Ashok Kumar Yadav & Ors Vs. State of
Haryana & Ors [1985] INSC 138 (10 May 1985)
BHAGWATI, P.N. BHAGWATI, P.N.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ) SEN, AMARENDRA NATH
(J) ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION: 1987 AIR 454 1985 SCR Supl. (1) 657
1985 SCC (4) 417 1985 SCALE (1)1290
CITATOR INFO:
R 1987 SC2267 (14) R 1988 SC 162 (11,13) D
1988 SC1451 (8) R 1988 SC2073 (18) R 1991 SC 295 (14) F 1991 SC1011 (9,10) R
1992 SC 80 (2)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Article 316 and
226 Public Service Commission-Chairman and Members-Whether possess
qualification and men of integrity and calibre-Whether High Court has power to
inquire in such question-Condemnatory observations by High Court-No factual
basis on pleadings or evidence-Propriety and validity of.
Administrative Law- Natural
Justice-Condemnatory observations made by High Court against Chairman and
Members of Public Service Commission without their being party
respondents-Whether justified.
Recruitment to posts in Haryana Civil Service
(Executive) & Allied Services-Selection by Public Service Commission-Some
interviewed candidates closely related to Members-Selections-Whether vitiated.
Viva voce examination-20 candidates called
for each post-Whether justified-Allocation of 33.3% marks in case of ex-service
officers and 22.2% in case of other candidates- Whether the viva voce
examination suffers from the vice of arbitrariness-Guidelines for fixing marks
for viva voce examination-Indicated.
HEADNOTE:
Rule 9 clause (1) of the Punjab Civil Service
(Executive Branch), Rules 1930 prescribes a competitive examination for
recruitment to posts in Haryana Civil Service (Executive) and other allied
services. Regulation (I) in Appendix (I) lays down that the competitive
examination shall include compulsorily and optional subjects and that every
candidate shall take the compulsory subjects and not more than three of the
optional subjects, and that ex-servicemen shall not be required to appear in
the optional subjects. As per Regulation 5, the compulsory subjects carry in the
aggregate 400 marks and there is also viva-voce examination which is compulsory
and which carries 200 marks and each optional subject carries 100 marks. Thus,
the written examination carries an aggregate of 700 marks for candidates in
general and for ex-servicemen it carries an aggregate of 400 marks while in
case of both, the viva voce examination carries 200 marks. Regulation 3
provides that no candidate shall be eligible to appear in the viva voce test
unless he obtains 45 per cent marks in the aggregate of all subjects.
In a written examination held by the Haryana
Public Service Commission for recruitment to 61 posts in Haryana Civil Service
(Executive) and other allied Services, over 1300 candidates obtained more than
45% marks and thus qualified 658 for being called for interview for the viva
voce examination. The Haryana Public Service Commission invited all the
candidates for the viva voce examination and the interviews lasted for almost
half a year. The number of vacancies also rose during the time taken up in the
written examination and the viva voce test and ultimately 119 posts became
available for being filled and on the basis of total marks obtained in the
written examination as well a viva- voce test, 119 candidates were selected and
recommended by the Haryana Public Service Commission to the State Government.
The respondents-petitioners had obtained very
high marks at the written examination but owing to rather poor marks obtained
in the viva voce test, they could not come within the first 119 candidates and
were consequently not selected. They filed several writ petitions in the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana challenging the validity of the selection of the
appellants and seeking a writ for quashing and setting aside the same. The
State of Haryana, Haryana Public Service Commission, three members of the
Haryana Public Service Commission and five selected candidates were respondents
to the Writ Petitions. The respondents- petitioners contended before the High
Court: (1) that the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were not men of high integrity, calibre and qualification and they
were appointed solely as a matter of political patronage and hence the
selections made by them were invalid; (2) that three of the selected candidates
were related to two members of the Commission namely, Shri R.C. Marya and Shri
Raghubar Dayal Gaur and though these two members did not participate in the
interview of their respective relatives, they did participate in the interview
of other candidates and the tactic adopted by the Chairman and the members of
the Commission was to give high marks to the relatives and award low marks to
the other candidates so as to ensure the selection of their relatives. This
vitiated the entire selection process; (3) that the number of candidates called
for interview were almost 20 times the number of vacancies and this not only
imposed an intolerable burden on the Haryana Public Service Commission but also
widened the scope for arbitrariness in selection by making it possible for the
Haryana Public Service Commission to boost up or deflate the total marks which
might be obtained by a candidate. This infirmity had the effect of invaliding
the selection made by Haryana Public Service Commission; (4) that the allocation
of 200 marks for the viva voce test out of a total of 900 marks for the
generality of students and a total of 600 marks for ex servicemen was arbitrary
and excessive and it had the effect of distorting the entire process of
selection and it was accordingly unconstitutional as involving denial of equal
opportunity in public employment; and (5) that the viva voce test was not
conducted fairly and honestly and the selections made were vitiated on account
of nepotism, favouritism and casteism and also political motivation. The
appellants, however, submitted that the challenge to the validity of selections
was unfounded on the grounds; (i) that not only was it not competent to the
Court on the existing set of pleadings to examine whether the Chairman and members
of the Haryana Public Service Commission were men of high integrity, calibre
and qualification but also there was no material at all on the basis of which
the Court could possibly come to the conclusion that they were men lacking
integrity, calibre or qualification; (ii) that the Haryana public Service
Commission being a constitutional authority it was not necessary for Sh. R.C.M
Arya and Sh. Raghubar Dayal Gaur to withdraw altogether from 659 the interviews
and they acted correctly in abstaining from participation when their relatives
came to be interviewed.
