S. K. Ghosh & ANR Vs. Union of
India & Ors [1968] INSC 87 (2 April 1968)
02/04/1968 BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BHARGAVA,
VISHISHTHA RAMASWAMI, V.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION: 1968 AIR 1385 1968 SCR (3) 631
CITATOR INFO:
D 1975 SC1269 (7)
ACT:
Rules for recruitment to the grade of
Directors of Postal Services in Indian Postal Service, Class 1, in the Posts
and Telegraphs Department, r. 3-Promotion as Directors front time scale of
Class 1 service based on selection and not seniority Revision of their
seniority in the time scale of Class 1 Service later--Seniority of Directors
inter se if could be revised --Such revision if violative of Art. 16 of
Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were promoted from the Postal
Superintendents Service Class II to the time scale of Class I Service, and,
respondents 3 to 7 were direct recruits to the time scale of Class I service.
On 30th January 1957, Government fixed the inter se seniority between them by
showing the petitioners as senior to respondents 3 to 7.
Subsequently, the petitioners were promoted
as Directors of Postal Services, and some time later, respondents 3 to 7 were
also promoted as Directors so that, the petitioners were senior to respondents
3 to 7 even in the grade of Directors.
On 5th June 1965 Government revised the
seniority of these officers in the time scale of Class I service, by showing
respondents 3 to 7 as senior to the petitioners, and on 17th January 1966,
their seniority in the grade of Directors was also revised placing respondents
3 to 7 as senior to the petitioners.
The petitioners challenged the two orders in
a petition under Art. 32. The Government justified its orders on the grounds,
that, the order of 30th January 1957 was passed by mistake as a relevant rule,
namely, Supplementary r. 2(15) was not given effect to, and, since the revision
of seniority in the time scale of Class I Service was justified, the
consequiential revision of seniority in the grade of Directors was also valid.
HELD : The revision of seniority in the grade
of Directors by order dated 17th January 1966 was not based on any rule or
applicable principle. it was therefore arbitrary and violative of Art. 16 and
must be struck down. Once that order was quashed, the petitioners would not be
affected by the order dated 5th June 1965, and therefore, it was not necessary
to decide on its validity. [638 E-G].
Rule 3 of the Rule,; for recruitment lo the
grade of Directors of Postal Services in Indian Postal Services Class 1. in the
Posts and Telegraphs Department, shows that appointment to the grade of
Directors is made by selection and not on the basis of seniority in the time
scale. It Must therefore be presumed that the promotion and appointment, of the
petitioners and respondents 3 to 7 as Director-, was based on merit, which was
to be taken into account at the time of selection and not on seniority in the
time scale of Class I Service. Once a member of Class I Service in the time
scale was selected for promotion to the grade of Directors and given seniority
over another officer selected later, the seniority so determined as a result of
selection could not be made dependent on the seniority in the time scale.
Therefore, even if there was justification for revising the seniority inter se
of the petitioners and respondents 3 to 7 in the time scale of Class I Service,
that revision could not in any way affect their order of seniority in the grade
of Directors to which they were promoted on the basis of selection is
accordance with the Rules. [637 G-H;] 638 A-C].
632
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 131
of 1966.
Petition tinder Art. 32 of the Constitution
of India for the enforcement of fundamental rights.
A. K. Sen and K. B. Mehta, for the
petitioners.
B. Sen and R. H. Dhebar for respondents Nos.
1 and 2.
B. P. Maheshwari and S. M. Jain, for
respondent No. 4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. S. K. Ghosh and A. M. Narula, the two petitioners in this petition
under Article 32 of the Constitution, appeared for the examination held in
October, 1945 for recruitment to the Indian Audit and Accounts Service and
other Allied Central Services. On the basis of the result of the examination,
both of them were selected for appointment to the Postal Superintendents'
Service Class II Petitioner No. 1, S. K. Ghosh, joined a post in that Service
on probation with effect from 9th April, 1947, while petitioner No. 2, A. M.
