State of Maharashtra & ANR Vs.
Chandrakant Anant Kulkarni & Ors [1981] INSC 162 (8 September 1981)
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA
(J) SEN, A.P. (J) ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
CITATION: 1981 AIR 1990 1982 SCR (1) 665 1981
SCC (4) 130 1981 SCALE (3)1445
CITATOR INFO :
R 1990 SC1072 (6) RF 1991 SC 363 (14)
ACT:
State Reorganisation Act 1956, S. 115(5) and
(7).
Reorganisation of State of Bombay-Assistant
Sales Tax Officers of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad and Sales Tax Inspectors of
Bombay allocated to new State-Integration of service.
State Government executive order altering
departmental promotion rule-ASTOs of M.P. Hyderabad required to pass
departmental examination for promotion-Whether alteration of condition of
service, permissible, valid.
Seniority list of allocated ASTOs and
STIs-State Government unilaterally altering the list-ASTOs of M.P., Hyderabad
Placed in isolated category above STIs for Bombay- Validity of.
Integration of services-Equation of posts
purely administrative function- Chances of promotion-Not condition of
service-Fair and equitable treatment-What is.
HEADNOTE:
Assistant Sales Tax Officers serving in
connection with the affairs of the former States of Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad, on the appointed date, were allocated to the new State of Bombay
under s. 115 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 (Act No. XXXVII) with
effect from November 1, 1956. The Assistant Sales Tax officers from the former
States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad were superior to the Sales Tax Inspectors
in their respective States and the posts of Assistant Sales Tax officer in
those States was a promotion post. In the former State of Bombay, there was no
similarly constituted cadre of Assistant Sales Tax officers, but there were
posts of Sales Tax Inspectors.
On November 16,1957, the State Government by
its resolution directed that the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad should
continue in their respective pay-scales until such of them were not appointed
as STOs Grade III, and Notes 3 and 6 appended to the Resolution provided that
for purposes of promotion their inter se seniority be Fixed on the basis of
their service as STOs and ASTOs. On February 3, 1960, the State Government
substantially modified rule 7 of the Allocated Government Servants (Absorption,
Seniority, Pay and Allowances) Rules, 1957 and a new rule 7 was substituted
which provided that the seniority of an allocated Government servant in the
post or cadre of absorption shall, as on November 1, 1956 be determined by the
length of continuous service etc. Since 666 there were no comparable posts of
ASTos in the former State of Bombay, the Central Government directed that the
ASTos from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad should not be equated with the post of
STIs but should be continued in an isolated category and their seniority should
be fixed above the persons in the next lower grade. The State Government by its
resolution dated September 10, 1960 modified Notes 3 and 6 and directed that
the seniority as on November 1, 1956 of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad
be fixed above all persons absorbed as STIs and that the inter se seniority of
STOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed on the basis of their
continuous service as ASTOs, and that the service rendered by the ASTOs from
Madhya Pradesh as Excise Inspec- tors or Assistant District Excise Officers in
the Excise Department be counted as equivalent service. On August 17,1962, the
State Government prepared a fresh provisional gradation list of ASTOs and STIs
and invited objections.
None of the respondents raised any objection.
Upto and until August 8, 1960, departmental
examinations for promotion to the post of STOs were conducted under the three
different sets of rules applicable to the former States of Bombay, Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad. The Departmental Examination Rules for Sales Tax
officers 1954 framed by the former State Government of Bombay were made
applicable to the Assistant Sales Tax officers allocated from Madhya Pradesh
and Hyderabad from August 8,1960, as the provisions of the Bombay Sales Tax
Act, 1959 were extended to the whole of the State, the CP and Berar Sales Tax
Act 1947 and the Hyderabad General Sales Tax 1950 having been repealed. The
ASTOs from Vidarbha and Marathwada regions of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad were
called upon to appear at the examinations prescribed from the STOs of the old
Bombay region, and some of the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad who had
been promoted as STOS Grade Ill were reverted to the post of ASTOs due to their
failure to pass the said examination.
The Government by its Resolution dated June
13, 1964 directed that the ex Hyderabad ASTOs even though they had not passed
the prescribed depart mental examination should be confirmed on the basis of
confidential records, efficiency and seniority: and by its Memorandum dated
November 21,1964 ordered that all the ASTOs and STIs who had been allocated
from the old M.P. and Hyderabad States should be considered eligible for
promotion without passing the STos examination if they are otherwise fit for
promotion.
On representation made by the ASTOS from
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, the Government of India, by its letter dated
March 9, 1965 to the State Government directed that the Bombay Departmental
Examination Rules, 1954, could not be made applicable to the allocated ASTOs
from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad as it would amount to changing their
conditions of service to their disadvantage. It accordingly directed that all
the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad who were compelled to appear for
the said examination and who had failed to pass the same be reinstated as STOs.
This directive resulted in Respondents I and 2 who had been promoted to
officiate as STO, Grade 111 being reverted as STIS.
The State Government in view of this change
reviewed the cases of all the ASTOs, and STIs from the three regions and those
who were otherwise found 667 suitable were according to their seniority
promoted to the post of STO, Gr. III even though they had not passed the STOs
examination. On January 6,1966 the State Government published a revised
gradation list of ASTOs and STIs and invited objections. Only Respondent 4
filed objections which was considered by the Government and rejected.
