K.C. Vasanth Kumar & ANR Vs. State
of Karnataka [1985] INSC 134 (8 May 1985)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ) CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
((CJ) DESAI, D.A.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) SEN, A.P. (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION: 1985 AIR 1495 1985 SCR Supl. (1)
352 1985 SCC Supl. 714 1985 SCALE (1)832
CITATOR INFO:
RF 1988 SC 959 (14) E 1988 SC2287 (2)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Articles
15(4),16(4), 29(2), 338(3) and 340- Validity of the Means test adopted in State
of Karnataka order dated 22.2.1977 as modified by the Government Order dated
March 1, 1979 and June 27, 1979- Guidelines for making special provision for
the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens
and provision for the reservation of appointments or posts in favour of any
backward classes of citizens which in to opinion of the State, is not
adequately represented in the services of the State- Conflict between "the
menitoriam principle and" the "compensatory principle" of
discrimination' in the matter of admissions into institutions imparting higher
education and of entry into Government service, how to be solved-Statutory
construction of the word "Backward classes" ejusdem qenesis Rule or
Rule Noscitur a sociis, explained-Construction of Articles 338(3) and 340 of
the Constitutions-Government's power to make reservations under Articles 15(4)
and 16(4) and the extent of reservation that can be made, explained-Words and
Phrases-Meaning of "backwardness" "backward classes",
socially and educationally backward classes",
HEADNOTE:
In the pre-independent period, the former
princely State of Mysore which now forms part of the State of Karnataka is one
of the earliest States in the country in which the system of reservation for
backward classes in public services was introduced. In 1918, the Government of
His Highness the Maharaja of Mysore appointed a committee under the
chairmanship Or Sir Leslie C. Miller, Chief, Justice of the Chief Court of
Mysore to investigate and report on the problem of backward classes. The
questions referred to that Committee were (i) changes needed in the then
existing rules of recruitment to the public services;
(ii) special facilities to encourage higher
and professional education among the members of backward classes and (iii) any
other special measures which might be taken to increase the representation of
backward communities in the public service without materially affecting the
efficiency, due regard being paid also to the general good accruing to the
State by a wider diffusion of education and feeling of increased status which
will thereby be produced in the backward communities. The expressions 'backward
classes' and 'backward communities, were used almost interchangeably and that
the contained in Article 335 of the Constitution that any reservation made
should not impair efficiency was anticipated more than three decades before the
Constitution was enacted. The committee submitted its report in 1921 containing
its opinion that all communities in the State other than Brahmins should be
understood as backward communities regarding whom it made certain
recommendations.
The 353 Government orders issued on the basis
of the Report continued to be in force till 1956 i.e. there organisation of
States which brought together five integrating A units- the former State of
Mysore (including Bellary District), Coorg, four districts of Bombay, certain
portions of the State of Hyderabad and the district of Sough Kanara and the
Kollegal Taluk which formerly formed part of the State of Madras. There were
different lists of backward communities in the five integrating units and they
were allowed to continue for sometime even after the reorganisation of States.
In order to bring about uniformity the State
Government issued a notification containing the list of backward classes for
the purpose of Article 15(4) of the Constitution at the beginning of 1959. The
validity of that notification and of another notification issued thereafter on
the same topic which according to the State Government had treated all persons except
Brahmins, Banias and Kayasthas as backward communities was challenged before
the High Court of Mysore in Rama Krishna Singh v. State of Mysore, AIR 1950
Mysore 338. The two notifications were struck down by the High Court holding
(a) in as much as the impugned notifications contained list of backward classes
including 55 per cent of the population of the State and all Hindu communities
other than Brahmins, Banias and Kayasthas and all other non-Hindu communities
in the State except Anglo- Indians and Parsees had been treated as backward
classes it resulted more in a discrimination against the few excluded
communities consisting of about 5 per cent of the total population rather than
making provision for socially and educationally backward classes; (b) making
provision for communities which were slightly backward to the so called forward
communities did not amount to making provision for the communities which really
needed protection under Article (15(4) of the Constitution; (c) socially and
educationally backward classes can in some cases be determined on the basis of
castes.
Therefore, the State Government constituted a
Committee on January 8, 1960 under the Chairmanship of Dr R. Nagan Gowda for
the purpose of determining the criteria for the classification of backward
classes in the State with the following tern s of reference: (i) to suggest the
criteria to be adopted in determining which sections of the people in the State
should be treated as socially and educationally backward and (ii) to suggest the
exact manner in which the criteria thus indicated should be followed to enable
the State Government to determine the persons who should secure such preference
as may be determined by Government in respect of admissions to technical
institutions and appointment to Government services. The said committee
submitted its Interim Report on February 19, 1960. On the basis of the Interim
Report of the Committee, the State Government passed an order dated June 9,
1960 regarding admissions to professional and technical institutions reserving
22 per cent of seats for backward classes, 15 per cent for Scheduled Castes and
3 per cent for Scheduled Tribes and the remaining 60 percent of seats were
allowed to be filled upon the basis of merit. The order of the Government was
challenged before the High Court of Mysore in S.A. Partha & Ors. v. The
State of Mysore & Ors. A.J.R. 1961 Mys. 220. The High Court found that the
direction contained in the Government order to the effect that if any seat or
seats reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes 354 and
Scheduled Tribes remained unfilled, the same shall be filled by candidates A of
other backward classes was unconstitutional. It also gave some directions
regarding the manner in which the calculation of the quota of reservation be
made. Thereafter the Final Report was submitted by the Nagan Gowda Committee on
May 16, 1961. After taking into consideration the recommendations made in the
said Report, the State Government issued an order for the purpose of Article 15
(4) of the Constitution on July 10, 1961. By that order, the State Government
specified 81 classes of people as backward classes and 135 classes of people as
more backward classes and reserved 30 percent of seat- professional and
technical institutions for backward and more backward classes. 15 per cent and
3 per cent of the seats were reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
respectively and the remaining 52 per cent of the seats were allowed to be
filled up on merit. This order was challenged before the Supreme Court under
Article 32 of the Constitutions in M. R. Balaji & Ors v. State of Mysore
[1963] Supp. 1 SCR 439.
In this land mark decision of the Supreme
Court, the meaning of the term "socially and educationally backward
classes" appearing in Article 15(4) was explained as "The
backwardness under Article 15(4) must be social and educational. It is not
either social or educational but it is both social and educational." After
explaining as to how social and educational backwardness has to be determined,
and the question of determination of the classes which were educationally
backward, the court held that the inclusion of the members of the Lingayat
community in the list of backward classes was erroneous. On the question of
extent of reservation that can be made the Court held that speaking generally
and in a broad way, a special provision should be less then 50 per cent; how
much less than 50 per cent should depend upon the relevant prevailing
circumstances in each case." and thus allowed the petition Thereafter, the
Government passed another order dated July 26, 1963 which directed that 30 per
cent of the seats in professional and technical colleges and institutions
should be reserved for backward classes as defined in that order and that 18
per cent of the seats should be reserved for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes. The criteria laid down in that order for determining social and
economic backwardness were two-fold-income and occupation. It stated that those
who followed occupations of agriculture, petty business, inferior service,
crafts or other occupations involving manual labour and whose family income was
less than Rs. 1,200 per annum were to be treated as belonging to backward
classes. This order was questioned before the High Court in D.G. Viswanath v.
Government of Mysore & Ors.
A.l.R. 1964 Mys. 132 by some petitioners on
various grounds.
The High Court dismissed the petitions
observing that the determination of the backward classes without reference to
caste altogether was not correct and it expressed the hope that the State would
make a more appropriate classification lest its bonafides should be questioned.
In the appeal filed against this judgment in R. Chitralekha & H. Anr. v
State of Mysore & Ors [196416 SCR 368 the Supreme Court explained the
inconsistency between the High Court judgment with the decision in Balaji's
case and observed that "Two principles stand out prominently from 355
Balaji, namely, (i) the caste of a group of citizens may be a relevant circumstance
in ascertaining their social backwardness; and (ii) though it is a relevant A
factor to determine the social backwardness of class of citizens, it cannot be
the sole or dominant test in that behalf-casts is only a relevant circumstance
in ascertaining the backwardness of a class and there is nothing in the
judgment of the Supreme Court which precludes the authority concerned from
determining the social backwardness of a group of citizens if it can do so
without reference to caste." While this Court has not excluded caste from
ascertaining the backwardness of a class of citizens, it has not made it one of
compelling circumstances, affording a basis for the ascertainment of
backwardness of a class.
Thereafter the State Government appointed the
Karnataka Backward Classes Commission under the Chairmanship of Sri L.G.
Havanur which after an elaborate enquiry submitted its report in four massive
volumes on November 19,1975. The Commission recommended that person belonging
to backward classes for purposes of Article 15(4) of the Constitution should be
divided into three groups-(a) backward communities consisting of 15 castes (b)
backward castes consisting of 128 castes and (c) backward tribes consisting of
62 tribes.
For purposes of Article 16(4) of the Constitution,
the Commission divided the backward classes into (a) backward communities
consisting of 9 castes(b) backward castes consisting of 115 castes and (c)
backward tribes consisting of 61 tribes. According to the Commission, backward
communities were those castes whose student average of students passing SSLC
examination in 1972 per thousand of population was below the State average
(which was 1.69 per thousand) but above 50 per cent of the State average and
backward castes and backward tribes were those castes and tribes whose student
average was below 50 per cent of the State average except in the case of
Dombars and Voddars and those who were Nomadic and de-notified tribes. The
total population of these backward classes (other than Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes), according to the Commission, was about 45 per cent of total population
of the State. The difference between the two lists-one under Article 15(4) and
the other under Article 16(4) of the Constitution was due to the exclusion of
certain communities, castes and tribes which were socially and educationally
backward but which had adequate representation in the services from the list
prepared for the purpose of Article 16(4). The Commission recommended both for
purposes of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) the percentage of reservations: (i)
Backward communities 16 per cent; (ii) Backward Castes 10 per cent;
and (iii) Backward Tribes 6 per cent and
total 32 per cent.
The reservation of 32 per cent along with 18
per cent reserved for Scheduled Casts and Scheduled Tribes together amounted to
50 per cent of the total seats or posts, as the case may be. The Commission
further recommended if seats/posts remained unfilled in the quota allotted to
backward tribes, they should be made over to backward communities and backward
castes Similarly if seats/posts remain unfilled in the quota allotted to
backward castes, they should be made over to backward communities and backward
tribes If, however, seats/posts remain unfilled in the quota allotted to any of
those three categories, they should be made over to Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. In the event of seats/posts remaining unfilled by any of
these categories they should be transferred to the general pool.
356 After considering the said Report, the State
Government issued an order A dated February 22,1977 whereunder it listed the
Backward communities. Backward Castes and Backward Tribes who shall be treated
as Backward classes for purposes of Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the
Constitution of India. The order clarified, (a) that only such citizens of
these Backward Classes whose family income per annum from all sources if Rs.
8000 (Eight thou sands only) and below shall be entitled to special treatment
under these Articles and (b) that five categories, namely; an actual
cultivator, an artisan, a petty businessman, one holding an appointment either
in Government service or corresponding services under private employment
including casual labour; and any person self employed or engaged in any
occupation involving manual labour" of citizens shall be considered as a
special group such citizens of this special group whose family income is Rs.
4,800 (Rupees four thousand and eight hundred only) and below per annum shall
be eligible for special treatment under the two Articles. The order further
noted that (i) Family income means income of the citizen and his parents and if
either of the parents is dead, his legal guardian;
and (b) to fix the reservation for purposes
of Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution in respect of the Backward
classes and the special group of citizens at 40 per cent, the allocation being
-Backward Communities (20 per cent), Backward castes (10 per cent, Backward
Tribes (5 per cent), and special group (5 per cent). In the list of backward
communities mentioned in the Government order, the State Government included '
Muslims' thus making a total of 16 backward communities. In the list of
backward castes there were 129 castes including converts into Christianity from
Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes upto second generation and 62 Scheduled
Tribes. The reservation for backward classes was 40 percent and taken along
with 18 per cent for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, the total
reservation of seats/posts came to 58 per cent leaving only 42 per cent for
merit pool.
The Government order dated February 22, 1977
and another notification dated March 4, 1977 issued for purposes of Article
16(4) had also been challenged in a number of writ petitions filed under
Article 226 of the Constitution before the High Court of Karnataka in S
Somashekarappa & Ors. v State of Karnataka & Ors (Writ Petition No 43;1
of 1977 and connected writ petition disposed of on April 9, 1979). Allowing the
petitions; the High Court quashed (i) the inclusion of `Arasu' community in the
list of 'Backward Communities' both for purposes of Article 15(4) and Article
16(4); (ii) the inclusion of the (a) Balija (b) Devadiga (c) Ganiga (d) Nayinda
(e) Rajput and (f) Satani in the list of backward communities and the inclusion
of (a) Banna (b) Gurkha (c) Jat (d) Konga (e) Kotari (f) Koyava (g) Malayali
(h) Maniyanani or (Muniyani) (i) Padatti (j) Padiyar (k) Pandavakul (l) Raval
and (m) Rawat in the list of backward classes for purposes of Article 16(4) of
the Constitution;
and (iii) reservation of 20 percent made for
Backward communities in the State Civil Services under Article 16(4), reserving
liberty to the State Government to determine the extent of reservation in
accordance with law. The classification and reservation in other respects was
upheld.
Special Leave Petitions (Civil) No. 6656 of
1979 and 985411979 are filed against the said Judgment of the High Court under
Article ] 36 of the Constitution.
357 After the said judgment of the High
Court, by an order dated May 1, 1979, the reservation for backward communities
was reduced to 18 per cent A for purposes of Article 16(4).
By an order dated June 27, 1979, the State
Government modified the Government order dated February 22, 1977 by increasing
the reservation for 'Special Group' from 5 per cent to 15 per cent both for
purposes of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the Constitution. Thus as on
date, the total reservation for purposes of Article 15(4) is 68 per cent and
for purposes of Article 16(4) is 66 per cent. There are only 32 per cent seats
in professional and technical colleges and 34 per cent posts in Government
services which can be filled up on the basis of merit. These writ petitions
filed under Article 32 of the Constitution of India, seek to challenge the Constitutional
validity of the State Government orders dated February 22,1977 as modified by
the Government orders dated May ],1979 and June 27,1979.
Disposing of the petitions and the appeals by
Special Leave, the Court expressed their following opinions, Per Chandrachud,
C.J.
The following propositions on the issue of
reservation may serve as a guideline to the Commission which the Government of
Karnataka proposes to appoint, for examining the question of affording better
employment and educational opportunities to Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes
and other Backward Classes which problem is a burning issue to- day.
1. The reservation in favour of scheduled
castes and scheduled tribes must continue as to present, there is, without the
application of a means test, for a further period not exceeding fifteen years.
Another fifteen years will make it fifty years after the advent of the
Constitution, a period reasonably long for the upper crust of the oppressed
classes to overcome the baneful effects of social oppression, isolation and
humiliation. [376 C-D]
2. The means test, that is to say, the test
of economic backwardness ought to be made applicable even to the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes after the period mentioned in (1) above. It is
essential that the privileged section of the underprivileged society should not
be permitted to monopolise preferential benefits for an indefinite period of
time. [376E-F]
3. In so far as the Other Backward Classes
are concerned, two tests should be conjunctively applied for identifying them
for the purpose of reservations in employment and education: One, that they
should be comparable to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the matter
of their backwardness; and two, that they should satisfy the means test such as
a State Government may lay down in the context of prevailing economic
conditions. [376 F-G]
4. The policy of reservations in employment,
education and legislative institutions should be reviewed every five years or
so. That will at once afford an opportunity (i) to the State to rectify
distortions arising out of particular facts of the reservation policy and (ii)
to the people, both backward and, non- 358 backward, to ventilate their views
in a public debate on the practical impact of A the policy of reservations.
[376 H;
377 Al Per Desai J For a period of three and
half decades, the unending search for identifying socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens has defined the policy makers, the interpreters of
the policy as reflected in statutes or executive administrative orders and has
added a spurt in the reverse direction, namely, those who attempted to move
upward (Pratilom) in the social hierarchy have put the movement in reverse gear
so as to move downwards (Anulom) in order to be identified as a group or class
of citizens socially and educationally backward. The Constitution promised an
egalitarian society; it was a caste ridden stratified hierarchical society.
Therefore, in the early stages of the functioning of the Constitution it was
accepted without dissent or dialogue that caste furnishes a working criterion
for identifying socially and educationally backward class of citizens for the
purpose of Article 15(4).[377 D-G] The language of Article 15(4) refers to
'class' and not caste. Preferential treatment which cannot be struck down as
discriminatory was to be accorded a class, shown to be socially and
educationally backward and not to the members of a case who may be presumed to
be socially and educationally backward. [378 A B] It is clear from the
decisions of the Supreme Court that same vacillation on the part of the
judiciary on the question whether the caste should be the basis for recognising
the backwardness. Judiciary retained its traditional blindfold on its eyes and
thereby ignored perceived realities. The expression `backward classes' is not
defined. Courts, therefore have more or less in the absence of well-defined
criteria not based on caste label has veered round to the view that in order to
be socially and educationally backward classes, the group must have the same
indicia as Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. [378 E; 384 E-F] State of
Madras v. Srimathi Champakam Dorairajad & Anr [1951] SCR 525; M R. Balaji
& Ors v State of Mysore [1963] Supp. 1 SCR 439; T. Devadesan v The Union of
India & Anr [19641 4 SCR 680; R. Chitralekha & Anr. v State of Mysore
& Ors. [1964] 6 SCR 368; Triloki Nath & Anr v. State of Jammu
State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors [1969]
I SCR 103; A.
Peeriakaruppan etc. v. State of Tamil Nadu
[1971] 2 SCR 430, State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. v. U.S.V. Balram etc
[19721 3 SCR 247; Janki Prasad Parimoo & Ors etc etc v State of Jammu &
Kashmir & Ors. [ 1973] 3 SCR 236; State of Uttar Pradesh v Pradip Tandon
& Ors [1976] 2 SCR 761; State of Kerala & Anr v N M Thomas & Ors.
11976l 1 SCR 906; Kumari K S Jayasree & Anr v The State of Kerala &
Anr. [1977] 1 SCR 194; and Akhil Bhartiya Soshit Karamchari Sangh (Railway)
represented by its Assistant General Secretary on behalf of the Association v
Union of India & Ors. [1981] 2 SCR 185, referred to.
A caste is a horizontal segmental division of
society spread over a district of a region or the whole State and also
sometimes outside it. The 359 concept of purity and impurity conceptualises the
caste system. There are four essential features of the caste system which
maintained in homo hierarchicus character; (i) hierarchy (ii) commensality
(iii) restrictions on marriage and (iv) hereditary occupation. Most of the
caste are endogamous groups. Inter-marriage between two groups is
impermissible. But `Pratilom' marriages are not wholly unknown. Similarly with
the onward movement of urbanisation, members of various castes are slowly
giving up, traditional occupations and the pure impure avocations is being
frowned upon by developing notion of dignity of labour. As the fruits of
independence were unequally distributed amongst various segments of the
society, in each caste there came into existence a triple division based on
economic resurgence amongst the members of the caste. Those who have become
economically well off have acquired an upper class status (class consciousness)
and the one on the step below is the middle class and the third one belongs to
poorer section of the caste. This led to the realisation that caste culture
does not help economic interest. In fact the upper crust of the same caste is
verily accused of exploiting the lower strata of the same caste. Therefore, the
basis of the caste system namely, purity and pollution is slowly being
displaced by the economic condition of the various segments of the same caste.
It is recognised on almost all hands that the important feature of the caste
structure are progressively suffering erosion. The new organisation, the
so-called caste organisation, is substantially different from the traditional
caste structure and caste councils.
Economic differentiation amongst the members
of the caste has become sharp, but not so sharp as to bury caste sentiments and
ties. In the face of this transformation of the caste structure, caste label
can not be accepted as the basis for determining social and educational
backwardness, but the class or the social group should be examined [385 C- H;
386 A-D] Caste in rural society is more often than not mirrored in the economic
power wielded by it and vice versa. Social hierarchy and economic position
exhibit an undisputable mutuality. The lower the caste, the poorer its members.
The poorer the members of a caste, the lower the caste. Caste and economic
situation, reflecting each other as they do are the Deus ex-Machina of the
social status occupied and the economic power wielded by an individual or class
in rural society. Social status and economic power are so woven and fused into
the caste system in Indian rural society that one may, without hesitation, say
that if poverty be the cause, caste is the primary index of social
backwardness, so that social backwardness is often readily identifiable with
reference to a person's caste So sadly and oppressively deep-rooted is caste in
our country that it has cut across even the barriers of religion. The caste
system has penetrated other religious and dissentient Hindu sects to whom the
practice of caste should be anathema and today we find that practitioner of
other religious faiths and Hindu dissentients are some times as rigid adherents
to the system of caste as the conservative Hindus. [386 E-H] Shared situation
in the economic hierarchy, caste gradation, occupation, habitation, style of
consumption, standard of literacy and a variety of such other factors appear to
go to make towards social and educational backwardness. Thus there is a mad
rush for being recognised as belonging to a caste 360 which by its nomenclature
would be included in the list of socially and A educationally backward classes.
Certain castes are known by a number of synonymy which vary from one region to
the other and making their complete coverage almost impossible. The only way
out would in such a situation is to treat, if a particular caste has been
treated as backward, all its synonyms whether mentioned in the State lists or
not as backward. Again, some of the castes just for the sake of being
considered socially and educationally backward, have degraded themselves to
such an extent that they had no hesitation in attributing different types of
vices to and associating other factors indicative of backwardness, with their
castes. The only remedy for such a malaise is to devise a method for
determining socially and educationally backward classes without reference to
caste, beneficial to all sections of people irrespective of the caste to which
they belong. [387 B-H; 388 A] A few other aspects for rejecting caste as the
basis for identifying social and educational backwardness are: (i) If State
patronage for preferred treatment accepts caste as the only insignia for
determining social and educational backwardness; the danger looms large that
this approach alone would legitimise and perpetuate caste system. It does not
go well with our proclaimed secular character as enshrined in the Preamble to
the Constitution. The assumption that all members of some caste are equally
socially and educationally backward is not well-founded.
Such an approach provides an over
simplification of a complex problem of identifying the social and educational
backwardness: (ii) it is recognised reservation has been usurped by the
economically well-placed section in the same caste; and (iii) the caste is, as
is understood in Hindu Society unknown to Muslims, Parsis, Jews etc. As such,
caste criterion would not furnish a reliable yardstick to identify socially and
educationally backward group in the aforesaid communities though economic
backwardness would.
[388 P-G; 389 A;F] Therefore, the only
criterion which can be realistically devised is the one of economic backwardness.
To this may be added some relevant criteria
such as the secular character of the group, its opportunity for earning
livelihood etc, but by and large economic backwardness must be the load-star.
[389 F] Chronic poverty is the bane of Indian Society. Market economy and money
spinning culture has transformed the general behaviour of the society towards
its members. Upper caste does not enjoy the status or respect, traditional,
voluntary or forced any more even in rural areas what to speak of highly westernised
urban society. The bank balance, the property holding and the money power
determine the social status of the individual and guarantee the opportunities
to rise to the top echelon. How the wealth is acquired has lost significance.
Purity of means disappeared with Mahatma Gandhi and we have reached a stage
where ends determine the means. This is the present disturbing situation
whether one likes it or not. [389 G-H; 390 A-B] Reservation in one or other
form has been there for decades. If a survey is made with reference to families
in various castes considered to be socially and educationally backward, about
the benefits of preferred treatment, it would 361 unmistakably show that the
benefits of reservations are snatched away by the top creamy layer of the
backward castes. This has to be avoided at any cost.
[390 E] If economic criterion for
compensatory discrimination or affirmative action is accepted, it would strike
at the root cause of social and educational backwardness, and simultaneously
take a vital step in the direction of destruction of caste structure which in
turn would advance the secular character of the Nation. This approach seeks to
translate into reality the twin constitutional goals: one, to strike at the
perpetuation of the caste stratification of the Indian Society so as to arrest
progressive movement and to take a firm step towards establishing a casteless
society; and two, to progressively eliminate the disadvantageous sections of
the society to raise their position and be part of the mainstream of life which
means eradication of poverty. However, this does not deal with reservation in
favour of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Thousands of years of
discrimination and exploitation cannot be wiped out in one generation. But even
here economic criterion is worth applying by refusing preferred treatment to
those amongst them who have already benefited by it and improved their
position. And finally reservation must have a time span otherwise concession
tend to become vested interests. [391 E-H; 392 A] Per Chinnappa Reddy .r.
The paradox of the system of reservation that
may be made under Articles 15(4),16(4) read with 29(2) of the Constitution is
that it has engendered a spirit of self denigration among the people. Nowhere
else in the world do castes, classes or communities queue up for the sake of
gaining the backward status. Nowhere else in the world is there competition to
assert backwardness and to claim 'we are more backward than you'. This is an
unhappy and disquieting situation, but it is stark reality. [392 E-F]
2. The Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes
and other socially and educationally backward classes, all of whom have been
compendiously described as 'the weaker sections of the people', have long
journeys to make unsociety. They need aid; they need facility; they need
launching; they need propulsion. Their needs are their demands. The demands are
matters of right and not of philanthropy. They ask for parity, and not charity.
They claim their constitutional right to equality of status and of opportunity
and economic and social justice. Several bridges have to be erected, so that
they may cross the Rubicon. Professional education and employment under the
State are thought to be two such bridges. Hence the special provision for
advancement and for reservation under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the
Constitution. [393 C-D]
3. Courts are not necessarily the most
competent to identify the backward classes or to lay down guidelines for their
identification except in a broad and very general way.
Courts are not equipped for that; Courts have
no legal barometers to measure social backwardness and are truly removed from
the people, particularly those of the backward classes, by layer upon layer of
gradation and degradation.
And, India is such a vast country that
conditions 362 vary from State to State, region to region, 'district to
district and from one A ethnic religious, linguistic or caste group to another.
A test to identify back ward classes which may appear appropriate when applied
to one group of people may be wholly inappropriate and unreasonable if applied
to another group of people. There can be no universal test; there can be no
exclusive test; there can be no conclusive test. In fact, it may be futile to
apply and rigid tests. One may to look at the generality and the totality of
the situation. [398 A-C]
4. Before attempting to lay down any
guideline for the purpose of determining the methods to be adopted for
identifying the socially and educationally backward classes one should guard
against the pitfalls of the traditional approach to the question, which has
generally been superior, elitist and, therefore, ambivalent. The result is that
the claim of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and other backward classes
to equality as a matter of human and constitutional right is forgotten and
their rights are submerged in what is described as the "Preferential
principle" or "protective or compensatory discrimination".
Unless these superior, patronising and
paternalist attitudes are got rid off. It is difficult to truly appreciate the
problems involved in the claim of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and
other backward classes for their legitimate share of the benefits arising out
of their belonging to humanity and to a country whose constitution preaches
justice, social, economic and political and equality of status and opportunity
for all. [393 E-H]
5. There is neither statistical basis nor
expert evidence to support the assumption that efficiency will necessarily be
impaired if reservation exceeds 50%, if reservation is carried forward or if
reservation is extended to promotional posts. The word 'efficiency' is neither
sacro-sanct nor is the sanctorum has to be fiercely guarded.
'Efficiency' is not a Mantra which is
whispered by the Guru in the Sishya's ear. The mere securing of high marks at
an examination may not necessarily mark out a good administrator. An efficient
administrator, one takes it, must be one who possesses among other qualities
the capacity to understand with sympathy and, therefore, to tackle bravely the
problems of a large segment of population constituting the weaker sections of
the people. This does not mean that efficiency in civil service is unnecessary
or that it is a myth. However, one need not make a fastidious fetish of it. It
may be that for certain posts, only the best may be appointed and for certain
courses of study only the best may be admitted. If so, rules may provide for
reservation for appointment to such posts and for admission to such courses.
The rules may provide for an appropriate method of selection. It may be that
certain posts require a very high degree of skill or efficiency and certain
courses of study require a high degree of industry and intelligence.
If so, the rules may prescribe a high minimum
qualifying standard and an appropriate method of selection. Different minimum
standards and different modes of selection may be prescribed for different
posts and for admission to different courses of study having regard to the
requirements of the posts and the courses of study. But, efficiency cannot be
permitted to be used as a camouflage to let the upper classes monopolise the
services, particularly the higher posts and the professional institutions. In
view of Articles 15(4) and 16(4), the so called 363 controversy between the
moratorium and compensatory principles is not of any significance. [395 D; G-H;
396 C-G;
397 F]
6. The three dimensions of social inequality
are class, status and power. Everyone of these three dimensions are intimately
and inextricably connected with economic position. Viewed from any of these
three dimensions it is clear that the economic factor is at the bottom of
backwardness and poverty is the culprit cause and the dominant characteristic.
The economic power has firm links with the castes system, land and learning,
two of the primary sources of economic power in India have been the monopoly of
the superior castes. Social status and economic power are so woven and fused
into the caste system in Indian rural society that one may, without hesitation,
say that if poverty be the cause, caste is the primary index of social
backwardness, so that social backwardness is often readily identifiable with
reference to a person's caste. Shared situation in the economic hierarchy,
caste gradation, occupation, habitation, style of consumption, standard of
literacy and a variety of such other factors appear to go to make towards
social and educational backwardness. [398 F;
399 C-H 400 G-H]
7. " The backward classes of
citizens" referred to in Article 16(4), despite the short description, and
the same as 'the socially and educationally backward classes of citizens and
the scheduled castes and the scheduled tribes' so fully described in Article
15(4). Again the ' special provision for advancement' is a wide expression any
may include many more things besides 'mere reservation of seats in colleges It
may be by way of financial assistance, free medical, educational and hostel
facilities, scholarships, free transport, concessional or free housing,
exemption from requirements insisted upon in the case of other classes and so
on. Under Article 16(4), reservation is to be made to benefit those backward
classes, who in the opinion of the Government are not adequately represented,
in the services.
Reservation must, therefore, be aimed at
securing adequate representation. It must follow that the extent of reservation
must match the inadequacy of representation.
There is no reason why this guideline
furnished by the Constitution itself should not also be adopted for the
purposes of Article 15(4) too. The reservation of seats in professional
colleges may conveniently be determined with reference to the inadequacy of
representation in the various professions. Similarly, the extent of reservation
in other colleges may be determined with reference to the inadequacy in the
number of graduates, etc. Naturally, if the lost ground is to be gained, the
extent of reservation may even have to be slightly higher than the percentage
of population of the backward classes. [403 H; 404 A-F]
8. The ordinary rules of statutory
interpretations cannot be applied to interpret constitutional instruments which
are sui generis and which deal with situations of significance and consequence.
The Constitution must be given a generous interpretation so as to give all its
citizens, the full measure of justice promised by it. [406 D-E] There is no
reason whatever to narrow the concept of equality in Article 16(1) and refuse
to read into it broader concepts of social justice and equality. In fact it is
necessary to read Article 16(1) so as not to come into any conflict 364 with
Articles 46 and 335. A constitutional document must be read so as to synthesise
its provisions and avoid disharmony. To say that equality means that unequals
cannot be treated equally is merely to say what is self-evident and common
place. Article implies it and it is not implied in Article 16(1) also. True, on
a first glance, Article 16(4) appears to save power of the State to make provision
for the reservation of appointments and posts in favour of any backward class
of citizens, but a second look shows that it really recognises a pre-existing
power and expresses the recognition in an emphatic way lest there should be any
doubt caste upon that power. Such a device is not unknown to legislatures and
constitution making bodies. Article 16(4) is more in the nature of a rule of
interpretation to guide the construction of Article 16(1). The possibility of
interpreting Article 16(1) so as to promote the narrower equality rather than
the greater equality is excluded by Article 16(4). [425-CE]
9. The test of nearness to the conditions of
existence of the Scheduled Castes would practically nullify the provision for
reservation for socially and educationally Backward Classes other then
Scheduled Castes and Tribes, would perpetuate the dominance of existing upper
classes, and would take a substantial majority of the classes, who are between
the upper classes and the Scheduled Castes and Tribes out of the category of
backward classes and put them at a permanent disadvantage. Only the
'enlightened' classes of body will capture all the 'open' posts and seats and
the reserved posts and seats will go to the Scheduled Castes and Tribes and
those very the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. 1 he bulk of these behind the
'enlightened' classes and ahead of the near Scheduled Castes and Tribes would
be left high and dry, with never a chance of improving themselves. [406 G-H;
407 A)
10. On principle, there can be a classification
in to Backward Classes and More Backward Classes, if both classes are not
merely a little behind but far behind the most advanced classes. In fact such a
classification would be necessary to held the More Backward Classes; otherwise
those of the Backward Classes who might be a little more advanced than the More
Backward Classes might walk away with all the seats, just as, if reservation
was confined to the More Backward Classes and no reservation was made to the
slightly more advanced Backward Classes, the most advanced Classes would walk
away with all the seats available for the general category leaving none for the
Backward Classes. [409 A-D]
11. As to the adoption of the test average
student population in the last three High School Classes of all High Schools in
the State in relation to a thousand citizens of that community as the basis for
assessing relative backwardness, the adoption of a lower basis may give a false
picture. After all, if one is considering the question of admission to professional
colleges or of appointment to posts, the basis possibly should be the average
number of students of that community who have passed the examination prescribed
as the minimum qualification for admission to professional colleges, say in the
last three years and perhaps the average number of persons of that community
who have graduated in the last three years, since graduation is generally, the
mini mum extent qualification for most posts possibly, the extent of
reservation may even vary with reference to the class of post. [490 D-H] 365
12. The percentage of reservation is not a
matter upon which a Court may pronounce with no materials at hand. For a Court
to say that reservations should not exceed 40 per cent, 50 per cent or 60 per
cent would be arbitrary and the Constitution does not permit us to be
arbitrary. [410 E-F]
13. From the historical and sociological
background of caste and class the philosophy, the reason and the rhetoric
behind reservation and anti-reservation, the Constitutional provisions and the
varying judicial stances, the following emerges; (a) clearly there exist large
sections of people who are socially and educationally backward who stand midway
between the forward classes such as the landed, the learned, the priestly and
the trading classes on one side and the out-caste and depressed classes, i.e.
the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes on the other;(b) Poverty, Caste,
occupation and habitation are the principal factors which contribute to brand a
class as socially backward. The customs which they honour and observe, the
rituals which they fear and practice the habits to which they adapt and
conform, the festivals which they enjoy and celebrate and even the Gods that
they revere and worship are enlightening elements in recognising their social
gradation and backwardness; (c) Amongst very many classes and communities
considered socially inferior, child marriage persists, the rule of Saptapadi is
not followed; divorces are granted by a caste panchayat; (d) dress and work habit
is yet another indication that economic situation and social situation often
reflect each others; (e) there are many other customs, rituals or habits of
significance mark out the socially backward class; (f) the weight to be
attached to these factors depends upon the circumstances of the case which can
only be revealed by thoughtful, penetrating investigation and analysis. It
cannot be done by means of mathematical formulae but only by looking in the
round or taking a look at the entire situation. Sometimes it may be possible to
readily identify certain castes or social groups as a whole as socially forward
or socially backward classes. Poverty, of course, is basic, being the root
cause as well as the rueful result of social and educational backwardness But
mere poverty it seems is not enough to invite the constitutional branding
because of the vast majority of the people of our country are poverty-struck
but some among them are socially and educationally forward and others backward.
