Anand Parkash Saksena Vs. Union of
India & Ors [1967] INSC 302 (14 December 1967)
14/12/1967 BACHAWAT, R.S.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ) SHELAT, J.M.
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION: 1968 AIR 754 1968 SCR (2) 311
CITATOR INFO:
R 1976 SC2345 (16) RF 1980 SC1275 (24)
ACT:
Indian Administrative Service-I.A.S.
Extension to States Scheme-Officer in the junior scale of pay if has a right to
a post in the senior scale-All India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Rules
1955, r. 3-Filling of posts by non-Cadre officers, if penalty-I.A.S.
Recruitment Rules, 1954, r.
4(3), if bad for excessive
delegation-Regulation of Seniority Rules, 1954, r. 3(3)(b), Seniority of
Special Recruits Regulation, 1960, regulation 3(3), if violative of
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 16.
HEADNOTE:
The Madhya Bharat Cadre of the Indian
Administrative Service was constituted in 1951 under the I.A.S. Extension to
States Scheme. The Cadre included all senior posts. A number of junior and
training posts were provided to be held by officers recruited to the cadre
before they acquired the experience and seniority necessary to hold senior
posts.
The primary source for the initial
constitution of the Cadre was the existing incumbents of the State Service.
They were selected and included in three Lists. Officers in List I, were
immediately appointed to the service Officers in List 11 were to be taken in
the service only when found suitable and those in List III were not to be
absorbed in the service. List 11 and III officers were counted against' senior
posts but these posts held by them were excluded from the Cadre for the period
they were held by those officers.
The Cadre was to be maintained on a permanent
basis by direct recruitment by competitive examination and promotion of State
Civil Service Officers and twenty-five per cent of the senior posts were
reserved for the latter. The Cadre continued Co be governed by the Scheme until
1954 when the I.A.S. Recruitment, Seniority Cadre and Pay Rules were made.
Rule 9(1) of the Cadre Rules provides for
appointment of non-cadre officers to cadre posts, i.e. senior posts, if
suitable cadre officers are not available and the proviso to the rule preserved
the arrangement under the Extension to States Scheme for the holding of cadre
posts by non-Cadre officers. Under Rule 9(1) of the Recruitment Rules twentyfive
per cent of the senior posts are reserved for persons recruited under rule 8,
i.e. by promotion of substantive members of the State Civil Service and by
selection of those who hold gazetted posts in connection, with the affairs of a
State. The Special Recruitment Regulations, 1956, made under rule 4 of the
Recruitment of Rules, provides for recruitment by promotion to the Service by
selection of persons serving in connection with the affairs of a State.
In the matter of seniority, the Regulation of
seniority Rules, gives a promote from State Civil Service the year of allotment
of the junior-most direct recruit officiating continuously in a senior post
earlier than the date of commencement of such officiation by the promotee. The
seniority of Special Recruits Regulation,, 1960, adopts the formula applicable
to promotees for fixing the seniority of those recruited by promotion under the
Special Recruitment Regulations.
The petitioner, a direct recruit by
competitive examination,, was appointed to a junior post in the Service on
April 2, 1952. He was originally allotted to the Madhya Bharat Cadre, which
along with the former Vindhya Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh Cadres merged in the
present L2 Sup CI/68-9 612 Madhya Pradesh Cadre constituted on November 1,
1956. He was not found suitable to hold a senior post till November 17, 1956,
when. he was appointed to officiate in a senior post. At the time his
appointment to the service there were no vacancies in the senior posts.
Vacancies arose before he was appointed to officiate in the senior post and
after.
Some of the respondents who were officers of
the Madhya Bharat and the former Madhya Pradesh State Civil Services were
promoted before the integration of the cadres on November 1, 1956 to fill the
vacancies against the twentyfive per cent quota and several non-Cadre officers
were appointed under r. 9(1) of the Cadre Rules. Vacancies were also filled in
by promotion under the Special Recruitment Regulations. In the gradation List
published on January 1, 1966 all the respondents were shown as senior to the
petitioner.