This was in conformity with the principles of
fair play and did not affect the validity of the selections; (iii) that under
Regulation 3 in Appendix I, the Haryana Public Service Commission was justified
in calling for interview all the 1300 and odd candidates who qualified by
getting more than 45% marks; (iv) that the allocation of 200 marks for the viva
voce test was made under the Punjab Civil Service (Executive Branch) Rules,
1930 and it had stood the test of time and could not possibly be regarded as
arbitrary or excessive; and (v) that the selections were made fairly and
honestly and they were not tainted by nepotism, favouritism, casteism or
political patronage, besides there was nothing to show that any extraneous
considerations had influenced the selection process. The High Court set aside
the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission and directed the
Haryana Public Service Commission and the State of Haryana to forthwith declare
the result of candidates of all categories on the basis of written examination
alone, scrupulously excluding all considerations of the viva voce test. Hence
these appeals by the appellants, selected candidates, State of Haryana and
three members of the Haryana Public Service Commission.
Allowing the appeals, the Court, ^
HELD : 1. (i) The Division Bench of the High
Court was not justified in making condemnatory observations against the
Chairman and all the members of the Haryana Public Service Commission. Three
members namely S/Sh. D.R. Chaudhary, Raghubar Dayal Gaur and R.C. Marya were
joined as respondent Nos. 3, 4 and 5 but the Chairman Shri B.S. Lather and
another member Shri Gurmesh Prakash Bishnoi were not impleaded in the writ
petitions and yet the most damaging observations were made against them This
was clearly in violation of the principles of natural justice. Moreover, these
observations against the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were made without any factual basis on the pleadings or the
evidence.
[672 H; 673 A-B] (ii) It is difficult to see
how on the basis of a mere averment in paragraph 9 of one of the writ
petitions, which averment was disputed on behalf of the respondents, the
Division Bench of the High Court could possibly come to the conclusion that
politics had played a major role in appointment of the Chairman and members of
the Haryana Public Service Commission and that they were men lacking in
integrity, calibre and qualification, particularly when no such allegation was
made by the petitioners in any of the other writ petitions. Therefore, the
Division Bench of the High Court was not at all justified in drawing from the
facts set out in paragraph 9 of Civil writ Petition No. 3344 of 1983 any inference
that the Chairman and members were totally unfit to be appointed on the Haryana
Public Service Commission or that they were not men of integrity, calibre and
qualification. However, it may be pointed out that even if the Chairman and
members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were appointed on account of
political and caste considerations, they could still be men of character,
integrity and competence and the extraneous considerations which might have
weighed with the appointing authority need not necessarily reflect upon their
competence, character or fitness. [674 A-C; 675 A-B] 660 (iii) The High Court
was not justified in undertaking an inquiry into the question whether the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were men of
integrity, calibre and qualification or not. It was a totally irrelevant
inquiry because even if they were men lacking in integrity, calibre and
qualification, it would not make their appointments invalid, so long as the
constitutional and legal requirements in regard to appointment were fulfilled.
The High Court was also wrong in going into the question whether the Chairman
and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were appointed on account
of caste considerations and political patronage or were lacking in integrity,
calibre or qualification, when the validity of their appointments was not
challenged in the writ petitions nor was any relief claimed for setting aside
their appointments. The validity of their appointments could not be questioned
collaterally while considering the challenge to the selections made by them.
