Hargovlnd Pant Vs. Dr. Raghukul Tilak
& Ors [1979] INSC 114 (4 May 1979)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ) UNTWALIA, N.L.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION: 1979 AIR 1109 1979 SCR (3) 972 1979
SCC (3) 458
CITATOR INFO:
R 1984 SC 399 (12) RF 1987 SC1953 (6)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Art. 319(d)-Scope
of- Governor-If an "employee" of the Government of India-If could be
regarded as "employed under the Government of India"-Employed-Meaning
of.
HEADNOTE:
Article 319(d) of the Constitution provides
that on ceasing to hold office a member, other than the Chairman of a State
Public Service Commission, shall be eligible for appointment as the Chairman or
any other member of the Union Public Service Commission or as the Chairman of
that or any other State Public Service Commission but not for any other
employment either under the Government of India or under the Government of a
State.
The first respondent, who was a member of the
Rajasthan State Public Service Commission during the years 1958-59, was later
appointed as Governor of the State of Rajasthan.
The petitioner contended that by virtue of
Art. 319(d) of the Constitution the respondent was ineligible to be appointed
as Governor of a State because he was a member of the State Public Service
Commission earlier.
On the question whether, by reason of Art.
319 (d) the respondent was ineligible for employment either under the
Government of India or under the Government of a State and whether the office
of Governor was an employment under the Government of India.
HELD: 1. The office of Governor of a State is
not an employment under the Government of India and it does not therefore come
within the prohibition of cl.(d) of Art. 319.
The appointment of the first respondent as
Governor of Rajasthan could not be held to be invalid. [982 F].
2. Howsoever wide and expansive a meaning one
may give to the words "employment under the Government of India" the
office of Governor cannot come within that term. [978 F].
3. The word "employment" is not a
word with a single fixed meaning but has many connotations. If the term
"employment" is construed in the narrow sense of employer employee
relationship the office of Governor would not be an employment within the
meaning of Art. 319(d) because the Governor of a State is not an employee or
servant of anyone.
He occupies a high constitutional office with
important constitutional functions and duties. The executive power of the State
is vested in him and every executive action of the Government is required to be
expressed to be taken in his name. He constitutes an integral part of the
legislature of the State though not in the fullest sense and is also vested
with the legislative power to promulgate ordinances while the Houses of the Legislature
are not in session. He also exercises the sovereign power to grant pardons,
reprieves, respite etc. He is vested with the power to summon 973 each House of
the Legislature, or to prorogue either House or to dissolve the legislative
assembly and this power may be exercised by him from time to time. No bill
passed by the Houses of the Legislature can become law unless it is assented to
by him and before assenting to the bill he may return the bill, (provided it is
not a money bill) to the Houses of Legislature for reconsideration. He has the
power to reserve for consideration of the President any bill which in his
opinion would, if it became law, so derogate from the power of the High Court
as to endanger the position which that Court is by the Constitution designed to
fill. Another important function of his is to make a report to the President
where he finds that a situation has arisen in which the Government of State
cannot be carried on in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution. It
is the Governor's report which generally forms the basis for the President
taking action under Art. 356, of the Constitution. These powers and functions
of the Governor make it clear that he is not an employee or servant in any
sense of the term. [978 H; 979 A-B].
4. Though the Governor is appointed by the
President, which means in effect and substance the Government of India, it does
not make him an employee or servant of the Government of India. Every person
appointed by the President is not necessarily an employee of the Government of
India.
[979 G].
5. The fact that the Governor holds office
during the pleasure of the President does not make the Government of India an
employer of the Governor. It is only a constitutional provision for
determination of the term of office of the Governor. The Governor is the head
of the State and holds a high constitutional office which carries with it
important constitutional functions and duties and he cannot be regarded as an
employee or servant of the Government of India. If the word
"employment" were construed to mean relationship of employer and
employee, the office of Governor would not been "employment" within
the meaning of cl.(d) of Art. 319. [979 H].
6. An employment can be said to be under the
Government of India if the holder or incumbent of the employment is under the
control of the Government of India vis-a-vis such employment. If this test is
applied to the office of Governor, it is impossible to hold that the Governor
is under the control of the Government of India. His office is not subordinate
or subservient to the government of India.
He is not amenable to the directions of the
Government of India, nor is he accountable to them for the manner in which he
carried out his functions and duties. His is an independent constitutional
office which is not subject to the control of the Government of India. He is
constitutionally the head of the State in whom is vested the executive power of
the State and without whose assent there can be no legislation in exercise of
the legislative power of the State. There can be no doubt that the office of
Governor is not an employment under the Government of India and it does not
come within the prohibition of Art. 319(d).