The writ petition filed by Respondents 1 to S
who were STIs in the State of Bombay and had passed the prescribed departmental
examination for promotion as STOs Gr. III was allowed by the High Court which
struck down the various resolutions and orders passed by the State Government
from time to time relating to integration of service under sub- section (7) of
S. 115 of the Act.
In the appeals by the State to this Court on
the questions whether (I) the State Government could by an executive order
without framing a rule under the Proviso to Art. 303 of the Constitution alter
the rules relating to departmental promotion of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad which constituted their conditions of service to the prejudice of the
STIs of Bombay without the prior approval of the Central Government under the
proviso to sub- section (7) of section 115 of the Act, and (2) the State
Government while integrating the services could unilaterally alter the
seniority list of the allocated ASTOs and place the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh
and Hyderabad in an isolated category over the STIs from Bombay while
determining their inter se seniority.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD :1 (i). The matter of equation of posts
is purely an administrative function under s. 115 of the States Re-
organisation Act, 1956. Under sub-s. (5) of s. 115 the Central Government is
the sole repository of the power to effectuate the integration of services in
the new States. It has been left entirely to the Central Government as to how
it has to deal with these questions. The Central Government established an
Advisory Committee for purposes of assisting in proper consideration of the
representations made to it for the work of integration of services, the Central
Government could take all manner of assistance from the State Government
including the preparation of provisional gradation lists, The Central
Government exercises general control in regard to the integration of services,
and the ultimate integration was done with the sanction and approval of the
Central Government. The provisional gradation lists prepared by the State
Government were not, therefore, open to challenge. [679 A-E] Union of India and
Anr. v. P.K. Roy and Ors. [1968] 2 SCR 186 referred to.
In the instant case, not only had the Central
Government laid down the principles for integration but also considered the
representation made and passed the final orders thereon. The provisional
gradation lists were prepared by the State Government under the direction and
with the sanction of the Central Government. The Assistant Sales Tax officers
from the former States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad allocated to the new
State of Bombay, could not be equated with the Sales Tax Inspectors. In the
former State of Bombay, there was no similarly constituted cadre of Assistant
Sales Tax officers, but there were 668 posts of Sales Tax Inspectors. The
Assistant Sales Tax officers from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad were superior to
Sales Tax Inspectors in their respective States and the post of Assistant Sales
Tax officer in these State was a promotion post. It would have been inequitable
and unfair to equate Assistant Sales Tax officers from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad with Sales Tax Inspectors from Bombay having regard to the nature of
their posts, the powers and responsibilities, and the pay-scales drawn by them.
In addition, Assistant Sales Tax officers in these States were assessing
authorities and they enjoyed statutory powers of their own to assess tax and
levy penalties, whereas the Sales Tax Inspectors in Bombay had no such powers
to assess tax or levy penalty but had merely to scrutinise returns and
generally act in a subordinate capacity to Sales Tax officers. [679 F-680 C]
(ii) The principle adopted by the State Government for determining the relative
inter se seniority was obviously wrong, being contrary to the principles
settled at the Chief Secretaries Conference. The Government of India, on re
presentation by the affected Assistant Sales Tax Officers from Madhya Pradesh
and Hyderabad in consultation with the Central Advisory Committee, directed
that the inter se seniority should be fixed taking into account continuous
service in the equated grade only subject to the inter se seniority of the
Officers, coming from the several integrating regions. Upon that basis, the
State Government by its Resolution dated September 10, 1960 rightly modified
Notes 3 and 6 of its 1957 Resolution and directed that the seniority as on
November 1, 1956 of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed above the
persons in the cadre of STIs and that the inter se seniority of ASTOs from
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed on the basis of their continuous service
as ASTOS in their respective States. [680 E.G]
2. There was a difference between the
Departmental Examination Rules framed by the former State Governments of
Bombay, Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad regulating the appointment of STOs. In the
former State of Bombay, eligibility for the promotion of STIs to the post of
STO Gr. Ill depended upon their passing the departmental examination for the
non-gazetted staff of the Sales Tax Department under rule I (b) (ii) of the
Recruitment Rules for the STOs Gr. III, i. e. it was condition precedent. In
the former States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad there was no such condition
attached. Under the Rules for Departmental examination, the ASTOs who were
promoted as STOs were required to pass the departmental examination within two
or three years from the date of their promotion i.e. it was a condition
subsequent.
The Departmental Examination Rules framed by
the former State Governments of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad for promotion to
the post of STOs formed part of the conditions of service of ASTOs from Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad and they could not be altered to their disadvantage
without the prior approval of the Central Government under s. 115 (7) of the
Act. Since no examination admittedly had been held there was no question. Of
their reversion as ASTOs. [685 B-C; E-G; 683 B-F; 685F] 3(i) The Resolution
dated June 13, 1964 and the Memorandum dated November 24,1964 do not have the
status of a rule framed under the Proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution.
