Ramchandra Shankar Deodhar & Ors Vs.
The State of Maharashtra & Ors [1973] INSC 205 (12 November 1973)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
RAY, A.N. (CJ) PALEKAR, D.G.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION: 1974 AIR 259 1974 SCR (2) 216 1974
SCC (1) 317
CITATOR INFO :
R 1974 SC1631 (15) R 1975 SC 511 (11) RF 1975
SC 538 (18) R 1985 SC1272 (3) RF 1986 SC1445 (9) RF 1986 SC1830 (18,19,21,23) R
1990 SC 166 (12) E&D 1990 SC 772 (22,32) RF 1991 SC1676 (72)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 32.-Laches,
alternative remedy and necessary Parties.
States Reorganisation Act, 1956-State of
Bombay-Rules for Promotion from divisional cadre of Mamlatdars to State Cadre
of Deputy Collectors Not made on State-wide basis-Validity.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were Tahsildars in the
quondam state of Hyderabad. After the new state of Bombay was constituted with
territories drawn from various existing States including Hyderabad, under the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956, equation of posts and determination of inter se
seniority was done by the Allocated Government Servants' (Absorption,
Seniority. Pay and Allowance) Rules, 1957.
Under these rules (1957-Rules) the Government
of Bombay declared that the posts of Mamlatdar in the former State of Bombay
shall be deemed to be equivalent to the posts of Tahsildars from the former
State of Hyderabad, and the posts of Deputy Collector in the former State of
Bombay shall be deemed to be equivalent to the posts of Deputy Collector
allocated from the former State of Hyderabad. The recruitment to the posts of
Deputy Collector was provided for by Rules of 30th July, 1959, (1959-Rules)
according to which vacancies to the posts of Deputy Collector were to be filled
from three sources : 50% by nomination on the basis of the result of
competitive examination; 25% by directly.
recruited Mamlatdars who have put in at least
7 years, service including the period spent on probation and the remaining 25%
by Mamlatdars promoted from the lower ranks in the revenue departments. The
reservation of 25% in favour of directly recruited Mamlatdars was made by the
second proviso to rule (1) of the Rules. On 7th April, 1961 the Government laid
down the principles, for regulating the preparation and revision of select list
of Mamlatdars/Tahsildars fit to be appointed as Deputy Collectors in posts to
be filled by promotion. The procedure provided that a Review Committee should
in JulyAugust each year review the claims of all Mamlatdars for promotion to
the posts of Deputy Collector and should draw up a select list for each
division of those who are considered by the Committee as fit for promotion.
When a vacancy arose in the posts of Deputy Collector in a division the
Mamlatdar whose name was highest in the divisional select list was promoted as
officiating Deputy Collector in the vacant post. The name of such Mamlatdars
though so promoted, continued in the divisional select list until he was
confirmed in the cadre of Deputy Collectors or retired from service. There was
a periodical review of the working of the officiating deputy collectors and on
such review the rank in the divisional select list was adjusted so as to reflect
the assessment of the relative merits of the ,officiating deputy collectors.
The promotions as officiating deputy collectors were thus made for each
division separately on the basis of its divisional select list in which the
ranking changed periodically as a result of review and assessment. Then, deemed
dates of continuous officiation were given to the officiating deputy collectors
from each division with a view to ensure that their inter se ranking in the
divisional select list was not affected by the fact that an officer lower in
rank in the divisional,select list might have been officiating as Deputy
Collector for a longer period than another in higher rank. _On the basis of the
deemed dates of continuous officiation given to the officiating Deputy Collector
in each division a combined statewide seniority list of officiating Deputy
Collectors was prepared and confirmation in the cadre of Deputy Collectors were
made in accordance with the seniority in such combined state wise seniority
list. This procedure did not have the warrant of any legislative rules or
administrative orders. It was in accordance with this procedure that the
petitioners were promoted as officiating Deputy Collectors but 2 1 7 some of
the allocated Mamlatdars/ Tahsildars in other divisions who were junior to the
petitioners became officiating Deputy Collectors earlier than the petitioners
and were consequently entitled to be confirmed in-the cadre of Deputy
Collectors in preference to the petitioners. The petitioners filed a writ petition
in this Court, challenging the procedure for promotion,
HELD : The second proviso to rule (1) of the
1959-Rules is void as being violative of Art. 16 of the Constitution. The
procedure for promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors followed by the State
Govenment is also invalid on the ground that it denies equality of opportunity
of promotion and is therefore hit by Art 16 of the Constitution, and hence the
Government resolution dated 7th April 1961 must be quashed. The State
Government should readjust the promotions as officiating Deputy Collectors as
also the confirmation in the cadre of Deputy. Collectors and the readjustment
should be made with retrospective effect and the petitioners should be given
the benefit of seniority, pay and other allowances from the respective dates on
which they would have been promoted had the promotions been made on the,
correct basis. [238E-G], (1)The petitioners were not guilty of any laches or
delay in filing the petition. [226F] (a) The rule that the Court may not inquire
into belated and stale claims is not a rule of law, but a rule of practice
based on exercise of sound judicial discretion depending on the facts of each
case. In the present case, in January 1961, the petitioners were informed that
the rules of recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector in the reorganised
State of Bombay had not yet been unified, that the petitioners continued to be
governed by the rules of the ex Hyderabad State and that the 1959-Rules did not
apply to them. It was only when the Bombay High Court decided Kapoor's case on
23rd March 1968, that the petitioners came to know that it was.the case of the
State Government which was accepted by the High Court, that the 1959-Rules
we-re the unified rules of recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector
applicable throughout the reorganised State of Bombay. The petitioners
thereafter did not lose any time in filing the present petition. [226F-G 227
A-C] (b) Moreover, what is challenged is the validity of the procedure for
making promotions to the posts of Deputy Collector and since this procedure is
still being followed by the State Government it is desirable that its constitutionality
should be adjudged when the question has come up before the Court. [227C-D]
(c)In the present case all promotions that have been made by State Government
are provisional and the position has not been crystallised. Even if the
petitions were allowed and the reliefs claimed by. the petitioner were granted
to them, it would not result in the reversion of any Deputy Collector or
officiating Deputy Collector to the position of Mamlatdar/Tahsildar. The only
effect would be merely to disturb their inter se seniority as officiating
deputy collectors or as deputy collectors. Hence there is no question of
rights, which have accrued to others by reason of the delay in filing the
petition, being disturbed. [227G228B] (d) The claim of enforcement of the
fundamental right of equal opportunity under Art. 16 is itself a right
guarantees under Art. 32 and this Court, which has been assigned the role of a
sentinel on the qui ve for protection of fundamental rights, cannot allow
itself to be persuaded to refuse relief solely on the ground of laches. delay
or the like. [228B-C] Tilockchand Motichand v. H. B. Munshi [1969] 2 S.C.R. 824,
referred to.
(2) The petitioners could not be said to have
any adequate alternative legal remedy. [228F-G] (a)The petitioners could not
have applies for review of the judgment of the Bombay High Court in Kapoor's
case. They were not persons directly or immediately affected by the judgment
and it could not be said that they were necessary parties to the petition who
should have been heard before the judgment was given. [228D-E] 218 (b) The
subject matter of the present petition is, barring only one question namely the
validity of the second proviso to rule (1) of the 1959-Rules, wholly different
from that of the petition in Kapoor's case [228E-F] (e) The remedy by way of
review of a judgment given in another case in which the petitioners were not
parties could hardly be said to be an adequate alternative legal remedy
available to the petitioners. [228F-G] (3) Those who are already promoted
according to the impugned procedure and whose position vis-a-vis the petitioner
would be likely to be affected by the invalidation of such procedure are before
the Court as parties to the petition. All those who are necessary parties are
before the Court, and there is, therefore no impediment in the way of the Court
dealing with the matter.
[228H] (4) The inter se seniority of the
Tahsildars/Mamlatdars allocated from the former State of Hyderabad etc., would
be governed by rr. 7, 8 and 9 of the 1957-Rules; and neither the Government
resolution dated 21st November 1941 as contended by the petitioners, nor the
government resolution dated 29th July 1963 which superseded the
1941-Resolution, would have any application. [229C-E] (5) A right to be
considered for promotion is a condition of service, but mere chances of
promotion are not. By making promotions to the posts of Deputy Collector
divisionwise and limiting such promotions to 50% of the total number of
vacancies in the Posts of Deputy Collector as a result of the 1959-Rules, all
that happened was to reduce the chances of promotion available to the
petitioners. A rule which merely affects the chances 'of promotion cannot be
regarded as varying a condition of service. Therefore, neither the 1959-Rules
nor the procedure for making promotions to the posts of Deputy Collector
division wise varies the conditions of service of the petitioners to their
disadvantage, and hence could not be assailed on the ,round that the previous
approval of the Central Government as required by the proviso to S. 115(7) of
the Estates Reorganisation Act was not obtained. [230A-C] State of Mysore v. G.