In a writ petition, under Art. 32 the
petitioner contended that (i) he had a right to hold a post in the senior scale
of pay from April 2. 1952 to November 17, 1956, under the Rules and in tile
light of this Court's decision in P. C. Wadhwa v. Union of India and the
filling of the vacancies by non-Cadre officers amounted to withholding of
promotion and penalty within the meaning of r. 3 of the All India Service
(Discipline and Appeal) Rules. 1955; (ii) under the rules seventy-five per cent
of the total number of senior posts was exclusively reserved for direct
recruits and that in computing the twenty-five per cent quota officers in Lists
11 and III and special recruits had to be included; (iii) r.
4(3) of the Recruitment Rules which
authorised the Central Government to make regulation for special recruitment
was bad on the ground of excessive deletation; (iv) r. 3 (3) (b) of the
Regulation of Seniority Rules, 1954, made unjust discrimination between a
promotee and a direct recruit in the matter of seniority by arbitrarily
allotting a lower year of allotment to a promotee and therefore violated Arts.
14 and 16 of the Constitution; and (v)
regulation 3(3) of the Seniority of Special Recruits, Regulation 1960, offended
Arts. 14 and 16 inasmuch as the relevant rules and regulations set up an
arbitrary double standard for a special recruit enlisted by promotion.
HELD : Dismissing the petition.
(i) The filling of a vacancy by a non-Cadre
officer under r. 9 of the Cadre Rules does not infringe any right of the Cadre
officer nor does it amount to withholding of Promotion or a Penalty within the
meaning of r. 3 of All India Service (Discipline and Appeal) Rules, 1955. A
Cadre Officer in the junior scale of pay cannot claim 'a right to fill a
vacancy in the senior scale if he is not 'suitable and no Cadre officer junior
to him is Promoted to fill the vacancy. The decision in Wadhwa's case is
distinguishable. That case only decided that the reversion of a Cadre, office,
while Cadre officers junior to him continued in the senior scale amounted not
only to reduction in rank but also to withholding of promotion. Rule 6 A(2) of
the Recruitment Rules introduced in 1965 after the decision in Wadhwa's case
now makes explicit what was always implicit in r. 9(i) of the Cadre Rules.
In the instant case no Cadre Officer junior
to the Petitioner was promoted to the Cadre post before his Promotion on
November 17, 1956 and after Promotion he was neither reverted nor reduced in
rank nor was his promotion withheld. [619 F-H: 620 E-F] P. C. Wadhwa v. Union
of India, [1964] 4 S.C.R. 598.
distinguished.
613 (ii) Seventy-five per cent of the senior
posts may be filled by recruits other than those recruited by promotion or
selection under r. 8 of the Recruitment Rules. Special recruits are appointed
against the seventy-five per cent quota and rule 9(3)(b)(iv) added in 1965
makes explicit what was always implicit in r. 9(1) of the Recruitment Rules.
Under the Extension. to State Scheme officers
in Lists II and III were not counted against the twenty-five per cent quota.
Rule 9(3)(b)(iii) of the Recruitment Rules make it clear that in computing the
twenty-five per cent quota the appointments of officers in List 11 will be
excluded. [620 G, H] (iii) Assuming that the doctrine of excessive delegation
of Legislative power applies to rules, r. 4(3) does not suffer from the vice of
excessive delegation. in making .'he regulations under the rule the Central
Government is to be guided by the exigencies of the service and the advice of
the State Governments 'and (,he Union Public Service Commission. There
authorities are the best judges of the appropriate regulations to be made in
the matter [622 A-C] (iv) Rule 3(3)(b) of the Regulation of Seniority Rules is
not violative of Arts. 14 or 16 of the Constitution. The object of the rule is
to fix the seniority of the promotees who obtained promotion after long service
in the State Civil Service, in relation to direct recruits. The 'rule attempts
to strike a just balance between theconflicting claims of the promotees and
direct recruits. [622 F-G] (v) Regulation 3(3) of the Special Recruits
Seniority Regulations is not violative of Arts. 14 and 16. Special recruits
'are neither direct recruits nor promotees. They form a distinct class. The
regulation, properly adopts the formula applicable to promotees for fixing the
seniority of special recruits enlisted by promotion so that in the matter of
seniority all officers recruited from the State Civil Services 'are placed on
the same footing. [623 A-C]
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 58
of 1967.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution
of India for the enforcement of the Fundamental Rights.