[981 A-B].
Pradyat Kumar Bose v. The Hon'ble the Chief
Justice of Calcutta High Court, [1955] 2 SCR 1331; Baldev Raj Guliani &
Ors. v. The Punjab & Haryana High Court & ors., [1977] 1 SCR 425; Union
of India v. S.H. Sheth & Anr [1978] 1 SCR 423;
referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Special Leave
Petition (Civil) No. 1596 of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 8-11-1977
of the Rajasthan High Court in S.B. Civil Writ Petition No. 311/77.
Somnath Chatterjee, Dilip Sinha and K.R.
Nambiar for the Petitioner.
F.S. Nariman, (for R. 1), Soli J. Sorabjee,
Addl. Sol.
Genl. (for RR 5 and 6) Dr. S.K. Tewari, S.M.
Jain and S.K.
Jain for Respondent 1, 5 and 6.
V.M. Tarkunde, C.M. Mathur, Manoj Swarup and
Miss Lalita Kohli for Respondents 3 and 4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J., This petition for special leave to appeal is directed against an
order made by a Full Bench of the Rajasthan High Court dismissing the writ
petition filed by the petitioner for quashing and setting aside an order of
reversion passed against him by the 4th respondent in his capacity as the
Acting Vice-Chancellor of the University of Rajasthan. The order of reversion
was challenged on several grounds, but they were all negatived by the Full
Bench and the writ petition was dismissed on a preliminary hearing.
The petitioner has raised the same grounds of
challenge in this special leave petition, but barring one ground, which calls
for a reasoned judgment, we do not think there are any other grounds which
require detailed consideration and we reject them in limine. The only ground
which needs to be considered and which we propose to dispose of by this
judgment is a constitutional one, namely, whether the appointment of the 1st
respondent as Governor of Rajasthan is valid. This question becomes material
because if it is found that the 1st respondent could not be validly appointed
as Governor of Rajasthan and his appointment as Governor is invalid, he would
not be the Chancellor of the Rajasthan University and he would have no
authority to appoint the 4th respondent as Acting Vice-Chancellor under section
12, sub- section (7) of the University of Rajasthan Act and if the appointment
of the 4th respondent as Acting Vice Chancellor is invalid, the impugned order
of reversion made by him would fall. We are, therefore, called upon to consider
in this special leave petition whether the appointment of the 1st respondent as
Governor of Rajasthan is valid. The only ground on which the validity of the
appointment has been assailed is that the 1st respondent was a member of the
Rajasthan Public Service 975 Commission during 1958-59 and he was, therefore,
by reason of Article 319, clause (d) of the Constitution, ineligible for any
employment either under the Government of India or under the Government of a
State and since the office of Governor is an employment under the Government of
India, the 1st respondent could not validly be appointed to that office. This
ground raises a question of considerable importance relating to the
applicability of Article 319, clause (d) to the office of Governor.
We shall have to consider the true nature of
the office of Governor in order to determine whether it is an employment under
the Government of India, but before we do so, we may first have a look at
Article 319. This Article consists of clauses (a) to (d) and these clauses, on
a combined reading, impose prohibition on holding of any employment under the
Government of India or the Government of a State by the Chairman or member of
the Union Public Service Commission or a State Public Service Commission on his
ceasing to be such Chairman or member. This prohibition has been enacted in
public interest with a view to ensuring that no allurement is held out to the
Chairman or members of the Union Public Service Commission or a State Public
Service Commission which would deflect them from the path of rectitude and
duty. The Union and State Public Service Commissions are charged inter alia
with the duty of advising the Government on various matters relating to civil
services and civil posts such as methods of recruitment, appointments,
promotions and transfers and disciplinary matters and it is of utmost
importance for the efficiency and integrity of the civil services that this
duty should be performed by the Union and State Public Service Commission’s
objectively, impartially and without being influenced by any extraneous
considerations. The Union and State Public Service Commission have vast powers
of recruitment to an immense and increasing host of Government posts and in a
country with considerable unemployment, these powers may be prone to be abused
if the office of Chairman and member of the Union and State Public Service Commission’s
is exposed to executive or political pressures. The prospect and peril of the
executive or the politician trying to influence overtly or covertly the
Chairman and members of the Union and State Public Service Commission’s by
dangling the carrot or holding out the possibility of employment under the
Government after the expiry of their term of office may corrupt the integrity
of the institution of the Union and State Public Service Commissions. It is
true that by and large the Chairman and members of the Union and State Public
Service Commission’s would be men of proven merit and integrity and no
allurement, howsoever attractive, would deflect them from doing their duty
without fear 976 or favour, but even so, the possibility of obtaining
employment under the Government in future may consciously or unconsciously
induce them to fall in line with the wishes of the executive or the politician.