In the instant case, no constitutional
provision was violated in making appointments of the Chairman and members of
the Haryana Public Service Commission nor was any legal provision breached and
the appointments of the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were made in conformity with the constitutional and legal
requirements. If that be so, it is difficult to see as to how the appointments
of the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission could be
regarded as suffering from any infirmity or any selections made by them could
be said to be vitiated, merely on the ground that they were not, in the opinion
of the Division Bench of the High Court, possessed of integrity, calibre or
qualifications.
[675 C-D; 676 G-H; 675 H; 676 A-C] C. Ranga
Raju v. State of Andhra Pradesh [1981] 3 S.C.R. 474 relied upon.
2. (i) There was no material whatsoever on
record to justify the observations made by the Division Bench that high marks
were undeservedly given to the three candidates related to Shri R.C. Marya and
Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and low marks were deliberately given to the other
meritorious candidates with a view to manipulating the selection of the former
at the cost of the latter. In fact, far from there being any material
supportive of such observation, there is one circumstance, which, completely
militates against the view taken by the Division Bench and that circumstance is
that the marks obtained by the candidates at the written examination were not
disclosed to the members of the Haryana Public Service Commission who held the
viva voce examination. If the members, who interviewed the candidates, did not
know what were the marks obtained by the candidates at the written examination,
it is difficult to see how they could have manipulated the marks at the viva
voce examination with a view to pushing up the three candidates related to Shri
R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur or any other candidates of their choice
so as to bring them within the range of selection. [682 C-E]
2. (ii) It is one of the fundamental
principles of jurisprudence that no man can be a judge in his own cause and
that if there is a reasonable likelihood of bias it is 'in accordance with
natural justice and common sense that the justice likely to be so biased should
be incapacitated from sitting". The question is not whether the judge is
actually biased or in fact decides partially, but 661 whether there is a real likelihood
of bias. What is objectionable in such a case is not that the decision is
actually tainted with bias but that the circumstances are such as to create a
reasonable apprehension in the mind of others that there is a likelihood of
bias affecting the decision. The basic principle underlying this rule is that
justice must not only be done but must also appear to be done and this rule has
received wide recognition in several decisions of the Supreme Court. It is also
important to note that this rule is not confined to cases where judicial power
stric to sensu is exercised. It is appropriately extended to all cases where an
independent mind has to be applied to arrive at a fair and just decision
between the rival claims of parties. Justice is not the function of the courts
alone;
it is also the duty of all those who are
expected to decide fairly between contending parties. The strict standards
applied to authorities exercising judicial power are being increasingly applied
to administrative bodies, for it is vital to the maintenance of the rule of law
in a welfare state where the jurisdiction of administrative bodies is
increasing at a rapid pace that the instrumentalities of the State should
discharge their functions in a fair and just manner. Where reasonable likelihood
of bias is alleged on the ground of relationship, the question would always be
as to how close is the degree of relationship or in other words, is the
nearness of relationship so great as to give rise to reasonable apprehension of
bias on the part of the authority making the selection. [683 E-H; 634 A-B; 685
C-D] A.K. Kraipak v. Union of India A.I.R. 1970 S.C. 150 relied upon.
D.K. Khanna v. Union of India & Ors.
[1973] 1 S.L.R.
80: Surinder Nath Goel v. State of Punjab
[1973] 1 Ser. L.R.
690 and M. Ariffudin v. D.D. Chitaley &
Ors. [1973] 2 Ser.
L.R. 119 referred to.
2.(iii) The principle which requires that a
member of a selection Committee whose close relative is appearing for selection
should decline to become a member of the selection committee or withdraw from
it leaving it to the appointing authority to nominate another person in his
place, need not be applied in case of a constitutional Authority like the
Public Service Commission, whether Central or State. If a member of a Public
Service Commission was to withdraw altogether from the selection process on the
ground that a close relative of his is appearing for selection, no other person
save a member can be substituted in his place. And it may sometimes happen that
no other member is available to take the place of such member and the
functioning of the Public Service Commission may be affected. When two more
members of a Public Service Commission are holding a viva voce examination,
they are functioning not as individuals but as the Public Service Commission.
Of course, it must be made clear that when a close relative of a member of a
Public Service Commission is appearing for interview, such member must withdraw
from participation in the interview of that candidate and must not take part in
any discussion in regard to the merits of that candidate and even the marks or
credits given to that candidate should not be disclosed to him.
