now proceed to tackle the main
controversy posed for our consideration. Point No.1: So
far as this point is concerned, it is strictly not necessary
for us to go into the reason or the cause which led the
appellant-State to resort to the exercise of legislative
power for enacting the impugned Act. The question is
whether the Act, as enacted, by its express language, can
apply to judicial service of the State or not. When we
turn to this Act, we find that it is enacted to provide for
adequate representation of SC, ST and OBC candidates in
Posts and Services under the State. The State is defined
by Section 2(n) to include the Government, the Legislature
and the Judiciary of the State of Bihar and all local or
other authorities within the State or under the control of
the State Government. Consequently, it cannot be said that
the Act, as framed, did not seek to cover the Judiciary of
the State of Bihar. The main provision of the Act, which is
on the anvil of controversy, is Section 4 which reads as
under : 4. Reservation for direct recruitment All
appointments to services and posts in an establishment which
are to be filled by direct recruitment shall be regulated in
the following manner, namely :- (1) The available vacancies
shall be filled up (a) from open merit category .. ..
50% (b) from reserved category .. .. 50% (2) The vacancies
from different categories of reserved candidates from
amongst the 50% reserved category shall, subject to other
provisions of this Act, be as follows :- (a) Scheduled
Castes .. .. 14% (b) Scheduled Tribes .. .. 10% (c)
Extremely Backward Class .. .. 12% (d) Backward Class ..
.. 8% (e) Economically Backward Woman .. 3% (f)
Economically Backward .. .. 3% ----- Total .. 50% ----
Provided that the State Government may, by notification in
the official Gazette, fix different percentage for different
districts in accordance with the percentage of population of
Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes and Other backward classes
in such districts: Provided further that in case of
promotion, reservation shall be made only for Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes in the same proportion as provided
in this section. (3) A reserved category candidate who is
selected on the basis of his merit shall be counted against
50% vacancies of open merit category and not against the
reserved category vacancies. (4) Notwithstanding anything
contained to the contrary in this Act or in any other law or
rules for the time being in force, or in any judgement or
decree of the Court, the provision of sub-section (3) shall
apply to all such cases in which all formalities of
selection have been completed before the 1st November 1990,
but the appointment letters have not been issued. (5) The
vacancies reserved for the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes
and other Backward Classes shall not be filled up by
candidates not belonging to Scheduled Castes/Scheduled
Tribes and Other Backward Classes except as otherwise
provided in this Act. (6) (a) In case of non-availability
of suitable candidates from the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes for appointment and promotion in vacancies
reserved for them, the vacancies shall continue to be
reserved for three recruitment years and if suitable
candidates are not available even in the third year, the
vacancies shall be exchanged between the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes and the vacancies so filled by exchange
shall be treated as reserved for the candidates for that
particular community who are actually appointed. (b) In
case of non-availability of suitable candidates from the
Extremely Backward Classes and Backward Classes the
vacancies so reserved shall continue to be reserved for them
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for three recruitment years and if suitable candidates are
not available even in the third year also, the vacancies
shall be filled by exchange between the candidates from the
extremely Backward and Backward Classes and the vacancies so
filled by Exchange shall be treated as reserved for the
candidates of that particular community who are actually
appointed. (c) In case of non-availability of suitable
candidates for the vacancies reserved for the economically
backward women the vacancies shall be filled first by the
candidates from the Scheduled Castes, then by the candidates
from the Scheduled Tribes, then by the candidates from
extremely backward class, and then by the candidates from
backward class. The vacancies so filled in the transaction
shall be treated as reserved for the candidates of that
particular community who are actually appointed. (d) If in
any recruitment year, the number of candidates of Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes, extremely Backward and Backward
Classes are less than the number of vacancies reserved for
them even after exchange formula the remaining backlog
vacancies may be filled by general candidates after
dereserving them but the vacancies so dereserved shall be
carried forward for three recruitment years.
(e) If the required number of candidates of Scheduled
Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward and Backward
Classes are not available for filling up the reserved
vacancies, fresh advertisement may be made only for the
candidates belonging to the members of Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward and Backward
Classes, as the case may be, to fill the backlog vacancies
only.
A bare reading of the said provision shows that all
appointments to services and posts in any establishment by
way of direct recruitment require to be subjected to
reservation so that all available vacancies have to be
filled in from open category candidates only up to 50% and
from reserved category up to remaining 50%. It cannot be
disputed that posts of District Judges and Judges
subordinate to the District Judiciary are also posts in
Judicial Service. Question is whether the phrase posts in
any establishment governs such judicial posts. We have,
therefore, to turn to the definition of the term
establishment as found in Section 2(c) of the Act. The
relevant provision thereof lays down that establishment
means any Office or department of the State concerned with
the appointments to public services and posts in connection
with the affairs of the State. On a conjoint reading of
the definition of State under Section 2(n) and the
definition establishment under Section 2(c), the following
statutory scheme emerges. Any office or establishment of
the Judiciary of the State of Bihar concerned with the
appointments to public services and posts in connection with
affairs of the Judiciary of the State of Bihar would fall
within the sweep of the term establishment. Once that
conclusion emerges from the scheme of the Act, it becomes
obvious that all appointments to services and posts in any
office or department of the Judiciary of the State of Bihar
would be covered by the sweep of Section 4. On the
aforesaid scheme of the Act, the High Court in the impugned
judgment, has taken the view that the operation of Section 4
for offices or departments of the Judiciary of the State of
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Bihar would cover only the ministerial staff of the District
Courts and courts subordinate thereto and would not include
Presiding Officers and therefore, Section 4 will not govern
the direct recruitment to the posts of Presiding Officers of
the District Judiciary as well as of Subordinate Judiciary.
It is difficult to appreciate this line of reasoning on the
express language of the relevant provisions of Section 4
read with the definition provisions. It becomes obvious
that the term any office of the Judiciary of the State of
Bihar would naturally include not only ministerial staff but
also officers, including Presiding Officers of courts
comprised in the Judiciary of the State. Once that
conclusion is reached on the express language of the
relevant provisions of the Act, it cannot be held that the
thrust of Section 4 would not apply to govern reservation
for direct recruitment to the posts of Presiding Officers in
the District Courts as well as courts subordinate thereto,
as all of them will form part and parcel of the Judiciary of
the State of Bihar and will have to be treated as holders of
offices in the State Judiciary. Consequently, it is not
possible to agree with the contention of learned senior
counsel Shri Thakur for the High Court that on the express
provisions of the Act, Section 4 cannot apply to govern
recruitment to posts in Subordinate Judiciary. The first
point for determination, therefore, has to be answered in
the affirmative in favour of the appellants and against the
respondents.
Point No.2: Since it is held that Section 4 of the
impugned Act, on its express terms, covers direct
recruitment to posts in the cadre of District Judiciary as
well as to Subordinate Judiciary in the State of Bihar, moot
question arises as to whether Section 4 can be sustained on
the touchstone of the relevant Constitutional scheme
governing the recruitment and appointments to these posts.
For coming to the grip of this problem, we have to keep in
view the salient features of the Constitution emanating from
the Directive Principles of State Policy as laid down by
Article 50 which underscores the felt need of separation of
the Judiciary from the Executive. For achieving that
purpose, the Constitution has made separate provisions
regarding the recruitment and appointment to the cadre of
District Judges as well as the Subordinate Judiciary as
found in Chapter VI of Part VI of the Constitution and, as
seen earlier, these provisions are conspicuously not
included in part XIV dealing in general with Services under
the Union and the States. Article 309 itself, which is of
general nature, dealing with regulation of Recruitment and
conditions of Service of persons serving in the Union or a
State is expressly made subject to other provisions of the
Constitution. The first part of Article 235 itself lays
down that it is for the High Court to control the District
Courts and Courts subordinate thereto and in exercise of
that control vesting in the High Court, regulation of
posting and promotions and granting of leave to persons
belonging to the Judicial Services has to be done by the
High Court. It is, of course, true that in the second part
of Article 235 judicial officers already appointed to the
Service have their statutory right of appeal and the right
to be dealt with regarding other service conditions as laid
down by any other law for the time being in force, expressly
protected. But these provisions of the second part only
enable the Governor under Article 309, in the absence of any
statutory enactment made by the competent Legislature for
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regulating the conditions of service of judicial officers
who are already recruited and have entered and become part
and parcel of the State service, to promulgate appropriate
rules on the subject. But so far as the entry points are
concerned, namely, recruitment and appointment to the posts
of Presiding Officers of the courts subordinate to the High
Courts, only Articles 233 and 234 would govern the field.
Article 234 lays down the procedure and the method of
recruiting judicial officers at grass-root level being
Subordinate Judges and Munsiffs as laid down by the 1955
Rules. These Rules are also framed by the Governor of Bihar
in exercise of his powers under Article 234 obviously after
the consultation of the High Court and the Public Service
Commission. Rules regarding the procedure of selection to
be followed by the State Public Service Commission as found
in Rules 4 to 17 deal with the method to be adopted by the
Public Service Commission while selecting candidates who
offer their candidature for the posts advertised to be
filled in. These Rules obviously require consultation with
the Commission on the procedural aspect of selection
process. But so far as the High Court is concerned, its
consultation becomes pivotal and relevant by the thrust of
Article 233 itself as it is the High Court which has to
control the candidates, who ultimately on getting selected,
have to act as Judges at the lowest level of the Judiciary
and whose posting, promotion and grant of leave and other
judicial control would vest only in the High Court, as per
Article 235 first part, once they enter the judicial service
at grass-root level. Thus consultation of the Governor with
the High Court under Article 234 is entirely of a different
type as compared to his consultation with the Public Service
Commission about procedural aspect of selection. So far as
direct recruitment to the posts of District Judges is
concerned, Article 233 sub-article (2) leaves no room for
doubt that unless the candidate is recommended by the High
Court, the Governor cannot appoint him as a District Judge.
Thus Articles 233 and 234, amongst them, represent a
well-knit and complete scheme regulating the appointments at
the apex level of District Judiciary, namely, District
Judges on the one hand and Subordinate Judges at the
grass-root level of Judiciary subordinate to the district
court. Thus Subordinate Judiciary represents a pyramidical
structure. At base level i.e. grass- root level are the
Munsiffs and Magistrates whose recruitment is governed by
Article 234. That is the first level of the Judiciary. The
second level represents already recruited judicial officers
at grass-root level, whose working is controlled by the High
Court under Article 235 first part. At the top of this
pyramid are the posts of District Judges. Their recruitment
to these posts is governed by Article 233. It is the third
and the apex level of Subordinate Judiciary. It has also to
be kept in view that neither Article 233 nor Article 234
contains any provision of being subject to any enactment by
appropriate Legislature as we find in Articles 98, 146, 148,
187, 229(2) and 324(5). These latter Articles contain
provisions regarding the rule making power of the concerned
authorities subject to the provisions of the law made by the
Parliament or Legislature. Such a provision is
conspicuously absent in Articles 233 and 234 of the
Constitution of India. Therefore, it is not possible to
agree with the contention of learned counsel for the
appellant-State that these Articles only deal with the rule
making power of the Governor, but do not touch the
legislative power of the competent Legislature. It has to
be kept in view that once the Constitution provides a
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complete Code for regulating recruitment and appointment to
District Judiciary and to Subordinate Judiciary, it gets
insulated from the interference of any other outside agency.
We have to keep in view the scheme of the Constitution and
its basic framework that the Executive has to be separated
from the Judiciary. Hence, the general sweep of Article 309
has to be read subject to this complete Code regarding
appointment of District Judges and Judges in the Subordinate
Judiciary. In this connection, we have also to keep in view
Article 245 which, in its express terms, is made subject to
other provisions of the Constitution which would OBinclude
Articles 233 and 234. Consequently, as these twin Articles
cover the entire field regarding recruitment and appointment
of District Judges and Judges of the Subordinate Judiciary
at base level pro tanto the otherwise paramount legislative
power of the State Legislature to operate on this field
clearly gets excluded by the Constitutional scheme itself.
Thus both Articles 309 and 245 will have to be read subject
to Articles 233 and 234 as provided in the former Articles
themselves. It is true, as submitted by learned senior
counsel Shri Dwivedi for the appellant-State that under
Article 16(4) the State is enabled to provide for
reservations in Services. But so far as Judicial Service
is concerned, such reservation can be made by the Governor,
in exercise of his rule making power only after consultation
with the High Court. The enactment of any statutory
provision dehors consultation with the High Court for
regulating the recruitment to District Judiciary and to
Subordinate Judiciary will clearly fly in the face of the
complete scheme of recruitment and appointment to
Subordinate Judiciary and the exclusive field earmarked in
connection with such appointments by Articles 233 and 234.
It is not as if that the High Courts being constitutional
functionaries may be oblivious of the need for a scheme of
reservation if necessary in appropriate cases by resorting
to the enabling provision under Article 16(4). The High
Courts can get consulted by the Governor for framing
appropriate rules regarding reservation for governing
recruitment under Articles 233 and 234. But so long as it
is not done, the Legislature cannot, by an indirect method,
completely bypassing the High Court and exercising its
legislative power, circumvent and cut across the very scheme
of recruitment and appointment to District Judiciary as
envisaged by the makers of the Constitution. Such an
exercise, apart from being totally forbidden by the
Constitutional scheme, will also fall foul on the concept
relating to separation of powers between the legislature,
the executive and the judiciary as well as the fundamental
concept of an independent judiciary. Both these concepts
are now elevated to the level of basic structure of the
Constitution and are the very heart of the Constitutional
scheme. In the case of His Holiness Kesavananda Bharati
Sripadagalvaru vs. State of Kerala & Anr. etc.etc., (1973)
4 SCC 225, a twelve-member Constitution Bench of this Court
had occasion to consider this question regarding the basic
structure of the Constitution which, according to the Court,
could not be tinkered with by the Parliament in exercise of
its amending power under Article 368 of the Constitution.
Sikri, CJ., in para 247 of the Report referred with approval
the decision of the Judicial Committee in Liyanges case,
(1967) 1 AC 259 for culling out the implied limitations on
the amending power of the competent Legislature like the
Parliament of Ceylon with which that case was concerned.
The relevant observations are found in paras 253 to 255 of
the Report at pages 357 and 358, which read as under :
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253. The case, however, furnishes another instance where
implied limitations were inferred. After referring to the
provisions dealing with judicature and the Judges, the
Board observed:
These provisions manifest an intention to secure in
the judiciary a freedom from political, legislative and
executive control. They are wholly appropriate in a
Constitution which intends that judicial power shall be
vested only in the judicature. They would be inappropriate
in a Constitution by which it was intended that judicial
power should be shared by the executive or the legislature.
The Constitutions silence as to the vesting of judicial
power is consistent with its remaining, where it had lain
for more than a century, in the hands of the judicature. It
is not consistent with any intention that henceforth it
should pass to or be shared by, the executive or the
legislature.
254. The Judicial Committee was of the view that
there exists a separate power in the judicature which under
the Constitution as it stands cannot be usurped or infringed
by the executive or the legislature. The Judicial
Committee cut down the plain words of Section 29(1) thus:
Section 29(1) of the Constitution says.- Subject to
the provisions of this Order Parliament shall have power to
make laws for the peace, order and good government of the
Island. These words have habitually been construed in their
fullest scope. Section 29(4) provides that Parliament may
amend the Constitution on a two-thirds majority with a
certificate of the Speaker. Their Lordships however cannot
read the words of Section 29(1) as entitling Parliament to
pass legislation which usurps the judicial power of the
Judicature-e.g., by passing an Act of attainder against some
person or instructing a judge to bring in a verdict of
guilty against someone who is being tried-if in law such
usurpation would otherwise be contrary to the Constitution.
(p.289)
255. In conclusion the Judicial Committee held that
there was interference with the functions of the judiciary
and it was not only the likely but the intended effect of
the impugned enactments, and that was fatal to their
validity.
The ultimate conclusion to which Chief Justice Sikri
reached are found in paras 292 to 294 at page 366 of the
Report which read as under : 292. The learned
Attorney-General said that every provision of the
Constitution is essential; otherwise it would not have been
put in the Constitution. This is true. But this does not
place every provision of the Constitution in the same
position. The true position is that every provision of the
Constitution can be amended provided in the result the basic
foundation and structure of the constitution remains the
same. The basic structure may be said to consist of the
following features:
(1) Supremacy of the Constitution; (2) Republican and
Democratic form of Government; (3) Secular character of the
Constitution; (4) Separation of powers between the
legislature, the executive and the judiciary; (5) Federal
character of the Constitution.
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293. The above structure is built on the basic
foundation, i.e., the dignity and freedom of the individual.
This is of supreme importance. This cannot by any form of
amendment be destroyed.
294. The above foundation and the above basic
features are easily discernible not only from the preamble
but the whole scheme of the Constitution, which I have
already discussed.
The other learned Judges constituting the Constitution
Bench had nothing inconsistent to say in this connection.
Thus separation of powers between the legislature, the
executive and the judiciary is the basic feature of the
Constitution. It has also to be kept in view that judicial
independence is the very essence and basic structure of the
Constitution. We may also usefully refer to the latest
decision of the Constitution Bench of this Court in
Registrar (Admn.), High Court of Orissa, Cuttack etc. vs.
Sisir Kanta Satapathy (Dead) by LRs & Anr. etc., (1999) 7
SCC page 725, wherein K.Venkataswami, J., speaking for the
Constitution Bench, made the following pertinent
observations in the very first two paras regarding Articles
233 to 235 of the Constitution of India : An independent
judiciary is one of the basic features of the Constitution
of the Republic. Indian Constitution has zealously guarded
independence of judiciary. Independence of judiciary is
doubtless a basic structure of the Constitution but the said
concept of independence has to be confined within the four
corners of the Constitution and cannot go beyond the
Constitution.
The Constitution Bench in the aforesaid decision also
relied upon the observations of this Court in All India
Judges Association & Ors.etc. (supra), wherein on the
topic of regulating the service conditions of Judiciary as
permitted by Article 235 read with Article 309, it had been
observed as under : .the mere fact that Article 309 gives
power to the executive and the legislature to prescribe the
service conditions of the judiciary does not mean that the
judiciary should have no say in the matter. It would be
against the spirit of the Constitution to deny any role to
the judiciary in that behalf, for theoretically it would not
be impossible for the executive or the legislature to turn
and twist the tail of the judiciary by using the said power.
Such a consequence would be against one of the seminal
mandates of the Constitution, namely, to maintain the
independence of the judiciary.
In view of this settled legal position, therefore,
even while operating in the permissible field of regulating
other conditions of service of already recruited judicial
officers by exercising power under Article 309, the
concerned authorities have to keep in view the opinion of
the High Court of the concerned State and the same cannot be
whisked away. In order to fructify this Constitutional
intention of preserving the independence of Judiciary and
for fructifying this basic requirement, the process of
recruitment and appointment to the District Judiciary with
which we are concerned in the present case, is insulated
from outside legislative interference by the Constitutional
makers by enacting a complete Code for that purpose, as laid
down by Articles 233 and 234. Consultation with the High
Court is, therefore, an inevitable essential feature of the
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exercise contemplated under these two Articles. If any
outside independent interference was envisaged by them,
nothing prevented the founding fathers from making Articles
233 and 234 subject to the law enacted by the Legislature of
States or Parliament as was done in the case of other
Articles, as seen earlier. In the case of State of Kerala
vs. Smt.A.Lakshmikutty & Ors., (1986) 4 SCC 632, a two
member Bench of this Court, speaking through Sen,J., placing
reliance on the Constitution Bench judgment of this Court in
Chandra Mohan vs. State of U.P., (1967) 1 SCR 77, made the
following pertinent observations in paras 22 to 25 at pages
647-648, which read as under : 22. The heart of the
matter is that consultation between the State Government
and the High Court in the matter of appointment of District
Judges under Article 233(1) of the Constitution must be
real, full and effective. To make the consultation
effective, there has to be an interchange of views between
the High Court and the State Government, so that any
departure from the advice of the High Court would be
explained to the High Court by the State Government. If the
State Government were simply to give lip service to the
principle of consultation and depart from the advice of the
High Court in making judicial appointments without referring
back to the High Court the difficulties which prevent the
government from accepting its advice, the consultation would
not be effective and any appointment of a person as a
District Judge by direct recruitment from the bar or by
promotion from the judicial services under Article 233(1)
would be invalid. Unless the State Government were to
convey to the High Court the difficulties which prevent the
government from accepting its advice by referring back the
matter the consultation would not be effective.
23. Indubitably, the power of appointment of persons
to be District Judges conferred on the Governor, meaning the
State Government, under Article 233(1) in consultation with
the High Court is an executive function. It has been
settled by a long line of decisions of this Court starting
from Chandra Mohan v. State of U.P. to M.M.Gupta v. State
of J & K that the power of the State Government is not
absolute and unfettered but is hedged in with conditions.
The exercise of the power of the Governor under Article
233(1) in the matter of appointment of District Judges is
conditioned by consultation with the exercise of the power
that the power can only be exercised in consultation with
the High Court.
24. Appointment of persons to be, and the posting and
promotion of, District Judges in any State, shall be made by
the Governor of the State under Article 233(1) in
consultation with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in
relation to such State. Sub-Article (2) thereof provides
that a person not already in the service of the Union or of
the State shall only be eligible to be appointed as a
District Judge if he has been for not less than seven years
an advocate or a pleader and is recommended by the High
Court for appointment. It is therefore obvious that
eligibility of appointment of persons to be District Judges
by direct recruitment from amongst the members of the bar
depends entirely on the recommendation of the High Court.
The State Government has no power to appoint any person as a
District Judge except from the panel of names forwarded by
the High Court. As stated, the decisions starting from
Chandra Mohan v. State of U.P. have established the
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principle as a rule of law, that consultation between the
Governor and the High Court in the matter of appointment of
District Judges under Article 233(1) must not be empty
formality but real, full and effective.
25. In Chandra Mohan v. State of U.P. Subba Rao,
C.J. speaking for a unanimous court observed : The
exercise of the power of appointment by the Governor is
conditioned by his consultation with the High Court, that is
to say, he can only appoint a person to the post of District
Judge in consultation with the High Court. The object of
consultation is apparent. The High Court is expected to
know better than the Governor in regard to the suitability
or otherwise of a person, belonging either to the Judicial
Service or to the bar, to be appointed as a District Judge.
Therefore, a duty is enjoined on the Governor to make the
appointment in consultation with a body which is the
appropriate authority to give advice to him.These
provisions indicate that the duty to consult is so
integrated with the exercise of the power that the power can
be exercised only in consultation with the person or persons
designated therein.
To the same effect are the decisions in
Chandramouleshwar Prasad v. Patna High Court, (1969) 3 SCC
56, High Court of P & H v. State of Haryana, (1975) 1 SCC
843, A.Panduranga Rao v. State of A.P., (1975) 4 SCC 709,
and M.M. Gupta v. State of J & K, (1982) 3 SCC 412.
It becomes, therefore, obvious that no recruitment to
the post of a District Judge can be made by the Governor
without recommendation from the High Court. Similarly,
appointments to Subordinate Judiciary at grass-root level
also cannot be made by the Governor save and except
according to the rules framed by him in consultation with
the High Court and the Public Service Commission. Any
statutory provision bypassing consultation with the High
Court and laying down a statutory fiat as is tried to be
done by enactment of Section 4 by the Bihar Legislature has
got to be held to be in direct conflict with the complete
Code regarding recruitment and appointment to the posts of
District Judiciary and Subordinate Judiciary as permitted
and envisaged by Articles 233 and 234 of the Constitution.
Impugned Section 4, therefore, cannot operate in the clearly
earmarked and forbidden field for the State Legislature so
far as the topic of recruitment to District Judiciary and
Subordinate Judiciary is concerned. That field is carved
out and taken out from the operation of the general sweep of
Article 309. It is, of course, true as laid down by a
catena of decisions of this Court, that topics of
constitution of courts and services, laying down of rules
regarding the conditions of service other than those
expressly placed within the jurisdiction of the High Court
by Articles 233 and 235, providing for age of superannuation
or other retirement benefits to judicial officers, fixing
pay scales, diversification of cadres may form part of
general recruitment and conditions of services falling
within the spheres of Governors rule making power under
Article 309 read with second part of Article 235 or may even
be made subject matter of legislation by competent
Legislature in exercise of its legislative powers under
entry 41 of List II or for that matter entry 11A of List III
of the Seventh Schedule. But save and except this permitted
field, the State Legislature cannot enter upon the forbidden
field expressly reserved for consultation with the High
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Court by the thrust of Articles 233 and 234 so far as the
initial entry point of recruitment to judicial service at
grass root level or at the apex level of the District
Judiciary is concerned. A three-Judge Bench of this Court
in the case of A.Panduranga Rao vs. State of Andhra Pradesh
& Ors., AIR 1975 SC 1922, speaking through Untwalia, J.,
considered the question whether any one can be appointed by
the Governor as a District Judge without being recommended
by the High Court. Relying on the Constitution Bench
decision of this Court in Chandra Mohans case (supra) in
para 7 of the Report, observations were made as under :
There are two sources of recruitment, namely, (i) service
of the Union or the State, and (ii) members of the Bar. The
said Judges from the first source are appointed in
consultation with the High Court and those from the second
source are appointed on the recommendation of the High
Court.
And thereafter following pertinent observations were
made in para 8, which read as under : A candidate for
direct recruitment from the Bar does not become eligible for
appointment without the recommendation of the High Court.
He becomes eligible only on such recommendation under clause
(2) of Article 233. The High Court in the judgment under
appeal felt some difficulty in appreciating the meaning of
the word recommended. But the literal meaning given in
the Concise Oxford Dictionary is quite simple and apposite.
It means suggest as fit for employment. In case of
appointment from the Bar it is not open to the Government to
choose a candidate for appointment until and unless his name
is recommended by the High Court.
It is, therefore, obvious that the State Legislature
has no role to play while controlling appointments of
District Judges under Article 233 or appointment of Civil
Judges to Subordinate Judiciary at grass-root level under
the District Judiciary and it is only the Governor who is
entrusted with the said task which he has to undertake after
consultation with the High Court and by framing appropriate
rules for recruitment to Judiciary at grass-root level as
enjoined by Article 234 and can only act on recommendation
by the High Court for direct recruitment from the Bar for
being appointed as District Judges as laid down by Article
233 sub-article (2). There is no third method or third
authority which can intervene in the process or can have its
say, whether legislative authority or executive authority,
as the case may be, independently of the complete scheme of
such recruitment as envisaged by the aforesaid two Articles.