The office of the Chairman and member of the Union and the State Public Service
Commission’s must, therefore, be zealously kept beyond reproach and above
suspicion. It was pointed out as far back as 1924 by the Royal Commission on
Superior Services in India, popularly called the Lee Commission:
"Wherever democratic institutions exist,
experience has shown that to secure an efficient civil service it is essential
to protect it as far as possible from political or personal influence and give
it that position of stability and security which is vital to its successful
working as the impartial and efficient instrument by which governments, of
whatever political complexion, may give effect to their policies. In countries
where this principle has been neglected, and where the 'spoils system' has
taken its place, an inefficient and disorganised civil service has been the
inevitable result and corruption has been rampant." It was as a result of
this recommendation that Public Service Commissions were set up in the country
with the objective outlined by the Lee Commission. When Article 285(3) of the
Draft Constitution providing for ineligibility of the Chairman and members of
the Union and the State Public Service Commissions for future employment under
the Government was being debated in the Constituent Assembly, Dr. Ambedkar
pointed out the raison d'etre of that provision in the following words:
"Now I come to the other important
matter relating to the employment or eligibility for employment of the members
of the Public Services Commission both the Union and State Public Services
Commissions. Members will see that according to Article 285, clause (3), we
have made both the Chairman and the Members of the Central Public Services
Commission as well as the Chairman of the State Commission and the members of
the State Commission, ineligible for reappointment to the same posts: that is
to say, once a term of office of a Chairman and Member is over, whether he is a
Chairman of the Union Commission or the Chairman of a State Commission, we have
said that he shall not be reappointed. I think that is a very salutary
provision, because any hope that might be held out for reappointment, or
continuation in the same 977 appointment, may act as a sort of temptation which
may induce the Member not to act with the same impartiality that he is expected
to act in discharging his duties. Therefore, that is a fundamental bar which
has been provided in the draft article." Shri H.V. Kamath also spoke in
the same strain while adverting to this topic:
"It is agreed on all hands that the
permanent services play an important role in the administration of any country.
With the independence of our country the responsibilities of the services have
become more onerous.
They may make of mar the efficiency of the
machinery of administration call it steel frame or what you will-a machinery
which is so vital for the peace and progress of the country." x x x x
"If a Member of the Public Service Commission is under the impression that
by serving and kowtowing to those in power he could get an office of profit
under the Government or India or in the Government of a State, then I am sure
he would not be able to discharge his functions impartially or with
integrity." x x x x "The public here have sometimes been made to feel
that family or group interests have been promoted at the expense of the
national; and to protect the Ministers against such a charge, it is necessary
that the Public Service Commission’s must be kept completely independent of the
executive.... " It is, therefore, clear that the Constitution makers were
anxious to insulate the Chairman and members of the Union and State Public
Service Commissions from executive or political pressures or influences and to
place them beyond the reach of any allurement or temptation which may cloud
their judgment and deflect them from doing their duty. The Constitution makers
were keen to ensure that the Chairmen and members of the Union and State Public
Service Commissions were above reproach, free from coercion and political
influence and they could, if necessary, stand up against the executive and defy
any political pressure. It was with this end in view that the Constitution
makers enacted 978 clauses (a) to (d) of Article 319 prohibiting future
employment under the Government of India or under the Government of a State for
the Chairmen and members of the Union and State Public Service Commissions.
We are concerned in this special leave
petition only with clause (d) of Article 319 since the 1st respondent was a
member of the Rajasthan Public Service Commission and it is on account of that
fact that it is claimed that he was ineligible to be appointed Governor of
Rajasthan. Clause (d) of Article 319 provides: "on ceasing to hold
office-a member other than the Chairman of a State Public Service Commission
shall be eligible for appointment as the Chairman or any other member of the
Union Public Service Commission or as the Chairman of that or any other State
Public Service Commission, but not for any other employment either under the
Government of India or under the Government of a State".