[686 G-H;687 A-B] Javid Rasool Bhat v. State
of J.& K. [1984] 2 S.C.C.
632 relied upon.
In the instant case, both the members of the
Haryana Public Service Commission retired from the room when the inter views of
their respective 662 relatives were held. Moreover, neither of them took any
part in any discussion in regard to the merits of his relatives nor is there
anything to show that the marks or credits obtained by their respective
relatives at the interviews were disclosed to them. There was no infirmity
attaching to the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission on
the ground that, though their close relative were appearing for the interview,
Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and Shri R.C. Marya did not withdraw completely from
the entire selection process. [688 C-D;] 4.(i) The Haryana Public Service
Commission was not right in calling for interview all the 1300 and odd
candidates who secured 45 per cent or more marks in the written examination. It
is clear on a plain natural construction of Regulation 3 that what it
prescribes is merely a minimum qualification for eligibility to appear at the
viva voce test. Every candidate to be eligible for appearing at the viva voce
test must obtain at least 45 per cent marks in the aggregate in the written
examination. But obtaining of minimum, 45 per cent marks does not by itself
entitle a candidate to insist that he should be called for the viva voce test.
There is no obligation on the Haryana public Service Commission to call for the
viva voce test all candidates who satisfy the minimum eligibility requirement.
Where there is a composite test consisting of
a written examination followed by a viva voce test, the number of candidates to
be called for interview in order of the marks obtained in the written
examination, should not exceed twice or at the highest, thrice the number of
vacancies to be filled.
In the instant case, the Haryana Public
Service Commission could not be said to be actuated by any malafide or oblique
motive in calling for interview all the 1300 candidates because it was common
ground between the parties that this was the practice which was being consistently
followed by the Haryana Public Service Commission over the years and what was
done in this case was nothing exceptional. Therefore the selections made by the
Haryana Public Service Commission could not be said to be vitiated merely on
the ground that as many as 1300 and more candidates representing more than 20
times the number of available vacancies were called for interview, though it is
not right course to follow and not more than twice or at the highest thrice,
the number of candidates should have been called for interview. [690 B; E-F,
691 G-H; 629 A-D] "Theory & Practice of Modern Government" by
Harman Finer and Kothari Committee's Report on the Recruitment Policy &
Selection Methods for Civil Services Examination referred to 4.(ii) It is true
that some of the petitioners did quite well in the written examination but
faired badly in the viva voce test and in fact their performance at the viva
voce test appeared to have deteriorated in comparison to their performance in
the year 1977-78. But, the Court cannot sit in judgment over the marks awarded
by interviewing bodies unless it is proved or obvious that the marking is
plainly and indubitably arbitrary or affected by oblique motives. It is only if
the assessment is patently arbitrary or the risk of arbitrariness is so high
that a reasonable person would regard arbitrariness as inevitable, that the
assessment of marks at the viva voce test may be regarded as suffering from the
vice of arbitrariness. [692 F-G; 693 B- C;] 663 In the instant case, apart from
only three candidates, namely, Trilok Nath Sharma, Shakuntala Rani and Balbir
Singh one of whom belonged to the general category and was related to Shri
Raghubar Dayal Gaur and the other two were candidates for the seats reserved
for scheduled Castes and were related to Shri R.C. Marya, there was no other
candidate in whom the Chair man or any member of the Haryana Public Service
Commission was interested, so that there could be any motive for manipulation
of the marks at the viva voce examination. There were of course general
allegations of casteism made against the Chairman and the members of the
Haryana Public Service Commission but these allegations were not substantiated
by producing any reliable material before the Court. The Chairman and members
of the Haryana Public Service Commission in fact belonged to different castes
and it was not as if any particular caste was predominant amongst the Chairman
and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission so as even to remotely
justify an inference that the marks might have been manipulated to favour the
candidates of that caste.
Therefore, the Division Bench was not right
in striking down the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission
on the ground that they were vitiated by arbitrariness or by reasonable
likelihood of bias. [693 D-G] 5.(i) While a written examination assesses the
candidate's knowledge and intellectual ability, a viva voce test seeks to
assess a candidate's overall intellectual and personal qualities. While a written
examination has certain distinct advantages over the viva voce test, there are
yet no written tests which can evaluate a candidate's initiative, alertness,
resourcefulness, dependableness, cooperativeness, capacity for clear and
logical presentation, effectiveness in discussion, effectiveness in meeting and
dealing with others, adaptability, judgment, ability to make decision, ability
to lead, intellectual and moral integrity. Some of these qualities can be
evaluated, perhaps with some degree of error, by a viva voce test, much
depending on the constitution of the interview Board. There can therefore be no
doubt that the viva voce test performs a very useful function in assessing
personnel characteristics and traits and in fact, tests the man himself and is
therefore regarded as an important tool along with the written examination.