In a country like India where 80 per cent of
the people live below the breadline, even the majority of the so called
socially forward classes may be poor. In the rural social ladder they are
indeed high up and despite the economic backwardness of sizeable sections of
them, they cannot be branded as socially backward. On the other hand, there are
several castes or other social groups who have only to be named to be
immediately identified as socially and economically backward classes,
identified as socially backward classes. [431 F-H; 432 A-F; 433 A-E] R.
Chitralekha v. State of Mysore, [1964] 6 SCR 368;
Rajendran v. State of Madras,1968] I SCR 721;
State of Andhra Pradesh v. P. Sagar, [1968]3 SCR 595; Triloki Nath v.
State of Jammu & Kashmir, [1969] 1 SCR
103; A. Peeriakaruppan v. State of Tamil Nadu. 1197]] 1 8CC 38;
State of Andhra Pradesh v. Balram AIR 1972 SC
1375; State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradeep Tandon 11975l 2 SCR 761; X.S. Jayasree
v. State of Kerala [1976] 3 SCC 730; State of Kerala v. N.M. Thomas [1976] I
SCR 906; Akhil Bhartiya Soshit Karamchari Sangh v Union of India & Ors.
[1981] 1 SCR 185 referred to.
366 (g) True, a few members of those caste or
social groups may have progressed far enough and forged ahead so as to compare
favourably with the leading forward classes economically, socially and
educationally. In such cases, per haps and upper income ceiling would secure
the benefit of reservation to such of these members of the class who really
deserve it;
(h) In the cases of poorest sections of the
forward classes, the State will have to-and it is the duty of the State to
do-to discover means of assisting them means other than reservations under
Article 15(4) and 16(4). [433 G-H]
14. In the ultimate analysis, attainment of
economic equality is the final and the only solution to the besetting problems.
There is also one danger in adopting individual property as the criterion to
identify a member of the backward classes. The truly lower classes who need the
certificate most to prove their poverty will find it difficult to get the
certificate from the official or the legislator or any named person [434 B-C]
15. Class poverty, not individual poverty, is
therefore the primary test. Other ancillary tests are the way of life, the
standard of living, the place in the social hierarchy, the habits and customs,
etc. etc. Despite individual exceptions, it may be possible and easy to
identify social backwardness with reference to caste, with reference to
residence, with reference to occupation or some other dominant feature. notwithstanding
our antipathy to caste and sub-regionalism, these are facts of life which
cannot be wished away. If they reflect poverty which is the primary source of
social and educational backwardness, they must be recognised for what they are
along with other less primary sources. There is and there can be nothing wrong
in recognising poverty wherever it is reflected as an identifiable group
phenomena whether you see it as a caste group, a sub regional group, an
occupational group or some other class. Once the relevant factors are taken
into consideration, how and where to draw the line is a question for each State
to consider since the economic and social conditions differ from area to area.
Once the relevant conditions are taken into consideration and the backwardness
of a class of people is determined, it will not be for the court to interfere
in the matter. But certainly, judicial review will not stand excluded. [334
D-G] Per A.P. Sen, J.
1. Conceptually, the making of special
provisions for the advancement of backward classes of citizens under Art.
15(4) and the system of reservation of
appointments or posts as envisaged by Art. 16(4) as guaranteed in the
Constitution, is a national commitment and a historical need to eradicate
age-old social disparities in our country. But unfortunately the policy of
reservation higher to formulated by the Government for the upliftment of such
socially and educationally backward classes of citizens is caste-oriented while
the policy should be based on economic criteria. Then alone the element of
caste in making such special provisions or reservations under Arts. 15(4) and
16(4) can be removed.
[435B-D]
2. It is true that mere economic backwardness
would not satisfy the rest of educational and social backwardness under Article
15(4), and is only 367 One of several tests to be adopted. The predominant and
the only factor for making special provisions under Article 15(4) or for
reservations of posts and appointments under Art. 16(4) should be poverty, and
caste or a sub-caste or a group should be used only for purposes of
identification of persons comparable to Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes,
till such members of backward classes attain a state of enlightenment and there
is eradication of poverty amongst them and they become equal partners in a new
social order in our national life. [435 H; 436 C-D]
3. The adequacy or otherwise of
representation of the backward classes in the services has to be determined
with reference to the percentage of that class in the population and the total
strength of the service as a whole. The representation does not have to exactly
correspond to the percentage of that class in the population; it just has to be
adequate. Moreover, in the case of services the extent of representation has to
be considered by taking into account the number of members of that class in the
service, whether they are holding reserved or unreserved posts. [436 E-F]
4. The State should give due importance and
effect to the dual constitutional mandates of maintenance of efficiency and the
equality of opportunity for all persons.
The nature and extent of reservations must be
rational and reasonable. The state of backwardness of any class of citizens is
a fact situation which needs investigation and determination by a fact finding
body which has the expertise and the machinery for collecting relevant data.
The Constitution has provided for the appointment of such a Commission for
Backward Classes by the President under Art.
340 to make recommendations and left if to
the States to make special provisions for advancement of such backward classes.
It may be, and often is, difficult for the Court to draw the line in advance
which the State ought not to cross, but it is never difficult for the Court to
know that an invasion across the border, however ill-defined, has taken place.
The Courts have neither the expertise nor the sociological knowledge to define
or lay down the criteria for determining what are 'socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens' within the meaning of Art.
15(4) which enables the State to make
'special provisions for the advancement' of such classes notwithstanding the
command of Art. 15(2) that the State shall not discriminate against any
citizens on the ground only of religion, race, caste, descent, place of birth,
residence or any of them.
The Supreme Court is ill-equipped to perform
the task of determining whether a class of citizens is socially and
educationally backward, but, however a duty to interpret the Constitution and
to see what it means and intends when it makes provision for the advancement of
socially and educationally backward classes. In considering this situation
then, Courts must never forget that it is the Constitution they are expounding.
Except for this, the Court has very little or no function.
[436 G-H; 437 A-D]
5. The Preamble to our Constitution shows the
nation's resolve to secure to all its citizens: Justice-Social, economic and
political. The State's objective of bringing about and maintaining social
justice must be achieved reasonably having regard to the interests of all.
Irrational and unreasonable moves by the State will slowly but surely tear
apart the fabric of society. It is primarily the 368 duty and function of the
state to inject moderation into the decisions taken under Arts. 15(4) and
16(4), because justice lives in the hearts of men and a growing sense of
injustice and reverse discrimination, fueled by unwise State action, will
destroy, not advance, social justice. If the State contravenes the constitutional
mandates of Art. 16(1) and Art. 335, the Supreme Court will of course, have to
perform its duty. [437 F-G] 6. The extent of reservation under Art. 15(4) and
Art.
16(4) must necessarily vary from State to
State and from region to region within a State, depending upon the conditions
prevailing in a particular State or region, of the Backward Classes. Since the
problems pertaining in reservation can never be resolved through litigation in
the Courts, the Central Government should consider the feasibility of
appointing a permanent National Commission for Backward Classes which must
constantly carry out sociological and economic study from State to State and
from region to region within a State. The framers of the Constitution by
enacting Art. 340 clearly envisaged the setting up of such a high-powered
National Commission for Backward Classes at the Centre. [437 H; 438 A-B]
7. The doctrine of protective discrimination
embodied in Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) and the mandate of Art. 29(2) cannot be
stretched beyond a particular limit. The State exists to serve its people.
There are some services where expertise and skill are of the essence. Medical
services directly affect and deal with the health and life of the populace.
Professional expertise, born of knowledge and experience, of a high degree of
technical knowledge and operational skill is required of pilots and aviation
engineers. The lives of citizens depend on such persons.
There are other similar fields of
governmental activity where professional, technological, scientific or other
special skill is called for. In such services or posts under the Union or
States, there can be no room for reservation of posts; merit alone must be the
sole and decisive consideration for appointments. [438 C-E] Per Venkataramiah,
J.
1. Equality of opportunity revolves around
two dominant principles- (i) the traditional value of equality of opportunity;
and (ii) the newly appreciated-not newly conceived-idea of equality of results.
The Society which cherishes the ideal of equality has to define the meaning and
consent of the concept of equality and the choices open to it to bring about an
egalitarian society would always be political. But the Courts have been forced
to scrutinise a variety of choices, while society for which they have to answer
has been issuing a proliferation of demands. Many inequalities in the past
seemed almost to have been part of the order of nature. The Courts, however
deal with the problems that society presents. `Levels of awareness and
corresponding senses of grievance have arisen at different times for particular
historical reasons often tending to differentiate among the categories of
equality rather than unifying them. Inequalities of class, race, religion and
sex have presented themselves at different periods as primary grievances'. The
Courts must remind themselves that for those who are suffering from deprivation
of inalienable rights, gradualism can never be a sufficient remedy. Ours is a
'struggle for status, a struggle 369 to take democracy off parchment and give
it life.' 'Social injustice always balances its books with red ink'. Neither
the caprice of personal taste nor the protection of vested interests can stand
as reasons for restricting opportunities of any appropriately qualified person.
These are the considerations which sometimes may be conflicting that should
weigh with the courts while dealing with cases arising out of the doctrine of
equality. It should, however, be remembered that the courts by themselves are
not in a position to bring the concept of equality into fruitful action. They
should be supported by the will of the people of the Government and of the
legislators. These should be an emergence of united action on the part of all
segments of human society. This is not all. Mere will to bring about equality
under the existing economic level might worsen the situation. There should be
at the same time a united action to increase the national resources so that the
operation of equality will be less burdensome and every member of the society
is carried to a higher social and economic level leaving nobody below a minimum
which guarantees all the basic human needs to every member of the society. If
there is no united action the pronouncements by courts would become empty words
as many of the high principles adumberated in the chapter on the Directive
Principles of State Policy in the Constitution have turned out to be owing to
several factors. [440 B-H; 441 A]
2. The need for social action is necessitated
by the environmental factors and living conditions of the individuals
concerned. The application of the principle of individual merit, unmitigated by
other considerations may quite often lead to inhuman results 1441 G]
3. An examination of the question of the
background of the Indian Social conditions-caste ridden atmosphere shows that
the expression "backward classes" used in the Constitution referred
only to those who were born in particular castes, or who belonged to particular
races or tribes or religious minorities which were backward. This is so because
a caste is based on various factors, sometimes it may be a class, a race or a
racial unit and the caste of a person is governed by his birth in. the family.
[459 E; 457 F] It is significant that the expression "backward classes"
used in Part XVI of the Constitution and in particular in Article 338(3) is
used along with the Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes and the Anglo-Indian
Community. The meaning of "backward classes" has, therefore, to be
deduced along with the other words preceding it. [462 G] It is a rule of
statutory construction that where there are general words following particular
and specific words, the general words must be confined to things of the same
kind as those specified. It is true that this rule which is called as the
ejusdem generise rule or the rule noscitur a sociis cannot be carried too far.
But it is reasonable to apply that rule where the specific words refer to a
distinct genus or category. [462 H; 463 A] Part XVI of the Constitution deals
with certain concessions extended to certain castes, tribes and races which are
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and to the Anglo-Indian community. In the
context if Article 338(3) and 370 Article 340 are construed, the expression
'backward classes' can only refer to A certain castes, races tribes or
communities or parts thereof other than Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and
the Anglo-Indian community, which are backward. Clause (6) of the resolution
regarding the aims and objects of the Constitution moved by Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru on December 13, 1946 and the history of the enactment of Part XVI of the
Constitution by the Constituent Assembly lead to the conclusion that backward
classes are only those castes, races, tribes or communities, which are identified
by birth, which are backward. It is, therefore,difficult to hold that persons
or groups of persons who are backward merely on account of poverty which is
traceable to economic reasons can also be considered as backward classes for
purposes of Article 16(4) and Part XVI of the Constitution.
[463 C-D; 466 G-H] The Drafting Committee by
qualifying the expression "class of citizens" by "backward"
in Article 16(4) of the Constitution tried to reconcile three different points
of view and produced a workable proposition which was acceptable to all, the
three points of view being (i) that there should be equality of opportunity for
all citizens and that every individual qualified for a particular post should
be free to apply for that post to sit for examinations and to have his
qualifications tested so as to determine whether he was fit for the post or not
and that there ought to be no limitations, there ought to be no hindrance in
the operation of the principle of equality of opportunity; (ii) that if the
principle of equality of opportunity was to be operative there ought to be no
reservations of any sort for any class or community all and that all citizens
if they qualified should be placed on the same footing of equality as far as
public services were concerned; and (iii) that though the principle of equality
of opportunity was theoretically good there must at the same time be a
provision made for the entry of certain communities which have so far been
outside the administration. The whole tenor of discussion in the Constituent
Assembly pointed to making reservation for a minority of the population
including Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes which were socially backward.
[465 G-H; 466 A-B]
4. In Balaji's case and in Chitralekha's
case, the Supreme Court exhibited a lot of hesitation in equating the
expression 'class' with 'caste' for purposes of Article 15(4) and 16(4) of the
Constitution. The juxtaposition of the expression 'backward classes' and
'Scheduled Castes' in Article 15 of the Constitution, according to the above
two decisions, led to a reasonable inference that expression 'classes' was not
synonymous with 'caste'. The Court while making these observations did not give
adequate importance to the evils of caste system which had led to the
backwardness of people belonging to certain castes and the debates that
preceded the enactment of Part XVI and Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the
Constitution. What was in fact over looked was the history of the Indian social
institutions. The makers of the Indian Constitution very well knew that there
were a number of castes the conditions of whose members were almost similar to
the conditions of members belonging to the Scheduled Castes and to the
Scheduled Tribes and that they also needed to be given adequate protection in
order to tide over the difficulties in the way of their progress which were not
so much due to poverty but due to their birth in a particular caste. Part XVI
was not enacted for the 371 purpose of alleviating the conditions of poorer
classes as such which was taken care of by the provision of Part IV of the
Constitution and in particular by Article 46 and by Article 14, Article 15(1)
and Article 16(1) of the Constitution which permitted classification of persons
on economic grounds for special treatment in order to ensure equality of
opportunity to all persons The views expressed by the Supreme Court, however
stood modified by the later decisions. [466- D-H; 467 A-B] Minor P. Rajendran
v. State of Madras & Ors. [19681 2 SCR 786; State of Andhra Pradesh &
Anr. v. P. Sagar [1968] 3 SCR 595; Triloki Nath & Anr. v. State of Jammu
& Kashmir & Ors. [19691 I SCR 103; A. Peeriakaruppan etc. v. State of
Tamil Nadu & Ors. 11971] 2 SCR 430; State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. v.
U.S.V. Balram etc. [1972] 3 SCR 247 referred to.
5. If the view that caste or community is an
important relevant factor in determining social and educational backwardnesses
for purposes of Articles ]5(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution, is departed from
several distortions are likely to follow and may take away from the sole
purpose for which these constitutional provisions were enacted. Several factors
such as physical disability, poverty, place of habitation, the fact of
belonging to a freedom fighter's family, the fact of belonging to the family of
a member of the armed forces might each become a sole factor for the purpose of
Article 15(4) or Article 16(4) which were not at all intended to be resorted to
by the State for the purpose of granting relief in such cases. While relief may
be given in such cases under Article 15(1) and Article 16(1) by adopting a
rational principle of classification, Article 14, Article 15(4) and Article
16(4) cannot be applied to them.
Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) are intended
for the benefit of those who belong to castes/communities which ale
'traditionally disfavoured and which have suffered societal discriminations' in
the past. The other factors mentioned above were never in the contemplation of
the makers of the Constitution while enacting these clauses. [472 A-D] D.N.
Chanchala v. State of Mysore & Ors. etc. [1971] Supp. SCR 608; State of
Kerala v. Kumari T.P. Roshana & Anr.
[1979] 2 SCR 974; Kumari M.S. Jayasree &
Anr. v. State of Kerala & Anr. [1977] 1 SCR ]94; State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradip
Tandon & Ors. (1975) 2 SCR 761; Subhash Chandra v. The State of U.P. &
Ors. AIR 1973 All. 295; Dilip Kumar v. The Government of U.P. & Ors. AIR
1973 All. 592 referred to.
6. Article 14 of the Constitution consists of
two parts. It asks the State not to deny to any person equality before law. It
also asks the State not to deny the equal protection of the laws. Equality
before law connotes absence of any discrimination in law. The concept of equal
protection required the State to meet out differential treatment to persons in
different situations in order to establish an equilibrium amongst all. This is
the basis of the rule that equals should be treated equally and unequals must
be treated unequally if the doctrine of equality which is one of the corner
stones of our Constitution is to be duly implemented. In order to do justice
amongst unequals, the State has to resort to compensatory or protective
discrimination. Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution were enacted as
measures of compensatory or protective 372 discrimination to grant relief to
persons belonging to socially oppressed castes and minorities. Under them, it
is possible to provide for reservation of seats in educational institution and
of posts in Government services to such persons only. But if there are persons
who do not belong to socially oppressed castes and minorities but who otherwise
belong to weaker sections, due to poverty, place of habitation, want of equal
opportunity etc. the question arises whether such reservation can be made in their
favour under any other provision of the Constitution such as Article 14,
Article 15(1), Article 16(1) or Article 46.
According to Thomas's case, (a) no
reservation of posts can be made in Government services for backward classes
including Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes under Article 14 or Article 16
1), and (b) preferential treatment as was done in this case on the basis of
classification ordinarily could be given under Article 16(1) to the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes only. Other backward classes could not, except in
exceptionally rare cases be extended the same benefit and their only hope was
Article 16(4) of the Constitution. [477 A-E; 485 G-H]
7. As to the power of the Government to make
reservations under Article 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution: The
determination of the question whether the members belonging to a caste or a
group or a community are backward for the purpose of Article 15(4) and Article
16(4) of the Constitution is not open to the Government to call any caste or group
or community as backward according to its sweet will and pleasure and extend
the benefit that may be granted under those provisions to such caste or group
or community. The exercise of uncontrolled power by the Government in this
regard may lead to political favoritism leading to denial of the just
requirements of classes which are truly backward. The power of the Government
to classify any caste or group or community as backward has to be exercised in
accordance with the guidelines that can be easily gathered from the
Constitution. It is now accepted that the expressions 'socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens' and the Scheduled Castes and the
Scheduled Tribes' in Article 15(4) of the Constitution together are equivalent
to `backward classes of citizens' in Article 16(4). [486 A-D] Further the
criterion for determining the backwardness must not be based solely on
religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth and the backwardness being social
and educational must be similar to the backwardness from which the Scheduled
Castes and the Scheduled Tribes suffered. This view is in conformity with the
intention underlying clause 6 of the resolution regarding the aims and objects
of the Constitution moved by Jawaharlal Nehru on December 13,1946 which asked
the Constitution Assembly to frame a Constitution providing adequate safeguards
for minorities, backward and tribal area and depressed and other backward
classes and also wish the provisions of Article 338 and Article 340 of the
Constitution. Unless the above restriction is imposed on the Government, it
would become possible for the Government to call any caste or group or
community which constitutes a powerful political lobby in the State as backward
even though in fact it may be an advanced caste or group or community but just
below some other forward community.
[486 H; 487 C-D] 373 There is another
important reason why such advanced castes or groups or communities should not
be included in the list of backward classes and that A is that if castes or
groups and communities which are fairly well advanced and castes and groups and
communities which are really backward being at the rock-bottom level are
classified together as backward classes, the benefit of reservation would
invariably be eaten up by the more advanced sections and the really deserving
sections would practically go without any benefit as more number of children of
the more advanced castes or group or communities amongst them would have scored
higher marks than the children of more backward castes or groups or
communities. In that even the whole object of reservation would become
frustrated. [487 D-F] Hence as far as possible while preparing the list of
backward classes, the State Government has to bear in mind the above principle
as a guiding factor. The adoption of the above principle will not unduly reduce
the number of persons who will be eligible for the benefits under Article 15(4)
and Article 16(4) of the Constitution since over the years the level of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes is also going up by reason of several
remedial measures taken in regard to them by the State and Central Government.
At the same time, it will also release the really backward castes, groups and
communities from the strangle-hold of many advanced groups which have l-ad the
advantage of reservation along with the really backward classes for nearly
three decades. It is time that n ore attention is given to those castes, groups
and communities who have been at the lowest level suffering from all the
disadvantages and disabilities (except perhaps untouchability) to which many of
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes have been exposed but without the
same or similar advantages that flow from being included in the list of the
Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes.
[487 H; 488 A-B] Janki Prasad Parimoo &
Ors. etc. etc. v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors. [1973l 3 SCR 236
referred to.
8. Since economic condition is also a
relevant criterion, it would be appropriate to incorporate a 'means test' as
one of the tests in determining the backwardness as was done by the Kerala
Government. These two tests namely, that the conditions of caste or group or
community should be more or less similar to the conditions in which the
Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes are situated and that the income of the
family to which the candidate belongs does not exceed the specified limit would
serve as useful criteria in determining beneficiaries of any reservation to be
made under Article 15(4). For the purpose of Article 16(4) however, it should
also be shown that the backward class in question is in the opinion of the
Government not adequately represented in the Government services. [488 C- i]
9. The classification styled as 'special'
group which is based on occupation-cum-income considerations and which has
received the approval in Chitralekha s case; is yet another valid and useful
test which can be adopted for the purpose of reservation which can be more
legitimately traced to Art. 14 and not to Art. 15(4) and Art. 16(4). [491 H]
374
10. From a careful consideration of all the
seven opinions in the A Thomas s case it cannot be said that the settled view
of the Supreme Court that the reservation under Article 15(4) or Article 16(4)
could not be more than 50 per cent has been unsettled by a majority on the
Bench which decided this case. [491 B]
11. If reservation is made only in favour of
those backward castes or clauses which are comparable to the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes, it may not exceed 50 per cent (including 18 per cent
reserved for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and 15 per cent reserved
for 'special group') in view of the total population of such backward classes
in the State of Karnataka. The Havanur Commission has taken the number of students
passing at SSLC examination in the year 1972 as the basis for determining the
backwardness. The average passes per thousand of the total population of the
State of Karnataka was 1.69 in 1972.
The average in the case of the Scheduled
Castes was 0.56 and in the case of Scheduled Tribes was 0.51. Even if we take
all the castes, tribes and communities whose average is below 50 per cent of
the State average i.e. below 85 per cent for classifying them as backward,
large chunks of population which are now treated as backward would have to go
out of the list of backward classes. Consequently the necessity for reservation
which would take the total reservation under Article 15(4) and 1(,(4) beyond 50
per cent of the total number of seats/posts would cease to exist. The present
arrangement has been worked for more than five years already. It is now
necessary to redetermine the question of backwardness of the various castes,
tribes and communities for purposes of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) in the
light of the latest figures to be collected on the various relevant factors and
to refix the extent of reservation for backward classes. The reservation of 15%
now made under Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) but which may be traced to
Articles 14 and 16(1) to 'special group' based on occupation-cum-income can in
any event be availed of by members of all communities and castes.
[491 C-G]
12. However, it should be made clear that if
on a fresh determination some castes or communities have to go out of the list
of backward classes prepared for Articles 15(4) and 16(4), the Government may
still pursue the policy of amelioration of weaker sections of the population
amongst them in accordance with the directive principle contained in Article 46
of the Constitution. There are in all castes and communities poor people who if
they are given adequate opportunity and training may be able to compete success
fully with persons belonging to richer classes. The Government may provide for
them liberal grants of scholarships, free studentships, free boarding and
lodging facilities, free uniforms, free mid-day meals etc. to make the life of
poor students comfortable. The Government may also provide extra tutorial
facilities, stationery and books free of cost and library facilities. These and
other steps should be taken in the lower classes so that by the time a student
appears for the qualifying examination he may be able to attain a high degree
of proficiency in his studies.
[491 H; 492 A-C] ^ & ORIGINAL
JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions NOS. 1297-98, 1407 of 1979, 4995-97 of 1980 and
402 of 1981.
375 (Under Article 32 of the Constitution of
India.) F.S. Nariman, K.N. Bhat, B. Veerbhadrappa, H.S. Renuka Prasad, Vijay
Kumar Verma, Nanjappa Ganpathy and P.K Manohar for the Petitioners in W.P. Nos.
1297-98, of 1979.
K Chennabasappa, S.S. Javali and B.R. Agarwal
for the Petitioners in W.P. No. 1407 of 1979.
K.K Venugopal and C.S. Vaidyanathan for the
Petitioners in W.P. Nos. 4995-97180 & 402 of 1981. R.K. Garg and A.V.
Rangam, for the Respondents in W.P. Nos. 4995-97180 and 402 of 1981.
P.H. Parekh and Gautam Philip, for the
Intervener Akhil Bharat Anusuchit Jati in W.P. Nos. 1297-98 of 1979. L3 L.G.
Havenur, K.M.K. Nair and Narayana Nettar for the Intervener President Karnataka
Legislative in W.P. No. 1407 of 1979.
K Rajendra Chaudhury for the Intervener
Dravida Kazhagam in W.P. No. 402 of 1981.
KM.K. Nair for the Intervener All India
Nayaka Sangh in W.P. No. 1297-98 and 1407 of 1979.
The following Judgments were delivered:
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. : My learned Brethren have
expressed their respective points of view on the policy of reservations which,
alas, is even figuratively, a burning issue to-day. We were invited by the
counsel not so much as to deliver judgments but to express our opinion on the
issue of reservations; which may serve as a guideline to the Commission with
the Government of Karnataka proposes to appoint, for examining the question of
affording better employment and educational opportunities to Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes. A somewhat unusual exercise is
being undertaken by the Court in giving expression to its views without
reference to specific facts. But, institutions profit by well-meaning
innovations. The facts will appear before the Commission and it 376 will evolve
suitable tests in the matter of reservations. I cannot resist expressing the
hope that the deep thinking and sincerity which has gone into the formulation
of the opinions expressed by my learned Brethren will not go waste.
The proposed Commission should give its close
application to their weighty opinions. Mine is only a skeletal effort. I
reserve the right to elaborate upon it, but the chances of doing so are not too
bright.
I would state my opinion in the shape of the
following pro positions:
1 The reservation in favour of scheduled
castes and scheduled tribes must continue as at present, there is, without the
application of a means test, for a further period not exceeding fifteen years.
Another fifteen years will make it fifty years after the advent of the
Constitution, a period reasonably long for the upper crust of the oppressed
classes to overcome the baneful effects of social oppression, isolation and
humiliation.
2. The means test, that is to say, the test
of economic backwardness ought to be made applicable even to the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes after the period mentioned in (1) above. It is
essential that the privileged section of the underprivileged society should not
be permitted to monopolise preferential benefits for an indefinite period of
time.
3. In so far as the Other Backward Classes
are concerned, two tests should be conjunctively applied for identifying them
for the purpose of reservations in employment and education: One, that they
should be comparable to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the matter
of their backwardness; and two, that they should satisfy the means test such as
a State Government may lay down in the context of prevailing economic
conditions.
4. The policy of reservations in employment,
education and legislative institutions should be reviewed every five years or
so. That will at once afford an oppor 377 tunity (i) to the State to rectify
distortions arising out of particular facets of the reservation policy and (ii)
to the people, both backward and non-backward, to ventilate their views in a
public debate on the practical impact of the policy of reservations.
DESAI, J `India embraced equality as a
cardinal value against a background of elaborate, valued, and clearly perceived
inequalities.'(l) 'Art. 14 guaranteed equality but the awareness of deep rooted
inequality in the society reflected in Art. 15 and 16. Fifteen months of the
working of the Constitution necessitated amplification of Art. 15(3) so as to
ensure that any special provisions that the State may make for the educational,
economic or social advancement of any backward class citizen, may not be
challenged on the ground of being discriminatory.'(`2) Sec. 2 thereof provided
for addition to sub Art (4) of Art. 15 For a period of three and a half
decades, the unending search for identifying socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens has defied the policy makers, the interpreters of
the policy as reflected in statutes or executive/administrative orders and has
added a spurt in the reverse direction, namely, those who attempted to move
upward/(Pratilom) in the social hierarchy have put the movement in reverse gear
so as to move downwards (Anulom) in order to be identified as a group or class
of citizens socially and educationally backward. As the awareness of
concessions and benefits grows with consequent frustration on account of their
non-availability confrontation develops amongst various classes of society.
The Constitution promised an egalitarian society.
At the dawn of independence Indian Society was a compartmentalised society
comprising groups having distinct and diverse life styles. It was a caste
ridden stratified hierarchical society. Though this is well accepted, the
concept of caste has defied a coherent definition at the hands of jurists or
sociologists.
Tn the early stages of the functioning of the
Constitution, it was accepted without dissent or dialogue that caste furnishes
a working criterion for identifying socially and educationally backward class
of citizens for the purpose of Art. 15(4).
'This was predicated on a realistic appraisal
that caste as a principle of social order has persisted over millennia if much
more (1) Marc Galanter-Competing Equalities 1980.
(2) Objects and Reasons Statement of the
Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951.
378 disorderly and asymmetrical in practice
than classical Hindu socio- legal theory depicted it'.(1) Language of Art.
15(4) refers to 'class' and not caste. Preferential treatment which cannot be
struck down as discriminatory was to be accorded/to a class, shown to be
socially and educationally backward and not to the members of a caste who may
be presumed to be socially and educationally backward. How do we define,
ignoring the caste label, class of citizens socially and educationally
backward. As we are not writing on a clean slate, let us look at judicial
intervention to give shape and form to this concept of a class of citizens who
are socially and educationally backward so as to merit preferred treatment or
compensatory discrimination or affirmative action.
A brief survey of decisions bearing on the
subject would reveal the confusion and the present state of malaise.
This review is necessary because a serious
doubt is now nagging the jurists, the sociologists and the administrators
whether caste should be the basis for recognising the backwardness. There has
been some vacillation on the part of the Judiciary on the question whether the
caste should be the basis for recognising the backwardness. Therefore, a bird's
eye-view of the decisions of the Court may first be taken to arrive at a
starting point as to whether the Judiciary has univocally recognised caste as
the basis for recognition of the backwardness, In State of Madras v. Srimathi
Champakam Dorairajan & Anr.,(2) this Court struck down the classification
in the Communal G.O. founded on the basis of religion and caste on the ground
that it is opposed to the Constitution and constitutes a clear violation of the
fundamental rights guaranteed to the citizen. The decision was in the hey-day
of supremacy of fundamental rights over Directive Principles of State Policy.
The Court held that Art. 46 cannot override the provisions of Art. 29(2)
because the Directive Principles of State Policy have to conform to and run as
subsidiary to the Chapter of Fundamental Rights.
In M.R. Balji & Ors. v. State of
Mysore(3) it was observed that though caste in relation to Hindus may be a
relevant factor to (1) Hutton-Caste in India: Its nature, function and Origin
1961.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 525.
(3) [1963] Supp. I S.C.R. 439.
379 consider in determining the social
backwardness of groups or classes of citizens, it cannot be made the sole or
dominant test. Social A backwardness is in the ultimate analysis the result of
poverty to a very large extent. The classes of citizens who are deplorably poor
automatically become socially backward. The problem of determining who are
socially backward classes, is undoubtedly very complex, but the classification
of socially backward citizens on the basis of their castes alone is not
permissible under Art.
15(4). The Court could foresee the danger in
treating caste as the sole criterion for determining social and educational
backwardness. The importance of the judgment lies in realistically appraising
the situation when it uttered the harsh but unquestionable truth that economic
backwardness would provide a much more reliable yardstick for determining
social backwardness because more often educational backwardness is the outcome
of social backwardness. The Court drew clear distinction between 'caste' and
'class'.
The attempt at finding a new basis for
ascertaining social and educational backwardness in place of caste reflected in
this decision. Clairvoyance in this behalf displayed in our opinion is
praiseworthy.
In T. Devadesan v. The Union of India &
Anr.(l) the petitioner challenged the carry forward rule in the matter of
reserved seats in the Central Secretariat Service as being violative of Art. 14
and 16 of the Constitution. The majority accepting the petition observed that
the problem of giving adequate representation to members of the backward class
enjoined by Art. 16(4) of the Constitution is not adequate by framing a general
rule without bearing in mind its reflections from year to year. What precise
method should be adopted for this purpose is a matter for the Government to
decide. The Court observed that any method to be evolved by the Government must
strike a reasonable balance between the claims of the backwardness and claims
of other employees as pointed out in Balaji s case.
In R. Chitralekha & Anr. v. State of
Mysore & Ors.(2) the majority held valid the orders made by the Government
of Mysore in respect of admissions to engineering and Medical Colleges, and
observed that a classification of backward classes based on economic conditions
and occupations is not bad and does not offend Art. 15(4).