It is, therefore, difficult to appreciate the contention of
learned senior counsel for the appellant-State that
paramount legislative power of the State Legislature stands
untouched by the scheme of the aforesaid two Articles of the
Constitution. Shri Dwivedi, learned senior counsel for the
appellant-State was right when he contended that Article
16(4) is an enabling provision permitting the State to lay
down a scheme of reservation in State Services. It may also
be true that Judicial Service can also be considered to be a
part of such Service as laid down by this Court in the case
of B.S.Yadav & Ors.etc. (supra). However, so far as the
question of exercising that enabling power under Article
16(4) for laying down an appropriate scheme of reservation
goes, as seen earlier, we cannot be oblivious of the fact
that the High Court, being the high Constitutional
functionary, would also be alive to its social obligations
and the Constitutional guideline for having scheme of
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reservation to ameliorate the lot of deprived reserved
categories like the SC, ST and Other Backward Classes. But
for that purpose, the Governor can, in consultation with the
High Court, make appropriate rules and provide for a scheme
of reservation for appointments at grass-root level or even
at the highest level of the District Judiciary, but so long
as this is not done, the State Legislature cannot, by
upsetting the entire apple-cart and totally bypassing the
Constitutional mandate of Articles 233 and 234 and without
being required to consult the High Court, lay down a
statutory scheme of reservation as a road roller straight
jacket formula uniformly governing all State Services,
including Judiciary. It is easy to visualise that the High
Court may, on being properly and effectively consulted,
endorse the Governors view to enact provision of
reservation and lay down the percentage of reservation in
Judicial Service, for which it will be the appropriate
authority to suggest appropriate measures and required
percentage of reservation, keeping in view the thrust of
Article 335 which requires the consideration of the claim of
members of SC, ST and OBC for reservation in Services to be
consistent with the maintenance of efficiency of
administration. It is obvious that maintenance of
efficiency of judicial administration is entirely within the
control and jurisdiction of the High Court as laid down by
Article 235. The State Legislature, on its own, would
obviously lack the expertise and the knowledge based on
experience of judicial administration which is possessed by
the High Court. Consequently, bypassing the High Court, it
cannot, in exercise of its supposed paramount legislative
power enact any rule of thumb and provide fixed percentage
of reservation for SC, ST and Other Backward Classes in
Judicial Services and also lay down detailed procedure to be
followed as laid down by sub-sections (3) to (6) of Section
4 for effecting such statutorily fixed 50% reservation. It
is easy to visualise that if the High Court is not consulted
and obviously cannot be consulted while enacting any law by
the State Legislature and en bloc 50% reservation is
provided in the Judicial Service as is sought to be done by
Section 4 of the Act and which would automatically operate
and would present the High Court with a fait accompli, it
would be deprived of the right to suggest during the
Constitutionally guaranteed consultative process, by way of
its own expertise that for maintenance of efficiency of
administration in Judicial Service controlled by it, 50%
reservation may not be required, and/or even lesser
percentage may be required or even may not be required at
all. Even that opportunity will not be available to the
High Court if it is held that the State Legislature can
enact the law of reservation and make it automatically
applicable to Judicial Service bypassing the High Court
completely. Such an exercise vehemently canvassed for our
approval by learned senior counsel for the appellant- State
cannot be countenanced on the express scheme of the
Constitution, as discussed by us earlier. Even proceeding
on the basis that the scheme of Article 16(1) read with
Article 16(4) may be treated to be forming a part of the
basic feature of the Constitution, it has to be appreciated
that for fructifying such a Constitutional scheme Article
335 has to be kept in view by the authority concerned before
such a scheme of reservation can be promulgated. Once
Article 335 has to be given its full play while enacting
such a scheme of reservation, the High Court, entrusted with
the full control of Subordinate Judiciary as per Article 235
by the Constitution, has got to be consulted and cannot be
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treated to be a stranger to the said exercise as envisaged
by the impugned statutory provision.
We may now refer to one submission of learned senior
counsel Shri Dwivedi for the appellant-State. He contended
that there cannot be any dispute reOBgarding appointments to
available vacancies in the cadre of District Judiciary and
that they can be filled in only on the recommendation of the
High Court and equally there cannot be any dispute regarding
filling up of all vacancies in the Subordinate Judiciary as
per Article 234. They can be filled in by the Governor as
per rules framed in consultation with the High Court and the
Public Service Commission. But so far as reservation of
vacancies to be filled in by reserved category of candidates
is concerned, it is an exercise which is resorted to by the
State authorities in discharge of their enabling powers
under Article 16(4). That is a stage anterior to the
question of recruitment or appointment on available
vacancies in the cadre of District Judiciary or in the cadre
of Subordinate Judiciary. Consequently, such an exercise
invoked by any administrative order or, even by legislation,
cannot be said to be conflicting in any manner with the
procedure of recruitment and appointment to District
Judiciary and Subordinate Judiciary as per Articles 233 and
234 of the Constitution. This argument, as submitted, looks
attractive but on closer scrutiny falls through, as we shall
see presently. It is not in dispute and cannot be disputed
that creation of cadres and creation of posts in a cadre
comprised in Judicial Service of the State can be resorted
to by the Governor in exercise of his rule making power
under Article 309 or for that matter by any appropriate
Legislation by the State authorities under the very same
Article. But once cadre of District Judges and Subordinate
Judiciary are constituted by the aforesaid authorities and
posts backed up by suitable budgetary provisions are created
and are accordingly made available to be filled in in the
concerned cadres, process of creation of posts comes to an
end. Thereafter when in the created posts borne on any
judicial cadre, whether at the District Court level or at
the Subordinate Court level, any vacancies arise by
retirement or otherwise non-availability of the incumbents
due to any other reason, question of filling up of those
available vacancies would arise. Such available vacancies
of sanctioned posts have to be filled in only after
following the procedure laid down by Articles 233 and 234 of
the Constitution of India and cannot be subjected to any
other procedure. At that stage, directing the High Court
without its consent and consultation and merely by the
thrust of legislative provision that 50% of the available
vacancies in the cadre of District Judges or Judges of the
Subordinate Judiciary must be filled in from reserved
candidates only would ex-facie cut across the power of the
High Court which alone can recommend the filling up of all
such vacancies in the district cadre as per Article 233 and
equally the power of the High Court to render effective
consultation to the Governor under Article 234 when he
frames rules for recruitment of candidates for filling up of
all available vacancies in the Subordinate Judiciary under
the district court as per Article 234. It is difficult to
appreciate how filling up of vacancies in the already
sanctioned posts in these cadres will remain an exercise
anterior to the procedure laid down by the Constitution for
filling up of these vacancies as per Articles 233 and 234,
as the case may be. In any case, impugned Section 4 of the
Act, by its express wordings, does not contemplate any such
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stage anterior to filling up of vacancies in the existing
posts. On the contrary, it provides that all appointments
to Services and Posts in an establishment which are to be
filled in by direct recruitment shall be regulated in the
manner laid down therein. Meaning thereby, 50% of the
appointments to such available posts have to be done from
reserved category candidates as per percentage provided for
each of such classes. That necessarily means that 50% of
the existing vacancies in the available posts in the
Services have to be filled in from reserved category
candidates only. This mandate of Section 4, therefore, gets
directly hit by the scheme of the complete Code for such
direct recruitment to the Judicial Services in the district
cadre or subordinate cadre, as envisaged by Articles 233 and
234 of the Constitution of India.
We may take an example to highlight this position.
Supposing there are 10 vacancies of District Judges at a
given point of time in the State, which are available to be
filled in by direct recruitment keeping in view the ratio of
such direct recruitment permissible under the relevant
rules. Once these 10 vacancies of District Judges are
required to be filled in by direct recruitment on the
recommendation of the High Court from the members of the Bar
subject to the minimum eligibility laid down under Article
233 sub-article (2), the High Court obviously has to
undertake the exercise of selection of eligible candidates
on its own. The Governor, in such a case, shall have only
to pass consequential orders of appointment from the panel
as recommended by the High Court. If no such
recommendations are forthcoming, the Governor will have no
jurisdiction or power to make any such appointment as
clearly mandated by Article 233 sub-article (2). Once the
High Court undertakes such an exercise and prepares a panel
of eligible and suitable direct recruits from the Bar after
holding appropriate tests whether written or oral as the
relevant procedural rules may provide, it will, in the
serial order of inter se merit prepare a panel of 10
candidates and recommend them for appointment and the panel
may be sent for passing appropriate orders. If that is so,
all the 10 vacancies have to be filled in in the light of
the panel prepared by the High Court, keeping in view the
names of candidates listed in the panel as per the rankings
made by the High Court in the order of their respective
merits. Therefore, the High Court will prepare a panel of
10 recommendees for appointment to first 10 vacancies in the
serial order of their ranking as per merit and suitability.
This is the Constitutional mandate of that Article. Now if
it is visualised that the State Legislature, by an
independent enactment, as in the present case, requires the
High Court to treat only the first five vacancies to be
filled in by direct recruitment from general category in the
order of merit and the remaining five vacancies are required
to be filled in from reserved category of candidates only
and even if those reserved five vacancies can be filled in
by appointing reserved category of candidates as per the
order of their inter se merit, even then the thrust of
Section 4, to that extent, will certainly cut across or
restrict the power and authority of the High Court to
recommend appointments to all the ten vacancies of suitable
meritorious candidates as found by it. The result would be
that first five vacancies may go to the first five
candidates recommended in the panel according to merit but
so far as the vacancy nos.6 to 10 are concerned even though
the 6th direct recruit recommended by the High Court is
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obviously more meritorious than the candidate listed in the
panel at serial no.7, he may have to be bypassed if the
candidate at serial no.6 in the panel belongs to general
category while candidate no.7 belongs to SC category namely,
reserved category. The net result would be that though the
High Court, in exercise of its Constitutional obligation and
authority, recommends the 6th vacancy in the District Judge
cadre to be filled up by candidate no.6 listed in the panel,
by thrust of impugned Section 4 of the Act, the 6th vacancy
can be filled in by the Governor by appointing candidate
no.7 who is less meritorious as compared to candidate no.6
and who is not recommended by the High Court for being
appointed in vacancy no.6. Thus, he will be bypassed by
candidate no.7 who may belong to the SC category and who may
be standing higher in so far as inter se merit between the
SC candidates only are concerned. Supposing at serial no.9
there is another SC candidate then vis-.-vis candidate nos.7
and 9, who both belong to SC category, this 6th vacancy,
because of the thrust of Section 4 can be filled up by
candidate no.7. The submission of Shri Dwivedi that between
two SC candidates or candidates belonging to the same
reserved category it will be open to the High Court to
recommend appointment of more meritorious reserved category
candidate as compared to the candidate of the same category
who is less meritorious and this exercise would satisfy the
requirement of Article 233 sub-article (2) only gives lip
service to that Article. The reason is obvious. The High
Courts power and in fact Constitutional obligation to
recommend meritorious candidates found suitable by it for
filling up of all vacant posts will obviously get truncated
and restricted and the High Court though not recommending
candidate No.7 as suitable candidate for filling up vacancy
no.6, will be helpless by not being permitted appointment of
candidate no.6 who belongs to general category to occupy
that post and will have willy-nilly to suffer against its
own decision regarding appointment of candidate no.7 who
belongs to SC category for filling up vacancy no.6 and this
exercise will be thrust upon the High Court without being
consulted in this connection by the State Legislature by
enacting the impugned Section 4 of the Act. This
appointment obviously will be null and void and violative of
Article 233 (2). This type of bypassing the High Court will
clearly be an act of interference with independence of
judiciary which is the hallmark and bedrock of the
Constitutional scheme. Section 4, therefore, has got to be
held not to be operative on the forbidden field occupied by
Articles 233 and 234 of the Constitution of India. This is
obviously a type of reservation which is thrust upon the
High Court by Section 4. It cannot be treated to be
referable to a stage anterior to the process of recruitment
and appointment. In fact, as seen above, Section 4 itself
deals with the reservation for direct recruitment on
available posts. Therefore, in the field of recruitment
itself Section 4 seeks to have its independent sway. Both
Article 233 and Article 234 also deal with the very same
question of recruitment and appointment to District
Judiciary. It is this very field wholly reserved for
operation of Articles 233 and 234 that is encroached upon by
Section 4, by its express language, if made applicable to
judicial appointments. As seen earlier, consultation with
the High Court is a sine qua non in connection with direct
recruitment of judicial officers at grass-root level i.e.
Munsiffs and Magistrates and whose recruitment is governed
by the rules framed under Article 234 being the 1955 Rules.
Similarly, recruitment at district level judiciary is
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governed by 1951 Rules framed under Article 233 read with
Article 309 of the Constitution of India. However, direct
recruitment as District Judges has to be solely based on
appropriate recommendations of suitable candidates by the
High Court. In fact Rule 3 thereof, provides that the
strength of the Service and the number and character of the
posts shall be as specified in the schedule to these rules,
and once we turn to the Schedule to the 1951 Rules, we find
listed five cadres of superior judiciary at the district
level and the total posts sanctioned being 26. Obviously,
this rule has a direct nexus with Article 309 read with
Article 233. But beyond that when the question of filling
up of vacancies in the cadres of higher District Judiciary
on the already sanctioned posts crops up, the field is fully
occupied by Article 233 sub-articles (1) and (2) and there
is no other power with any other Constitutional authority to
effect such recruitment on available vacancies. It is not
possible to visualise that, while providing for direct
recruitment to District Judiciary as per Article 233
sub-article (2), even though the minimum eligibility
qualification laid down under the said provision is that the
candidate should have been practising for not less than
seven years as an advocate or a pleader, any further
eligibility as belonging to a reserved category is envisaged
for a given post. Consequently, it is not possible to agree
with the contention of learned counsel Shri Dwivedi for the
appellant-State that question of recruitment to the cadre of
District Judges by directing the High Court to recommend
eligible candidates for appointment keeping in view only 50%
of the available vacancies to be filled in by general
category and by treating the remaining 50% of the vacancies
as reserved would be a stage anterior to the stage of
recruitment or appointment to such available vacancies on
the already sanctioned posts in the cadre of District
Judiciary. At this stage we may also refer to the decision
of a Constitution Bench of this Court in B.S.Yadavs case
(supra) wherein Chandrachud, CJ had an occasion to interpret
Article 235 read with Article 309 proviso. The question
which arose for consideration in that case was whether the
rule of seniority of existing members of Superior Judicial
Services as framed by the Governor in exercise of his powers
under Article 309 proviso could validly operate to regulate
the seniority of such already recruited and appointed
judicial officers in Subordinate Judiciary. In order to
avoid the operation of the said rule which was having a
direct nexus with conditions of service of already appointed
judicial officers, a contention was raised that under
Article 235 even this subject matter was part and parcel of
the control of Subordinate Judiciary vesting in the High
Court under that article. While negativing this contention,
the Constitution Bench, speaking through Chandrachud, CJ,
placed reliance on the second part of Article 235 and
observed as under : The power of control vested in the
High Court by Art.235 is expressly made subject to the law
which the State Legislature may pass for regulating the
recruitment and service conditions of judicial officers of
the State. The framers of the Constitution did not regard
the power of the State Legislature to pass laws regulating
the recruitment and conditions of service of judicial
officers as an infringement of the independence of the
judiciary. The mere powers to pass such a law is not
violative of the control vested in the High Court over the
State judiciary.
Placing strong reliance on the aforesaid observations
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it was contended by learned senior counsel for the
appellant-State that it has been authoritatively ruled by
the Constitution Bench of this Court that the framers of the
Constitution did not regard the power of the State
Legislature to pass laws regulating the recruitment and
conditions of service of judicial officers as an
infringement of the independence of the judiciary. Now it
must be kept in view that these observations are made in the
light of second part of Article 235 which expressly saves
laws regulating the conditions of service of already
recruited judicial officers and who are functioning under
the control of the High Court under Article 235. Once the
very same Article permits the limited field for operation of
law-makers or rule-makers under Article 309 for regulating
the conditions of services of such already appointed
judicial officers by way of enacting any appropriate
statutory provision either by exercise of rule making power
of the Governor under Article 309 proviso or by appropriate
legislation under the said Article, it cannot be said that
these observations have laid down even impliedly, that while
recruiting judicial officers either at grass-root level
under Article 234 or at district level under Article 233 any
legislation can be enacted by the Legislature or that the
Governor by independent exercise of his rule making power
can make such a provision. This question of controlling
recruitment and appointment at the entry point either at
grass-root level i.e. level no.1 or at the apex level being
level no.3 in the pyramid of District Judiciary never arose
for consideration of the Constitution bench and hence the
aforesaid observations cannot be considered to be the
decision rendered by the Court on this moot point. It is
also easy to visualise that while considering the scope of
play of Article 309 vis-.-vis second part of Article 235
which carves out a permissible field by the very same
Article for law to be made for regulating other permissible
conditions of service the term recruitment has been
employed almost by way of mere reference to the language of
Article 309 and nothing more. If it is held that even
impliedly the aforesaid decision of the Constitution Bench
has taken the view that the appropriate authority, i.e. the
Governor, in exercise of his delegated legislative powers
under the Proviso to Article 309 or any State Legislature in
exercise of its paramount power under Article 309 first
part, can control the recruitment of judicial officers at
district level or at the level of Subordinate Judiciary
bypassing the High Court, then such an implied thrust of the
said observations must be held to be totally obiter and
uncalled for. Consequently, the aforesaid decision in
B.S.Yadavs case (supra) must be confined to the facts of
that case laying down the limited ratio that for deciding
the rule of seniority of already appointed judicial officers
in District Judiciary or Subordinate Judiciary, appropriate
law or rules can be framed under Article 309 by the
concerned authority as permissible under second part of
Article 235. That is the only ratio of that decision and it
cannot travel any further. However, leaving aside that
question, it can easily be visualised that the aforesaid
observations in the Constitution Bench judgment in
B.S.Yadavs case (supra) may, in general sense, refer to the
concept of recruitment as laid down by proviso under
Article 309 in view of the settled legal position that, in
exercise of their powers under the said Article, the
concerned authorities can form cadres of service in
Subordinate Judiciary and can also create sanctioned posts
in these cadres. The said exercise of creation of posts may
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also get covered by the concept of recruitment. It is
only in this broad sense that the term recruitment can be
said to have been mentioned by the Constitution Bench in the
aforesaid observations but they can certainly not go any
further nor can be treated to have ruled anything contrary
to the express scheme of Articles 233 and 234. This is the
additional reason why the aforesaid general observations
have to be confined to the limited scope and ambit of
Article 309, as indicated therein. For all these reasons,
therefore, the decision in B.S.Yadavs case (supra) cannot
be of any real assistance to learned counsel for the
appellant-State. We may now briefly deal with the main
contentions canvassed by learned senior counsel for the
appellant-State in support of their appeals. We shall first
deal with the contentions canvassed by Dr.Dhavan for the
appellant-State. The interpretation sought to be put on
Article 309 by Dr.Dhavan, as we have already seen earlier,
is not capable of having wider coverage so as to engulf
recruitment to judicial offices on district cadre as well as
on those below the district cadre. The Constitutional
scheme examined and seen earlier contra-indicates this
contention. So far as Dr.Dhavans submission that second
part of Article 235, despite the full control of District
Judiciary being vested in the High Court permits enactment
of suitable provisions under Article 309 also, cannot be of
any real assistance. As we have already seen above, the
second part of Article 235 deals with the topic of other
conditions of service including the right of appeal which
might be guaranteed to judicial officers by appropriate
legislation enacted by the authorities acting under Article
309 but that is an operation on the limited field permitted
by the second part of Article 235 at second level of the
pyramid of Subordinate Judiciary and nothing more.
Dr.Dhavan was right when he contended that on the scheme of
Articles 233 to 235 it is not as if other legislation is a
total taboo. However, the said submission ignores the fact
that it is the limited field earmarked by second part of
Article 235 regarding permissible regulation of conditions
of service that is reserved for operation of Article 309
through its appropriate authorities. But, save and except
this limited aspect which is permitted, the rest of the
control totally vests in the High Court under Article 235
first part. What is permitted by Article 235 cannot be
considered as a blanket power entrusted to the Legislature
or to the Governor under Article 309 by the Constitutional
makers dehors the complete net of Constitutional scheme
controlling recruitment and appointment to District
Judiciary and the Subordinate Judiciary under Articles 233
and 234 of the Constitution of India. These twin Articles
conspicuously do not envisage even the limited independent
field for operation of Article 309 as is permitted by
Article 235 second part. That shows the clear intention of
the Constitutional makers that so far as question of
recruitment and appointment to available vacancies in the
cadre of District Judges and Judges of the Subordinate
Judiciary is concerned, neither the Legislature nor the
Governor, dehors any consultation with the High Court, can
have any independent say. We may now deal with the supposed
anomalies that may result if the interpretation canvassed by
the respondent High Court is accepted. Dr.Dhavan contended
that, if power of the State Legislature to enact appropriate
provisions for appointment of members of Subordinate
Judiciary is excluded by Article 234, and to that extent
Article 309 is also to be out of picture, then various
anomalous situations may arise. He firstly, submitted that
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judicial service as defined by Article 236(b) will get
truncated in its operation. It is not possible to agree
with this contention for the simple reason that the
definition of judicial service only earmarks the Members
of that Service. How their appointment is to be made has to
be gathered from Articles 233 and 234. If they exclude any
statutory interference by the State Legislature such
interference would remain excluded by the sweep of these two
Articles themselves. The second anomaly pointed out by
Dr.Dhavan is that power to legislate must be given full
effect unless there is express exclusion. Even this cannot
be said to be an anomaly for the simple reason that Article
309 itself is subject to the opening part of the clause and
has to give way if other Articles of the Constitution cover
the field. The complete Code projected by Articles 233 and
234 would itself be an exclusion of the legislative power
and equally the Governors independent power under Article
309 qua that field. Even that apart, Article 245 dealing
with the legislative powers of Parliament and the State
Legislatures in terms makes the said provisions subject to
other provisions of the Constitution. Therefore, on the
same analogy by which Article 309 cannot independently
operate qua the exclusive field carved out by Articles 233
and 234, the legislative powers of Parliament as well as the
State Legislature would also get excluded. The next anomaly
pointed out by Dr.Dhavan was that under the Constitution,
the scheme of separation of powers is devised to separate
the Executive from the Judiciary and that this scheme does
not extend to oust the legislative power. If it is held
that Article 234 ousts the legislative power for making
suitable enactment on the topic covered by it, then to that
extent, it is contended, an anomalous situation would arise
not contemplated by the Constitutional scheme. It is
difficult to appreciate this contention. As per Article 50
of the Constitution of India, judicial functioning has to be
treated to be separate from that of the executive and to
fructify the said Constitutional scheme, Article 309 is made
subject to other relevant Articles of the Constitution
including Articles 233 and 234. Thus Articles 233 and 234
have their full sway not being inhibited by any outside
independent interference to be made by the Governor under
proviso to Article 309 or by the State Legislature in that
connection. Dr.Dhavan next contended that on the express
language of Article 233, only the rule making power of the
Governor is fettered but not the legislative power of the
State. This submission is mis-conceived as the legislative
power is co-terminus with the Governors rule making power.
For regulating the conditions of Service of Members of
public service as found in Article 309, as the proviso to
Article 309 itself shows, what the legislature can enact in
connection with the topic mentioned therein can be done by
the Governor in exercise of his rule making power as a
stop-gap arrangement till the very same field is covered by
the statutory enactment. Thus the earmarked field is the
same, namely, conditions of Service of employees of State
Public Service. Employees of a Public Service are a genus
of which Members of Judicial Service are a species. So far
as the appointment to Judicial Service is concerned, the
said topic is carved out from the general sweep of Article
309 on account of the words in its opening part, read with
Articles 233 and 234. The Governors rule making power in
this connection is separately dealt with under Article 234
and it is the procedure laid down therein which will govern
the said rule making power of the Governor and cannot draw
any sustenance independently from Article 309 which gets
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excluded in its own terms so far as Members of Judicial
Service are concerned. A limited play available to the
Legislature to deal with unexcepted and open categories of
conditions of Service of judicial officers as found in
Second Part of Article 235, therefore, cannot be read
backwards to govern even by implication the method of
appointment of Members of Subordinate Judiciary even at the
grass-root level. For that purpose, Article 234 is the only
repository of the power available to the concerned
Constitutional authority which has to follow the gamut of
the procedure laid down therein. Dr.Dhavan tried to salvage
the situation by submitting that if this view is taken, the
greatest anomaly that would arise is that there would be
total ouster of legislative interference as per Article 234.
There will be definite permissible interference of
legislative power on topics mentioned in second part of
Article 235. While so far as appointments of District
Judges under Article 233 are concerned, there is no express
ouster of legislative interference at all. He, therefore,
submitted that a totally anomalous situation would emerge,
as at the grass-root level i.e. lowest rung of regulating
the recruitment and appointment of Judiciary, there will be
total exclusion of legislative interference while at the
apex level i.e. at the district level there will be no
ouster of legislative interference. Even this argument of
despair cannot be countenanced for the simple reason that on
the topic of appointment of direct recruits to the District
Judiciary at the district court level or even at the
grass-root level of Munsiffs and Civil Judges-junior
division or senior division, as the case may be, both under
Article 234 as well as under Article 233 interference by the
State Legislature is totally excluded. If appointments at
the grass-root level in Subordinate Judiciary is taken as
base level no.1 in the pyramid of Subordinate Judiciary, as
indicated earlier, then the express language of Article 234
lays down a complete procedure which cannot be tinkered with
by any outside agency like the legislature. For regulating
the service conditions of already appointed judicial
officers which will be treated as level no.2, to the extent
to which the conditions of service can be regulated by law
as laid down by second part of Articles 235 a limited field
is kept open for legislative play. It is only because of
the permissible field indicated by the very same Article
that the Governor under Article 309 or even the State
Legislature can be permitted to operate in that field.
While at the apex level of the pyramid of Subordinate
Judiciary, which is level no.3, for recruiting District
Judges a complete Code is furnished by Article 233 excluding
outside interference, as indicated earlier. Thus neither at
the base level i.e. at the grass-root level of controlling
entry point to Subordinate Judiciary nor at the entry point
at the apex level of the pyramid for appointing District
Judges any State Legislatures interference is contemplated
or countenanced. On the contrary, it is contra-indicated by
necessary implication. Thus, neither at the first level nor
at the third level, both dealing with entry points to
Subordinate Judiciary, the State Legislature has any say and
at the second level it has a limited say to the extent
permitted by the very same Article 235 second part and which
does not pertain to recruitment or appointments at all.
Thus, it cannot mean that because of this limited
independent play at the joint is available to the
authorities functioning under Article 309 at the second
level to frame rules or legislation for permissively
regulating the conditions of service of the members of the
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judiciary who have already entered the Judicial Service at
the grass-root level, or even at the district level, any
anomalous situation emerges. Dr.Dhavan then invited our
attention to the observations of a nine-Judge Constitution
Bench judgment of this Court in Indra Sawhney & Ors. case
(supra), para 694 at page 662, para 738 at page 689 and para
788 at page 720, for submitting that Article 16 sub-article
(4) enables the State authorities to direct reservation in
Services under the State. This Constitutional power, once
exercised, cannot be sought to be circOBumscribed or
curtailed by non-compliance with the procedure of Article
234 or for that matter Article 233. This argument of his
cannot be countenanced. It is obvious that for utilising
the enabling power under Article 16(4), the State
Legislature cannot enter the forbidden field and conflict
with substantive provisions of Article 233 or first part of
Article 235. Meaning thereby, neither can it lay down new
criterion of eligibility contrary to sub-article (2) of
Article 233 for appointment to the District Judiciary nor
can it affect the control of the High Court in connection
with District Judiciary as vested in the High Court under
first part of Article 235. If at all any reservation policy
under Article 16(4) is to be pursued, it has to be exercised
in consonance with the scheme of Articles 233 and 234 and
not dehors it. Dr.Dhavan fairly conceded that neither in
the Rules of 1951 regarding appointments to district cadre
as per Article 233 nor under the Rules of 1955 for
appointments in the cadre of Subordinate Judiciary as laid
down by Article 234, there is any provision for 50%
reservation of posts. As already noted earlier, Article
16(4) is an enabling provision and it enables the competent
authority which is entrusted with the task of recruitment
and appointment to any service including the Judicial
Service to exercise this enabling power and provide for
appropriate reservation. In fact there is no dispute
between the parties in these proceedings that with the
consent of the High Court of Patna, 14% reservation for SC
and 10% reservation for STs is already accepted as
permissible reservation for direct recruitment at the
grass-root level and Rule 20 of the Rules of 1955 clearly
points to such reservation, percentage of which has already
been agreed to between the High Court on the one hand and
the Government on the other. That would be perfectly a
permissible exercise under Article 16(4) read with Article
234. But beyond that unless the rules are properly amended
by following the procedure of Articles 233 and 234 read with
Article 309 after consulting the High Court, the Governor on
his own cannot provide for any more reservation. Nor can,
by a legislative Act, an independent provision under Article
16(4) totally bypassing the High Court be resorted to. As
already seen earlier, Article 16(4) has to be read with
Article 335 and maintenance of efficiency of administration
in the making of appointments to Services and posts would be
a sine qua non before considering the claim for reservation
of SC and STs which would also include the OBCs as laid down
by a Constitution Bench judgment of this Court in Indra
Sawhneys case (supra), (2000) 1 SCC 168 = JT 1999 (9) SC
557. If Article 16(4) has to be read with Article 335 as
already ruled by the Constitution Bench judgment of this
Court, the same authority which can have the pulse and full
control of administration pertaining to concerned services
having sufficient expertise can avail of the aforesaid
Article 16(4) keeping in view the mandate of Article 335.