[695 F-G; 696 C-D] 5.(ii) There cannot be any hard and fast rule regarding the
precise weight to be given to the viva voce test as against the written
examination. It must very from service to service according to the requirement
of the service, the minimum qualification prescribed, the age group from which
the selection is to be made, the body to which the task of holding the viva
voce test is proposed to be entrusted and a host of other factors. It is
essentially a matter for determination by experts. The Court does not possess
the necessary equipment and it would not be right for the Court to pronounce
upon it, unless to use the words of Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Liladhar's case
"exaggerated weight has been given with proven or obvious oblique
motives." [696 H; 697 A-B]
5. (iii) The allocation of as high a
percentage of marks as 33.3% in case of ex-service officers and 22-2% test in
case of other candidates for the viva voce renders the selection process
arbitrary and it does suffer from the vice of arbitrariness.[697 C-D] Kothari
Committee's Report on the Recruitment Policy & Selection Methods for the
Civil Services Examination relied upon 664 In the instant case, the candidates
selected by the Haryana Public Service Commission have already been appointed
to various posts and have been working on these posts since the last about two
years. Moreover the Punjab Civil Service (Executive Branch) Rules 1930 under
which 33.3% marks in case of ex-service officers and 22.2% marks in case of
other candidates, have been allocated for the viva voce test have been in force
for almost 50 years and everyone has acted on the basis of these rules. If
selections made in accordance with the prescription contained in these rules
are now to be set aside, it will upset a large number of appointments already
made on the basis of such selections and the integrity and efficiency of the
entire administrative machinery would be seriously jeopardised. Therefore this
Court does not propose to set aside the selections made by the Haryana Public
Service Commission though they have been made on the basis of an unduly high
percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce test. [700 B-D]
6. So far as candidates in general category
are concerned, it would be prudent and safe to follow the percentage adopted by
the Union Public Service Commission in case of selections to the Indian
Administrative Service and other allied services. The percentage of marks
allocated for the viva voce test by the Union Public Service Commission in case
of selections to the Indian Administrative Services and other allied service is
12.2, and that has been found to be fair and just, as striking a proper balance
between the written examination and the viva voce test. This Court would
therefore direct that hereafter in case of selections to be made to the Haryana
Civil Services (Executive Branch) and other allied services, where the
competitive examination consists of a written examination followed by a viva
voce test, the marks allocated for the viva voce test shall not exceed 12.2% of
the total marks taken into account for the purpose of selection. The Court
would suggest that this percentage should also be adopted by the Public Service
Commissions in other States, because it is desirable that there should be
uniformity in the selection process through out the country and the practice
followed by the Union Public Service Commission should be taken as a guide for
the State Public Service Commissions to adopt and follow. In case of ex-service
officers, having regard to the fact that they would ordinarily be middle aged
persons with personalities fully developed, the percentage of marks allocated
for the viva voce test may be 25. Whatever selections are made by the Haryana
Public Service Commission in the future shall be on the basis that the marks
allocated for the viva voce test shall not exceed 12.2% in case of candidates
belonging to the general category and 25% in case of ex-service officers. [700
F-H; 701 A-D]
7. The Court directed that when selections to
the Judicial Service are being made in a State, a sitting Judge of the High
Court to be nominated by the Chief Justice of the State should be invited to
participate in the interview as an expert who, by reason of the fact that he is
a sitting High Court Judge, knows the quality and character of the candidates
appearing for the interview and the advice given by him should ordinarily be
accepted, unless there are strong and cogent reasons for not accepting such
advice and such strong and cogent reasons must be recorded in writing by the
Chairman and members of the Public Service Commission. [702 E-G] 665
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
Nos. 10160- 10162 of 1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 20.10.1983
of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Writ Petition No. 2495 of 1983.
P.P. Rao, A. Mariarputham, K.S. Kendriya and
R. Venkatarumani for the Appellants in C.A. No. 10160 of 1983. G.L. Sanghi,
S.K. Mehta, P.N. Puri, M.K. Dua and A.K. Vachar for the Appellants in C.A. No.
10161 of 1983. A.K. Ganguli for the Appellants in C.A. No. 10162 of 1983. M.K.