N. C. Chatterjee, A. N. Sinha, S.
Balakrishnan and K. B.. Rohtage, for the petitioner.
Niren De, Solicitor-General, V. A. Seyid
Muhammad and R. H. Dhebar for R. N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 1.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for respondents Nos.
2 to 18,, The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bachawat, J. The
petitioner is a member of the Indian Administrative Service having been
appointed to a junior post therein on April 2, 1952 on the basis of a
competitive examination held by the Union Public Service Commission in the year
1951. He completed his probation on October 2, 1953. He was originally allotted
to the Madhya Bharat Cadre of the Indian Administrative Service which along
with the former Vindhya Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh cadres, merged in the
present Madhya Pradesh cadre of Indian Administrative Service constituted on
November 1, 1956.
614 He was appointed to officiate in a senior
post on November 17, 1956. In the gradation list published on January 1, 1966,
hi,; number is 70. In this writ petition under Art.
32 of the Constitution he claims that (a) he
had the right to hold a post in the senior scale of pay from April 2, 1952 up
to November 17, 1956 under the relevant rules read in the light of the decision
in P. C Wadhwa v. Union of India(1) and that (b) he is entitled to a higher
place in the gradation list. He asks for the issue of appropriate writs
declaring his rights and giving him consequential reliefs.
The Madhya Bharat cadre of the Indian
Administrative Service: was constituted on June 1, 1951 under the Indian
Administrative Service Extension to States Scheme. The cadre included all
senior posts. A number of junior and training posts were provided, to be held
by officers recruited to the cadre before the) acquired the experience and
seniority necessary for holding senior posts. The initial constitution of the
cadre was made from (1) the existing incumbents and (2) emergency recruits. The
existing incumbents were considered to be the first and primary source of
recruitment. They were selected by a Special Recruitment Board and divided in
three lists.
Officers in List I were considered fit for
immediate appointment to the Service. Officers in List II were to continue to
hold their present posts, their work was to be watched for 5 years and were to
be absorbed in the Service as and when they were found fit. Officers in List
III were to hold their present posts or posts of equivalent rank until they
retired but they were not to be absorbed in the Service. The posts held by
officers in Lists 11 and III were excluded from the cadre for the period during
which they were held by those officers. The cadre was to be maintained on a
permanent basis by (a) direct recruitment on the result of the competitive
examination and (b) promotion from amongst officers of the State Civil Service.
As in the case of the Provincial cadres, 25 per cent of the senior posts were
earmarked for promotion of officers of the State Civil Service.
On June 1, 195 1, the number of senior posts
in the Madhya Bharat cadre was 25. On selection by the Special Recruitment
Board, 6 officers were placed in List I and were appointed to the Service from
January 1, 1951. Four officers were placed in List II and 11 officers were
placed in List III and they continued to hold their posts under the Extension
to States Scheme.. The remaining 4 senior posts were held by 4 emergency
recruits. On April 2, 1952, there was thus no available vacancy for the
petitioner in the senior posts. As a matter of fact, 2 direct recruits senior
to the petitioner were in the junior scale of pay.
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 598.
615 In September 1954, the Central Government
framed the I.A.S. Cadre Rules, 1954, I.A.S. Recruitment Rules, 1954, I.A.S. Pay
Rules, 1954 and I.A.S. Regulation of Seniority Rules, 1954 in exercise of its
powers under s. 3(1) of the All India Services Act, 1951. These rules were
amended from time to time. Under r. 2 (a) of the Cadre Rules, a cadre officer
means a member of the Indian Administrative Service.