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 680.
(2) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 368.
380 The caste of a group of citizens may be a
relevant circumstance in A ascertaining their social backwardness and though it
is a relevant factor to determine social backwardness of a class, it cannot be
the sole or dominant test in that behalf. If in a given situation caste is
excluded in ascertaining a class within the meaning of Art.
15(4) it does not vitiate the classification
if it satisfied other tests. The Court observed that various provisions of the
Constitution which recognised the factual existence of backwardness in the
country and which make a sincere attempt to promote the welfare of the weaker
sections thereof should be construed to effectuate that policy and not to give
weightage to progressive sections of the society under the false colour of
caste to which they happen to belong. Under no circumstances a 'caste' though
the caste of an individual or group of individuals may be a relevant factor in
putting him in a particular class.
In Triloki Nath & Anr. v. State Or Jammu
& Kashmir & Ors.(1) reservation of 5() per cent of the Gazetted posts
to be filled by promotion was in favour of Muslims of Jammu & Kashmir. The
Court held that inadequate representation in State services would not be
decisive for determining the backwardness of the section. The Court
accordingly, gave directions for collecting further material relevant to be
subject. After the material as directed earlier was collected the matter was
placed before the court and the decision is reported in Triloki Nath & Anr.
v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors.(1) The Court observed that the expression
'backward class' is not used as synonymous with 'backward caste' or 'backward
community'. The members of an entire caste or community may, in the social,
economic and educational scale of values at a given time, be backward and may,
on that account be treated as a backward class, but that is not because they
are members of a caste or community, but because they form a class. In its
ordinary connotation, the expression 'class' may mean a homogeneous section of
the people grouped together because of certain likenesses or common traits, and
who are identifiable by some common attributes such as status, rank,
occupation, residence in a locality, race, religion and the like, but for
purpose of Art. 16(4) in determining whether a section forms a class, a test
solely based on caste, community, race, religion, sex, descent, place of birth
or residence cannot be adopted because it would directly offend the
Constitution. The caste as the basis for determining backwardness received a
rude jolt.
(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 265.
(2) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 103.
381 In A. Peeriakaruppan etc. v. State of
Tamil Nadu(1) this Court after referrening to earlier decisions especially in
Balaji's case and Chitralekha's case observed that there is no gain saying the
fact that there are numerous castes in this country which are socially and
educationally backward.
To ignore their existence is to ignore the
realities of life. It is difficult to make out whether the court accepted caste
as the sole basis for determining social and educational backwardness.
In State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. v.
U.S.V. Balram etc.(2) a list of backward classes which was under challenge
prima facie appeared to have been drawn up on the basis of caste. The Court on
closer examination found that the caste mark is merely a description of the
group following the particular occupations or professions exhaustively referred
to by the commission. Even on the assumption that the list is based exclusively
on caste, it was clear from the materials before the Commission and the reasons
given by it in its report that the entire caste is socially and educationally
backward and therefore, the inclusion of sub- caste in the list of Backward
Classes is warranted by Art.
15(4). The caste remained the criterion for
determining social and educational backwardness. The assumption that all the
members of a given caste are socially and educationally backward is wholly
unfounded and lacks factual support obtained by survey.
In Janki Prased Parimoo & Ors etc. etc.
v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors. (8) it was observed that mere
poverty cannot be a test of backwardness because in this country except for a
small percentage of the population, the people are generally poor-some being
more poor, others less poor.
In the rural areas some sectors of the population
are advancing socially and educationally while other sectors are apathetic,
Applying this yardstick, priestly classes following a traditional profession
was held not to be socially and educationally backward. Cultivators of land
designated as backward measured by the size of the holding was held to be
impermissible on the ground that placing economic consideration alone above
other considerations, is erroneous to determine social and educational
backwardness.
(1) [1971] 2 S.C.R. 430.
(2) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 247.
(3) [1973] 3 S.C.R. 236.
382 In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradip
Tandon & Ors.(1) reservations in favour of rural areas was held to be
unsustainable on the ground that it cannot be said as a general proposition
that rural areas represents socially and educationally backward classes of
citizens. Poverty in rural areas cannot be the basis of classification to
support reservation for rural areas.
In State of Kerala & Anr. v. N.M. Thomas
& Ors.(2) the constitutional validity of Rule 13A giving further exemption
of two years to members belonging to Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes in
the service from passing the tests referred to in r. 13 or r. 13A, was
questioned. The High Court struck down the rule. Allowing the State appeal,
Mathew, J. in his concurring judgment held that to give equality of opportunity
for employment to the members of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, it is
necessary to take note of their social, educational and economic backwardness.
Not only is the Directive principles embodied in Art. 46 binding On the law
makers as ordinarily understood, but it should equally inform and illuminate
the approach of the court when it makes a decision as the court also is State
within the meaning of Art. 12 and makes law even though interstitially.
Existence of equality depends not merely on the absence of disabilities but on
the presence of disabilities. To achieve it differential treatment of persons
who are unequal is permissible. This is what is styled as compensatory
discrimination or affirmative action. In a concurring judgment, Krishna lyer,
J. Observed that the genius of Arts- 14 and 16 consists not in literal equality
but in progressive elimination of pronounced inequality. To treat sharply
dissimilar persons equally is subtle injustice. Equal opportunity is a hope,
not a menace.
In Kumari K.S. Jayasree & Anr. v. The
State kerala & Anr.(3) it was held that the problem of determining who are
socially and educationally backward classes is undoubtedly not simple. Dealing
with the question whether caste can by itself be a basis for determining social
and educational backwardness, the court observed that it may not be irrelevant
to consider the caste of group of citizens claiming to be socially and
educationally backward.
Occupations, place of habitation may also be
relevant factors in determining who are socially and educationally backward
classes.
(1) [1975] 2 S.C.R. 761, (2) [1976] 1 S.C.R.
906.
(3) [1977] 1 S.C.R. 194.
383 In Akhil Bharatiya Soshit Karamchari
Sangh (Railway) represented by its Assistant General Secretary on behalf of the
Association v. A Union of India & Ors.(l) this Court upheld reservation of
posts at various levels and making of various concessions in favour of the
members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Krishna Iyer, J.
extensively quoting from the final address to
the Constituent Assembly by Dr. Ambedkar held that the political democracy was
not the end in view of the struggle for freedom but a social democracy was to
be Set up by which it was meant the social fabric resting on the principle of
one man one value. Translated functionally, it means 'total abolition of social
and economic inequalities.' This brief review would clearly put into focus, the
dithering and the vacillation on the part of the Judiciary in dealing with the
question of reservation in favour of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes as well
as other socially and educationally backward classes. Judiciary retained its
traditional blindfold on its eyes and thereby ignored perceived realities. A
perceptive viewer of judicial intervention observed that the courts turned out
to be more limited as a vantage point then I naively assumed at the outset.
They act as a balance wheel channelling compensatory policies and accommodating
them to other commitments, but it is the political process that shapes the
larger contour of these policies and gives them their motive force. Official
doctrine-judicial pronouncements or administrative regulations-proved
insufficient guide to the shape of the policies in action and the result they
produced.'(2) The Indian social scene apart from being disturbing presented the
picture of stratified society hierarchically fragmented.
At the lowest rung of the ladder stand
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and any preferential treatment in their
favour has more or less ment with judicial approval. But when it came to
preferential treatment or affirmative action or what is also called
compensatory discrimination in favour of socially and educationally backward
classes of citizens, the caste ridden society raised its ugly face. By its
existence over thousands of years, more or less it was assumed that caste
should be the criterion for deter- mining social and educational backwardness.
In other words, it was said, look at the caste, its traditional functions, it
position in relation to upper castes by the standard of purity and pollution,
pure and not so pure occupation, once these questions are satisfactorily
answered without anything more, those who belong to that (1) [1981] 2 S.C.R.
185.
(2) Marc Galanter-Compoting Equalities, 1980
p. XVIII.
384 caste must be labelled socially and
educationally backward.
This A over-simplified approach ignored a
very realistic situation existing in each caste that in every such caste whose
members claim to be socially and educationally backward, had an economically
well placed segments. But that may wait. We are at present concerned with the
judicial response to the attempt of the Executive to accord preferential
treatment to socially and educationally backward classes of citizens. The
litigation which came to the court was more often by those who relied on
meritocracy and complained that the merit is crucified at the altar of the
mirage of equality. The outcome of judicial intervention against preferred
treatment is summed up as under:
"Summing up, we may surmise that the
gross effect of litigation on the compensatory discrimination policy has been
to curtail and confine it. Those who have attacked compensatory discrimination
schemes in court have compiled a remarkable record of success, while those
seeking to extend compensatory discrimination have been less successful.''(1)
The controversy now has shifted to identifying socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens. The expression 'back ward classes' is not
defined. Courts have more or loss in the absence of well-defined criteria not
based on caste label has veered round to the view that in order to be socially
and educationally backward classes, the group must have the same indicia as
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The narrow question that the being
examined here is whether cast label should be sufficient to identify social and
educational backwardness? Number of Commissions have attempted to tackle this
complex problem.
However, both Mandal Commission of Karnataka
and Bakshi Commission of Gujrat have finally accepted caste as the identifying
criterion for determining social and educational backwardness, thought will be
presently pointed out that Mandal Commission had serious reservations about
caste criterion. Most of these Commissions and the Government orders based
their recommendations used communal units to discriminate the backward class.
Rane Commission of Gujrat has chalked out a different path, rejecting caste as
the basis for ascertaining social and educational backwardness.
The question we must pose and (1) Marc
Gallanter , Competing Equalities, p. 511.
385 answer is whether caste should be the
basis for determining social and educational backwardness. In other words, by
what yardstick, groups which are to be treated as socially and educationally
backward are to be identified? To simplify the question: should membership of
caste signify a class of citizens as being socially and educationally backward
? If 'caste' is adopted as the criterion for determining social and educational
backwardness does it provide a valid test or it would violate Art. 15(1) which
prohibits discrimination against any citizen on grounds of religion, race,
caste, sex, place of birth or any of them.
What then is a caste ? Though caste has been
discussed by scholars and jurists, no precise definition of the expression has
emerged. A caste is a horizontal segmental division of society spread over a
district or a region or the whole State and also sometimes outside it.(') Homo
Hierarchicus is expected to be the central and substantive element of the caste
system with differentiate it from other social systems. The concept of purity
and impurity conceptualises the caste system. Louis Dumont asserts that the
principle of the opposition of the pure and the impure underlies hierarchy,
which is the superiority of the pure to the impure, underlies separation
because pure and the impure must be kept separate and underlies the division of
labour because pure and impure occupations must likewise, be kept separate.(2)
There are four essential features of the caste system which maintained its homo
hierarchicus character: (1) hierarchy (2) commensality: (3) restrictions on
marriages;
and (4) hereditary occupation.(3) Most of the
caste are endogamous groups. Intermarriage between two groups is impermissible.
But 'Pratilom' marriages are not wholly unknown. Similarly with the onward
movement of urbanisation, members of various castes are slowly giving up,
traditional occupations and the pure and impure avocations is being frowned
upon by developing notion of dignity of labour As the fruits of independence
were unequally distributed amongst various segments of the society, in each
caste there came into existence a triple division based on economic resurgence
amongst the members of the caste. Those who have become economically well off
have acquired an upper class status (class consciousness) and the one on the
step below is the middle class and the third one belongs to poorer section (1)
I.P. Desai: Should 'caste' be the Basis for Recognising Backwardness [1985].
(2) Louise Dumont-Home Hierachicus [1970] (3)
Caste in Contemporary India: G. Shah [1985].
386 of the caste. This led to the realisation
that caste culture does not help economic interest. In fact the upper crust of
the same caste is verily accused of exploiting the lower strata of the same
caste. It is therefore, rightly argued that the basis of the caste system
namely, purity and pollution is slowly being displaced by the economic
condition of the various segments of the same caste. It is recognised on almost
all hands that the important feature of the caste structure are progressively
suffering erosion. The new organisation, the so-called caste organisation, is
substantially different from the traditional structure and caste councils.
Economic differentiation amongst the members of the caste has become sharp, but
not so sharp as to bury caste sentiments and ties.
If the transformation of the caste structure
as herein indicated is realistically accepted, should the caste label be still
accepted as the basis for determining social and educational backwardness. In a
recent paper by the noted sociologist Shri I.P. Desai (Alas, he is no more), it
has been ably argued that not a caste but the class or the social group should
be examined with a view to determining their social and educational
backwardness. Caste in rural society is more often than not mirrored in the
economic power wielded by it and vice versa. Social hierarchy and economic
position exhibit an undisputable mutuality. The lower the caste, the poorer its
members. The poorer the members of a caste, the lower the caste. Caste and
economic situation, reflecting each other as they do arc the Deus exMachina of
the social status occupied and the economic power wielded by an individual or
class in rural society.
Social status and economic power are so woven
and fused into the caste system in Indian rural society that one may without
hesitation, say that if poverty be the cause, caste is the primary index of
social backwardness, so that social backwardness is often readily identifiable
with reference to a person's caste. Such we must recognize is the primeval
force and omnipresence of caste in Indian Society, however, much we may like to
wish it away. So Sadly and oppressively deep-rooted is caste in our country
that it has cut across even the barriers of religion. The caste system has
penetrated other religious and dissentient Hindu sects to whom the practice of
caste should be anathema and today we fined that practitioner of other
religious faiths and Hindu dissentients are some times as rigid adherents to
the system of caste as the conservative Hindus . We find Christian harijans,
Christian 387 Madars, Christian Reddys, Christian Kammas, Mujbi Sikhs, etc.
etc. In Andhra Pradesh there is a community known as Pinjaras or Dudekulas
(known in the North as 'Rui Pinjane Wala'): (Professional cotton-beaters) who
are really Muslims, but are treated in rural society, for all practical
purposes, as a Hindu caste. Several other instances may be given.
Shared situation in the economic hierarchy,
caste gradation, occupation, habitation, style of consumption, standard of
literacy and a variety of such other factors appear to go to make towards
social and educational backwardness. In some situations and indeed quite often,
social investigator may easily be able to identify a whole caste group as a
socially and educationally backward class;
he may readily recognise people living in
certain areas, say mountainous, desert a fresh lease of life. In fact there is
a mad rush for being recognised as belonging to a caste which by its
nomenclature would be included in the list of socially and educationally
backward classes. To illustrate:
Bakshi Commission in Gujrat recognised as
many as 82 castes as being socially and educationally backward. On the
publication of its report, Government of Gujrat received representations by
members of those castes who had not made any representation to the Bakshi
Commission for treating them as socially and educationally backward. This
phenomenon was noticed by Mandal Commission when it observed: "whereas the
Commission has tried to make the State wise lists of OBCS as comprehensive as
possible, it is quite likely that severally synonymy of the castes listed
backward have been left out. Certain castes are known by a number of synonymy
which vary from one region to the other and their complete coverage is almost
impossible. Mandal Commission found a p way out by recommending that if a
particular caste has been treated as backward then all its synonyms whether
mentioned in the State lists or not should also be treated as backward.(1)
Gujrat Government was forced to appoint a second commission known as Rane
Commission Rane Commission took note of the fact that there was an organised
effort for being considered socially and educationally backward castes.
Rane Commission recalled the observations in
Balaji's case that 'Social backwardness is on the ultimate analysis the result
of poverty to a very large extent.' The Commission noticed that some of the
castes just for the sake of being considered as socially and educationally
backward, have degraded (1) Mandal Commission Report Vol. Ch. XII p. 55.
388 themselves to such an extent that, they
had no hesitation in attributing different types of vices to and associating
other factors indicative of backwardness, with their castes.
The Commission noted that the malaise
requires to be remedied. The Commission therefore, devised a method for
determining socially and educationally backward classes without reference to
caste, beneficial to all sections of people irrespective of the caste to which
they belong. The Commission came to an irrefutable conclusion that amongst
certain castes and communities or class of people, only lower income groups
amongst them are socially and educationally backward. We may recall here a
trite observation in case of N.M.Thomas which reads as under:
"A word of sociological caution. In the
light of experience, here and elsewhere, the danger of 'reservation', it seems
to me, is three-fold. Its benefits, by and large, are snatched away by the top
creamy layer of the 'backward' caste or class, thus keeping the weakest among
the week always weak and leaving the fortunate layers to consume the whole
cake.
Secondly, this claim is over played
extravagntly in democracy by large and vocal groups whole burden of
backwardness has been substantially lightened by the march of time and measures
of better education and more opportunities of employment, but wish to weak the
'weaker section' label as a means to score over their near-equals formally
categorised as the upper brackets." A few other aspects for rejecting
caste as the basis for identifying social and educational backwardness may be
briefly noted. If State patronage for preferred treatment accepts caste as the
only insignia for determining social and educational backwardness, the danger
looms large that this approach alone would legitimise and perpetuate caste
system. lt does not go well with our proclaimed secular character as enshrined
in the Preamble to the Constitution.
The assumption that all members of some caste
are equally socially and educationally backward is not well-founded.
Such an approach provides an
oversimplification of a complex problem of identifying the social and
educational backwardness. The Chairman of the Backward Classes Commission, set
up in 1953, after having finalised the report, concluded that 'it would have been
better if we could determine the criteria of backwardness on principles other
than 389 caste.'(1) Lastly it is recognised without dissent that the caste
based reservation has been usurped by the economically well-placed section in
the same caste. To illustrate, it may be pointed that some years ago, I came
across a petition for special leave against the decision of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in which the reservation of 2-1/2" for admission to
Medical and Engineering College in favour of Majhabi Sikhs was challenged by
none other than the upper crust of the members of the Scheduled Castes amongst
Sikhs in Punjab, proving that the labelled weak exploits the really weaker. Add
to this, the findings of the Research Planning Scheme of Sociologists assisting
the Mandal Commission when it observed: 'while determining the criteria of
socially and educationally backward classes, social backwardness should be
considered to be the critical element and educational backwardness to be the
linked element though not necessarily derived from the former.'(2) The team
ultimately concluded that 'social backwardness refers to ascribed status and
educational backwardness to achieved status, and it considered social
backwardness as the critical element and educational backwardness to be the
linked though not derived element.' 'The attempt is to identify socially and
educationally backward-classes of citizens. The caste, as is understood in
Hindu Society, is unknown to Muslims, Christians, Parsis, Jews etc Caste
criterion would not furnish a reliable yardstick to identify socially and
educationally backward group in the aforementioned communities though economic
backwardness would.
Therefore, a time has come to review the
criterion for identifying socially and educationally backward classes ignoring
the caste label. The only criterion which can be realistically devised is the
one of economic backwardness.
To this may be added some relevant criteria
such as the secular character of the group, its opportunity for earning livelihood
etc. but by and large economic backwardness must be the load star. Why I say
this ? Chronic poverty is the bane of Indian Society. Market economic and money
spinning culture has transformed the general behavior of the Society towards
its members. Upper caste does net enjoy the status or respect, traditional,
voluntary or forced any more even in rural areas what to speak of highly
westernised urban society.
(1) Backward Classes Commission Report Vol. I
Ch. XIV.
(2) Part 3 Appendix XIII, p. 99 of the Report
of the Team.
390 The bank balance, the property holding
and the money power deter mine the social status of the individual and
guarantee the opportunity to rise to the top echelon. How the wealth is
acquired has lost significance. Purity of means disappeared with Mahatama
Gandhi and we have reached a stage where ends determine the means. This is the
present disturbing situation whether one likes it or not. Rane Commission on
the evidence before it and after applying the relevant tests and criteria observed
as under:
"We have found on applying relevant
tests and on the basis of the evidence on record, that there()re certain
castes/communities or classes of people which are backward, but, only lower
income groups amongst them are socially and educationally backward. In order to
ensure that, no ambiguity remains in regard to the above aspect, we may add
that, the above observations hold good even in respect of those classes which
are identified as socially and educationally backward without reference to any
caste."(1) Reservation in one or other form has been there for decades. If
a survey is made with reference to families in various castes considered to be
socially and educationally backward, about the benefits of preferred treatment,
it would unmistakably show that the benefits of reservations are snatched away
by the top creamy layer of the backward castes. This has to be avoided at any
cost.
If poverty is to be the criterion for
determining social and educational backwardness, we must deal with a fear
expressed by sociologists. It is better to recapitulate these aspects in the
words of a sociologist:
"Now, if the government changes the
criteria of reservation from caste to class, persons from the upper strata of
the lower castes who are otherwise not able to compete with the upper strata of
the upper castes despite the reservations will be excluded from the white
collar jobs. And the persons from the lower strata of lower castes will not be
able to compete with their counterpart of the upper castes. They too will be
excluded. This (1) Report of Rane Commission Chapter XII prge 12.1.
391 will bridge the gap which is otherwise
widening between the rich and the poor of the upper castes and it will
strengthen their caste identity. It will wipe out the small poor strata of the
upper castes at the cost of the poor strata of lower castes, and in the name of
secularism. In course of time the upper caste will also become the upper class.
Such a process would hamper the growth of secular forces."(1) This fear psychosis
is effectively answered by an eminent academic. He says that 'if the poor can
be operationally defined, categorised and sub-categorised and reservation
benefits be stratified accordingly, would the scenario still haunt use? I think
not. He recognised that this point is valuable in terms of alerting everyone to
the need for further refinement of the notions of poor strata. He recognised
that the State is, with all its limitations and resources, to direct and plan
social transformation. (The non-revolutionary) choice is between reinforcing
'caste' or reinforcing the extant constitutional values ' (2) Let me conclude.
If economic criterion for compensatory discrimination or affirmative action is
accepted, it would strike at the root cause of social and educational
backwardness, and simultaneously take a vital step in the direction of
destruction of destruction of caste structure which in turn would advance the
secular character of the Nation. This approach seeks to translate into reality
the twin constitutional goals: one, to strike at the perpetuation of the caste
stratification of the Indian Society so as to arrest progressive movement and
to take a firm step towards establishing a casteless society; and two, to
progressively eliminate poverty by giving an opportunity to the disadvantaged
sections of the society to raise their position and be part of the mainstream
of life which means eradication of poverty.
Let me make abundantly clear that this
approach does not deal with reservation in favour of Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. Thousands of years of discrimination and exploitation cannot
be wiped out in one generation. But even here economic criterion is worth
applying by refusing preferred treatment to those amongst (1) G. Shah IPW
January 17, 1983.
(2) Upendra Baxi, Vice-Chanceller, South
Gujarat University, in 'Caste, Class and Reservations: A Rejoinder to Ghansham
Shah.
392 them who have already benefitted by it
and improved their position. And finally reservation must have a time span otherwise
concessions tend to become vested interests. This is not a judgment in a lis in
adversary system. When the arguments concluded, a statement was made that the
Government of State of Karanataka would appoint a Commission to determine
constitutionally sound and nationally acceptable criteria for identifying
socially ar d educationally backward classes of citizens for whose benefit the
State action would be taken. This does not purport to be an exhaustive essay on
guidelines but may point to some extent, the direction in which the proposed
Commission should move.
CHINNAPA REDDY, J. Over three decades have
passed since we promised ourselves "justice, social, economic and
political" and "equality of status and opportunity". Yet, even
today, we find members of castes, communities, classes or by whatever name you
may describe them, jockeying for position, trying to elbow each other out, and,
viewing with one another to be named and recognised as 'socially and
educationally backward classes', to quality for the 'privilege' of the special
provision for advancement and the provision for reservation that may be made
under Art. 15(4) & 16(4) of the Constitution. The paradox of the system of
reservation is that it has engendered a spirit of self denigration among the
people. Now here else in the world do castes, classes or communities queue up
for the sake of gaining the backward statue. Nowhere else in the world is there
competition to assert backwardness and to claim 'we are more backward than
you'. This is an unhappy and disquieting situation, but it is stark reality.
Whatever gloss one may like to put upon it, it is clear from the rival claims
in these appeals and writ petitions that the real contest here is between
certain members of two premier (population-wise) caste-community-classes of
Karnataka, the Lingayats and the Vokkaligas, each claiming that the other is
not a socially and educationally backward class and each keen to be included in
the list of socially and educationally backward classes. To them, to be dubbed
a member of the socially and educationally back ward classes is a passport for
entry into professional colleges and State services; so they jostle with each
other and in tho bargain, some time they keep out and some times they usher in
some of those entitled to legitimate entry, by competition or by reservation.
Commissions have been appointed in the past to identify the backward classes,
Governments have considered the reports of the commissions, and Courts have
scrutinised the decisions of Governments, Case s have reached the Court too,
then and now again. Once more we are told 393 that the State of Karnataka is
ready to appoint another commission and they have asked us will you kindly lay
down some guidelines?" Ours is a country of great economic, social and
cultural diversity. Often we take great pride in the country's cultural
diversity. While cultural diversity adds to the splendor of India, the others
add to our sorrow and shame. The social and economic disparties are indeed
despairingly vast. The Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes and the other
socially and educationally backward classes, all of whom have been
compendiously described as 'the weaker sections of the people' have long
journeys to make society. They need aid; they need facility; they need
launching; they need propulsion. Their needs are their demands. The demands are
matters of right and not of philanthropy. They ask for parity, and not charity.
The days of Dronacharya and Ekalavya are over. They claim their constitutional
right to equality of status and of opportunity and economic and social justice.
Several bridges have to be erected so that they may cross the Rubicon.
Professional education and employment under
the State are thought to be two such bridges. Hence the special provision for
advancement and for reservation under Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) of the
Constitution.
Before we attempt to lay down any guidelines
for the benefit of the Commission proposed to be appointed by the Karnataka
Government, will do well to warn ourselves and the proposed Commission against
the pitfalls of the traditional' approach towards the question of reservation
for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other backward classes which has
generally been superior, elitist and, therefore, ambivalent. A duty to undo an
evil which had been perpetrated through the generations is thought 'to betoken
a generosity and farsightedness that are rare among nations'.
So a superior and patronising attitude is
adopted. The result is that the claim of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes and other backward classes to equality as a matter of human and
constitutional right is forgotten and their rights are submerged in what is
described as the 'proferential principle' or 'protective or compensatory
discrimination', expression borrowed from American jurisprudence Unless we get
rid of these superior, patronising and paternalist attitudes, what the French
Call Le mentalite hierarchique, it is difficult to truly appreciate the
problems involved in the claim of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and
other backward classes for their legitimate share of the benefits arising out
of their belonging to humanity and to a country 394 whose constitution preaches
justice, social, economic and political and equality of status and opportunity
for all.
One of the results of the superior, elitist
approach is that the question of reservation is invariably viewed as the
conflict between the meritarian principle and the compensatory principle. No,
it is not so. The real conflict is between the class of people, who have never
been in or who have already moved out of the desert of poverty, illiteracy and
backwardness and are entrenched in the oasis of convenient living and those who
are still in the desert and want to reach the oasis. There is not enough fruit
in the garden and so those who are in, want to keep out those who are out. The
disastrous consequences of the so-called meritarian principle to the vast
majority of the under- nourished, povetity-stricken, barely literate and vulnerable
people of our country are too obvious to be stated And, what is merit ? There
is no merit in a system which brings about such consequences. Is not a child of
the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes or other backward classes who has been
brought up in an atmosphere of penury, illiteracy and anti- culture, who is
looked down upon by tradition and society, who has no books and magazines to
read at home, no radio to listen, no T.V. to watch, no one to help him with his
home work, who goes to the nearest local board school and college, whose
parents are either illiterate or so ignorant and informed that he cannot even
hope to seek their advice on any matter of importance, a child who must
perforce trudge to the nearest public reading room to read a newspaper to know
what is happening in the world, has not this child got merit if he, with all
his disadvantages is able to secure the qualifying 40% or 50% of the marks at a
competitive examination where the children of the upper classes who have all
the advantages, who go to St. Paul's High School and St. Stephen's College, and
who have perhaps been specially coached for the examination may secure 70, 80
or even 90% of the marks? Surely, a child who has been able to jump so many
hurdles may be expected to do better and better as he progresses in life. If
spring flower he cannot be, autumn flower he may be. Why than, should he be
stopped at the threshold on an alleged meritarian principle? The requirements
of efficiency may always be safeguarded by the prescription of minimum
standards. Mediocrity has always triumphed in the past in the case of the upper
classes. But why should the so-called meritarian principle be put against
mediocrity when we come to Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and backward
classes? 395 Efficiency is very much on the lips of the privileged whenever
reservation is mentioned. Efficiency, it seems, will be impaired if the total
reservation exceeds 50 per cent; efficiency, it seems, will suffer if the
'carry forward' rule is adopted; efficiency, it seems, will be injured if the
rule of reservation is extended to promotional posts. from the protests against
reservation exceeding 50 per cent or extending to promotional posts and against
the carry-forward rule, one would think that the civil service is a Heavenly
Paradise into which only the archangels, the chosen of the elite, the very best
may enter and may be allowed to go higher up the ladder. But the truth is
otherwise. The truth is that the civil service is no paradise and the upper
echelons belonging to the chosen classes are not necessarily models of
efficiency. The underlying assumption that those belonging to the upper castes
and classes, who are appointed to the non-reserved castes will, because of
their presumed merit, 'naturally' perform better than those who have been
appointed to the reserved posts and that the clear stream of efficiency will be
polluted by the infiltration of the latter into the sacred precincts is a
vicious assumption, typical of the superior approach of the elitist classes.
There is neither statistical basis nor expert evidence to support these
assumptions that efficiency will necessarily be impaired if reservation exceeds
50 per cent, if reservation is carried forward or if reservation is extended to
promotional posts.
Arguments are advanced and opinions are
expressed entirely on an ad hoc presumptive basis. The age long contempt with
which the 'superior' or 'forward' castes have treated the 'inferior' or
'backward' casts is now transforming and crystalising itself into an unfair
prejudice, conscious and sub-conscious, ever since the 'inferior' casts and
classes started claiming their legitimate share of the cake, which naturally
means, for the 'superior' castes parting with a bit of it. Although in actual
practice their virtual monopoly on elite occupations and posts is hardly
threatened, the forward castes are nevertheless increasingly afraid that they
might lose this monopoly in the higher ranks of Government service and the
profession. It is so difficult for the 'superior' castes to understand and rise
above their prejudice and it is so difficult for the inferior castes and
classes to overcome the bitter prejudice and opposition which they are forced
to face at every stage.
Always one hears the word efficiency as if it
is sacrosanct and the sanctorum has to be fiercely guarded. 'Efficiency' is not
a mantra which is whispered by the Guru in the Sishya's ear. The mere securing
of high marks at an examination may not necessarily mark out a good 396
administrator. An efficient administrator, one takes it, must be one A who
possesses among other qualities the capacity to understand with sympathy and,
therefore, to tackle bravely the problems of a large segment of populating
constituting the weaker sections of the people. And, who better than the ones
belonging to those very sections? Why not ask ourselves why 35 years after
independence, the position of the Scheduled Castes, etc. has not greatly
improved? Is it not a legitimate question to ask whether things might have been
different, had the District Administrators and the State and Central
Bureaucrats been drawn in larger numbers from these classes? Courts are not
equipped to answer these questions, but the courts may not interfere with the
honest endeavours of the Government to find answers and solutions. We do not
mean to say that efficiency in the civil service is necessary or that it is a
myth. All that we mean to say is that one need not make a fastidious fetish of
it. It may be that for certain posts, only the best may be appointed and for
certain courses ! of study only the best may be admitted [f so, rules may
provide for reservations for appointment to such posts and for admission to
such courses. The rules may provide for no appropriate method of selection. It
may be that certain posts require a very high degree of skill or efficiency and
certain courses of study require a high degree of industry and intelligence. If
so, the rules may prescribe a high minimum qualifying standard and an
appropriate method of selection. Different minimum standards and different
modes of selection may be prescribed for different posts and for admission to
different courses of study having regard to the requirements of the posts and
the courses of study. No one will suggest that the degree t of efficiency
required a cardiac or a neuro-surgeon is the same as the degree of efficiency
required of a general medical practitioner.
Similarly no will suggest that the degree of
industry and intelligence expected of a candidate seeking admission to a
research degree course need be the same as that of a candidate seeking
admission to an ordinary arts degree course. We do not, therefore, mean to say
that efficiency is to be altogether discounted. All that we mean to say is that
it cannot be permitted to be used as a camouflage to let that upper classes
take advantage of the backward classes in its name and to monopolise the
services, particularly the higher posts and the professional institutions. We
are afraid we have to rid our minds of many cobwebs before we arrive at the
core of the problem. The quest for equality is self elusive, we must lose our
illusions, though not our faith. It is the dignity of man to pursue the quest
for equality. It will be advantageous to quote at this juncture R.H. Tawney in
his classic work equality where he says.
397 "The truth is that it is absurd and
degrading for me to make much of their intellectual and moral superiority to
each other and still more of their superiority in the arts which bring wealth
and power, because, judged by their place in any universal scheme, they are
infinitely great or infinitely small .. . The equality which all these thinkers
emphasise as desirable is not equality of capacity or attainment, but of
circumstances, and institutions, and j manner of life. The equality which they
deplore is not the inequality of personal gifts, but of the social and economic
environment... ...Their views, in short, is that, because men are men, social
institutions-property rights, and the organisation of industry, and the system
of public health and education-should be planned, as far as is possible to
emphasise and strengthen, not the class differences which divide but the common
humanity which unite, them.. " But the controversy between the meritarian
and the compensatory principals cannot be allowed to cloud the issues before
us. An intelligible consequence of the fundamental rights of equality before
the law, equal protection of the laws, equality of opportunity, etc.,
guaranteed to all citizens under our Constitution is the right of the weaker
sections of the people to special provision for their admission into
educational institutions and representation in the services. Appreciating the
realities of the situation. and least there by any misapprehension, the Constitution
has taken particular care to specially mention this right of the weaker
sections of the people in Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution. In view of
Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) the so-called controversy between the meritarian and
compensatory principles is not of any great significance, though, of course, we
do not suggest efficiency should be sacrificed. The question really is, who are
the scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and backward classes, who are entitled
to special provision and reservation in regard to admission into educational
institutions and representation in the services. So far as Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes are concerned, the question of their identification stands
resolved by the notifications issued by the President under Part XVI of the
Constitution. The problem is only in regard to the identification of the other
socially and educationally backward classes. The question really is how to
identify these backward classes to entitle them to entry through the doors of
Arts. 15(4) and 16(4). And, the further question, naturally, is about the
limits of reservation.