Narula, joined as a probationer on 11th February, 1947. At that time there was
no Class I Service in the Postal Department. In Class II Service, to which
these two petitioners were appointed, recruitment was made by a competitive
examination to the extent of 50 per cent, while the remaining 50 per cent posts
were filled by promotion from lower cadres of the Department.
On 24th May, 1948, the Government sanctioned
the creation of Indian Postal Service Class I with four grades as follows (i)
Directors of Postal Services, Grade I, (ii) Directors of Postal Services, Grade
II, (iii) Senior Time Scale, and (iv) Junior Time Scale.
This decision of the Government was
communicated to the Director-General, Posts and Telegraphs, by their letter
dated 13th November, 1948, which also laid down the manner of recruitment to
the Service and the various sources from which recruitment was to be made. The
normal rule laid down was that appointment to the junior time-scale were to be
made by direct recruitment against 75% of the vacancies and the remaining 25%
were to be filled by promotion by selection of the best officers in the Postal
Superintendents' Service Class II, seniority being regarded only when all other
qualifications were practically equal.
To this rule, however, an exception was laid
down to the effect that all initial appointments to the time scale cadres of
the Indian Postal Service Class I consisting of 64 posts (23 in the senior
scale and 41 in the junior scale) were to be made by promotion from amongst
officers of Postal Superintendents' Service Class II by selection. Future
recruitment was to be governed by the general rule cited above. Appointments to
Grade IT of the Directors of Postal Services was to be made by promotion by
selection 633 of the best officers in the senior time scale of the Indian
Postal Service, Class 1, seniority being regarded only where other
qualifications were practically equal. These promotions were to be made through
a Departmental Promotion Committee consisting of the Director-General, Posts
and Telegraphs, Senior Deputy Director-General, Posts and Telegraphs, and a
member of the Federal Public Service Commission. Appointments to Grade I of
Directors of Postal Services were to be made by promotion from Grade 11 of
Directors in the order of seniority, provided the senior officer was considered
fit for such promotion. The Service under these rules was, in fact, constituted
with effect from 15th September, 1948, and, even in cases where appointments
were actually made later, they were made effective retrospectively from 15 th
September, 1948. for purposes of confirmation. The two petitioners were still
probationers in Postal Superintendents' Service Class II on 15th September,
1948; and, since only persons holding permanent posts in the cadre of Class 11
were to be considered for appointment to this Class I Service, the petitioners
were not considered at the initial stage. Both the petitioners completed their
probation in Class 11 Service in the year 1949. According to the petitioners,
petitioner No. 1 was promoted to Class I Service on 2nd December, 1949, and
petitioner No. 2 on 5th December, 1949. They were shown as officiating in this
Service. Subsequently, petitioner No. 1 was confirmed in the junior time scale
of Class I Service with effect from IIth May, 1951, while petitioner No. 2 was
confirmed with effect from 12th February, 1952. In the meantime, direct
recruitment to Class I Service was also made on the basis of competitive
examinations held in the years 1948 and 1949, and a number of direct recruits
were selected for appointment to this Service. Amongst them were K. Ramamurti,
N. C. Talukdar, Shiv Nath, S. L. Rajan and B.
N. Dubey, respondents Nos. 3 to 7 in the
petition. Besides these, a number of other direct recruits were also taken, but
it is unnecessary to take notice of them, because the petitioners have sought
relief against these five respondents only, the others having already retired
by the time this petition was filed. These five respondents joined Class 1
Service as probationers on various dates falling between 16th March, 1950 and
22nd November, 1950.
Thereafter, the question of fixing seniority
inter se between the direct recruits and officers promoted from Class II
Service came up for consideration of the Government.
Government communicated their final decision
through 'the letter dated 30th January, 1957. The letter indicated the
considerations that led the Government to fix the seniority of the various
officers and to the letter was annexed an Appendix giving the seniority of
junior time scale officers.