In case of Subordinate Judicial Services comprising of
district courts and courts subordinate thereto, the full
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control vests in the High Court under Article 235 which can
control the promotions and postings of such members of the
Judiciary. It is the High Court which will have full
knowledge and expertise for deciding the question of
adequacy of representation by way of reservation in Judicial
Service. Therefore, it is the High Court only which can
give green signal regarding the extent of such reservations
at entry points as candidates entering on reserved posts in
Judicial Service of the District Judiciary both at the apex
level and at the grass-root level have to act under its
control. In the absence of such a green signal by the High
Court there would be no occasion to invoke Article 16(4)
read with Article 335. We fail to appreciate how the State
Legislature by enacting Section 4 of the Act, can decide for
itself that 50% reservation is required to be made in
appointments to District and Subordinate Judiciary
consistent with the maintenance of efficiency of judicial
administration which is under full control of the High Court
as per Article 235. As it cannot of its own be alive to
this vital aspect lacking requisite knowledge and expertise,
any scheme of reservation framed by the legislature under
Article 16(4) dehors Article 335 so far as judicial
appointments are concerned, must necessarily fall through.
The authority giving green signal as per Article 16(4) read
with Article 335 can be only the High Court. It will be
totally out of picture so far as enactment of such straight
jacket reservation provisions dehors the High Courts
consultation goes. In this view of the matter, the broad
submission of Dr.Dhavan that reservation in fulfillment of
right to equality of opportunity under Article 16(1) read
with Article 16(4) can be resorted to without reference to
the High Court and therefore, the impugned Act cannot be
found fault with, cannot be accepted. Reliance placed by
Dr.Dhavan to the decision of this Court in Durgacharan Misra
vs. State of Orissa & Ors., (1987) 4 SCC 646, wherein at
para 15 a two Judge Bench observed that Rules under Article
234 are framed by the Governor, in exercise of his rule
making power under Article 309, cannot be of any assistance
to him. Even if the rules contemplated by Article 234 are
framed by the Governor under Article 309 proviso, that power
is clearly fettered and regulated by Article 234 as well as
Article 233 wherein consultation of the High Court in one
case and total clearance by the High Court by way of
recommendation of the appointees in the other case, cannot
be given a go by. Turning to the contentions canvassed by
Shri Dwivedi in support of the companion appeal, it may be
stated that he adopted the arguments of Dr.Dhavan but he
further contended that under Article 234, the rule making
power of the Governor is hedged in by consultation with the
High Court and the Public Service Commission. So far as the
Public Service Commission is concerned, as per Article 320
sub-article (4), it is not required to be consulted in
respect of the manner in which any provision referred to in
clause (4) of Article 16 may be made or as respects the
manner in which effect may be given to the provisions of
Article 335. Shri Dwivedi, therefore, submitted that
consultation with the Public Service Commission cannot be in
connection with Article 16(4) and if that is so, by
necessary implication, consultation with the High Court
under Article 234 can also be treated to be standing at par
and consequently the decision on any policy of reservation
as per Article 16(4) need not get covered by any
consultation with the High Court. It is difficult to
appreciate this contention. The Public Service Commission
is merely an examining body which examines the candidates
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for seeking appointments to the advertised posts. It has,
therefore, nothing to do with the policy decision of laying
down of reservation in appointments to the posts. That
policy has to be resorted to under Article 16(4) by the
authority calling upon the Public Service Commission to
proceed with the procedure of selection of suitable
candidates for filling up advertised posts subject to the
conditions laid down in the advertisement. That type of
consultation naturally would not stand at par with the
consultation with the High Court as laid down by Article 234
of the Constitution. As seen earlier, consultation with the
High Court as envisaged by Article 234 is for fructifying
the Constitutional mandate of preserving the independence of
Judiciary, which is its basic structure. The Public Service
Commission has no such Constitutional imperative to be
fulfilled. The scope of examining bodys consultation can
never be equated with that of consultation with the
appointing body whose agent is the former. It is also
pertinent to note that the essence of consultation is the
communication of a genuine invitation to give advice and a
genuine consideration of that advice which in turn depends
on sufficient information and time being given to the party
concerned to enable it to tender useful advice. It is
difficult to appreciate how the Governor while consulting
the Public Service Commission before promulgating the Rules
of Recruitment under Article 234 has to solicit similar type
of advice as he would solicit from the High Court on due
consultation. The advice which in the process of
consultation can be tendered by the Public Service
Commission will confine itself to the Constitutional
requirements of Article 320. They are entirely different
from the nature of consultation and advice to be solicited
from the High Court which is having full control over
Subordinate Judiciary under Article 235 of the Constitution
and is directly concerned with the drafting of efficient
judicial appointments so that appropriate material will be
available to it through the process of selection both at the
grass-root level and at the apex level of the District
Judiciary. Consultation, keeping in view the role of the
High Court under Article 234 read with Article 235, stands
on an entirely different footing as compared to the
consultation with the Public Service Commission which has to
discharge its functions of entirely different type as
envisaged by Article 320 of the Constitution. Naturally,
therefore, consultation with the High Court will have a
direct linkage with the policy decision as to how many posts
should be advertised, what are the felt needs of District
Judiciary and whether there can be any reservation which can
be permitted to be engrafted in the Rules framed by the
Governor consistent with the maintenance of efficiency of
judicial administration in the State. It is also pertinent
to note that there is no express fetter regarding
consultation with the High Court excluding Article 16(4) as
we find in Article 320 (4) in connection with the Public
Service Commissions consultation. This very departure and
absence of such exclusion of the High Courts consultation
indicate the intention of the Constitutional makers that
policy decision as per Article 16(4) has to be taken by the
Governor in consultation with the High Court while framing
appropriate rules governing the recruitment and appointments
to the Judicial Service both at the apex level and at the
grass-root level. Submission of Shri Dwivedi that
legislative power stands independently and dehors Articles
235 and 234 cannot be countenanced for the detailed reasons
given by us while rejecting the contentions of Dr.Dhavan.
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Shri Dwivedis effort to draw sustenance for his argument
from the observations of the learned Judges of the
Constitution Bench in Indra Sawhneys case (supra) namely,
Justice Pandians observations at para 243, Justice Sawant
at para 555 and Justice Kuldip Singh in para 383, also
cannot be of any avail to him. The question of reservation
of posts in a cadre cannot be equated with the question of
creation of posts in a cadre. After the posts in a cadre
are created how many thereof can be filled in from general
category and how many from reserved category candidates,
will remain a policy decision which has to be undertaken
under Article 16(4) read with Article 335 and only by the
competent authority namely, the High Court in dialogue with
the Governor so far as Judicial Service is concerned, as we
have seen earlier. The observations of learned Judges in
the aforesaid Indra Sawhneys case (supra) therefore,
regarding the scope and ambit of Article 16(4) in general in
connection with those services wherein such reservation
would be effected by the competent authorities themselves
without consultation with other agencies like the High
Court, cannot be of any avail to Shri Dwivedi for culling
out the competence of the authority concerned to impose such
reservation in connection with Judicial Services without
consulting the High Court. Reliance placed by learned
counsel for the appellant-State on various rules framed by
Governors of other States in consultation with High Courts
like the Uttar Pradesh Governor also cannot be of any avail
as those rules are framed by the Governors in consultation
with the High Courts after following the procedure of
Articles 234 or for that matter Article 233. Decisions of
this Court relied on by Shri Dwivedi for showing that the
Governor can create cadres and also can lay down provisions
for regulating the conditions of Service as provided under
Article 235 second part also are besides the point. The
effort made by learned counsel for the appellant-State to
show that Judicial Service also represents a part of State
Service and it is the State within the meaning of Article
12 amenable to writ jurisdiction under Article 226 so far as
the administrative decisions taken by the courts are
concerned also cannot solve the problem which is posed for
our consideration. The High Court may be an authority
within the meaning of Article 12, its administrative
decisions may be subject to its writ jurisdiction on
judicial side but that does not mean that for recruiting
judicial officers for manning Judicial Services, the say of
the High Court can be totally bypassed by enacting
provisions like the impugned Act by the State Legislature
which, while enacting this statute, was not expected to
consult any one else including the High Court. Of course,
Shri Dwivedi was right when he contended that in Civil
Appeal No.9072 of 1996 there was no occasion for the High
Court to treat the policy reflected by the stand of the High
Court regarding giving preference in appointments to SC and
ST candidates if they are of equal merit with general
category candidates as the only reasonable one. It is true
that this exercise was not required to be undertaken by the
High Court which was concerned with the short question as to
whether the impugned Act, especially Section 4 thereof, can
be permitted to operate of its own so far as the recruitment
to District Judiciary was concerned. To that extent, the
aforesaid reasoning of the High Court in the impugned
judgment cannot be sustained as being redundant and uncalled
for. We may now briefly refer to the written submissions on
behalf of the appellant-State submitted by Shri Dwivedi on
20th January, 2000. As we have already discussed earlier,
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it is not possible for us to agree with the contention that
reservation of posts does not truncate the High Courts
power of making appointments on available vacancies. In
cases where reservations are made after consultation with
the High Court, the situation stands entirely on a different
footing as the High Court itself agrees with the rule making
authority under Article 234 or for that matter under Article
233 to recommend reserved category candidates on earmarked
vacancies in the already created posts in a cadre. But the
question is as to whether bypassing the High Court such an
exercise can be undertaken by the State Legislature or by
the Governor under Article 309. As seen earlier, such an
exercise is not countenanced by the relevant Constitutional
scheme. It is also not possible to agree with the
contention that in the absence of express exclusion of any
law made by the Legislature, the legislative power remains
untouched by Articles 233 and 234. On the contrary, as seen
earlier, because of the opening words of Article 309 as well
as Article 245 what is provided by Articles 233 and 234 is a
complete Code, which cannot be touched independently of the
High Courts consultation either by the Legislature or by
the rule making authority. Reliance placed on the
observations in paras 16 & 17 in the case of M.M.Gupta &
Ors. etc. vs. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors., (supra) to
the effect that appointing authority is the Governor also
cannot advance the case of Shri Dwivedi for the simple
reason that under the scheme of Articles 234 and 233 once
effective consultation is made with the High Court and rules
are framed as per Article 234 and selections are made as per
these rules or when the High Court recommends appointments
under Article 233, the selection process is over, only the
ministerial work of issuing actual appointment orders may be
carried out by the Governor. But that would not, in any
case, interfere with the independence of Judiciary and the
power of the High Court. The Governor, acting as per
Article 234 while framing rules in consultation with the
High Court and the Public Service Commission and also while
acting on the recommendation of the High Court under Article
233, only performs the ultimate act of issuing actual
appointment orders to the selectees but these selectees have
undergone the process of filtering by the High Court as per
Article 233(2) or in cases governed by Article 234, as per
the procedure laid down in the rules framed under that
Article, after consultation with the High Court. It is not
as if the Council of Ministers or the Legislature has
anything independently to say to the Governor in this
connection bypassing the High Court. Reference to the case
in Samsher Singh etc. vs. State of Punjab & Anr. etc.,
AIR 1974 SC 2192, about Cabinets responsibility to
Legislature is totally besides the point while considering
the moot question with which we are concerned. It is
difficult to appreciate on the scheme of Articles 233 to 235
the contention of Shri Dwivedi that recruitment procedure
could be laid down either by the Legislative enactment or
rules under Article 309 without having consultation with the
High Court. Further contention of Shri Dwivedi that
Parliamentary system of governance is also a basic feature
of the Constitution also cannot advance his case for the
simple reason that Article 235 itself read with Article 309
furnishes restraints on the legislative power so far as
topics of recruitment and appointment to District Judiciary
and Subordinate Judiciary are concerned being covered by the
complete code of Articles 233 and 235, as seen earlier. The
dichotomy sought to be suggested between the process of
selection for recruitment to advertised posts on the one
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hand and reservation of posts in a cadre on the other by
Shri Dwivedi is not a real one. As already seen earlier,
recruitment and appointments have to be done to already
created posts in the cadre and once the procedure of
creation of posts is over, the further question as to how
these posts are to be filled in and from which source or
category of candidates, will entirely depend upon the rules
framed by the Governor in consultation with the High Court,
so far as Article 234 is concerned and will wholly be
subject to the recommendations of the High Court under
Article 233. The submission of Shri Dwivedi that cadre
formation is in the exclusive domain of the government and
forms part of constitution of State Judicial Service, cannot
have any impact on the moot question as to how created posts
in a given cadre can be filled in and from which category of
candidates. That remains essentially in the domain of
recruitment and appointment to already existing, created and
sanctioned posts in a given cadre. Reliance placed on
Articles 37, 38 and 46 read with Article 16(4) cannot have
any impact on the decision of the question posed for our
consideration. Reliance placed by Shri Dwivedi on the
decisions of this Court in Indra Sawhneys case (supra),
Dr.Preeti Srivastava & Anr. etc. vs. State of M.P. &
Ors.etc., (1999) 7 SCC 120 and in Durgacharan Misra vs.
State of Orissa & Ors. (supra) also cannot be of any
effective help for resolving the question with which we are
concerned. The general scheme of reservation and to what
extent it can be applied to a given service directly under
the control of the State without any reference to Judicial
Service, as discussed in the first two cases, can be of no
avail to Shri Dwivedi. So far as the case of
Smt.A.Lakshmikutty (supra) is concerned, the relevant
observations in the concerned paragraphs do not support the
submissions put forward by Shri Dwivedi for the
appellant-State. Even if Judicial Service is also a State
Public Service and hence a Service under the State as laid
down therein so as to attract Articles 12 and 226 of the
Constitution, the question which remains for consideration
is as to whether the scheme of recruitment and appointment
to the Subordinate Judiciary as laid down by the
Constitution itself can be encroached upon, whittled down or
cut across by any enactment or rule dehors the said
Constitutional scheme. Smt.A.Lakshmikuttys judgment
(supra) had not to consider that question. Even though
judicial officer in the Judicial Service of the State would
be an officer under the State and according to which
principle, to a limited extent, the conditions of service of
said judicial officer can be laid down by the State or the
Governor under Article 309 independently of the High Court
as per the second part of Article 235, so far as Articles
233 and 234 are concerned as already seen earlier, they
stand entirely on a different footing and do not countenance
any independent encroachment on the field covered by the
said provisions bypassing the High Court. There cannot be
any dispute that laying down of pay-scales as one of the
conditions of Service under the second part of Article 235
is not within the expression of control which is vested in
the High Court as laid down in Smt.Lakshmikuttys case
(supra). But it is difficult to appreciate how reservation
can be treated on par with laying down of pay scales.
Making available pay-scales to the members of the Judicial
Service will have a direct impact on the State exchequer and
Consolidated Fund of State in case of District Judiciary but
that does not mean that the recruitment to such judicial
posts also can be controlled by the State, dehors the
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requirements of Articles 233 and 234. The next written
submission of Shri Dwivedi placing reliance on a judgment of
this Court in the Belsund Sugar Co. Ltd. vs. The State of
Bihar & Ors.etc., JT 1999 (5) SC 422, that reservations are
a special topic and, therefore, the general expression of
appointments would not embrace, the same cannot be
accepted for the simple reason that once posts are created
and sanctioned in a cadre, to the extent to which any
independent order or direction under Article 309 or Article
16(4) encroaches upon the field of recruitment and
appointment to such posts, specially carved out by the
Constitutional makers for operation by the Governor in
consultation with the High Court or with the concurrence or
recommendation of the High Court, as the case may be, the
said encroachment would remain totally ultra vires and
cannot be saved by provisions of reservation envisaged by
Article 16(4). Reliance placed by Shri Dwivedi on a
decision of this Court in Chandra Mohans case (supra) to
show that there is no complete separation of powers has to
be appreciated in the light of the observations made therein
in connection with the nature of permissible field for
operation of state authorities under Article 235(2). These
observations have nothing to do with the complete separation
of powers between the Judiciary and the Executive so far as
initial recruitment at entry points in Subordinate Judiciary
up to district level is concerned. Even if rules under
Article 234 can be said to have been framed by the Governor
of the concerned State, on a conjoint reading of Articles
234 and 309 the fact remains that these rules, in order to
be effective, have to satisfy the Constitutional requirement
of the procedure laid down therein for their promulgation.
The alternative contention that when the State sends a
proposal to the High Court for introducing reservations, the
High Court is bound to carry out the mandate of Articles
15(4), 16(4), 38 and 46 of the Constitution, and should
respond with such duty-consciousness, cannot be of any avail
on the facts of the present case as we are not concerned
with such a situation. The rules framed under Articles 233
and 234 by the Bihar Government in consultation with the
High Court are not on the anvil of scrutiny. The only short
question with which we are concerned is whether in the
absence of appropriate provision being made in these rules,
the State Legislature can intervene on its own bypassing the
High Court and lay down a rule of thumb by way of fixed
quota of reservation in all the posts in the Subordinate
Judiciary. The Mandal Commission Report has nothing to do
with the question with which we are concerned. Even if
adequate representations of reserved category of candidates
for appointment to Judiciary may be a laudable object, it
has to be kept in view that whatever is right has to be done
in a right manner or not at all. Even in the present case
24% reservation for SC and ST candidates at grass-root level
in Judiciary has already been agreed to by the High Court
and the appointments are accordingly being made since years.
The only question is whether by Section 4 of the impugned
Act that percentage of reservation can be increased to 50%
by bringing other reserved categories like the Other
Backward Classes, completely bypassing the High Court and
without there being any need to consult it. Such a
legislative Act cannot be countenanced on the touchstone of
relevant Articles of the Constitution. This question cannot
be answered in the light of the supposed Constitutional
philosophy underlying the scheme of reservation for weaker
sections of the community in general terms. It is now time
for us to refer to the judgments of this Court and other
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High Courts on which reliance was placed by learned counsel
for the contesting parties in support of their respective
cases. A three-Judge Bench of this Court in the case of
M.M.Guptas case (supra), speaking through Shri R.S.Pathak,
J (as he then was), while considering the question of
independence of judiciary, has clearly ruled that any scheme
of appointment to judicial posts by the executive at the
State and the Central level, without consulting the High
Court, would clearly affect the independence of judiciary.
Pertinent observations in this connection are found in paras
33 and 34. The relevant portions thereof read as under:
.Independence of the judiciary is one of the basic
tenets and a fundamental requirement of our Constitution.
Various Articles in our Constitution contain the relevant
provisions for safeguarding the independence of the
Judiciary. Article 50 of the Constitution which lays down
that the State shall take steps to separate the judiciary
from the executive in the public services of the State,
postulates separation of the judiciary from the executive.
Unfortunately, for some time past there appears to be
an unhappy trend of interference in the matter of judicial
appointments by the executive both at the State and the
Central level..Article 235 of the Constitution vests the
control of judicial administration completely in the High
Court excepting in the matter of initial appointment and
posting of District Judges and the dismissal, removal or
termination of services of these officers. Even in these
matters the requirement of the Constitution is that the
Governor must act in consultation with the High Court. If
in the matter of appointment, the High Court is sought to be
ignored and the executive authority chooses to make the
appointment, independence of the judiciary will be
affected.
In the light of the aforesaid settled legal position,
therefore, there cannot be any escape from the conclusion
that if the process of appointment to Subordinate Judiciary
at district level or grass-root level is tried to be
circumscribed or truncated by any direction as to
reservation of available vacancies for a given category of
candidates it would certainly impinge upon the power of the
High Court in suggesting appointment of suitable candidates
to fill up the posts of judicial officers with a view to
fructify the goal of furnishing effective mechanism of
judicial administration and making the Judiciary fully
vibrant, effective and result-oriented. Such an independent
Judiciary is the heart of the Constitutional scheme, as
already discussed earlier. In the case of All India Judges
Association & Ors. (supra), the special features of
Judicial Services have been clearly earmarked in the light
of Articles 233, 234, 236 and 309. A three-Judge Bench of
this Court, speaking through Sawant, J., while disposing of
the Review Petitions by the Union of India and Officers of
the States, has made the following apposite observations in
paras 4 & 5 :
The judicial service is not service in the sense of
employment. The judges are not employees. As members of
the judiciary, they exercise the sovereign judicial power of
the State. They are holders of public offices in the same
way as the members of the council of ministers and the
members of the legislature. When it is said that in a
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democracy such as ours, the executive, the legislature and
the judiciary constitute the three pillars of the State,
what is intended to be conveyed is that the three essential
functions of the State are entrusted to the three organs of
the State and each one of them in turn represents the
authority of the State. However, those who exercise the
State-power are the ministers, the legislators and the
judges, and not the members of their staff who implement or
assist in implementing their decisions. The council of
ministers or the political executive is different from the
secretarial staff or the administrative executive which
carries out the decisions of the political executive.
Similarly, the legislators are different from the
legislative staff. So also the Judges from the judicial
staff. The parity is between the political executive, the
legislators and the Judges and not between the Judges and
administrative executive. This distinction between the
Judges and the members of the other services has to be
constantly kept in mind for yet another important reason.
Judicial independence cannot be secured by making mere
solemn proclamations about it. It has to be secured both in
substance and in practice. It is trite to say that those
who are in want cannot be free. Self-reliance is the
foundation of independence. The society has a stake in
ensuring the independence of the judiciary, and no price is
too heavy to secure it. To keep the judges in want of the
essential accoutrements and thus to impede them in the
proper discharge of their duties is to impair and whittle
away justice itself. (para 4)
It is high time that all concerned appreciated that
there cannot be any link between the service conditions of
the judges and those of the members of the other services.
It is true that under Art.309 of the Constitution, the
recruitment and conditions of service of the members of the
subordinate judiciary are to be regulated by the Acts of the
appropriate legislature and pending such legislation, the
President and the Governor or their nominees, as the case
may be, are empowered to make rules regulating their
recruitment and the conditions of service. It is also true
that after the Council of States makes the necessary
declaration under Art.312, it is the Parliament which is
empowered to create an All India Judicial Service which will
include posts not inferior to the post of District Judge as
defined under Art.236. However, this does not mean that
while determining the service conditions of the members of
the Judiciary, a distinction should not be made between them
and the members of the other Services or that the service
conditions of the members of all the Services should be the
same. As it is, even among the other Services, a
distinction is drawn in the matter of their service
conditions. The linkage between the service conditions of
the judiciary and that of the administrative executive was
an historical accident. The erstwhile rulers constituted,
only one service. Viz., the Indian Civil Service for
recruiting candidates for the Judicial as well as the
Administrative Service and it is from among the successful
candidates in the examination held for such recruitment,
that some were sent to the administrative side while others
to the judicial side. Initially, there was also no clear
demarcation between the judicial and executive services and
the same officers used to perform judicial and executive
functions. Since the then government had failed to make the
distinction between the two services right from the stage of
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the recruitment, its logical consequences in terms of the
service conditions could not be avoided. With the
inauguration of the Constitution and the separation of the
State power distributed among the three branches, the
continuation of the linkage has become anachronistic and is
inconsistent with the constitutional provisions. The parity
in status is no longer between the Judiciary and the
administrative executive but between the judiciary and the
political executive. Under the Constitution, the judiciary
is above the administrative executive and any attempt to
place it on par with the administrative executive has to be
discouraged. The failure to grasp this simple truth is
responsible for the contention that the service conditions
of the judiciary must be comparable to those of the
administrative executive and any amelioration in the service
conditions of the former must necessarily lead to the
comparable improvement in the service conditions of the
latter. (para 5)
In our view, the aforesaid decision of the three Judge
Bench on the relevant scheme of the Constitution,
especially, Articles 234 to 236 and 309 remains well
sustained and clearly indicates how Judicial Service, though
being a part of the general Service of the State, stands of
its own and cannot countenance any encroachment on it as it
is based on the principle of independence of Judiciary from
the executive and/or legislative save and except to the
limited extent permitted by second part of Article 235 of
the Constitution. Otherwise the basic feature of
independence of Judiciary will get eroded. The submission
of Shri Dwivedi in this connection that, even Tribunals have
got trappings of judicial power and decide lis between the
parties also is besides the point while considering the
question as to how appointments to the lower Judiciary in
the strict sense of the term is to be effected. Once on
this aspect the Constitutional scheme is clear, it has got
to be given its full effect. We may now refer to Judgments
of some of the High Courts to which our attention was
invited by learned senior counsel Shri Thakur for the
respondent High Court. In the case of K.N.Chandra Sekhara &
Ors. vs. State of Mysore & Ors., AIR 1963 Mysore 292 (V 50
C 68), a Division Bench of the High Court of Mysore was
concerned with the question whether contrary to the
statutory rules framed by the Governor under Article 234
read with Article 309 of the Constitution of India, laying
down the criteria for recruitment to the cadre of Munsiffs
in Judicial Service of the State, the Public Service
Commission of its own can fix different criteria of passing
marks for candidates belonging to SC and ST as compared to
higher passing marks for general category of candidates.
Answering this question in the negative, Somnath Iyer, J.,
speaking for the Division Bench observed that : Article
234 excepts out of the operation of Art.309, appointments to
Judicial Service and constitutes the Governor in a sense a
select legislative organ for enactment of rules for that
purpose.