398 We are afraid the courts are not
necessarily the most competent to identify the backward classes or to lay down
guidelines for their identification except in broad and very general way. We
are not equipped for that; we have no legal barometers to measure social
backwardness. We are truly removed from the people, particularly those of the
backward classes, by layer upon layer of gradation and degradation.
And, India is such a vast country that
conditions vary from State to State, region to region, district to district and
from one ethnic religious, linguistic or caste group to another. A test to
identify backward classes which may appear appropriate when applied to one
group of people may be wholly inappropriate and unreasonable if applied to
another group of people. There can be no universal test;
there can be no exclusive test; there can be
no conclusive test. In fact, it may be futile to apply any rigid tests.
One may have to look at the generality and
the totality of the situation.
We do generally understand what we mean when
we talk of the richer classes, the poorer classes, the upper middle class, the
lower middle classes, the ruling class, the privileged class, the working
class, the exploited classes, etc. etc. In what senses the word 'classes' used
in Art.
15(4) and in Art. 16(4) of the Constitution?
What is the meaning of the expression 'socially' and 'educationally backward
classes'? What does backwardness consist in? To have a clear understanding of
what is meant by 'backwardness', 'backward classes' and 'socially and
educationally backward classes', we must have an idea of what social inequality
is about. Max Weber gives us a three dimensional picture of social inequality.
According to Weber, the three dimensions are class, status and power. A
person's class-situation, in the Weber sense, is what he shares with others,
similarly placed in the process of production, distribution and exchange, a
definition of class which is very near to that of the Marxist conception The
inequality of class depends primarily on inequality of income and to some
extent on an equal opportunity for upward mobility. persons class, according
this definition, is his shared situation in the economic hierarchy. Status, the
second of Weber's three dimensions is generally determined by the style of
consumption, though not necessarily by the source or amount of income. An
impoverised aristocrat is sometimes sought after by the nouveau riche. A desk
worker considers himself superior to a manual worker. A professional like a
doctor or a lawyer is thought to be of superior status than those belonging to
several other walks of life. Status seems to 399 depend on social attributes
and styless of life, including dress, speech, I occupation, etc., on what R.H.
Tawney describes as 'the tedious A vulgarities of income and social position.'
Similarly, class and status are not contemporeaneous with power, though power
and class can often be sen to be closely connected. Power is participation in
the decision making process but those who wield power are not necessarily the
best paid nor the most respected. But, it is now obvious even to the most
superficial observer that social and political power is wielded in innumerable
unseen ways by those who control economic power. Political power is
remorselessly manipulated by economic power. We, therefore, see that everyone
of the three dimensions propounded by Weber is intimately and inextricably
connected with economic position. However, we look at the question of
'backwardness', whether from the angle of class, status or power, we find the
economic factor at the bottom of it all and we find poverty, the culprit-cause
and the dominant characteristic Poverty, the economic factor brands all
backwardness just as the erect posture brands the homosapiens and distinguishes
him from all other animals, in the eyes of the beholder from Mars. But, whether
his racial stock is Caucasian, Mongoloid, Negroid, etc., further investigation
will have to be made. So too the further question of social and educational
backwardness requires further scrutiny. In India, the matter is further
aggravated, complicated and pitilessly tyrannised by the ubiquitous caste
system, a unique and devastating system of gradation and degradation which has
divided the entire Indian and particularly Hindu society horizontally into such
distinct layers as to be v destructive of mobility, a system which has
penetrated and corrupted the mind and soul of every Indian citizen. It is a
notorious fact that there is an upper crust of rural society consisting of the
superior castes, generally the priestla, the landlord and the merchant castes,
there is a bottom strata consisting of the 'out-castes' of Indian Rural
Society, namely the Scheduled Castes, and, in between the highest and the
lowest, there are large segments of population who because of the law gradation
of The caste to which they belong in the rural society hierarchy, because of
the humble occupation which they pursue , because of their poverty and
ignorance are also condemned to backwardness, social and educational,
backwardness which prevents them from competing on equal terms to catch up with
the upper crust Any view of the caste system, class or cursory, will at once
reveal the firm links which the caste system has with economic power. Land and
learning, two of the primary sources of economic power in 400 India have till
recently been the monopoly of the superior castes. Occupational skills were practised
by the middle castes and in the economic system prevailing till now they could
rank in the system next only to the castes constituting the landed and the
learned gentry. The lowest in the hierarchy where those who were assigned the
meanest task, the out-castes who wielded no economic power. The position of a
caste in rural society is more often than not mirroned in the economic power
wielded by it and vice versa.
Social hierarchy and economic position
exhibit an undisputable mutuality. The lower the caste, the poorer its members.
The poorer the members of a caste lower the caste.
Caste and economic situation, reflecting each
other as they do are the Deus ex-Machina of the social status occupied and the
economic power wielded by an individual or class in rural society. Social
status and economic power are so woven and fused into the caste system in
Indian rural society that one may without hesitation, say that if poverty be
the cause, caste is the primary index of social backwardness, so that social backwardness
is often readily identifiable with reference to a person's caste. Such we must
recognised is the primeval force and omnipresence of caste in Indian Society,
however, much we may like to wish it away. So Sadly and oppressively
deep-rooted is caste in our country that it has out across even the barriers of
religion. The caste system has penetrated other religious and dissentient Hindu
sects to whom the practice of caste should be anathema and today we find that
practitioner of other religious faiths and Hindu dissentients are some times as
rigid adherents to the system of caste as the conservative Hindus. We find
Christian harijans, Christian Madars, Christian Reddys, Christian Kammas, Mujbi
Sikhs, etc. etc. In Andhra Pradesh there is a community known as Pinjaras or
Dudekulas (known in the North as 'Rui Pinjane Wala'): Professional cotton-
beaters) who are really Muslims, but are trated in rural society, for all
practical purposes, as a Hindu. caste Several other instances may be given.
Shared situation in the economic hierarchy,
caste gradation, occupation, habitation, style of consumption, standard of
literacy and a variety of such other factors appear to go to made towards
social and educational backwardness. In some situations and indeed quite often,
social investigator may easily be able to identify a whole caste group as a
socially and educationally backward class;
he may readily recognise people living in
certain areas, say mountainous, desert or forest regions, as socially and
educationally backward classes; he may freely perceive those pursuing certain
'Lowly' accusations as socially and educationally backward classes: he may,
without difficulty, distinguish the very poor and the destitute as socially and
educationally 401 backward classes. The social investigator may be able to do
all this by field-reasearch. study, observation, collection and interpretation
of data, application of common though not rigid standards. We will refer to
these aspects of the question later in our judgment.
With these prefatory, general observations,
we may now refer to the relevant Constitutional provisions. Part XVI of the
Constitution concerns itself with "Special provisions relating to certain
classes". The classes in regard to which the constitution-makers thought
fit to make special provision are the Scheduled Caste, the Scheduled Tribes,
the Anglo-Indian community and the socially and educationally backwardness
classes Articles 330 and 332 provide for reservation of seats for Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the House of the People and the Legislative
Assembles of the State.
Articles 331 and 333 provide for
representation of the Anglo-Indian Community in the House of the People and the
Legislative Assemblies of the States. Article 334 provides that the reservation
and special representation are to cease after 30 years. There is no reservation
or special representation for socially and educationally backward classes
either in the House of the People or in the Legislative Assemblies of the
State.
Article 335 imposes a constituently
obligation to take into consideration the claims of members of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes, in the making of appointments to the services and
posts in connection with the affairs of the Union or of the States,
consistently with the maintenance of efficiency of administration. Articles 336
and 337 make certain special provisions for the Anglo-Indian Community in
certain services and with respect to educational grants for the benefit of that
community.
Article 341 empowers the President, with
respect to any State (after consultation with the Governor) or Union Territory,
to specify, by public notification, the castes, the races or tribes or parts or
groups within castes, races or tribes which shall, for the purposes of the
Constitution, be deemed to be Scheduled Castes in relation to that State or
Union Territory as the case may be. A notification so issued by the President
is not to be varied by any subsequent notification, but may only be varied by
law, made, by Parliament. Article 342 makes a similar provisions with respect
to Scheduled Tribes.
Article 340 empowers the President to appoint
a commission to investigate the conditions of socially and educational 402 ly
backward classes within the territory of Indian and the difficulties under
which they labour and to make recommendations as to the steps that should be
taken by the Union to remove such difficulties and to improve their conditions
and as to the grants that should be made for that purpose by the Union or by
the State. The report of the Commission which is to set out the facts and make
recommendations is required to be laid before each House of Parliament,
together with a memorandum explaining the action taken thereon.
Article 338 enjoins the appointment of a
special officer for the Scheduled Tribes by the President whose duty is to
investigate all matters relating to the safeguards provided for the Scheduled
Castes and Schedule Tribes under the Constitution and to report to the
President upon the working of those safeguards at such intervals as may be
directed by the President. The reports are to be laid before each House of
Parliament. Article 338(3) expressly provides that n under Art. 338 references
to the Scheduled Castes Scheduled Tribes shall be construed as in including
references to such other backward classes as the President may on receipt of
the report of a Commission appointed under Art. 34a(1). specify and also the
Anglo-Indian community.
Thus, while there is a special provision for
reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the House of
the People and the Legislative Assemblies of the States and a provision for the
representation of the Anglo-Indian Community in the House of the People and the
Legislative Assemblies of the States, there is no such provision for
reservation of seats for or reservation socially and educationally backward
classes in the House of the People or the Legislative Assemblies of the States.
Again, while under Art. 335, there is a constitutional obligation to consider
the claims of the members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the
making of appointments to services and posts in connection with the affairs of
the Union and the States and there is a special provision for the Anglo-Indian
Community in certain services for a limited period. There is no corresponding
provision for the socially and educationally backward classes. But there is a
provision under Art. 340 of the Constitution for the appointment of a
Commission to investigate the conditions of socially and educationally backward
classes and to recommend the steps to be taken to ameliorate such conditions.
403 Article 14 of the Constitution, stated in
positive language, guarantees to every person equality before the law and equal
protection of the laws, Article 15(1) prohibits the State from discriminating
against any citizen on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of
birth or any of them. Article 22(2) similarly prohibits the denial of admission
into any educational institution maintained by the State or receiving aid out
of State funds on grounds only of religion, race, caste, language or any of
them. While Art.
15(3) States that nothing in Art. 15 shall
prevent the State from making any special provision for women and children,
Art. 15(4) provides, "Nothing in this Article or in clause (2) of Art. 29
shall prevent the State from making and special provision for the advancement
of any socially, educationally backward classes of citizens or for the
Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes." Art. 16 deals with equality of
opportunity in matters of public employment.
Art. 16(1) provides that there shall be
equality of opportunity in matters relating employment or appointment to any
office under the State, and Art. 16(2) prohibits discrimination on grounds only
of religion, race, caste, sex, descent, place of birth, residence or any of
them. Art.
16(4) States, "nothing in this Article
shall prevent the State from making any provision for the reservation of
appointments or posts in favour of any backward class of citizens which, in the
opinion of the "that, is not adequately represented in the services under
the State. We are primarily concerned in this case with the question as to who
are socially and educationally backward classes of citizens mentioned in Art.
15(4) and the backward class of citizens, not adequately represented in the
services under the State mentioned in Art. 16(4).
We see that while Art. l 5(4) contemplates
"special provision for the advancement of any socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled
Tribes", Art. 16(4) speaks of 'provision for the reservation of
appointments or posts in favour of any backward class of citizens which, in the
opinion of the State is not adequately represented in services under the
State"- Now, it is not suggested that the socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens and the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes
from whom special provision for advancement is contemplated by Art- 15(4) are
distinct and separate from the backward classes of citizens who are adequately
represents in the services under the State for whom reservation of posts and
appointments is contemplated by Art. 16(4). 'The backward classes of citizens'
referred to in Art. 16(4), despite the short description, are the same 404 as
the socially and educationally backward classes of citizens and the A scheduled
castes and the Scheduled Tribe', 90 fully described in Art. 15(4): Vide
Trilokinath Tiku v. State of Jammu and Kashmir and other cases. However, for
the purposes of Art. 16(4) it is further necessary that the Backward classes
should not be adequate in the services.
Again, and quite obviously, 'special
provision for advancement' is a wide expression and may include many more
things besides 'mere reservation of seats in colleges.' It may be by way of
financial assistance, free medical, educational and hostel facilities,
scholarships, free transport, concessional or free housing, exemption from requirements
insisted upon in the case of other classes al- so on. We are not, for the time
being, concerned with the mode advancement, other than reservation of seats in
college, we observe that under Art. 16(4), reservation is to be made to benefit
those backward classes, who in the opinion of the Government are not adequately
represented, in the services. Reservation must, therefore, be aimed at securing
adequate representation. It must follow that the extent of reservation must
match the inadequacy of representation. There is no reason why this guideline
furnished by the Constitution itself should not also be adopted for the
purposes Or Art. 15(4) too. For example, the extent of reservation of seats in
professional colleges may conveniently be determined with reference to the
inadequacy of representation in the various profession. Similarly, the extent
of reservation in other colleges may be determined with reference to the
inadequacy in the number of graduates, etc. Naturally, if the lost ground is to
be gained. the extent of reservation may even have to be slightly higher than
the percentage of population of the backward classes.
Since these questions are not altogether res
integra, it will be useful to refer to a few of the earlier opinions of this
Court touching upon this question.
Until Thomas(1) came on the scene, Balaji(2)
was considered by many as the magnum opus on reservations.
Balaji was also a case from Karnataka. The
very first sentence of the judgment of a Gajendragadkar, J.. is a revelation of
the frustrating task that the Government of Karnataka has been undertaking
these several years. The first sentence says: "Since 1958, the State of
Mysore has been (l) [1976] 1 S.C.R. 906.
(2) [1963] Suppl. I S.C.R,4 39 405
endeavouring to make a special provision for the advancement of the socially
and educationally backward classes af citizens in the State A of Mysore under
Art. 15(4) of the Constitution and every time when an order is passed in that
behalf, its validity has been challenged by writ proceedings. Four previous
orders passed in that behalf were challenged by writ proceedings taken against
the State under Art. 226". Balaji was concerned with the question of the
validity of the reservation made under Art. 15(4) of the Constitution in regard
to admission to the medical colleges of the Mysore and Karnataka Universities.
28 per cent of the seats were reserved for Backward Classes so-called, 20
percent for more Backward classes, 15 per cent for Scheduled Castes and 3 per
cent for Scheduled Tribes, making a total of 68 per cent of the seats available
for the reserved category only and 32 per cent for the general category,
described in the judgment as "merit pool". The reservation was
generally made on the basis of the report of the Nagan Gowda Committee
appointed by the State Government. The court found that the Committee
approached the problem of enumerating and classifying these socially and
educationally backward communities on the basis that social backwardness
depended substantially on the caste to which the community belonged, though it
recognised that economic condition may be a contributing factor. according to
the court, the Committee virtually equated 'classes' with castes'. The court
observed that in dealing with the question as to whether any class of citizens
were socially backward or not, it might not be irrelevant to consider the caste
of the said citizens but the importance of caste should not be exaggerated. rt
was observed that caste could not be made the sole or dominant test to determine-
the social backwardness of group or classes of citizens. It was noted that
social backwardness was in the ultimate analysis the result of poverty, to a
very large extent. It was also noticed that the occupation of citizens might
also contribute to make classes of citizens socially backwardness. As the Nagam
Gowda Committee had adopted the caste test as the predominant test, if not the
sole test, without regard to the other factor- which were undoubtedly relevant,
the court expressed the vice the classification made by the Committee of
socially backward communities was invalid. In passing, at one place, it was
remarked that the Backward Classes of citizens for whom special provision was
authorised to be made, were treated by Art. 15(4) itself, as being similar to
the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. It was observed that the Backward Classes were
in the matters of their backwardness comparable to Scheduled Castes and Tribes.
Based on these observations and the juxta 406 position of the expressions Scheduled
Castes, Scheduled Tribes and A socially and educationally backward classes in
Art. 15 and Art. 338, it was suggested by the learned counsel for the
petitioner that the socially backward classes of people were those whose status
and standard of living was very much the same as those of the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes. We do not think that these observations were meant to lay
down any proposition that the socially Backward Classes were those classes of
people, whose conditions of life were very nearly the same as those of the
Scheduled Castes and Tribes. We say so first because of the inappropriateness
of applying the ordinary rules of statutory interpretations to interpret
constitutional instruments which are sui generies and which deal with situations
of significance and consequence. It is not enough to exhibit a Marshallian
awareness that we are expounding a Constitution; we must also remember that we
are expounding a Constitution born in the mid-twentieth century, but of an
anti-imperialist struggle, influenced by Constitutional instruments, events and
revolutions elsewhere, in search of a better world, and winded to the idea of
justice, economic, social and political to all. such a Constitution must be
given a generous interpretation so as to give all its citizens the full measure
of justice promised by it. The expositors of the Constitution are to concern
themselves less with mere words and arrangement of words than with the
philosophy and the prevading 'spirit and sense' of the Constitution, so
elaborately exposed for our guidance in the Directive Principles of State
Policy and other provisions of the Constitution. Now, anyone acquainted with
the rural scene in India would at once recognise the position that the
Scheduled Castes occupy a peculiarly degraded position and are treated, not as
persons of caste at all, but as outcastes. Even the other admittedly backward
classes shun them and treat them as inferior beings. It was because of the
special degradation to which they had been subjected that the Constitution
itself had to come forward to make special provision for them. There is no
point in attempting to determine the social backwardness of other classes by
applying the test of nearness to the conditions of existence of the Scheduled
Castes. Such a test would practically nullify the provision for reservation for
socially and educationally Backward Classes other than Scheduled Castes and
Tribes. Such a test would perpetuate the dominance of the existing upper
classes. Such a test would take a substantial majority of the classes who are
between the upper classes and the Scheduled Castes and Tribes out of the
category of backward classes and put them at a permanent disadvantage. Only the
'enlightened' classes of body will capture all the 'open' posts and seats and
the reserved posts and 407 seats will go to the Scheduled Castes and Tribes and
those very near the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. The bulk of those behind the
'enlightened' classes and ahead of the near Scheduled Castes and Tribes would be
left high and dry, with never a chance of imposing themselves .
Earlier we mentioned that poverty was
regarded by the Court as the prime cause of social backwardness. It was said at
page 460, "Social backwardness is on the ultimate analysis the result of
poverty, to a very large extent. The classes of citizens who are deplorably
poor automatically become socially backward. They do not enjoy a status in
society and have, therefore, to be content to take a backward seat. It is true
that social backwardness which results from poverty is likely to be aggravated
by considerations of caste to which the poor citizens may belong, but that only
shows the relevance of both caste and poverty in determining the backwardness
of citizens". We only add that there is an overpowering mutuality between
poverty and caste on the Indian scene. Again, referring to some scheme
formulated by the Maharashtra Government for financial assistance the Court
observed, "However, we may observe that if any State adopts such a measure,
it may afford relief to and assist the advancement of the Backward Classes in
the State, because backwardness social and educational, in ultimately and
primarily duties for proverty". Recognising poverty as the true source of
the evil of social and economic backwardness and caste as a relevant factor in
determining backwardness, the Court also noticed occupation and habitation as
two other important contributing factors and finally stressed the need for a
penetrating investigation. It was said, "The occupations of citizens may
also contribute to make classes of citizens socially backward. There are some
occupations which are treated as inferior according to conventional beliefs and
classes of citizens who follow these occupations are apt to become socially backward.
The place of habitation also plays not a minor part in determining the
backwardness of a community of persons. In a sense, the problem of social
backwardness is the problem of Rural India and in that behalf, classes of
citizens occupying a socially backward position in rural area fall within the
purview of Art. 15(4). The problem of deter mining who are socially backward
classes is undoubtedly very complex.
Sociological, social and economic
considerations come into play in solving the problem and 408 evolving proper
criteria for determining which classes are A socially backward is obviously a
very difficult task. It will need an elaborate investigation and collection of
data and examining the said data in a rational and scientific way".
The Balaji Court then proceeded to consider
the question of educational backwardness. The Nagan Gowda Committee had dealt
with the question on the basis of the average of the student population in the
last three High school classes of all High Schools in the State in relation to
a thousand citizens of that community. The Committee was of the view that all
castes whose average was less than the State average should be regarded as
Backward communities and those whose average was less than 50 per cent of the
State average should be regarded as More Backward. The Court took the view that
the adoption of the test of the last three High School classes might be a
little high. but even if it was not considered high, it was not right to treat
communities which were just below the State average as backward. There can be
divergence of views on this question.
Where the State average itself is abysmally
low, there is no reason why classes of people whose average was slightly above,
or very near, or just below the State average, should be excluded from the list
of Backward Classes. The adoption of the State average or the 50 per cent of
the State average test might lead to quite arbitrary results and This surely
cannot be a matter in which the court should try to impose its views.
In fact while observing: "if the test
has to be applied by a reference to the State average of student population,
the legitimate view to take would be that the classes of citizens, whose
average is well or substantially below the State average, can be treated as
educationally backward," the court also observed, ' On this point again we
do not propose to lay down any hard and fast rule; it is for the State to
consider the matter and decide in a manner which is consistent with the
requirements of Art. 15(4)".
It was also observed in Balaji that the sub-
classification made by the reservation order between Backward Classes and More
Back ward Classes did not appear to be justified under Art. 15(4) as it
appeared to be a measure devised to benefit all the classes of citizens who
were less advanced when compared with the most advanced classes in the State,
and that was not the scope of Art.
15(4). A result of the sub-classification was
that nearly 90 per cent of the 409 population of the State was treated as backward.
The propriety of such a course may be open to question on the facts of each
case, but A we do not see why on principle there cannot be :3 classification
into Backward Classes and More Backward Classes, if both Classes are not merely
a little behind, but far far behind the most advanced classes In fact such a
classification would be necessary to help the More Backward Classes; otherwise
those of the Backward Classes who might be a little more advanced than the More
Backward Classes might walk away with all the seats, just as, if reservation
was confined to the More Backward Classes and no reservation was made to the
slightly more advanced Backward Classes the most advanced Classes would walk
away with all the seats available for the general category leaving none for the
Backward Classes. All that we can say is that sub-classification may be
permissible if there are classes of people who are definitely far behind the
advanced classes but ahead of the very backward classes.
One may say the same thing about the adoption
of the average of the student population in the last three High School Classes
of all High Schools in the State in relation to a thousand citizens of that
community as the basis for assessing relative Backwardness. Balaji thought it
was a little high but surely other views are possible. In fact considering the
wide spread of elementary education, one would think the basis should be pushed
up higher. Having regard to the availability of elementary schools in rural
areas, more and more boys of the backward Classes may become literate. But it
is a long way from ceasing to be educationally backward. As one goes up class
by class it as a notorious fact that there are more 'drop-outs' from the boys
of the backward classes than from the boy of the forward classes. The adoption
of a lower basis to assess educational backwardness may give a wholly false
picture.
After all, if one is considering the question
of admission to professional colleges or of appointment to posts, the basis
possibly should be the average number of students of that community who have
passed the examination prescribed as the minimum qualification for admission to
professional colleges, say in the last three years, and perhaps the average
number of persons of that community who have graduated is the last three years,
since graduation is generally the minimum qualification for most posts
possibly, the extent of reservation may even vary with reference to the class
of post. This is a matter for evaluation by experts.
410 The Balaji Court then considered the
question of the extent of the special provision which the State would be
competent to make under Art. 15(4). Here the Court brought in the so-called
meritarian principle and thought that large reservation would inevitably affect
efficiency. We may perhaps, mention here what a noted sociologist had to say:
"So the leading anti-reservationists by
hand to find nationalizations for their campaigns. A favourite one is to
conjure up the image of a phoney juxtaposition; on one side is 'merit' shown up
by candidates on the open list, on the other side is 'incompetence',
represented b those on the reserved list Hence-so the argument runs-if
reservations are maintained, standards in the medical professions (or in other
professions and senior Government posts) will be deleted. Indeed (it is
claimed) there is serious risk that patients will die if they are treated by
(backward' doctors who have reached their positions through reservations. (Such
allegations are constantly repeated although they are patently false; in the
final at the postgraduate level, the minimum qualifying marks are identical for
all candidates, irrespective of their origin.)"(') We should think that is
a matter for experts in management and administration. There might be posts or
technical courses for which only the best can be admitted and others might be
posts and technical courses for which minimum qualification would also serve.
The percentage of reservations is not a
matter upon which a court may pronounce with no 1 material at hand. For a court
to say that reservations should not exceed 40 per cent, 50 per cent or 60 per
cent, would be arbitrary and the Constitution does not, permit us to be
arbitrary. Though in the Balaji case, the court thought that generally and in a
broad way a special provision should be less than 50 per cent, and how much
less than 50 per cent would depend upon the relevant prevailing circumstances
in each case, the court confessed. "In this matter again, we are reluctant
to say definitely what would be a proper provision to make." All that the
court would finally say was that in the circumstances of the case before them,
a reservation of 68 per cent was inconsistent with Art. 15(4) of the
Constitution. We are not prepared to read Balaji as arbitrarily laying down 50
per cent as the outer limit of reservation. What precisely was decided by
Balaji has been summed up by the Court itself at page 471 of the S.C.R. in the
following words:
(1) Ruth Glass: Divided and degraded: the
downtrodden people of India, (Monthly Review July-August) 1982.
411 "We have already noticed that the
impugned order in the present case has categorised the Backward Classes on the
sole basis of caste A which, in our opinion, is not permitted by Art. 15(4):
and we have also held that the reservation of 68 per cent made by the impugned
order is plainly inconsistent with the concept of the special provision
authorised by Art. 15(4). therefore, it follows that the impugned order is a
fraud on the Constitutional power conferred on the State by Art. 15(4)".
We must repeat here, what we have said
earlier, that there is no scientific statistical data or evidence of expert
administrators who have made any study of the problem to support the opinion
that reservation in excess Or 5() percent may impair efficiency. It is a rule
of thumb and rules of the thumb are not for judges to lay down to solve
complicated sociological and administrative problems.
Sometimes, it is obliquely suggested that
excessive reservation is indulged in as a mere votecatching device.
Perhaps so, perhaps not. One can only say
'out of evil cometh good' and quicker the redemption of the oppressed classes,
so much the better for the nation. Our observations are not intended to show
the door to genuine efficiency.
Efficiency must be a guiding factor but not a
smokes-cream.
All that a Court may legitimately say is that
reservation may h not be excessive. It may not be so excessive as to be
oppressive; it may not be so high as to lead to a necessary presumption of
unfair exclusion of everyone else.
In R. Chiralekha v. State of Mysore,(') the
Supreme Court upheld that classification of socially and educationally backward
classes made on the basis of economic condition and occupation, without
reference to caste.
According to the Government order, a family
whose income was Rs. 1200 per annum or less and persons or classes following
occupations of agriculture petty business, inferior services crafts or other
occupations involving manual labour, were in general, socially and educationally
backward. The Government listed the following occupations as contributing to
social backwardness; (1) actual cultivators; (2) artisan; (3) inferior services
(i.e. Class IV in Government Services and corresponding class or service in
private employment) including casual labour; and (4) any other occupation
involving manual labour. Th is criteria was adopted by the Government as a
temporary measure pending further detailed study. The order did not take into
consideration as a criterion for backwardness the caste of an applicant.
Relying heavily on Balaji, (1) [1964] 6
S.C.R.368.
412 the Mysore High Court held that the
scheme adopted by the Government was most imperfect as in their opinion in
addition to the occupation and poverty tests, the study should have adopted the
caste test as well as the "residence" test in making the
classification. It also observed that the decision in the Balaji case said that
the caste basis was undoubtedly a relevant, nay an important basis in deter
mining the classes of backward Hindus but it should not be made the sole basis.
Subba Rao, J., speaking for this Court, explained how the Mysore High Court had
misunderstood Balaji and observed:
"While this Court said that caste is
only a relevant circumstance and that it cannot be the dominant test in
ascertaining the backwardness of a class of citizens, the High Court said that
it is an important basis in determining the class of backward Hindus and that
the Government should have adopted caste as one of the test. As the said
observations made by the High Court may lead to some confusion in the mind of
the authority concerned who may be entrusted with the duty of prescribing the
rules for ascertaining the backwardness of classes of citizens within the
meaning of Art. 15(4) of the Constitution, we would hasten to make it clear
that caste is only a relevant circumstance in ascertaining the backwardness of
a class and there is nothing in the judgment of this Court which precludes the
authority concerned from determining the social backwardness of a group of
citizens if it can do so without reference to caste.
While this Court has not included caste from
ascertaining the backwardness of a class of citizens, it has not made it one of
the compelling circumstances affording a basis for the ascertaining of
backwardness of a class. To put it differently, the au- thority concerned may
take caste into consideration in ascertaining the backwardness of a group of
persons;
but, if it does not, its order will not be
bad on that account, if it can ascertain the backwardness of a group of person
on the basis of other relevant criteria." Later he further proceeded to
explain:- "This interpretation will carry out the intention of the
Constitution expressed in the aforesaid Article.
It helps the really backward classes instead
of promoting the interests of individuals or groups who, though they 413 belong
to a particular caste a majority where of si socially and educationally
backward, really belong to a class A which is socially and educationally
advanced.
To illust rate, take a caste in a State which
is numerically the largest therein. It may be that though a majority of the
people in that caste are socially and educationally backward, an effective
minority may be socially and edu- cationally for more advanced than another
small sub-caste the total number of which is far less than the said minority.
If we interpret the expression "Classes" as "caster ', the
object of the Constitution will be frustrated and the people who do not deserve
any advertitious aid may get it to the exclusion of those who really deserve.
This anomaly will not arise if, without equating caste with class, caste is
taken as only one of the considerations to ascertain whether a person belongs
to a backward class or not. On the other hand, if the entire sub-caste, by and
large, is backwardness, it may be included in the Scheduled Castes by following
the appropriate procedure laid down by the Constitution".
Evidently recognising the difficulty
be-setting any attempt by a Court to lay down inflexible criteria, he pointed
out:
'We do not intend to lay down any inflexible
rule for the Government to follow. The laying down of criteria for
ascertainment of social and educational backwardness of a class is a complex
problem depending upon many circumstances which may vary from State to State
and even from place to place in a State. But what we l? intend to emphasize is
that under no circumstances a "class" can be equated to a
"caste", though the caste of an individual or a group of individual
may be considered along with other relevant factors in putting him in a
particular class. We would also like to make it clear that if in a given
situation caste is excluded in ascertaining a class within the meaning of Art.
15(4) of the Constitution, it does not vitiate the classification if it
satisfied other tests." In Rajendran v. State of Madras(l) Ramaswami, J.
took care to say, (1) [1968] I S.C.R. 721.
414 ".. if the reservation in question
had been based A only on caste and had not taken into account the social and
educational backwardness of the caste in question, it would be violative of
Art. 15(1) But it must not be for gotten that a caste is also a class of
citizens and if the caste as a whole is socially and educationally backward reservation
can be made in favour of such a caste on the ground that it is a socially and
educationally backward class of citizens within the meaning of Art. 15(4) . ..
It is true that in the present cases the list of socially and educationally
backward classes has been specified by caste. But that does not necessarily
means that caste was the sole consideration and that person belonging to these
castes are also not a class of socially and educationally backward
citizens." In State of Andhra Pradesh v. P. Sagar,(l) Shah, J.
Observed, "In the context in which it
occurs the expression "class" means a homogeneous section of the
people ground together because of certain likeness or common traits and who are
identifiable by some common attributes such as status, rank, occupation,
residence in a locality, race, religion and the like. In determining whether a
particular section forms a class, caste cannot be excluded altogether. But in
the determination of a class a test solely based upon the caste or community
cannot also be accepted- ...................................................
....... Reservation may be adopted to advance
the interests of weaker sections of society, but in doing so, case must be
taken to see that deserving and qualified candidates are not excluded from
admission to higher educational institutions. The criterion for determining the
backwardness must not be based solely on religion, race, caste, sex or place of
birth, and the backwardness being social and educational must be similar to the
backwardness from which the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes
suffer".
(1) [1998] 3 S.C.R. 595.
415 In Tirloki Nath v. State of Jammu &
Kashmir,(l) the Court held that while it was open to the State to make a
provision for reservation of appointments or posts in favour of socially and
educationally backward classes, it could not distribute the number of posts or
appointments on the basis of community or place or residence. An order of the
Government of Jammu and Kashmir reserving 50 per cent of the vacancies for the
Muslims of Kashmir (entire State), 40 per cent for the Jammu Hindus and 10 per
cent for the Kashmiri Hindus was struck down. It was pointed out that the
expression "backward class" was not used as synonymous with backward
caste or backward community but it was noticed, "The members of an entire
caste or community may in the social, economic and educational scale of values
at a given time be backward and may on that account be treated as a backward
class, but that is not because they are members of a caste or community, but
because they form a class". The Court further said:
In its ordinary connotation the expression
"class" means a homogeneous section of the people grouped together
because of certain likenesses or common traits, and who are identifiable by
some common attributes such as status, rank, occupation, residence in a
locality, race, religion and the like. But for the purpose of Art. 16(4) in
determining whether a section forms a class, a test 1 solely based on caste,
community, race, religion, sex descent, place of birth or residence cannot be
adopted, because it would directly offend the Constitution".
In A. Peeriakatuppan v. State of Tamil
Nadu,(') the Court observed:
"A caste has always been recognised as a
class.
there is no gain saying the fact that there
are numerous castes in this country which are socially and educationally
backward. To ignore their existence is to ignore the facts of life." In
State of Andhra Pradesh v. Balaram(3), the order of the Government of Andhra
Pradesh enumerating the socially and (1) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 103 (2) [1971] 1
S.C.C.38.