Under r. 2(b), a cadre post means a senior
cadre post under the State Government. Under r. 3, an I.A.S. cadre is
constituted for each State or group of States. Under r. 4, the strength and
composition of each cadre is determined by regulations made by the Central
Government. Rule 8 provides that "Save as otherwise provided in these
rules, every cadre post shall 'be filled by a cadre officer." Rule 9(1)
provides that "A cadre post in a State may be filled by a person who is
not a cadre officer if the State Government is satisfied (a) that the vacancy
is not likely to last for more than three months; or (b) that there is no
suitable cadre officer available for filling the vacancy." If a person
other than a cadre officer is appointed to a cadre post for a period exceeding
three months, the fact shall be reported to the Central Government who may, on
receipt of the report, direct the State Government to terminate his appointment
and if he is likely to fill a cadre post for a period exceeding six months, the
Central Government must seek the advice of the Union Public Service Commission
and in the light of its advice, give suitable directions to the State
Government. It was provided that r. 9 would not affect the existing
arrangements made by the Central Government in connection with the Governments
of Part B States and the State of Vindhya Pradesh at the time of the initial
constitution of the cadre for certain cadre posts to be filled by non-cadre
officers.
Rule 3 of the I.A.S. Recruitment Rules, 1954
gives the constitution of the service. Rule 4 specifies the methods of
recruitment. Sub-rule (1) of r. 4, as amended, provides that "Recruitment
to the Service, after the commencement of these rules, shall be by the
following methods, namely: (a) by a competitive examination; (aa) by selection
of persons from among released Emergency Commissioned Officers and Short
Service Commissioned Officers, commissioned in the Armed Forces of the Union
after the 1st November, 1962; (b) by promotion of substantive members of a State
Civil Service; (c) by selection, in special cases from among persons, who hold
in a substantive capacity gazetted posts in connection with the affairs of a
State and who are not members of a State Civil Service." Sub-rule (3) of
r. 4 provides that "Notwithstanding anything contained in subrule (1), if
in the opinion of the Central Government the exigencies of the service so
require, the Central Government may, after consultation with the State
Governments and the Commission, adopt 616 such methods of recruitment to the
Service other than those specified in the said sub-rules as it may by
regulations made in this behalf prescribe." Rule 6 provides that no
appointment to the Service shall be made except after recruitment by one of the
methods specified by r. 4 Rules 6A(2) introduced with effect from September 24,
1966 after the decision in P. C. Wadhwa's case(1) provides that "A direct
recruit in the junior time-scale of pay shall be appointed to a post in the
senior time-scale of pay if, having regard to his length of service,
experience, and performance in the junior time-scale of pay, the State
Government is satisfied that he is suitable for appointment to a post in the
senior time-scale of pay." Rules 7. 7A, 8(1) and 8(2) deal with the four
methods of recruitment specified in r. 4 and empowers the Central Government to
make appropriate regulations. Rule 8(1) deals with recruitment by promotion of
substantive members of the State Civil Service. Rule 8(2) deals with
recruitment by selection in special cases from amongst persons who hold, in a
substantive capacity, gazetted posts in connection with the affairs of the
State and who are not members of the State Civil Service. Rule 9(1), as
amended, provides inter alia that "the number of persons recruited under
rule 8 in any State or group of States shall not, at any time, exceed 25 per
cent of the number of" senior posts in relation to that State or group of
States. Rule 9(3)(b) provides that "for the purpose of determining the
percentage specified in sub-rule (1)(b) the following category of officers
shall 'be excluded namely :(i) officers of a State Civil Service appointed to
the Service under the Emergency Recruitment Scheme otherwise than against the
25 per -cent quota; (iii) officers of a State Civil Service appointed to the
Service from List II, prepared by the Special Recruitment Board under the
Indian Administrative Service (Extension to States) Schemes; (iv) officers of a
State Civil Service appointed to the Service under the Indian Administrative Service
(Special Recruitment) Regulations, 1956." Rule 9 (3) (b) (iv) was added
oil October 15, 1965.
The I.A.S. (Special Recruitment) Regulations,
1956 were made under r. 4(3) of the Recruitment Rules. Regulation 3 provides
that special recruitment will be made (a) by direct recruitment by selection
and (b) by promotion to the Service by selection of persons serving in
connection with the affairs of the State. Regulations 8 and 9 adopt for the
purposes of special recruitment the regulations for appointment by competitive
examination, promotion and selection made under rules 7, 8(1) and 8(2) of the
Recruitment Rules with appropriate modifications.