B. Purohit, C.A. No. 2281 of 1965, dated 25th January 1967 followed.
(6) The petitioners were not right in their
contention that the second proviso to r. (1) of the 1959-Rules was a valid
provision. Both the directly recruited Mamlatdars as well as the promoted
Mamlatdars form one class. They are both known by the same designation. They
have the same scales of pay and discharge the same functions. The Posts held by
them are interchangeable. There is nothing to show that the two groups are kept
apart. Both are merged together in the same class. It is not competent to the
Government thereafter to discriminate between directly recruited Mamlatdars and
promoted Mamlatdars in the matter of further promotion to the posts of Deputy
Collector. That would be violative of Art. 16 of the Constitution. Therefore,
the second proviso to r. (1) of the 1959-Rules must be held to be bad.'
[230D-G] Meryyn Coutindo v. Collector of Customs. Bombay [1966] 3 S.C.R. and S.
M. Pandit v. The State of Gujarat, A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 252, followed.
(7)(a) The State Government in the absence of
legislative rules, has to make up its mind on the question whether to treat the
cadre of Mamlatdars as a State Cadre or a divisional Cadre,,, and it is
competent to the State Government to take a decision in the exercise of its
executive power under Art. 162 of the Constitution. The State Government
accordingly decided, on 1st November 1956, that while recruitment to the posts
of Mamlatdars should be ,on all State basis" the cadre of Mamlatdars
should be according to the divisions. [231D] B. N. Nagarajan v. State of
Mysore' [1966] 3 S.C.R. 682 and Sant Ram v. State of Rajasthan, [1968] 1 S.C.R.
11, followed.
(b) It is true that under the Bombay Civil
services Classification and Recruitment Rules the service of Mamlatdars is
regarded as Provincial Service 2 1 9 as distinct from Subordinate Service. But
that does not necessarily mean that it cannot be organised into divisional
cadres. The only difference between Provincial Service and Subordinate Service reorganised
in these Rules in the mode of recruitment. Clearly from 1st November, 1956, the
State Government proconceeded on the basis that the cadre of Mamlatdars was a
divisional cadre and not a State Cadre.
[231F-232B] (8) But nothing turns upon this
fact, because the procedure for promoting from the divisional cadre of
Mamlatdars to the State Cadre of Deputy Collectors %,as not consistent with
Art. 16. [232C] (a) The 1959-Rules provided that 50% of the vacancies in the
cadre of Deputy Collector should be filled by direct recruitment. But since the
cadre of Deputy Collector was a State cadre, 50% of the vacancies, to be filled
by direct recruitment were determined on the basis of vacancies in the cadre
for the State as a whole and not for any particular division of the State. But
in regard to promotion by which the other 50% of the vacancies in the cadre of
Deputy Collectors was to-be filled, the State adopted a wholly different
procedure. Though a common seniority list of all the Mamlatdars in the State. irrespective
of the divisions to which they belonged, could be, prepared without, any
difficulty on the basis of the 1951-Rules for the allocate cl Mamlatdars
Tahsildars and for the subsequent appointees, on the principle, of continuous
officiation up to 29th July 1963 and thereafter according to the rule laid down
in the Resolution of 29th July 1963, and a common statewise list could ' also
be made of the Mamlatdars found fit for promotion as Deputy Collectors, and
promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors, could be made on the basis of such
Statewise select list, the State Government did not follow this method. and
instead, made promotions to, the cadre of Deputy Collectors, which was a State
cadre. on the basis of divisional select lists. Where promotion is made by
selection on the basis of merit-cum-seniority, every Mamlatdar should have
equal opportunity With others for being considered for promotion. But the
actual procedure followed limits his opportunity for promotion to avacancy in
his own division. This procedure amounts to denial of equality ofopportunity to
the Mamlatdars, because it is wholly unrelated to the object and purpose of
promotion which is to secure an efficient cadre of Deputy Collectors and in
fact negates it. [232D-234F] (b) It is true that confirmations in the cadre of
Deputy Collectors are made on the basis of a combined seniority list of
officiating Deputy Collectors but that does not cure the infirmity in the mode
of promotion. [234F-G] (c) The allotment of deemed dates of continuous
officiation cannot help retrieve those who have had no opportunity to be
promoted as officiating Deputy Collectors, not on account of want of higher
seniority or better merit, but purely on account of lack of adequate number of
vacancies in the post, of Deputy Collector arising in their division. The
giving of deemed dates of continuous officiation no doubt reflects the relative
merits of the Mamlatdars in each division taken as a separate unit, but it does
not seek to adjust the seniority of the approved Mamlatdars in all the
divisions taken as a whole on the basis of assessment of their relative merits.
It does not, therefore, eliminate the initial inequality of treatment.
[234G-235C] (d) The decision in Rain Saran v. D.I.G. of Police, [1964] 7 S.C.R.
228, shows that if the Cadre of promotion is a.divisional cadre, there was
divisionwise promotion on the basis of divisional select lists. but if it is a
State Cadre, promotion has to be on Statewise basis, so that every officer in
the State has equal opportunity of promotion to the State Cadre. [237A-C] (e)
It is true that, a Mamlatdar cannot be promoted to the cadre of Deputy
Collector unless be officiates as Deputy Collector. But it cannot for that
reason be contended that there is an intermediate cadre of officiating Deputy
Collectors between the cadre of Mamlatdars and the cadre of Deputy Collectors
from which promotion is made to the cadre of Deputy Collectors. There is no
legislative rule or executive order providing for the creation of any such intermediate
cadre of officiating Deputy Collectors. The 1959-Rules provided that the
appointment to 50% posts of the Deputy Collectors should be made by promotion
of suitable Mamlatdars, that is, promotion should be from the cadre of
Mamlatdars to the cadre of Deputy Co lectors. [238B-E] 220 [The :need for
simplifying and streamlining service rules and giving there statutory shape so
as to promote contentment among the services by extending the area of equal
treatment and imparting stability to conditions of service pointed out].
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 299
of 1969.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India
for the enforcement of fundamental rights.
M. N. H. Heble, Parvathi Heble, S. V. Tambwe
K. Rajendra Choudhry and Veena Devi Talwar, for the petitioners.
S. B. Wad and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No.
1.
S. C. Agarwal, R. K. Garg and V. J. Francis,
for respondents Nos. 46-54.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. The short question that arises for determination in this petition
under Art. 32 of the Constitution lies in a very narrow compass, but in order
to arrive at its proper determination it is necessary to state the facts giving
rise to the petition in some detail.
Prior to the reorganisation of the States,
which took place on 1st November, 1956 by virtue of the provisions of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956, the petitioners were confirmed Tehsildars in the
quondam State of Hyderabad which was then a Part B State. The Rules of
recruitment to the posts of Tehsildar which prevailed in the erstwhile State of
Hyderabad provided that 1/3rd of the number of posts shall be filled by
promotion from the lower ranks while the remaining 2/3rd shall be filled by
direct recruitment on the basis of the result of competitive examination. The
petitioners belonged to the latter category of directly recruited Tehsildars.
The next higher cadre above that of Tehsildars was the cadre of the Deputy
Collectors and recruitment to, that cadre was governed by a notification issued
by the Rajpramukh of Hyde I rabid State on the 15th September, 1955. This
notification provided that all the vacancies of the cadre of Deputy Collectors
shall be filled 'only by promotion by selection' from the cadre of Tehsildars.
It was common ground between the parties that both the cadres of Tehsildars as
well as Deputy Collectors were State cadres On 31st August, 1956 the Parliament
enacted the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 and that Act brought about
reorganisation of almost all the States in India with effect from the appointed
day, namely, 1st November, 1956. The fascinating of sections in Part II of the
Act altered the territories of the existing States of Madras and Andhra Pradesh
and brought into being various other new States. We are. concerned here only
with the formation of the new State of Bombay, and we will, therefore, confine
our attention to that. Section 8 constituted a new State of Bombay with
territories drawn from various existing States, namely, Bombay, Hyderabad,
Madhya Pradesh, Saurashtra and Kutch.
