D.R. Nim, I. P. S. Vs. Union of India
[1967] INSC 5 (5 January 1967)
05/01/1967 SIKRI, S.M.
SIKRI, S.M.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION: 1967 AIR 1301 1967 SCR (2) 325
CITATOR INFO:
F 1969 SC1249 (26) RF 1971 SC1814 (6,11,17) R
1972 SC2350 (14) R 1975 SC 538 (27) F 1983 SC 130 (52) R 1986 SC 638 (19) RF
1992 SC1363 (11)
ACT:
Civil Service--Indian Police Service
(Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954, r. 3--Officer appointed by
promotion--Seniority, how determined.
HEADNOTE:
Under r. 3 of the Indian Police Service
(Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954, issued under s. 3(1) of the All India
Services Act, 1951, he mode of determining the seniority of officers of the
Indian Police Service is as follows : The officers are divided into categories
: (1) those in the Service at the commencement of the Rules, and (2) those
appointed to the Service after the commencement of the Rules. The second
category is divided into two sub- categories : (a) officers appointed as a
result of a competitive examination, and (b) officers appointed by promotion in
accordance with r. 9 of the Recruitment Rules.
The year of allotment of an office which
determines his seniority, is determined according to r. 3(3)(a) or (b).
But if an officer started officiating
continuously in a senior post from a date earlier than the date on which any of
the officers was recruited to the Service by competition, the year of allotment
had to be determined ad hoc by the Central Government, under proviso (1) to r.
3(3)(b), and under proviso (2) to r. 3(3)(b) the period of officiation before
the date of inclusion of the name of an officer in the Select List prepared in
accordance with the requirements of the Indian Police Service (Appointment by
Promotion) Regulations. would be counted, only if such period was approved by
the Central Government in consultation with the Public Service Commission.
The appellant was officiating as
Superintendent of Police from June 1947, that is from a date earlier than the
date of any officer recruited by competition, and was appointed to the Indian
Police Service by promotion in 1955 after the commencement of the Seniority
Rules. His name was included in the Select List in 1956. The Government passed
an order on 25th August 1955, that officers promoted to the Indian Police
Service should be allowed the benefit of their continuous officiation with
effect only from 19th May 1951.
The appellant challenged the order by a
petition under Art.
226, because the period of his officiation
from June 1947 to May 1951 has excluded for the purpose of fixation of his
seniority. The High Court dismissed the petition.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD: The impugned order dated 25th August,
1955 should be quashed and the Central Government directed to fix the year of
allotment and seniority of the appellant according to law.
The date 19th May 1951, was an artificial and
arbitrary date having nothing to, do with the application of the first and the
second provisos to r. 3(3). It has some relevance for the Indian Administrative
Service, but why it should be applied to the Indian Police Service was not
adequately explained. Under the two provisos, the Central Government had to
determine ad hoc the year of allotment after approving or not approving the
period of officiation in consultation with the Public 'Service Commission
taking into consideration all the relevant facts. The Central 326 Government
cannot pick out a date and say that a period prior to that date would not be
deemed to be approved by the Central Government within the second proviso. [331
B, E-G] (2) In view of the facts that he was officiating for eight years, that
he had never been reverted and that he was appointed to the post when vacancies
fell,. it could not be held that the appellant's continuous officiation a mere
temporary or local or stop-gap arrangement, within the meaning of Explanation 1
to r. 3 (3) (b). [3 32 G]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 371 of 1965- Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 8, 1961 of the Punjab High Court Circuit Bench at Delhi in Civil Writ
No, 507-D of 1961.
B. R. L. Iyengar, B. Dutta, O. C. Mathur and
Ravinder Narain, for the appellant.
N. S. Bindra, R. Ganapathy Iyer and R. S.
Sachthey, for the respondent.
Basudev Prasad, K. Rajendra Chaudhuri and
K.R. Chaudhuri, for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment of the
Circuit Bench of the Punjab High Court at Delhi, dismissing in limine the
petition under art. 226 of the Constitution filed by the appellant, D. R. Nim.
The appellant had impugned in this petition an order dated August 25, 1955,
passed by the Government of India, (Ministry of Home Affairs)-hereinafter referred
to as the impugned order-as being contrary to law and art. 14 of the
Constitution.