Rule 3 of I.A.S. (Pay) Rules, 1954 prescribes
the scales of pay admissible to the members of the Service. The _junior scale
is (1)[1964] 4 S.C.R. 598.
617 scale is Rs. 900 (6th year or
under)-50-1000-60-1600-50-1800 (22 years). The selection grade is Rs.
1800-100-2000. Rule 4(1) provides that the initial pay of a direct recruit
shall be fixed at the minimum of the junior time-scale. Rule 4(2) provides that
the pay of a member of the Service in the junior time-scale shall on
appointment to a post on the senior time-scale, be fixed at the corresponding
stage of the senior time-scale as shown in Sch. 1. The two scales of pay are
given in Sch. 1 in parallel columns against the years of service. The
increments, withholding of increments and grant of advance increments are
regulated by rules 5, 6 and 7.
Rule 3(1) of I.A.S. (Regulation of Seniority)
Rules, 1954 provides that every officer shall be assigned a year of allotment.
Rule 3 (3) (a) provides inter alia that the year of allotment of an officer
appointed to the Service after the commencement of these rules, shall be-where
the officer is appointed to the Service on the results of a competitive
examination, the year following the year in which such examination was
held." Rule 3 (3) (b) provides that the year of allotment of an officer
shall be "where the officer is appointed to the Service by promotion in accordance
with subrule (1) of rule 8 of the Recruitment Rules, the year of allotment of
the junior-most among the officers recruited to the Service in accordance with
rule 7 of those rules who officiated continuously in a senior post from a date
earlier than the date of commencement of such officiation by the former."
The proviso to r. 3 (3) (b) lays down that "the year of allotment of an
officer appointed to the Service in accordance with sub-rule (1) of rule 8 of
the Recruitment Rules who started officiating continuously in a senior post
from a date earlier than 'the date on which any of the officer recruited to the
Service in accordance with rule 7 of those Rules so started officiating shall
be determined ad hoc by the Central Government in consultation with the State
Government concerned." Rule 5A authorises the making of regulations for
fixing the seniority of special recruits.
Rule 6 provides for preparation of a
gradation list of all officers borne on the cadre arranged in order of
seniority.
Regulation 3 of the I.A.S. (Seniority of
Special Recruits) Regulation, 1960 made under r. 5A of the Regulation of
Seniority Rules fixes the seniority of special recruits.
Rule 3(3) provides that "In the case of
officers recruited by promotion from the State Civil Service under clause (b)
of regulation 3 read with regulation 9 of the Indian Administrative Service
(Special Recruitment) Regulations, 1956, the year of allotment shall be fixed
in accordance with the provisions of clause (b) of sub-rule (3) of rule 3 of
the Indian Administrative Service (Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954."
618 The relevant provisions of the parallel Cadre, Recruitment, Pay and
Regulation of Seniority Rules of the Indian Police Service were considered by
this Court in P. C. Wadhwa v. Union of India(1). There, the appellant was a
member of the Indian Police Service. He joined the Service in 1952 and was
confirmed in 1953. In 1958 he was promoted to officiate in the senior
time-scale as Additional Superintendent of Police at Ferozepore in place of the
permanent incumbent who was on leave. In July 1964, he was served with a chargesheet
and he submitted a reply. Before the enquiry started he was reverted to his
substantive rank of Assistant Superintendent of Police. The reversion was not
due to the return of the permanent incumbent from leave or deputation or for
any administrative reason. Other officers junior to him continued to officiate
in the senior scale while he was reverted. His personal file revealed a note by
the Senior Superintendent of Police to the effect that a regular enquiry into
his conduct would take a long time and it was advisable to revert him. He was
not given any opportunity of showing cause against the action taken against
him. He filed a writ petition in the High Court asking for the issue of a writ
quashing the order of reversion. The High Court dismissed the petition. On
appeal, this Court set aside the order of the High Court and allowed the
petition. This Court held that the reversion was made in contravention of Art.