The old State of Bombay ceased to exist and a
new State of Bombay with considerably enlarged territories came into being2 21
Since the new State of Bombay comprised territories coming from different
existing States that was naturally bound to give rise to' new and complex
problems of administration, particularly in the context of increased tempo of
developmental activities including land reform measures and the necessity of
integrating the services, introducing a unified pattern of administration and
unifying the laws in the different territories brought together to form the new
State of Bombay. The Government of Bombay, therefore, issued a Resolution,
dated 1st November, 1956, dividing the territories of the new State into six
divisions and placing each division in the charge of a Divisional differ. The
territories of former Saurashtra and Kutch States were ground together in
Rajkot Division, the territories drawn from the former Bombay State, save the,
District ofEast Khandesh, in Ahmedabad, Bombay and Poona Divisions, the
territories drawn from ,the former State of Madhya Pradesh in Nagpur Division'
and the territories drawn from the former Hyderabad State with the addition of
East Khandesh District in Aurangabad Division. Since the service personnel from
these different territories came to be allocated to the new State of Bombay,,
they had all to be fitted into form a compact and homogeneous service, and it
was, therefore, necessary to decide where and at what place they should be
adjusted in the constitution of the new service. This process necessarily
involved equation of posts, absorption of service personnel in the equated
posts and determination of inter se seniority. The Government of Bombay, therefore,
made The Allocated Government Servants' (Absorption, Seniority, Pay and
Allowances) Rules, 1957, which We shall hereafter, for, the sake of
convenience, refer to as the Rules of 1957. The Preamble to the Rules of 1957
stated that they were made by the Governor of Bombay in exercise of powers
conferred by Art. 309 of the Constitution and with due regard to the proviso to
sub-s. (7) of S. 115 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 and with the
approval of the Government of India obtained thereunder where necessary. The
Rules of 1957 provided inter alia for absorption of all persons allotted for
Service to the State ofBombay and the determination of their inter se seniority
in the cadre of absorption. Rule 3 dealt with the, case of an allocated
Government servant belonging to a local cadre, that is, a cadre other than a
State cadre in a former State, but. this rule had no application to Tehsildars
of ExHyderabad State because they belonged to-.a State cadre and not to a local
cadre. Rule 4 enacted a general provision that the appointing authority shall
issue an order absorbing each allocated Government servant, other than one
covered by r. 3, in an equivalent post after the equation of 'posts was made by
the Government. The Government of Bombay thereafter, by a Resolution dated 21st
October, 1957, declared inter alia that the post of Mamlatdars in the former
State of Bombay shall be deemed to be equivalent to the posts of Tehsildars allocated
from the former State of Hyderabad. The petitioners and other Tehsildars
allocated from the Ex-Hyderabad State were accordingly absorbed as confirmed
Grade 11 Mamlatdars with effect from 1st November, 1956, and sense they were
serving in one or the other of the districts of the 'Ex-Hyderabad State which
were grouped together with East Khandesh District to constitute Aurangabad 222
Division, it was directed that they should be treated as Grade 11 Mamlatdars in
the Aurangabad division., Similarly, by the same Government Resolution dated
21st October, 1957 the posts of Deputy Collector in the former State of Bombay
were declared to be equivalent to the posts of Deputy Collector allocated from
the former State, of Hyderabad.
Prior to the reorganisation of the States
different rules of recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector prevailed in
the different regions which went to make up the reorganised State of Bombay. We
have already referred to the rules contained in the Notification of the
Rajpramukh of Hyderabad dated 15th September, 1955. Then there' were rules
enacted by the Government Resolution dated 24th July, 1951 which prevailed in
the former State of Bombay. There were also' similar rules in the other States,
namely, Madhya Pradesh, Saurashtra' and Kutch. The allocated
Mamlatdars/Tehsildars coming from these different States undoubtedly carried
their respective conditions of service with them under s. 115, sub-s. (7) of
the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, and those conditions of service included
the right to be considered for promotion as Deputy Collector, but the different
rules of recruitment which prevailed in the different regions as such became
wholly inapposite and incongruous and ceased to be applicable in the new set
up. The Government of Bombay, therefore, felt that it was necessary to have new
rules of recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector applicable uniformly
throughout the territory the reorganised State and, with that end in view
framed recruitment rules and issued them as appendix to a Resolution dated 30th
July, 1959. These rules we shall hereafter for the sake of convenience refer as
the rules of 30th July, 1959. Rule 1 of these Rules is material and it may be
reproduced as follows "Appointment to the posts of Deputy Collector ,hall
be made either by nomination or by promotion of suitable Mamlatdars.
Provided that the ratio of appointment by
nomination and by promotion shall, as far as practicable be 50 : 50.
Provided further that half the vacancies
reserved for appointment by promotion shall be filled by directly recruited
Mamlatdars who have put in at least seven years service in the posts including
the period spent on probation." It will be noticed that according to rules
vacancies in the posts of Deputy Collector were to be filled from three sources
: 50% by nomination on the basis of the result of competitive examination, 25%
by directly recruited Mamlatdars who have put in at least seven years service
including the period spent on probation and the remaining 25 % by Mamlatdars
promoted from the lower ranks in the Revenue Department. The reservation of 25%
of vacancies in favour of directly recruited Mamlatdars was made by the second
proviso to rule 1, but in writ Petition No. 845 of 1967 filed by one Kapor
against the Commissioner of Aurangabad Division & Ors., a Division Bench of
the Bombay High Court, by its judgment , dated 23rd March, 1968, declared 2 23
that proviso void as being violative of the equal opportunity clause contained
in Art. 16 of the Constitution.
The petitioners in this petition disputed the
correctness of this view taken by the High Court and contended that the
provision enacted in the second proviso to rule I was a valid provision. But of
that a little later when we deal with the arguments of the parties. It is,
however, evident.
that if the second. proviso to rule 1 were
invalid, 50% of the vacancies in the posts of Deputy Collector would have to be
filled by nomination and, 50% by promotion of Mamlatdars irrespective of
whether they were directly recruited Mamlatdars or Mamlatdars promoted from the
lower ranks. We may also at this stage refer to one other contention raised on
behalf of the petitioners in regard to the Rules of 30th July, 1959. That
contention was that the Rules of 30th July, 1959 did not apply to the allocated
Tehsildars from Ex-Hyderabed State who continued to be governed by the
recruitment and promotion' rules of their, erstwhile State.
This contention was sought to be supported by
reference to a letter dated 18th October, 1960 addressed by the Commissioner of
Aurangabad Division to the first petitioner in which the Commissioner stated
that the Rules of 30th July, 1959 "are not applicable to Marathwada
officers as they are governed by recruitment and promotion rules of ExHyderabad
State which are not yet unified by Government.
The respondents admitted that such a letter
was addressed by the Commissioner to the first petitioner, but said that was
due to a bonafide error, and in any event it was not binding on the State
Government. The respondents urged that the, Rules of 30th July, 1959 were
unified recruitment rules applicable throughout the whole, of reorganization
State of Bombay and the promotion of the allocated Tehsildars from Ex-Hyderabad
State to the posts of Deputy Collector was governed by those Rules and not by
the Ex-Hyderabad rules.
This controversy as to the scope and extent
of the applicability of the Rules of 30th July, 1959 need not, however, detain
us, as the same controversy was raised also before the Bombay High Court in
Kapoor's case and was decided in favour of the State Government, and review of
the cogent reasons given by the Bombay High Court in support of its decision
the petitioners did not press their contention and agreed to proceed on the
footing that the Rules of 30th July, 1959 governed recruitment to the posts of
Deputy Collector throughout the reorganised Bombay State.
It may also stated that, as in the case of
Deputy Collectors, so also in the case of Mamlatdars, the Government of Bombay
made unified rules of recruitment by a Resolution date( 19th November, 1959.
These Rules which we shall for the sake of convenience refer as the Rules of
19th November, 1959 came into force with effect from 1st January, 1960. Rule 1
of these rules is material and it provided that appointment to the posts of
Mamlatdars shall be made by nomination on the result of competitive examination
or by promo tion from amongst the members of subordinate revenue services,
provided that as nearly as may be one half of the vacancies in the cadre of
Mamlatdars ,hall be reserved for direct recruits by nomination "except in
the case of Nagpur Division" where a special provision was made that this
ratio would not apply till all persons recruited as Naib Tehsildars were either
promoted as Tehsildars or rejected as not fit to be so promoted.