The aforesaid observations will, of course, have to be
read down in the light of the Constitution Bench decision of
this Court in B.S.Yadavs case (supra). The next Judgment
placed for our consideration by Shri Thakur is another
Division Bench judgment in M.I.Nadaf vs. The State of
Mysore & Anr., AIR 1967 Mysore 77 (V 54 C 21). In that case
another Division Bench of the Mysore High Court, speaking
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through K.S.Hegde, J. (as he then was), had to consider the
question whether once rules are framed under Article 234
read with Article 309 of the Constitution of India for
governing the recruitment of Munsiffs any other independent
rule pertaining to general conditions of Service and laying
down a different eligibility criterion for a candidate to be
considered for such recruitment could be countenanced. In
that case, the general rules framed under Article 309
applicable to all State Services permitted clubbing of
temporary Service of candidates under the Government or
holding a post under local authority with the Service on
regular basis for deciding about the requisite experience of
the concerned candidate for such posts. Though the General
Rules provided to the aforesaid effect, the rules framed
under Articles 234 and 309 did not do so. Question was
whether the General Rules could cut across the rules framed
under Article 234, the former not having been made in
consultation with the High Court. Negativing the contention
that these General Rules which were framed under Article 309
without reference to the High Court could operate in
connection with appointment of judicial officers at
grass-root level as governed by the rules under Article 234,
Hegde, J., made relevant observations in this connection at
pages 78 and 79 in paras 9 and 10 of the Report as under :
Article 309 of the Constitution empowers the Governor to
make rules regulating the recruitment and the conditions of
services of persons appointed to the Civil Services of the
State. But that Article, as its opening words themselves
indicate, is subject to the other provisions of the
Constitution. Article 234 is one such provision. The power
of the Governor to make rules under Article 309 of the
Constitution is not only subject to the other provisions of
the Constitution, but it is also subject to any Act of the
appropriate Legislature. But the rules to be made by him
under Article 234 are not subject to any Act that may be
enacted by the appropriate Legislature. But they can be
made only after consultation with the State Public Service
Commission and the High Court. The consultation with the
High Court is not something nominal. It is the very essence
of the matter. It must be borne in mind that our
Constitution visualises the separation of the judiciary from
the executive. It is no doubt true that the judicial
service is also one of the States services. But it has got
its own individualistic character. Unlike the other
services of the State, the judicial service is expected to
be independent of the executive. Often times, it has to
pronounce on the correctness or the legality of the action
taken by the other services of the State. There are
occasions when it is required to pronounce on the legality
of an action taken by the Government or even the Governor.
Such being the case, it would not be proper to consider the
judicial branch as being just one of the branches of the
State. It is for that reason, the Constitution makers
thought it proper to make separate provisions for the
appointment of judicial Officers.
..Our view that appointments to judicial services of
the State other than that of the District Judges should be
made only in accordance with the rules made by the Governor
under Article 234 of the Constitution after consultation
with the State Public Service Commission and the High Court
exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State and not
under rules framed by him under Article 309 of the
Constitution is also supported by the decision of the Madras
High Court in N. Devasahayam v. State of Madras, AIR 1958
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Mad 53 and that of the Rajasthan High Court in Rajvi Amar
Singh v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1956 Raj 104.
In our view, the aforesaid decision of the Mysore High
Court is well sustained in the light of the Constitutional
scheme as culled out by a series of decisions of this Court
to which we have made reference earlier.
A Division Bench of the Orissa High Court in the case
of Manoj Kumar Panda vs. State of Orissa & Ors., 1982
Lab.I.C. 1826, speaking through R.N.Misra, CJ. (as he then
was) had to consider an identical question which is posed
for our consideration in the present proceedings. The
Orissa Judicial Service Rules framed under Article 234 read
with Article 309 provided a scheme of reservation for SC and
ST candidates. The said scheme was tried to be cut across
by the Orissa Legislature by enacting the Orissa Act 38 of
1975. Question was whether such a legislative exercise
dehors Article 234 and in exercise of powers under Articles
245 and 246 was permissible. Even though parties had
settled their dispute, the High Court examined this vital
question of great public importance which may ex-facie be
treated to be a obiter decision but which, in our view, is
fully sustained by the Constitutional scheme examined by us
in the present case in the light of decided cases of this
Court. It was observed, in this connection, by Misra, CJ,
in para 5 of the Report as under : The Orissa Rules of
1964 are specially made for recruitment to judicial service.
And since in some Articles of the Constitution rules have
been made subject to legislation while in other Articles
like Art.234, the rules have not been made subject to
legislation, a distinction must be maintained between the
two sets of rules. Where the Constitution specifically
vests power in the Governor to make rules and does not make
his rules subject to legislation, it must follow that the
Constitution has intended those rules to be final on the
subject specified.
Thus, in view of the specific provision in Art.234
authorising the Governor to make rules for the purpose of
appointment and in the instant case such rules having been
made viz. Orissa Rules of 1961, it must follow that the
power given to the State Legislature under Arts.234, 245,
and 246 (3) of the Constitution would be subject to the
provisions of Art.234, in view of a non obstante clause
appearing at the beginning of Art.245(1). And in the result
Orissa Act 38 of 1975 is not to apply to judicial service
covered by Art.234 of the Constitution so far as appointment
is concerned.
A similar view is also taken by the Allahabad High
Court in the case of Farzand vs. Mohan Singh & Ors., AIR
1968 All. 67 (V 55 C 18). In para 31 of the Report at page
74 it was observed as under : The intention behind taking
out the provisions relating to subordinate courts from Part
XIV of the Constitution and putting them in Part VI, seems
to be to make the consultation with the High Court in the
matter of framing of the rules, really effective and thus to
secure the independence of the subordinate Judiciary from
executive (See AIR 1966 SC 1987 (Para 14)). Under the
proviso to Art.309 the Governor is competent to frame rules
relating to recruitment as well as condition of service.
The rules made by the Governor operate only until a
provision in that behalf is made by an Act of the
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Legislature. The legislature while making an Act under
Art.309 is not required even by Art.234, to consult any one.
The provision for consultation with the High Court would
become nugatory as soon as the legislature acted to enact.
To avoid this and to keep the rules governing recruitment to
the judicial service outside the purview of the State
legislature, Article 234 was taken out of Part XIV which
includes Article 309. Article 309 is subject to the other
provisions of the Constitution, which means and includes
Article 234. Article 234, on the other hand, is not subject
to any other provision of the Constitution. The rules, made
under Art. 234, will hence not be subject to any Act of
legislature made under Art.309. Then again, if the Governor
alone was to frame the rules for recruitment to the judicial
service, there was no point in making this invidious
distinction between the rules for the judicial and the other
services. This distinction became necessary because the
rules for the Judicial Service were to be framed in
consultation with the High Court. All these aspects of the
matter lead to the inevitable view that Article 234 requires
consultation with the High Court only in the matter of the
making of the rules.
It is now time for us to take stock of the situation.
In the light of the Constitutional scheme guaranteeing
independence of Judiciary and separation of powers between
the executive and the judiciary, the Constitutional makers
have taken care to see by enacting relevant provisions for
the recruitment of eligible persons to discharge judicial
functions from grass-root level of the Judiciary up to the
apex level of the District Judiciary, that rules made by the
Governor in consultation with the High Court in case of
recruitment at grass-root level and the recommendation of
the High Court for appointments at the apex level of the
District Judiciary under Article 233, remain the sole
repository of power to effect such recruitments and
appointments. It is easy to visualise that if suitable and
competent candidates are not recruited at both these levels,
the out turn of the judicial product would not be of that
high level which is expected of judicial officers so as to
meet the expectations of suffering humanity representing
class of litigants who come for redressal of their legal
grievances at the hands of competent, impartial and
objective Judiciary. The Presiding Officer of the Court if
not being fully equipped with legal grounding may not be
able to deliver goods which the litigating public expects
him to deliver. Thus, to ensure the recruitment of the best
available talent both at grass-root level as well as at apex
level of District Judiciary, Articles 233 and 234 have
permitted full interaction between the High Court which is
the expert body controlling the District Judiciary and the
Governor who is the appointing authority and who almost
carries out the ministerial function of appointing
recommended candidates both by the Public Service Commission
and the High Court at the grass-root level and also has to
appoint only those candidates who are recommended by the
High Court for appointment at the apex level of District
Judiciary. Any independent outside inroad on this exercise
by legislative enactment by the State Legislature which
would not require consultation with an expert agency like
the High Court would necessarily fall foul on the touchstone
of the Constitutional scheme envisaging insulation of
judicial appointments from interference by outside agencies,
bypassing the High Court, whether being the Governor or for
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that matter Council of Ministers advising him or the
Legislature. For judicial appointments the real and
efficacious advice contemplated to be given to the Governor
while framing rules under Article 234 or for making
appointments on the recommendations of the High Court under
Article 233 emanates only from the High Court which forms
the bed- rock and very soul of these exercises. It is
axiomatic that the High Court, which is the real expert body
in the field in which vests the control over Subordinate
Judiciary, has a pivotal role to play in the recruitments of
judicial officers whose working has to be thereafter
controlled by it under Article 235 once they join the
Judicial Service after undergoing filtering process at the
relevant entry points. It is easy to visualise that when
control over District Judiciary under Article 235 is solely
vested in the High Court, then the High Court must have a
say as to what type of material should be made available to
it both at the grass-root level of District Judiciary as
well as apex level thereof so as to effectively ensure the
dispensation of justice through such agencies with ultimate
object of securing efficient administration of justice for
the suffering litigating humanity. Under these
circumstances, it is impossible to countenance bypassing of
the High Court either at the level of appointment at grass-
root level or at the apex level of the District Judiciary.
The rules framed by the Governor as per Article 234 after
following due procedure and the appointments to be made by
him under Article 233 by way of direct recruitment to the
District Judiciary solely on the basis of the recommendation
of the High Court clearly project a complete and insulated
scheme of recruitment to the Subordinate Judiciary. This
completely insulated scheme as envisaged by the founders of
the Constitution cannot be tinkered with by any outside
agency dehors the permissible exercise envisaged by the twin
Articles 233 and 234. It is a misnomer to suggest that any
imposition of scheme of reservation for filling up vacancies
in already existing or created sanctioned posts in any cadre
of district judges or Subordinate Judiciary will have
nothing to do with the concept of recruitment and
appointment for filling up such vacancies. Any scheme of
reservation foisted on the High Court without consultation
with it directly results in truncating the High Courts
power of playing a vital role in the recruitment of eligible
candidates to fill up these vacancies and hence such
appointments on reserved posts would remain totally ultra
vires the scheme of the Constitution enacted for that
purpose by the founding fathers. It is also to be noted
that the concept of social justice underlying the scheme of
reservation under Article 16(4) read with Article 335 cannot
be said to be one which the High Court would necessarily
ignore being a responsible Constitutional functionary. In
fact what is required is that the right decision should be
arrived at in the right manner. In the facts of the present
case, it is an admitted position that the High Court of
Patna has already consented to have 14% reservation for SC
candidates and 10% reservation for ST candidates in
recruitment of Munsiffs and Magistrates at grass-root level
of Subordinate Judiciary and rules framed under Article 234
by the Governor of Bihar in consultation with the High Court
have permitted such reservation. Thus, it is not as if the
purpose of reservation cannot be achieved without reference
to the High Court. But as the saying goes you can take a
horse to the water but cannot make it drink by force .
Thus what is expected of the executive and the Governor is
to have an effective dialogue with the High Court so that
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appropriate reservation scheme can be adopted by way of
rules under Article 234 and even by prescribing quota of
reservations of posts for direct recruits to District
Judiciary under Article 233 if found necessary and feasible.
That is the Constitutional scheme which is required to be
followed both by the High Court and by the executive
represented through the Governor. But this thrust of the
Constitutional scheme cannot be given a go-bye nor can the
entire apple-cart be turned topsy-turvey by the legislature
standing aloof in exercising its supposed independent
Legislative power dehors the High Courts consultation.
Leaving aside this question even on the express
language of the impugned Section 4 of the Act, argument of
learned senior counsel for the appellant- State would fall
through as the said Section does not envisage creation of
separate category of posts for reserved category of
candidates in the existing cadres of District Judges and
Subordinate Judges. On the contrary, that Section
postulates available vacancies in the already existing posts
in the cadres and tries to control appointments to such
existing posts in the vacancies falling due from time to
time by adopting the rule of thumb and a road-roller
provision of 50% vacancies to be reserved for reserved
category candidates, meaning thereby, the Section mandates
the High Court and that too without consulting it, that it
shall not fill up 50% of available vacancies by selected
candidates standing in the order of merit representing
general category candidates and must go in search of less
meritorious candidates for filling up these vacancies
supposedly reserved for them. Such a scheme can be
envisaged only under relevant rules framed under Articles
233 and 234 after consultation with the High Court and
cannot be made the subject matter of any legislative fiat
which the High Court is expected to carry out willy-nilly
and dehors the Constitutional scheme regarding full and
effective consultation with the High Court in this
connection. It must, therefore, be held that the impugned
Section 4, as existing on the statute book if allowed to
operate as it is for controlling recruitment to the posts of
district judges as well as to the posts in Judiciary
subordinate thereto to the district courts, would directly
conflict with the Constitutional scheme of Articles 233 and
234 constituting a complete Code and has to be treated as
ultra vires the said Constitutional scheme. Before parting
with the discussion on this point, we may mention that in
the impugned judgment of the High Court in CWJC No.6756 of
1994 the learned Judges have considered the question of
reservation of posts in Judicial Service dehors the
Reservation Act in paragraphs 16 to 21 of the judgment.
Placing reliance on a decision of the Constitution bench
Judgment of this Court in Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record
Association & Anr. vs. Union of India, AIR 1994 SC 268, it
has been observed that whenever such a question arises and
any scheme of reservation is sought to be introduced by the
Governor in consultation with the High Court, the opinion of
the High Court shall have primacy. We may mention that this
question strictly does not arise for our consideration in
the present proceedings for the simple reason that legality
of rules of reservation, if any, framed by the Governor
under Article 309 read with Articles 233 and 234 introducing
a scheme of reservation contrary to the consent of the High
Court has not arisen for decision. In the present
proceedings, we are concerned with the short question
whether totally bypassing the High Court, the State
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Legislature can enact a statutory provision introducing a
scheme of reservation in Judicial Service comprised of
District Judges cadre as well as cadre of Judges subordinate
thereto. Hence, the aforesaid observations of the High
Court, in our view, were not called for in the present case
and we express no opinion thereon.
Point no.2, therefore, will have to be answered in the
affirmative against the appellant-State and in favour of the
respondent.
Point No.3: In the light of our answer to point no.2,
the question survives for consideration as to what
appropriate orders can be passed in connection with the
impugned Section 4 of the Act. Now it must be kept in view
that Section 4, as enacted in the Act, can have general
operation and efficacy regarding other Services of the State
not forming part of Judicial Service of the State. Qua such
other services Section 4 can operate on its own and in that
connection consultation with the High Court is not at all
required. However, in so far as it tries to encroach upon
the field of the recruitment and appointment to Subordinate
Judicial Service of the State as envisaged by Articles 233
and 234 it can certainly be read down by holding that
Section 4 of the impugned Act shall not apply for regulating
the recruitment and appointments to the cadre of District
Judges as well as to the cadre of Judiciary subordinate to
the District Judges and such appointments will be strictly
governed by the Bihar Superior Judicial Service Rules, 1951
as well as by the Bihar Judicial Service (Recruitment)
Rules, 1955. In other words, Section 4 will not have any
impact on these rules and will stand read down to that
extent. Once that is done, question of striking down the
said rule from the statute book would not survive and would
not be required. We, accordingly, read it down as
aforesaid. Point no.3 is answered accordingly in favour of
the respondent and against the appellant-State. Point No.4:
Now the stage is reached for passing appropriate final
orders in the light of our answers to the aforesaid points.
The impugned judgments of the High Court in both these
appeals allowing the writ petitions are sustained subject to
the following modifications and directions : 1. Even
though the impugned Act, as framed, is held to be applicable
even to Judicial Service, Section 4 thereof in particular
laying down scheme of reservation, will not apply for
governing the recruitment to the cadre of District Judiciary
as well as to the cadres of Judiciary Subordinate to the
District Judges. 2. The observation of the High Court in
the impugned judgement in Civil Appeal No.9072 of 1996 to
the effect that if two candidates, one belonging to general
category and another to reserved category are found to be
equally meritorious, preference can be given to reserved
category candidate is the only rational scheme envisaged by
the Constitution, being an unnecessary one will be treated
to be of no legal effect. 3. Despite the aforesaid
observations, the stand of the respondent High Court that
for recommending direct recruitment of advocates as District
Judges the suggested preference to be given to reserved
category candidate of equal merit with general category
candidate has to be followed by the High Court as agreed to
in the present proceedings till appropriate scheme of
reservation for reserved category candidates if any is
promulgated by the Governor by framing appropriate rules in
consultation with the High Court and the same procedure will
have to be followed by the High Court till then. Once such
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a scheme after proper dialogue with the High Court is
promulgated by amending the relevant rules then obviously
the High Court even while recommending recruitment to the
posts of District Judges from members of the Bar as per
Article 233(2) will be bound by such a scheme of
reservation. 4. For governing direct recruitment at
grass-root level as per the Bihar Judicial Service
(Recruitment) Rules, 1955, 14% reservation for SC and 10%
reservation for ST candidates shall be followed by all
concerned acting under the said rules and appointments at
the grass-root level of Judiciary shall be made following
the said scheme of reservation until any other scheme of
reservation is promulgated by amending the relevant rules by
the Governor after effective consultation with the High
Court as envisaged by Article 234 read with Article 309. 5.
By an interim order dated 16.11.1995 in the Civil Appeal
arising out of SLP(C) No.16476 of 1993 it was directed as
under : Having heard counsel representing different
interests we modify the order dated 13.5.94 whereby it was
stated that while the process of selection may go on but
actual appointment orders should not be issued. If the
selection process is over the selectees may be appointed
subject to the result of this petition and further subject
to the seniority that may be required to be adjusted if
reservation is upheld and candidates to fill in the reserved
slots are selected at any time hereafter and become entitled
to appointments. However, question of filling up the
reserved posts will not arise and they shall remain in
abeyance but if after this Court decides the issue on
reservation in the instant case and selections are made even
thereafter and appointments are made, they will be entitled
to their respective seniorities at the slots available as on
the date of appointment of General Category candidates.
In this appeal, the appointments of candidates as per
1955 Rules to the posts of Subordinate Judges and Munsiffs
are on the anvil of consideration. The writ petition filed
by the original writ petitioners before the High Court will
stand partly allowed by holding that Section 4 of the
impugned Act does not apply to these recruitments and the
scheme of reservation of 14% for SCs and 10% for STs only
will apply to such recruitment. As a result, the question
of filling up of reserved posts in this case will remain
germane to the aforesaid extent of permissible reservation
of 24% for SC and ST candidates. The concerned authorities
will work out the rights of the selected candidates for
being appointed to these posts governed by the Bihar
Judicial Service (Recruitment) Rules, 1955 accordingly,
keeping in view the directions contained in the interim
order of this Court dated 16.11.1995. 6. Both these
appeals are accordingly dismissed subject to the aforesaid
modifications and directions. There will be no order as to
costs in both these appeals.
New Delhi, March 14, 2000 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
INDIA CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION CIVIL APPEAL NO.9072 OF
1996 State of Bihar & Anr. ....Appellant Versus Bal Mukund
Sah & Ors. ....Respondents (With CA No....../2000 @ SLP (C)
No.16476/93)
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PATTANAIK, J.
I have gone through the two learned judgments, one of
Brother Majmudar, J. and the other of Brother Sethi, J.
expressing divergent views on the question at issue, and I
entirely agree with the conclusions arrived at by Brother
Majmudar,J. and respectfully differ from the views
expressed by Brother Sethi,J. But in view of the importance
of the question I would like to add few paragraphs of my
own.
The question for consideration is whether the State
Legislature could enact a law in exercise of their powers
under article 309 of the Constitution in relation to the
recruitment and laying down the conditions of service of the
officers belonging to the Judicial Services of the State?
It is in this context the further question that arises for
consideration is whether the provisions of the Bihar
Reservation of Vacancies in Posts and Services (for
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other Backward
Classes) Act, 1991 (hereinafter referred to as the Act)
(Bihar Act 3 of 1992) as amended by Bihar Act 11 of 1993,
providing reservation to the extent mentioned in Section 4
would apply to the Judicial Services of the State in view of
the definition of State in Section 2(m) of the Act. The
answer to these questions depend upon an analysis of the
Constitutional Scheme and how the founding fathers intended
to have separate provisions for the judicial wing of the
State. In fact when the question of appointment of persons
to the post of District Judges and post subordinate thereto
were being considered and had been engrafted in the Draft
Constitution under article 209-A to 209-F, Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar in his Speech in the Constituent Assembly had
categorically stated, the object of these provisions is
two- fold: first of all, to make provision for the
appointment of district judges and subordinate judges and
their qualifications. The second object is to place the
whole of the civil judiciary under the control of the High
Court. The only thing which has been excepted from the
general provisions contained in article 209-A, 209-B and
209-C is with regard to the magistracy, which is dealt with
in article 209-E. The Drafting Committee would have been
very happy if it was in a position to recommend to the House
that immediately on the commencement of the Constitution,
provisions with regard to the appointment and control of the
Civil Judiciary by the High Court were made applicable to
the magistracy. But it has been realised, and it must be
realised that the magistracy is intimately connected with
the general system of administration. We hope that the
proposals which are now being entertained by some of the
provinces to separate the judiciary from the Executive will
be accepted by the other provinces so that the provisions of
article 209-E would be made applicable to the magistrates in
the same way as we proposed to make them applicable to the
civil judiciary. It has been felt that the best thing is to
leave this matter to the Governor to do by public
notification as soon as the appropriate changes for the
separation of the judiciary and the executive are carried
through in any of the province. Thus it is apparent how
anxious the founding fathers of the Constitution were to
insulate the judicial wing of the State from the other
wings. When Pt.Hirday Nath Kunzru moved some amendments to
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article 209-A, as it stood in the Draft Constitution, he had
indicated that the very object of amendments is for the
purpose that though the Governor will appoint District
Judges in consultation with the High Court but once such
appointment is made by the Governor the District Judge would
remain under the control of the High Court. It is not
necessary to delve into the reaction of other Members of the
Constituent Assembly at that point of time in as much as
almost all the Members had felt the necessity of making
separate provisions for the judicial wing of the State as
far as practicable and to vest the entire control with the
High Court of the State. In fact Dr. Ambedkar himself had
indicated that there is nothing revolutionary in the
provisions of the Constitution relating to the sub-ordinate
courts of the States and in fact those provisions were there
in the Government of India Act, 1935. With this background
in mind if we look at the Constitutional Scheme we find Part
XIV consisting of articles 308 to 323 deal with the services
under the Union and the States whereas Chapter VI containing
articles 233 to 237 deal with the Subordinate Courts. Under
article 233, the power of appointment, posting and promotion
of district judges in any State has been conferred on the
Governor of the State in consultation with the High Court
exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State. It
obviously deals with those officers who are to be promoted
to the rank of district judge in the superior judicial
service from the post of subordinate judge. Sub-article (2)
of article 233 of the Constitution makes provision for
appointment of a person as a district judge direct on the
recommendation of the High Court concerned. Article 234 of
the Constitution provides for recruitment of persons other
than district judges to the judicial service of the State
and the same has to be made by the Governor in accordance
with the Rules made by him in that behalf after consultation
with the State Public Service Commission and with the High
Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State.
Article 235 deals with control over the subordinate courts
and there is not an iota of doubt that the control over
district courts and courts subordinate thereto vest with the
High Court and such control must be one which is real and
effective and there cannot be any dilution in that respect.
It is to be borne in mind that in the Constitutional Scheme
in Chapter VI the Founding Fathers have dealt with the
question of recruitment and not other conditions of service,
such as the age of superannuation, the pay, the pension and
allowances, so on and so forth. While Article 309 deals
with recruitment and conditions of service of persons
serving the Union or the State, a particular category of
post forming the judicial wing has been carved out in
Chapter VI in Articles 233 to 235 so far as the question of
recruitment is concerned. When Article 309 itself uses the
expression subject to the provisions of this constitution
it necessarily means that if in the constitution there is
any other provision specifically dealing with the topics
mentioned in said Article 309, then Article 309 will be
subject to those provisions of the Constitution. In other
words, so far as recruitment to the judicial services of the
State is concerned, the same being provided for specifically
in Chapter VI under Articles 233 to 237, it is those
provisions of the Constitution which would override any law
made by the appropriate legislature in exercise of power
under Article 309 of the Constitution. The State
legislature undoubtedly can make law for regulating the
conditions of services of the officers belonging to the
judicial wing but cannot make law dealing with recruitment
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to the judicial services since the field of recruitment to
the judicial service is carved out in the Constitution
itself in Chapter VI under Articles 233 to 236 of the
Constitution.
It would be appropriate to notice at this stage while
in Articles 145(1), 148(5), 187(3), 229(2), 283(1) and (2),
the Constitution itself make the provision subject to the
provisions of law made by the Parliament but Article 234 is
not subject to any legislation to be made by the appropriate
legislature, which indicates that so far as recruitment to
the Judicial Service is concerned which is engrafted in
Article 234, the same is paramount and the power of
legislature to make law under Article 309 will not extend to
make a law in relation to recruitment, though in relation to
other conditions of service of such judicial officers, the
appropriate legislature can make a law. In fact in B.S.
Yadavs case 1981(1)SCR 1024, on which Dr. Dhawan,
appearing for the State of Bihar, heavily relied upon Chief
Justice Chandrachud, had noticed to the effect- Whenever,
it was intended to confer on any authority the power to make
any special provisions or rules, including rules relating to
conditions of service, the Constitution has stated so in
express terms. See, for example Articles 15(4), 16(4),
77(3), 87(2), 118, 145(1), 146(1) and (2), 148(5), 166(3),
176(2), 187(3), 208, 225, 227(2) and (3) and 229(1) and (2),
234, 237 and 283(1) and (2). The observation has been made
in the context of the question whether Article 235 confers
any power on the High Court to make Rules relating to the
Conditions of Judicial Officers attached to the District
Courts and the Courts subordinate thereto. The very fact
that the framers of the Constitution in enacting Article 234
have made the provision, not subject to any acts of the
appropriate legislature is the clearest indication of the
Constitution makers that so far as the recruitment to the
Judicial Service of the State is concerned, the State
Legislature do not possess the necessary power to make law.
At the cost of repetition, it may be stated that the
expression recruitment and the expression other
conditions of service are two distinct connotations in the
service jurisprudence and the framers of the Constitution
have also born that in mind while engrafting Articles 234
and 309 of the Constitution. It is true that Article 233
dealing with appointment of District Judges does not
indicate conferment of power to make Rules for appointment.
But the language of article 233 indicates that the entire
matter of recruitment to the post of District Judge, either
by way of direct recruitment or by promotion is left to the
High Court and it is the Governor of the State who is
required to make such appointment in consultation with the
High Court. So far as direct recruitment is concerned, the
Constitution itself lays down certain criteria for making a
person eligible for being appointed/recruited as a District
Judge. The entire field of recruitment is left to the two
Constitutional consultees and obviously, the opinion of the
High Court in such matter must be of binding effect. For
direct recruitment to the post of District Judges in
sub-Article (2) of Article 233, the Constitution itself has
indicated the eligibility criteria and the source of
recruitment, leaving the manner of final selection with the
High Court itself. The argument of Dr. Rajiv Dhawan, in
this context that it would be anomalous that whereas for
subordinate judiciary, the legislature has no power to make
law to deal with the recruitment, whereas for District
Judges, the legislature has such power, is devoid of
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substance inasmuch as under Article 233, both under Clause
(1) as well as Clause (2) though the appointment has to be
made by the Governor but it is the High Court, who has to
decide as to who would be appointed and this also fits in
with the underlying principles under Article 235 of the
Constitution. With reference to second part of Article 235,
Dr. Dhawan had also raised the contention that it pre-
supposes that the legislature does possess the power to make
law, conferring a right to appeal to an officer of the
judiciary of the State, though, control over District Courts
and Courts sub-ordinate thereto vests with the High Court.