(3) A.l.R. 1972 S.C. 1375.
416 educationally backward classes for the
purpose of admission into the A medical colleges of the State had been struck
down by the High Court on the ground that the Government Order was based on the
report of the Backward Classes Commission which had adopted caste as the main
basis to determine who were backward classes and this was contrary to the
decision of the Court in Balaji. It had also been held by the High Court that
the Commission had committed a mistake in adopting the average of student
population per thousand of a particular class or community in the 10th or 11th
classes with reference to the State average for the purpose of determining
educational backwardness. Even so the percentage of literacy of some groups
included in the list of backward classes was well above the State average. The
High Court had further held that the Commission had ignored the principle that
the social and educational backwardness of persons classified in the list
should be comparable or similar to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes-
The Commission had committed a further mistake in subdividing the groups into
more backward and less backward classes. It was urged before this Court that
the principles thought to have been laid down in Balaji, Chitralekha and Sagar
that Art. 15(4) was to be read as a proviso to Arts. 15(1) and 29(2) and that
in the matter of backwardness that backward classes must be comparable to
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, were wrong and required to be
re-considered. The Court found that it was not necessary for them to consider
this aspect of the matter as in the particular case before them, they were
factually satisfied that classes enumerated as backward, were really socially
and educationally backward. The Court however took care to say:
"It must be pointed out that none of the
above decisions lay down that social and educational backwardness must be
exactly similar in all respects to that of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes.
" The contention that backward classes
were classified on the basis of caste was met with the following observation:
"No doubt, we are aware that that any
provision {I made under this clause must be within the well defined limits and
should not be on the basis of caste alone.
But it should not also be missed that a caste
as such may be socially and educationally backward. If after collecting 417 the
necessary data, it is found that the caste as a whole is socially and
educationally backward, in our opinion, A the reservation made of such persons
will have to be up held notwithstanding the fact that a few individuals in that
group may be both socially and educationally above the general average. There is
no gain saying the fact that there are numerous castes in the Country, which
are socially and educationally backward and therefore a suitable provision will
have to be made by the State as charge in Article 15(4) to safeguard their
interest....................
............................................................
............. the members of an entire caste
or community may in the social economic, and educational scale of values, at a
given time be backward and may on that account be treated as backward classes,
but that is not because they are members of a caste of community but because
they form a class. Therefore, it is clear that there may be instances of an
entire caste or a community being socially and educationally backward for being
considered to be given protection under Art. 15(4)............................
......................................................
To conclude, though prima facie the list of
Backward Classes which is under attack before us may be considered to be on the
basis of caste, a closer examination will clearly show that it only a
description of the group following the particular occupations or professions,
exhaustively referred to by the Commission." The Court then proceeded to
observe that the question before them was whether the Backward Classes
Commission had relevant data and material before it for enumerating the classes
of persons to be included in the list of backward classes was a real question
and not whether the Commission was scientifically accurate in conclusion. The
Court expressed its satisfaction that there was sufficient relevant material to
justify the Commission's conclusion and added:- "No doubt there are a few
instances where the educational average is slightly above the State average,
but that circumstance by itself is not enough to strike down the entire list.
In fact, even there it is seen that when the whole class in which that
particular group is included, is considered the average works out to be less
418 than the State average. Even assuming there are a few A categories which
are a little above the State average, in literacy, that is a matter for the
State to be taken note of and review the position of such categories of persons
and take a suitable decision." Referring to the observations in Balaji
regarding the test of average student population in the last three High Court
School classes it was said:
"These observations made by this Court
in the above decisions have, in our opinion, been misapplied by the High Court
to the case in hand. lt has proceeded on the basis that it is axiomatic that
the educational average of the class should not be calculated on the basis of
the student population in the last three high school classes and that only
those classes whose average is below the State average, that can be treated as
educationally back ward. This Court has only indicated the broad principles to
be kept in view when making the provision under Art. 15(4)." In Janki
Prasad Parimoo v. State of Jammu & Kashmir the Court noticed the link
between economic backwardness and social and educational backwardness and
observed - "In India, social and educational backwardness is further
associated with economic backwardness and it is observed in Balaji's case
referred to above that backwardness, socially and educationally is ultimately
and primarily due to poverty." Having said this the Court was not prepared
to lay down poverty as the exclusive test on the ground that a large proportion
of the population in India was poverty stricken and if poverty was made the
sole test for reservation, a resourceless situation might arise. It was said,
"But if poverty is the exclusive test, a very large proportion of the
population in India would have to be regarded as socially and educationally
backward and if reservations are made only on the ground of economic 419
considerations, an untenable situation may arise because even in sectors which
are recognised as socially and educationally advanced, there are large pockets
of poverty. In this country except for a small percentage of the population,
the people are generally poor-some being more poor, others less poor.
Therefore, when a social investigator tries to identify socially and
educationally backward classes he may do it with confidence that they are bound
to be poor. Though the two wards, 'Socially' and 'educationally' are used
cumulatively for the purpose of describing the backwardness class, one may find
that if a class as a whole is educationally advanced, it is generally also
socially advanced because of the reformative effect of education on that class.
The words "advanced" and "backward" are only relative
terms-there being several layers or strata of classes, hovering between
"advanced" and "backward", and the difficult task is which
class can be recognised out of these several layers as being socially and
educationally backward." The State of Jammu & Kashmir had declared six
classes of citizens as socially and educationally backward. They were (1)
persons whose traditional occupation was one of the sixty-two mentioned; (2)
persons belonging to 23 social castes; (3) small cultivators (4) low paid
pensioners; (5) residents in areas adjoining the cease-fire line; (6) persons
belonging to "bad pockets". The court found that some of the
sixty-two enumerated occupations were not traditional occupations at all and
that that list required review. The court also found that 19 out of the 23
castes had been identified by the Committee as suffering from social
disabilities and also educationally and economically backward. In the case of
the remaining four castes, there was nothing to indicate that they were
backward classes.
Referring to the third category of small
cultivators, it was observed that they could not be said to be 'a homogeneous
social section of the people with common trades and identifiable by some common
attributes'. All that could be said about them was that they cultivated or
lived on land.
Similarly in regard to the fourth category,
it was observed that they also do not belong to a homogeneous section of the
people, the only thing common between them being that they had retired from
Government service. In regard to the fifth and sixth category the court
observed that lack of communication, inaccessibility, lack 420 of material
resources, primitive living conditions and such considerations made the people
living in those areas socially and educationally backward.
In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradeep
Tandon,(1) the Court recognised poverty as a relevant factor but observed that
it was not the determining factor discovering poor socially and educationally
backward classes. Even so the backwardness of the hill and Uttrakhand areas in
Uttar Pradesh was sustained on economic basis. It was said, "The Hill and
Uttrakhand areas in Uttar Pradesh are instances of socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens for those reasons. Backwardness is judged by
economic basis that each region has its own measurable possibilities for the
maintenance of human numbers, standards of living and fixed property. From an
economic point of view the classes of citizens are backward when they do not
make effective use of resources. When large areas of land maintain a sparse,
disorderly and illiterate population whose property is small and negligible the
element of social backwardness is observed. When effective territorial
specialisation is not possible in the absence Of means of communication and
technical processes as in the hill and Uttrakhand areas the people are socially
backward classes of citizens. Neglected opportunities and people in remote
places raise walls of social backwardness of people." "Educational
backwardness is ascertained with reference to those factors. Where people have
traditional apathy for education on account of social and environ mental
conditions or occupational handicaps, it is an illustration of educational
backwardness. The hill and Uttrakhand areas are inaccessible. There is lack of
educational institutions and educational aids. People in the hill and
Uttrakhand areas illustrate the educationally backward classes of citizens
because lack of educational facilities keep them stagnant and they have neither
meaning and values nor awareness for education." (1) [1975] 1 S.C.R. 761,
421 The Court struck down the reservation for candidates from rural areas on the
ground that rural population which constituted 80% of A the population of the
State could not be a homogeneous class. Some people in the rural areas might be
educationally backward, some might be socially backward, there may be few who
were both socially and educationally backward but it could not be said that all
citizens residing in rural areas were socially and educationally backward.
The Court while noticing the difficulty of
defining the expression 'socially' and 'educationally' backward classes of
citizens allowed itself to make the observation, "the traditional
unchanging occupations of citizens may contribute to social and educational
backwardness. The place of habitation and its environment is also a determining
factor in judging the social and educational backwardness." In K.S.
Jayasree v. State of Kerala,(l) what was in question was a Government Order
specifying that only citizens who were members of families which had an
aggregate income of less than Rs. 6,000 per annum and which belonged to the
caste and community mentioned in the annexures to the Government Order would
constitute socially and educationally backward classes for the purposes of Art.
15(4). The Court upheld the order and held:
"In ascertaining social backwardness of
a class of citizens it may not be irrelevant to consider the caste of the group
of citizens. Caste cannot however be made the sole or dominant test. Social
backwardness is in the ultimate analysis the result of poverty to a large
extent. Social backwardness which results from poverty is likely to be
aggravated by considerations of their caste. This shows the relevance of both
caste and poverty in determining the backwardness of citizens.
Poverty by itself is not the determining
factor of social backwardness. Poverty is relevant in the context of social
backwardness. The commission found that the lower income group constitutes
socially and educationally backward classes. The basis of the reservation is
not income but social and educational backwardness determined on the basis of
relevant criteria. If any classification of backward classes of (1) [1976] 3
S.C.C. 730.
422 citizens is based solely on the caste of
the citizen, it will A perpetuate the vice of caste system. Again, if the
classification is based solely on poverty, it will not be
logical.................................
................................
................. Social backwardness which results from poverty is likely to
be magnified by caste considerations. Occupations, place to habitation may also
be relevant factors in determining who are socially and educationally backward
classes. Social and economic considerations came into operation in solving the
problem and evolving the proper criteria of determining which classes are
socially and educationally
backward....................................................
.................................................
The problem of determining who are socially and educationally backward classes
is undoubtedly not simple. Sociological and economic considerations come into
play in evolving proper criteria for its determination. This is the function of
the State. The Court's jurisdiction is to decide whether the tests applied are
valid.......................................................
............................................................
....If the classification is based solely on
caste of the citizen, it may not be logical. Social backwardness is the result
of poverty to a very large extent. Caste and Poverty are both relevant for
determining the backwardness. But neither caste alone nor poverty alone will be
the determining tests
............................................................
............................................................
........ Therefore, socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens in Article 15(4) cannot be equated with castes. In
R. Chitralekha v. State of Mysore [1964] 6 SCR 368 AIR 1964 SC 1823 this Court
said that the classification of backward classes based on economic conditions
and occupations does not offend Article 15(4)." State of Kerala v. N.M.
Thomas(1) is a very important case decided by a bench of seven judges
consisting of Ray, C.J., Khanna, Mathew, Beg. Krishna Iyer, Gupta and Murtaza
Fazal Ali, JJ.). The question was about the exemption given to members of the
Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribes, for a limited period, from passing a (1)
[1976] 1 S.C.R. 906.
423 certain departmental test to qualify for
promotion from the post of Lower Division Clerk to the post of Upper Division
Clerk. The rule A providing for the exemption was attacked on the ground that
it was violative of Art. 16(1). One of the arguments in support of the attack
was that the result of application of the rule would be to enable the members
of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to claim more than 50% of the
posts immediately available for promotion. The rule was upheld by Ray, C.J.,
Mathew, Beg, Krishna Iyer and Murtaza Fazal Ali, JJ. and struck down by Khanna
and Gupta, JJ. Ray, C.J. Observed that the equality of opportunity took within
its fold "all stages of service from initial appointment to its ,
termination including promotion".
Articles 14 and 16(1) would not be violated
by the rule which would ensure equality of representation in the services for
unrepresented classes, after satisfying the basic needs of efficiency of
administration. A rule giving preference to an underrepresented backward
community would not contravene Arts. ]4, 61(1) and 16(2). Article 16(4) merely
removed any doubt in that respect. The classification of employees belonging to
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for allowing them an extended period of
two years for passing the special tests for promotion was a just and reasonable
classification having rational nexus to the object of providing equal
opportunity for all citizens in matters relating to employment or appointment
to public office. All legitimate methods were available to strive for equality
of opportunity in service under Art. 16(1). Article 16(4) enacted one of the
methods for achieving equality embodied in Art. 16(1). Dealing with the
arguments that the rule exceeded the permissible limits of the resulting
preference shown to Scheduled Castes. Ray, C.J.. Observed:
"The High Court was wrong in basing its
conclusion that the result of application of the impeached Rule and the orders
are excessive and exorbitant namely that out of 51 posts, 34 were given to the
members of the Schedule led Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The promotions made in
the service as a whole are no where near 50 per cent of the total number of
posts. The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes constitute 10 per cent of the
State's population. Their share in the gazetted service of the State is said to
be 2 per cent 184 out of 8,700. Their share in the non-gazetted appointments is
only 7 per cent namely 11,437 out of 1,62,784. It is, therefore, correct that
Rule 13A and the orders are meant to implement 424 not only the direction under
Art. 335, but also the Directive principal under Art. 46." One other important
statement in Ray, CJ. 's judgment is worth noticing. He said, "Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes are not a caste within the ordinary meaning of
caste". He referred Bhaiyalal v. Harikishan Singh were it had been held
that an enquiry was not permissible into the question whether a particular
caste was a Scheduled Caste or not in view of the provision of Art. 341.
Mathew, J. who agreed with the conclusions of
Ray, CJ., observed that resort to some sort of proportionate equality was
necessary in many spheres to achieve justice. Equality of opportunity was not
simply a matter of legal equally, it depended not merely on the absence of
disability but on the presence of abilities. The Government has an affirmative
duty to eliminate inequalities and to provide opportunities for the exercise of
human rights and claims. The Government has an affirmative responsibility for
elimination of inequalities, social, economic or otherwise. There was no reason
for the court not to require the State to adopt a standard of proportional
equality which took account of the differing conditions and circumstances of a
class of citizens whenever those conditions and circumstances stood in the way
of their equal access to the enjoyment of basic rights and claims. Art. 16(4)
was not an exception of Art.
16(1). It was an emphatic way of putting the
extent to which the equality of opportunity could be carried, viz., even up to
the point of making reservation. The state was entitled to adopt by measure
which would ensure an adequate representation of the members of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes and justify it as a compensatory measure to ensure
equality of opportunity provided the measure did not dispense with the
acquisition of the minimum basic qualification necessary for the efficiency of
administration. Beg, J. expressly agreeing with the conclusions of Ray, CJ.,
Mathew, Krishna Iyer and S. M. Fazal Ali, JJ, added that the protection of Art.
16 continued through out the period of service. He distinguished Devasana and
Balaji on the ground that if the overall position and picture was taken into
account by taking the number of employees in all Government departments, the
so-called favoured class of employees would be less than 50 per cent of the
number of posts.
Beg, J., however, thought that Art. 16(4) was
designed 'to reconcile the conflicting pulls of Art. 16(1) representing the
dynamics 425 of justice, conceived of as equality in conditions under which
candidates actually compete for posts in Government service, and of Arts. A 46
and 335 embodying the duties of the State to promote the interest of the
economically, educationally and socially backward so as to release them from
the clutches of social injustice'. According to Beg, J.
the encroachments on the field of Art. 16(1)
could only be permitted to the extent they were warranted by Art. 16(4) and to
read broader concept of social justice and equality into Art. 16(1) might
stultify the provision itself and make Art. 16(4) otiose. We must straight away
demur. There is no reason whatever to narrow the concept of equality in Art.
16(1) and refuse to read into it broader
concepts of social justice and equality. In fact, it is necessary to read Art.
16(1) so as not to come into any conflict
with Arts. 46 and 335. A constitutional document must be read as to synthesis
its provisions and avoid disharmony. To say that equality also means that
unequals cannot be treated equally is merely to say what is self-evident and
common place. Art. 14 implies it and we do not see why it is not implied in
Art.
16(1) also. True, on a first glance, Art.
16(4) appears to save the power of the State to make provision for the
reservation of appointments and posts in favour of any backward class of
citizens, but a second look shows that it really recognises a pre-existing
power and expresses the recognition in an emphatic way lest there should be any
doubt caste upon that power. Such a device is not unknown to legislatures and
constitution making bodies. Art. 16(4) is more in the nature of a rule of
interpretation to guide the construction of Aft. 16(1). The possibility of
interpreting Art 16(1) so as to promote the narrower equality rather than the
greater equality is excluded by Art. 16(4).
Krishna Iyer, J., while upholding the
validity of Rule 13AA made it quite clear that Art. 16(4) was to be viewed not
as a saving clause but as a clause inserted in Art. 16 due to the over-anxiety
of the draftsman to make matters clear beyond possibility of doubt. He was
emphatic that Art.
16 applied to appointments and pro- motions
as well. He expressed his agreement with Fazal Ali, J. that arithmetical limit
of 50 per cent in one year set by some earlier rulings could not be pressed too
far and that overall representation in a department did not depend on the
recruitment in a particular year, but the total strength of a cadre He also
agreed with Fazal Ali, J's construction of Art. 16(4) and his view about the
'carry forward' rule. But we must point out that Krishna Iyer, J. also made
certain observations indicating that he too fell into the elitist 426 trap of
viewing the question as one of 'protective discrimination'. A The question to
which he addressed himself was 'Is Rule (13AA) valid as protective
discrimination to the Heartiness'. Viewing the question in that light, he
proceeded to utter some words of purported caution about the fills of
reservation. He aid, A word of sociological caution. In the light of
experience, here and elsewhere the danger of 'reservation', it seems to me, is
three-fold. TLC benefits, by and large, are snatched away by the top creamy
layer of the 'back ward' caste or class, thus keeping the weakest among the
weak always weak and leaving the fortunate layers to consume the whole cake.
Secondly, this claim is over played
extravagantly in democracy by large and vocal groups whose burden of
backwardness has been substantially lightened by the march of time and measures
of better education and more opportunities of employment but wish to wear the
'weaker section' label as a means to score over their near-equals formally
categorised as the upper brackets.
Lastly, a lasting solution to the problem
comes only from improvement of social environment, added educational facilities
and cross-fertilisation of castes by inter-caste and inter-class marriages
sponsored as a massive State programme, and this solution is calculatedly
hidden from view by the higher 'backward' groups with a vested interest in the
plums of backwardness. But social science research, not judicial impressionism,
will alone tell the whole truth and a constant process of objective
re-evaluation of a progress registered by the 'under dog' categories is
essential lest a once deserving 'reservation' should be degraded into 'reverse
discrimination'." One cannot quarrel with the statement that social
science research and not judicial impressionism should form the basis of
examination, by Courts, of the sensitive question of reservation for backward
classes. Earlier we mentioned how the assumption that efficiency will be
impaired if reservation exceeds 50 per cent, if reservation is extended to
promotional posts or if the carry forward rule is adopted, is not based on any
scientific data. One must, however, enter a caveat to the criticism that the
benefits of reservation are often snatched away by the top creamy layer of
backward class or caste. That a few of the seats and posts reserved for
backward classes are 427 snatched away by the more fortunate among them is not
to say that reservation is not necessary. This is bound to happen in a
competitive society such as ours. Are not the unreserved seats and posts
snatched away, in the same say, by the top creamy layer on society itself ?
Seats reserved for the backward classes are taken away by the top layers
amongst them on the same principle of merit it on which the unreserved seats
are taken away by the top layers of society. How can it be bad if reserved
seats and posts are snatched away by the creamy layer of backward classes, if
such snatching away of unreserved posts by the top creamy layer of society it
self not bad? This is a necessary concomitant of the very economic and social
system under which we are functioning. The privileged in the whole of society
snatch away the unreserved prizes and the privileged among the backward classes
snatch away the reserved prizes, This does not render reservation itself bad.
But it does emphasis that mere reservation of a percentage of seats in colleges
and a percentage of posts in the services is not enough to solve the problem of
backwardness. Developmental facility and opportunity must be created to enable
the really backward to take full advantage of reservations. It indicates that
the ultimate solution lies in measures aimed firmly at all round economic and
social development. There is, of course, the danger that it engenders
self-denigration and backwardness may become a vested interest. The further
real danger is not reservation but reservation without general all round social
and economic development. The result of such reservation is that all the young
men of merit belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Backward classes are
literally 'gobbled up' by the civil services leaving very few educated young
men of those classes to make their cause on the social, economic and political
fronts. The very constraints of office restrain those who have become civil
servants from championing the cause of their brethern. There is also the
historical truth that oppressed persons who improve their lot, in an effort to
forget an unhappy past, often, rush to join the elite and imitate their ways,
habits and thoughts. In the process they tend to forget their less fortunate
brethern.
Fazal Ali, J. expressed his satisfaction that
the classification made by the Government by Rule 13(AA) was fully justified by
Art. 16 of the Constitution- He held that Art. 16(4) was not to be read in
isolation or as an exception to Art 16(1), but was to be read as part and
parcel of Art 16(1) and (2). Dealing with the question of the COCKADED
excessive reservation, he emphatically observed, 428 "This means that the
reservation should be within A the permissible limits and should not be a cloak
to till all the posts belonging to a particular class of citizens and thus
violate Art. 16(1) of the Constitution indirectly. At the same time clause (4)
of Art. 16 does not fix any limit on the power of the Government to make
reservation. Since clause (4) is a part of Art. 16 of the Constitution it is
manifest that the State cannot be allowed to indulge in excessive reservation
so as to defeat the policy contained in Art. 16(1). As to what would be a
suitable reservation within permissible limits will depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case and no hard and fast rule can be laid down, nor can
this matter be reduced to a mathematical formula so as to be adhered to in all
cases. Decided cases of this Court have no doubt laid down that the percentage
of reservation should not exceed 50 per cent. As t read the authorities, this,
is, however, a rule of caution and does not exhaust all categories. Suppose for
instance a State has a large number of back ward classes of citizens which
constitute 80 per cent of the jobs for them, can it be said that the percentage
of reservation is bad and violates the permissible limits of clause (4) of Art.
16 ? The answer must necessarily be in the
negative.
The dominant object of this provision is to
take steps to make inadequate representation adquate." Fazal Ali, J. mext
considered the validity of the 'carry forward' rule and upheld that rule also.
He said that if in fact the carry forward rule was not allowed to be adopted,
it might result in inequality to the backward classes of citizen.
Thus, we see that all five judges who
constituted the majority were clear that Art. 16 applied to all stages of the
service of a civil servant, from appointment to retirement, including
promotion. Four out of seven judges Ray C.J., Beg, Krishna Iyer and Fazal Ali
JJ., were also of the clear view that the so-called fifty percent rule would
apply to the total number of posts in the service and not to the number of
posts filled up at different times on different occasions. The reservation in
appointments made on any single occasion might well exceed 50 per cent. Four
out of seven judges, Ray, CJ., Mathew, Krishna Iyer and Fazal Ali, JJ., further
expressed the view that Art.
429 16(4) was not an exception to Art. 16(1)
and it was merely an emphatic way of stating that reservation was one of the
modes of A achieving equality for the backward class of citizens.
In Akhil Bharativa Soshit Karamchari Sangh v.
Union of India & Ors.,(l) the Court had to consider the question of
reservation of posts under the State in favour of Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes and the 'carry forward rule. The reservation and the rule were
upheld by the court. One of the arguments vigorously advanced was the usual
plea that efficiency would suffer. Krishna Iyer, J. meeting the argument
observed:
"The sting of the argument against
reservation is that it promotes inefficiency in administration, by choosing
sub-standards candidates in preference to those with better mettle. Competitive
skill is more relevant in higher posts, especially those where selection is
made by competitive examinations. Lesser classes of posts, where promotion is
secured mechanically by virtue of seniority except where the candidate is
unfit. do not require a high degree of skill as in the case of selection posts.
(See [1968] I SCR p. 721 at 734). It is obvious that as between selection and
non-selection posts the role of merit is functionally more relevant in the
former than in the latter. And if in Rangachari reservation has been held valid
in the case of selection posts, such reservation in non-selection posts is an
afortiori case. If, in selecting top officers you may reserve posts for SC/ST
with lesser merit, how can you rationally argue that for the posts of peons or
lower division clerks reservation will spell calamity? The part that efficiency
plays is far more in the case of higher posts than in the appointments of the
lower posts. On this approach Annexure K is beyond reproach." "Trite
arguments about efficiency and inefficiency are a trifle phoney because, after
all, at the higher levels the heartiness harijans girijan appointees are a
microscopic percentage and even in the case of Classes III and II posts they
are negligible. The preponderant majority coming from unreserved communities
are presumably efficient and the dilution of efficiency caused by the minimal
induction of (1) [1981] 1 S.C.R.. 185.
430 a small percentage of 'reserved'
candidates, cannot affect the over-all administrative efficiency significantly.
Indeed, it will be gross exaggeration to visualise a collapse of the
Administration because 5 to 10 per cent of the total number of officials in the
various classes happen to be sub-standard. Moreover, care has been taken to
give in service training and coaching to correct the deficiency." While we
agree that competitive skill is relevant in higher posts, we do not think it is
necessary to be apologetic about reservations in posts, higher or lower so long
as the minimum requirements are satisfied. On the other hand, we have to be
apologetic that there still exists a need for reservation. Earlier we extracted
a passage from Tawney's Equality where he bemoaned how degrading it was for
humanity to make much of their intellectual and moral superiority to each
other. Krishna Iyer, J. Once again emphasised that Art. l 6(4) was one facet of
the multi- faceted character of the central concept of equality. One of us
(Chinnappa Reddy, J.), in the same case, explained how necessary it was to
translate the constitutional guarantees given to the Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and other backward classes in to reality by necessary State
action to protect and nuture those classes of citizens so as to enable them to
shake off the heart-crushing burden of a thousand years' deprivation from their
shoulders and to claim a fair proportion of participation in the
administration. It was pointed out that Art. 16(4) in truth flowed out of Art.
16(1). It was said, "Art. 16(4) is not
in the nature of an exception to Art. 16(1). It is a facet of Art. 16(1) which
fosters and furthers the idea of equality of opportunity with special reference
to an under privileged and deprived class of citizens to when egalite do droit
(formal or legal equality) is not egalite de fait (practical or factual
equality). It is illustrative of what the State must do to wipe out the
distinction between egalite de droit and egalite de fait, It recognises that
the right to equality of opportunity includes the right of the under-privileged
to conditions comparable to or compensatory of those enjoyed by the privileged
Equality of opportunity must be such as to yield 'Equality of Results' and not
that which simply enables people, socially and economically better placed, to
win against the less fortunate, even when the competition is itself otherwise
equitable.
John Rawls in 'A, 431 Theory of Justice'
demands the priority of equality in a distributive sense and the setting up of
the Social System "so that no one gains or loses from his arbitrary place
in the distribution of natural assets or his own initial position in society
without giving or receiving compensatory advantages in return." His basic
principle of social justice is: "All social primary goods-liberty and
opportunity, income and wealth, and the bases of self-respect- are to be
distributed equally unless an unequal distribution of any or all these goods is
to the advantage of the least favoured." One of the essential elements of
his conception of social justice is what he calls the principle of redress:
"This is the principle that undeserved inequalities call for redress, and
since inequalities of birth and natural endowment are underserved, these
inequalities are somehow to be compensated for". Society must, therefore,
treat more favorably those with fewer native assets and those born into less
favorable social positions." The statement that equality of opportunity
must yield equality of results was the philosophical foundation of the
fulfillment of Art. 16(1) in Art. 16(4).
So we have now noticed the historical and
sociological background of Class and Caste, the philosophy, the reason and the
rhetoric behind reservation and anti-reservation, the Constitutional provisions
and the varying judicial stances. What emerges from these three decades of
Parliamentary, Executive, Judicial, Political, and practical wisdom? Clearly
there exist large sections of people who are socially and educationally
backward, who stand midway between the such as forward classes the landed, the
learned, the priestly and the trading classes on the one side and the out-caste
and depressed classes, i.e. the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes on
the other. Poverty, Caste, occupation and habitation are the principal factors
which contribute to brand a class as socially backward. The customs which they
honour and observe, the rituals which they fear and practice the habits to
which they adapt and conform, the festivals which they enjoy and celebrate and
even the Gods that they revere and worship are enlightening elements in
recognising their social gradation and backwardness- For instance, it may be
possible 432 to demonstrate that amongst very many classes, castes or
communities, considered socially inferior, Child marriage persists to this day
despite the Child Marriage Restraint Act and the Hindu Marriage Act. Despite
the wisdom of legal pandits and learned text books on Hindu Laws proclaiming
that Saptapadi is essential to a vaid Hindu Marriage, most of the socially
inferior classes rarely follow the rule;
they have their own customs and rituals. Long
before the Hindu Widows' Re-marriage Act permitted widows to remarry, long
before the Hindu Marriage Act permitted divorce, the custom of the several so
called socially inferior classes or communities permitted re-marriage of widows
and divorce. The divorce was not by decree of a Court of Law but was granted by
a Caste Panchayat. The Caste-Panchayat divorce was impermissible and remarriage
of widows was also impermissible among the socially superior classes who used
to look down upon these customs as primitive. The socalled inferior classes did
not and do not have recourse either to Purohits to perform marriages or the
Courts to dissolve them.
Dress habits also throw light, while it is
difficult to imagine, persons belonging to upper caste or occupational groups
going about their daily work bare-lacked it is not an uncommon right to see
persons belonging to lower caste or occupational groups so going about, Work
habits also given an indication. Women belonging to higher social groups would
not generally care to serve in other people's homes or fields. Again children
of lower social groups take to domestic and field work quite early in their lives.
There are certainly good economic reasons for all these factors.
As we said economic situation and social
situation often reflect each others. We mentioned earlier that even the Gods
that they worship give occasional clues. While the Hindu Gods proper, Rama,
Krishna, Siva etc. are worshipped by all Hindus generally there are several
local Gods and Goddesses in each village worshipped only by the inferior
castes. In Andhra Pradesh, for example, in every village the socalled inferior
castes worship the goddesses Sunkalamma, Gangamma, Polimeramma (the Goddess
guarding the village boundary), Yellamma (another Goddess guarding the vi11age
limits). They celebrate Hindu festivals like Dasara, Deepawali etc. but also
other festivals in which the upper classes do not participate.
There are many other customs, rituals or
habits of significance which if one only cares to study them mark out the
socially back ward classes. The weight to be attached to these factors depends
433 upon the circumstances of the case which can only be revealed by
thoughtful, penetrating investigation and analysis. It cannot be done A by
means of mathematical formulae but only by looking in the round or taking a
look at the entire situation. Sometimes it may be possible to readily identify certain
castes or social groups as a whole as socially forward or socially backward
classes. Poverty, of course, is basic, being the root cause as well as the
rueful result of social and educational backwardness. But mere poverty it seems
is not enough to invite the Constitutional branding, because of the vast
majority of the people of our country are poverty-struck but some among them
are socially and educationally forward and others backward.
In a country like India where 80% of the
people live below the bread-line, even the majority of the so called socially
forward classes may be poor. For example no one will think of describing
Brahmins anywhere in the land as socially and educationally backward however,
poor they might be. The idea that poor Brahmins may also be eligible for the
benefits of Articles 15(4) and 16(4) is too grotesque even to be considered.
Similarly no one can possibly claim that the patels of Gujarat, the Kayasthas
of Bengal, the Reddys and Kammas of Andhra Pradesh are socially backward
classes, despite the fact that the majority of them may be poor farmers and
agricultural laborers. In the rural, social ladder they are indeed high up and
despite the economic backwardness of sizeable sections of them, they can not be
branded as socially backward. On the other hand, there are several castes or
other social groups who have only to be named to be immediately identified as
socially and economically backward classes, identified as socially backward
classes. Again illustrating from rural Andhra Pradesh, one can easily identify
caste groups, such as, Kommaras (who traditionally carry on the occupation of
black smiths), Kummaris (who traditionally carry on the occupation of potters),
Vadderas (who traditionally carry on the occupation of Stone breaking),
Mangalis (who traditionally carry on the occupation of Barbers) and Besthas
(who traditionally carry on the occupation of Fisher folk), etc.
as backward classes by the mere mention of
their castes.
True, a few members of those caste or social
groups may have progressed far enough and forged ahead so as to compare
favourably with the leading forward classes economically, socially and
educationally. In such cases, perhaps an upper income ceiling would secure the
benefit of reservation to such of those members of the class who really deserve
it.
But one is entitled to ask what is to happen
to the poorer sections of the forward classes? The State will have to-and it is
the duty of the State so to do-to 434 discover other means of assisting them,
means other than reservations A under Arts. 15(4) and 16(4). All this only
emphasises that in the ultimate analysis, attainment of economic equality is
the final and the only solution to the besetting problems. There is also one
danger in adopting individual poverty as the criterion to identify a member of
the backward classes, which needs to be pointed out. How is one n to identify
the individuals who are economically backward and, therefore, to be classified
as socially and educationally backward? Are all those who produce certificates
from an official or a legislator or some other authority that their family
incomes are less than a certain figure to be so classified? It should be easy
to visualise who will obtain such certificates? Of course, the rural elite, the
upper classes of the rural areas who don't pay any income tax because
agricultural income is not taxed. Who will find it difficult or impossible to
obtain such certificates? Of course, the truly lower classes who need them
most.
Class poverty, not individual poverty, is
therefore the primary test. Other ancillary tests are the way of life, the
standard of living, the place in the social hierarchy, the habits and customs,
etc. etc. Despite individual exceptions, it may be possible and easy to
identify socially backwardness with reference to caste, with reference to
residence, with reference to occupation or some other dominant feature.
Notwithstanding our antipathy to caste and sub-regionalism, these are facts of
life which cannot be wished away. If they reflect poverty which is the primary
source of social and educational backwardness, they must be recognised for what
they are along with other less primary sources There is and there can be
nothing wrong in recognising poverty wherever it is reflected as an
identifiable group phenomena whether you see it as a caste group, a
sub-regional group, an occupational group or some other class. Once the
relevant conditions are taken into consideration, how and where to draw the
line is a question for each State to consider since the economic and social
conditions differ from area. Once the relevant conditions are taken into
consideration and the backwardness of a class of people is determined, it will
not be for the court to interfere in the matter. But, lest there be any
misunderstanding, judicial review will rot stand excluded .