In this list, the two petitioners were placed
at Nos. 31 and 32, while the five respondents were placed junior to them at
Nos. 33, 36, 41, 42 and 44. In the letter, the Government speci634 fically
stated that, in arriving at the decisions, the Government had given due
consideration to all the representations submitted by officers on the subject
and replies to these representations were not, therefore, being sent
separately. Only one representation of A. C. Mohamedi was still under
consideration; but, with that representation, we are not concerned in the
present writ petition. The Government added that the seniority list along with
a copy of the memorandum was to be given to all the officers concerned for
their information and they were to be informed that any further representations
against the principles on the basis of which the seniority list had been prepared,
would not be entertained. At the time when this seniority was fixed, the
principles, which, according to the petitioners, were applicable, were those
laid down in the Ministry of Home Affairs' Office Memorandum dated 22nd June,
1949, paragraph 2 of which contained the decision that seniority in respect of
persons employed in any particular grade should, as a general rule, be
determined on the basis of the length of service in that Grade as well as
service in an equivalent Grade, irrespective of whether the latter was under
the Central or Provincial Government in India or Pakistan. The order of
seniority laid down 'by the order dated 30th January, 1957 continued in force
for a number of years.
The Ministry of Home Affairs subsequently
issued an Office Memorandum on 22nd December, 1959, laying down general
principles for determining seniority of various categories of persons employed
in Central Services. This Memo.
referred to various earlier Office Memoranda,
including the one dated 22nd June, 1949 issued by the Home Ministry.
Paragraph 3 of this Office Memo. laid down
that the instructions contained in those various Office Memoranda were thereby
cancelled but made an exception in regard to determination of seniority of
persons appointed to the various Central Services prior to the date of this
Office Memorandum. The revised General Principles embodied in the Annexure to
this Memorandum were not to apply with retrospective effect, but were to come
into force with effect from the date of issue of these orders, unless a
different date in respect of any particular service/grade from which these
revised principles were to be adopted for purposes of determining seniority had
already been or was to be thereafter agreed to by the Home Ministry. In para. 2
of the Annexure it was again laid down that, subject to the provision of para.
3 below, persons appointed in a substantive or officiating capacity to a grade
prior to the issue of these general principles were to retain the relative
seniority already assigned to them or such seniority as might thereafter be
assigned to them under the existing orders applicable to their cases and were
to be en bloc senior to all others in that grade. It was. thus. the case of the
petitioners that this Office Memorandum of 2nd December, 1959 did not in any
way affect their seniority 635 Government dated 30th January, 1957.
Subsequently, the petitioners as well as respondents Nos. 3 to 7 were promoted
as Directors. The common case of both the parties was that, by the time these promotions
were made, the two grades of Directors of Postal Services were amalgamated into
one single grade, and the promotions of the petitioners as well as respondents
Nos. 3 to 7 were to that grade. The case of the petitioners was that
respondents Nos. 3 to 7 were promoted as Directors after the petitioners, so
that the petitioners were recognised as seniors in the grade of Directors also.
These promotions, according to the petitioners, were made some time in the
years 1961 and 1962.
Subsequently, by an Order dated 5th June,
1965, the Government suddenly revised the seniority of these various officers.
The letter dated 5th June, 1965 mentioned the subject as "Revision of
seniority in the erstwhile Junior Time Scale of the Indian Postal Service,
Class 1 of direct recruits from the combined competitive examinations held in
'the years 1947, 1948 and 1949." As a result of this revision of seniority
in the junior time scale of the Indian Postal Service Class 1, respondents Nos.
3 to 7 were shown as senior to the petitioners. The places allotted to
respondents Nos. 3 to 7 were at Nos. 17, 20, 22, 23 and 25, while the two
petitioners were placed below them at Nos. 26 and 27. Later, again another
Order was issued on 17th January 1966 revising the seniority in the grade of
Directors of Postal Services, and, in that revision also, respondents Nos. 3 to
7 were placed as seniors at Nos. 14, 15, 17, 18 and 19, while the two
petitioners were shown as junior to them at Nos. 20 and 21. The petitioners,
consequently, filed this petition under Article 32 of the Constitution
challenging the revision of their seniority in the junior time scale by the
order dated 5th June, 1965 as well as 'the revision of their seniority in the
grade of Directors of Postal Services by the order dated 17th January, 1966.