Ramamurthi, Mahabir Singh, S. Srinivasan and Vijay Hansaria for the Respondents
Nos. 6 & 7 in C.A. No. 10160 of 1983. R.K. Garg, Mahabir Singh, S.
Srinivasan and Vijay Hansaria for the Respondents Nos. 1, 2 and 16 in C.A. No. 10161
and Respondents Nos. 8 & 9 in C.A. No. 10162 of 1983.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. These appeals by special leave are directed against a judgment of
the Division Bench of the Punjab & Haryana High Court quashing and setting
aside certain selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission to the
Haryana Civil Service (Executive) and other allied services. The judgment in part
proceeds on surmises and conjectures and has made certain uncharitable
observations against the Chairman and Members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission without any warrant and hence it is necessary to set out the facts
giving rise to the appeals in some detail.
Sometime in October 1980 the Haryana Public
Service Commission invited applications for recruitment to 61 posts in Haryana
Civil Service (Executive) and other allied Services. The procedure for
recruitment was governed by the Punjab Civil Service (Executive Branch) Rules,
1930 as applicable in the State of Haryana. Rule 9 clause (1) of these Rules
provided that a competitive examination shall be held at any place in Haryana
in each year in or about the month of January for the purpose of selection by
competition of as many candidates for the Haryana Civil Service (Executive),
and others allied services as the Governor of Haryana may determine and 666
such competitive examination shall be held in accordance with the Regulations
contained in Appendix I to the Rules.
Rule 10 laid down the conditions for
eligibility to appear at the competitive examination but we are not concerned
with these conditions of eligibility in the present appeals.
Regulation I in Appendix I provided that the
competitive examination shall include compulsory and optional subjects and
every candidate shall take all the compulsory subjects and not more than three
of the optional subjects, provided that ex-serviceman shall not be required to
appear in the optional subjects. The compulsory subjects included English
Essay, Hindi Essay and General knowledge carrying in the aggregate 400 marks
and there was also viva-voce examination which was compulsory and which carried
200 marks and each optional subject carried 100 marks. Vide Regulation 5. The
result was that the written examination carried an aggregate of 700 marks for
candidates in general and for ex- servicemen, it carried an aggregate of 400
marks while in case of both, the viva voce examination carried 200 marks.
Some argument has turned on the true
interpretation of Regulation 3 and hence it would be desirable to set it out in
extenso. It read as follows:
"3. No candidate shall be eligible to
appear in the viva voce test unless he obtains 45 per cent marks in the aggregate
of all subjects including at least 33 per cent marks in each of the language
papers in Hindi (in Devnagri Script) and Hindi Essay provided that if at any
examination a sufficient number of candidates do not obtain 45 per cent marks
in the aggregate the Commission may at their discretion lower this percentage
to not below 40 per cent for the language papers remaining unchanged." It
appears that in response to the advertisement issued by the Haryana Public
Service Commission, about 6000 candidates applied for recruitment and appeared
at the written examination held by the Haryana Public Service Commission.
Out of about 6000 candidates who appeared for
the written examination, over 1300 obtained more than 45 per cent marks and
thus qualified for being called for interview for the viva voce examination.
The Haryana Public Service Commission invited all the 1300 and more candidates
who qualified for the viva voce test, for interview and the interviews lasted
for almost half a year. It seems that though originally applications were
invited for recruitment to 61 posts, the number of vacancies rose 667 during
the time taken up in the written examination and the viva voce test and test
and ultimately 119 posts became available for being filled and on the basis of
total marks obtained in the written examination as well as viva-voce test, 119
candidates were selected and recommended by the Haryana Public Service
Commission to the State Government.
It seems that there were some candidates who
had obtained very high marks at the written examination but owing to rather
poor marks obtained by them in the viva voce test, they could not come within
the first 119 candidates and they were consequently not selected. They were
aggrieved by the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission and
three out of them accordingly filed Civil writ No. 2495 of 1983 in the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana challenging the validity of the selections and
seeking writ for quashing and setting aside the same. They also claimed that
the marks given in the viva voce test should be ignored and selections should
be made only on the basis of the marks obtained by the candidates at the
written examination and they contended that if that was done, they would be
within first 119 to be selected by the Haryana Public Service Commission. Some
other candidates who did not figure in the list of 119 selected candidates also
filed Civil Writ Petition Nos.