SEN, J. In view of the importance of the
question involved, would like to add a few words of my own.
435 The real question raised is not of
excessive reservation for the advancement of socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
under Art. 15(4) or for reservation of appointments or posts in favour of any
backward classes of citizens under Art. 16(4) which, in the opinion of the State,
is not adequately represented in the services under the State but the question
is as to the identification of the socially and educationally backward classes
of citizens for whose advancement the State may make special provisions under
Art. 1'(4) like those for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
Conceptually, the making of special provisions for the advancement of backward
classes of citizens under Art. 15(4) and the system of reservation of
appointments or posts as envisaged by Art.
16(4) as guaranteed in the Constitution, is a
national commitment and a historical need to eradicate age-old social
disparities in our country. But unfortunately the policy of reservation
hitherto formulated by the Government for the upliftment of such socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens is caste-oriented while the policy
should be based on economic criteria. Then alone the element of caste in making
such special provisions or reservations under Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) can be
removed. At present only the privileged groups within the backward classes i.e.
the forwards among the backward classes reap all the benefits of such
reservation with the result that the lowest of the low are stricken with
poverty and therefore socially and economically backward remain deprived though
these constitutional provisions under Arts. (15(4) and 16(4) are meant for
their advancement.
After 37 years of attainment of independence
it cannot be seriously disputed that poverty is the root cause of social and
economic backwardness. The problem is about identification of the backward
classes for whose benefit the State may make special provisions under Art.
15(4). Or for reservation of appointments or posts under Art. 16(4). In view of
the widespread public unrest in the State of Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat in
recent days, the Government at the Centre must have a second look at the whole
system of reservation. It is true that mere economic backwardness would not
satisfy the test of educational and social backwardness under Art. IS(4) but
the question is as to the criteria to be adopted. Economic backwardness is only
one of the tests to determine social and educational backwardness.
If that test were to be the sole criterion of
social and educational backwardness, the reservation for the advancement of
such classes to special treatment under Art.
15(4) would fail.
436 In retrospect, the answer to the question
as to who are the A members of socially and educationally backward classes for
whose advancement the State may make special provisions under Art. 15(4) still
eludes us. Why should not the expression 'backward classes' be treated as
synonymous with the weaker sections of the society? Does the word 'class'
denote a caste or sub-caste among Hindus so far as Hindus are concerned, or a
section or a group so far as Muslim, Christian or other religious communities
and denomination are concerned? In my considered opinion. the predominant and
the only factor for making special provisions under Art.
15(4) or for reservations of posts and
appointments under Art. 16(4) should be poverty, and caste or a sub-caste or a
group should be used only for purposes of identification of persons comparable
to Scheduled Castes - or Scheduled Tribes, till such members of backward
classes attain a state of enlightment and there is eradication of poverty
amongst them and they become equal partners in 8 new social order in our
national life.
In this context, I must point out that the
adequacy or otherwise of representation of the backward classes in the services
has to be determined with reference to the percentage of that class in the
population and the total strength of the service as a whole. The representation
does not have to exactly correspond to the percentage of that class in the
population; it just to be adequate. Moreover, in the case of services the
extent of representation has to be considered by taking into account the number
of members of that class in the service, whether they are holding reserved or
unreserved posts. I cannot overemphasize the need for a rational examination of
the 17 whole question of reservation in the light of the observation made by
us. The State should give due importance and effect to the dual constitutional
mandates of maintenance of efficiency and the equality of opportunity for all
persons. The nature and extent of reservations must be rational and reasonable.
It may be, and often is difficult for the Court to draw the line in advance
which the State ought not to cross, but it is never difficult for the Court to
know that an invasion across the border, however ill-defined, has taken place.
The Courts have neither the expertise nor the sociological knowledge to define
or lay down the criteria for determining what are 'socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens' within the meaning of Art 15(4) which enables the
State to make 'special provisions for the advancement' of such classes
notwithstanding the command of Art. 15(2) that the State shall not discriminate
against and citizens on the 437 ground only of religion, race, caste, descent,
place of birth, residence or any of them. Art. 340 provides for the appointment
of a Commission to 'investigate the conditions of socially and educationally
backward classes within the territory of India and the difficulties under which
they labour and to make recommendations as to the steps that should be taken by
the Union or any State to remove such difficulties and to improve their
condition. The state of backwardness of any class of citizens is a fact
situation which needs investigation and determination by a fact finding body
which has the expertise and the machinery for collecting relevant data. The
Constitution has provided for the appointment of such a Commission for Backward
Classes by the President under Art. 340 to make recommendations and left it to
the State to make special provisions for the advancement of such backward
classes. The Court is ill- equipped to perform the task of determining whether
a class of citizens is socially and educationally backward. This Court has,
however, a duty to interpret the Constitution and to see what it means and
intends when it makes provision for the advancement of socially and
educationally back- ward classes. In considering this situation then, we must
never forget that it is the Constitution we are expounding. Except for this the
Court has very little or no function.
Questions as to the validity or otherwise of
reservations have been agitated several times before this Court and resolved.
The frequency and vigour with which these questions are raised is a disturbing
indication of the tension and unease in society in regard to the manner in
which Art. 15(4) and Art. 16(4) are operated by the State.
The Preamble to our Constitution shows the
nation's resolve to secure to all its citizens: Justice-Social, economic and
political. The State's objective of bringing about and maintaining social
justice must be achieved reasonably having regard to the interests of all.
Irrational and unreasonable moves by the State will slowly but surely tear
apart the fabric of society. It is primarily the duty and function of the State
to inject moderation into the decisions taken under Arts. 15(4) and 16(4),
because justice lives in the hearts of men and growing sense of injustice and
reverse discrimination, fuelled by unwise State action, will destroy, not
advance, social justice. If the State contravenes the constitutional mandates
of Art. 16(1) and Art. 335, this Court will of course, have to perform its
duty.
The extent of reservation under Art. 15(4)
and Art.
16(4) must necessarily vary from State to
State and from region to region within 438 a State, depending upon the
conditions prevailing in a particular A State or region, of the Backward
Classes. r do feel that the Central Government should consider the feasibility
of appointing a permanent National Commission for Backward Classes which must
constantly carry out sociological and economic study from State to State and
from region to region within a State. The framers of the Constitution by enacting
Art. 340 clearly envisaged the setting up of such a high-powered National
Commission for Backward classes at the Centre. These problems can never be
resolved through litigation in the Courts.
I wish to add that the doctrine of protective
discrimination embodied in Arts. 15(4) and 16(4) and the mandate of Art. 29(2)
cannot be stretched beyond a particular limit. The State exists to serve its
people.
There are some services where expertise and
skill are of the essence. For example, a hospital run by the State serves the
ailing members of the public who need medical aid. Medical services directly
affect and deal with the health and life of the populace. Professional
expertise, term of knowledge and experience, of a high degree of technical
knowledge and operational skill is required of pilots and aviation engineers.
The lives of citizens depend on such persons.
There are other similar fields of
governmental activity where professional, technological, scientific or other
special skill is called for. In such services or posts under the Union or
States, we think there can be no room for reservation of posts; merit alone
must be the sole and decisive consideration for appointments.
Reasons for this decision will follow.
VENKATARAMIAH, J. The constitutional validity
of certain Government orders issued by the Government of the State of Karnataka
making provisions for reservation of some seats in technical institutions and
some posts in the Government services respectively under Article 15(4) and
Article 16(4) of the Constitution of India for being filled up by students,
`candidates, as the case may be, belonging to certain castes, tribes and
communities which in the opinion of the State Government constituted backward
classes (other than the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes) is
questioned in these petitions.
The questions involved in these cases fare
delicate ones and have, therefore, to be tackled with great caution.
The issues raised here and the decision
rendered on them are bound to have a great 439 impact on society. They are
indeed highly sensitive issues.
A superficial approach to the problem has,
therefore, to be avoided. A The questions have to be tackled with sympathy for
persons who are really in need of the benign assistance at the hands of the
State and with due regard to the interests of the general public.
"India's vast and unparalleled
experiment with 'protective' or 'compensatory' discrimination in favour of
'backward sections' of her population betokens a generosity and farsightedness
that are rare among nations. The operation of such a preferential principle
involves formidable burdens of policy-making and administration in a developing
nation. It also places upon the judiciary tasks of great complexity and
delicacy. The courts must guard against abuses of the preferential principle
while at the same time insuring that the government has sufficient leeway to
devise effective use of the broad powers which the Constitution places at its
disposal". These are the wise words of Marc Galanter, a member of the
faculty on social Sciences, University of Chicago, who has made a special study
of the problem of the Indian backward classes. The very fact that the
governmental agencies and 'above all the courts have been obliged to examine
the constitutional principles in the light of the egalitarian pressures has in
its turn opened up hardly foreseen complexities that had lain buried in the
doctrine of equality'. The society which cherishes the ideal of equality has to
define the meaning and content of the concept of equality and the choices open
to it to bring about an egalitarian society would always be political. But the
courts have been forced to scrutinise a variety of choices, while the society
for which they have to answer has been issuing a proliferation of demands. What
is 'coming about, in short, is a transformation of consciousness which is
tinged with sensations of in justice and exploitation'. Many inequalities in
the past seemed almost to have been part of the order of nature. 'The categories
of equality can thus in a sense be seen to correspond to levels of awareness.
Perhaps not all inequalities can ever be rectified and it is certain that some
can be rectified only by creating new inequalities and new grievances. It is
this that has made the judiciary the fulcrum of such continuous tension for it
is the judiciary and above all the Supreme Court which has the duty of
mediating these conflicting demands back to society through the prism of
constitutional interpretation'. The courts, however, deal with the problems
that society presents.
'Levels of awareness and corresponding senses
of grievance have arisen at different times for particular historical reasons
often tend 440 ing to differentiate among the categories of equality rather
than unifying them. Inequalities of class, race, religion and sex have
presented themselves at different periods as primary grievances'. Equality of
opportunity revolves around two dominant principles-(1) the traditional value
of equality of opportunity and (2) the newly appreciated-not newly
conceived-idea of equality of results. 'Social justice may demand and political
interests may make expedient a policy of correction in favour of individual
members of minorities or communities. But at this point whenever any action was
taken the principle of individual equality of opportunity lost its direction.
Such affirmative action played off not one individual of one group against
another of another group, but the present against the past. In past many
privileged persons of mediocre ability had benefited from the indulgence of a
system that unquestionably biased in favour of higher castes.' 'Individual
aspirations claim the protection of society's rules. But they are not always in
harmony and sometimes conflict with the same society's broad interest in
achieving certain kinds of racial or group balance.' But rectification of
imbalance also sometimes tends towards inequality. 'Societies do not work on
absolute rationality, excess of rationality often tends to dehumanise human
relations'. The courts are also reminded that for those who are suffering from
deprivation of inalienable rights, gradualism can never be a sufficient remedy
because as Ralph Buoche observed 'inalienable rights cannot be enjoyed
posthumously'. Ours is a 'struggle for status, a struggle to take democracy off
parchment and give it life'.
'Social injustice always balances its books
with red ink'.
Neither the caprice of personal taste nor the
protection of vested interests can be stand as reasons for restricting
opportunities of any appropriately qualified person. These are the
considerations which sometimes may be conflicting that should weigh with the
courts dealing with cases arising out of the doctrine of equality. It should,
however, be remembered that the courts by themselves are not in a position to
bring the concept of equality into fruitful action. They should be supported by
the will of the people, of the Government and of the legislators. There should
be an emergence of united action on the part of all segments of human society.
This is not all. Mere will to bring about equality under the existing economic
level might worsen the situation. There should be at the same time a united
action to increase the national resources so that the operation of equality
will be less burdensome 441 and every member of the society is carried to a
higher social and economic level leaving nobody below a minimum which
guarantees all the basic human needs to every member of the society. If there
is no united action the pronouncements by courts would become empty words as
many of the high principles adumberated in the chapter on the Directive
Principles of State Policy in the Constitution have turned out to be owing to
several factors which need not be detailed here. We shall proceed to consider
this case against this background.
In this case, the Court is called upon to
resolve the conflict between 'the meritarian principle and the compensatory
principle' in the matter of admissions into institutions imparting higher education
and of entry into Government service in the State of Karnataka. All the
contestants depend upon one or the other clauses of the Constitution in support
of their case. Hence the problem is rendered more difficult.
Those who argue in support of merit contend
that the State should remove all man-made obstacles which are in the way of an
Individual and allow him to attain his goal in an atmosphere of free
competition relying upon his own natural skill and intelligence. Those who
argue for compensatory principle contend that in order that the competition may
be 'fair and not just free' it is the duty of the State to take note of the
unequal situation of the individuals concerned which has led to unequal
capacities amongst them and to reduce the rigours of free competition which
may, unless looked into by the State, lead to perpetual denial of equality of
opportunity to the weak and the neglected sections of society. This argument is
based on the well founded assumption that unequal conditions of cultural life
at home cause unequal cultural development of children belonging to different
strata of society. The need for social action is necessitated by the
environment factors and living conditions of the individuals concerned. The
application of the principle of individual merit, unmitigated by other
considerations, may quite often lead to inhuman results. The following
illustration given by Bernard Williams establishes the above statement:
"Suppose that in a certain society great
prestige is attached to membership of a warrior class, the duties of which
require great physical strength. This class has in the past been recruited from
certain wealthy families 442 only ; but egalitarian reforms achieve a change in
the rules, by which warriors are recruited from all sections of the society, on
the results of a suitable competition, The effect of this, however, is that the
wealthy families still provide virtually all the warriors, because the rest of
the populage is so under- nourished by reason of poverty that their physical
strength is inferior to that of the weal thy and well- no nourished. The
reformers protest that equality of opportunity has not really been achieved;
the wealthy reply that in fact it has, and that the poor now have the
opportunity of becoming warriors- it is just bad luck that their
characteristics are such that they do not pass the test. 'We are not,' they
might say, 'excluding anyone for being poor, we exclude people for being weak,
and it is unfortunate that those who are poor are also weak.' This answer would
seem to most people feeble and even cynical This is for reasons similar to
those discused before in connection with equality before the law; that the
supposed equality of opportunity is quite empty indeed, one may say any that it
does not really exist- unless it is made more effective than this. For one
knows that it could be made more effective: one knows that there is a casual
connection between being poor and being under nourished, and between being
undernourished and being physically weak. One suppose further that something
could be done-subject to whatever economic conditions obtain in the imagined
society to alter the distribution of wealth. All this being so, the appeal by
the wealthy to the 'bad luck' of the poor must appear as disingenuous."
The former princely State of Mysore which now forms part of the State of
Karnataka is one of the earliest States in the country in which the system of
reservation for backward classes in public ser vices was introduced. In 1918,
the Government of His Highness the Maharaja of Mysore appointed a committee
under the chairmanship of Sir Leslie C. Miller, Chief Justice of the Chief
Court of Mysore to investigate and report on the problem of backward classes.
The questions referred to that Committee were
(i) changes needed in the then existing rules of recruitment to public
services; (ii) special 443 facilities to encourage higher and professional
education among the members of backward classes and (iii) any other special
measures which might be taken to increase the representation of backward
communities in the public services without materially affecting the efficiency,
due regard being paid also to the general good accruing to the State by a wider
diffusion of education and feeling of increased status which will thereby be
produced in the backward communities. It is significant that the expression
'backward classes' and 'backward communities' were used almost interchangeably
and that the idea contained in Article 335 of the Constitution that any reservation
made should not impair efficiency was anticipated more than three decades
before the Constitution was enacted. The Committee submitted its report in 1921
containing its opinion that all communities in the State other than Brahmins
should be understood as backward communities regarding whom it made certain
recommendations. The Government orders issued on the basis of that Report
continued to be in force till 1956 i.e.
the reorganisation of States which brought
together five integrating units-the former State of Maysore (including Bellary
District), Coorg, four districts of Bombay, certain portions of the State of
Hyderabad and the district of South Kanara and the Kollegal Taluk which
formerly formed part of the State of Madras. There were different lists of
backward communities in the five integrating units and they were allowed to
continue for sometime even after the reorganisation of States- In order to
bring about uniformity the State Government issued a notification containing
the list of backward classes for the purpose of Article 15(4) of the
Constitution at the beginning of 1959. The validity of that notification and of
another notification issued thereafter on the same topic which according to the
State Government had treated all persons except Brahmins. Banias and Kayasthas
as backward communities was challenged before the High Court of Mysore in Rama
Krishna Singh v. State of Maysore.(l) The two notifications were struck down by
the HighCourt. The High Court held that inasmuch as the impugned notifications
contained a list of backward classes including 95% of the population of the
State and all Hindu communities other than Brahmins, Banias and Kayasthas and
all other non- Hindu communities in the State except Anglo-Indians and Parsees
had been treated as backward classes it resulted more in a discrimination
against the few excluded communities consisting of about 5% of the total
population rather than making provision for socially and (1) A.I.R.. 1960 Mys.
338.
444 educationally backward classes. The High
Court held that making A provision for communities which were slightly backward
to the so called forward communities did not amount to making provision for the
communities which really needed protection under Article 15(4) of the
Constitution. The argument of the petitioners in that case that socially and
educationally backward classes can in no case be determined on the basis of
caste was, however, rejected. After the above decision was rendered by the High
Court, the State Government constituted a Committee OD January 8, 1960 under
the Chairmanship of Dr. R. Nagan Gowda for the purpose of determining the
criteria for the classification of backward classes in the State with the
following terms of reference:
( I) to suggest the criteria to be adopted in
determining which sections of the people in the State should be treated as
socially and educationally backward and (2) to suggest the exact manner in
which the criteria thus indicated should be followed to enable the State
Government to determine the persons who should secure such preference as may be
determined by Government in respect of admissions to technical institutions and
appointment to Government services. The said committee submitted its Interim
Report on February 19, 1960. On the basis of the Interim Report of the
Committee, the State Government passed an order dated June 9, 1960 regarding
admissions to professional and technical institutions reserving 22% of seats
for backward classes, 15% for Scheduled Castes and 2% for Scheduled Tribes and
the remaining 60% of seats were allowed to be filled upon the basis of merit.
The above Government order was, challenged before the High Court of Mysore in
S.A. Partha & Ors. v. The State of Mysore & Ors.(l) The High Court
found that the direction contained in the Government order to the effect that
if any seat or seats reserved for candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes remained unfilled, the same shall be filled by candidates
of other backward classes was unconstitutional. It also gave some directions
regarding the manner in which the calculation of the quota of reservation
should be made. Thereafter the Final Report was submitted by the Nagan Gowda
Committee on May 16, 1961 After taking into consideration the recommendations
made in the said Report, the State Government issued an order for the purpose
of Article 15 (4) of the Constitution on July 10, 1961. By that order, the
State Government specified 81 classes of people as backward classes and 13 S
classes of people as more backward classes and reserved 30% of (1) A.I.R.. 1961
Mys. 220.
445 seats in the professional and technical
institutions for backward and more backward classes. 15% and 3% of the seats
were reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes respectively and the
remaining 52% of the seats were allowed to be filled up on merit. The above
order was superseded by a fresh Government order made on July 31, 1962 for the
purpose of Article 15 (4). By this new order, 28% of the seats were reserved
for the backward classes, 22% for the more backward classes, 15 per cent for
the Scheduled Castes and 3 per cent for the Scheduled Tribes. Thus 68 per cent
of the seats were reserved under Article 15 (4) of the Constitution and only 32
per cent of the seats became available for being filled up on the basis of
merit. This order was challenged before this Court under Article 32 of the
Constitution in M.R. Balaji and Ors. v. State of Mysore.(1) In the decision
rendered in that case which is considered to be land-mark in the constitutional
pronouncement made by this Court, Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then was) explained
the meaning of the term 'socially and educationally backward classes' appearing
in Article 15 (4) of the Constitution at pages 459-461 thus:
"The backwardness under Art. 15 (4) must
be social and educational. It is not either social or educational but it is
both social and educational; and that takes us to the question as to how social
and educational backwardness has to be determined.
Let us take the question of social
backwardness first. By what test should it be decided whether a particular
class is socially backward or not ? The group of citizens to whom Article 15
(4) applies are described as 'classes of citizens', not as castes of citizens.
A class, according to the dictionary meaning, shows division of society
according to status, rank or caste. In the Hindu social structure, caste,
unfortunately plays an important part in determining the status of the citizen.
Though according to sociologists and Vedic scholars, the caste system may have
originally begun on occupational or functional basis, in course of time, it
became rigid and inflexible. The history of the growth of caste system shows
that its original functional and occupational basis was later over- burdened
with considerations of purity based on ritual (1) [1963] Supp. S.C.R. 439, 446
concepts and that led to its ramifications which introduced inflexibility and
rigidity. This artificial growth inevitably tended to create a feeling of
superiority and inferiority and to foster narrow caste loyalties. Therefore, in
dealing with the question as to whether any class of citizens is socially
backward or not, it may not be 13 irrelevant to consider the caste of the said
group of citizens. In this connection, it is, however, necessary to bear in
mind that the special provision is contemplated for classes of citizens and not
for individual citizens as such, and so, though the caste of the group of
citizens may be relevant, its importance should not be exaggerated.
If the classification of backward classes of
citizens was based solely on the caste of the citizen, it may not always be
logical and may perhaps contain the vice of perpetuating the castes themselves.
Besides, if the caste of the group of
citizens was made the sole basis for determining the social backwardness of the
said group, that test would inevitably break down in relation to many sections
of Indian Society which do not recognise castes in the conventional sense known
to Hindu Society. How is one going to decide whether Muslims, Christians or
Jains, or even Lingayats are socially, backward or not ? The test of castes
would be inapplicable to those groups, but that would hardly justify the
exclusion of these groups in to from the operation of Art. 15 (4). It is not
unlikely that in some States some Muslims or Christians or Jains forming groups
may be socially backward. That is why we think that though castes in relation
to Hindus may be a relevant factor to consider in determining the social
backwardness of groups or classes of citizens, it cannot be made the sole or
the dominant test in that behalf. Social backwardness is on the ultimate
analysis the result of poverty, to a very large extent. The classes of citizens
who are deplorably poor automatically became socially backward.
They do not enjoy a status in society and
have, therefore, to be content to take a backward seat. It is true that social
backwardness which results from poverty is likely lo be aggravated by
considerations of caste to which the poor citizens may belong, but that 447
only shows the relevance of both caste and poverty in determining the
backwardness of citizens. A The occupations of citizens may also contribute to
make classes of citizens Socially backward. There are some occupations which
are treated as inferior according to conventional beliefs and classes of
citizens who follow these occupations are apt to become socially backward. The
place of habitation also plays not a minor part in determining the backwardness
of a community of persons. In a sense, the problem of social backwardness is
the problem of Rural India and in that behalf, classes of citizens occupying a
socially backward position in rural area-fall within the purview of Art. 15 (4)
The problem of determining who are socially backward classes is undoubtedly
very compleat Sociological, social and economic considerations come into play
in solving the problem and evolving proper criteria for determining which
classes are socially backward is obviously a very difficult task; it will need
an elaborate investigation and collection of data and examining the said data
in a rational and scientific way. That is the function of the State which
purports to act under Art 15 (4). All that this Court is called upon to do in
dealing which the present petitions is to decide whether the tests applied by
the impugned order are valid under Art. 15 (4). If it appears that the test
applied by the order in that behalf is improper and invalid, then the
classification of socially back ward classes based on that test will have to be
held to be inconsistent with the requirements of Art. 15 (4)." Dealing
with the question of determination of the classes which were educationally
backward, Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then was) observed in the same case at
pages 463- 464 thus:
"It may be conceded that in determining
the educational backwardness of a class of citizens the literacy test supplied
by the Census Reports may not be adequate; but it is doubtful if the test of
the average of student population in the last three High School classes is
appropriate in determining the educational backwardness. Having regard to the
fact that the test is intended to determine who are educationally backward
classes, it may 448 not be necessary or proper to put the test as high as has
been done by the Committee. But even assuming that the test applied is rational
and permissible under Art.
15 (4), the question still remains as to
whether it would be legitimate to treat castes or communities which are just
below the State average as educationally backward classes. If the State average
is 6.9 per thousand, a community which satisfies the said test or is just below
the said test cannot be regarded as backward. It is only communities which are
well below the State average that can properly be regarded as educationally
backward classes of citizens. Classes of citizens whose average of student
population works below 50 per cent of the State average are obviously
educationally backward classes of citizens. Therefore, in our opinion, the
State was not justified in including in the list of Backward Classes, castes or
communities whose average of student population per thousand was slightly above
or very near, or just below the State average." (underlining by us)
Applying the above rule the Court held that the inclusion of members of the
Lingayat community in the list of backward classes was erroneous. On the
question of extent of reservation that can be made, this Court observed in the
aforesaid case at pages 469-471 thus:
"The learned Advocate-General has
suggested that reservation of a large number of seats for the weaker sections
of the society would not affect either the depth or efficiency of scholarship
at all, and in support of this argument, he has relied on the observations made
by the Backward Classes Commission that it found no complaint in the States of
Madras, Andhra, Travancore-Cochin and Mysore where the system of recruiting
candidates from other Backward Classes to the reserve quota has been in vogue
for several decades. The Committee further observed that the representatives of
the upper classes did not complain about any lack of efficiency in the offices
recruited by reservation (p. 135). This opinion, however, is plainly
inconsistent with what is bound to be the inevitable consequence of reservation
in higher university education. If admission to professional and technical
colleges is unduly liberalist it would be idle to contend 449 that the quality
of our graduates will not suffer. That is not to say that reservation should
not be adopted; A reservation should and must be adopted to advance the
prospects of the weaker sections of society, but in providing for special
measures in that behalf care should be taken not to exclude admission to higher
educational centres to deserving and qualified candidates of other communities.
A special provision contemplated by Art. 15 (4) like reservation of posts and
appointments contemplated by Art. 16 (4) must be within reasonable limits. The
interests of weaker sections of society which are a first charge on the States
and the Center have to be adjusted with the interests of the community as a
whole. The adjustment of these competing claims is undoubtedly a difficult
matter, but if under the guise of making a special provision, a State reserves
practically all tho seats available in all the colleges, that clearly would be
subverting the object of Art. 15 (4). In this matter again, we are reluctant to
say definitely what would be a proper provision to make. Speaking generally and
in a broad way, a special provision should be less than 50 per cent; how much
less than 50 per cent would depend upon the relevant prevailing circumstances
in each case. In this particular case, it is remarkable that when the State
issued its order on July 10, 1961, it emphatically expressed its opinion that
the reservation of 68 per cent recommended by the `Nagging Gowada Committee
would not be in the larger interests of the State. What happened between July
10, 1961 and July 31, 1962, does not appear on the record. But the State
changed its mind and adopted the recommendation of the Committee ignoring its
earlier decision that the said recommendation was contrary to the larger
interests of the State. In our opinion, when the State makes a special
provision for the advancement of the weaker sections of society specified in
Art. 15 (4), it has to approach its task objectively and in a rational manner.
Undoubtedly, it has to take reasonable and
even generous steps to help the advancement of weaker elements; the extent of
the problem must be weighed, the requirements of the community at large must be
borne in mind and a formula must be evolved which would strike a reasonable
balance between the several relevant considerations. Therefore, 450 we are
satisfied that the reservation of 68 per cent directed by the impugned order is
plainly inconsistent with Art. 15 (4)." (Emphasis added) The petition was
thus allowed by this Court.
Then came the Government order dated July 26,
1963 which directed that 30 per cent of the seats in professional and technical
colleges and institutions should be reserved for backward classes as defined in
that order and that 18 per cent of the seats should be reserved for the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The criteria laid down in that order for
determining social and economic backwardness were two-fold-income and
occupation. It stated that those who followed occupations of agriculture, petty
business, inferior service, crafts or other occupations involving manual labour
and whose family income was less than Rs.
1,2001- per annum were to be treated as
belonging to backward classes. This order was questioned before the High Court
in G. Viswanath v. Govt. of Mysore and Ors.(l) by some petitioners on various
grounds. While dismissing the said petitions, the High Court observed that the
determination of the backward classes without reference to caste altogether was
not correct and it expressed the hope that the State would make a more
appropriate classification lest its bonafides should be questioned. In the
appeal filed against this judgment in R. Chitralekha and Anr. v. State of
Mysore and Ors.,(2) the correctness of the above observation was questioned.
Dealing with that question Subba Rao, J. (as he then was), who spoke for the
majority, said that the observations of the High Court referred to above were
inconsistent with the decision in Balaji's case (supra).
After referring to the relevant observations
made by this Court in Balaji' case (supra), Subba Rao, J. (as he then was)
observed at pages 386-387 thus:
"Two principles stand out prominently
from the said observations, namely, (i) the caste of a group of citizens may be
a relevant circumstance in ascertaining their social backwardness; and (ii)
though it is a relevant factor to determine the social backwardness of a class
of citizens, it cannot be the sole or dominant test in that behalf.
(1) A.I.R. 1964 Mys. 132.
(2) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 368 451 The observations
extracted in the judgment of the High Court appear to be in conflict with the
observations Of A this Court. While this Court said that caste is only a
relevant circumstance and that it cannot be the dominant test in ascertaining
the backwardness of a class of citizens, the High Court said that it is an
important basis in determining the class of backward Hindus and that the
Government should have adopted caste as one of the tests As the said
observations made by the High Court may lead to some confusion in the mind of
the authority concerned who may be entrusted with the duty of prescribing the
rules for ascertaining the backwardness of classes of citizens within the
meaning of Art. 15 (4) of the Constitution, we would hasten to make it clear
that caste is only a relevant circumstance in ascertaining the backwardness of
a class and there is nothing in the judgment of this Court which precludes the
authority concerned from determining the social backwardness of a group of
citizens if it can do so without reference to caste.
While this Court has not excluded caste from
ascertaining the backwardness of a class of citizens, it has not made it one of
the compelling circumstances according a basis for the ascertainment of
backwardness of a class. To put it differently, the authority concerned may
take caste into consideration in ascertaining the backwardness of a group of
persons;
but, if it does not, its order will not be
bad on that account, if it can ascertain the backwardness of a group of persons
on the basis of other relevant criteria." (Underlining by us) Proceeding
further, Subba Rao, J. (as he then was) observed at pages 388-389 thus:
"The important factor to be noticed in
Art. 5(4) is that it does not speak of castes, but only speaks Or classes. If
the makers of the Constitution intended to take castes also as units of social
and educational backwardness, they would have said so as they have said in the
case of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes. Though it may be
suggested that the wider expression "classes" is used in cl. (4) of
Art. 15 as there are communities without castes, if take intention was to
equate classes with castes, 452 nothing prevented the marks of the Constitution
from A using the empression "backwarded classes or castes".
The juxtaposition of the expression
"backward classes" and "Scheduled Castes" in Art. 15(4)
leads to a reasonable inference that the empression "classes" is not
synonymous with castes. It may be that for ascertaining whether a particular
citizen or a group of citizens belong to a backward class or not, his or their
caste may have some relevance, but it can not be either the sole or the
dominant criterion for ascertaining the class to which he or they belong.
This interpretation will carry out the
intention of the Constitution expressed in the aforesaid Articles. It helps the
really backward classes instead or promoting the interests of individuals or
groups who, though they belong to a particular caste a majority whereof is
socially and educationally backward, really belong to a class which is socially
and educationally advanced. To illustrate, take a caste in a State which is
numerically the largest therein. It may be that though a majority of the people
in that caste are socially and educationally backward, an effective minority
may be socially and educationally far more advanced than another
small-sub-caste the total number of which is far less then the said minority.
If we interpret the empression "classes" as "castes" the
object of the Constitution will be frustrated and the people who do not deserve
any adventitious aid may get it to the exclusion of those who really deserve.
This anomally will not arise if, without equating caste with class, caste is
taken as only one of the considerations to ascertain whether a person belongs
to a backward class or not. On the other hand, if the entire sub-caste, by and
large, is backward, it may be included in the Scheduled Castes by following the
appropriate procedure laid down by the Constitution".
In 1972, tho State Government appointed the
Karnataka Backward Classes Commission under the chairmanship of Shri L. G.
Havanur which after an elaborate enquiry submitted its Report on November 19,
1975 in four massive volumes, the first volume containing two parts. rt is
stated that the commission counted a socio-economic survey of 378 villages and
town/city blocks in their entirety covering more than 3,55,000 individuals
belonging to 453 171 castes and communities with the help of more than 425
investigators and supervisors. About 365 witnesses were examined by A the
Commission. The Report of the Commission is full of tabular statements and it
refer to a number of writings by sociologists, demographers, jurists and
persons will versed in social sciences. The work of the Commission deserves to
be commended as such an extensive investigation into the conditions of backward
classes had not been conducted in the State so far Perhaps till than in no
other part of India, such on elaborate investigation had been carried out with
reference to so many minute details. The commission recommended that persons belonging
to backward classes for purpose of Article 15(4) of the Constitution should be
divided into three groups-(a) backward communities consisting of 15 castes, (b)
backward castes consisting of 128 castes and (c) backward tribes consisting of
62 tribes.
For purposes Or Article 16(4) of the
Constitution, the Commission divided the backward classes into (a) backward
communities consisting of 9 castes. (b) backward castes consisting of 115
castes and (c) backward tribes consisting of 61 tribes. According to the
Commission, backward communities were those castes whose student average of
students passing S. S. L. C. examination in 1972 per thousand of population was
below the State average (which was 1.69 per thousand) but above 50 per cent of
the State average and backward castes and backward tribes were those castes and
tribes whose student average was below 50 per sent of the State average except
in the case of Dombars and Voddars and those who were Nomadic and de-notified
tribes.