It is, therefore, obvious that the 1st
respondent could be appointed Chairman or any other member of the Union Public
Service Commission or Chairman of the Rajasthan or any other State Public
Service Commission, but he was ineligible for any other employment either under
the Government of India or under the Government of a State. Now, it was not the
case of the petitioner that the office of Governor was an employment under the
Government of a State and the only question which, therefore, requires to be
considered is whether the office of Governor can be said to be an employment
under the Government of India. If it is, then undoubtedly the 1st respondent
could not be appointed Governor of Rajasthan and his appointment would be
invalid. But we are of the view that howsoever wide and expansive a meaning we
may give to the words "employment . . under the Government of India",
the office of Governor cannot come within The first question that arises on the
applicability of the words "employment...under the Government of
India" is whether the office of Governor is an 'employment' within the
meaning of that expression in clause (d) of Article 319.
What is the sense in which that word has been
used in this Article? Semantically, the word 'employment' is not a word with a
single fixed meaning but it has many connotations. On the one side it may bear
the narrow meaning of relationship of employer and employee and on the other,
it may mean in its widest connotation any engagement or any work in which one
is engaged. If the former be the sense in which the word 'employment' is used
in clause (d) of Article 319, the office of Governor would certainly not be an
employment, because the Governor of a State is not an employee or servant of
any 979 one. He occupies a high constitutional office with important
constitutional functions and duties. The executive power of the State is vested
in him and every executive action of the Government is required to be expressed
to be taken in his name. He constitutes an integral part of the legislature of
the State though not in the fullest sense, and is also vested with the
legislative power to promulgate ordinances while the Houses of the Legislature
are not in session. He also exercises the sovereign power to grant pardons,
reprieves, respites or remissions of punishment or to suspend, remit or commute
the sentence of any person convicted of any offence against any law relating to
a matter to which the executive power of the State extends. He is vested with
the power to summon each House of the Legislature or to prorogue either House
or to dissolve the legislative assembly and this power may be exercised by him
from time to time. He is also entitled to address either House of the
Legislature or both Houses assembled together and he may send messages to the
House or Houses of the Legislature with respect to a bill then pending in the
legislature or otherwise. No bill passed by the Houses of the Legislature can
become law unless it is assented to by him and before assenting to the bill he
may return the bill, provided it is not a money bill to the Houses of the
Legislature for reconsideration. He has also the power to reserve for
consideration of the President any bill which in his opinion would, if it
became law, so derogate from the powers of the High Court as to endanger the
position which that court is by the Constitution designed to fill. There is
also one highly significant role which he has to play under the Constitution
and that is of making a report where he finds that a situation has arisen in
which the Government of the State cannot be carried on in accordance with the
provisions of the Constitution. It is the Governor's report which generally forms
the basis for the President taking action under Article 356 of the
Constitution. It will be seen from this enumeration of the constitutional
powers and functions of the Governor that he is not an employee or servant in
any sense of the term. It is no doubt true that the Governor is appointed by
the President which means in effect and substance the Government of India, but
that is only a mode of appointment and it does not make the Governor an
employee or servant of the Government of India. Every person appointed by the
President is not necessarily an employee of the Government of India. So also it
is not material that the Governor holds office during the pleasure of the
President: it is a constitutional provision for determination of the term of
office of the Governor and it does not make the Government of India an employer
of the Governor. The Governor is the head of the State and holds a high
constitutional office which carries with it important constitutional functions
and duties and he cannot, therefore, even by stretching the language 980 to a
breaking point, be regarded as an employee or servant of the Government of
India. If, therefore, the word 'employment' were construed to mean relationship
of employer and employee, the office of Governor would certainly not be an
'employment' within the meaning of clause (d) of Article 319.
But if we accept the wider meaning of the
word 'employment' as connoting any engagement or any work in which one is
engaged as in the expression self-employment' the office of Governor would
clearly be an 'employment' within the meaning of clause (d) of Art. 319. That,
however, would not be enough to attract the applicability of this provision.
There is a further requirement which is necessary and that is that the employment
must be under the Government of India. Now, what is the meaning of this
expression "under the Government of India"? Fortunately, there are
two decisions of this Court which throw some light on this question. The first
is the decision in Pradyat Kumar Bose v.
The Hon'ble the Chief Justice of Calcutta
High Court where the question was as to whether the officers and members of the
staff of the High Court could be said to be persons "serving under the
Government of India or the Government of a State, in a civil capacity" so
as to be within the scope of Article 320(3) (c) which requires consultation
with the appropriate Public Service Commission in disciplinary matters. This
Court speaking through Jagannadhadas, J., pointed out: "the phrase 'a
person' serving under the Government of India or the Government of 'a State' it
seems to have reference to such persons in respect of whom the administrative
control is vested in the respective executive Governments functioning in the
name of the President or of the Governor or of a Rajpramukh. The officers and
staff of the High Court cannot be said to fall within the scope of the above
phrase because in respect of them the administrative control is clearly vested
in the Chief Justice-". The question which arose in the other decision in
Baldev Raj Guliani & ors. v. The Punjab & Haryana High Court & ors.
was a similar one and it related to the applicability of Article 320(3) (c) to
Judicial officers in the State.