But this contention does not take into account the
distinction between the two connotations namely
recruitment and conditions of service. The second part
of Article 235 protecting a right of appeal which an officer
may have under any law made by the legislature or Governor
relates to regulating the conditions of service and not in
relation to recruitment of the said officer. An ingenious
argument had been advanced by Dr. Dhawan to the effect that
Article 234 expressly uses the expression that the
appointment has to be made in accordance with the Rules to
be made by the Governor in consultation with the State
Public Service Commission and with the High Court, thereby
is referable to proviso to Article 309 and, therefore, the
plenary power of the legislature under main Article 309 is
not whittled down in any manner. But this argument over-
looks the fact that the law made by the legislature under
the main part of Article 309 and the law made by the
Governor under the proviso stands on the same footing. At
this stage, it would be appropriate to notice the argument
advanced by Mr. Dwivedi, the learned counsel appearing for
the State of Bihar in one of these appeals to the effect
that the appropriate act of the State Legislature providing
for reservation in the services of the State is a stage
prior to the recruitment or appointment and, therefore the
power of recruitment in Article 234 is not in any way
infringed. This contention would not stand a moment
scrutiny in view of the language of Section 4 of the Act
itself.
4.Reservation for direct recruitment - All
appointments to services and posts in an establishment which
are to be filled by direct recruitment shall be regulated in
the following manner, namely:-
(1) The available vacancies shall be filled up- (a)
from open merit category .. 50% (b) from reserved category
.. 50%
(2) The vacancies from different categories of
reserved candidates from amongst the 50% reserved category
shall, subject to other provisions of this Act, be as
follows:-
(a) Scheduled Castes .. 14% (b) Scheduled Tribes ..
10% (c) Extremely Backward Class .. 12% (d) Backward Class
.. 8% (e) Economically Backward Woman .. 3% (f)
Economically Backward .. 3% ---------------- Total .. 50%.
Provided that the State Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, fix different
percentage for different districts in accordance with the
percentage of population of Scheduled Castes/Scheduled
Tribes and other backward classes in such districts:
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Provided further that in case of promotion,
reservation shall be made only for Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes in the same proportion as provided
in this section.
(3). A reserved category candidate who is selected on
the basis of his merit shall be counted against 50%
vacancies of open merit category and not against the
reserved category vacancies.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained to the contrary
in this Act or in any other law or rules for the time being
in force, or in any judgment or decree of the Court, the
provision of sub-section (3) shall apply to all such cases
in which all formalities of selection have been completed
before the 1st November, 1990, but the appointment letters
have not been issued.
(5) The vacancies reserved for the Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes shall not
be filled up by candidates not belonging to Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes except as
otherwise provided in this Act. (6) (a) In case of
non-availability of suitable candidates from the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes for appointment and promotion in
vacancies reserved for them, the vacancies shall continue to
be reserved for three recruitment years and if suitable
candidates are not available even in the third year, the
vacancies shall be exchanged between the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes and the vacancies so filled by exchange
shall be treated as reserved for the candidates for that
particular community who are actually appointed.
(b) In case of non-availability of suitable candidates
from the Extremely Backward Classes and Backward Classes the
vacancies so reserved shall continue to be reserved for them
for three recruitment years and if suitable candidates are
not available even in the third year also, the vacancies
shall be filled by exchange between the candidates from the
extremely Backward and Backward Classes and the vacancies so
filled by Exchange shall be treated as reserved for the
candidates of that particular community who are actually
appointed.
(c) In case of non-availability of suitable candidates
for the vacancies reserved for the economically backward
women the vacancies shall be filled first by the candidates
from the Scheduled Castes, then by the candidates from the
Scheduled Tribes, then by the candidates from extremely
backward class and then by the candidates from backward
class. The vacancies so filled in the transaction shall be
treated as reserved for the candidates of that particular
community who are actually appointed.
(d) If in any recruitment year, the number of
candidates of Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes, extremely
Backward and Backward Classes are less than the number of
vacancies reserved for them even after exchange formula the
remaining backlog vacancies may be filled by general
candidates after deserving them but the vacancies so
deserved shall be carried forward for three recruitment
years. (e) If the required number of candidates of
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward
and Backward Classes are not available for filling up the
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reserved vacancies, fresh advertisement may be made only for
the candidates belonging to the members of Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward and Backward
Classes, as the case may be, to fill the backlog vacancies
only.
The plain and grammatical meaning of the words used in
Section 4 quoted above unequivocally indicates, that it is a
law relating to recruitment/appointment and as such once, it
is held that the power of recruitment in respect of Judicial
Services is provided for in Article 234, the State
Legislature in the garb of making law in consonance with
Article 16(4) cannot encroach upon Article 234. In course
of hearing an elaborate argument had been advanced that
reservation is intended to fulfil the Right of Equality
under Article 16(1) read with 16(4) and the question whether
there has been adequate representation of a particular
backward class of citizens has been left to the satisfaction
of the State Government in Article 16(4) and, therefore, the
State Legislature cannot be denuded of its right to make
such law to fulfil the aforesaid Constitutional mandate. We
really fail to understand as to why the legislature would
feel that the Governor, when frames rules in consultation
with the High Court and the Public Service Commission under
Article 234 will not take into consideration the
constitutional mandate under Article 16(1) or Article 16(4).
In fact in the case in hand in the Bihar Judicial Service
Recruitment Rules, 1955, reservations have been provided for
Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe candidates and the Full
Court of Patna High Court have also adopted the percentage
of reservation for these candidates as per the notification
of the State Government. So far as the Superior Judicial
Service is concerned, it is of course true that there has
been no provision for reservation. But such provision could
always be made by the Governor in consultation with the High
Court, also bearing in mind the mandate of Article 335,
namely Maintenance of Efficiency of Administration. It is
indeed painful to notice, some times law makers
unnecessarily feel that the High Court or the Judges
constituting the High Court are totally oblivious to the
Constitutional mandate underlying Article 16 and more
particularly, Article 16(4). It is also not appropriate to
think that the High Court will not take into consideration
the provisions of Article 16(1) and 16(4) while considering
the case of recruitment to the judicial services of the
State. The Judiciary is one of the three limbs of the
Constitution and those who are entrusted with the affairs of
administration of justice must be presumed to have greater
expertise in understanding the Constitutional requirements.
In this view of the matter the contention of Mr. Dwivedi,
appearing for the State of Bihar is unfounded.
In the aforesaid premises, in my considered opinion,
the provisions of Bihar Reservation of Vacancies in Posts
and Services (for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and
other Backward Classes) Act, 1991 has no application to the
recruitment of judicial officers in the State of Bihar.
BANERJEE, J.
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I have had the privilege of going through the
judgments of Brother Majmudar and Brother Sethi expressing
however, two different and divergent views in regard to the
issues raised in the Appeals before us. I have also the
privilege of going through the judgment of Brother
Pattanaik, recording his concurrence with Brother Majmudar
and differing from the views expressed by Brother Sethi. I
also record my concurrence with the views expressed by
Brother Majmudar but I wish to add a few lines without
dilating on to the points delved into both by Brother
Majmudar and Brother Pattanaik in expression of my opinion
in the matter in issue.
The Bihar Reservation of Vacancies in Posts and
Services (for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribed and Other
Backward Classes) Act, 1991 as amended by Bihar Act 11 of
1993, in particular Section 4 thereof is the issue in
controversy. The exact language of Section 4 has already
been noticed by both Brother Majmudar and Brother Pattanaik
in their judgments and as such to avoid the length of the
judgment again. I retrain myself from quoting the same
excepting, recording however, that Section 4 of the Act of
1991 covers the filed of reservation for direct recruitment
to the extent of 50% from the open merit category and 50%
from the reserved category and the effort on the part of the
State legislature to include the judiciary within the ambit
of Section 4 stands negated by the High Court and hence the
Appeal before this Court. The core question that needs to
be answered is whether Judicial Service comes within the
ambit of Acticle 309 so as to clothe the State legislature
with the power of legislation and it is in this context that
heading of Acticle 309 lends some assistance in the matter
which reads; "Recruitment and conditions of Service of
persons serving the Union or a State" Article 309 thus, is
restrictive to recruitment and conditions of service of
persons. In any event the founding fathers of out
Constitution with due care and caution introduced this
Article subject however, to the other provisions in the
Constitution. The opening words of the Article is to be
noticed since any rule in terms of the rule making power as
conferred by the proviso to the Article if contravenes any
of the provision of the Constitutioin, the rule cannot but
be ascribed to be viod the reason being express words used
by the makers of Constitution subject to the provisions and
by reason of existence of a specific provision in regard
thereto. It is an authorisation for the legislature to
legislate relating to recruitment and conditions of service
provided there is existing no specific provision in regard
thereto. Needless to record here that Article 309 falls
under Part XIV of the Constitution under the lead "Services
under the Union and States" and relying theron Dr. Dhawan
appearing in support of the Appeal contended that since
judiciary is an organ of the State question of taking it out
of the ambit of Article 309 would not arise. The
constitutional scheme however, runs in direct conflict with
the submission of Dr. Dhawan. Articles 233 to 237 falls
under Chapter VI of Constitutioin with a heading -
’Subordinate Court’ . The headings of Articles 233, 233A,
234, 235 in this context are of some effect and consequence
and as such, the same are noted hereinbelow:
"233. Appointment of District Judges".
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"233A. Validation of appointment of and judgments
etc., delivered by, certain District Judges.
"234. Recruitment of persons other than District
Judges to the Judicial Service".
"235. Control over subordinate courts".
Be it noted that whereas Chapter V of the Constitution
deals with the High Court in the State, Chapter VI as
noticed above deals with Subordinate Courts; the scheme of
the Constitution thus, is categorical enough to depict the
judiciary as a specific class by itself being an independent
third wing of democratic polity. The appointment of
district judges though conferred in terms of Articles 233 of
the Constitution on to the Governor of the State but the
"Consultation with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in
relation to such a State" has been inserted in order to
obviate any controversy as to the efficiency of the officers
who are to be promoted to the rank of district judge in the
Higher Judicial Service from the post of subordinate Judge.
The incorporation of sub-Article 2 as regards a direct
recruit district judge on the basis of the recommendations
of the High Court for appointment has as a matter of fact
cemented the controversy, in the event however, there being
any, as regards the method of consultation in matter of
appointment of district judges. The further incorporation
of Articles 234 and 235 and on a plain reading thereof would
leave no manner of doubt as to the separate categorization
of judicial officers exclusive to themselves and their
appointment independently of Articles 309.
The inclusion of Chapter Vi in the Constitution as a
matter of fact records a distinct intention of the framers
of the Constitution as regards the supremacy and
separateness of the judiciary from the legislature and the
executive. If Article 309 is subject to be a general
provision, Articles 233 to 235 ought to be treated as
specific provisions for appointment of judicial officers and
by reason therefor, the specific field of legislation thus
stands completed and obviously the framers of the
Constitution having provided Articles 233 to 235, introduced
in Article 309, the words "subject to the provisions of this
Constitution". As a matter of fact the submission in
support of the Appeal does not stand to further scrutiny by
reason of the fact that in the event of there being any
contra intention of the framers, the same would have found
an expression in Article 234 itself. The appointment of
district judges, in my view, without any hesitation rests
with two constitutional functionaries namely, the Governor
and the High Court and thus withdrawing the same from the
purview of the general power as conferred under Article 309.
On the wake of the aforesaid, judicial service thus,
cannot be termed to be covered under Article 309 as regards
the appointment thereto though however, other conditions of
service specifically left open and thus the authorisation to
legislate under Article 309 is available in regard to
conditions of service and other incidentals thereto
subsequent to the appointment. It may also be noted that
General Legislative powers of thee Parliament as well as the
State Legislature under Article 245 is expressly made
subject to other provisions of the Constitution which would
obviously include Articles 233 to 235.
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The other aspect of the matter is in regard to Article
16 (4) which Mr. Dwivedi appearing in support of the Appeal
in Appeal No.9072/96 contended that reservation is outside
the purview of Chapter VI and since Article 16 (4) can be
termed to be a basic feature of the Constitution
appointments in the posts of district judges ought also to
be governed thereunder and not de hors the same. This
aspect of the matter however, has been dealt with
elaborately by both my learned Brother Majmudar and Brother
Pattanaik and as such I do not wish to record any further
reasons therefore but adopt the same and hereby record my
concurrence therewith. In that view of the matter I would
dismiss both Appeals without however, any orderr as to
costs.
ORDER
Leave granted.
The Civil Appeals stand dismissed as per the majority
view subject to the modification and directions contained in
thee main judgment.
There will be no order as to costs.
SETHI, J. (For himself & Khare,J.)
We have minutely perused the well prepared, lucid and
knowledgeable judgment of Brother Majmudar, J. but find it
difficult to agree with him on main issues involved in the
case, which undoubtedly are of far reaching consequences on
the future of the Indian polity. As the interpretation of
the various provisions of the Constitution in relation to
the independence of judiciary and the sovereign rights of
the legislature to make laws with respect to the Judicial
Service is likely to affect the constitutional scheme
adopted in a Parliamentary democracy, We have opted to write
a separate judgment.
Leave granted in SLP 16476 of 1993.
Concededly India is a Parliamentary democracy having
an elaborate written Constitution adopted by the people of
the country for their governance. The Constitution declares
to secure to all citizens of the country, justice, social,
economic and political; liberty of thought, expression,
belief, faith and worship and equality of status and
opportunity. The Parliamentary form of democracy introduced
in this country is referable to the West-minister experience
of Great Britain. All the basic principles of Parliamentary
system practised and followed in United Kingdom were adopted
by the founders of the Constitution in our country. The
constitutional scheme generally envisages separation of
powers which is not synonymous to the "checks and balances"
as prevalent in the United States Constitutional system. In
implementation of the scheme, with respect to separation of
powers amongst the main wings of the State, there is
overlapping sometimes, even without encroachment as the
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Constitution is found to contain interactive provisions.
The constitutional scheme makes the Executive responsible to
the Legislature. The paramount consideration and dominant
goal of the Constituent Assembly has been to bring popular
people into the Government and make the Government
answerable to the representatives of the people. The Indian
Parliamentary system adopted and practised for over half a
century has, by and large, kept pace with the changing
circumstances by embodying innovations and practices to meet
the requirements of the changing role of the Parliament.
Various provisions made in the Constitution reflect the
desire of the nation to have a practicable
socio-political-economic system to meet the aspirations of
the common man. The system is intended to deliver the goods
and services to the satisfaction of the common masses. The
constitutional framework envisaging Parliamentary system of
governance ensures the establishment of a sovereign,
socialist, secular, democratic Republic in the country. It
guarantees fundamental rights and mandates the Directive
Principles of the State policy. Besides providing a quasi
federal system in the country and envisaging the scheme for
distribution of legislative powers between the State and the
Centre, it emphasizes the establishment of the rule of law.
The form of Government envisaged under a Parliamentary
system of democracy is a representative democracy in which
the people of the country are entitled to exercise their
sovereignty through the legislature which is to be elected
on the basis of adult franchise and to which the Executive,
namely, the Council of Ministers is responsible. The
legislature has been acknowledged to be a nerve centre of
the State activities. It is through Parliament that elected
representatives of the people ventilate peoples grievances.
The Constitution devises the ways and means in its various
parts by which each of the three branches of the Government,
namely, legislative, executive and judiciary can function
without interference of the other by invading others
assigned sphere. The doctrine of separation of powers
though not strictly accepted yet provides for independent
judiciary in the States. This Court in Chandra Mohan vs.
State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. [AIR 1966 SC 1987] held:
"The Indian Constitution, though it does not accept the
strict doctrine of separation of powers, provides for an
independent judiciary in the States: it constitutes a High
Court for each State, prescribes the institutional
conditions of service of the Judges thereof, confers
extensive jurisdiction on it to issue writs to keep all
tribunals, including in appropriate cases the Governments,
within bounds and gives to it the power of superintendence
over all courts and tribunals in the territory over which it
has jurisdiction. But the makers of the Constitution also
realised that it is the Subordinate Judiciary in India who
are brought most closely into contact with the people, and
it is no less important, perhaps indeed even more important,
that their independence should be placed beyond question in
the case of the superior Judges. Presumably to secure the
independence of the judiciary from the executive, the
Constitution introduced a group of articles in Ch.VI of Part
VI under the heading "Subordinate Courts". But at the time
the Constitution was made, in most of the States the
magistracy was under the direct control of the executive.
Indeed it is common knowledge that in pre-independence India
there was a strong agitation was based upon the assumption
that unless they were separated, the independence of the
judiciary at the lower levels would be a mockery. So
article 50 of the Directive Principles of Policy states that
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the State shall take steps to separate the judiciary from
the executive in the public services of the States. Simply
stated, it means that there shall be a separate judicial
service free from the executive control."
The hallmark of the constitutional scheme in the
country is the role of judicial review assigned to the
courts. Unlike United States our Constitution explicitly
empowers the Supreme court and the High Courts to check the
actions of the Executive and the Legislature in case of such
actions being incompatible with the Constitution. To ensure
the existence of an independent, effective and vibrant
judiciary provision is made in the Constitution in Part V,
Chapter IV dealing with the Union Judiciary, Part VI,
Chapter V dealing with the High Courts in the States and
Chapter VI dealing with Subordinate Courts. This Court, in
various decisions, has highlighted the importance of
insulating the judiciary from executive interference to make
it effectively independent. In S.P. Gupta vs. Union of
India[1982 (2) SCR 365] , Bhagwati, J., as His Lordships
then was declared that the principle of independence of
judiciary is not an abstract conception but it is a living
faith which must derive its inspiration from the
constitutional charter and its nourishment and sustenance
from the constitutional values. The Indian judiciary was
described as a document of social revolution which casts an
obligation on every instrumentality including the judiciary
which is a separate but equal branch of the State to
transform the status quo ante into a new human order in
which justice, social, economic and political will inform
all institutions of national life and there will be equality
of status and opportunity for all. The British concept of
justicing was found to be satisfactory for a stable and
static society but not for a society pulsating with urges of
gender justice, worker justice, minorities justice, dalit
justice and equal justice between chronic unequals. In the
words of Glanville Austin, the judiciary has to become an
arm of the socio-economic revolution and perform an active
role calculated to bring social justice within the reach of
the common man. In the instant case the controversy relates
to the alleged invasion on the independence of subordinate
judiciary defined as judicial service in Article 236 of
the Constitution. It is contended that the provisions of
Part VI, Chapter VI of the Constitution are to be construed
independently ignoring the other constitutional guarantees
and provisions made to deal with the public services of the
Union and the States as contemplated under Article 309 of
the Constitution. On the one hand it is submitted that the
said Chapter VI is a self-contained provision with which no
interference can be had by any other organ of the State,
namely, the executive and the legislature. On the other
hand it is contended that conceding that the provisions made
in the said Chapter are mandatory, the executive or the
legislature is not debarred from supplementing those
provisions without transgressing the limit imposed by law or
making such provision which may not amount to interference
with the judiciary endangering its independence. Divergent
views are expressed regarding the nature of service
contemplated under Part VI, Chpater VI and the service
referred to in Part XIV Chapter I. The impugned Act being
Bihar Act No.3 of 1992 is referable to the provisions of
Article 309 legislated by the State Legislature in exercise
of its powers conferred upon it under Part XI Chpater I read
with Schedule VII Entry 41 List II and Entry IIA List III.
Section 4 of of the impugned Act deals with and provides
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reservation in all services including the judicial service.
The High Court of Patna has held the aforesaid section to be
inapplicable to the judicial service with the result that
the appointments to the judicial service have been made
without any reservation. Without repeating the facts as
narrated in the judgment of Majmudar, J., it is noticed that
when the High Court of Patna administratively declined to
concede reservation in the judicial services, the State
Legislature enacted the impugned Act. Article 233 of the
Constitution provides that appointment of District Judges
shall be made by the Governor of the State in consultation
with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to
such State. Direct appointment of a person to the post of
District Judge can be made only if he has been an
Advocate/Pleader for seven years and is recommended by the
High Court for appointment. The appointment contemplated
under this Article is the initial appointment from direct
recruits or initial promotion from the service. The
exercise of power of appointment by the Governor is
conditioned by his consultation with the High Court which
means that he can appoint only such person to the post of
District Judge who has been recommended by the High Court.
The object of consultation was considered by this Court in
Chandra Mohan’s case (Supra) wherein it was held: "The
Constitutional mandate is clear. The exercise of power of
appointment by the Governor is conditioned by his
consultation with the High Court that is to say, he can only
appoint a person to the post of District Judge in
consultation with the High Court. The object of
consultation is apparent. The High Court is expected to
know better than the Governor in regard to the suitability
or otherwise of a person, belonging either to the judicial
service or to the Bar, to be appointed as a district judge.
Therefore, a duty is enjoined on the Governor to make the
appointment in consultation with a body which is the
appropriate authority to give advice to him. This mandate
can be disobeyed by the Governor in two ways, namely, (i) by
not consulting the High Court at all, and (ii) by consulting
the High Court and also other persons. In one case he
directly infringes the mandate of the Constitution and in
the other he indirectly does so, for his mind may be
influenced by other persons not entitled to advice him."
This Court in State of Assam & Anr. vs. Kuseswar
Saikia & others [AIR 1970 SC 1616] held that the separate
judicial service was provided to make the office of a
District Judge completely free of executive control. In
Chandramouleshwar Mohan Prasad vs. The Patna High Court &
Ors. [AIR 1970 SC 370] this Court held that the underlying
idea of Article 233 is that the Governor should make up his
mind after there has been a deliberation with the High
Court. The High Court is the body which is intimately
familiar with the efficiency and quality of officers who are
fit to be promoted as District Judges. The High Court alone
knows the merits as also their demerits and that the
consultation with the High Court under Article 233 is not an
empty formality. It is not disputed in this case that the
State Legislature had the plenary power to enact the
impugned Act under Part XI Chapter I read with 7th Schedule
Entry 41 of List II and Entry IIA of List III. It is also
not disputed that the said Act has been enacted to give
effect to the fundamental rights, the Directive Principles
of State Policy and the obligation of the State under
Article 335 of the Constitution. The controversy rests upon
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the interpretation of Articles 233, 234, 235 and 309 of the
Constitution. The High Court held that the judicial service
was not a service in the sense of employment and was
distinct from other services. Referring to various
provisions of the impugned Act and the definitions of the
terms "any office or department" in an "establishment" and
State", the High Court concluded that the provisions of
Section 4 of the said Act were not applicable to the
judicial service and that no reservation in terms thereof
could be made in the matter of appointment to the post of
District Judges and other judicial officers subordinate to
the District Judge. The High Court extensively referred to
the observations of this Court in the case of All India
Judges Association & Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors. [AIR
1993 SC 2493] to conclude that the judicial service having
been assigned a special status and place in the Constitution
was in contradistinction to other services within the
constitutional framework. It was held that the definition
of "office or department" and of "establishment" under the
Act was referable to the office or department of the Court
and not the Court itself. Part XIV Chapter I of the
Constitution relates to "services under the Union and the
State". Article 309 authorises the appropriate Legislature
to regulate the recruitment and conditions of service of
persons appointed to public services and posts in connection
with the affairs of the Union or of any State, however,
subject to other provisions of the Constitution. Proviso to
Article 309 authorises the executive to make rules
regulating the recruitment and conditions of service of
persons appointed to such services or posts until powers in
that behalf are exercised by the appropriate Legislature
under Article 309 of the Constitution. "Public Service"
means anything done for the service of the public in any
part of the country in relation to the affairs of the Union
or the State. It was opposite of private service. Persons
connected with the discharge of public duties relating to
any of the organs of the State i.e. executive, judiciary
and legislature including the Armed Forces, would be termed
as "public servants" engaged in the service of the Public.
Public services and posts in connection with the affairs of
the Union or of any State would refer to all services and
posts under the Union and the State and include every
commissioned officer in the Military, Naval or Air Force,
every Judge, every officer of court of justice, a member of
Panchayat, every arbitrator or other person to whom any
cause or matter has been referred for decision or report by
any court of justice, every person who holds any office by
virtue of which he is empowered to place or keep any person
in confinement; every officer of the Government whose duty
it is as such officer, to prevent offences, to give
information of offences, to bring offenders to justice or to
protect the public health, safety or convenience; every
officer whose duty it is, as such officer, to take, receive,
keep or expend any property on behalf of the Government, or
to make any survey assessment or contract on behalf of the
Government; every officer who holds any office in virtue of
which he is empowered to prepare, publish, maintain or
revise an electoral roll or to conduct an election or part
of an election; every person in the service or pay of the
Government or remunerated by fees or commission for the
performance of any public duty by the Government; or such
person in the pay of a local authority, a corporation
established by or under a Central or State Act, and the
like. Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code may be an
indicator to refer to the public services and posts intended
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to be covered or contemplated under Article 309 of the
Constitution. Judicial service, therefore, cannot be termed
not to be a service within the meaning of Article 309.
Accordingly, the appointment of District Judge under Article
233 is an appointment to the public service within the
meaning of Article 309 of the Constitution. It is true that
the constitutional scheme envisages an independent judiciary
not being under the Executive but such an independent
judiciary cannot be termed to be a creation of a distinct
service in the State being not subject to law making
sovereign powers of the Legislature. Article 309, as
noticed earlier, is itself subject to other provisions of
the Constitution which guarantee the independence of
judiciary. The power of appointment of District Judges is
vested in the Governor subject to the conditions imposed
under Article 233 of the Constitution. It follows,
therefore, that subject to the other provisions of the
Constitution, the appropriate Legislature can regulate the
recruitment and condition of service of all persons
appointed to public services including the judicial services
and posts in connection with the affairs of the Union or of
the State. Similarly with restraint of the provisions of
Article 309 the Governor of the State can make rules
regulating the recruitment and condition of service of such
persons. The scheme of the Constitution, ensuring
independence of judiciary clearly and unambiguously provides
that no power is conferred upon executive to exercise
disciplinary authority and jurisdiction in respect of
judicial service. Express provision has been made under the
Constitution, vesting in the High Court "the control over
District Courts and Courts subordinate thereto". Such a
provision did not exist in the Government of India Act,
1935. In State of West Bengal & Anr. vs. Nripendra Nath
Bagchi [AIR 1966 SC 447] this Court after referring to
Articles 233, 234 and 235 of the Constitution held that the
aforesaid Articles were intended to make special provision
for the judicial service of the State. To understand why a
special chapter was provided when there existed Part XIV
dealing with the service under the Union and the State it
was found necessary to go into the history of the aforesaid
constitutional provision. It was held: "Before we set down
briefly how this Chapter came to be enacted outside the Part
dealing with Services and also why the articles were worded,
as they are, we may set down the corresponding provisions of
the Government of India Act, 1935. There too a special
provision was made in respect of judicial officers but it
was included as a part of Chapter 2 of Part X which dealt
with the Civil Services under the Crown in India. The
cognate sections were Ss.254 to 256 and they may be
reproduced here:
"254. District Judges, etc.
(1) Appointments of persons to be, and the posting and
promotion of District Judges in the Province shall be made
by the Governor of any province shall be made by the
Governor of the Province, exercising his individual
judgment, and the High Court shall be consulted before a
recommendation as to the making of any such appointment is
submitted to the Governor.
(2) A person not already in the service of His Majesty
shall only be eligible to be appointed a District Judge if
he has been for not less than five years a Barrister, a
member of the Faculty of Advocates in Scotland, or a Pleader
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and is recommended by the High Court for appointment.