The total population of these backward
classes (other then Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, according to the
Commission, was about 45 per cent of the total population of the State. The
difference between the two lists-one under Article 15(4) and the other under
Article 16(4) of the Constitution was due to the exclusion of certain
communities, castes and tribes which were socially and educationally backward
but which had adequate representation in the services from the list prepared
for the purpose of Article 16(4). The Commission recommended both for purpose
of Article 15(4) and Article 16 4) the following percentage of reservations:
(i) Backward communities 16 percent (ii)
Backward castes 10 percent (iii) Backward tribes 6 percent ------------ Total:
32 percent 454 The above reservation of 32 per cent along with 18 per cent
reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes together amounted to 50 per
cent of the total seats or posts, as the case may be. The Commission further
recommended that if seats/posts remained unfilled in the quota allotted to
backward tribes, they should be made over to backward communities and backward
castes. Similarly if seats/posts remain unfilled in the quota allotted to
backward castes, they should be made over to backward communities and backward
tribes. If, however, seats/posts remain unfilled in the quota allotted to any
of those three categories, they should be made over to Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. In the event of seats/posts remaining unfilled by any of
these categories, they should be transferred to the general pool.
After considering the Report of the Backward
Classes Commission, the State Government issued an order dated February 22,
1977 the material part of which read as follows:
"1 After careful consideration of the
various recommendations made by the Commission, Government are pleased to
direct as follows:
I. The Backward Communities, Backward Castes
and Backward Tribes as mentioned in the list appended to this Order shall be
treated as Backward Classes for purposes of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of
the Constitution of India. Only such citizens of these Backward Classes whose
family income per annum from all sources is Rs. 8,000 , (Rupees eight thousand
only) and below shall be entitled to special treatment under these Articles.
II. The following five categories of citizens
shall be considered as a special group and such citizens of this Special Group
whose family income is Rs. 4,800 (Rupees Four Thousand eight Hundred only) and
below per annum shall be eligible for special treatment under these Articles:
(i) an actual cultivator;
(ii) an artisan;
(iii) a petty businessman;
455 (iv) one holding an appointment either in
Government service or corresponding services under A private employment
including casual labour; and (v) any person self employed or engaged in any
occupation involving manual labour.
Note :- Family income under sub-paras I and
II above means income of the citizen and his parents and if either of the
Parents is dead, his legal guardian.
III. To fix the reservation for purposes of
Articles ] 5(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution in respect of the Backward
Classes and the Special Group of citizens at 40 per cent, the allocation being
as follows:
(a) Backward Communities 20 (twenty per cent)
(b) Backward Castes 10 (ten per cent) (c) Backward Tribes 5(five per cent) (d)
Special Group 5(five per cent) E In the list of Backward communities mentioned
in the Government order, the State Government included 'Muslims' thus making a
total of 16 backward communities In the list of backward castes, there were 129
castes including converts into Christianity from Scheduled Castes/Scheduled
Tribes up to second generation and 62 Schedules Tribes. The reservation for
backward classes was 40 per cent and taken along with 18 per cent for Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes, the total reservation of seats/posts came to 58
per cent leaving only 42 per cent for merit pool. By an order dated May 1,
1979, the reservation for backward communities was reduced to 18 per cent for purposes
of Article 16(4). By an order dated June 27, 1979, the State Government
modified the Government order dated February 22, 1977 by increasing the
reservation for 'Special Group' from 5 per cent to 15 per cent both for
purposes of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the Constitution. Thus as on
date, the total reservation for purposes of Article 15(4) in 68 per cent and
tor purposes of Article 16(4) is 66 per cent. There are only 32 per 456 cent
seats in professional and technical colleges and 34 per cent posts in
Government services which can be filled up on the basis of merits.
In these writ petitions filed under Article
32 of the Constitution the above Government orders dated February 22, 1977 as
modified by the Government orders dated May 1, 1979 and June 27, 1979 are
challenged.
It should be stated here that the Government
orders dated February 22, 1977 and another notification dated March 4, 1977
issued for purposes of Article 16(4) had also been challenged in a number of
writ petitions filed under Article 226 of the Constitution before the High
Court of Karnataka in S.C. Somashekarappa & Ors. v. State of Karnataka
& Ors.(l) The High Court allowed the writ petitions in part.
It quashed the inclusion of 'Arasu' community
in the list of 'Backward Communities' both for purposes of Article 15(4) and
Article 16(4). It also quashed inclusion of the (i) Balaji,(ii) Devadiga, (iii)
Gangia, (iv) Nayiada, (v) Rajput and (vi) Satani in the list of backward
communities and the inclusion of (1) Banha, (2) Gurkha, (3) Jat, (4) Konga, (5)
Kotari, (6) Koyava, (7) Malayali, (&) Maniyanani or (Muniyani), (9)
Padarti, ( 10) Padiyar, (11) Pandavakulam, (12) Raval and (13) Rawat in the
list of Backward Castes for purposes of Article 16(4) of the Constitution. Reservation
of 20 per cent made for Backward Communities in the State Civil Services under
Article 16(4) was quashed reserving liberty to the State Government to
determine the extent of reservation in accordance with law. The classification
and reservation in other respects was upheld. S.L.P. (Civil) No.
6656 of 1979 is filed against the said
judgment of the High Court under Article ] 36 of the Constitution. The two
Government orders dated May 1, 1979 and June 27, 1979 referred to above
modifying the earlier Government orders were passed after the judgment of the
High Court was pronounced, as stated above.
Volumes have been written on the caste system
prevailing in India. The caste (varna) has its origin in antiquity. We find
reference to it in the vedic lore and in the great epics, in the Smritis and in
the Puranas. Purusha Sukta refers to the prevalence of the four Varnas (caste)
(See Rig Veda X-90-12). The Lord says in the (1) Writ Petition No. 4371 of 1977
and connected writ petitions disposed of on April 9, 1979.
457 Bhagavadgita (lV- 13) that the fourfold
caste was created by him by the varying distribution of guna and karma. Varna
Dharma is extold in many ancient treaties. However laudable the division of
society into different castes at the commencement might have been, during the
several centuries that followed these castes became petrified making mobility
from one caste to another almost impossible. The caste of a person was known by
his birth. There arose in course of time a social hierarchy built upon the caste
system. The stigma of low caste was attached to a person during his whole life
with all the attendant disadvantages. Karua, the tragic hero of the Mahabharata
though born of a Kshatriya princess had to suffer ignominy during his entire
life time as he came to be known as the son of a charioteer (Suta) belonging to
a low caste. He was made to say 'I may be a charioteer or a charioteer's son. I
may be anybody. What does it matter ? Being born in a (high) caste is God's
will but valour belongs to me.' (See Veni Samhara by Bhatta Narayana).
There were many sub-castes of different
degrees in the hierarchy. Some were even treated as untouchables. People of low
castes became socially backward and they in their turn neglected studies. Thus
they became socially and educationally backward. This part of the Indian
history is dismal indeed. A page of history is worth a volume of logic.
We are aware of the meanings of the words
caste, race, or tribe or religious minorities in India. A caste is an
association of families which practice the custom of endogamy i.e which permits
marriages amongst the member.
belonging to such families only. Caste rules
prohibit its members from marrying outside their caste. There are subgroups
amongst the castes which sometimes inter marry and sometimes do not. A caste is
based on various factors, sometimes it may be a class, a race or a racial unit.
A caste has nothing to do with wealth. The caste of a person is governed by his
birth in a family. Certain ideas of ceremonial purity are peculiar to each
caste. Sometimes caste practices even led to segregation of same castes in the
villages- Even the choice of occupation of members of castes was predetermined
in many cases, and the members of a particular caste were prohibited from engaging
themselves in other types of callings, professions or occupations Certain
occupations were considered to be degrading or impure. A certain amount of
rigidity developed in several matters and many who 458 belonged to castes which
were lower in social order were made to A suffer many restrictions, privations
and humiliations. Untouchability was practised against members belonging to
certain castes. Inter dining was prohibited in some cases. None of these rules
governing a caste had anything to do with either the individual merit of a
person or his capacity. The wealth owned by him would not save him from many
social discriminations practised by members belonging to higher castes.
Children who grew in this caste- ridden atmosphere naturally suffered from many
social disadvantages apart from the denial of opportunity to live in the same
kind of environment in which persons of higher castes lived. Many social
reformers have tried in the last two centuries to remove the stigma of caste
from which people born in lower castes were suffering. Many laws were also
passed prohibiting some of the inhuman caste practices.
Article 15 (2) of the Constitution provides
that no citizen shall on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of
birth or any of them be subject to any disability, liability, restriction, or
condition with regard to (a) access to shops, public restaurants, hotels and
places of public entertainment or (b) use of wells, tanks, bathing ghats, roads
and places of public resort maintained wholly or partly out of State funds or
dedicated to the use of the general public. Article 16 (2) declared that no
person shall be ineligible to hold any civil post on grounds of religion, race,
caste or descent. Article 17 abolished 'untouchability' and its practice in any
form. Yet the disadvantages from which many of the persons who belonged to
various lower castes were suffering are still persisting notwithstanding the
fact that some of them have progressed economically. socially and
educationally. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru writes on the social problems created by
tho caste system which is peculiar to India in those terms:
"The conception and practice of caste
embodied the aristocratic ideal and was obviously opposed to democratic
conceptions. It had its strong sense of noblesse oblige, provided people kept
to their hereditary stations and did not challenge the established order.
India's success and achievements were on the whole confined to the upper
classes; those lower down in the scale had very few chances and their
opportunities were strictly limited. These upper classes were not small limited
groups but large in numbers and there was a difusion of power, authority and
influence. Hence they carried on successfully 459 for a very long period. But
the ultimate weakness and failing of the caste system and the Indian social
structure were that they degraded a mass of human beings and gave them no
opportunities lo get out of that condition- educationally, culturally, or
economically. That degradation brought deterioration, all along the line
including in its scope even the upper classes. It led to the petrification
which became a dominant feature of India's economy and life. The contrasts
between this social structure and those existing elsewhere in the past were not
great, but with the changes that have taken place all over the world during the
past few generations they have become far more pronounced. In the context of
society today, the caste system and much that goes with it are wholly
incompatible, reactionary, restrictive and barriers to progress. There can be
no equality in status and opportunity within its framework nor can there be
political democracy and much less economic democracy.
Between these two conceptions conflict is
inherent and only one of them can survive." (Jawaharlal Nehru: 'The
Discovery of India' 1974 Edn. Chapter VI at pp. 256- 257).
An examination of the question in the
background of the Indian social conditions shows that the expression 'backward
classes used in the Constitution referred only to those who were born in
particular castes, or who belonged to particular races or tribes or religious
minorities which were backward.
It is now necessary to ascertain the true
meaning of the expression 'backward classes' found in Articles 15, Article 16,
Article 338 (3) and Article 340 of the Constitution. Article 338 and Article
340 are in Part XVI of the Constitution entitled 'special provisions relating
to certain classes'. The corresponding part in the Draft Constitution was Part
XIV entitled special provisions relating to minorities which contained nine
Articles, Articles 292 to 301. Article 292 of the Draft Constitution referred
to reservation of seats for minorities in the House of the People, the
minorities being, the Muslim community and the Scheduled Castes, certain
Scheduled Tribes and the Indian Christian community. Article 293 of the Draft
Constitution made special provision regarding the representation of the
Anglo-Indian community in the House of the People. Article 294 of the Draft
Constitution dealt with reservation 460 of seats for the Muslim community,
Scheduled Castes, certain A Scheduled Tribes and the Indian Christian community
in the State Legislatures. Article 295 of the Draft Constitution authorised the
Governor to nominate a representative of the Anglo-lndian community to a State
Legislature in certain cases. Article 296 of the Draft Constitution required
the Union and the States to appoint members belonging to all minority
communities in the State services consistently with the maintenance of
efficiency of administration. Article 297 of the Draft Constitution required
the Union to appoint members of the Anglo-lndian community in certain services
as stated therein and Article 298 of the Draft Constitution provided for
certain educational concessions to the Anglo Indian community over a certain
specified period. Article 299 of the Draft Constitution required the President
to appoint a Special Officer for minorities for the Union and the Governor to
appoint a Special Officer for minorities for a State. Administration of
Scheduled areas and welfare of certain Scheduled Tribes were entrusted to the
President by Article 300 of the Draft Constitution and it made provision for
appointment of a commission for that purpose. Article 301 of the Draft
Constitution authorised the President to appoint a commission to investigate
the conditions of socially and educationally backward classes. It read as
follows:
"301. (1) The President may by order
appoint a Commission consisting of such persons as he thinks fit to investigate
the conditions' of socially and educationally backward classes within the
territory of India and the difficulties under which they labour and to make
recommendations as to the steps that should be taken by the Union or any State
to remove such difficulties and to improve their condition and as to the grants
that should be given for the purpose by the Union or any State and the
conditions subject to which such grants should be given, and the order
appointing such Commission shall define the procedure to be followed by the
Commission.
(2) A Commission so appointed shall
investigate the matters referred to them and present to the President a report
setting out the facts as found by them and making such recommendations as they
think proper.
461 (3) The President shall cause a copy of
the report so presented, together with a memorandum explaining the A action
taken thereon to be laid before Parliament." The Constituent Assembly
after considering the report of the Advisory Committee appointed on July 24,
1947 for the purpose of making its recommendations on the provisions contained
in Part XIV of the Draft Constitution referred to above adopted a resolution
moved by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel which read as follows:
"Resolved that the Constituent Assembly
do proceed to take into consideration the Report dated the 11th May 1949 on the
subject of certain political safeguards for minorities submitted by the
Advisory Committee appointed by the resolution of the Assembly on 24th January
1 47.
Resolved further- (i) that notwithstanding
any decisions already taken by the Constituent Assembly in this behalf, the
provisions of Part X[V of the Draft Constitution of India be so amended as to
give effect to the recommendations of the Advisory Committee contained in the
said report; and E (ii) that the following classes in East Punjab, namely,
Mazhbis, Ramdasias, Kabirpanthis and Sikligars be included in the list of
Scheduled Castes for the Province so that they would be entitled to the benefit
of representation in the Legislatures given to the Scheduled Castes".
(Vide 'the Framing of India's Constitution by
B. Shiva Rao, Vol. IV p. 606).
In the Revised Draft Constitution which was
introduced in the Constituent Assembly on November 3, 1949, the provisions
relating t minorities were incorporated in Part XVI and the title of that Part
read as 'Special Provisions Relating to Minorities' and it contained thirteen
Articles, Article 330 to Article 342. Article 330 provided for reservation of
seats for Scheduled Castes and certain Scheduled Tribes in the Lok Sabha and
Article 332 provided for reservation for them in the Legislative Assemblies of
States. Article 331 and Article 333 dealt with domination of representatives of
the 462 Anglo-Indian community respectively to the Lok Sabha and the A
Legislative Assemblies of States. Article 334 fixed the period during which
reservations and nominations could be made under the above said Articles.
Article 335 required the Union and the States to recognise the claims of
members of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes consistently with the
maintenance of efficiency of administration in the making of appointments by
the Union or the States, as the case may be. Article 336 contained special
provision for the Anglo-Indian community in certain services during the first
two years after the commencement of the Constitution and Article 337 contained
special provision with respect to educational grants for the benefit of the
Anglo-lndian community during a certain period after the commencement of the
Constitution. Article 338 required the President to appoint a Special Officer
for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Article 338(3) stated that
references to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in Article 338 should be construed
as references to such other backward classes as the President might on receipt
of the report of the Commission appointed under Article 340 by order specify
and also to the Anglo-Indian community. Article 340 provided for the
appointment of a Commission by the President to investigate the conditions of
socially and educationally backward classes and the difficulties under which
they labour, Article 341 and Article 342 explained what the terms 'Scheduled
Castes' and 'Scheduled Tribes' meant. The above Articles (Art. 330 to Art. 342
of the Revised Draft of the Constitution) were finally passed by the
Constituent Assembly with the amendment that for the word 'minorities' wherever
it occurred in Part XVI, the words 'certain classes' be substituted The heading
of the Part was, therefore, changed to 'Special Provisions Relating to certain
Classes'.
It is significant that the expression
'backward classes used in Part XVI of the Constitution and the particular in
Article 338(3) is used along with the Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes
and the Anglo-Indian Community. In the original Draft Constitution, the Muslim
community and the Indian Christian community also had been referred to in Part
XVI. In the course of the debates, the question of the members of the Sikh
community was along considered along with these communities. The meaning of
backward classes has, therefore, to be deduced having regard to the other words
preceding it. It is a rule of statutory construction that where there are
general words following particular and specific words, the general words must
be confined to things of the same kind as those specified. It is true that this
rule which is called as the ejusdem generies rule or 463 the rule noscitur a
socis cannot be carried too far. But it is reasonable to apply that rule where
the specific words refer to a distinct A genus or category. The Scheduled
Castes are those castes, races and tribes or parts of or groups within the
castes, races and tribes which are specified in the Public Notification issued
by the President under Article 341(1). Similarly Scheduled Tribes are those
tribes or tribal communities or parts of or groups of within tribes or tribal
communities which are specified in the Public Notification issued by the
President under Article 342(1). This is clear from the definitions of
'Scheduled Castes' and 'Scheduled Tribes' in Article 366(24) and Article
366(25). The notifications issued under Article 341 and Article 342 can be
modified only by a law made by the Parliament (Vide Article 341(2) and Article
342(2). It is thus seen that Part XVI of the Constitution deals with certain
concessions extended to certain castes, tribes and races which are Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes and to the Anglo-Indian community. In the above context
if Article 338(3) and Article 340 are construed, the expression 'backward
classes' can only refer to certain castes, races, tribes or communities or
parts thereof other than Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and the
Anglo-Indian community, which are backward. Thus view also gains support from
the resolution regarding the aims and objects of the Constitution moved by
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru in the Constituent Assembly on December 13, 1946. He
sid: E "I beg to move:
(1) This Constituent Assembly declares its
firm and solemn resolve to proclaim India as an Independent Sovereign Republic
and to draw up for her future governance a Constitution;
(2) Where in the territories that now
comprise British India, the territories that now form the Indian States.
and such other parts of India as are outside
British India at the States as well as such other territories as are willing to
be constituted into the Independent Sovereign India, shall be a Union of them
all; and (3) Where in the said territories, whether with their pre sent
boundaries or with such others as may be determined by the Constituent Assembly
and there after according to the Law of the Constitution, shall 464 possess and
retain the status of autonomous Units, together with residuary powers, and exercise
all powers, and exercise all powers and functions as are vested in or assigned
to the Union, or as are inherent or implied in the Union or resulting
therefrom; and (4) Wherein all power and authority of the Sovereign Independent
India, its constituent parts and organs of government, are derived from the
people; and (5) Wherein shall be guaranteed and secured to all the people of
India justice, social, economic and political; equality of status, of
opportunity, and before the law, freedom of thought, expression, belief, faith,
worship, vocation, association and action, subject to law and public morality;
and (6) Wherein adequate safeguards shall be provided for minorities, Backward
and tribal areas, and depressed and other backward classes; and (7) Wherein
shall be maintained the integrity of the territory of the Republic and its
sovereign rights on land, sea, and air according to Justice and the law of
civilised nations: and (8) this ancient land attains its rightful and honoured
place in the world and make its full and willing contribution to the promotion
of world peace and the welfare of mankind." (Underlining by us) Clause (6)
of the above resolution which was later adopted by the Constituent Assembly
pledged to make adequate safeguards in the Constitution for 'minorities,
backward and tribal areas and depressed and other backward classes' The above
resolution and the history of the enactment of Part XVI of the Constitution by
the Constituent Assembly lead to the conclusion that backward classes are only
those castes, races, tribes or communities, which are identified by birth,
which are backward. It is, therefore, difficult to hold that persons or groups
of persons who are backward merely on account of poverty which is traceable to
economic reasons can also be considered as backward classes for purposes of
Article 16(4) and Part XVI of the Constitution.
465 The word 'backward' was not there before
the words 'class of citizens' in Article 10(3) of the original draft of the
Constitution (the personal Article 16(4)). The Drafting Committee presided over
by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar deliberately introduced it. Dr. Ambedkar gave the reason
for introducing that term as follows:
"Supposing, for instance, reservations
were made for a community or a collection of communities, the total of which
came to something like 70 per cent of the total posts under the State and only
30 per cent are retained as the unreserved, could anybody say that the
reservation of 30 per cent as open to general competition would be satisfactory
from the point of view of giving effect to the first principle, namely that
there shall be equality of opportunity? It cannot be in my judgment. Therefore
the seats to be reserved, if the reservation is to be consistent with
sub-clause (1) of Article 10, must be confined to a minority of seats. It is
then only that the first principle could find its place in the Constitution and
effective (sic) in operation. If Honourable Member under stand this position
then we have to safeguard two things, namely, the principle of equality of
opportunity and at the same time satisfy the demand of communities which have
not had so far representation in the state, then, I am sure they will agree
that unless you use some such qualifying phrase as "backward' the exception
made in favour of reservation will ultimately eat up the rule altogether
Nothing of the rule will remain." (Vide Constituent Assembly Debates,
1948-1949, Vol. VII, pp.
701-702). F The Drafting Committee by
qualifying the expression classes of citizens' by 'backward' in Article 16(4)
of the Constitution tried to reconcile three different points of view and
produced a workable proposition which was acceptable to all, the three points
of view being (1) that there should be equality of opportunity for all citizens
and that every individual qualified for a particular post should be free to
apply for that post, to sit for examinations and to have his qualifications
tested so as to determine whether he was fit for the post or not and that there
ought to be no limitations, there ought to be no hindrance in the operation of
the principle of equality of opportunity; (2) that if the principle of equality
of opportunity was to be operative the Ought to b no reservations of any sort
for any class or 466 community at all and that all citizens if they are
qualified should be A placed on the same footing of equality as far as public
services were concerned and (3) that though the principle of equality of
opportunity was theoritically good there must at the same time be a provision
made for the entry of certain communities which have so far been outside the
administration. The whole tenor of discussion in the Constituent Assembly
pointed to making reservation for a minority of the population including
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes which were socially backward. During the
discussion, the Constitution (first Amendment) Bill by which Article 15(4) was
introduced, Dr. Ambedkar referred to Article 16(4) and said that backward
classes are 'nothing else but a collection of certain castes' (Parliamentary
Debates 1951, Third Session, Part Ir Vol. Xll at p. 9007).
This statement leads to a reasonable
inference that this was the meaning which the Constituent Assembly assigned to
classes' at any rate so far as Hindus were concerned.
In Balaji's case (supra) and in Chifralekha's
case (supra) this Court exhibited a lot of hesitation in equating the
expression 'class' with 'caste' for purposes of Articles 15(4) and Article
16(4) of the Constitution. It observed, as stated earlier, that while caste
might be a relevant circumstance to determine a backward class, it could not,
however, be dominant test. One of the reasons given for not accepting caste
insofar as Hindu community in which caste system was prevalent was concerned as
a dominant test for determining a backward class was that as there were
communities without castes, nothing prevented the makers of the Constitution to
use the expression 'backward classes or castes'. The juxtaposition of the
expression 'backward classes' and 'Scheduled Castes' in Article 15 of the
Constitution, according to the above two decisions, led to a reasonable
inference that expression 'classes' was not synonymous with 'caste'. The Court
while making these observations did not give adequate importance to the evils
of caste system which had led to the backwardness of people belonging to
certain castes and the debates that preceded the enactment of Part XVI and
Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the Constitution- What was in fact
overlooked ! was the history of the Indian social institutions. The makers of
the Il Indian Constitution very well knew that there were a number of i castes
the conditions of whose members were almost similar to the conditions of
members belonging to the Scheduled Castes and to the Scheduled Tribes and that
they also needed to be given adequate protection in order tide over the
difficulties in the way of their 467 progress which were not so much due to
poverty but due to their birth in a particular caste. As mentioned elsewhere in
the course of this judgement. the word 'classes' was substituted in the place
of the word 'communities' by the Constituent Assembly just at the last moment.
The word community meant a caste amongst Hindus or Muslims, or Indian
Christians or Anglo-Indians. Part XVI was not enacted for the purpose of
alleviating the conditions of poorer classes as such which was taken care of by
the provisions of Part IV of the Constitution and in particular by Article 46
and by Article 14, Art. 15(1) and Art. 16(1) of the Constitution which
permitted classification of persons on economic grounds for special treatment
in order to ensure equality of opportunity to all person.
It is of significance that the views
expressed by this Court, however, stood modified by the decisions of this Court
in Minor P. Rajendran v. State of Madras & Ors.,(l) State of Andhra Pradesh
& Anr. v. P. Sagar,(2) Triloki Nath & anr. v. State of Jammu Kashmir
& Ors.(s) A. Peeriakaruppan etc. v. State of Tamil Nadu & Ors.(4) and
State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. v. U.S.V. Balram etc.(5) In Rajendran's case
(supra) while holding that the allocation of seats in Medical Colleges on the
basis of the district to which a candidate belonged was not warranted by Art.
15(4), the Court observed that a caste was also a class of citizens and if the
caste as a whole was socially and educationally backward reservation could be
made in favour of such caste under Art. 1 5(4) In Sagar's case (supra)
reservation of seats was done solely on the basis of caste or community.
There appeared to be no determination of the
fact whether members belonging to such castes or communities were in fact
socially and educationally backward. The court struck down the reservation as
being outside Article I C(4) of the Constitution. The Court. however, observed
at page 600 thus:
' In the context in which it occurs the
expression "class" means a homogeneous section of the people grouped
together because of certain likeness or common traits and who are identifiable
by some common attributes such as status, rank, occupation residence in a
locality, race, (1) [1968] 2 S.C.R 786.
(2) [1968] 3 S.C.R.595 (3) [1969] 1 S C.R.
103.
(4) [1971] 2 S.C.R. 430.
(5) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 247, 468 religion and the
like, In determining whether a particular section forms a class, caste cannot
be excluded altogether. But the determination of a class a test solely based
upon the caste or community cannot also be accepted. By cl. (1), Art. 15
prohibits the State from discriminating against any citizens on grounds only of
religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth or any of them. By cl. (3) Of Art.
15 the State is, notwithstanding the provisions contained in Cl.
(1), permitted to make special provision for
women and children. By cl. (4) a special provision for the advancement of any
socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes is outside the purview of cl. (1). But cl. (4) is
an exception to cl. (1). Being an exception, it cannot be extended so as in
effect to destroy the guarantee of cl. (1). The Parliament has by enacting cl.
(4) attempted to balance as against the right of equality of citizens the
special necessites of the weaker sections of the people by allowing a provision
to be made for their advancement. In order that effect may be given to cl. (4),
it must appear that the beneficaries of the special provision are classes which
are backward socially and educationally and they are other than the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes, and that the provision made is for their
advancement.
Reservation may be adopted to advance the
interests of weaker sections of society, but in doing so, care must be taken to
see that deserving and qualified candidates are not excluded from admission to
higher educational institutions. The criterion for determining the backwardness
must not be based solely on religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth, and
the backwardness being social and educational must be similar to the
backwardness from which the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes
suffer." (emphasis added) In Triloki Nath's case (supra) which was a case
in which Article 16(4) came up for consideration, a Constitution Bench of this
Court observed at page 105 thus - "Article 16 in the first instance by cl.
(2) prohibits discrimination on the ground, inter alia, of religion, race,
caste, place of birth, residence and permits an exception to be 469 made in the
matter of reservation in favour of backward classes of citizens. The expression
"backward class" is not used as synonymous with "backward
caste" or "back ward community". The members of an entire caste
or community may in the social, economic and educational scale of values at a
given time be backward and may on that account be treated as a backward class,
but that is not because they are members of a caste or community, but because
they form a class In its ordinary connotation the expression "class"
means a homogenous section of the people grouped together because of certain
likenesses or common traits, and who are identifiable by some common attributes
such as status, rank, occupation, residence in a locality, race religion and
the like. But for the purpose or Art.
16(41 in determining whether a section forms
a class, a test solely based on caste, community, race, religion, sex, descent,
place of birth or residence cannot be adopted, because it would directly offend
the Constitution." (emphasis added) In Peeriokaruppan's case (supra)
Hegde. J. Observed at page 443 thus;
"A caste has always been recognised as a
class. In construing the expression "classes of His Majesty's
subjects" found in s. 153-A Or the Indian Penal Code, Wassoodew, J.
Observed in Narayan Vasudev v. Emperor A I.R. 1943 Bom. 379.
"In my opinion' the expression 'classes
of His Majesty's subjects' in Section 153-A of the Code is used in restrictive
sense as denoting a collection of individuals or groups bearing a common and
exclusive designation and also possessing common and exclusive characteristics
which may be associated with their origin, race or religion, and that the term
'class' within that section carries with it the idea of numerical strength so
large as could be grouped in a single homogeneous community," In Paragraph
10, Chapter V of the backward Classes Commission's Report, it is observed:
470 "We tried to avoid caste but we find
it difficult to A ignore caste in the present prevailing conditions.
We wish it were easy to dissociate from
social backwardness at the present juncture. In modern times anybody can take
to any profession. The Brahman taking to tailoring, does not become a tailor by
caste, nor is his social status lowered as a Brahman. A Brahman may be a seller
of boots and shoes, and yet his social status is not lowered thereby. Social
backwardness, therefore, is not today due to the particular profession of a
person, but we cannot escape caste in considering the social backwardness in
India" Paragraph 11 of that Report it is stated:
"It is not wrong to assume that social
backwardness has largely contributed to the educational backwardness of a large
number of social groups." Finally in Paragraph 13, the Committee concludes
with following observations:
"All this goes to prove that social
backwardness is mainly based on racial, tribal, caste and denominationals
differences." The learned Judge then proceeded to state at page 444:
"There is no gainsaying the fact that
there are numerous castes in this country which are socially and educationally
backward. To ignore their existence is to ignore the facts of life. Hence we
are enable to uphold the contention that impugned reservation is not in
accordance with Art. 15(4). But all the same the Government should not proceed
on the basis that once a class is considered as a backward class it should
continue to be backward class for all times. Such an approach would defeat the
very purpose of the reservation because once a class reaches a stage of
progress which some modern writers call as take off stage then competition is
necessary for their future progress. The Government should always keep under
review the question of reservation of seats and only the classes which 471 are
really socially and educationally backward should be allowed to have the
benefit of reservation.
Reservation of A seats should not be allowed
to become a vested interest. The fact that candidates of backward classes have
secured about 50 per cent of the seats in the general pool does show that the
time has come for a de novo comprehensive examination of the question. It must
be remembered that g the Government's decision in this regard is open to
judical review." In Balaram's case (supra) the State was the appellant.
it had come up in appeal against the judgment
of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh which had struck down its order making
reservation of seats of seats under Article 15(4).
This Court allowed the appeal upholding the
Government order, Vaidialingam, J. in the course of his judgment observed at
page 280 thus:- "Art. 15(4) will have to be given effect to in order to
assist the weaker sections of the citizens, as the State has been charged with
such duty. No doubt, we are aware that any provision made under this clause
must be within the well defined limits and should not be on the basis of caste
alone. But it should not also be missed that a caste is also a class of
citizens and that a caste as such may be socially and educationally backward.
If after collecting the necessary date, it is found that the caste as a whole
is socially and educationally backward, in our opinion, the reservation made of
such persons will have to be upheld notwithstanding the fact that a few
individuals in that group may be both socially and educationally above the
general average. There ii no gainsaying the fact that there are numerous castes
in the country, which are socially and educationally backward and therefore a
suitable provision will have to be made by the State as charged in Art. 15(4)
to safeguard their interest." The learned Judge felt that the Backward
Classes Commission on the basis of whose Report the Government order had been
passed had given good reasons in support of its recommendations. Accordingly
the Government order was upheld.
472 If we depart from the view that caste or
community is an important relevant factor in determining social and educational
backwardness for purposes of Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4) of the
Constitution, several distortions are likely to follow and may take us away
from the sole purpose for which those constitutional provisions were enacted.
Several factors such as physical disability,
poverty, place of habitation, the fact of belonging to a freedom fighter's
family, the fact of belonging to the family of a member of the armed forces
might each become a sole factor for the purpose of Article 15 (4) or Article 16
(4) which were not at all intended to be resorted to by the State for the
purpose of granting relief in such cases. While relief may be given in such
cases under Article 14, Article 15 (1) and Article 16 (1) by adopting a
rational principle of classification, Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4) cannot
be applied to then. Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4) are intended for the
benefit of those who belong to castes/communities which are 'traditionally
disfavoured and which have suffered societal discrimination' in the past. The
other factors mentioned above were never in the contemplation of the makers of
the Constitution while enacting these clauses.
In D.N. Chanchala v. State of Mysore and Ors.
etc.(1) a classification based on some of these factors was upheld but not
under Article 1 5 (4). The observation made in State of Kerala v. Kumari T.P.
Roshana and Anr.(2) that 'the principle of reservation with weightage for the
geographical area of Malabar District has our approval in endorsement of the
view of the High Court' is outside the scope of Article 15 (4) even though it
may be sustained under Article 14.
While caste or community is a relevant factor
in determining the social and educational backwardness, it cannot be said that
all members of a caste need be treated as backward and entitled to reservation
under Article 15 (4) or Article 16 (4). Caste-cum means test would be a
rational test in identifying persons who are entitled to the benefit of those
provisions. This principle has received acceptance at the hands of this Court
in Kumari K.S. Jayasree and Anr. v. The State of Kerala and Anr.,(2) In that
case a Commission appointed by the Government of the State of Kerala to enquire
into the social and economic conditions of the people of that State and (1)
[1971] Supp. S.C.R. 60 (2) [1979] 2 S.C.R. 974.
(3) [1977] 1 S.C.R. 194.
473 to recommend as to what sections of the
people should be extended the benefits under Article 15 (4) of the Constitution
found that only the rich amongst certain castes or communities were enjoying
the benefit of reservations made earlier. It, therefore, recommended adoption
of a means-cum-caste/community test for determining the sections of the people
who should be given the benefit under the relevant constitutional provisions.