311 of the Constitution. The majority held that the reversion was by way of
punishment and amounted to reduction in rank and withholding of promotion on
grounds which may be summarised thus : There is only one cadre in the Indian
Police Service. A person in the junior time-scale of the Service is as much a
cadre officer as one holding a post in the senior time-scale or a post above
the time-scale. The transition of a member of the Service from one scale to
another does not depend upon selection or the consideration of the comparative
merits of the officers in the junior scale inter se but only upon a
consideration of his seniority. Mudholkar, J. said that "the whole scheme
of the rules indicates that a person borne on the junior scale of pay has a
right to hold a post on the senior scale of pay depending upon the availability
of a post and his seniority in the junior scale of pay." The learned Judge
added :
"Despite the fact that he holds a
certain rank in the gradation list persons who also belong to the Indian Police
Service and who were recruited to it subsequent to him have continued to hold
or have been appointed to hold posts carrying salary in the senior scale. This
would itself indicate that the action taken against him was by way of penalty
or punishment. For, he has not only been reduced in rank but his promotion to
the senior scale has also been withheld." (1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 598.
619 In this background, the petitioner says
that he was deprived of his right to hold a senior post during the period from
April 2, 1952 up to November 17, 1956. We have found already that on April 2,
1952 there was no available vacancy in the senior post to which he should be
appointed. The Madhya Bharat Cadre continued to be governed by the Extension to
States Scheme until September 1954 when the Cadre, Recruitment, Pay and
Regulation of Seniority Rules were made. The proviso to r. 9 of the Cadre Rules
preserved the existing arrangements under the I.A.S. Extension to States Scheme
for the holding of certain cadre posts by noncadre, officers. On June 24, 1955,
the strength of the Madhya Bharat cadre was revised and increased to 46.
Respondents Nos. 14, 15 and 16 belonged to
the Madhya Bharat State Service. Respondent No. 14 was appointed on June 24,
1955 and respondents Nos. 15 and 16 were appointed on April 25, 1956 to senior
posts against vacancies in the 25 per cent quota. Several non-cadre officers
were appointed to fill vacancies in the senior posts under r. 9 of the Cadre
Rules. The petitioner was not found suitable to fill a vacancy in a senior post
until November 17, 1956.
The petitioner contends that (1) he had the
absolute right to be appointed to a vacancy in the senior posts on and after
April 2, 1952, (2) the filling of the vacancies by non-cadre officers on the
ground that he was not suitable was an infringement of his right and amounted
to withholding of promotion and a penalty within the meaning of r. 3 of the All
India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Rules, 1955, (3) 75 per cent of the
total number of senior posts was reserved exclusively for direct recruits and
(4) in computing the 25 per cent quota under r. 9(1) of the Recruitment Rules
officers in Lists 11 and III and special recruits should be included. These
contentions must be rejected.
Vis a vis another cadre officer junior to
him, a cadre officer in the junior scale of pay has the right of promotion to a
post in the senior scale on the ground of seniority. This right is infringed if
the junior cadre officer is promoted to fill a vacancy in the senior scale,
while he continues to hold a post in the junior scale of pay. But he cannot
claim the right to fill the, vacancy if he is not suitable and no cadre officer
junior to him is promoted to fill the vacancy. An officer in the junior scale
of pay has no right to a senior post as soon as he joins the Service. He may be
appointed to a senior post only when he is found suitable having regard to his
length of service, experience and performance in the junior scale of pay. Rule
6A(2) of the Recruitment Rules now makes explicit what was always implicit in
r. 9 of the Cadre Rules.
Under r. 9(1) of the Cadre Rules, a senior
cadre post may be filled by a non-cadre officer if there is no suitable officer
620 available for filling the vacancy. Similar provision is to be found in
paragraph 3 of the memorandum regarding constitution of the Indian
Administrative Service and paragraph 5 of the Indian Civil Administrative Cadre
Rules, 1950. The appointment of a non-cadre officer to a cadre post under r.