They merely conveyed the decision of the State Government that the allocated
ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad 669 should be considered eligible for
promotion to the post of STO, Gr. III without passing the departmental
examination for STOs Gr. III. The State Government had not by its Resolution or
Memorandum brought about a change in the conditions of service by an executive
order. All that was done was to rectify a mistake that had been committed in
the past in subjecting the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad to the
Departmental Examination Rules framed by the former State Government of Bombay
i.e. to a rule which did not form part of conditions of their service and, therefore,
was not applicable to them. There is, therefore, no infirmity in these two
documents. [681 F-H] (ii) Mere chances of promotion are not conditions of
service and the fact that there was reduction in the chances of promotion did
not tantamount to a change in the conditions of service. A right to be
considered for promotion is a term of service, but mere chances of promotions
are not. [683 C] (iii) The State Government's Resolution dated June 13, 1964
and its Memorandum of November 21, 1964 clarifying that the ASTOs from Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad were entitled for promotion to the post of STO Gr. III
without passing the departmental examination. placed STI from Bombay at a
disadvantage. To ensure 'fair and equitable treatment the State Government rightly
dispensed with the requirement of passing the departmental examination in the
case of STIs from the former State of Bombay. The State Government acted with
the best of intentions. It endeavoured to strike a balance between the
competing claims to relative seniority.
When sub-section (5) of section 115 of the
Act speaks of 'fair and equitable treatment', it envisages a decision which is
fair and equitable to all. [686 A-D]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 420(N) of 1971 From the Judgment and order dated 23rd October 1969 of the
Bombay High Court in Special Civil Application No. 1721 of 1966.
R.N. Sachthey and Mr. R.N. Poddar for the
Appellant U. R. Lalit, V. N. Ganpule and Mrs. Veena Devi Khanna for Respondents
Nos. 1 to 5 S. V. Tambewaker for Respondent No. 7 A.K. Sanghi for the
intervener M. L. Heble, V. N. Ganpule and Mrs. Veena Devi Khanna for the
intervener.
670 The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by SEN, J. In this appeal, by special leave, the question for consideration is
whether there was denial of "fair and equitable treatment" within the
meaning of sub-s. (5) of s. 115 of the States Reorganisation Act. 1956
(hereinafter called 'the Act') in the matter of determination of relative
seniority and equation of posts as between the Assistant Sales Tax officers
(abbreviated as ASTOs) from the former States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad
and Sales Tax Inspectors (abbreviated as STIs) from the former State of Bombay,
who were allocated to the new State of Bombay, and their right to promotion to
the posts of Sales Tax officers (abbreviated as STOs) Grade III.
The High Court by its judgment, on a writ
petition filed by Respondents I to S, who were STIs of the State of Bombay and
passed the prescribed departmental examination for promotion as STOs Gr. III,
has struck down the various resolutions and orders passed by the State
Government from time to time relating to integration of services of these
officers under sub-s. (7) of s. 115 of the Act, in compliance with the
directives of the Central Government issued under sub-s. (5) of s. 115 of the
Act. The main question in the appeal is whether the High Court was right in
doing so. To appreciate the points involved, it is necessary to set out a few
facts. On November 16, 1957, the State Government by its Resolution purported
to direct that the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad should continue in
their respective pay-scales until such of them were not appointed as STOs Gr.
III under r. 7 of the Allocated Government Servants (Absorption, seniority, Pay
and Allowances) Rules, 1957. Notes 3 and 6 appended to the said Resolution
provided that for purposes of promotion, their inter se seniority shall be
fixed on the basis of their service as STIs being counted together with their
service as ASTOs in Madhya Pradesh and service as Accountants, if any, together
with their service as ASTOs in Hyderabad. In accordance therewith, a
provisional gradation list of those who were absorbed as STIs as on November 1,
1956 as also of those who continued as ASTOs in their respective posts with
effect from that date was prepared and published by the State Government under
r. 2 of the said Rules, on January 21, 1960 and objections thereto were invited
within two months from the date of its publication. On February 3, 1960, the
State Government substantially modified r. 7 and a new r. 7 was substituted
which provided that generally the seniority of an allocated Government servant
in the post or cadre of absorption shall, as 671 on November 1, 1956, be
determined by the length of continuous service etc. On instructions from the
Central Government and in further consultation with it. the State Government
clarified that the provisional gradation list as published would not be
finalised until representations, if any, of the Government servants were
decided by the Government of India in consultation with the Advisory Committee.
Since there were no comparable posts of ASTOs in the former State of Bombay,
the Central Government directed that the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad should not be equated with the post of STIs, but should be continued
in an isolated category and their seniority should be fixed above the persons
in the next lower grade.
In accordance with the directive of the
Central Government under sub-s. (S) of s. 115 of the Act, the State Government
by its resolution dated September 10, 1960, modified Notes 3 and 6 referred to
above and directed that the seniority as on November 1, 1956 of ASTOs from
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed above all persons absorbed as STIs and
that the inter se seniority of STOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed
on the basis of their continuous service as ASTOs. It was further directed that
the service rendered by the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh as Excise Inspectors or
Assistant District Excise officers in the Excise Department of that State be
counted as equivalent to service as STOs. On August 17, 1962, the State
Government accordingly prepared a fresh provisional gradation list of ASTOs and
STIs and invited objections thereto afresh. It appears that none of the
respondents raised any objection.