2317, 3344, 3345, 3434, 3457, 3435 and 3719
of 1983 in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana challenging the validity of the
selections on substantially the same grounds and claiming substantially the
same reliefs as the petitioners in Civil Writ Petition 2495 of 1983. The State
of Haryana was joined as 1st respondent, the Haryana Public Service Commission
as 2nd respondent and three out of the five members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission, as respondents Nos. 3 to 5 in these writ petitions. The
Chairman and one other member of Haryana Public Service Commission, namely,
Shri B.S. Lather and Shri Gurmesh Prakash Bishnoi were however not impleaded as
respondents in the writ petitions. None of the 119 selected candidates were
also joined as respondents in the writ petitions. Five our of the 119 selected
candidates thereupon applied for being joined as respondents to these writ
petitions and on their application, they were added as respondent Nos. 6 to 10
in the writ petitions. This was broadly the array of parties in the writ
petitions.
Since all the writ petitions raised
substantially the same issues and the pleadings in the writ petitions also
followed substantially the same pattern, one writ petition, namely, Civil Writ
Petition 2495 of 1983 was treated as the main writ petition and the principal
arguments were advanced in that writ petition, It would therefore be 668
convenient to refer only to Civil Writ Petition 2495 of 1983 and trace the
course followed by it in the High Court because whatever we say in regard to
this writ petition would apply equally to the other writ petitions. So far as
Civil Writ Petition No. 2495 of 1983 is concerned, the State of Haryana filed
its counter affidavit in reply to the writ petition and so also did the Haryana
Public Service Commission. The five selected candidates who were impleaded as
respondents Nos. 6 to 10 also filed their counter affidavit joining issue with
the petitioners. We do not propose to set out here at this stage the averments
made in the writ petition or the answer to those averments made on behalf of
the respondents, because we shall have to refer to them in some detail when we
deal with the arguments advanced on behalf of the parties. Suffice it to state
that the avernments made in the writ petition and the answer sought to be given
on behalf of the respondents raised issues of considerable importance affecting
not only the Haryana Public Service Commission but also all other State Public
Service Commissions and calling for formulation of principle and norms which
should guide all State Public Service Commissions in the discharge of their functions.
We may briefly set out the grounds on which the petitioners challenged the
validity of the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission.
There were several grounds on which the
validity of the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission was
assailed on behalf of the petitioners and a declaration was sought that they
were entitled to be selected as falling within the first 119 candidates. The
first ground was that the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were not men of high integrity, calibre and qualification and they
were appointed solely as a matter of political patronage and hence the
selections made by them were invalid. Secondly, it was urged on behalf of the
petitioners that two of the selected candidates, namely, Mrs. Shakuntala Rani
and Balbir Singh were related to one of the members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission namely, Sh. R.C. Marya, while the third selected candidate
namely Trilok Nath Sharma was related to another member namely, Sh.
Raghubar Dayal Gaur and though these two
members did not participate in the interview of their respective relatives they
did participate in the interview of other candidates and the tactics adopted by
the Chairman and the members of the Commission was to give high marks to the
relatives and award low marks to the other candidates so as to ensure the
selection of their relatives. This, according to 669 petitioners, vitiated the
entire selection process. Thirdly, contended the petitioners, it was contrary
to the well settled practice followed by the Union Public Service Commission
and other selecting authorities to call for interview as many as 1300
candidates even though the number of vacancies required to be filled in was
only 119. The number of candidates called for interview was almost 20 times the
number of vacancies and this not only imposed an intolerable burden on the
Haryana Public Service Commission but also widened the scope for arbitrariness
in selection by making it possible for the Haryana Public Service Commission to
boost up or deflate the total marks which might be obtained by a candidate. The
argument of the petitioners was that the number of candidates to be called for
interview should not exceed twice or at the highest, thrice the number of
vacancies because otherwise the objective test of written examination would be
considerably diluted by the subjective assessment made in the vive voce test
and there would be considerable scope for arbitrariness in the process of
selection. This infirmity, submitted the petitioners, had the effect of
invaliding the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission. The
fourth contention urged on behalf of the petitioners was that the allocation of
200 marks for the viva voce test out of a total of 900 marks for the generality
of students and a total of 600 marks for ex- servicemen, was arbitrary and
excessive and it had the effect of distorting the entire process of selection
by introducting in a preponderant measure subjective element which could
facilitate arbitrariness and manipulation and it was accordingly
unconstitutional as involving denial of equal opportunity in public employment.
Lastly, it was contended on behalf of the petitioners that the viva voce test
was not conducted fairly and honestly and the selections made were vitiated on
account of nepotism, favouritism and casteism and also political motivation.