(3) In this and the next succeeding section the
expression District Judge includes Additional District
Judge, Joint District Judge, Assistant District Judge, Chief
Judge of a Small Cause Court, Chief Presidency Magistrate,
Sessions Judge, Additional Sessions Judge, and Assistant
Sessions Judge.
255. Subordinate Civil Judicial Service.
(1) The Governor of each Province shall, after
consultation with the Provincial Public Service Commission
and with the High Court, make rules defining the standard of
qualifications to be attained by persons desirous of
entering the subordinate civil judicial service of a
Province.
In this section, the expression "subordinate civil
judicial service" means a service consisting exclusively of
persons intended to fill civil judicial posts inferior to
the post of District Judge.
(2) The Provincial Public Service Commission for each
Province, after holding such examinations, if any, as the
Governor may think necessary, shall from time to time out of
the candidates for appointment to the subordinate civil
judicial service of the Province make a list or lists of the
persons whom they consider fit for appointment to that
service, and appointment to that service shall be made by
the Governor from the persons included in the list or lists
in accordance with such regulations as may from time to time
be made by him as to the number of persons in the said
service who are to belong to the different communities in
the Province.
(3) The posting and promotion of, and the grant of
leave to, persons belonging to the subordinate civil
judicial service of a Province and holding any post inferior
to the post of District Judge, shall be in the hands of the
High Court, but nothing in this section shall be construed
as taking away from any such person the right of appeal
required to be given to him by the foregoing provisions of
this chapter, or as authorising the High Court to deal with
any such person otherwise than in accordance with the
conditions of his service prescribed thereunder.
256 Subordinate criminal magistracy.
No recommendation shall be made for the grant of
magisterial powers or of enhanced magisterial powers to, or
the withdrawal of any magisterial powers from, any person
save after consultation with the District Magistrate or the
district in which he is working, or with the Chief
Presidency Magistrate, as the case may be.
It may be pointed out at once that in the present
Constitution these provisions have been lifted from the
Chapter dealing with Services in India and placed separately
after the provisions relating to the High Courts of the
States.
(8) As far back as 1912 the Islingtons Commission
stated that the witnesses before the Commission demanded two
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things (1) recruitment from the Bar to the superior judicial
service, namely, the District judgeship; and (2) the
separation of the judiciary from the executive. The
Commission stated in the report: Opinion in India is much
exercised on the question of the separation of the executive
and the judicial functions of the officers’...and observed
that to bring this about legislation would be required.
The Commission made its report on August 14, 1915, a few
days after the Government of India Act, 1915 (5 and 6 Geo.
V. c.61) was enacted. The Act did not, therefore, contain
any special provision about the judicial services in India.
The World War I was also going on. In 1919, Part VII-A
consisting of Ss.96-B to 96-E was added in the Government of
India Act, 1915 S.96-B provided that every person in the
Civil Service of the Crown in India held office during His
Majestys pleasure but no person in that service might be
dismissed by any authority subordinate to that by which he
was appointed. The only section that concerns us in S.96-B.
Sub-s.(2) of that section reads as follows:
"(2) The Secretary of State in Council may make rules
for regulating the classification of the civil services in
India, the methods of their recruitment, their conditions of
service, pay and allowances, and discipline and conduct.
Such rules may, to such extent and in respect of such
matters as may be prescribed, delegate the power of making
rules to the Governor-General in Council or to Local
Governments, or authorise the Indian legislature or local
legislatures to make laws regulating the public services:"
The Fundamental Rules and the Civil Services
(Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules were made by the
Secretary of State in Council under the above rule- making
power. These rules governed the judicial services except
the High Court. Part IX of the Government of India Act
dealt with the Indian High Courts, their constitution and
jurisdiction. Section 107 gave to the High Courts
superintendence over all Courts for the time being subject
to its appellate jurisdiction and enumerated the things the
High Court could do. They did not include the appointment,
promotion, transfer or control of the District Judges. High
Court could only exercise such control as came within their
superintendence over the Courts subordinate to their
appellate jurisdiction. In the Devolution Rules, Item 17 in
Part II dealing with the Provincial subjects read as
follows:-
"Administration of justice, including constitution,
powers, maintenance and organisation of civil Court and
criminal jurisdiction within the Province; subject to
legislation by the Indian legislature as regards High
Courts, Chief Courts, and Court of Judicial Commissioners
and any Courts of criminal jurisdiction."
It would thus appear that the problem about the
independence of judicial officers, which was exercising the
minds of the people did not receive full attention and to
all intents and purposes the Executive Government and
Legislatures controlled them. The recommendations of the
Islington Commission remained a dead letter. When the
Montague-Chemlsford enquiry took place the object was to
find out how much share in the legislative and executive
fields could be given to Indians. The post of the District
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Judge was previously reserved for Europeans. The disability
regarding Indians was removed as a result of the Queens
Proclamation in 1870 and rules were framed first in 1873.
In 1875 Lord Northbrooks Government framed rules allowing
Indians to be appointed and Lord Lyttons Government framed
Rules fixing 1/5th quota for the Indians. There was no
fixed principle on which Indians were appointed and the
report of the Public Service Commission presided over by Sir
Charles Aitchison in 1886 contains the system followed in
different Provinces. This continued down to 1919. The
Government of India Act had introduced Dyarchy in India and
the question of control of services in the transferred field
was closely examined when the Government of India Act, 1935
was enacted. It was apprehended that if transference of
power enabled the Ministers to control the services, the
flow of Europeans to the civil services would become low.
Government appointed several committees, chief among them
the MacDonnel Committee considered the position of the
Europeans vis-.-vis the services. There was more concern
about Europeans than about the independence of the
judiciary.
(9) The Indian Statutory Commission did not deal with
the subject of judicial services but the Joint Committee
dealt with it in detail. It is interesting to know that the
Secretary of State made a preliminary statement on the
subject of subordinate civil judiciary and his suggestion
was to leave to the Provincial Legislatures the general
power but to introduce in the Constitution a provision
which would in one respect override those powers, namely,
power to select the individuals for appointment to the Civil
Judicial Services, to lay down their qualifications, and to
exercise over the members of the service the necessary
administrative control.’ He said that ’the powers of the
local Government should be ’to fix the strength and pay of
the services to which the High Court would recruit’ and to
lay down, if they so thought fit, any general
requirement...’. During the debates Marquis of Salisbury
asked a question with regard to the general powers of the
High Courts and the control over the subordinate courts. It
was:
"As I understood the Secretary of State in his
statement, the control of the High Court the subordinate
judges in civil matters has to be as complete as possible
and maintained. Is that so?. The answer was, yes.
(No.7937)".
(10) The recommendations of the Joint Committee also
followed the same objective. In the report (paragraph 337
p.201) the following observations were made:
"337. Necessity for securing independence of
subordinate judiciary. The Federal and High Court Judges
will be appointed by the Crown and their independence is
secure; but appointments to the Subordinate Judiciary must
necessarily be made by authorities in India who will also
exercise a certain measure to control over the Judges after
appointment, especially in the matter of promotion and
posting. We have been greatly impressed by the mischiefs
which have resulted elsewhere from a system under which
promotion from grade to grade in a judicial hierarchy is in
the hands of a Minister exposed to pressure from members of
a popularly elected Legislature. Nothing is more likely to
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sap the independence of a magistrate than the knowledge that
his career depends upon the favour of a Minister; and
recent examples (not in India) have shown very clearly the
pressure which may be exerted upon a magistracy thus
situated by men who are known, or believed, to have the
means of bringing influence to bear upon a Minister. It is
the Subordinate Judiciary in India who are brought most
closely into contact with the people, and it is no less
important, perhaps indeed even more important, that their
independence should be placed beyond question than in the
case of the superior Judges...".
As a result, when the Government of India Act, 1935
was passed it contained special provisions (Sections 254-256
already quoted) with regard to District Judges and the
subordinate judiciary. It will be noticed that there was no
immediate attempt to put the subordinate criminal magistracy
under the High Courts but the posting and promotion and
grant of leave of persons belonging to the subordinate
judicial service of a Province was put in the hands of High
Court though there was right of appeal to any authority
named in the rules and the High Courts were asked not to act
except in accordance with the conditions of the service
prescribed by the Rules. As regards the District Judges the
posting and promotions of a District Judge was to be made by
the Governor of the Province exercising his individual
judgment and the High Court was to be consulted before a
recommendation to the making of such an appointment was
submitted to the Governor. Since S.240 of the Government of
India Act, 1935 provided that a civil servant was not to be
dismissed by an authority subordinate to that which
appointed him, the Governor was also the dismissing
authority. The Government of India Act, 1935 was silent
about the control over the District Judge and the
subordinate judicial services. The administrative control
of the High Court under S.224 over the courts subordinate to
it extended only to the enumerated topics and to
superintendence over them. The independence of the
subordinate judiciary and to the District Judges was thus
assured to a certain extent, but not quite.
(11) When the Constitution was being drafted the
advance made by the 1935 Act was unfortunately lost sight
of. The draft Constitution made no mention of the special
provisions, not even similar to those made by the Government
of India Act, 1935, in respect of the subordinate judiciary.
If that had remained, the judicial services would have come
under Part XIV dealing with the services in India. An
amendment, fortunately, was accepted and led to the
inclusion of Arts.233 to 237. These articles were not
placed in the Chapter on services but immediately after the
provisions in regard to the High Courts. The articles went
a little further than the corresponding sections of the
Government of India Act."
It was further held that Articles 233 and 235 made
mention to two distinct powers. The first relates to power
of appointment of persons, their posting and promotion and
the second is the power to control. This Court did not
accept the contention that the word "District Court" denoted
only the court but not the Presiding Judge. The latter part
of Article 235 has been held to refer to the man who holds
the office. The Articles vest "control in the High Court".
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The purpose of the aforesaid Articles was held to be in
regard with the Directive Principles in Article 50 of the
Constitution which mandates the States to take steps to
separate the judiciary from the executive in the public
services of the State. Reference to Article 50 in
connection with Articles 233, 234 and 235, clearly and
unambiguously shows that this Court has held that the
judicial service was a public service within the meaning of
Article 309 regarding which law could be made, however,
subject to other provisions of the Constitution providing
and guaranteeing the independence of judiciary. In B.S.
Yadav & Ors, etc.v. State of Haryana & Ors., etc. [1981
(1) SCR 1024] this Court considered the scope and extent of
Articles 235 and 309 of the Constitution and held that the
power to frame rules regarding the judicial officers vested
in the Governor and not in the High Court. The first part
of Article 235 vests the control over District Courts and
courts subordinate thereto in the High Court and the second
part of that Article mandates that nothing in the Articles
shall be construed as taking away from any person belonging
to the judicial service any right of appeal which he may
have under law regulating the conditions of service or
authorising the High Court to deal with him otherwise than
in accordance with the conditions of his service prescribed
under such law. Outer limits of the High Court’s powers of
control over the subordinate judiciary have thus been
defined providing that it is not open to the High Court to
deny to a member of the subordinate judicial service of the
State the right of appeal given to him by law which
regulates the conditions of his service. Even the High
Court, in exercise of its power of control, cannot deal with
such person otherwise than in accordance with the conditions
of his service which are prescribed by law. This court then
put a question to itself as to who had the power to pass
such a law and answered it: "Obviously not the High Court
because, there is no power in the High Court to pass a law,
though rules made by the High Court in the exercise of power
conferred upon it in that behalf may have the force of law.
There is a distinction between the power to pass a low and
the power to make rules, which by law, have the force of
law. Besides, law which the second part of Art.235 speaks
of, is law made by the legislature because, if it were not
so, there was no purpose in saying that the High Courts
power of control will not be construed as taking away
certain rights of certain persons under a law regulating
their conditions of service. It could not have been
possibly intended to be provided that the High Courts power
of control will be subject to the conditions of service
prescribed by it. The clear meaning, therefore, of the
second part of Article 235 is that the power of control
vested in the High Court by the first part will not deprive
a judicial officer or the rights conferred upon him by a law
made by the legislation regulating him conditions of
service.
Article 235 does not confer upon the High Court the
power to make rules relating to conditions of service of
judicial officers attached to district courts and the courts
subordinate thereto. Whenever, it was intended to confer on
any authority the power to make any special provisions or
rules, including rules relating to conditions of service,
the Constitution has stated so in express terms. See, for
example Articles 15(4), 16(4), 77(3), 87(2), 118, 145(1),
146(1), and 2(148)(5), 166(3), 176(2), 187(3), 208, 225,
227(2) and (3), 229(1) and (2), 234, 237 and 283(1) and (2).
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Out of this fasciculus of Articles, the provisions contained
in Articles 225, 227(2) and (3) and 229(1) and (2) bear
relevance on the question, because these Articles confer
power on the High Court to frame rules for certain specific
purpose. Article 229(2) which is directly in point provides
in express terms that subject to the provisions of any law
made by the legislature of the State, the conditions of
service of officers and servants of a High Court shall be
such as may be prescribed by the rules made by the Chief
Justice or by some other Judge or officer of the Court
authorised by the Chief Justice to make rules for the
purposes. With this particular provision before them, the
framers of the Constitution would not have failed to
incorporate a similar provision in Article 235 if it was
intended that the High Courts shall have the power to make
rules regulating the conditions of service of judicial
officers attached to district courts and courts subordinate
thereto.
Having seen that the Constitution does not confer upon
the High Court the power to make rules regulating the
conditions of service of judicial officers of the district
courts and the courts subordinate thereto, we must proceed
to consider: who, then, possesses that power? Article 309
furnishes the answer. It provides that Acts of the
appropriate legislature may regulate the recruitment and
conditions of service of persons appointed to posts in
connection with the affairs of the Union or of any State.
Article 248(3), read with Entry 41 in List II of the Seventh
Schedule, confers upon the State legislatures the power to
pass laws with respect to "State public services" which must
include the judicial services of the State. The power to
control vested in the High Court by Art.235 is thus
expressly, by the terms of that Article itself, made subject
to the law which the State legislature may pass for
regulating the recruitment and service conditions of
judicial officers of the State. The power to pass such a
law was evidently not considered by the Constitution makers
as an encroachment on the ’control jurisdiction’ of the High
Courts under the first part of Article 235. The control
over the district courts and subordinate courts is vested in
the High Court in order to safeguard the independence of
judiciary. It is the High Court, not the executive, which
possesses control over the State judiciary. But, what is
important to bear in mind is that the Constitution which has
taken the greatest care to preserve the independence of the
judiciary did not regard the power of the State legislature
to pass laws regulating the recruitment and conditions of
service of judicial officers as an infringement of that
independence. The mere power to pass such a law is not
violative of the control vested in the High Court over the
State Judiciary.
It is in this context that the proviso to Art.309
assumes relevance and importance. The State legislature has
the power to pass laws regulating the recruitment and
conditions of service of judicial officers of the State.
But it was necessary to make a suitable provision enabling
the exercise of that power until the passing of the law by
the legislature on that subject. The Constitution furnishes
by its provisions ample evidence that it abhors a vacuum.
It has therefore made provisions to deal with situations
which arise on account of the ultimate repository of a power
not exercising that power. The proviso to Art.309 provides,
in so far as material, that until the State Legislature
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passes a law on the particular subject, it shall be
competent to the Governor of the State to make rules
regulating the recruitment and the conditions of service of
the judicial officers of the State. The Governor thus steps
in when the legislature does not act. The power exercised
by the Governor under the proviso is thus a power which the
legislature is competent to exercise but has in fact not yet
exercised. It partakes of the characteristics of the
legislative, not executive, power. It is legislative power.
That the Governor possesses legislative power under
our Constitution is incontrovertible and, therefore, there
is nothing unique about the Governors power under the
proviso to Article 309 being in the nature of a legislative
power. By Article 168, the Governor of a State is a part of
the legislature of the State. And the most obvious exercise
of legislative power by the Governor is the power given to
him by Art.213 to promulgate ordinances when the legislature
is not in session. Under that Article, he exercises a power
of the same kind which the legislature normally exercises:
the power to make laws. The heading of Chapter IV of Part
VI of the Constitution, in which Art.213 occurs, is
significant: "Legislative Power of the Governor". The
power of the Governor under the proviso to Article 309 to
make appropriate rules is of the same kind. It is
legislative power. Under Article 213, he substitutes for
the legislature because the legislature is in recess. Under
the proviso to Article 309, he substitutes for the
legislature because the legislature has not yet exercised
its power to pass an appropriate law on the subject.
It is true that the power conferred by Article 309 is
"subject to" the provisions of the Constitution. But it is
fallacious for that reason to contend that the Governor
cannot frame rules regulating the recruitment and conditions
of service of the judicial officers of the State. In the
first place, the power of control conferred upon High Courts
by the first part of Article 235 is expressly made subject,
by the second part of that Article, to laws regulating
conditions of service of its judicial officers. The first
part of Article 235 is, as it were, subject to a proviso
which carves out an exception from the area covered by it.
Secondly, the Governor, in terms equally express, is given
the power by the proviso to Article 309 to frame rules on
the subject. A combined reading of Articles 235 and 309
will yield the result that though the control over
Subordinate Courts is vested in the High Court, the
appropriate legislature, and until that legislature acts,
the Governor of the State, has the power to make rules
regulating the recruitment and the conditions of service of
judicial officers of the State. The power of the
legislature or of the Governor thus to legislate is subject
to all other provisions of the Constitution like, for
example, Articles 14 and 16. The question raised before us
is primarily one of the location of the power, not of its
extent. The second part of Article 235 recognises the
legislative power to provide for recruitment and the
conditions of service of the judicial officers of the State.
The substantive provision of Article 309, including its
proviso, fixes the location of the power. The opening words
of Article 309 limit the amplitude of that power."
It was further declared that the mere power to pass a
law or to make rules having the force of law regulating the
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service conditions did not impinge upon the control vested
in the High Court over the district courts and the courts
subordinate thereto by Article 235. Such laws or the rules,
as the case may be, can provide for general or abstract
rules (of seniority in that case) leaving it to the High
Court to apply them to each individual case as and when the
occasion arises. The opening words of Article 309, "subject
to provisions of this Constitution" do not exclude the
provision contained in the first part of Article 235. It is
thus clear that though the legislature or the Governor has
the power to regulate seniority of judicial officers by
laying down rules of general application, yet that power
cannot be exercised in a manner which will lead to
interference with the control vested in the High Court by
the first part of Article 235. In The High Court of Punjab
& Haryana, etc. etc. vs. State of Haryana & Ors., etc.
etc. [AIR 1975 SC 613] it was held that the power of
appointment of persons to be District Judges is vested in
the Governor of the State under Article 233. The words
"posting and promotion of district judge" in Article 233
mean initial appointment by direct recruitment of persons to
be district judges and the posting mentioned therein the
initial posting. Promotion of district judges has been
explained to mean promotion of persons to be district
judges. In All India Judges Association case(supra) this
Court no doubt held: "The judicial service is not service
in the sense of ’employment’. The judges are not employees.
As members of the judiciary, they exercise the sovereign
judicial power of the State. They are holders of public
offices in the same way as the members of the council of
ministers and the members of the legislature. When it is
said that in a democracy such as ours, the executive, the
legislature and the judiciary constitute the three pillars
of the State, what is intended to be conveyed is that the
three essential functions of the State are entrusted to the
three organs of the State and each one of them in turn
represents the authority of the State. However, those who
exercise the State power are the ministers, the legislatures
and the judges, and not the members of their staff who
implement or assist in implementing their decisions. The
council of ministers or the political executive is different
from the secretarial staff or the administrative executive
which carries out the decisions of the political executive.
Similarly, the legislators are different from the
legislative staff. So also the Judges from the judicial
staff. The parity is between the political executive, the
legislators and the Judges and not between the Judges and
the administrative executive. In some democracies like the
U.S.A., members of some State judiciaries are elected as
much as the members of the legislature and the heads of the
State. The Judges, at whatever level they may be, represent
the State and its authority unlike the administrative
executive or the members of the other services. The members
of the other services, therefore, cannot be placed on par
with the members of the judiciary, either constitutionally
or functionally.
This distinction between the Judges and the members of
the other services has to be constantly kept in mind for yet
another important reason. Judicial independence cannot be
secured by making mere solemn proclamations about it. It
has to be secured both in substance and in practice. It is
trite to say that those who are in want cannot be free.
Self-reliance is the foundation of independence. The
society has a stake in ensuring the independence of the
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judiciary, and no price is too heavy to secure it. To keep
the judges in want of the essential accoutrements and thus
to impede them in the proper discharge of their duties is to
impair and whittle away justice itself."
But it has to be kept in mind that in the same
judgment this Court considered the powers under Article 309
of the Constitution authorising the executive and the
legislative to prescribe the service conditions of the
judiciary, however, rejecting the contention that in that
regard judiciary did not have any say in the matter. It was
held: "In view of the separation of the powers under the
Constitution, and the need to maintain the independence of
the judiciary to protect and promote democracy and the rule
of law, it would have been ideal if the most dominant power
of the executive and the legislative over the judiciary,
viz., that of determining its service conditions had been
subjected to some desirable checks and balances. This is so
even if ultimately, the service conditions of the judiciary
have to be incorporated in and declared by the legislative
enactments. But the mere fact that Art.309 gives power to
the executive and the legislature to prescribe the service
conditions of the judiciary does not mean that the judiciary
should have no say in the matter. It would be against the
spirit of the Constitution to deny any rule to the judiciary
in that behalf, for theoretically it would not be impossible
for the executive or the legislature to turn and twist the
tail of the judiciary by using the said power. Such a
consequence would be against one of the seminal mandates of
the Constitution, namely, to maintain the independence of
the judiciary."
It may be noticed that the All India Judges
Association had filed Writ Petition (C) No.1022/89 in this
Court praying therein: "1. Uniformirty in the Judicial
cadres in the different States and Union Territories;
2. An appropriate enhanced uniform age of retirement
for the Judicial Officers throughout the country;
3. Uniform pay scales as far as possible to be fixed;
4. Residential accommodation to be provided to every
Judicial Officer.
5. Transport facility to be made available and
conveyance allowance provided.
6. Adequate perks by way of Library Allowance,
Residential Office Allowance, and Sumptuary Allowance to be
provided.
7. Provision for inservice training to be made."
Upon consideration of various aspects including the
reports of the Law Commission, this Court recommended and
directed that: "(i) An all India Judicial Service should be
set up and the Union of India should take appropriate steps
in this regard.
(ii) Steps should be taken to bring about uniformity
in designation of officers both in civil and criminal side
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by 31.3.1993.
(iii) Retirement age of judicial officers be raised to
60 years and appropriate steps are to be taken by
31.12.1992.
(iv) As and when the Pay Commissions/Committees are
set up in the States and Union Territories, the question of
appropriate pay scales of judicial officers be specifically
referred and considered.
(v) A working library at the residence of every
judicial officer has to be provided by 30.6.1992. Provision
for sumptuary allowance as stated has to be made.
(vi) Residential accommodation to every judicial
officer has to be provided and until State accommodation is
available, Government should provide requisitioned
accommodation for them in the manner indicated by
31.12.1992. In providing residential accommodation,
availability of an office room should be kept in view.
(vii) Every District Judge and Chief Judicial
Magistrate should have a State vehicle. Judicial officers
in sets of 5 should have a pool vehicle and others would be
entitled to suitable loans to acquire two wheeler
automobiles within different time limits as specified.
(viii) Inservice Institute should be set up within one
year at the Central and State or Union Territory level."
It may be remembered that the recommendations and
directions were issued by the Court in a writ petition in
which no objection was raised regarding the competence of
the State to enact laws and make rules under Article 309 of
the Constitution. In exercise of its powers under Article
32 of the Constitution this Court was clothed with the
authority and powers vesting in it under Articles 141 and
142 of the Constitution. The judgment in All India Judges
Association case decided that the issuance of directions by
the Court did not have the effect of encroaching upon the
powers of the executive and the legislature under Article
309 of the Constitution. The Court referred to the
recommendations of the Law Commission made in the year 1958
and observed that the said recommendations had been made to
improve the system of justice and thereby to improve the
content and quality of justice administered by the Courts.
It was noted that "instead of improving, they have
deteriorated making it necessary to update and better them
to meet the needs of the present times". It was
specifically held: "By giving directions in question, this
Court has only called upon the executive and the legislature
to implement their imperative duties. The Court do issue
directions to the authorities to perform their obligatory
duties whenever there is a failure on their part to
discharge them. The power to issue such mandates in proper
cases belongs to the Courts. As has been pointed out in the
judgment under review, this Court was impelled to issue the
said directions firstly because the executive and the
legislature had failed in their obligations in that behalf.
Secondly, the judiciary in this country is a unified
institution judicially though not administratively. Hence
uniform designations and hierarchy, with uniform service
conditions are unavoidable necessary consequences. The
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further directions given, therefore, should not be looked
upon as an encroachment on the powers of the executive and
the legislature to determine the service conditions of the
judiciary. They are directions to perform the long overdue
obligatory duties.
The contention that the directions of this Court
supplant and bypass the constitutionally permissible modes
for change in the law, we think, wears thin if the true
nature and character of the directions are realised. The
directions are essentially for the evolvement of an
appropriate national policy by the Government in regard to
the judiciarys condition. The directions issued are mere
aids and incidental to and supplemental of the main
direction and as a transitional measure till a comprehensive
national policy is evolved. These directions, to the extent
they go, are both reasonable and necessary."
In Hari Datt Dainthla & Anr. vs. State of Himachal
Pradesh & Ors. [AIR 1980 SC 1426] this Court held:
"Article 233 confers power on the Governor of the State to
appoint persons either by direct recruitment or by promotion
from amongst those in the judicial service as District
Judges but this power is hedged in with the condition that
it can be exercised by the Governor in consultation with the
High Court. In order to make this consultation meaningful
and purposive the Governor has to consult High Court in
respect of appointment of each person as District Judge
which includes an Additional District Judge and the opinion
expressed by the High Court must be given full weight.
Article 235 invests control over subordinate courts
including the officers manning subordinate courts as well as
the ministerial staff attached to such courts in the High
Court. Therefore, when promotion is to be given to the post
of District Judge from amongst those belonging to
subordinate judicial service, the High Court unquestionably
will be competent to decide whether a person is fit for
promotion and consistent with its decision to recommend or
not to recommend such person. The Governor who would be
acting on the advice of the Minister would hardly be in a
position to have intimate knowledge about the quality and
qualification of such person for promotion. Similarly when
a person is to be directly recruited as a District Judge
from the Bar the reasons for attaching full weight to the
opinion of the High Court for its recommendation in case of
subordinate judicial service would mutatis mutandis apply
because the performance of a member of the Bar is better
known to the High Court than the Minister or the Governor.
In Chandra Mohan v. State of Uttar Pradesh (1967) 1 SCR 77
at p.83 (AIR 1966 SC 1987), a Constitution Bench of this
Court observed as under:
"The constitutional mandate is clear. The exercise of
the power of appointment by the Governor is conditioned by
his consultation with the High Court, that is to say, he can
only appoint a person to the post of District Judge in
consultation with the High Court. The object of
consultation is apparent. The High Court is expected to
know better than the Governor in regard to the suitability
or otherwise of a person, belonging either to the ’judicial
service’ or to the Bar, to be appointed as a District Judge.
Therefore, a duty is enjoined on the Governor to make the
appointment in consultation with a body which is the
appropriate authority to give advice to him."