To resume the narration. Between November 1,
1956 and August 8, 1960, promotions to the post of STO, Gr. III were made on
the basis of separate departmental examinations held in accordance with the
rules framed by the former State Governments concerned. Upto and until August
8, 1960, departmental examinations for promotion to the post of STOs were
conducted under the three different sets of rules applicable to the former States
of Bombay, Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad. From August 8, 1960, the Bombay
Departmental Examination Rules for STOs were made applicable to the ASTOs
allocated from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad as well in as much as the Bombay
Sales Tax Act, 1959 was made applicable to the whole of the State and the C.P.
and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and the Hyderabad General Sales Tax 672 Act,
1950, were repealed. The ASTOs from Vidarbha and Marathwada regions of Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad were called upon to appear at the examination prescribed
for the STOs of the old Bombay region. Accordingly, promotions to the post of
STO Gr. III were regulated under the Bombay Departmental Examination Rules and
in consequence some of the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad who had been
promoted as STOs Gr. III were reverted to the post of ASTO due to their failure
to pass the said examination. In the meanwhile, the State Government, on
January 20, 1961, amended r. I(b) (ii) of the Recruitment Rules for the Sales
Tax Officers Grade III by the addition of the words "and also the
Departmental Examination for Sales Tax Officers" after the words
"time for promotion" which had the effect of making the passing of
such an examination a condition precedent to promotion as STOs Gr. III.
On representations made by the ex-Hyderabad
ASTOs, the Government by its Resolution dated June ]3, 1964, directed:
Rules 2(d) of the Departmental Examination
Rules of Sales Tax officers and Assistant Sales Tax officers issued by the
Finance Department of the former Hyderabad Govt. under their Notification
number 1118/3 S. T. dated the 24th January, 1956 lays down that Inspecting
officers, Sales Tax Officers (Class I and II) and Assistant Sales Tax Officers
who are not confirmed in their respective posts, should pass the examination
within the period specified in clause (c) of Rule 2 of the said Rules failing
which they would be reverted to their substantive post. In accordance with this
Rule Government have reverted some Sales Tax officers from the former Hyderabad
State for not having passed the Departmental Examination within the prescribed
time. The Government of Andhra Pradesh has brought to the notice of this
Government the instructions contained in Ex-Hyderabad, Finance Department,
Letter No. 7851/ Admn. dated the 31st October 1956 according to which officers
and the staff of the Sales Tax Department of the former Hyderabad State, even
though they have not passed the prescribed Departmental Examination ate to be confirmed,
if they are otherwise found deserving of confirmation on the basis of their
confidential records, efficiency and seniority. The said letter dated 31st
October 1955 of the Hyderabad Finance Department, also laid down that such 673
confirmed personnel should not be promoted to higher A posts until such times
as they complete the prescribed Departmental Examination.
2. The validity of the instructions issued in
Ex- Hyderabad Finance Department letter No. 7851/Admn.
dated the 31st October, 1956 was under the
consideration of Government for some time and it has now been decided to
observe the instructions contained in the Finance Department letter of the
Ex-Hyderabad Slate, and is, therefore, pleased to order that the officers and
staff of the Sales Tax Department of the former Hyderabad State, who were
otherwise found deserving of confirmation on the basis of their confi- dential
records, efficiency and seniority may be confirmed in their respective posts
held prior to 1st November 1956 against clear vacancies in terms-of General
Administration Department Circular No. 97 G.A.D. 12-SR-55 dated 10th September
1956 issued by the Ex-Hyderabad Government.. Such confirmed personnel should,
however, not be promoted to higher posts until such times as they complete the
prescribed Departmental Examination.
(emphasis supplied) Similarly, on
representations made by the ex-Madhya Pradesh ASTOs, the State Government by
its Memorandum dated November 21 ,1964, ordered:
Recruitment Rules for the Sales Tax officers
prescribed for the old Bombay State appearing in Government Resolution Finance
Department No. STO-1654 dated 28th July 1954 as amended by the Government
Resolution, Finance Department No. STE-1159/Ol81/61- XIII dated the 29th
January 1961 lays down that a Sales Tax Inspector is not eligible for promotion
of Sales Tax Officers without passing the examination prescribed for the Sales
Tax officers. According to Govt.
Circular, Political and Services Department
No. STI- 1080-D dated the 29th April 1960 pending unification of the
Recruitment Rules sanctioned by the Government of the former State of Bombay,
M.P. and Hyderabad Recruitment to the post and services in the various
component parts of the State is to be regulated according to the rules framed
by the former Govern- 674 ments concerned and not according to the Bombay Civil
Service Rules. In view of this, the recruitment rules of old M.P. and the Ex.
Hyderabad State will be applicable to the allocated Government servants coming
from those areas until such time as a unified set of recruitment rules is
prescribed by Government. As there is no condition in the recruitment rules of
the M.P. State or the Ex. Hyderabad State to the effect that persons should
pass the Sales Tax Officers Examination before he is promoted as a Sales Tax
Officer it would not be correct to ask the Assistant Sales Tax Officers and
Sales Tax Inspectors allocated from the old M.P. State and Hyderabad State to
pass the Sales Tax Officers examination before being considered for promotion.