224 Now, according to the respondents, the
cadre of Mamlatdars was a divisional cadre and not a State cadre and the
reorganised State of Bombay being divided into six divisions, there was a
separate cadre of Mamlatdars for each division. This position was, however,
disputed on behalf of the petitioners and their argument was that though it was
true that Mamlatdars were allocated to different divisions, that was only for
the sake of administrative, convenience and it did not have the effect of
splitting up the State cadre of Mamlatdars into divisional cadres. The cadre of
Mamlatdars always remained one and indivisible and it was a State cadre. Now,
whatever be the correct position in law, and we shall examine. that presently,
one thing is certain that the State Government proceeded on the basis that the
cadre of Mamlatdars was a divisional cadre. The procedure that the State
Government followed for making appointment to the posts of Deputy Collector by
promotion of suitable Mamlatdars/Tehsildars from and after 1st November, 1956
was that for each division a select,list of Mamlatdars/Tehsildars considered
fit for promotion as Deputy Collector was prepared by a revising committee
every year and from the divisional select list, promotions were made as
officiating Deputy Collector on a divisional basis, and thereafter
confirmations in the cadre of Deputy Collector, which was admittedly a State
cadre "were made for the, State as a whole after considering the claims of
all officiating Deputy Collectors in the State as a whole. Thisprocedure does
not appear to have the warrant of any legislatively or administrative orders
but there can be no doubt from the affidavit in reply filed on behalf of the
State Government, that it was in fact followed for making promotions to the
posts of Deputy Collector. On 7th April, 1961, the Government issued a
Resolution laying down the "principles for regulating preparation and
revision of select list of Mamlatdars/ Tehsildars fit to be appointed as Deputy
Collectors in the posts to be filled by promotion". It may be
recapitulated here that under the Rules of 30th July, 1959 the posts to be
filled by promotion of suitable Mamlatdars/Tehsildars were 25% in case the
second proviso to rule I were, held to be valid and 50% in case it was invalid.
The Government Resolution dated 7th April, 1961 provided that a comradeship
should, in July-August each year, review the claims of all Mamlatdars/Tehsildars
for promotion to the posts of Deputy Collector and should draw up a select list
for each division of those who are considered by the committee fit for
promotion, and paragraphs 3 to 7 of this Government Resolution laid down the
principles governing the preparation and revision of the divisional select
lists. The promotions as officiating Deputy Collectors were made divisible on
the basis of the divisional select lists and confirmations in the cadre of
Deputy Collector were made according to the combined seniority list of
officiating Deputy Collectors. Paragraph 17 of the affidavit in reply-filed on
behalf of the State Government set out the detailed procedure followed by the
State Government in this behalf. We shall have occasion to refer to this
procedure in detail when we examine the respective arguments of the parties and
we need not, therefore, elaborate it at this stage Suffice it to point out that
it was in accordance with the procedure that the petitioners were 2 2.5
promoted as officiating Deputy Collectors in the Aurangabad Division on
different dates. The consequence of the, adoption of this procedure, however,
was that some of the allocated Mamlatdars/Tehsildars, in other divisions, who
were junior to the petitioners, became officiating Deputy Collectors earlier
than the petitioners and were consequently entitled to be confirmed in the
cadre of Deputy Collectors, in preference to the petitioners. The petitioners
actually gave in paragraph 38 of the petition examples of three allocated
Mamlatdars from Ex-Bombay State who were admittedly appointed Mamlatdars later
than the petitioners, and yet came to be promoted as officiating Deputy
Collectors earlier than the petitioners. This was the main cause of grievance
of the petitioners in the petition.
Before we conclude the narration of facts we
must also refer to, Government Resolution dated 29th July, 1963 passed by the
Government of Maharashtra which superseded the rule of seniority contained in
an earlier Government Resolution dated 21st November, 1941 and provided that
"The seniority of promoted officers in the State Services and this would
include the service of Deputy Collectors "should be determined according
to the date of promotion, to officiate continuously in the case of those' appointed
by promotion, irrespective of whether the appointments are made in temporary or
in permanent vacancies, subject to the provisions of the following clauses :
(i) (ii) The inter se seniority of officers promoted from the select lists
prepared in consultation with the State Public Service Commission should be
determined in accordance with the ranks in the select list.". This was the
rule which governed the determination of seniority, in the cadre of Deputy
Collectors.
Now, various reliefs were claimed by the
petitioner in the present petition, but of these reliefs, the petitioners did
not press those contained in prayers V, VI and IX to XII.
The other reliefs were pressed by the
petitioners and they may subsumed under the following three grounds (A) The
gradation list of Mamlatdars/Tehsildars allocated to the State of Bombay as oil
1st November, 1956 was liable to be prepared in, accordance with the principle
of seniority laid down in Government Resolution dated 21st November 1941, and
the Government Resolution dated 29th , 1963 had no application in the
determination of such seniority.
(B) The Rules of 30th July, 1959 varied the
conditions of service of the petitioners and other allocated Tehsildars from
Ex-Hyderabad State to their disadvantage without the previous approval of the
Central Government as required under the proviso to s' 115, sub-s.
(7) of the, States Reorganisation Act, 1956,
and were, therefore, null and void. If, contrary to this submission, the Rules
of 30th July, 1959 were valid, so also was the second proviso to 226 rule 1 of
these Rules, and the Bombay High Court was in error in declaring it to be
invalid in Kapoor's case.
(C) The Government Resolution dated 7th April,
1961, as also the procedure for making promotions to the posts of Deputy
Collector followed by the State Government were violative of the equal
opportunity, clause contained in Art. 16 of the Constitution. The promotions to
the posts of Deputy Collector should have been made on the basis of Statewide
seniority of Mamlatdars/Tehsildars by selection from amongst
Mamlatdars/Tehsildars throughout the State as a whole.
We shall proceed to examine these grounds in
the order in which we have set them out, but before we do so we must refer to
some ,objections of a preliminary nature raised on behalf of the respondents.
The first preliminary objection raised on
behalf of the respondents. was that the petitioners were guilty of gross lashes
and delay in filing the petition. The divisional cadres of
'Mamlatdars/Tehsildars were created as far back as 1st November, 1956 by the
Government Resolution of that date, and the procedure for making promotion to
the posts of Deputy Collector on the basis of divisional select lists, which
was a necessary consequence of the creation of the divisional ,cadre of
Mamlatdars/Tehsildars, had been in operation for a long number of years, at any
rate from 7th April, 1961" and the Rules ,of 30th July, 1959 were also
given effect to since the date of their ,,enactment and yet the petitioner did
not file the petition until 14th July, 1969. There was a delay of more than ten
or twelve years in filing the petition since the accrual of the cause of
complaint, and this delay, contended the respondents, was sufficient to
disentitle the petitioners to any relief in a petition under Art, 32 of the
Constitution. We do not think this contention should prevail with us. In the
first place, it must be remembered that the rule which says that the Court may
not inquire into related and stale claims is not a rule of law, but a rule of
practice based on sound and proper exercise of discretion, and there is no
inviolable rule that whenever there is delay, the court must necessarily refuse
to entertain the petition. Each case must depend on its own facts. The
question, ,as pointed out by Hidayatullah, C.J., in Tilockchand Motichand v. H.
B. Munishi(4) "is one of discretion or this Court to follow from ,case to
case. There is no lower limit aid there is no upper limit-. It will all depend
on what the breach of the Fundamental Right and the remedy claimed are and how
the delay arose." Here the petitioners were informed by the Commissioner,
Aurangabad Division, by his letter dated 18th October, 1960 land also by the
Secretary of the Revenue Department in January 1961 that the rules of
recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector in the reorganised State of Bombay
had not yet been unified, and that the petitioners continued (1) [1969] 2 S
S.C.R. 824.