9(1) of the Cadre Rules is a temporary arrangement which may be terminated at
any time when the Government finds a cadre officer suitable for filling the
vacancy. Until the cadre officer is found suitable, a noncadre officer may be
appointed to fill the vacancy in a" post in the senior scale of pay. The
cadre officer has no right to fill the vacancy if he is not suitable. The
filling of the vacancy by a non-cadre ,officer under r. 9 does not infringe any
right of the cadre officer nor doesit amount to a withholding of promotion or a
penalty within the meaning of r. 3 of the All India Services (Discipline and
Appeal) Rules, 1955.
The decision in P. C. Wadhwa's case(1) is
distinguishable.
There, a cadre officer in the junior scale of
pay was promoted to officiate in a post in the senior scale of pay and was
thereafter reverted to his substantive post while other cadre officers junior
to him continued to officiate in posts in the senior scale of pay. As against
cadre officers junior to him,,he had the right to hold :the post in the senior
scale of pay. The reversion while cadre officers junior to him continued in the
senior scale amounted to not only reduction in rank but also withholding of
promotion.
This is all that P. C. Wadhwa's case(1)
decided. The fact in the present case are entirely different. The petitioner
was not suitable to fill the vacancies in the senior posts and non-cadre
officers were appointed to fill the vacancies under r. 9 of the Cadre Rules. No
cadre officer junior to the petitioner was promoted to the cadre post before
his promotion on November 17, 1956. Nor was he reverted after his promotion,
while officers junior to him continued to hold senior posts. The petitioner was
not reduced in rank nor was his promotion withheld. He had no right to fill a vacancy
in the senior posts or to draw salary in the senior scale between April 2, 1952
and November 17, 1956.
There is no merit in the contention that 75
per cent of the total number of senior posts is reserved exclusively for direct
recruits. Under r. 9(1) of the Recruitment Rules, the number of persons
recruited to senior posts under r. 8 of the Recruitment Rules by promotion or
by selection cannot exceed 25 per cent of the total number of senior posts. The
remaining 75 per cent of the senior posts may be filled by other recruits.
Special recruits under r. 4 of the Recruitment Rules are appointed against the
75 per cent quota. Their appointments are not counted against the 25 per cent
quota reserved for persons recruitment under r.8.
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 598.
621 Rule 9(3)(b)(iv) now expressly provides
what was already implicit in r. 9(1).
Paragraph 4(iv) of the I.A.S. !Extension to
States Scheme provided that the posts held by officers included in Lists 11 and
III would be excluded from the cadre for the period they were held by those
officers and would revert to the cadre as and when they ceased to be required
for that purpose. The posts held by the officers in List III were excluded from
the cadre until they retired and were not counted against the 25 per cent
quota. The posts held by the officers in List 11 pending absorption in the
service were excluded from the cadre. They were absorbed in the service as and
when they were found fit. Rule 9 (3) (b) (iii) provides that in computing the
25 per cent quota the appointments of officers from List 11 will be excluded.
There were vacancies in the 25 per cent quota
which were filled up by promotion of respondents Nos. 14, 15 and 16 from the
Madhya Bharat State Service. Respondents Nos. 4, 6, 11, 12, 13, 17 and 18 were
from the former Madhya Pradesh State Service. Some of them were promoted to the
Indian Administrative Service against the 25 per cent quota in the State cadres
before the integration of the cadres on November 1, 1956. No appointments were
made between November 1, 1956 and November 17, 1956 when the petitioner was
appointed to officiate in a senior post Other respondents were appointed after
November 17, 1956. None of the appointments is open to any challenge. It is
surprising that the petitioner seeks to challenge the appointments after a long
lapse of time. He has not given any adequate explanation as to the delay in
filing the writ petition.
The petitioner next challenges the seniority
assigned to the respondents. In the gradation list, all the respondents are
shown as senior to him Respondents Nos. 10, 11, 12 and 13 are special recruits
and their seniority has been fixed under Regulation 3(3) of the I.A.S.
(Seniority of Special Recruits) Regulation, 1960 read with r. 3 ( 3 ) (b) of
the Regulation of Seniority Rules, 1 9 5 4. The other respondents are promotees
and their seniority has been fixed under r. 3 (3) (b) of the Regulation of
Seniority Rules and the proviso thereto.