Government has, therefore decided that all Assistant S.T.Os and S.T.ls who have
been allocated from the old M.P. and Hyderabad States should he considered
eligible for promotion without passing the STOs examination if they are
otherwise fit for the promotion. Such persons will have to pass STOs
examination within such period as laid down in their respective departmental
examination rules or recruitment rules as the ease may be.
(emphasis added) On the representations made
by the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, the Government of India, on
March 9, 1965, addressed a letter to the State Government to the effect:
The specific approval of the Government of
India under the proviso to section 115(7) of the S.R. Act is necessary not only
for applying the amended rules to the erstwhile employees of Vidarbha and
Marathwada but also for amending the rules to the disadvantage of the erstwhile
Bombay employees. The 1954 rules of Bombay only provided that preference should
be given to an Inspector who had passed the Departmental Examination of Sales Tax
officers before he could be considered for promotion to the post of Sales Tax
officer. But the amended rules now provide that passing this examination is a
prerequisite for consideration for promotion to the post of Sales Tax officer.
The Government of India have normally been
according approval under the S. R. Act for prescribing such departmental tests
subject to the following conditions:- 675
1. Additional time which may be double that
of the time that is ordinarily permissible for passing such tests be allowed to
the employees from the integrating units in cases where tests of higher
standard are prescribed, or where tests were not prescribed under the parent
State Governments.
2. Employees of the integrating unit should
be promoted subject to their passing the test within the additional time
referred to at item (i) above in other words promotions should not be withheld
merely because the employees have not passed a Departmental test, and
3. Government Servants of the age of 45 years
or more should be exempted from passing departmental test and when exempted,
they should be eligible for pro motion equally with one who has passed the
tests.
I am to request that the State Government may
examine the matter on the above lines and forward to the Government of India
for approval their reconsidered proposals together with a draft of the
amendment to the rules which the State Government may desire to make. I am also
to request that relevant extract of the rules of the erstwhile Government of
Hyderabad, Madhya Pradesh and Bombay which are to be affected by the proposed
amendment may also be forwarded to this Ministry.
(emphasis added) As the Central Government
was of the opinion that the Bombay Departmental Examination Rules should not be
made applicable to the allocated ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad to
their disadvantage, all the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad who were
compelled earlier to appear for the said examination and who had failed to pass
it were reinstated as STOs. As a direct consequence of this, the Respondents l
and 2 who had been promoted to officiate as STO, Gr. III were reverted as STLS
by orders dated April 28, 1965 and June 30, 1965. Since the amendment made to
rule I (b) (ii) on January 20, 1961 operated to the disadvantage of STIs from
Bombay, the State Government by its orders dated October 1, 1965, suspended the
said amendment to the Recruitment 676 Rules until further orders. In view of
these changes, the State Government reviewed the cases of all the ASTOs and STIs
from the three regions, and those who were otherwise found suitable were
according to their seniority promoted to the post of STO Gr. III even though
they had not passed the STO examination. On January 6, 1966, the State
Government published a revised gradation list of ASTOs and STIs and invited
objections thereto. None of the respondents except Respondent 4 filed any
objection. That representation, on being forwarded by the State Government, was
duly considered by the Government of India, who rejected the same.
The decision of the Government of India is
contained in the counter-affidavit of Shri Shukla, Deputy Secretary, Ministry
of Home Affairs, which reads:
I say that the Government of India carefully
considered the representation made inter alia by the 4th petitioner and the
recommendations of the State Advisory Committee and rejected the said
representations and upheld the said gradation list dated the 6th Jan. 1966 as
there was no reason to alter the principles on which the same had been
prepared. As stated hereinabove the Government of India was of the opinion that
the decision of the State Government to treat Assistant Sales Tax Officers as
an isolated category and to place the same above Sales Tax Inspec- tors was
just and fair. The Government of India also considered the alterations made by
the State Government in the rules relating to the passing of a Departmental
Examination before a Sales Tax Inspector could be promoted to the post of a
Sales Tax officer Grade III.
I say that different rules were prevalent in
the different integrating areas regulating departmental promotions. The State
Govt. decided that until unified recruitment rules were framed promotions might
be given to all without their having to pass an examination i.e. without any
discrimination. The Government of India who has examined the matter in
consultation with the State Advisory Committee was of the view that the
deletion of departmental examination altogether was fair and just because by
doing so and discrimination between employees coming from different integrating
areas was removed.
(emphasis added) 677 It would appear that
till 1973 there were no unified rules by which ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad and STIs from Bombay were governed. The Maharashtra Sales Tax officers'
Rules, 1973, framed by the State Government in exercise of the powers under the
Proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution came into force on August 4, 1973. Rule
2 provides that the rules shall apply to Government servants serving in the
Sales Tax Department including those of the former States of Bombay, Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad who were allocated for service to the State of Bombay and
subsequently to the State of Maharashtra. Rule 4 deals with direct recruits as
well as promotees and makes the condition for passing of the departmental
examination within two years from the date of promotion or two years from the
date of promulgation of the Rules and by r. 4 (c) it is provided that in the
event of failure to pass the examination in the prescribed time, they shall be
liable to reversion to the posts held by them prior to their promotion. Looking
to the lapse of time in framing the Rules, r. 8 provides that STOs who have
already attained the age of 48 years on the date of promulgation of these rules
shall be exempted from passing the Departmental Examination under the rules. It
is necessary here to mention that the Maharashtra (Bombay Area) Sales Tax
officers (Grade II and Grade III) Recruitment Rules, 1969 framed by the State
Government under the Proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution were struck down
by the High Court as ultra vires being per se discriminatory and thus violative
of Art. 14 of the Constitution. That was because r. 2 provided that nothing
therein shall govern the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad. There is no
need for us to enter into the question as to the validity or otherwise of the
said Rules. since the Maharashtra Sales Tax officers' Rules, 1973 now hold the
field.