2 2 7 to be governed by the rules of
Ex-Hyderabad State and the Rules. of 30th July, 1959 had no application to
them. The petitioners. were, therefore, justified in proceeding on the
assumption that there were no unified rules of recruitment to the posts of
Deputy Collector and the promotions that were being made by the State
Government were only provisional, to be regularised when unified rules of
recruitment were made. It was only when the petition in Kapoor's case was
decided by the Bombay High Court that the petitioners came to know that it was
the case of the State Government in that petition and that case was accepted by
the Bombay High Court that the Rules of 30th July, 1959 were the unified rules
of recruitment to the posts of Deputy Collector applicable throughout. the
reorganised State of Bombay. The petitioners thereafter did not lose any time
in Ring the present petition. Moreover, what is challenged in the petition is
the validity of the procedure for making promotions to the posts of Deputy
Collector-whether it is violative of the equal opportunity clause-and since
this procedure, is not a thing of the past but is still being followed by the
State Government, it is but desirable that its constitutionality should be
adjudged when the question has, come before the court at the instance 'of
parties properly aggrieved by it. It may also be noted that the principle on
which the Court proceeds in refusing relief to the petitioner on ground of
lashes ordeals is that the rights which have accrued to others by reasons of
the delay in filing the petition should not be allowed to be disturbed unless
there is reasonable explanation for the delay. This principle was stated in the
following terms by Hidayatullah, C.J. in Tilokchand v. H. B. Munshi(1)
"The party claiming Fundamental Rights must move the Court before other
rights come into existence. The action of courts cannot harm innocent parties
if their rights emerge by reason of delay on the part of the person moving the
Court." Sikri, J., (as he then was), also restated the same principle in
equally felicitous language when he said in' S.
N. Bose v. Union of India(2) : "It Would
be unjust to deprive the respondents of the rights which have, accrued to them.
Each person ought to be entitled to sit back and consider that his appointment
and promotion effected a long time ago would not be set aside after the lapse
of a number of years." Here as admitted by the State Government in
paragraph 55 of the affidavit in repeal promotions that have been made by the
State Government area provisional and the position has not been crystallised to
the prejudice of the petitioners. No rights have, therefore, accrued in favour
of others by reason of the delay in filing the petition. The promotions being
provisional, they have not conferred any rights on hose promoted and they are
by their very nature liable to be set a : naught, if the correct legal
position, as finally determined, so reqiures. We were also told by the learned
counsel for the petitioners, and that was not controverted by the learned
counsel appearing on behalf of the (2) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 697.
(1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 824.
228 State Government, that even if the
petition were allowed and the reliefs claimed by the petitioners granted to
them, that would not result in the reversion of any Deputy Collector or
officiating Deputy Collector to the post of Mamlatdar/Tehsildar; the only
effect would be merely to disturb their inter se seniority as officiating
Deputy Collectors or as Deputy Collectors. Moreover it may be noticed that the
claim for enforcement of the fundamental right of equal opportunity under Art.
16 is itself a fundamental right guaranteed under. Art. 32 and this Court which
has been assigned the role of a sentinel on the quay dive for protection of the
fundamental rights cannot easily allow itself to be persuaded to refuse relief
solely on the jejune ground of laches, delay or the like.
The respondents then contended that though
the petitioners were not parties to the petition in Kapoor's case, some of the
respondents in that petition were directly recruited Tehsildars like the
petitioners and ,the dispute of directly recruited Tehsildars as a class was
agitated in that case and decided and consequently if the judgment of the
Bombay High Court in regard to such dispute was incorrect, the petitioners
could always apply for a review of that impunities; as did the parties in
Shivdeo Singh v. State of Punjab(1). The petitioners had this alternative legal
remedy of review available to them and there was no reason why, instead of pursuing
that remedy, the petitioners should have filed the present petition under Art.
32. This contention is also without force, and for three very good reasons. In
the first place, it is difficult to see how the petitioners could have applied
for review of the judgment of the Bombay High Court in Kapoors case. The
petitioners were not persons directly and immediately affected by the judgment
and it could not be said that they were necessary parties to the petition who
should have been heard before the judgment was given, as was the case in
Shivdeo Singh v.State of Punjab(1). The petitioners had, therefore, no locus to
apply for review of that judgment. Secondly,. the subject matter of the present
petition is, barring only one question which is common, namely, the question as
to the validity of the second proviso to rule 1 of the Rules of 30th July,
1959, wholly different from that of the petition in Kapoor's case, and asking
for review of the judgment in Kapoor's case would be no remedy at all so far as
the reliefs claimed in the present petition are concerned.
Lastly, the remedy by way of review of a
judgment given in another case in which the petitioners are not parties can
hardly be said to be an adequate alternative legal remedy ,available to the
petitioners.
The third preliminary objection raised on
behalf of the respondents was that it was 'not competent to the Court, to
pronounce on the validity of the procedure for making promotions to the posts
of Deputy Collector in the absence of other Mamlatdars/Tehsildars who might be
interested in supporting the procedure, This objection is equally futile.
Those who are already promoted according to,
the impugned procedure and whose position' vis-a-vis the petitioners would be
likely to be affected by the invalidation of such procedure are A.I.R 963 S.C.
1909.
229 before the Court as parties to the
petition. Only those Mamlatdars/ Tehsildars are not made parties to the
petition who are not promoted as officiating Deputy Collectors or who are, even
on the basis of the promotions made under the impugned procedure, junior to the
petitioners. But these Mamlatdars/Tehsildars are not necessary parties to the
petition, as they would not be adversely affected vis-a-vis the petitioners
even if the impugned procedure were held to be invalid. All those who are
necessary parties are before the Court and there is, therefore, no. impedimentin
the way of the Court proceeding to decide the questions raised for its
determination.
Having rejected these preliminary objections,
we shall now turn to examine the grounds of challenge urged on behalf of the
petitioners.
Re. Ground A : The argument under this ground
of challenge was that the seniority of the petitioners vis-a-vis other
Mamlatdars/ Tehsildars in the recognised State of Bombay was liable to be
determined according to the principle laid down in the Government Resolution
dated 21st November, 1941 and the Government Resolution dated 29th July, 1963
had no application. This argument :is a little ,difficult to comprehend. We fail
to see how either of the two Government Resolutions dated 21st November, 1941
and 29th July, 1963 comes into the picture in determining the seniority of the
petitioners qua other allocated Mamlatdars/Tehsildars as on 1st November, 1956.
The inter se seniority of the Tehsildars and Mamlatdars allocated from the
former States of Hyderabad, Madhya Pradesh, Bombay, Saurashtra and Kutch to the
reorganised States of Bombay as on 1st November..
1956 would be governed by rules 7, 8 and 9 of
the Rules of 1957, and neither the Government 'Resolution dated 21st November,
1941 nor the Government Resolution dated 29th July, 1963 would have any
application. Prayer II of the petition must accordingly be rejected.
Re : Ground B : The petitioners and other
allocated Tehsildars from Ex-Hyderabad State had, under the Notification of the
Rajpramukh dated 15th September, 1955, all :he vacancies in the post of Deputy
Collector in the ExHyderabad State available to them for promotion, but under
the Rules of 30th July, 1959, 50% of the vacancies were to be filled by direct
recruitment and only the remaining 50% were available for promotion and that
too on divisional basis. This according to the petitioners, constituted
variation to their prejudice in the conditions of sence applicable to them
immediately prior to the reorganisation of the States and since such variation
was effected by the Rules of 30th July, 1959 without obtaining the previous
approval of the Central Government as require , under the proviso to s. 1 15,
sub-s. (7) of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, the Rules of 30th July, 1959
were invalid. This contention of the petitioners we find difficult to accept.
All that happened Is a result of making
promotions to the posts of Deputy Collectors divisionwise and limiting such 230
promotions to 50% of the total number of vacancies in the posts of Deputy
Collector was to reduce. the chances of promotion available to the petitioners.
It is now well settled by the decision of the Court in State of Mysore v.G. B
Purohit(1) that though a right to be considered for promotion is a condition of
service, mere chances of promotion are not. A rule which merely affects chances
of promotion cannot be regarded as varying a condition of service. In Purohit's
case,(1) the district wise seniority of sanitary inspectors was changed to
State wise seniority,.
and as a result of this change the respondents
went down in seniority and became very junior. This, it was urged, affected
their chances of promotion which were protected under the proviso to S. 115,
sub-s. (7). This contention was negatived and Wanchoo, J., (as he then was),
speaking on behalf of this Court observed : "'It is said on behalf of the
respondents that as their chances of promotion have been affected their
conditions of service have been changed to their disadvantage. We see no force
in this argument because chances of promotion are not conditions of
service".
It is, therefore, clear that neither the
Rules of 30th July, 1959, nor the procedure for making promotions to the posts
of Deputy Collector division wise varies the conditions of service of the
petitioners to their disadvantage. The proviso to S. 1 1 5, sub-s. (7) is
accordingly not attracted and the Rules of 30th July, 1959 cannot be assailed
as invalid on ground of non-compliance with that proviso.