The relevant facts for the determination of
the validity of the impugned order are as follows: The appellant was appointed
to the U.P. Police Service as a result of a competitive examination held in
1938. In course of time he was appointed officiating Superintendent of Police
with effect from June 25, 1947. He continued to officiate till he was appointed
to the Indian Police Service against the promotion quota of the Indian Police
Service Cadre of Uttar Pradesh with effect from October 22, 1955. By the time
he was appointed to the Indian Police Service various Rules and Regulations
governing the Indian Police Service had been issued by the Central Government
in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-s. (1) of s. 3 of the All India
Services Act (LXI of 1951). We are concerned particularly with the Indian
Police Service (Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954, hereinafter referred to
as the Seniority Rules. The seniority of the appellant has to be determined
under these Seniority Rules. The first thing to be done under the Seniority
Rules is to determine the year of allotment of the appellant. The 327 appellant
claims that a wrong year of allotment has been given to him by the application
of the impugned order, which, according to him, is a void order. Rule 3, which
deals with the assignment of the year of allotment reads as follows:
"3. Assignment of Year of Allotment.-(1)
Every officer shall be assigned a year of allotment in accordance with the
provisions hereinafter contained in this rule.
(2) The year of allotment of an officer in
service at the commencement of these rules shall be the same as has been
assigned to him or may be assigned to him by the Central Government in
accordance with the orders and instructions in force immediately before the
commencement of these rules:
Provided that where the year of allotment of
an officer appointed in accordance with rule 9 of the Recruitment Rules has not
been determined prior to the commencement of these Rules, his year of allotment
shall be determined in accordance with the provision in clause (b) of sub-rule
(3) of this rule and for this purpose, such officer shall be deemed to have
officiated in a senior post only if and for the period for which he was
approved for such officiation by the Central Government in consultation with
the Commission.
(3) The year of allotment of an officer
appointed to the Service after the commencement of these rules, shall be (a)
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;
(b) where the officer is appointed to the
Service by promotion in accordance with rule 9 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:
Provided that the year of appointment of an
officer appointed to the Service in accordance with rule 9 of the Recruitment
Rules who started officiating continuously in a senior post from a date earlier
than the date on which any of the officers 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 Provided further that an officer appointed to the Service
after the commencement of these Rules in accordance with rule 9 of the
Recruitment Rules shall be deemed to have officiated continuously in a senior
post prior to the date of the inclusion of his name in the Select List prepared
in accordance with the requirements of the Indian Police Service (Appointment
by Promotion) Regulations framed under rule 9 of the Recruitment Rules, if the
period of such officiation prior to that date is approved by the Central
Government in consultation with the Commission.
Explanation 1.-An officer shall be deemed to
have officiated continuously in a senior post from a certain date if during the
period from that date to the date of his confirmation in the senior grade he
continues to hold without any break or reversion as senior post otherwise than
as a purely temporary or local arrangement.
Explanation 2.-An officer shall be treated as
having officiated in a senior post during any period in respect of which the
State Government concerned certifies that he would have so officiated but for
his absence on leave or appointment to any special post of any other
exceptional circumstance." Sub-rule (1) clearly makes Rule 3 the
Controlling Rule for the purposes of assignment of the year of allotment. The
Rule then divides officers into two categories: (1) an officer in the Indian
Police Service at the commencement of the Rules, and (2) an officer appointed
to the Indian Police Service after the commencement of the Rules. We are
concerned with the second category as the appellant was appointed to the Indian
Police Service in 1955. The second category is again divided into two
sub-categories: (a) officer appointed to the service as a result of a
competitive examination, and (b) officer appointed to the service by promotion
in accordance with Rule 9 of the Recruitment Rules. As the appellant was
appointed to the Service by promotion, we are concerned with the second sub-
category. The formula adopted works out as follows first find out the year of
allotment of the junior-most among the officers recruited to the service by
competition, who officiated continuously in a senior post from a date earlier
than the date of commencement of officiation of the appellant. We may again
mention that the appellant started officiating as Superintendent of Police on June
25, 1947.
But, according to the first proviso, if the
appellant started officiating continuously in a senior post from a date earlier
than the date of any officer recruited by competition his allotment had to be
determined ad hoc by the Central Government. According to the facts of this
case, the first proviso applies and not the test provided in rule 3(3) (b) of
the Seniority Rules. The second proviso limits the operation of the first
proviso by dividing the officiating period into two classes: first, a period
329 before the date of inclusion of an officer in the Select List and,
secondly, the period after that date. The first period can only be counted if
such period is approved by the Central Government in consultation with the
Commission. The appellant's name was included in the Select List of 1956.