The two questions canvassed in this appeal
are: (l) whether the State Government could by an executive order without
framing a rule under the Proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution, alter the
rules relating to departmental promotion of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad which constituted their conditions of service to the prejudice of the
STIs of Bombay without the prior approval of the Central Government under the
Provision to sub s. (7) of s. 115 of the Act, and (2) Whether the State
Government while integrating the services could unilaterally alter the seniority
list of the allocated ASTOs and STIs and place the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh
and Hyderabad in an isolated category over the STIs from Bombay while
determining their inter se seniority.
678 Prior to the reoganisation of the States,
a Conference of the Chief Secretaries of the States that were to be affected by
the reorganisation was held at Delhi on May 18 and 19, 1956 for the purpose of
the formulation of the principles upon which integration of services was to be
effected. The Government of India by their letter dated April 3, 1957 informed
the State Government that the work of integration of services should be dealt
with by them in the light of the general principles already settled at the
Chief Secretaries Conference. This has been construed to be a valid delegation
of powers to prepare the preliminary and final gradation lists under the
direction and with the sanction of the Central Government. The Government of
India by its Circular dated May 11, 1957 to all the State Governments stated
inter alia that it agreed with the views expressed on behalf of the States'
representatives that it would not be appropriate to provide any protection in
the matter of departmental promotion. This Circular has been interpreted as a
prior approval of the Central Government in terms of the proviso to sub-s. (7)
of s. 115 of the Act in the matter of change in the conditions of service
relating to departmental promotions.
The following principles had been formulated
for being observed as far as may be, in the integration of Government servants
Allotted to the services of the new States:
"In the matter of equation of posts:
(i) Where there were regularly constituted
similar cadres in the different integrating units the cadres will ordinarily be
integrated on that basis; but (ii) Where, however, there were no such similar
cadres the following factors will be taken into consideration in determining
the equation of posts:- (a) nature and duties of a post;
(b) powers exercised by the officers holding
a post, the extent of territorial or other charge held or responsibilities
discharged;
(c) the minimum qualifications, if any,
prescribed for recruitment to the post.
(d) the salary of the post.
679 It is well-settled that these principles
have a statutory force.
There is a long line of decisions of this
Court starting from the Union of India and Anr. v. P.K Roy and Ors. (l) laying
down that the Central Government has been constituted to be the final authority
in the matter of integration of services under sub-s. (S) of s. 115 of the Act.
The matter of equation of posts is purely an administrative function. It has
been left entirely to the Central Government as to how it has to deal with
these questions. The Central Government had established an Advisory Committee
for the purpose of assisting in the proper consideration of the representations
made to it.
There is nothing in ss. 115 to 117 of the Act
prohibiting the Central Government in any way from taking the aid and
assistance of the State Govt, in the matter of effecting the integration of
services. As observed by this Court in Roy's case the usual procedure followed
by the Central Government in the matter of integration of services generally,
is in order. It is not open to the Court to consider whether the equation of
posts made by the Central Government is right or wrong. This was a matter
exclusively within the province of the Central Government. Perhaps, the only
question the Court can enquire into is whether the four principles agreed upon
at the Chief Secretaries Conference had been properly taken into account. This
is the narrow and limited field within which the supervisory jurisdiction of
the Court can operate.
But where, as here, in the matter of equation
of posts, the Central Government had properly taken into account all the four
principles decided upon at the Chief Secretaries Conference, the decision
cannot be assailed at all. In the present case, not only the Central Government
had laid down the principles for integration, but also considered the
representations and passed the final orders and the provisional gradation lists
were prepared and published by the State Government under the direction and
with the sanction of the Central Government.
In accordance with the principles settled at
the Chief Secretaries Conference, the Government of India, in consolation with
the Central Advisory Committee, directed that the posts of ASTOs in the former
States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad should be continued in an isolated
category, there being no corresponding post in the successor State of Bombay
with which they could be equated. There were 19 ASTOs in the pay-scale of Rs.
l50-10-200- 680 EB-15-250 from Madhya Pradesh and 23 ASTOs in the pay-scale of
Rs. 170-8 1/2-225-EB-13-320 from Hyderabad allocated to the new State of
Bombay. In the former State of Bombay there was no similarly constituted cadre
of ASTOs, but there were posts of STIs in the pay-scale of Rs.