So far as the question of validity of the
second proviso to rule 1 of the Rules of 36th July, 1959 is concerned, there
can be no doubt that the, Bombay High Court was right in declaring it to be
invalid.. It can hardly be disputed that both the directly recruited Mamlatdars
as well as the promote Mamlatdars form one class. They are both known by the
same designation. They have same scales of pay. They discharge the same
functions. The posts held by them are interchangeable. There is nothing to'
show that the two groups are kept apart. Both are merged together in the same
class. It is not competent to the Government thereafter to discriminate between
directly recruited Mamlatdars and promotee Mamlatdars in the matter of further
promotion to the posts of Deputy Collector. That would be violative of Art. 16
of the Constitution. This is abundantly clear from the decisions of this Court
in Meryn Coutindo v. Collector of Customs, Bombay(2) and S. M. Pandit v. The
State of Gujarat(3). In fact S. M. Pandit's case (3) is directly in Districts
of the present case are almost indistinguishable from S. M. Pandit's case (3 )
. The second proviso to rule 1 of the Rules of 30th July, 1959 must
consequently be held to be bad as being in conflict with Art. 16 of the Constitution.
Re : Ground C : The first question that would
logically seem to arise under the ground of challenge is whether in the
reorganised State of Bombay the cadre of Mamlatdars was a State cadre or a
divisional cadre. There is no doubt that in the former State of Hyderabad the
cadre of Mamlatdars was a State cadre. What was the nature of the (1) C.A. No.
2281 of 1965, decided on 25th January, 1957.
(2) [1956] 3 S.C.R. 600.
(3) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 252.
231 231 cadre of Mamlatdars in the former
State of Bombay was a matter of dispute between the parties. The petitioners
said that it was a State cadre, while the respondents asserted that it was a
divisional cadre. It is not' possible to resolve this controversy on affidavits
as it raised a disputed question of fact, and we must, therefore, without
finally deciding the question proceed on the basis that in the former State of
Bombay the cadre of Mamlatdars was a divisional cadre as alleged by the
respondents. Nothing, however, turns upon this fact except to indicate that if
the cadre of Mamlatdars in the recognised State of Bombay was constituted into a
divisional cadre, it was not something radically new; it was in line with what
prevailed in the former state of Bombay. Now let us examine what happened on
the reorganisation of the States. The allocated Mamlatdars/Tehsildars coming
from different regions were absorbed in the equated posts of Mamlatdars and the
question arose as to how they should be integrated in the new service. Should
they be formed into a State cadre as in ExHyderabad State or into a divisional
cadre as in Ex-Bombay State ? The State Government had to make up its mind on
this question and, in the absence of legislative rules, it was competent to the
State Government to take a decision in the exercise of its executive power
under Art. 162 of the Constitution, vide B. N. Nagarajan v. State of Mysore(1)
and Sant Ram v. State of Rajasthan (2). The State Government accordingly
decided by Government Resolution dated 1st November, 1956 that while
recruitment to the posts of Mamlatdars should be "on all State
basis", the cadre of Mamlatdars should be according to the divisions. It
was contended on behalf of the petitioners that the constitution of Mamlatdars
into divisional cadres was contrary to the Bombay Civil Services Classification
and Recruitment Rules which were statutory rules made by the Governor under s. 241
of the Government of India Act, 1935. These Rules, said the petitioners,
classified the service of Mamlatdars as a Provincial Service and that showed
that the cadre of Mamlatdars was a Provincial or State cadre. Now it is true
that under the Bombay Civil Services Classification and Recruitment Rules the
service of Mamlatdars is regarded as a Provincial Service as distinguished from
Subordinate Service, but that does not necessarily mean that it cannot be
organised into divisional cadres. Ile only difference between Provincial
service and Subordinate service recognised in these Rules is that whereas
"appointments to Provincial services-shall be made by Government or by an
authority empowered by Government in this behalf', "recruitment to
Subordinate Service shall be made by Heads of Departments and those Heads of
Offices to whom powers have been delegated subject to the provisions of these
rules and under the general control of Government". There is nothing in
the Rules which system that a Provincial service may not consist of divisional
cadres. The, Organisation of Mamlatdars into divisional cadres cannot,
therefore, be said to be in conflict with these Rules and on that account
invalid. in fact we find legislative recognition of the constitution of
divisional cadres of Mamlatdars in the Rules of 19th November, 1959 which are
admittedly statutory rules made under the proviso to Art. 309 of the
Constitution. The proviso to rule 1 proceeds on the basis that the cadre (1)
[1966] 3 S.C.R. 682.
(2) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 11.
232 of Mamlatdars is a divisional cadre and
in reference to each division. cadre, goes on to provide that one half of the
vacancies shall be filed by nomination and one half by promotion, except in
case of divisional cadre of Nagpur division where this provision would not
apply until after all persons recruited as Naib Tehsildars are either promoted
as Mamlatdars or rejected as not fit to be so promoted.
There can, therefore, be no doubt that right
from 1st November, 1956 the cadre of Mamlatdars was a divisional cadre and not
a State cadre. It is equally clear from the Government Resolution dated 1st
November, 1956 as well as the affidavits that the cadre of Deputy Columbus was
a Stirling cadre. The question is whether the procedure followed by the State
Government for marking promotions to the State cadre of Deputy Collectors from
the divisional cadres of Mamlatdars was consistent with Art. 16 of the
Constitution. Did it ensure equality of opportunity for promotion to Mamlatdars
belonging to the different divisional cadres? While examining this question it
is necessary to compare the procedure followed in regard to direct recruitment
to the cadre of Deputy Collectors. As we have already pointed out above, the
Rules of 30th July, 1959 provided that 50% of the vacancies in the cadre of
Deputy Collectors shall be filled by Direct recruitment. Since the cadre of
Deputy Collectors was a State cadre, 50% of the vacancies to be filled by
direct recruitment were determined on the basis of vacancies in the cadre for
the State as a whole and not for any particular division of the State. The
direct recruitment was made on a Statewide basis without any attempt to see
that there was divisionwise representation. But in regard to promotion by which
the other 50% of the vacancies in the cadre of Deputy Collectors were to be
filled, the State Government adopted a wholly different procedure. Though a
common seniority list ,of all the mamlatdars in the State, irrespective of the
divisions to which they belonged, could be prepared without any difficulty on
the basis of the Rules of 1957 for the allocated Mamlatdars/Tehsildars and for
the ,subsequent appointees, on the principle of continuous officiation upto
29th July, 1063 and thereafter according to the rule laid down in Government
Resolution dated 29th July, 1963 and a common Statewide select list could also
be made of Mamlatdars found fit for promotion as Deputy Collectors and
promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors could be made on the basis of such
Statewide select list, the State Government did not choose to follow this
method and instead made promotions to the cadre of Deputy Collectors which was
a State cadre on the basis of division select lists. The procedure followed
by-the State Government for making promotions was as follows : The Review
Committee prepared every year for each division a separate divisional select
list of those Mamlatdars who were found fit for promotion as Deputy Collectors.
Where Mamlatdars were brought on the divisional select list at the same time,
their names were ordinarily arranged according to their seniority in the
divisional cadre but in case of Mamlatdar ,of outstanding merit, a higher rank
might be given to win in the divisional select list than that warranted by his
seniority. Subject to this provision, the seniority of Mamlatdarsin the
Divisional select list was determined by the date of their entry in the list.
When a 233 vacancy arose in the post of Deputy Collector in a division and it
was likely to last for three months or more, the Mamlatdar whose name was
highest in the Divisional select list and who was not already officiating, 'was
promoted as officiating Deputy Collector in the vacant post 'De name of such
Mamlatdar, though promoted as officiating Deputy Collector, however, continued
in the, divisional select list until he was confirmed in the cadre of Deputy
Collectors or retired from service whichever happened earlier. Now, the ranking
in the divisional select list did not remain constant. There wag periodical
review of the work of the officiating Deputy Collectors and on such review, the
ranking in the divisional select list was adjusted so as to reflect the
assessment of the relative merits of the officiating Deputy Collectors e.g. an
officiating Deputy Collector who had a better record of service might be placed
higher than another with less meritorious record and so on and so forth in
descending order of merit. The promotions as officiating Deputy Collector were
thus made for each division separately, on the basis of its divisional select
list in which the ranking kept on changing periodically as a result of review
and assessment. Then for the purpose or confirmation in the, cadre of Deputy
Collectors, a combined seniority list of officiating Deputy Collectors from all
divisions was prepared. procedure followed for the purpose of preparing
combined seniority list was as follows in the first place "deemed"'
dates of continuous officiation were given to the officiating Deputy Collectors
from each division with a view to ensuring that their inter se ranking in the
divisional select list was not affected by the fact that an officer lower in
rank in the divisional select list might have been officiating as Deputy
Collector for a longer period than another in higher rank. This was done by
providing that-the officer who was highest in the rank in the divisional select
list should be given the date of continuous officiation of the officer who had
the longest period of officiation as Deputy Collector and the officer next to
him in rank should be given the date of continuous officiation of the officer
who had officiated next longest as Deputy Collector and so on till the dates of
continuous officiation of all officers were adjusted so as to reflect their
inter se seniority in the divisional select list.