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This view was reaffirmed in Chandramouleshwar Prasad
v. Patna High Court (1970) 2 SCR 666: (AIR 1970 SC 270),
observing:
"The High Court is the body which is intimately
familiar with the efficiency and quality of officers who are
fit to be promoted as District Judges. The High Court alone
knows their merits as also demerits."
It was further held that in the absence of statutory
rules regulating the promotions from one post in subordinate
judicial service to higher post in the same service, the
High Court would be the sole authority to decide the
question in exercise of its control under Article 235 which
empowers the High Court with complete control over the
subordinate courts. The existence of this control
comprehends the power to decide eligibility for promotion
from one post in the subordinate judicial service to higher
post in the same service except where one reaches the stage
of giving promotion when Article 233 would be attracted and
the power to give promotion would be in Governor hedged in
with the condition that the Governor can act after
consultation with the High Court which has been understood
to mean on the recommendation of the High Court. If the
High Court felt that the post of District Judge being a very
responsible post should be filled up by promotion only on
merits, it is incumbent upon it to propose necessary rules
and get them enacted under Article 309. In Chandra Mohan
vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. [1967 (1) SCR 77] this
Court held that the Constitution contemplates an independent
judiciary in the States and in order to place the
independence of the subordinate judiciary beyond question,
provides, in Article 50 of the Directive Principles for the
separation of the judiciary from the executive and secures
such independence by enacting Articles 233 to 237 in Chapter
VI of the Constitution. Under these Articles the
appointment of the District Judges in any State are to be
made by the Governor of the State, from the two sources,
namely, : (i) service of the Union or of the State and (ii)
members of the Bar. The words "service of the Union or of
the State" do not mean any other service of the Union or the
State except the judicial service as defined in Article
236(b) of the Constitution. This Court specifically held:
"Appointments of persons to be, and the posting and
promotion of, district judges in any state shall be made by
the Governor of the State. There are two sources of
recruitment, namely, (i) service of the Union or of the
State, and (ii) members of the Bar. The said judges from
the first source are appointed in consultation with the High
Court and those from the second source are appointed on the
recommendation of the High Court. But in the case of
appointments of persons to the judicial service other than
as district judges, they will be made by the Governor of the
State in accordance with rules framed by him in consultation
with the High Court and the Public Service Commission. But
the High Court has control over all the district courts and
courts subordinate thereto, subject to certain prescribed
limitations.
So far there is no dispute. But the real conflict
rests on the question whether the Governor can appoint as
district judges persons from services other than the
judicial service; that is to say, can he appoint a person
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who is in the police, excise, revenue or such other service
as a district judge? The acceptance of this position would
take us back to the pre-independence days and that too to
the conditions prevailing in the Princely States. In the
Princely States one used to come across appointments to the
judicial service from police and other departments. This
would also cut across the well-knit scheme of the
Constitution and the principle underlying it, namely, the
judiciary shall be an independent service. Doubtless, if
Art.233(1) stood alone, it may be argued that the Governor
may appoint any person as a district judge, whether legally
qualified or not, if he belongs to any service under the
State. But Art.233(1) is nothing more than a declaration of
the general power of the Governor in the matter of
appointment of district judges. It does not lay down the
qualifications of the candidates to be appointed or denote
the sources from which the recruitment has to be made. But
the sources of recruitment are indicated in cl.(2) thereof.
Under cl.(2) of Art.233 two sources are given, namely, (i)
persons in the service of the Union or of the State, and
(ii) advocate or pleader. Can it be said that in the
context of Ch.VI of Part VI of the Constitution, ’the
service of the Union or of the State’ means any service of
the Union or of the State or does it mean the judicial
service of the Union or of the State? The setting, viz.,
the chapter dealing with subordinate courts, in which the
expression the service appears indicates that the service
mentioned therein is the service pertaining to courts. That
apart, Art.236(b) defines the expression judicial service
to mean a service consisting exclusively of persons intended
to fill the post of district judge and other civil judicial
posts inferior to the post of district judge. If this
definition, instead of appearing in Art.236, is placed as a
clause before Art.233(2), there cannot be any dispute that
’the service’ in Art.233(2) can only mean the judicial
service. The circumstances that the definition of ’judicial
service’ finds a place in a subsequent Article does not
necessarily lead to a contrary conclusion. The fact that in
Art.233(2) the expression ’the service’ is used whereas in
Art.234 and 235 the expression ’judicial service’ is found
is not decisive of the question whether the expression ’the
service’ in Art.233(2) must be something other than the
judicial service, for, the entire chapter is dealing with
the judicial service. The definition is exhaustive of the
service. Two expressions in the definition bring out the
idea that the judicial service consists of hierarchy of
judicial officers starting from the lowest and ending with
district judges. The expressions ’exclusively’ and
’intended’ emphasise the fact that the judicial service
consists only of persons intended to fill up the posts of
district judges and other civil judicial posts and that is
the exclusive service of judicial officers. Having defined
’judicial service’ in exclusive terms, having provided for
appointments to that service and having entrusted the
control of the said service to the care of the High Court,
the makers of the world Constitution not have conferred a
blanket power on the Governor to appoint any person from any
service as a district judge.
Reliance is placed upon the decision of this court in
Rameshwar Dayal v. State of Punjab (1961) 2 SCR 874 in
support of the contention that the service in Art.233(2)
means any service under the State. The question in that
case was, whether a person whose name was on the roll of
advocates of the East Punjab High Court could be appointed
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as a district judge. In the course of the judgment S.K.
Das, J., speaking for the Court, observed:
"Article 233 is a self contained provision regarding
the appointment of District Judges. As to a person who is
already in the service of the Union or of the State, no
special qualifications are laid down and under cl.(1) the
Governor can appoint such a person as a district judge in
consultation with the relevant High Court. As to a person
not already in service, a qualification is laid down in
cl.(2) and all that is required is that he should be an
advocate or pleader of seven years standing."
This passage is nothing more than a summary of the
relevant provisions. The question whether the service in
Art.233(2) is any service of the Union or of the State did
not arise for consideration in that case nor did the Court
express any opinion thereon.
We, therefore, construe the expression the service
in cl.(2) of Art.233 as the judicial service."
There is no dispute that the power under Article 309
conferred upon the legislature and the executive is subject
to the opening words of the Article. The legislature and
the executive cannot enact any law or make any rule which is
in violation of any other provision of the Constitution. If
any law or rule is made contravening any other provision of
the Constitution including Articles 14, 15, 16, 19, 124,
217, 233, 234, and 235, such law or rule shall be void.
This Article, however, does not debar the legislature or the
executive to make provision with respect to the matters
which are not in the covered field of other provisions of
the Constitution. Various provisions of the Constitution
including Part III Chapter VI, Part XIV Chapter I and Part
XI Chapter I read with Seventh Schedule are to be read
conjointly and interpreted harmoniously to make the various
organs of the State function in their respective fields
subject to limitations imposed by the Constitution itself
including the power of the courts of judicial review. It
cannot, therefore, be accepted that the judicial service is
such an independent service which deprives the State
Legislature and the executive to enact laws and make rules
with respect to matters mentioned in Article 309 but not
covered under Articles 233 to 236 of the Constitution. The
provisions of Part III Chapter VI and Part XIV Chapter I
have to be understood as complementary and supplementary to
each other. Exercise of power under Article 309 is further
curtailed by the constitutional mandate that no law be
enacted and rule made which in any way affects the working
of independent judiciary in the country. Such principles
shall, however, be not applicable in the case of higher
judiciary constituted and established under Part V Chapter
IV and Part VI Chapter V. The Supreme Court of India and
the High Courts in the country are the creation of the
Constitution and the judges presiding over such courts,
constitutional functionaries. The higher judiciary,
therefore, cannot be equated with the "public services"
contemplated under Part XIV Chapter I of the Constitution.
The conditions of eligibility for appointment to the Supreme
Court are such conditions as are prescribed under Article
124 of the Constitution and for the High Court as prescribed
under Article 217 of the Constitution. These conditions, if
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allowed to be amended, modified or substituted by way of
legislation in terms of Article 309 of the Constitution,
would render the Union and the State judiciary defunct
which, may amount to clipping its wings resulting in the
destruction of independence of the higher judiciary as
contemplated by the Constitution framers. The conditions
for appointment of judges to the Supreme Court and the High
Courts may not be amendable even by a constitutional
amendment as the same is likely to tamper with the Indian
judiciary and thereby adversely affect the basic features of
the Constitution. The Constitution envisages a single
judiciary, uniformity in Fundamental laws, civil and
criminal, and a common All India Service to man important
posts. Speaking on the nature of the constitutional scheme
Dr.Ambedkar in his speech delivered on November 4, 1948 in
the Constituent Assembly had said: "A dual judiciary, a
duality of legal codes and a duality of civil services, as I
said, are the logical consequences of a dual polity which is
inherent in a federation. In the USA, the Federal Judiciary
and the State Judiciary are separate and independent of each
other. The Indian Federation though a Dual Policy has no
Dual Judiciary at all. The High Courts and the Supreme
Court form one single integrated Judiciary having
jurisdiction and providing remedies in all cases arising
under the constitutional law, the civil law or the criminal
law. (Constitutent Assembly Debates. Vol.7 (1948-49) at
pp.34,36-37)."
This Court in S.P. Gupta’s case (Supra) held that:
"An analysis of the various provisions of the Constitution
and other laws having a bearing on the question shows that
every High Court in India is an integral part of a single
Indian judiciary and judges who hold the posts of judges of
High Courts belong to a single family even though there may
be a slight variation in two of the authorities who are
required to be consulted at the time of the appointment.
The provisions dealing with the High Courts are found in
Chapter V in Part VI of the Constitution containing
provisions governing the States and the salaries of the
judges of a High Court are paid out of the funds of the
State or States over which it exercises jurisdiction. Yet
it is difficult to say that each High Court is independent
of the other High Courts. A perusal of the other provisions
in that Chapter shows that the State Legislatures and the
State Governments have very little to do so far as the
organisation of the High Courts is concerned."
Judges of the High Court do not constitute a single
All India Cadre or a ’judicial service’ which could be
subjected to the Legislature in terms of Article 309 of the
Constitution. While dealing with the High Court Judges
Transfer case, Bhagwati, J. (as His Lordship then was) held
that: "....the judiciary should be in a country like India
which is marching along the road to social justice with the
banner of democracy and the rule of law, for the principle
of independence of the judiciary is not an abstract
conception but it is a living faith which must derive its
inspiration from the constitutional charter and its
nourishment and sustenance from the constitutional values.
It is necessary for every Judge to remember constantly and
continually that our Constitution is not a non-aligned
rational charter. It is a document of social revolution
which casts an obligation on every instrumentality including
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the judiciary, which is a separate but equal branch of the
State, to transform the status quo ante into a new human
order in which justice, social, economic and political will
inform all institutions of national life and there will be
equality of status and opportunity for all. The judiciary
has, therefore, a socio- economic destination and a creative
function. It has to use the words of Glanville Austin, to
become an arm of the socio-economic revolution and perform
an active role calculated to bring social justice within the
reach of the common man. It cannot remain content to act
merely as an umpire but it must be functionally involved in
the goal of socio-economic justice". In these appeals, even
the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellants
has not tried to compare or equate the subordinate judiciary
with the distinct and independent higher judiciary
comprising of the judges of Supreme Court and the High
Courts. The apprehension expressed on behalf of the
respondents that if allowed to enact laws like the impugned
Bihar Act, the Union Legislature may by law or amendment of
the Constitution provide reservations in the higher
judiciary with the object of controlling it and thereby
demolishing the independence of judicary, is thus apparently
misconceived besides being far-fetched. In the present
appeals, it is conceded before us by all the parties
concerned that appointments to the posts of District Judges
are governed by the Bihar Superior Judicial Service Rules,
1951 (hereinafter referred to as "1951 Rules") which have,
admittedly, been made by the Governor of Bihar in exercise
of powers conferred upon him by the proviso to Article 309
read with Article 233 of the Constitution. Reference to
Article 233 of the Constitution only indicates that before
making the rules the High Court had been consulted. Article
233 of the Constitution itself does not envisage the making
of rules either by the Governor or by the High Court. Rule
5 of the 1951 Rules provides that appointment to the Bihar
Superior Judicial Service shall, in the first instance,
ordinarily be to the post of Additional District & Sessions
Judge and shall be made by the Governor in consultation with
the High Court: "(a) by direct recruitment from among
persons qualified and recommended by the High Court for
appointment under clause (2) of Article 233 of the
Constitution; or
(b) by promotion, from among members of the Bihar
Judicial Service."
Of the Posts in the cadre of the service, 2/3rd are to
be filled by promotion and 1/3rd by direct recruitment. The
State Government may, in consultation with the High Court,
deviate from the said proportion in either direction. Rule
3 read with Schedule provides the sanctioned strength of the
service whereas other provisions relate to promotion, pay,
allowances and seniority. There is no dispute that these
rules have been and are being acted upon till date i.e. for
about half a century. The High Court was, therefore, not
justified in holding that the law made under Article 309
would not apply to the judicial service. If the rules made
by the executive under Article 309 have been applied and
acted upon, no objection could be taken to the sovereign
powers of the legislature to enact and make laws with
respect to the judicial service in exercise of its power
under first part of Article 309 of the Constitution. It is
also admitted that for appointments to the posts in the
judicial service other than the District Judges, the State
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Governor, in exercise of his powers conferred upon him under
Article 234 of the Constitution, after consultation with the
High Court of Judicature at Patna and the Bihar Public
Service Commission has made the rules called as "Bihar
Judicial Service (Recruitment) Rules, 1955" (hereinafter
referred to as "1955 Rules"). Rule 2 of the said Rules
provides that the recruitment to the post of munsiff shall
be made in accordance with the rules and recruitment to the
post of subordinate judge shall be made by the High Court by
promotion of munsiffs confirmed under Rule 24 and appointed
under Rule 26. Rule 3 authorises the Governor to decide in
each year the number of vacancies in the post of munsiff to
be filled by appointments to be made on a substantive basis
or on a temporary basis or both. The Bihar Public Service
Commission is obliged to announce in each year in such
manner as they think fit the number of vacancies to be
filled in that year by direct recruitment on the basis of a
competitive examination for which applications are required
to be invited from candidates eligible for appointments
under the rules. The Commission has the power to fix the
limit in any particular year as to the eligibility of the
candidates to be admitted to the written examination and if
the number of candidates exceeds to the limit fixed, the
Commission may make a preliminary selection of candidates to
be admitted to the written examination, on the basis of
their academic records. No candidate of the Scheduled
Castes or the Scheduled Tribes who is otherwise eligible
under the Rules can be excluded from appearing at the
written examination. Rules 6 provides: "6. A candidate
may be of either sex, and must - (a) be under 31 years and
over 22 years of age on the 1st day of August preceding the
year in which the examination is held:
Provided that a candidate belonging to a Scheduled
Caste or a Scheduled Tribe must be under 36 years and over
22 years of age on the said date:
Provided further that no candidate who does not belong
to a Scheduled Caste or a Scheduled Tribe shall be allowed
to take more than five chances at the examination;
(b) be a graduate in Law of a University recognised by
the Governor or a Barrister-at-Law or a member of the
faculty of advocates in Scotland, or an Attorney on the
rolls of a High Court, or possess other educational
qualifications which the Governor may, after consultation
with the High Court and the Commissions, decide to be
equivalent to those prescribed above; and
(c) be a practitioner at the Bar of at least one
years continuous standing on the date of the
advertisement."
Rule 6A provides that no person who has more than one
wife living shall be eligible for appointment to the
service. Rule 7 provides that a candidate must be of sound
health, good physique and active habits and free from any
physical defect likely to interfere with the efficient
performance of the duties of a member of the Service. With
his application a candidate is required to submit the
required documents as detailed in Rule 9. The examination
is to be held according to syllabus specified in Appendix C
to the Rules which are liable to alteration from time to
time by the Government after consultation with the High
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Court and the Commission. The Commission has the discretion
to fix the qualifying marks in any or all subjects at the
written examination in consultation with the Patna High
Court. The minimum qualifying marks for candidates
belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes shall not
be higher than 35 per cent unless the number of such persons
at the written examination according to the standards
applied for other candidates is considerably in excess of
the number of candidates required to fill the vacancies
reserved for the Scheduled Casts and the Scheduled Tribes.
the Commission is obliged to consult the Chief Justice of
the High Court in the matter of selection of examiners for
the Law papers prescribed for the written examination.
Viva-voce test of the candidates is to be held under Rule
17. The Chief Justice is authorised to appoint an officer
to represent the High Court at the viva-voce test. Rule 20
provides that Commission shall, while submitting the
recommendations, consider the claims of qualified candidates
belonging to the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes.
If the list of nominees submitted under Rule 19 does not
contain an adequate number of candidates belonging to the
Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes, the Commission
shall submit a supplementary list nominating a sufficient
number of such candidates as in their opinion attain the
required standard of qualifications and are in all respect
suitable for appointment to the service. It has been
conceded before us that to give effect to Rule 20 of the
Rules, the Commission and the High Court have been acting
upon the Government orders issued from time to time making
reservations to the extent of 24% in favour of the Scheduled
Castes and the Scheduled Tribes. It is undisputed that the
1955 Rules were made strictly in accordance with the
requirement of Article 234 of the Constitution after proper
consultation with the High Court and the Public Service
Commission. It appears that the controversy arose only when
the State Government insisted to make reservations in the
Superior Judicial Service which was vehemently resisted by
the High Court. The facts disclosed in the appeal entitled
State of Bihar vs. Deepak Singh & Ors. indicate that on
30.1.1991 the State Government consented the High Court and
Bihar Public Service Commission regarding making
reservations in the judicial service. The Public Service
Commission vide its letter No. 112 dated 30.1.1991
communicated its consent regarding the proposed amendment in
the Bihar Judicial Service (Recruitment) Rules, 1955.
However, the High Court vide Memo No.5999 dated 16.4.1991
informed the Government that "the court, in the interests of
judiciary, is unable to agree to the proposal of the State
Government". The aforesaid letters exchanged between the
State Government, High Court and Public Service Commission
obviously indicate that the State Government had intended to
amend the rules already framed in exercise of the powers
vesting in the Governor under Article 234 of the
Constitution. In view of the resistance of the High Court,
being one of the consultees in terms of Article 234, the
State of Bihar opted to promulgate an Ordinance called "The
Bihar Reservation of Vacancies in Posts and Services (for
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward
Classes) Ordinance,1991" under Article 213 of the
Constitution. The aforesaid Ordinance was thereafter
substituted by the Bihar Act No.3 of 1992 which was enforced
with immediate effect except Section 4 which was declared to
have come into force with effect from 1st November, 1994.
The Reservation Ordinance was challenged in C.W.J.C.
No.7619/91. The validity of letter dated 1.10.1990 whereby
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directions were issued to the effect that the vacancies of
24th Judicial Competitive Examination shall be filled in
accordance with the said Ordinance were also challenged.
During the pendency of the aforesaid writ petition, the
Ordinance was replaced by an Act No.3 of 1992. The High
Court allowed the writ petition vide the order impugned in
this appeal holding that the impugned Ordinance/Act as also
the letter dated 1.10.1990. In so far as its applicability
to the State is concerned, it was ultra vires and contrary
to the mandate of Article 234 of the Constitution.
Similarly the facts revealed in Civil Appeal No.9072/96
indicate that when on 13.10.1993 the State Government
decided to fill up the vacancies of Additional District
Judges through fresh advertisement as per directions, the
State Government on 16.11.1993 requested the High Court to
send the vacancies categorywise in accordance with the
provisions of Act of 1991. On 16.12.1993 the High Court
informed the State Government that fresh advertisement be
issued under Rule 5(a) and 6 of the 1951 Rules. It was
further recommended that for eligibility the minimum age of
the applicants be 35 years and maximum 50 year. The
Government was further informed by the High Court that the
1991 Act will neither be applicable nor followed in the
matter of direct recruitment from the Bar. No preference be
given to any person on the basis of caste, religion and sex.
On 4.1.1994 the High Court was informed by the Government
that the provisions of the Act of 1991 will also be
applicable to the appointments in the Superior Judicial
Service in the State of Bihar. The High Court was requested
to send the vacancies reservation- wise. On 25.2.1994, the
High Level Meeting under the Chairmanship of the Chief
Secretary to the Government of Bihar was held in which the
Secretary (Law) and Registrar of the High Court also
participated. In this meeting a request was made to the
High Court to send upto date vacancies in accordance with
the Reservation Act as the non compliance was apprehended to
lead to an offence under the Act. The High Court on 5th
April, 1994 reiterated its position and vide it letter
addressed to the Additional Secretary to the Government of
Bihar intimated: "With reference to your above mentioned
letter on the subject noted above, I am directed to say that
the State Government has already been informed about the
resolution adopted by the Court that in the matter of
appointment of Additional District and Sessions Judge direct
from the Bar, merit would be the sole criteria and no
preference will be given to any candidate on the basis of
caste, religion or sex. The resolution adopted by the Court
does further state that without accepting the provision of
the Bihar Reservation of Vacancy in Posts and Services (for
Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes and other Backward
Classes) Act, 1991, the Court are always prepared to give
preference to a candidate belonging to the Scheduled Caste
or Scheduled Tribe, provided that he is found to be of equal
merit with other candidates.
It needs to be appreciated that the post of Additional
District and Sessions Judge, in the Superior Judicial
Service, carries with it a greater responsibility in the
matter of administration of justice. The post demands that
the holder of the post should be a person of appreciable
merit and requisite calibre to perform the functions of a
Senior Judicial Officer."
On 1.9.1994, the High Court again intimated to the
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State Government of its position. It is to be noticed that
before this date the State Government had issued
advertisement on 16.6.1994 inviting applications for
recruitment of Additional District and Sessions Judge from
the Bar reserving post for the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes, backward classes, etc. to the extent of
the limits prescribed under the Reservation Act. Aggrieved
by the advertisement/notification respondents Advocates
filed the writ petition seeking a declaration that the
provisions of the Reservation Act were void and inoperative
insofar as they relate to the Bihar Superior Judicial
Service. The aforesaid writ petition was disposed of vide
the judgment impugned in this appeal. It is thus evident
that having failed to get the consent of the High Court in
framing the Rules either under Article 234 or Article 309
read with Article 233 of the Constitution, resort was had to
the issuance of Ordinance and thereafter enacting the
impugned Act. This unfortunate position arose on account of
the antagonistic and belligerent approaches adopted by the
State Government and the High Court. Had the aforesaid two
wings of the State acted fairly realising their obligations
under the Constitution, the confrontation could have been
avoided. Such a recourse was depricated by this Court in
B.S. Yadavs case (supra) observing "this unfortunate
position has arisen largely because of the failure of the
State Governments to take the High Court into confidence
while amending the Rules of Service. We must express our
concern at the manner in which the Rules of the Superior
Judicial Service have been amended by the Governor of Punjab
and particularly by the Governor of Haryana". In that case
the Rules had been amended despite the opposition of the
High Court and amendment in Haryana was made in order to
spite a single judicial officer who was a direct recruit.
Both the State Government and the Patna High Court failed to
realise their constitutional obligations in the matter of
public service. The insistence of the State Government
could have been substituted by persuations and antagonism by
the High Court could have been avoided by adopting rational
approach realising the responsibility of the State of the
constitutional obligations mandating them to make
reservations in favour of the weaker sections of the
society. It cannot be denied that the Reservation Policy
has been accepted to be a part of the Indian Parliamentary
Democracy as a safeguarding measure to protect the interests
of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Reservations
have been made in the Constitution to safeguard the
interests of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes keeping
in mind the proportions of their population. It cannot be
denied that such weaker sections of the society have been
subjected to decades of exploitation, persecution and
discrimination by the hostile dominating classes, having
been kept outside the sphere of the mainstream for centuries
and deprived of their due share in the polity of the State.
They were acknowledged to be given a special treatment under
the Constitution. The reservation on the basis of the caste
has a long history in our country. Good or bad the
reservation being the part of the Constitution, the High
Court should not have adopted an adamant attitude of totally
refusing to concede to the request of the State Government
for making reservations for the weaker sections of the
society. The hostility between two wings of the State have
not, in any way, strengthened the democratic set up nor has
it benefitted any section of the Society or institution. It
is to be noticed that the reservations made by the impugned
Act were not challenged on the ground of being either
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violative of Fundamental Rights or contrary to the other
provisions of the Constitution, except to the extent noticed
hereinabove. Relying upon judgment in K.N. Chandra Sekhara
& Ors.v. State of Mysore (AIR 1963 Mysore 292) and M.I.
Nadaf vs. The State of Mysore (AIR 1967 Mysore 77) the High
Court vide the order impugned in Deepak Kumars case held:
"Article 234 directs the appointment of persons to certain
cadres of the judicial service of the State only in
accordance with the Rules made under that Article and which
appoints the Governor of the State, the authority to make
these rules after consultation with the High Court and the
Public Service Commission. It is manifest from Article 234
of the Constitution that the constitutional intent was that
appointments to the judicial services in a State, unlike
other State services, should be regulated only by rules made
under that Article and not by a law made by the Legislature
of the State, which was conferred power by Article 309 to
make laws for recruitment to other services. The judicial
service was selected for special treatment and appointments
to it were excepted out of the operation of Article 309, and
out of the orbit of ordinary Legislative Control. Article
234 incorporates a command of the Constitution on the
subject of appointments to the cadres of the judicial
service referred to in it and constitutes the Governor in a
sense a select Legislative organ for the enactment of rules
for the accomplishment of the Constitutional purpose. The
status of the rules so enacted is as high as that of a law
made by the Legislature under Article 309 and of the rules
made under the proviso to it. The attributes of a Governor
to enact rules under Article 234 therefore resemble those of
a Legislature enacting legislation in its own legislative
field. The similitude between the power of the Legislature
and the power of the Governor being so obvious, it is clear
that the bounds of permissible delegation in each case
should also be similar."
It cannot be disputed that the judicial service has
been given a special treatment under the Constitution and
the appointments to the judicial service can be made only in
accordance with the rules made by the Governor under Article
234 after consultation with the State Public Service
Commission and the High Court exercising jurisdiction in
relation to such State. It follows, therefore, that the
Governor or the executive have no right, power or authority
to make rules with respect to the recruitment of persons
other than the District Judges to the judicial service of
the State under Article 309 of the Constitution. Rules
governing the service conditions of such persons in the
judicial service can be made by the Governor only in the
manner as prescribed under Article 234 of the Constitution.
It is, however, difficult to accept the finding of the High
Court that the status of the Rules enacted under Article 234
of the Constitution is as high as that of law made by the
legislature under Article 309. It cannot be accepted that
the attributes of a Governor to enact Rules under Article
234 resemble those of a legislature enacting legislation in
its own legislative field and have overriding effect. The
power of the legislature to make law regulating the
recruitment and conditions of service for persons appointed
to public services and posts in connection with the affairs
of Union or of any State under Article 309 of the
Constitution is only subject to the other provisions of
Constitution which have been noticed hereinbefore. Rules
made under the delegated legislation cannot be termed to be
such other provisions of the Constitution. It is not only
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Article 234 which confers power upon the Governor to make
Rules in the manner prescribed but various other provisions
including Article 309 which authorise him to make rules for
the purposes envisaged and the restrictions and restraints
imposed by the Constitution itself. It is settled position
of law that the Legislature cannot part with its essential
legislative function. A surrender of such essential
function would amount to abdication of legislative powers in
the eyes of law. No rule or law made by virtue of delegated
legislation can supersede or override the powers exercised
or the law made by the delegator of power, the sovereign
legislative, in exercise of its constitutional right with
respect to a matter or subject over which it has otherwise
plenary power of legislation. In Re: Article 143,
Constitution of India and Delhi Laws Act (1912) etc. [AIR
1951 SC 332], Kania, CJ, after dealing with various cases of
foreign courts found that the Indian Legislature had plenary
powers to legislate on the subjects falling within its
powers under the Constitution. He further observed, "every
power given to a delegate can be normally called back.