120-8-144-EB-8-200- 10/2-250. It would have been inequitable and unfair to
equate ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad with STIs from Bombay, looking
to the nature of their posts, the powers and responsibilities and the
pay-scales attached to the same. The ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad
were, in the first instance, superior to STIs in their respective States and
the post of ASTO in those States was a promotion post. In addition, ASTOs in
those States were assessing authorities and they enjoyed statutory powers of
their own to assess tax and levy penalties, whereas the STIs in Bombay had no
such powers to assess tax or levy penalty but had merely to scrutinise returns
and generally act in a subordinate capacity to STOS. Evidently, the State
Government was wrong in directing by its Resolution dated November 16, 1957
that the seniority of ASTOs from Madhya 1) Pradesh and Hyderabad and STIs from
Bombay be fixed in the cadre of Ss in the reorganised State of Bombay on the
basis of continuous service including that in the lower grade. The principle
adopted by the State Government for determining their relative inter se
seniority was obviously wrong, being contrary to the principles settled at the
Chief Secretaries Conference. As already stated, the Government of India, on
representation by the affected ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, in
consultation with the Central Advisory Committee, directed that the inter se
seniority should be fixed taking into account continuous service in the equated
grade only subject to the inter se seniority of the officers coming from the
several integrating regions. Upon that basis, the State Government by its
Resolution dated September 10, 1960, rightly modified Notes 3 and 6 of its 1957
Resolution and directed that the seniority as on November l, 1966 of ASTOs from
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be fixed above the persons in the cadre of STIs
and that the inter se seniority of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad be
fixed on the basis of their continuous service as ASTOs in their respective
States.
The High Court, in dealing with the question
of equation of posts, observed:
On merits, if the duties of Assistant Sales
Tax officers of those two States and those of Inspectors are compared 681 in
the light of the minutes contained in Ex.2 (Memorandum of the Government of
Maharashtra, Finance Department. dated November 21, 1964) the difference is not
much. We enquired about the nature of work they are doing today and we are told
on instructions by the State's counsel that they are doing the work that the
Sales Tax Inspectors are doing.
(emphasis added) All that we need say is that
the High Court, if we may say so, without meaning any disrespect, has viewed
the question from a wrong perspective.
The remaining question whether the State
Government by its Resolution dated June 13, 1964 and Memorandum dated November
21, 1964, effected a change of recruitment rules by an executive order, in the
conditions of service of the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, contrary
to the Proviso to sub-s. (5) of s. 115 of the Act; and if so, whether such a
change in the conditions of service could be brought about without framing a
rule under the Proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution. In our opinion, the
question does not really arise. There can be no dispute with the proposition
that a rule framed under the Proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution cannot be
modified by an executive order. But the question is whether that principle is
attracted to the facts and circumstances of the present case. The Resolution
and the Memorandum referred to above undoubtedly do not have the status of a
rule framed under the Proviso to Art of the Constitution. They merely conveyed
the decision of the State Government that the allocated ASTOs from Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad should be considered eligible for promotion to the post
of STO, Gr. IlI without passing the departmental examination for STO, Gr. III.
The State Government had not by its Resolution dated June 13, 1964, or by its
Memorandum dated Nov. 21, 1964, brought about a change in the conditions of
service by an executive order. All that was done was to rectify a mistake that
had been committed in the past in subjecting the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad to the Departmental Examination Rules framed by the former State
Government of Bombay i.e. to a rule which did not form part of conditions of
their service and, therefore, was not applicable to them. We find no infirmity
in these two documents. The decisions reached by the Government on the
representations made by ASTOS from Madhya Pradesh and 682 Hyderabad were
strictly in conformity with the recruitment rules framed by the former State of
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad under the Proviso to Art of the Constitution.
It is quite obvious that STIs from Bombay
were not entitled to the above concession, as the passing of the STOs
examination had been made a condition precedent for their promotion as STO Gr.
III.
There was a marked distinction between the
recruitment rules framed by the former State Governments of Bombay and Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad for appointment as STOs. In the former State of Bombay,
eligibility for the promotion of STIs to the post of STO Gr. III depended upon
their passing the departmental examination for the non-gazetted staff of the
Sales Tax Department under r. 1(b) (ii) of the Recruitment Rules for the
S.T.Os. Gr. III. Under r. 3, preference was to be given to an Inspector who had
passed the departmental examination prescribed for STOs over those who had not.
By the amendment of January 20, 1961 made by the State Government, the words
"and also the departmental examination for STOs' were added after the
words "time for promotion". The effect of this amendment was to make
the passing of the STO examination a condition precedent for promotion of STIs
as STO Gr. III. Further, the amendment deleted r. 3 which laid down a rule of
preference. In the former States of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, neither such
condition nor any rule of preference was there. Under r. 1 of the Rules for
Departmental Examination framed by the former State Government of Madhya
Pradesh, ASTOs who were promoted as STOs were required to pass the departmental
examination within two years from the date of such promotion. Rule 4 provided
that they would not be confirmed till they pass the said examination and on
their failure to do so, they would be reverted to the substantive post of
ASTOs. Similarly, under r. 2(c) of the Rules framed by the former Hyderabad
State, ASTOs who were prompted as STOs were required to pass the departmental
examination within three years from the date of commencement of the rules
failing which their grade increment was to be withheld till they pass such
examination. Rule 2 (d) provided that STOs Cl. 1 and II who had not been
confirmed in their respective posts, were required to pass the said examination
within the said period failing which they were to be reverted to their
substantive posts. According to the general Circular issued by the State
Government of the reorganised State of Bombay dated April 29, 1960, pending
unification of the recruitment rules framed by the State Government of Bombay,
Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad, the 683 recruitment to the various posts and
services was to be regulated A according to the rules framed by the State
Governments and not according to the Bombay Civil Service (Classification and
Recruitment) Rules. It is not disputed that the Departmental Examination Rules
framed by the former State Governments of Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad for
promotion to the post of STOs formed part of the conditions of service of ASTOs
from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad.