Thus, if A, B and C were officiating Deputy
Collectors in a division having 1st January, 1960, 1st July, 1960 and 1st
January, 1961 respectively as their dates of continuous officiation and in the
divisional select list their ranking was first C, second B and last A, their
deemed dates of continuous officiation would be 1st January, 1960 for C, 1st
July, 1960 for B and 1st January, 1961 for A. Then on the basis of the deemed
dates of continuous officiation given to the officiating Deputy Collectors in
each division, a combined State-wise seniority list of officiating Deputy
Collectors was prepared and confirmations in the cadre of Deputy Collectors
were made in accordance with the seniority in such combined State-wise
seniority list. This was the procedure followed by the State Government and it
hag to meet the challenge of Art. 16 of the Constitution.
Now, it is clear that this procedure suffers
from a, serious infirmity in that it provides for promotions to the State cadre
of Deputy Collectors to-be made on the basis of divisional select lists. That
clearly amounts to denial of equality of opportunity to Mamlatdars in the State
234 in the matter of promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors. If a
mamlatdar aspires to be promoted to the cadre of Deputy Collectors which is the
next higher cadre of promotion for him, he has to be promoted first as
officiating Deputy Collector. It is only after he is promoted as officiating
Deputy Collector that he can become eligible to be confirmed in the cadre of
Deputy Collectors.
But, in order to be promoted as officiating
Deputy Collector, he has to wait until a vacancy occurs in the post of Deputy
Collector in his division. Even if he is senior to a Mamlatdar in-another
division and more suitable, he cannot be promoted to officiate in a vacancy
which arises, in the other division. His opportunity for promotion is limited
to a vacancy in his own division. The consequence is that if a vacancy in the
post of Deputy Collector arises earlier in one division, a Mamlatdar in the
select list of that division, would get promoted as officiating Deputy
Collector earlier than a Mamlatdar 'in another division where a vacancy in the
post of Deputy Collector arises later and, subject to the operation of the rule
of deemed dates of continuous officiation, that would mean that the former
would gain entry in the cadre of )Deputy Collector earlier than the latter,
even though the former may be junior and less suitable than the latter. The
entry in the cadre of Deputy Collectors is thus made to depend not on the
assessment of the relative merits of a Mamlatdar vis a vis the other Mamlatdars
in the State, but on the fortuitous circumstances as to when a vacancy in the
post of Deputy Collector arises in the division to which the Mamlatdar belongs.
This is clearly violative of the equal opportunity clause because it is wholly
unrelated to the object and purpose of promotion which is to secure an
efficient cadre of Deputy Collectors and in fact negates it. It must be
remembered that the cadre of Deputy Collectors is a State cadre and for
promotion to such State cadre every Mamlatdar must have equal opportunity to be
considered. Where promotion is made by selection on the basis of merit-cumseniority,
every Mamlatdar should be able to enter the lists; he should have equal
opportunity with others for being considered for promotion. There must be one
common door for entry into the cadre of Deputy Collectors through which every
Mamlatdar should be equally entitled to enter, 'provided he is selected on the
application of the principle of merit-cum-seniority. There cannot be six doors
of entry, one door available exclusively for the Mamlatdars of each division.
That is bound to create inequality of opportunity in the matter of promotion.
It is true that confirmations in the cadre of Deputy Collectors are made on the
basis of combined seniority list of officiating Deputy Collectors, but that
does not cure the infirmity in the mode of promotion. The allotment of deemed dates
of continuous officiation cannot help retrive those who have had no opportunity
to be promoted as officiating Deputy Collectors, not on account of want of
higher seniority or better merit, but purely on account of lack of adequate
number of vacancies in the post of Deputy Collector arising in their division.
Moreover, since the Officiating Deputy Collectors are still substantively
Mamlatdars and it is in virtue of their being Mamlatdars that they are eligible
to be promoted to the cadre of Deputy Collectors by confirmation, the combined
seniority list of officiating Deputy Collectors is in truth and 235 reality
nothing but a combined select list of Mamlatdars prepared by unalgamating the
divisional select lists. The amalgamation of, the livisional select lists is
not made on a comparative assessment of the elative Merits of the Mamlatdars in
the divisional Select lists as to produce, a combined seniority list based on
merit-cum-seniority, but it proceeds on the basis of deemed dates of continuous
officiation is Deputy Collectors given to Mamlatdars in their respective
divisional select lists. The giving of deemed dates of continuous officiation
no doubt reflects the relative merits of the Mamlatdars in each,division taken
as a separate unit, but it does not seek to adjust the seniority of the
approved Mamlatdars in all the divisions taken as a whole on the basis of
assessment of their relative merits. It does not, therefore, eliminate the
inequality of treatment which inheres at the initial stage of promotion as
officiating Deputy Collectors. The, vice of inequality of opportunity continues
to inhibit promotions to the Cadre of Deputy Collectors. The procedure followed
by the State Government in making promotions must, therefore, be held to be
,violative of Art. 16 of the Constitution.
The respondents, however, relied very heavily
'on the decision of this Court in Ram Saran v. Deputy Inspector General of
police(1) and contended that this decision gives approval to the mode of
promotion adopted by the State Government in the present case. We do not think
so. Read superficially it might appear that this decision supports the
contention of the respondents, but if we scrutinise It closely, it would be
apparent that not only it does not render any assistance to the respondents but
actually goes against them. To understand the true ratio of this decision it is
necessary to notice the facts in some detail. The police force in the State of
Rajasthan was constituted under Police Act, 1861, and under s. 2 of the Act it
was deemed to be one police force for the whole state under the control and
supervision of theinspector General of Police. The entire area of the State
was, for administrative convenience, divided into four ranges each under the
charge of a Deputy Inspector General of Police Each range comprised various
district organisations under Superintendents of Police. The initial recruitment
to the police force was in the rank of constable and that Was done within the
district by the Superintendent of Police. The cadre of constables was a
district cadre' The promotion from the cadre of constables to the next higher
cadre of head constables was made within the district by the Superintendent of
Police on the basis of district wise select list of approved constables. The
cadre of Head Constables was also a district cadre. The further promotion from
the cadre of Head Constables to the cadre of Sub--Inspectors was made within
the range by the Deputy, Inspector General of Police and for this purpose all
the Head Constables in the range were considered as one group for promotion to
the rank of Sub-Inspectors and promotion was made on the basis of rangewise
select list of approved Head Constables. Whenever a vacancy In the post of
Sub-Inspector of Police arose in a range, the Deputy Inspector General of
Police of that range would make promotion from the select list of his range
according to seniority and conversely if reversion were (1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 228.
236 to take place, the junior most Head
Constable officiating as Sub-Inspector in the range would revert. The cadre of
Sub Inspectors wag thus clearly a range cadre. So far as the next higher cadre
of Inspectors is concerned, that was a State cadre and promotion to that cadre
was made by the Inspector General of Police for the State as a whole on the
basis of State wise select list of approved Sub-Inspectors.