The principal -round, on which these orders
were challenged by the petitioners, was that they had been made by the
Government arbitrarily in exercise of their power to fix seniority and. by such
arbitrary action, had adversely affected the rights of the petitioners
vis-a-vis respondents Nos. 3 to 7 in violation of Article 16 of the
Constitution.
The point taken was that the seniority having
once been fixed by the Order dated 30th January, 1957 in accordance with the
Rules then in force could not be arbitrarily disturbed by the Government,
particularly when the Rules were never revised subsequently, nor were any fresh
Rules issued governing the seniority of these officers who had been appointed
to the junior time scale of Class 1 Service prior to 30th January. 1957.
Learned counsel appearing for the petitioners formulated four different grounds
for challenge of the Order dated 5th June, 636 1965, all leading to the
contention that that Order violated Art. 16 of the Constitution, or was passed
against the principles of natural justice. In addition, the Order dated 17th
January, 1966 was challenged on one more ground, viz., that, even if it be held
that the re-fixation of seniority in the junior scale of Class I Service was
justified, the Order of the Government revising the seniority in the grade of
Directors was in any case void and illegal. This point was urged on the basis
that appointment to the Directors' grade was made on the basis of selection and
there could not be automatic revision of seniority in that grade consequent
upon the revision of seniority in the time scale of the Service.
The petition was opposed by respondents 1 and
2, the Union of India, and the Director-General of Posts and Telegraphs, as on
behalf of some of the other respondents. Most of the facts put forward by the
petitioners have been admitted, but the inferences and conclusions drawn by the
petitioners as well as the submissions on their behalf in the writ petition
were challenged. The principal contention for resisting the petition was that
the order dated 30th January 1957 fixing the seniority had been made by mistake
as a result of the Government having ignored Supplementary Rule 2(15), the
effect of which was that for purposes of seniority the service of respondents 3
to 7 in junior time scale Grade I was wrongly taken as commencing from the date
of their confirmation in the Service, while, correctly, it should have been
taken from the date on which these respondents joined as probationers. It was
urged that, on a correct interpretation of the Rules, respondents Nos. 3 to 7
should have been held, even initially, to be senior to the petitioners in the
_junior scale of the Class T. Service.
It was further urged that, since the revision
of seniority in the junior time scale of Class I Service was justified and not
arbitrary, the consequential revision of seniority in the grade of Directors of
Postal Services was also valid.
Arguments were addressed at length on both
aspects of the case, but we think that it is not necessary for us in this case
to decide the first point raised on behalf of the petitioners regarding the
validity of the refixation of their seniority in the junior time scale of Class
I Service by the order dated 5th June, 1965, because the petitioners could even
obtain adequate relief on the alternative ground that the revision of seniority
in the grade of Directors by the order dated 17th January, 1966 was void. The
petitioners in para. 4 of their petition made a definite assertion that respondents
3 to 7 were all promoted as Directors after the petitioners. This factual
assertion made in this paragraph has not been denied in any counter affidavit
filed on behalf of the various respondents. In the course of arguments before
us, it was urged by learned counsel appearing for the respondents that the petitioners
as well as respondents 3 to 7 were only shown as officiating in the grade of
Directors in the Civil List and, consequently we should not base our decision
on acceptance of the allegation made 'by the petitioners that the petitioners
and respondents 3 to 7 had all been promoted as Directors. We are unable to
accept this submission. The entry in the Civil List is no proof that the
petitioners and the live respondents have not been promoted in accordance with
the Rules laid down by the Government for promotion.
If it was a fact that there had been no
promotion in compliance with those Rules, the assertion made on behalf of the
petitioners in the petition should have been specifically controverted.
The principles for appointment to the post of
Directors of Postal Services were initially laid down by the Home Ministry's
Memorandum dated 24th May, 1948 to which we have already ,referred. As
indicated earlier, it was laid down that appointments to Grade It of the
Directors of Postal Services were to be made by promotion by selection of the
best officers in the senior time scale of the Indian Postal Services Class 1,
seniority being regarded only where other qualifications were practically equal.