The petitioner challenges the vires of r.
4(3) of the Recruitment Rules under which the Central Government framed the
Special Recruitment Regulations. The Recruitment Rules were made under s. 3 of
the All India Services Act, 1951.
In D. S. Garewal v. The State of Punjab and
Another(1), this Court held that s. 3 was not bad on the ground of excessive
delegation of legislative power. The petitioner submits that r. 4(3) of the (1)
[1959] Sup, 1 S.C.R. 72 622 Recruitment Rules is bad on the ground of excessive
delegation, of legislative power. Assuming that the doctrine of excessive
delegation of legislative power applies to rules, we think that r. 4(3) does
not suffer from the vice of excessive delegation. Rule 4(3) .authorities the
Central Government to make regulations for special recruitment. In making the
regulations, the Central Government is to be guided by the exigencies of the
service and the advice of the State Governments and the Union Public Service
Commission. These authorities are the best judges of the appropriate
regulations to be made in the matter. In the light of their expert knowledge
they can adapt for this purpose the existing regulations for other methods of
recruitment with suitable modifications or make other appropriate regulations
having regard to the exigencies of the service. As a matter, of fact, the Special
Recruitment Regulations 1960 framed under r. 4(3) have adapted for the purposes
of special recriutment the regulations for recruitment by competitive
examination, promotion and selection with appropriate modifications, The
petitioner next contends that r. 3 (3) (b) of the Regulation of Seniority Rules
makes unjust discrimination between a promotee and a direct recruit in the
matter of seniority by arbitrarily assigning a lower year of allotment to a
promotee and is violative of Arts. 14 and 16 of the constitution. This
contention is devoid of merit. The seniority of direct recruits inter se and
promotees inter se is fixed by r. 4. The object of r. 3 (3) (b) is to fix the
seniority of the promotees in relation to direct -recruits.
The promotees obtain promotion after long
service in the State Civil Services. From the point of view of the promotee,
his seniority should be counted from the date of his joining the State Civil
Service. From the point of view of the direct recruit the seniority of the
promotee should be counted from the date of his appointment to the Indian
Administrative Service. Rule, 3 (3) (b) attempts to strike a just balance
between the conflicting claims. It gives the promotee the year of allotment of
the junior-most direct recruit officiating continuously in a senior post
earlier than the date of commencement of such officiation by the promotee. If
no direct recruit was officiating continuously in a senior post on an earlier
date. the seniority of the promotee is determined ad hoc. In our opinion, the
rule is not arbitrary or discriminatory and is not violative of Arts. 14 and 16
of the Constitution.
The petitioner next challenges the validity
of ]Regulation 3(3) of the Special Recruitment Seniority Regulations, 1960 on
the ground that it offends Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution. According to
the petitioner, the relevant rules and regulations have set up an arbitrary
double standard for a special recruit enlisted by promotion because Regulation
3(3) of the Special Recruit623 ment Seniority Regulations read with r. 3 (3)
(b) of the Regulation of Seniority Rules treats him as a promotee for the
purpose of seniority while r. 9 (3) (b) (iv) of the Recruitment Rules treats
him as a direct recruit for the purpose of recruitment. There is no substance
in this contention. Special recruits form a distinct class. They are neither
direct recruits nor promotees. Rule 9 of the Recruitment Rules does not treat
them as direct recruits.
Regulation 3 (3) of the Special Recruits
Seniority Regulations properly adopts the formula applicable to promotees for
fixing the seniority of special recruits enlisted by promotion. so that in the
matter of seniority all officers recruited from the State Civil Service are
placed on the same footing. The regulation is not arbitrary nor violative of
Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
The seniority of the respondents was fixed in
accordance with Regulation 3 (3) of the Special Recruitment Seniority
Regulations, r. 3 (3) (b) of the Regulation of Seniority Rules and the proviso
thereto, and is not open to any challenge.
The writ petition is dismissed. There will be
no order as to costs.
Y.P. Petition dismissed.
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