Now what happened in this case was that the
petitioner who was promoted to the rank of Sub-Inspector from the rank of Head
Constable was reverted when a permanent Sub-Inspector returned to the range, as
he was the junior most approved Head Constable officiating as. Sub-,"
Inspector in that range, though in other ranges there were many approved Head
Constables who were junior to him and yet continued to, Officiate as
Sub-Inspectors. The petitioner thereupon filed a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution challenging the range wise system of promotion from the rank of
Head Constables to the tank of Sub Inspectors inter alia on the ground that the
whole police force being one, the practice of promotion of Head Constables to
officiate as Sub Inspectors range wise amounted to denial of equality of
opportunity under Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
While dealing with this ground of challenge
the Court pointed out that at the level of Constables and Head Constables local
knowledge was conducive to administrative efficiency and that was the reason
why recruitment of Constables and their promotion as Head Constables was on
districtwise basis and even for the post of Sub-Inpector, local knowledge was
regarded as useful, and therefore, while widening the area, selections to the
post of Sub-Inspector were confined within the range. In regard to the post of
Inspector, however, local knowledge was not insisted upon as the work of
Inspector is mostly of a supervisory nature and hence promotion to the rank of
Inspector was provided on Statewide basis. The Court then proceeded to observe
: "If the State evolved the three tier system of giving promotion from
constables to head-constables from head constables to Sub-Inspectors and from
Sub-Inspectors to Inspectors, which is done in the interest of administrative
efficiency of the police force, it cannot in our opinion be said that such a
system should be struck down on the ground that the police force being deemed
one for the whole State, promotion throughout from constable upwards should be
on the basis of the whole State. Apart from administrative difficulties which may
arise if all promotion of members in the police force is concentrated in the
hands of the Inspector General of Police which is what the petitioner is
contending for, it seems to us that there is a good deal of force in the
contention of the State that the three tier system works for the efficiency of
the police force of these ranks and is designed with that object". On this
reasoning the Court negatived the constitutional challenge to the validity of
the system of promotion.
It will be seen from this analysis of the
reasoning of the decision in Ram Saran's case(1) that far from negative the
contention of the petitioners, it goes a long way towards supporting it. In Ram
Saran's case(1) the cadre of Sub Inspectors was a range cadre and promotion to
that cadre in each range was made on the basis of select (1)[1964] 7 S.C.R.
228.
237 list of approved Head Constables from
that particular range.
This mode of promotion which confined
promotional Head Constables to Sub-Inspectors within the range was upheld by
this Court because it was calculated to make available the advantage of local
knowledge in a post where such local knowledge would be useful in promoting the
interest of administrative efficiency of the police force. But the basic
feature underlying this mode, of promotion was, and that is vital to the
understanding of the true ratio of this decision, that in respect of promotion
to the range cadre of Sub-Inspectors all the Head Constables in the range were
eligible for being considered and promotion to such range cadre was made on the
basis of rangewise selection list prepared by taking into account the relative
merits of all the Head Constables in the range. Every Head Constable in the
range had, therefore, equal opportunity of promotion to the range cadre of
Sub-Inspectors. Here in the present case, however, as we have. already pointed
out above, the procedure adopted by the State Government provided for promotion
to the State cadre of Deputy Collectors, not ,on the basis of States select
list, but on the basis of divisions select lists of Mamlatdars. This is a very
vital point on which the mode of promotion in the present case differed from
that in Ram Saran's case(1). If the cadre of Deputy Collectors had been a
divisional cadre, there would have been no objection in providing that the
promotion to that cadre shall be divisionwise on the basis of divisional select
lists. Then the analogy in Ram Saran's case(1) would have been complete. But
here the cadre of Deputy Collectors was admittedly a State cadre and not a
divisional cadre and divisionwise promotion to ,such cadre on the basis of
divisional select lists could not, therefore, be justified on the ratio of the
decision in Ram Saran's case(1). It may be noticed that in Rain Saran's
case(1), in regard to promotion to the State cadre of Inspectors, the procedure
followed was to have a Statewise select list of approved Sub-Inspectors from
all over the State and to make promotion to the State cadre of Inspectors on
the basis of such State wise select list. The promotion to the State cadre of
Inspectors was not made range wise on the basis of separate select lists of
Sub-Inspectors of each range. If that had been done, and upheld by this Court.
the argument of the respondents would have been almost unassailable. But the
promotion to the State cadre of Inspectors was on a Statewise basis. The ratio
of the decision in Ram Saran's case() does not, therefore, support the
contention that promotion to a State cadre can be made on the basis of
divisional select lists. On the contrary. it suggests that if the cadre is a
divisional cadre, there can be divisionwise promotion on the basis of
divisional select lists, but if it is a State cadre, promotion must be on
Statewide basis so that every officer in the State has equal opportunity of
promotion to the State cadre. Ram Saran's case(), therefore, impliedly supports
the view which we have taken on a priori reasoning. The respondents faintly
attempted to argue that in the present case there was an intermediate cadre of
officiating Deputy Collectors between the cadre of Mamlatdars and the cadre of
Deputy Collectors and promotion from the cadre of Mamlatdars lay to the cadre
of officiating Deputy Collectors and it was from the cadre of officiating
Deputy Collectors that one could obtain (1) [1964] 79.C.R. 229, 2 38' promotion
to the cadre of Deputy Collectors. The cadre of officiating Deputy Collectors
was a divisional cadre, and therefore,, promotion to it, was divisionwise on
the basis of divisional select lists, while the cadre of Deputy Collectors was
a state cadre and hence promotion to it was statewide on the basis of the
combined seniority list of all officiating Deputy Collectors in the. State.
This was ill accord with the pattern of promotion in Ram Saran Is case(1) and
was, therefore, valid. This contention of the respondents is without force. The
premise on which it is founded is incorrect. It is wholly contradicted the
Rules of 30th July, 1959 which are admittedly statutory rules These Rules
provide that appointment to 50% of the posts of Deputy Collectors shall be made
by "promotion of suitable Mamlatdars" The promotion that is spoken of
in these Rules is promotion from the cadreof Mamlatdars to the cadre of Deputy
collectors. These Rules completely negative the existence of any intermediate
cadre of officiating Deputy Collectors. It is difficult to see how in the face'
of these Rules which have statutory affect, it can ever be, contended that
promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors was not from the cadre of Mamlatdars
but from the so-called cadre of officiating Deputy Collectors. Of course it is
true that a Mamlatdar cannot be promoted to the cadre of Deputy Collectors
unless he has first officiated as Deputy Collector, but when he is promoted, it
is from the cadre of Mamlatdars and not from any supposed cadre of officiating
Deputy Collectors. In fact there is any legislative rule or executive order
providing for the creation of such an intermediate I cadre of Officiating
Deputy Collectors.
We therefore, hold that the second proviso to
Rule I of the Rules of 30th July, 1959 is void as being violative of Art.
16 of the Constitution. We also declare the
Procedure for Promotion to the cadre of Deputy Collectors followed by the State
Government to be invalid on the grand that it denies equality of opportunity of
promotion ago is therefore hit by Art 16 of the Constitution. The Government
Resolution dated 7th April 1961 must also. be quashed and set aside for the
same reason. We direct the State Government to readjust the promotions as
officiating Deputy Collectors as also the confirmed in the cadre, of Deputy
Collectors in the light of the principles laid down in this judgment. The
readjustment shall be made with retrospective effect and the petitioners shall
be given the benefit of seniority pay and other allowances from the respective
dates on which they would have been promoted, had the promotions been made on
the correct basis indicated in the judgment, subject to the qualification that
so far as arrears of pay and other allowances are concerned, they May no+ be
given for the period prior to the Ming of the petition. The first respondent
will pay the costs of the petition to the petitioners.
Before we part with this case we may add a
paragraph by way of epilogue. We find in the course of our judicial experience,
and we notice this fact with some apprehension that members of public services
in alarmingly large numbers resort to legal remedies in courts of law for
agitating their grievance in regard to service matters. This (1) [1641] 7
S.C.R. 228.
239 phenomenon is symtomatic of a sense of
injustice and subversive of that undivided and devoted attention to official
duties which is., so essential for efficient and dynamic functioning of the
Government. it can, therefore, hardly be, over emphasised that there is great
need for simplifying and streamlining service rules and giving them statutory
shape so as to promote contentment among the services by extending the areas of
equal treatment and imparting stability to conditions of service. It is not
desirable that the, fortunes of such a vital and strategic instrument of
Government as the public services should be left to be governed by mere
departmental resolutions and executive instructions. These cannot take the
place of statutory rules which alone can impart stability and security and
ensure observance of the rule of law. Legal rules must govern the recruitment
and conditions of public servants so that there is no arbitrariness or
inequality in State action in regard to them and the rule of law is not eroded.
And such rules should preferably be framed without avoidable delay and after
consultation with groups which apprehend discriminatory treatment as that would
go a long way to produce a sense of contentment and satisfaction. We make these
observations not with a view to casting any reflection on the administration
but to highlight a problem which has come to our notice quite often, in the
hope that it will help the social dimensions of the problem and the damage to
public interest which may be likely to result if the problem is not promptly
and satisfactorily resolved.
V.P.S.
Petition allowed.
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