Here, in this case also the Court took the
same view and, after referring to the earlier decision in Pradyat Kumar Bose's
case with approval, held that "just as the High Court staff are not
serving under the Government of the State, the Judicial officers are also not
serving under the State Government", because they are "entirely under
the jurisdiction of the High Court for the purpose of control and
discipline". It will, 981 therefore, be seen that the employment can be
said to be under the Government of India if the holder or incumbent of the
employment is under the control of the Government of India vis-a-vis such
employment. Now, if one applies this test to the office of Governor, it is
impossible to hold that the Governor is under the control of the Government of
India. His office is not subordinate or subservient to the Government of India.
He is not amenable to the directions of the Government of India, nor is he
accountable to them for the manner in which he carries out his functions and
duties.
His is an independent constitutional office
which is not subject to the control of the Government of India. He is
constitutionally the head of the State in whom is vested the executive power of
the State and without whose assent there can be no legislation in exercise of
the legislative power of the State. There can, therefore, be no doubt that the
office of Governor is not an employment under the Government of India and it
does not come within the prohibition of clause (d) of Article 319.
We may point out that the Governor of a State
is not the only constitutional functionary whose employment is not under the
Government. There are under the Constitution many other high functionaries,
such as Judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts, who do not hold any
employment under the Government of India, although they exercise State power.
This Court, while examining the constitutional position of a High Court Judge,
pointed out in the Union of India v. S. H. Sheth & Anr.(1) that a High
Court Judge is not a Government servant: there is no relationship of employee
and employer subsisting between him and the Government. He is a holder of a
constitutional office which has important constitutional functions and duties.
One of us (Bhagwati, J.) pointed out in that case at page 463 of the Report
that a High Court Judge:
"..... is as much part of the State as
the executive Government. The State has in fact three organs, one exercising
executive power, another exercising legislative power and the third exercising
judicial power.
Each is independent and supreme within its
allotted sphere and it is not possible to say that one is superior to the
other. The High Court, constituted of the Chief Justice and other Judges,
exercising the judicial power of the State and is coordinate in position and
status with the Governor aided and advised by the council of Ministers, 982 who
exercises the executive power and the Lgislative Assembly together with the
Legislative Council, if any, which exercises the legislative power of the
State. Plainly and unquestionably, therefore, a High Court Judge is not
subordinate either to the executive or to the legislature.
It would, indeed, be a constitutional heresy
to so regard him. He has a constitutional function to discharge, which includes
adjudication of the question whether the executive or the legislature has
over-stepped the limits of its power under the Constitution. No doubt Article
217, cl. (1) provides for appointment of a person to the office of a High Court
Judge by the President, which means in effect and substance the Central
Government, but that is only laying down a mode, of appointment and it does not
make the Central Government an employer of a High Court Judge. In fact a High
Court Judge has no employer: he occupies a high constitutional office which is
coordinate with the executive and the legislative." These observations
apply equally to the office of a Judge of the Supreme Court. We are mentioning
this merely to bring home, through comparable constitutional functionaries, the
validity of the proposition that holders of high constitutional offices
exercising State power and drawing salaries from State coffers may nevertheless
be not employees or servants or holders of employment under the Government.
We are, therefore, of the view that the
office of Governor of a State is not an employment under the Government of
India and it does not, therefore, come within the prohibition of clause (d) of
Article 319 and on this view, the appointment of the 1st respondent as the
Governor of Rajasthan cannot be held to be invalid.
We may point out that in the course of the
argument there was much discussion about the paramount public policy underlying
the need to ban appointment of holders of public offices after retirement to
higher offices and posts under the Government. We do not wish to expand on this
policy or to say more on the merits of this contention, but we think it would
be appropriate to sound a note of caution that Ceaser's wife must be above
suspicion, that purity of public offices of high status is a constitutional
value in itself, that nothing should be done which may create an impression
that a holder of a public office can look forward to a higher appointment after
retirement if he pleases the Government of the day and that no appointments
should be made which may lend sup- 983 port to the criticism of favourtism or
patronage and consequential weakening of credibility. The confidence of the
community in the key instrumentalities is of considerable significance in the
maintenance of the rule of law.
These were the reasons for which we made our
order dated 23rd November, 1978 rejecting the special leave petition and
confirming the order passed by the Full Bench of the Rajasthan High Court.
P.B.R.
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