From the very first stage, therefore, appointments to the Posts of Directors of
Postal Services were to be made on the basis of merit and not on the basis of
seniority. Seniority was to be taken into account -only if other qualifications
were practically equal. it appears that, after 'the two grades of Directors of
Postal Services were amalgamated, some fresh rules were promulgated. The
relevant Rules have been brought to our notice by placing before us extracts
from Posts and Telegraphs Manual Volume IV, 4th Edn., in which paragraph 153
mentioned that the rules for recruitment to the grade of Directors of Postal
Services in the Indian Postal Service Class I in the Posts and Telegraphs
Department are given in Appendix 6-A. A copy of Appendix 6-A has also been
placed before us. The Appendix bears the heading "Rules for recruitment to
the grade of Directors of Postal Services in the Indian Postal Services, Class
I in the Posts and Telegraph Department". Rule 2 in this Appendix lays
down the scale of' pay of the post in the grade which is admittedly Rs.
1,300-601,600. Rule 3 prescribes the method of recruitment and is as Follows:"
Recruitment to posts in the grade shall be by selection from among the officers
of the Senior Time Scale of the Indian Postal Service, Class I,, one post being
reserved for promotion of Presidency Postmasters, on the basis of
selection." This Rule also makes it clear that appointment to the grade of
Directors of Postal Services is made by selection and not on the basis of promotion
in accordance with seniority. The presumption exists that the promotion of the
petitioners and respondents 638 3 to 7 to the grade of Directors must have been
made in accordance with these instructions and rules, so that the appointment
of all these concerned parties as Directors was based on merit to be taken into
account at the time of selection and not on seniority in the time scale of
Class I Service. Once a member of the Class I Service in the time scale was
selected for promotion to the grade of Director and given seniority over
another officer selected later, the seniority so determined as a result of
selection could not be made dependent on the seniority in the time scale. It is
clear that, in these circumstances, even if there was justification for
revising the seniority inter se of the petitioners and respondents 3 to 7 in
the time scale of Class I Service, that revision of seniority could not in any
way affect their order of seniority in the grade of Directors to which they
were promoted on the basis of selection in accordance with the rules. It is,
therefore, clear that, even if it be held that the order of the Government
dated 5th June, 1965 revising the seniority of these officers in the junior
time scale was valid, the order dated 17th January, 1966 revising the seniority
in the grade of Directors of Postal Services is not valid and justified.
The seniority in the grade of Directors of
Postal Services was not dependent on the inter se seniority in the junior time
scale and any alteration in the seniority in the latter could not form the
basis for revising 'the seniority in the former grade. No other justification
for the revision of the seniority in the grade of Directors of Postal Services
was put forward on behalf of any of the respondents. It is, thus, clear that
the revision of seniority in the grade of Directors of Postal Services by the
order dated 17th January, 1966 was not based on any rule or appropriate
principle applicable to determination of seniority in that grade, and must,
therefore, be held to be totally arbitrary.
Such an arbitrary order, which affects the
civil rights of the petitioners in respect of future promotion, must,
therefore, be struck down as violating Art. 16 of the Constitution. Once this
order dated 17th January, 1966 is quashed, the petitioners will no longer be
affected in future by the revision of their seniority in the time scale of the
Service by the order dated 5th June, 1965 and, consequently, we have refrained
from going into the question of the validity of that order. The petitioners are
not claiming any relief on the basis of the invalidity of the order dated 5th
June, 1965 which would give to them any additional benefit over and above the
relief which they can obtain on the order dated 17th January, 1966 being
quashed.
As a result, we allow this petition and quash
the order dated 17th January, 1966, revising the seniority of the petitioners
and respondents Nos. 3 to 7 in the grade of Directors of Postal Services. In
the circumstances of this case, we direct that the petitioners 'will receive
their costs from respondent No. 1.' V.P.S. Petition allowed.
L7Sup.C.I./68--2,500-Sec. VI-24-4-69-GIPF.
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