Therefore, in the case of the appellant, the
period prior to 1956 had to be approved by the Central Government in
consultation with the Commission.
We may here notice Explanation 1 to Rule 3,
because the government of India also say that the appellant officiated
continuously as a temporary or local arrangement. We will deal with this aspect
later, but for the time being we assume that there is no force in the
Government of India's contention and the Explanation does not apply to the
facts of the present case. Therefore, according to the Rule the Central
Government had to determine ad hoc the year of allotment after approving or not
approving the period of officiation of the appellant before 1956. The Government
of India say that they determined this by issuing the impugned order, the
relevant part of which reads as follows:
"The Government of India have now
decided with the concurrence of the Commission that the State Civil Service
Officers who were officiating prior to 19th May, 1951, but have been appointed
to the Indian Administrative Service after that date should, for purposes of
fixation of seniority, be allowed the benefit of their continuous officiation
in senior posts with effect from the 19th May, 1951. The same decision will
also apply in the case of State Police Officers promoted to the Indian Police
Service after the 19th May, 1951." The result of this decision, as far as
the appellant is concerned, is that the period of officiation as Superintendent
of Police from June 25, 1947 to May 19, 1951, is excluded for the purpose of
fixation of seniority. Why the date May 19, 1951, was chosen is explained by
the Government of India in the following terms in paras 8 and 9 of the
affidavit dated May 15, 1966:
"8. While recruitment to the Service
through these diverse unconventional sources was being made over the years, the
question of fixation of seniority and year of allotment was subseqently
considered and instructions were issued vide Shri R. C. Dutt's letter No. 1/18/51-AIS
dated 22nd June, 1951 prescribing the detailed procedure as to how the
seniority and the year of allotment of each officer and for each category of
recruitment should be fixed. The said letter finds mention in the appeal paper
book at pages 45-49. It can be said that with the issue of this letter the
position regarding principles for the fixation of seniority and year of
allotment of officers that had been recruited to 330 the Services prior to this
date had been finalised and stabilised.
9.At this stage, it was noticed that there
still were some State Police Service Officers who had not qualified at the
various recruitments made for the Service in previous years and continued to
hold senior posts on account of paucity of officers. It was further realised
that if, for determination of seniority and year of allotment, the principle of
date of continuous officiation is applied in such case such State Police
Service Officers who had been rejected on earlier occasions would on eventual
absorption into the Service through the regular promotion quota become entitled
to higher seniority and year of allotment than those who had been selected in
preference to them at the time of the promotions made and the Special
Recruitment held in earlier years. This would have been a very anomalous
position for those selected on such occasions who would have found themselves
junior to those who had been rejected at the time of such selection. In
consultation with States and with the Union Public Service Commission, it was,
therefore, decided that in the case of State Police Service Officers appointed
to the Service after 19th May, 1951, their officiation prior to this date would
not count for purposes of seniority and year of allotment. In other words, all
such officiation prior to this date would be regarded as fortuitous. It was
also felt that since 19th May, 1951 was the date on which the Gradation List
for all the earlier persons recruited to the Service had been finalised and
issued in a somewhat stable stage, this may be a crucial date, and officiation
prior to which could be regarded as fortuitous. It may be mentioned that this
date refers to the finalisation of the Gradation List for the I.A.S. but since
the same principles were extended to the I.P.S. as well, it was decided to
retain this as the crucial date. It may be reiterated that this decision was
taken after consultation with the State Governments and the U.P.S.C. I would
say that there is no arbitrariness in this matter and that this was done after
consulting all concerned and after evolving a sound principle which would be
consistent with the view that those who had been selected for recruitment on
earlier occasions should not, by application of a principle, become junior to
those who on such occasions had been rejected. I may also mention that the said
date had been uniformly applied to all officers in this category." It
would be noticed that the date, May 19, 1951, to begin with had nothing to do
with the finlisation of the Gradation List of the Indian Police Service because
it was a date which had 331 reference to the finalisation of the Gradation List
for the I.A.S. Further this date does not seem to have much relevance to the
question of avoiding the anomalous position mentioned in para 9 of the
affidavit, reproduced above.