There can hardly be a case where this cannot be done because
the legislative body which confers powers on the delegate
has always the power to revoke that authority and it appears
difficult to visualise a situation in which such power can
be irrevocably lost". Referring to the constitutional
scheme in this country, Kania, CJ held: "Under the new
Constitution of 1950, the British Parliament, i.e. an
outside authority, has no more control over the Indian
Legislature. That Legislatures powers are defined and
controlled and the limitations thereon prescribed only by
the Constitution of India. But the scope of its legislative
power has not become enlarged by the provisions found in the
Constitution of India. While the Constitution creates the
Parliament and although it does not in terms expressly vest
the legislative powers in the Parliament exclusively, the
whole scheme of the Constitution is based on the concept
that the legislative functions of the Union will be
discharged by the Parliament and by no other body. The
essential of the legislative functions, viz., the
determination of the legislative policy and its formulation
as a rule of conduct, are still in the Parliament or the
State Legislature, as the case may be and nowhere else. I
take that view because of the provisions of Article 357 and
Article 22(4) of the Constitution of India. Article 356
provides against the contingency of the failure of the
constitutional machinery in the States. On a proclamation
to that effect being issued, it is provided in Article
357(a) that the power of the legislature of the State shall
be exercisable by or under the authority of the Parliament,
and it shall be competent for the Parliament to confer on
the President the power of the legislature of the State to
make laws "and to authorise the President to delegate,
subject to such conditions as he may think fit to impose,
the powers so conferred to any other authority to be
specified by him in that behalf." Sub-clause (2) runs as
follows:
"For Parliament or for the President or other
authority in whom such authority to make law conferring
powers and imposing duties, or authorising the conferring of
powers and the imposition of duties, upon the Union or
officers and authorities thereof."
It was contended that on the breakdown of such
machinery authority had to be given to the Parliament or the
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President, firstly, to make laws in respect of subjects on
which the State Legislature alone could otherwise make laws
and, secondly, to empower the Parliament or the President to
make the executive officers of the State Government to act
in accordance with the laws which the Parliament or the
President may pass in such emergency. It was argued that
for this purpose the word ’to delegate’ is used. I do not
think this argument is sound. Sub-clause (2) relates to the
power of the President to use the State executive offices.
But under clause (a) Parliament is given power to confer on
the President the power of the ’legislature’ of the State
’to make laws’. Article 357(1)(a) thus expressly gives
power to the Parliament to authorise the President ’to
delegate his legislative powers’. If powers of legislation
include the power of delegation to any authority there was
no occasion to make this additional provisions in the
Article at all. The wording of this clause therefore
supports the contention that normally a power of legislation
does not include the power of delegation."
Fazal Ali, J. on the point relating to the functions
of the Legislature and its authority to delegate held: "The
legislature must normally discharge its primary legislative
function itself and not through others (2) Once it is
established that it has sovereign powers within a certain
sphere, it must follow as a corollary that it is free to
legislate within that sphere in any way which appears to it
to be the best way to give effect to its intention and
policy in making a particular law, and that it may utilize
any outside agency to any extent it finds necessary for
doing things which it is unable to do itself or finds it
inconvenient to do. In other words, it can do everything
which is ancillary to and necessary for the full and
effective exercise of its power of legislation. (3) It
cannot abdicate its legislative functions, and therefore,
while entrusting power to an outside agency, it must see
that such agency acts as a subordinate authority and does
not become a parallel legislature. (4) The doctrine of
separation of powers and the judicial interpretation it has
received in America ever since the American Constitution was
framed, enables the American courts to check undue and
excessive delegation but the Courts of this country are not
committed to that doctrine and cannot apply it in the same
way as it has been applied in America. Therefore, there are
only two main checks in this country on the power of the
legislature to delegate, these being its good sense and the
principle that it should not cross the line beyond which
delegation amounts to abdication and self-effacement’."
Mahajan, J. was of the view that the Parliament being
omnipotent despot, apart from being a legislature
simpliciter, it can, in exercise of its sovereign power
delegate its legislative functions or even create new bodies
conferring on them power to make laws. Whether it exercises
its power of delegation of legislative power in its capacity
as a mere legislature or in its capacity as omnipotent
despot, its actions were not subject to judicial scrutiny.
In the same case Mukherjea, J. held that the legislature
cannot part with its essential legislative function. A
surrender of this essential function would amount to
abdication of its power in the eyes of law. In Hotel Balaji
& Ors., etc. etc. vs. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.,
etc. etc. [AIR 1993 SC 1048] this Court held that
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legislative competence of a legislature to enact a
particular provision in the Act cannot be made to depend
upon the rule or rules, as the case may be, at a given point
of time. Conferment of power upon the Governor to make
rules in the manner prescribed under Article 234 of the
Constitution cannot be interpreted to mean that the
constitutional makers had intended to take away the power of
the legislature, admittedly, conferred upon it under Part XI
Chapter I read with Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
Such an interpretation, if accepted, would be contrary to
the settled principles relating to interpretation of
Statutes. Whereas it is true that the Governor of a State
cannot make rules with respect to subjects covered by
Article 234 in any other manner, (Article 309) it cannot,
however, be accepted that such power of the Governor can be
equated with the sovereign power of the legislature to make
laws with respect to the assigned field. Law making power
of the legislature with respect to judicial service without
encroaching upon the subjects covered by Article 233 to 236
has impliedly been acknowledged by this Court in B.S.
Yadavs Case (supra). The High Court of Mysore in K.N.
Chandra Sekhars case (supra) while referring to Articles
233 and 309 had made certain observations which have been
relied upon by Patna High Court in the impugned judgment.
In that case the High Court of Mysore in fact was not called
upon to decide the issue of the finality of the rules made
under Article 234 of the Constitution in relation to a law
made under Article 309. In the case before Mysore High
Court, the dispute had arisen with respect to the
appointments to the posts of munsiffs in judicial service of
the State of Mysore. The Public Service Commission of the
State conducted a competitive examination under the rules
made for the purposes by the Governor of the State under
Article 234 and proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution.
The candidates who took the examination but did not succeed
challenged the notification of the Public Service Commission
on the ground of its being without lawful authority. The
notification of the Public Service Commission was impeached
on the ground that since the rules did not prescribe the
criterion by which the success of candidates should be
determined, there was no criterion by which the Commission
could have determined whether a candidate has succeeded or
failed and it was not upon the Commission to prescribe for
itself a criterion not found in the rules. The Commission
had applied a formula for ascertaining the names of the
successful candidates by fixing 45% as qualifying marks for
the candidates belonging to Scheduled Caste and Scheduled
Tribes and 55% for others. It was further claimed that
power of the Governor to fix the qualifying marks was
impliedly delegated to the Commission. In that context the
High Court examined Article 234 of the Constitution and
observed: "It is reasonably clear that the purpose of
Article 234 is that the collective wisdom of the Governor,
the High Court and the Public Service Commission should
regulate appointments referred to in that article, and it is
plain that no rule made without the required consultation
can have any effect or potency. It is obvious that within
the range of the many matters requiring such collective
deliberation would fall a multitude of subjects such as the
determination of the question whether the appointments
should be made on the basis of an examination, and if so, of
what pattern, the selection of the subjects in which the
candidates should be examined, the determination of the
qualifying and maximum marks, the appointment of the
authority to conduct the examination, the qualifications and
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disqualifications of the candidates and the like."
It further held:
"If, on its true construction, Art.234 does not
require that standard to be specified or formulated by a
rule, then alone, could it be said that the Governor could
delegate that function to another. That article is a
special constitutional provision removing from the
provisions of Art.309 certain appointments to the judiciary
and enjoining the Governor to make them in accordance with
rules enacted in consultation with the High Court and the
Public Service Commission. What are the matters about which
the Governor is required to consult the High Court and the
Public Service Commission. The Public Service Commission,
it is obvious, was required to be consulted in regard to
matters in which it had special competence to offer advice.
The High Court was required to be consulted so that its
advice may be obtained as to how and in what manner the
appointments to a service under its control may be
satisfactorily made."
It was conceded that there was no rule prescribing the
qualifying marks. Nor was the power to determine those
qualifying marks expressly delegated to any legislative
authority. In that case the State had prayed for placing
the construction on Article 320(3) to the effect that the
clause did not require the Governor or the legislature
functioning under Article 309 of the Constitution to consult
the Public Service Commission for determination of the
qualifying marks and that it was open to the legislature or
the Governor, as the case may, to determine and fix those
qualifying marks without such consultation. The court found
that the provisions of Article 320(3) were so comprehensive
which did not admit the interpretation sought for. The
determination of qualifying marks was held to be an integral
part of scheme for an examination because the examination
was the method applied for recruitment for testing the
suitability of candidates to the judicial service. The
Court observed that "the construction suggested by
Mr.Advocate General which makes it possible for the
legislature or the Governor to decline to consult Public
Service Commission on the determination of the qualifying
marks and to that extent diminishes the utility of the
construction and makes it futile and illusory, cannot merit
acceptance". Consultation required under Article 234 was
held to extend to everyone of the matters on which Article
320(3) enjoined consultation. The qualifying marks secured
in a competitive examination prescribed by rules made under
Article 234 shall form the subject matter of consultation by
the governor with the High Court and the Public Service
Commission. While striking down the selection, the Court
held that it shall be open to the Governor to make
appropriate rule determining the qualifying marks and to the
Public Service Commission to conduct another viva-voce
examination in accordance with those Rules. No Act of
legislature made on the subject was in issue warranting
observations made in para 23 of the judgment. Otherwise
also while dealing with Chandra Shekar’s case(supra) Brother
Majmudar,J. has rightly concluded: "Somnath Iyer, J.,
speaking for the Division Bench observed that: ’Article 234
excepts out of the operation of Art.309, appointments to
judicial service and constitutes the Governor in a sense a
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select legislative organ for enactment of rules for the
purpose’. The aforesaid observation will of course have to
be read down in the light of the Constitution Bench decision
of this Court in B.S. Yadav’s case (supra)."
In M.I. Nadafs case(supra) relying on K.N. Chandra
Sekhars case the High Court of Mysore held that the Rules
framed by the Governor under Article 309 of the Constitution
could not override the Rules made by him under Article 234
of the Constitution. The petitioner in that case had relied
upon the Rules framed under proviso to Article 309 of the
Constitution dealing with recruitment generally for the
Mysore State Civil Services whereas specific Rules
pertaining to the judicial service had earlier been framed
under Article 234 of the Constitution. After referring to
K.N. Chandra Sekhars case the Court held: "From a reading
of that decision, it is clear that no rule relating to the
appointment of the persons mentioned in Article 234 of the
Constitution can be validly made by the Governor without
consulting either the High Court or the Public Service
Commission. As seen earlier, the Mysore Munsiffs
(Recruitment) Rules, 1958 prescribed the age limits for the
appointments of the Munsiffs. Rules therein were made by
the Governor under Article 234 of the Constitution in
consultation with the High Court and the Public Service
Commission. Any variation of that rule can only be made
under Article 234 and that in accordance with the
requirements of that Article. As seen earlier "Rules" do
not comply with the requirements of Article 234. That being
so, we are unable to accept the contention of Mr.Javali, the
learned counsel for the petitioner that the age
qualification prescribed under the Munsiffs (Recruitment)
Rules stood modified by rule 6(4)(b) of the "Rules". Our
view that appointments to judicial services of the State
other than that of the District Judges should be made only
in accordance with the rules made by the Governor under
Article 234 of the Constitution after consultation with the
State Public Service Commission and the High Court
exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State and not
under rules framed by him under Article 309 of the
Constitution is also supported by the decision of the Madras
High Court in N.Devasahayam v. State of Madras AIR 1958 Mad
53 and that of the Rajasthan High Court in Rajvi Amar Singh
v. State of Rajasthan AIR 1956 Raj. 104."
It is true that if there is a conflict between the
Rules framed under Article 234 of the Constitution and the
Rules made under Article 309, the latter Rules, in so far as
they relate to Subordinate Judiciary shall be ineffective
and not applicable. However, main Article 309 cannot be
made subject to the provisions of Article 234 except to the
extent indicated in Chapter VI. In other words, the
appropriate legislature would be competent to make laws if
authorised under Chapter XI read with Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution. In case of conflict between the Rules
made under Article 234 and the laws made by the appropriate
legislature, the Rules would give way to the laws made by
the sovereign legislature. Such law made, however, may be
declared invalid or inapplicable to the judicial service if
it in any way undermines the independence of judiciary or
otherwise encroaches upon the constitutional guarantees
under aforesaid Chapter VI or is violative of the
Fundamental Rights. Giving any other interpretation would
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amount to usurping the power of the sovereign legislature.
Such an approach would be nugatory to the concept of
Parliamentary Democracy adopted by the people of India for
their governance. There cannot be two opinions that the
Parliamentary Democracy is one of the basic features of the
Constitution which nobody can alter, modify or substitute
even in exercise of the constitutional powers conferred upon
the Parliament under Article 368 of the Constitution. The
High Court of Patna, therefore, fell in error in holding
that the law made by the sovereign legislature in exercise
of the powers vesting in it under Article 309 or Part XI
read with Seventh Scheduled of the Constitution was not
applicable to the judicial service of the State of Bihar.
From the scheme of the Constitution with particular
reference to Part VI, Chapter VI, Part XIV Chapter I, Part
XI Chapter I and Seventh Schedule of the Constitution what
emerges is that: (i) The constitutional-makers had given a
special status and treatment to the judicial service; (ii)
That the independence of judiciary is ensured which cannot
be interfered with either by an executive action or by an
act of legislature; (iii) That the conditions of service
spelt out in Chapter VI of the Constitution cannot be
altered, modified or substituted either by rule making power
or by legislation made in exercise of the powers under
Article 309 of the Constitution; (iv) Rules made under
Article 234 have primacy in the matter of
appointment/recruitment, discipline and control of the
judicial service and even such rules cannot take away from
persons belonging to the judicial service any right of
appeal which they may have under the law regulating the
conditions of their service or as authorising the High Court
to deal with them otherwise than in accordance with the
conditions of their service prescribed under such law; (v)
The provisions of Chapter VI of Part VI and the powers
conferred upon the appropriate legislature and the Governor
under Article 309 are complementary and supplementary to
each other subject to the conditions of ensuring the
independence of judiciary; (vi) That in case of conflict
between the rules made under Chapter VI and under Article
309, the rules specifically framed under Article 234 of the
Constitution would prevail and the rules made under Article
309, to that extent, shall give in their way; (vii) That
the Parliament or the State Legislature can legislate upon
any matter including the matters relating to the judicial
service provided the legislation is permitted under Part XI,
Chapter I read with Seventh Schedule and is not in conflict
with other provisions of the Constitution and rights
guaranteed in favour of the judicial service by the
Constitution itself under Part VI Chapter VI; (viii) Even
if any law made by the appropriate legislature is held to be
made with plenary power of legislation and not in conflict
with Part VI Chapter VI, being subject to Judicial Review,
it can be challenged if it violates the Fundamental Rights
or any other provision of the Constitution; ix) As in the
case of Rules made under Article 234 of the Constitution, it
is expected that if any rules are intended to be made by the
executive under Article 309 with respect to the judicial
service, the High Court shall be consulted and its views
given due weight while making such rules. It is needless to
say that in the process of consultation, the concerned High
Court shall keep in mind the constitutional obligations of
the State under Part III, Part IV or any other provision of
the Constitution. x) The conclusions enumerated hereinabove
are, however, not applicable to the higher judiciary
constituted and established under Part V Chapter IV and Part
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VI Chapter V of the Constitution. In view of the position
of law as enunciated hereinabove, the findings of the High
Court in the impugned judgment in so far as it holds that
the impugned Act is not applicable to the judicial service
cannot be sustained and is liable to be set aside.
Admittedly, the impugned Act has not been challenged on any
other ground. It is not the case of the respondent that the
Act is violative of any of the Fundamental Rights or in
violation of any constitutional provision or it tampers with
the independence of judiciary. The impugned Act does not in
any way usurp the power of the High Court to make
recommendations for appointment of District Judges and
direct promotions or appointment of persons other than
District Judges to the judicial service. After enacting the
law in accordance with the constitutional provisions, the
selection for appointment of the persons to the judicial
service has been left to the wisdom and at the discretion of
the High Court. The High Court has not in any way been
deprived of making the selection of the best available
candidates if they otherwise fulfil the eligibility criteria
and come within the parameters prescribed by law. Despite
the impugned Act, making reservations, the power of the High
Court in the matter of appointments has not been curtailed
as apprehended. Appointments on the basis of reservation
can be made of only such persons who are found eligible and
recommended by the High Court. The Governor or the
executive cannot appoint any person of their own from the
reserved categories. Once reservations are made, the High
Court is absolutely within its powers to fix the category
and suitability to make selection for recommendation. The
independence of judiciary has not, in any way, been taken
away by the exercise of legitimate powers by the
legislature. By exercise of its power the legislature does
not appear to have interfered with the overall control of
the High Court over the subordinate judiciary. Even though
the appropriate authority to make the appointments is the
Governor, yet the power of the High Court or the
independence of judiciary is not undermined because the
power to make the appointment conferred upon the Governor
has to be exercised by him in consultation with the High
Court. This Court in M.M. Gupta & Ors.v. State of J & K &
Ors. [AIR 1982 SC 1579], after referring to a catena of
authorities, concluded: "We are of the opinion that healthy
convention and proper norms should be evolved in the matter
of these appointments for safeguarding the independence of
the judiciary in conformity with the requirements of the
Constitution. We are of the opinion that normally, as a
matter of rule, recommendations made by High Court for the
appointment of a District Judge should be accepted by the
State Government and the Governor should act on the same.
If in any particular case, the State Government for good and
weighty reasons find it difficult to accept the
recommendations of the High Court, the State Government
should communicate its views to the High Court and the State
Government must have complete and effective consultation
with the High Court in the matter. There can be no doubt
that if the High Court is convinced that there are good
reasons for the objections on the part of the State
Government, the High Court will undoubtedly reconsider the
matter and the recommendations made by the High Court.
Efficient and proper judicial administration being the main
object of these appointments, there should be no difficulty
in arriving at a consensus as both the High Court and the
State Government must necessarily approach the question in a
detached manner for achieving the true objective of getting
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proper District Judges for due administration of justice."
This Court in Indra Sawhney & Ors. vs. Union of
India & Ors. [1992 Supp. (3) SCC 217] has held that
reservation is a remedy for historical discrimination and
its continuing ill-effects. Poverty demands affirmative
action. Its eradication is a constitutional mandate. The
purpose of Article 16(4) is to give adequate representation
in the services of the State to that class which has no
representation. This Articles carves out a particular class
of people and not individuals from the weaker sections and
the class it carves out is the one which does not have
adequate representation in the services of the State.
Pandian J., in his concurring but separate judgment had
observed: "Though ’equal protection’ clause prohibits the
State from making unreasonable discrimination in providing
preferences and facilities for any section of its people,
nonetheless it requires the State to afford substantially
equal opportunities to those, placed unequally.
The basic policy of reservation is to off-set the
inequality and remove the manifest imbalance, the victims of
which for bygone generations lag far behind and demand
equality by special preferences and their strategies.
Therefore, a comprehensive methodological approach
encompassing jurisprudential, comparative, historical and
anthropological conditions is necessary. Such
considerations raise controversial issues transcending the
routine legal exercise because certain social groups who are
inherently unequal and who have fallen victims of
discrimination require compensatory treatment. Needless to
emphasise that equality in fact or substantive equality
involves the necessity of beneficial treatment in order to
attain the result which establishes an equilibrium between
two sections placed unequally."
The majority judgment further held that power of
"State" to make any provision under Article 16(4) does not
necessarily mean that such provision be made only by
Parliament or any State Legislature. Government can also
introduce reservation by executive orders as appears to have
been practised in Bihar also so far as subordinate judicial
service is concerned. As the impugned Act making
reservation in the services including the judicial service
has not been challenged on the grounds of being violative of
Fundamental Rights or in contravention of any constitutional
provision there is no necessity of testing its
constitutional validity on the aforesaid touchstones. In
view of this position of law it has to be now ascertained as
to whether the impugned Act had really made any provision of
reservation in the judicial service as well or not. The
High Court on perusal of its various provisions has held
that the Act did not relate to the judicial service and the
insistence of the Government of Bihar to issue notifications
in accordance with the said Act by making provision for
reservation was uncalled for. While interpreting the words
"office or department" occurring in the definition of term
"establishment" under Section 2(c) of the Act, the Court
held that the aforesaid words referred to the office or
department of the Court and not the Court itself. It
further held that reservation of posts in the judicial
service de hors of the Reservation Act was not permissible.
Intepreting Section 4, the High Court observed: "The
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correct construction of Section 4, in the context, read with
Section 2(c) and 2(n), would be something like this--
All appointments to service and posts in any office or
department (i.e. establishment) of the judiciary by direct
recruitment shall be regulated in the following manner."
The findings of the High Court cannot be upheld in
view of the clear provisions made in Bihar Act No.3 of 1992.
The Preamble of the Act states that it has been enacted to
provide for adequate representation of Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes in posts and
services under the State. Section 2(a) defines "Appointing
authority" in relation to a Service or post in an
establishment to mean the authority empowered to make
appointment to such services or posts; Section 2(c) defines
"Establishment" as "any office or department of the State
concerned with the appointments to public services and posts
in connection with the affairs of the State and includes (i)
local or statutory authority constituted under any State Act
for the time being in force, or (ii) a co-operative
institution registered under the Bihar Co-operative
Societies Act, 1935 (Act 6 of 1935) in which share is held
by the State Government or which receives aid from the State
Government in terms of loan, grant, subsidy, etc. and (iii)
Universities and Colleges affiliated to the Universities,
Primary, Secondary and High Schools and also other
educational institutions which are owned or aided by the
State Governments and (iv) an establishment in public
sector"; Section 2(f) defines "Reservation" to mean,
reservation of vacancies in posts and services for Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes; Section
2(n) defines "State" to include the Government, the
Legislature and the Judiciary of the State of Bihar and all
local or other authorities within the State or under the
control of the State Government. Section 3 refers to the
"Services" to which the Act has not been made applicable.
Section 4 mandates that all appointments to the Services and
Posts in an establishment which are to be filled by direct
recruitment shall be regulated in the manner prescribed
therein. 50% of the available vacancies are to be filled up
from open merit category and 50% from reserved category.
The vacancies from different categories of reserved
candidates from amongst the 50% the reserved categories
shall, subject to other provisions of the Act, be as
follows: (a) Scheduled Castes 14% (b) Scheduled Tribes 10%
(c) Extremely Backward Class 12% (d) Backward Class 8% (e)
Economically Backward Woman 3% (f) Economically Backward 3%
------ Total 50%
Section 5 of the Act provides: "Review of Reservation
Policy.--(1) It shall be the duty of the State Government to
strive to achieve the representation of the Scheduled
Castes/Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes in the
various services of posts of all the establishments of the
State as defined in clauses (c) and (d) of Section 2 in the
proportion fixed for various reserved categories under
Section 4.
(2) The State Government shall review its reservation
policy after every ten years:
Provided that every order made under sub-section (2)
shall be laid as soon as may be after it is made, before the
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State Legislature while it is in session for a total period
of fourteen days which may be comprised in one or in two
successive sessions."
The aforesaid Act was amended by Act No.XI of 1993 by
which amongst others Sub- section (2) of Section 4 was
substituted prescribing the extent of percentage of
reservations. Similarly clause (c) of sub-section (6) of
Section 4 was substituted prescribing the manner of filling
the vacancies in case of non-availability of suitable
candidates in the reserved categories. Clause (e) of
sub-section (6) of Section 4 was substituted providing:
"(e) If required number of candidates of Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward Classes and Backward
Classes and Women of Backward Classes are not available for
filling up the reserved vacancies, fresh advertisement may
be made only for the candidates belonging to the members of
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Extremely Backward
and Bacward Classes and Women of Backward Classes, as the
case may be, to fill the backlog vacancies only."
A combined reading of the various provisions of the
Act leave no doubt that it is also applicable to the
establishment of judicial service and "not only to the
office or department of the Court, excluding the Court
itself", as has been held in the impugned judgment. No
other interpretation is possible in view of the definitions
of "establishment" and "State" in Sections 2(c) and 2(n) of
the Act. It was not correct for the High Court to say that
the aforesaid language of the statute was capable of more
than one interpretation and for that such interpretation
which is not absurd or inconsistent should be followed. The
Court is required to interpret statute as far as possible
agreeable to justice and reason. While interpreting a
statute the courts have to keep in mind the underlying
policy of the statute itself and the object sought to be
achieved by it. This Court in Nasiruddin vs. State
Transport Appellate Tribunal [AIR 1976 SC 331] held: "If
the precise words used are plain and unambiguous, they are
bound to be construed in their ordinary sense. The mere
fact that the results of a statute may be unjust does not
entitle a court to refuse to give it effect. If there are
two different interpretations of the words in an Act, the
Court will adopt that which is just, reasonable and sensible
rather than that which is none of those things. If the
inconvenience is an absurd inconvenience, by reading an
enactment in its ordinary sense, whereas if it is read in a
manner in which it is capable, though not in an ordinary
sense there would not be an inconvenience at all; there
would be reason why one should not read it according to its
ordinary grammatical meaning. Where the words are plan the
court would not make any alteration."
It is not correct as held by the High Court in the
impugned judgment that interpreting the statute in favour of
the appellant State, as desired, "would amount to relegating
the judicial service at par with not only the secretarial
staff or the administrative, executive or council of
ministers and legislature but also their own staff. That
would be contrary to law laid down by the Apex Court in All
India Judges Case (supra)". It appears that to arrive at
such a conclusion the High Court was also persuaded and
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impressed on account of the statement before it that the
provisions of the Reservation Act had been declared to be
ultra vires, as regards the Bihar Subordinate Judicial
Service i.e., as regards recruitment of judicial officers
other than that of the District Judges in the case of Deepak
Kumar Singh & Others. Interpretation of Section 4 as put in
by the High Court, if accepted, would not only frustrate the
purpose and object of the Bihar Act No.3 of 1992 but also be
contrary to the mandate of the Constitution as enshrined in
its Part III and further declared in Part IV, Article 56 and
Article 335 of the Constitution. The High Court is thus
held to have fell in error of law in declaring the Act as
ultra vires in so far as its applicability to the judicial
service is concerned, and also in the matter of
interpretation of its various provisions. The appeals are
accordingly allowed by setting aside the judgments impugned
therein with a direction to the respondents to fill up the
vacancies in accordance with the Rules applicable and the
provisions of the impugned Act without disturbing the
appointments made till date on the basis of this Courts
order. The seniority of the members of the judicial service
shall be determined in accordance with the Service Rules
applicable and the provisions of the Act by adjusting the
candidates selected on reservation to fill in the reserved
slots keeping in view the quota and rota rule as
specifically pointed out by this Court in its order dated
16.11.1995. No costs.