Mere chances of promotion are not conditions
of service and the fact that there was reduction in the chances of promotion
did not tantamount to a change in the conditions of service. A right to be
considered for promotion is a term of service, but mere chances of promotion
are not. Under the Departmental Examination Rules for STOs, 1954, framed by the
former State Government of Madhya Pradesh. as amended on January 20, 1960, mere
passing of the departmental examination conferred no right on the STIs of Bombay,
to promotion. By passing the examination, they merely became eligible for
promotion. They had to be brought on to a select list not merely on the length
of service, but on the basis of merit-cum-seniority principle. It was,
therefore, nothing but a mere chance of promotion. In consequence of the
impugned orders of reversion, all that happened is that some of the STIs who
had wrongly been promoted as STOs Gr. III had to be reverted and thereby lost a
few places. In contrast, the conditions of service of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh
and Hyderabad, at least so far as one stage of promotion above the one held by
them before the reorganisation of States, could not be altered without the
previous sanction of the Central Government as laid down in the Proviso to
sub-s. (7) of s. 115 of the Act.
We are unable to agree with the High Court in
its opinion that ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad on their allocation to
the new State of Bombay, who had wrongly been put at par with STIs from Bombay,
had to pass the departmental examination prescribed by the former State
Government of Bombay, for promotion to the post of STO Gr. III before they
could be actually so promoted.
It is an incontrovertible fact that the
departmental examination prescribed by the former State Governments of Madhya
Pradesh and Hyderabad had not been held after August 8, 1960 i.e. for the last
20 years. Merely because the C.P.
and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 684 and the
Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950 stood repealed with effect from January
1, 1960, that hardly furnished a ground for not holding the examination. The
State Government, in their affidavit before the High Court, tried to justify
their action that the subjects under the ex- Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad Rules
had become obsolete and, therefore, it was felt that no useful purpose would be
served in holding these examinations. This was no justification at all, for
even after the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 had been extended throughout the
State with effect from January 1, 1960, all pending assessments pertaining to
the Vidarbha and Marathwada regions of the former States of Madhya Pradesh and
Hyderabad had to be completed in accordance with the repealed Acts. In this
context, the High Court observed that it examined the subjects prescribed for
the three departmental examinations of Bombay, Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad and
found that "there was not much difference". It went on to say that
"it could hardly be suggested by any one that prescribing a subject more
or less for an examination would adversely affect conditions of service. The
purpose of examination is to prepare the officer to be able to cope up with
different kinds of problems that would confront him with reasonable
efficiency." To say the least, the observations made by the High Court are
unwarranted.
Be that as it may, the fact remains that the
condition regarding the passing of the departmental examination became
incapable of compliance in the case of ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad
who had been promoted as STOs Gr. III.
They were entitled to such promotion without
passing such examination. Under the relevant rules which regulated their
conditions of service, there was only a possibility of reversion in the
eventuality of their not passing the examination within the stipulated time.
Since no examinations admittedly have been held, there is no question of their
reversion as ASTOs. If the decision of the High Court were to be upheld, it
would imply that many of the ASTO from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad who had been
promoted as STOs Gr III and during the past 20 years have reached the higher
echelons of service, would now have to be put back as ASTOs, for no fault of
their own. Many of them either have retired or are on the verge of retirement.
There was thus no alternative for the State
Government but to suspend the operation of the amendment made on January 20,
1961 to r. 1(b) (ii) of the recruitment rules, by its order dated October 1,
685 1965, which made the passing of the STO examination a condition A precedent
for promotion of STIs to STO Gr. III.
There can be no doubt that the State
Government's Resolution dated June 13, 1964 and its Memorandum of November 21,
1964, clarifying that the ASTOs from Madhya Pradesh and Hyderabad were entitled
for promotion to the post of STO Gr. III without passing the departmental
examination, placed STIs from Bombay at a disadvantage. To ensure 'fair and
equitable treatment', the State Government rightly dispensed with the
requirement of passing the departmental examination in the case of STIs from
the former State of Bombay.
In the end, reverting back to the main
question. On an overall view of things, we are satisfied that the State
Government acted with the best of intentions. It endeavoured to strike a
balance between the competing claims to relative seniority. When sub-s. (5) of
s. 115 of the Act speaks of "fair and equitable treatment", obviously
it envisages a decision which is fair and equitable to all.
The result, therefore, is that the appeal
succeeds. The judgment of the High Court of Bombay is set aside and the writ
petition filed by Respondents 1 to 5 is dismissed.
There shall be no order as to costs in the
facts and circumstances of the case.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
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