The State Government accordingly stipulated that applicants who were members of
certain castes or communities and whose family income was less than Rs. 1(),000
per year were only entitled to reservation under Article 15 (4). The petitioner
in the above case who belonged to one such community but whose family income
was above Rs. 10,000 per year questioned the order before the Kerala High Court
on the ground that the imposition of the ceiling of family income was
unconstitutional. The learned Single Judge who heard the ' petition allowed it.
The Division Bench of the Kerala High Court, however, reversed the decision of
the learned Single Judge and dismissed the petition. On appeal, the Court while
affirming the decision of the Division Bench in the above case on the question
of social backwardness observed at pages 199-200 thus:
"In ascertaining social backwardness of
a class of citizens it may not be irrelevant to consider the caste of the group
of citizens. Caste cannot however be made the sole or dominant test. Social
backwardness is in the ultimate analysis the result of poverty to a large
extent. Social backwardness which results from poverty is likely to be
aggravated by considerations of their caste. This shows the relevance of both
caste and poverty in deter- mining the backwardness of citizens.
Poverty by itself is not the determining
factor of social backwardness. Poverty is relevant in the context of social
backwardness. The Commission found that the lower income group constitutes
socially and educationally backward classes. The basis of the reservation is
not income but social and educational backwardness determined on the basis of
relevant criteria. If any classification of backward classes of citizens is
based solely on the caste of the citizens it will perpetuate the vice of caste
system. Again, if the classification is based solely on poverty it will not be
logical. The society is taking steps for uplift of the people. In such a task
groups or classes who are socially and 474 educationally backward are helped by
the society. That A is the philosophy of our Constitution. It is in this
context that social backwardness which results from poverty is likely to be
magnified by caste considerations. Occupations, place of habitation may also be
relevant factors in determining who are socially and educationally backward
classes. Social and economic considerations come into operation in solving the
problem and evolving the proper criteria of determining which classes are
socially and educationally backward. That is why our Constitution provided for
special consideration socially and educa- tionally backward classes of citizens
as also Scheduled Castes and Tribes. It is only by directing the society and
the State to offer them all facilities for social and educational uplift that
the problem is solved. It is in that context that the Commission in the present
case found that income of the classes of citizens mentioned in Appendix VIII
was a relevant factor in determining their social and educational
backwardness." When once the relevance of caste is not adhered to several
difficulties might arise as can be seen from the decision in the State of Uttar
Pradesh v. Pradip Tandon and Ors.,(1) In that case the Court had to examine the
validity of a Government order which had made reservation of seats under
Article 15 (4) in favour of two classes of students - (1) those who came from
rural areas and (2) those who came from hill areas and Uttrakhand. The High
Court of Allahabad upheld the said reservations in Subhash Chandra v. The State
of U.P. and ors.(2) but struck them down in a later case in Dilip Kumar v. The
Government of U.P. and Ors.(3) without noticing its earlier decision in Subash
Chandra's case (supra) When the same question came before this Court in an
appeal preferred by the State Government, the State Government attempted to
justify the classification of students for admission into medical colleges as
stated above on the ground that it was a notorious fact that rural, hill and
Uttrakhand areas were socially backward because of extreme poverty; that those
areas were backward educationally because the (1) [1975] 2 S.C.R. 761.
(2) A.l.R. 1973 All. 295.
(3) A.I.R. 1973 All. 592.
475 standard of literacy was poor and there
was lack of educational facilities and that there was dearth of doctors in the
said areas. A The geographical, territorial, historical and the economic
conditions in the said areas were emphasised to support the classification. In
the State of Uttar Pradesh v. Pradip Tandon's case (supra) Court first rejected
the plea that party could be a basis of classification for purposes of Art. I
(4) in these terms at page 7 "In Balaji's case (supra) the Court said that
social backwardness is on the ultimate analysis the result of poverty to a
large extent and that the problem of back ward classes is in substance the
problem of rural India. Extracting these observations the Attorney General
contended that poverty is not only relevant but is one, of the elements in
determining the social backwardness. We are unable to accept the test of poverty
as the determining factor of social backwardness." D Then it held that
reservation for rural areas on the ground of poverty was unconstitutional. In
doing so it observed at page 769 thus:
"The reservation for rural areas cannot
be sustained on the ground that the rural areas represent socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens. This reservation appears to be made
for the majority population of the State. 80 per cent of the population of the
State cannot be a homogeneous class.
Poverty in rural areas cannot be the basis of
classification to support reservation for rural areas.
Poverty is found in all parts of India. In
the instructions for reservation of seats it is provided that in the
application form a candidate for reserved seats from rural areas must submit a
certificate of the District Magistrate of the District to which he belonged
that he was born in rural area and had a permanent home there, and is residing
there or that he was born in India and his parents and guardians are still
living there and earn their livelihood there. The incident of birth in rural
areas is made the basic qualification. No reservation can be made on the basis
of place of birth, as this would offend Article 15. " 476 But it upheld
the reservations made in favour of the hill and A Uttrakhand areas with these
observations at page 767:
"The hill and Uttrakhand areas in Uttar
Pradesh are instance of socially and educationally backward classes for these
reasons. Backwardness is judged by economic basis that each region has its own
measurable possibilities for the maintenance of human numbers, standards of
living and fixed property. From an economic point of view the classes of
citizens are back ward when they do not make effective use of resources.
When large areas of land maintain a sparse,
disorderly and illiterate population whose property is small and negligible the
element of social backwardness is observed. When effective territorial
specialisation is not possible in the absence of means of communication and
technical processes as in the hill and Uttrakhand areas the people are socially
backward classes of citizens. Neglected opportunities and people in remote
places raise walls of social backwardness of people.
Educational backwardness is ascertained with
reference to these factors. Where people have traditional apathy for education
on account of social and environ mental conditions or occupational handicaps,
it is an illustration of educational backwardness. The hill and Uttrakhand
areas are inaccessible. There is lack of educational institutions and
educational aids People in the hill and Uttrakhand areas illustrate the
educationally backward classes of citizens because lack of educational
facilities keep them stagnant and they have neither meaning and values nor
awareness for education." The reading of the above passages shows that
there is inherent inconsistency between one part of the decision and the other.
The Court could not have arrived at the two divergent conclusions set out above
since many of the reasons urged by the State Government were almost identical.
This is due to the earlier approach adopted
by the Court to the question. If caste had been taken into consideration as a
relevant test which could not be ignored in determining the classes entitled to
the benefit of Article 15 (4) and Art. 16 (4), there would have been no room
for the above inconsistency.
477 Article 14 of the Constitution consists
of two parts.
It asks the State not to deny to any person
equality before law. It also asks A the State not to deny the equal protection
of the laws. Equality before law connotes absence of any discrimination in law.
The concept of equal protection required the State to meet out differential
treatment to persons in different situations in order to establish an
equilibrium amongst all. This is the basis of the rule that equals should be
treated equally and unequals must be treated unequally if the doctrine of
equality which is one of the corner stones of our Constitution is to be duly
implemented. In order to do justice amongst unequals, the State has to resort
to compensatory or protective discrimination, Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4)
of the Constitution were enacted as measures of compensatory or protective
discriminations to grant relief to persons belonging to socially oppressed
castes and minorities. Under them, it is possible to provide for reservation of
seats in educational institutions and of posts in Government services to such
persons only. But if there are persons who do not belong to socially oppressed
castes and minorities but who otherwise belong to weaker sections, due to
poverty, place of habitation, want of equal opportunity etc. the question
arises whether such reservation can be made in their favour under any other
provision of the Constitution such as Article 14, Article 15 (1), Article 16
(1) or Article 46.
The decision in State of Kerala and Anr. v.
N.M. Thomas and Ors.(l) which was rendered by 15 a Bench of seven learned
Judges of this Court attempted to deal with the above question. The facts of
that case were these: Rule 13 (a) of the Kerala State Subordinate Service
Rules, 1958 provided that no person would be eligible for appointment to any
service or any post unless he possessed such special qualifications and had
passed such special tests as might be prescribed in that behalf in the Ir
Special Rules. For promotion of a lower division clerk to the next higher post
of upper division clerk, the Government prescribed certain departmental tests.
By Rule 13A which was introduced later on temporary exemption was given for a
period of two years.
That Rule also provided that an employee who
did not pass the unified departmental tests within the period of two years from
the date of introduction of the tests would be reverted to the lower post and
further stated that he would not be eligible for appointment under that Rule.
Proviso (2) to this Rule gave temporary exemption for an extended period of two
years in the case of candidates belonging (1) [1976] I S.C.R 906.
478 to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
When the Government A found that a large number of candidates belonging to
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes were facing reversion under that Rule, on
a representation made on their behalf, it gave exemption to them for a further
period of two years by promulgating Rule 13A. As a result of this Rule,
respondent No. I in the above case who had passed the special test in 1971 was
not promoted but some candidates belonging to Scheduled Castes or Scheduled
Tribes who had not passed the tests were promoted. Respondent No. I there fore
challenged the validity of Rule 13A before the High Court of Kerala on the
ground that it violated Article 16 (1) of the Constitution. The High Court
struck down the Rule holding that it was outside the scope of Article 16 (4)
and therefore was violative of Article 16 (1) of the Constitution The State
Government questioned in the above case before this Court the correctness of
the decision of tho High Court. From the facts narrated above, it is obvious
that the case did not concern itself with reservation of posts in the higher
cadre as such but only involved the classification of employees of Government
into two groups- those belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and
those who did not belong to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for purposes
of given exemption from possessing one of the minimum qualifications i.e. from
passing the prescribed tests during a further period of two years 13 Ray, C.J.
upheld the Rule by upholding the classification under Article 14 and Article 16
(1). The learned Chief Justice observed at page 933 thus:
"All legitimate methods are available
for equality of opportunity in services under Article 16 (1).
Article 16 (4) is affirmative whereas Article
14 is negative in language. Article 16 (4) indicates one of the methods of
achieving equality embodied in Article 16 (1). Article 16 (1) using the
expression "equality" makes it relatable to all matters of employment
from appointment through promotion and termination to payment of pension and
gratuity. Article 16 (1) permits classification on the basis of object and
purpose of law or State action except classification involving discrimination
prohibited by Article 16 (2). Equal protection of laws necessarily involves
classification.
The validity of the classification must be
adjudged with reference to the purpose of law. The classification in the
present case is justified because 479 the purpose of classification is to
enable members of Scheduled Castes and Tribes to find representation by A
promotion to a limited extent. From the point of view of time a differential
treatment is given to members of Scheduled Castes and Tribes for the purpose of
giving them equality consistent with efficiency".
Khanna, J. who upheld the judgment of the
High Court was of the view that since the impugned Rule did not get the
protection of Article 16 (4) which was the only provision under which
preferential treatment could be given to members belonging to backward classes,
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, the Rule could not be upheld on the
basis of classification under Article 14 and Article 16 (1) of the
Constitution. The learned Judge observed at pages 939-940 thus;
"It has been argued on behalf of the
appellants that equality of treatment does not forbid reasonable
classification. Reference in this context is made to the well accepted
principle that Article 14 of the Constitution forbids class legislation but
does not forbid classification. Permissible classification, it is equally well
established, must be founded on an intelligible differential which
distinguishes persons or things that arc grouped together from others left out
of the group and the differential must have a rational relation to the object
sought to be achieved by the statute in question. It is urged that the same
principle should apply when the court is concerned with the equality of
opportunity for all citizens in matters P relating to employment or appointment
to any office under the State. In this respect I may observe that this Court
has recognised the principle of classification in the context of clause (1) of
article 16 in matters where appointments are from two different sources, e.g.
guards and station masters, promotees and direct recruits, degree holder and
diploma holder engineers. [See All India Station Masters and Asstt.
station Masters' Assn. and Ors. v. General
Manager, Central Railway and Ors. [1960) 2 S.C.R. 311, S.G.
Jaisinghani v. Union of India and Ors. [1967]
2 S.C.R.
703 and State of Jammu & Kashmir v.
Triloki Nath Khesa and Ors. [1974] I S.C.R. 771.) The question with which we
are concerned, however, is 480 whether we can extend the above principle of
classification so as to allow preferential treatment to employees on the ground
that they are members of the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes. So far as
this question is concerned I am of the view that the provision of preferential
treatment for members of backward classes, including scheduled castes and
scheduled tribes, is that contained in clause (4) of article 16 which permits
reservation of posts for them. There is no scope for spelling out such
preferential treatment from the language of clause (1) of article 16 because
the language of that clause does not warrant any preference to any citizen
against another citizen. The opening words of clause (4) of article 16 that
"nothing in this article shall prevent the State from making any provision
for the reservation of appointments or posts in favour of backward class of
citizens' indicate that but for clause (4) it would not have been permissible
to make any reservation of appointments or posts in favour of any backward
class of citizens." Khanna, J. proceeded to observe at page 944 thus:
"The matter can also be locked at from
another angle. If it was permissible to accord favoured treatment to members of
backward classes under clause (1) of article 16, there would have been no
necessity of inserting clause (4) in article 16. Clause (4) in Article 16 in
such an event would have to be treated as wholly superfluous and redundant. The
normal rule of interpretation is that no provision of the Constitution to be
treated as redundant and superfluous. The Court would, therefore, be reluctant
to accept a view which would have the effect of rendering clause (4) of Article
16 redundant and superfluous".
Mathew, J. more or less agreed with Ray, C.J.
He said at pages 954-955 thus:
"It is said that Article 16 (4)
specifically provides for reservation of posts in favour of backward classes
which according to the decision of this Court would include the power of the
State to make reservation at the 481 stage of promotion also and therefore
Article 16 (1) cannot include within its compass the power to give any
adventitious aids by legislation or otherwise to the back ward classes which
would derogate from strict numerical equality. If reservation is necessary
either at the initial stage or at the stage of promotion or at both to ensure
for the members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes equality of opportunity
in the matter of employment, l see no reason why that is not permissible under
Article 16 (1) as that alone might put them on a parity with the forward
communities in the matter of achieving the result which equality of opportunity
would produce. Whether there is equality of opportunity can be gauged only by
the equality attained in the result. Formal equality of opportunity simply
enables people with more education and intelligence to capture all the posts
and to win over the less fortunate in education and talent even when the
competition is fair. Equality of result is the test of equality of
opportunity".
Beg, J. (as he then was) agreed with the view
of Khanna, J. that the principle of classification could not be extended to
cases of this nature but upheld the Rule as squarely falling within the scope
of Article 16 (4) itself.
He observed at page 959:
"Strictly speaking, the view adopted by
my learned brother Khanna, that the ambit of the special protection of
"equality of opportunity in matters relating to public service",
which can be made available to members of backward classes of citizens, is
exhausted by Article 16 (4) of the Constitution, seems inescapable. Article 16
is, after all, a facet of the grand principles embraced by Article 14 of our
Constitution. It guarantees: "Equality of opportunity in matters of public
appointment". It does so in absolute terms. It is a necessary consequence
and a special application of Article 14 in an important field where denial of
equality of opportunity cannot be permit ted. While Article 16 (1) sets out the
positive aspect of equality of opportunity in matters relating to employment by
the State, Article 16 (2) negatively prohibits discrimination on the grounds
given in Article 16 (2) in the area covered by Article 16 (1) of the
Constitution. If 482 Scheduled Castes do not fall within the ambit of Article
16 (2), but as a "backward class" of citizens, escape the direct
prohibition it is because the provisions of Article 16 (4) make such an escape
possible for them. They could also avoid the necessary consequences of the
positive mandate of Article 16 (1) if they come within the only exception
contained in Article 16 (4) of the Constitution. I respectfully concur with my
learned brother Khanna and Gupta that it would be dangerous to extend the
limits of protection against the operation of the principle of equality of
opportunity in this field beyond its express constitutional authorisation by
Article 16 (4) '.
Beg, J. (as he then was) proceeded to hold at
page 961 thus:
"Members of a backward class could be
said to be discriminated against if severer tests were prescribed for them.
But, this is not the position in the case before us.
All promotees, belonging to any class, caste,
or creed, are equally subjected to efficiency tests of the same type and
standard. The impugned rules do not dispense with these tests for any class or
group. Indeed, such tests could not be dispensed with for employees from
Scheduled Castes, even as a backward class, keeping in view the provisions of
Article 335 of the Constitution. All that happens here is that the backward
class of employees is given a longer period of time to pass the efficiency
tests and prove their merits as determined by such tests. It has been, therefore,
argued that, in this respect, there is substantial equality.
In other words, the argument is that if
Article 16 (1) could be interpreted a little less rigidly and more liberally
the discrimination involved here will not fall outside it. Even if this was a
tenable view, I would, for all the reasons given here, prefer to find the
justification, if this is possible, in the express provisions of Article 16 (4)
because this is where such a justification should really lie." Krishna
Iyer, J. after recording the statement of the Advocate General for Kerala that
the Rule could not be sustained under Article 16 (4) upheld it under article 14
and Article 16 (1) as it 483 related to members belonging to the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Perhaps he would have struck down the Rule if the
benefit A of the Rule had been extended to other backward classes as can be
seen from the following passage occurring at page 981:
"If Art. 14 admits of reasonable
classification, so does Art. 16(1) and this Court has held so. In the present
case, the economic advancement and promotion of the claims of the grossly
under-represented and pathetically neglected classes, otherwise described as
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, consistently with the maintenance of
administrative efficiency, is the object, constitutionally sanctioned by Arts.
46 and 335 and reasonably accommodated in Art. 16(1). The differentia so loudly
obtrusive, is the dismal social milieu of harijans. Certainly this has a
rational relation to the object set out above. I must repeat the note of
caution earlier struck. Not all caste backwardness is recognised in this
formula. To do so is subversive of both Art. 16(1) and (2). The social
disparity must be so grim and substantial as to serve as a foundation for benign
discrimination. If we search for such a class, we cannot find any large segment
other than the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
Any other caste, securing exemption from Art.
16(1) and (2), by exerting political pressure or other influence, will run the
high risk of unconstitutional discrimination. If the real basis of
classification is caste masked as backward class, the Court must strike at such
communal manipulation. Secondly, the Constitution recognizes the claims of only
harijans (Art. 335) and not of every backward class. The profile of Art. 46 is
more or less the same. So, we may readily hold that casteism cannot come back
by the back door and, except in exceptionally rare cases, no class other than
Harijans can jump the gauntlet of 'equal opportunity' guarantee. Their only
hope is in Art.
16(4)". (Emphasis supplied).
Gupta, J. agreed generally with Khanna, J.
and upheld the judgment of the High Court. Gupta, 1. after referring to Article
335 observed at page 986 thus: H "This Article does not create any right
in the members of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes which 484 they
might claim in the matter of appointments to services A and posts; one has to
look elsewhere, Article 16(4) for instance, to find out the claims conceded to
them. Article 335 says that such claims shall be considered consistently with
administrative efficiency, thus is a provision which does not enlarge but
qualify such claims as they may have as members of the Scheduled Castes or
Scheduled Tribes. Article 335, it seems clear, cannot furnish any clue to the
understanding of Article 16(1)".
Fazal Ali, J. also upheld the impugned Rule
under Article 16(1). The learned Judge said at page 1001 thus: "
"Article 335 of the Constitution contains a mandate to the State for
considering the claims of the members of tho Scheduled Castes and the scheduled
tribes consistently with the maintenance of efficiency of administration. By
giving the special concessions to the promotees this man date is sought to be
obeyed by the Government. Mr. T.S. Krishnamoorthy Iyer, counsel for the
respondent No. I submitted that the mandate given in Art. 335 is violated
because by granting exemption to the members of the scheduled castes and tribes
the standard of efficiency of the services would be impaired. We are, however,
unable to agree with the argument. Both the respondent No. I and the promotees
were members of the same service and had been working as Lower Division Clerks
for a pretty long time. The promotees were members of the scheduled castes and
tribes are admittedly senior to respondent No. I and have gained more
experience. Further the rule does not grant complete exemption to the promotees
from passing the test; it only provides for grant of extension of time to
enable them to clear the test. In these circumstances it cannot be held that
the State's action in incorporating r. 13-AA in any way violates the mandate
contained in Art. 335. In these circumstances, therefore, I am clearly
satisfied that the concesion given in r. 13-AA amounts to a reasonable
classification which can be made under Art. 16(1) of the Constitution and does
not amount to the selection of the respondent No. 1 for hostile discrimination
so as to be violative of Art. 16(1) of the Constitution of India" 485 But
Fazal Ali, J. was, however, of the view that Article 16(4) of the Constitution
was a complete code so far as reservation of posts A was concerned. The learned
Judge observed at page 1002 thus:
"Clause (4) of Art. 16 of the
Constitution cannot be read in isolation but has to be read as part and parcel
of Art. 16(1) & (2). Suppose there are a number of backward classes who
form a sizable section of the population of the country but are not properly or
adequately represented in the services under the State the question that arises
is that can be done to enable them to join the services and have a sense of
equal participation. One course is to make a reasonable classification under
Art. 16(1) in the manner to which I have already adverted in great detail. The other
method to achieve the end may be to make suitable reservation for the backward
classes in such a way so that the inadequate representation of the backward
classes in the services is made adequate. This form of classification which is
referred to as reservation, is, in my opinion, clearly covered by Art. 16(4) of
the Constitution which is completely exhaustive on this point. That is to say
clause (4) of Art. 16 is not an exception to Art. 14 in the sense that whatever
classification can be made can be done only through clause (4) of Art. 16.
Clause (4) of Art. 16, however, is an explanation containing an exhaustive and
exclusive provision regarding reservation which is one of the forms of
classification. Thus clause (4) of Art.
16 deals exclusively with reservation and not
other forms of classifiable which can be made under Art.
16(1) itself. Since clause (4) is a special
provision regarding reservation, it can safely be held that it overrides Art.
16(1) to that extent and no reservation can be made under Art. 16(1)".
(Emphasis added) The result is that at least according to four learned Judges -
Khanna; Beg, Gupta and Fazal Ali, JJ. no reservation of posts can be made in
Government services for backward classes including Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes under Article 14 or Article 16(1). According to Krishna Iyer, J.
preferential treatment as was done in this case on the basis of classification
ordinarily could be given under Article 16(1) to the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes only. Other backward classes could not, except in
exceptionally rare cases be extended the same benefit and their only hope was
Article 16(4) of the constitution, 486 Now reverting to the power of the
Government to make reservations under Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the
Constitution, we may state thus: The determination of the question whether the
members belonging to a caste or a group or a community are backward for the
purpose of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4) of the Constitution is no doubt left
to the Government. But it is not open to the Government to call any caste or
group or community as backward according to its sweet will and pleasure and
extend the benefits that may be granted under those provisions to such caste or
group or community. The exercise of uncontrolled power by the Government in
this regard may lead to political favouritism leading to denial of the just
requirements of classes which are truly backward. The power of the Government
to classify any caste or group or community as backward has to be exercised in
accordance with the guidelines that can be easily gathered from the
Constitution. It is now accepted that the expressions 'socially and
educationally backward classes of citizens' and 'the Scheduled Castes and the
Scheduled Tribes' in Article 15(4) of the Constitution together are equivalent
to backward classes of citizens' in Article 16(4). Dealing with the question
whether any particular caste or group or community could be treated as socially
and educationally backward for purposes of Article 15(4), the Court observed in
Balaji's case (supra) at page 465 thus:
"Therefore, we are not satisfied that
the State was justified in taking the view that communities or castes whose ave
rage of student population was the same as, or just below, the State average,
should be treated as educationally back ward classes of citizens. If the test
has to be applied be a reference to the State average of student population,
the legitimate view to take would be that the classes of citizens whose average
is well or substantially below the State average can be treated as
educationally backward." This was further explained by Shah, J. (as he
then was) in Sagar's case (supra) when he observed that the criterion for deter
mining the backwardness must not be based solely on religion, race, caste, sex
or place of birth and the backwardness being social and educational must be
similar to the backwardness from which the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled
Tribes suffered. A Constitution, Bench of this Court reiterated the above
principle in Janki Prasad Parimoo & Ors. etc. etc. v. State of Jammu &
Kashmir & Ors. in which it was observed at page 252 thus:
(1) [1973] 3 S.C.R. 236.
487 "That accounts for the raison d
'etre of the principle explained in Balaji's case which pointed out that
backward classes for whose improvement special provision was contemplated by
Article 15(4) must be comparable to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes who
are standing examples of backwardness socially and educationally".
This view is in conformity with the intention
underlying clause (6) of the resolution regarding the aims and objects of the
Constitution moved by Jawaharlal Nehru on December 13, 1946 which asked the
Constituent Assembly to frame a Constitution providing adequate safeguards for
minorities, backward and tribal areas and depressed and other backward classes
and also with the provisions of Article 338 and Article 340 of the
Constitution. Unless the above restriction is imposed on the Government, it
would become possible for the Government to call any caste or group or
community which constitutes a powerful political lobby in the State as backward
even though in fact it may be an advanced caste or group or community but just
below some other forward community. There is another important reason why such
advanced castes or groups or communities should not be included in the list of
backward classes and that is that if castes or groups and communities which are
fairly well advanced and castes and groups and communities which are really
backward being at the rock-bottom level are classified together as backward
classes, the benefit of reservation would invariably be eaten up by the more
advanced sections and the really deserving sections would practically go
without any benefit as more number of children of the more advanced castes or
groups or communities amongst them would have scored higher marks than the
children of more backward castes or groups or communities. In that event the
whole object of reservation would become frustrated. It is stated that it was
with a view to avoiding this anomalous situation, the Government of Devaraj Urs
had to appoint the Havanur Commission to make recommendations for the purpose
of effectively implementing the objects of Article 15(4) and Article 16(4).
Hence as far as possible while preparing the list of backward classes, the
State Government has to bear in mind the above principle as a guiding factor.
The adoption of the above principle will not unduly reduce the number of
persons who will be eligible for the benefits under Article 15(4) and Article
16(4) of the Constitution since over the years the level of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes is also going up by reason of several remedial 488
measure taken in regard to them by the State and Central Government. At the
same time, it will also release the really backward castes, groups and
communities from the strangle-hold of many advanced groups which have had the
advantage of reservation along with the really backward classes for nearly
three decades. It is time that more attention is given to those castes, and
groups communities who have been at the lowest level suffering from all the
disadvantages and disabilities (except perhaps untouchability) to which many of
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes have been exposed but without the
same or similar advantages that flow from being included in the list of the
Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes.
Since economic condition is also a relevant
criterion, it would be appropriate to incorporate a 'means test' as one of the
tests in determining the backwardness as was done by the Kerala Government in
Jayasree's case (supra). These two tests namely, that the conditions of caste
or group or community should be more or less similar to the conditions in which
the Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes are situated and that the income of
the family to which the candidate belongs does not exceed the specified limit
would serve as useful criteria in determining beneficiaries of any reservation
to be made under Article 15(4). For the purpose of Article 16(4) however, it
should also be shown that the backward class in question is in the opinion of
the Government not adequately represented in the Government services.
There is one other basis on which a classification
made for purposes of Article 15 (4) or Article 16 (4) of the Constitution has
received the approval of this Court in Chitralekha's case (supra). In that case
the Court was concerned with a list of backward classes prepared on the basis
of economic condition and occupation. According to that Government order,
persons whose family income was Rs.
1,200 per annum or less and who were engaged
in occupations such as agriculture. petty business, inferior services, crafts
or other occupations involving manual labour were treated as belonging to
backward classes. The petitioner who had filed the petition in the High Court
did not challenge the validity of the said classification. But on a submission
made on behalf of the State Government, the Court expressed its general
approval to the method of classification. Even in the case before us now, there
is a reservation of 15 per cent of seats of posts in favour of members falling
under a classification styled as 'special group' which is based on similar 489
occupation-cum-income considerations. Even here no serious objection is taken
by any party to the said classification treating A persons who satisfied the
prescribed tests as being eligible for reservation. It is apparent that this
'special group' is a creature of social, economic and political necessity.
Since a classification made on the above said basis has received the approval
of a Constitution Bench of equal strength and its correctness is not challenged
before us, we treat this classification as a valid one even though a criticism
of this kind of classification was made, not unjustifiably as we now see, by
the Mysore High Court in D.G. Viswanath's case.(1) This classification would
include persons of all castes, groups and communities provided the two tests
namely, occupation test and income test are satisfied.
Next comes the vexed question relating to the
extent of reservation that can be made under Art. 15 (4) and Art. 16 (4) of the
Constitution. In Balaji's case (supra) this Court took the view that since
Article 15 (4) is an exception to Article 15 (1) and Article 16 (4) is an
exception to Article 16 (1) and (2) any reservation made under Article 15 (4)
and Article 16 (4) should not exceed 50 per cent of the total number of seats
or posts, as the case may be. The Court held that reservation of 68 per cent of
seats under Article 15 (4) which was a special provision was invalid. The Court
further held that 'speaking generally and in a broad way a special ID provision
should be less than 50 per cent, how much less than 50 per cent would depend
upon the relevant prevailing circumstances in each case'. This statement was
understood by a Constitution Bench of this Court in T.
Devadasan v. The Union of India and Anr.(2)
as laying down the rule that reservation under Article 15 (4) or Article 16 (4)
could not be more than 50 per cent of seats or posts. In that case Mudholkar,
J. speaking for the majority said at page 698:
"Even if the Government had provided for
the reservation of posts for Scheduled Castes and Tribes a cent per cent
reservation of vacancies to be filled in a particular year or reservation of
vacancies in excess of 50 per cent would, according to the decision in Balaji's
case, not be constitutional".
(1) A.I.R. 1964 Mys. 132.
(2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 680.
490 But in the State of Kerala and Anr. v.
N.M. Thomas and Ors. (supra) the question relating to the permissible extent of
reservation arose for consideration. Ray, C.J. came to the conclusion that
taking into consideration the entire Government service, there was no excessive
concession shown to the employees belonging to the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. Beg, J. (as he then was) was also of the same view. Fazal
Ali, J. Observed at page 1005 thus:
"This means that the reservation should
be within the permissible limits and should not be a cloak to fill all the
posts belonging to a particular class of citizens and thus violate Art. 16 (1)
of the Constitution indirectly. At the same time clause (4) of Art. 16 does not
fix any limit on the power of the Government to make reservation. Since clause
(4) is a part of Art. 16 of the Constitution it is manifest that the State
cannot be allowed to indulge in excessive reservation so as to defeat the
policy contained in Art. 16 (1). As to what would be a suitable reservation
within permissible limits will depend upon the facts and circumstances of each
case and no hard and fast rule can be laid down, nor can this matter be reduced
to a mathematical formula so as to be adhered to in all cases. Decided cases of
this Court have no doubt laid down that the percentage of reservation should
not exceed 50 per cent. As I read the authorities, this is, however, a rule of
caution and does not exhaust all categories. Suppose for instance a State has a
large number of backward classes of citizens which constitute 80 per cent of
the population and the Government, in order to give them proper representation,
reserves 80 per cent of the jobs for them, can it be said that the percent age
of reservation is bad and violates the permissible limits of clause (4) of Art.
16 ? The answer must necessarily be in the negative. The dominant object of
this provision is to take steps to make inadequate representation
adequate." Krishna Iyer, J. in the same case observed at page 981 thus:
"I agree with my learned brother Fazal
Ali, J. in the view that the arithmetical limit of 50 per cent in any one 491
year set by some earlier rulings cannot perhaps be pressed too far. Overall
representation in a department does not depend on recruitment in a particular
year, but the total strength of a cadre. I agree with his construction of Art.
16 (4) and his view about the 'carry forward' rule." After carefully going
through all the seven opinions in the above case, it is difficult to held that
the settled view of this Court that the reservation under Article 15 (4) or
Article 16 (4) could not be more than 50 per cent has been unsettled by a
majority of the Bench which decided this case. I do not propose to pursue this
point further in this case because if reservation is made only in favour of
those backward castes or classes which are comparable to the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes, it may not exceed 5() per cent (including 18 per cent
reserved for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and 15 per cent reserved
for 'special group') in view of the total population of such backward classes
in the State of Karnataka. The Havanur Commission has taken the number of
students passing at S S.L.C. examination in the year 1972 as the basis for determining
the backwardness. The average passes per thousand of the total population of
the State of Karnataka was 1.69 in 1972. The average in the case of the
Scheduled Castes was 0 56 and in the case of Scheduled Tribes was 0.51. Even if
we take all the castes, tribes and communities whose average is below 50 per
cent of the State average i.e.
below .85 per cent for classifying them as
backward, large chunks of population which are now treated as backward would
have to go out of the list of backward classes. Consequently the necessity for
reservation which would take the total reservation under Article 15 (4) and
Article 16 (4) beyond 50 per cent of the total number of seats/posts would
cases to exist. The present arrangement has been worked for more than five
years already. It is now necessary to redetermine the question of backwardness
of the various castes, tribes and communities for purposes of Article 15 (4)
and Article 16 (4) in the light of the latest figures to be collected on the
various relevant factors and to refix the extent of reservation for backward
classes. The reservation of 15 per cent now made under Article 15 (4) and
Article 16 (4) but which may be traced to Article 14 and Article 16 (1) to
'special group' based on occupation-cum-income can in any event be availed of
by members of all communities and castes.
At this stage it should be made clear that if
on a fresh determination some castes or communities have to go out of the list
of 492 Backward classes prepared for Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4), the
Government may still pursue the policy of amelioration of weaker sections of
the population amongst them in accordance with the directive principle
contained in Article 46 of the Constitution. There are in all castes and
communities poor people who if they are given adequate opportunity and training
may be able to compete success fully with persons belonging to richer classes
The Government may provide for them liberal grants of scholarships, free
studentship, free boarding and lodging facilities, free uniforms, free mid-day
meals etc. to make the life of poor students comfortable. The Government may
also provide extra tutorial facilities, stationery and books free of cost and
library facilities. These and other steps should be taken in the lower classes
so that by the time a student appears for the qualifying examination he may be
able to attain a high degree of proficiency in his studies.
The State Government shall now proceed to
redetermine the whole question of reservation of seats/posts under Article 15
(4) and Article 16 (4) of the Constitution in this judgment.
S.R.
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