This date was apparently chosen for the
I.A.S. because on this date the Gradation List for in the earlier persons
recruited to the Service had been finalised and issued in a somewhat stable
stage. But why should this date be applied to the Indian Police Service has not
been adequately explained. Mr. B. R. L. Iyengar, the learned counsel for the
appellant, strongly urges that selection of May 19, 1951, as a crucial date for
classifying people is arbitrary and irrational. We agree with him in this
respect. It further appears from the affidavit of Mr. D. K, Guha, Deputy
Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of Home Affairs, dated December
9, 1966, that "the Government of India have recently decided in consultation
with the Ministry of Law that the Ministry of Home Affairs letter No. 2/32/51-AIS,
dated the 25th August, 1955, will not be applicable to those SCS/ SPS officers,
who were a pointed to IAS/IPS prior to the promulgation of IAS/IPS (Regulation
of Seniority) Rules, 1954, and the date of the issue of the above letter if
their earlier continuous officiation' was approved by the Ministry of Home
Affairs and Union Public Service Commission." It further appears that
"in the case of Shri C. S. Prasad also, an IPS officer of Bihar, a
decision has been taken to give the benefit of full continuous officiation in
senior posts and to revise his year of allotment accordingly." But, it is
stated that "as Shri Nim was appointed to IPS on the 22nd October, 1955,
i.e. after the promulgation of IPS (Regulation of Seniority) Rules, 1954, and
after the issue of letter dated 25-8-1955, his case does not fall even under
this category." The above statement of the case of the Government further
shows that the date, May 19, 1951 was an artificial and arbitrary date having
nothing to do with the application of the first and the second provisos to Rule
3(3). It appears to us that under the second proviso to Rule 3(3) the period of
officiation of a particular officer has to be considered and approved or
disapproved by the Central Government in consultation with the Commission
considering all the relevant facts. The Central Government cannot pick out a
date from a hat and that is what it seems to have done in this case-and say
that a period prior to that date would not be deemed to be approved by the
Central Government within the second proviso.
Mr. Iyengar had contended before us that on a
proper construction of the rules, the entire period of officiation in a senior
post has to be counted towards the seniority of the appellant. We have already
discussed this point above and, in our opinion, there is no force in this
contention.
As we have said, the Central Government must
consider the question of approval of the officiation period and come to an ad
hoc decision after considering 332 all the relevant circumstances in
consultation with the State Government concerned and fix the year of allotment.
The next point Mr. Iyengar raised was that
the letter dated August 25, 1955, was without any legal authority and was
contrary to rules. It seems to us that the fixing of an artificial date, like
May 19, 1951, as the date prior to which period of officiation would not be
deemed to be approved by the Central Government is contrary to Rule 3.
The last point which Mr. Iyengar raised was
that the appellant for no valid reason has been treated unequally among his
equals. It is not necessary to decide this point because the appeal has to be
accepted on the ground that the selection of May 19, 1951, as a ,crucial date
for classifying people is arbitrary and contrary to Rule 3.
We had earlier left open the point raised by
the Government of ,India that the appellant's continuous officiation was a
temporary or local arrangement within Explanation 1 to Rule
3. This is sought to be sustained by the
following statement in the affidavit dated March 15, 1966:
"When vacancies could not be filled up
even by this method, recruitment from the open market was resorted to. All
officers thus recruited to the Service were initially appointed in the Junior
Scale of the I.P.S.
The result was that there were some senior
posts that had to be filled and some State Polic e Service Officers who had not
been selected to the Service through any of the above recruitment methods were,
in view of the existing paucity of officers, allowed to officiate on senior
posts as a stop-gap arrangement. I say that all such State Police Service
Officers who were officiating on senior posts due to shortage of officers were
primarily those who had been considered for absorption into the I.P.S. under
the Promotion Quota or under the Emergency Recruitment but had not been found
fit for such absorption." This statement is denied by the appellant. We
agree with him that such a stop-gap arrangement cannot last for eight years
:and it has not been shown that the appellant was appointed temporarily in
place of some persons as subsequently he has never been reverted. Further the
fact that he was appointed to the post at the time when vacancies fell
negatives that it was merely a temporary arrangement.
In the result we accept the appeal, quash the
impugned order dated August 25, 1955, and direct the Central Government to fix
the year of allotment and seniority of the appellant in accordance ,with this
judgment and the law. The respondent will pay costs of the appellant in this
appeal.
Appeal allowed.
V.P.S.
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