These were broadly the grounds of attack
levelled against the validity of the selections made by the Haryana Public
Service Commission.
These ground of challenge were sought to be
repelled on behalf of the respondents and it was contended that not only was it
not competent to the court on the existing set of pleadings to examine whether
the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were men of
high integrity, calibre and qualification but also there was no material at all
on the basis of which the Court could possibly come to the conclusion that they
were men lacking in integrity, calibre or qualification. It was also urged on
behalf of the respondents that the Haryana Public Service Commission being 670
a constitutional authority it was not necessary for Sh. R.C.
Marya and Sh. Raghubar Dayal Gaur to withdraw
altogether from the interviews and they acted correctly in abstaining from
participation when their relatives came to be interviewed. This was according
to the respondents, in conformity with the principles of fair play and did not
affect the validity of the selections. The respondents also contended that under
Regulation 3 in Appendix I every candidate who obtained 45 per cent and more
marks in the written examination was eligible to be called for interview and
the Haryana Public Service Commission was therefore justified in calling for
interview all the 1300 and odd candidates, who qualified by getting more than
45 per cent marks and in fact it would have been a denial of equal opportunity
in public employment if some of them had not been called despited having
qualified for the viva voce test. So far as the allocation of 200 marks for the
viva voce test is concerned, it was contended that this allocation of 200 marks
for the viva voce test was made under the Punjab Civil Service (Executive
Branch) Rules 1930 which had been in force since over 50 years and no one had
raised any objection to it during this long period of half a century and it had
stood the test of time and could not possibly be regarded as arbitrary or
excessive. The allegation that the selections were not made fairly and honestly
and they were tainted by nepotism, favouritism casteism or political patronage
was vehemently denied on behalf of the respondents and it was contended that
there was nothing to show that any extraneous considerations had influenced the
selection process. The respondents accordingly submitted that the challenge to
the validity of the selections was unfounded and the writ petitions were liable
to be dismissed.
The writ petitions came to be heard by a
Division Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana. The Division Bench
after hearing the parties at great length delivered a judgment on 20th October
1983 allowing the writ petitions.
The Division Bench held that the Chairman and
members of the Haryana Public Service Commission had been appointed purely on
the basis of political partisanship and caste considerations and that they did
not satisfy the stringent test of being men of high integrity, calibre and
qualification. The Division Bench actually went to the length of alleging
corruption against the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission and observed that they were not competent "to validly wield the
golden scale of viva voce test for entrants into the prestigious public
service." This ground alone, accordingly to the Division Bench, was
sufficient to invalidate the selections made by 671 the Haryana Public Service
Commission. The Division Bench then proceeded to hold that it was not enough
for Sh. R.C.
Marya and Sh. Raghubar Dayal Gaur to abstain
from participating in the interview when their relatives came up for the viva
voce test and their presence and participation at the time of interview of the
other candidates was sufficient to taint the selection process with a serious
infirmity. The Division Bench almost seemed to suggest, without there being the
slightest warrant for it, that "it was a familiar and deliberate tactic
adopted by the members of the Commission to abstain from participating in the
interview of their close relatives which in effect made patent to the remaining
members about their deep interest in them and further that each member of the
Commission adjusted the relatives" of the other and awarded low marks in
interview to other candidates who had secured high marks in the written
examination in order to oust the latter and bolster up the former in the merit
list. The Division Bench also condemned out of hand the practice adopted by the
Haryana Public Service Commission of calling for interview all the candidates
who obtained more than 45% marks in the written examination and who thus proved
themselves eligible for the viva voce test. The view taken by the Division
Bench was that the number of candidates to be called for interview should not
exceed twice or at the highest, thrice the number of vacancies required to be
filled up. The Division Bench also observed that the allocation of 200 marks
for the viva voce test was arbitrary and excessive, as it introduced a large
amount of subjective discretion in the process of selection which subordinated
the objective test of written examination and this, according to the Division
Bench, constituted denial of equal opportunity in public employment. The
Division Bench also came to the conclusion that candidates who had obtained
high marks in the written examination had been depressed by award of low marks
in the viva voce test and candidates who had obtained low marks were pulled up
by award of high marks in the viva voce test and the entire selection process
was vitiated by an "obvious oblique motive" and tainted by nepotism,
favouritism, caste considerations and political pressures. The Division Bench
on this view set aside the selections made by the Haryana Public Service
Commission and directed the Haryana Public Service Commission and the State of
Haryana" to forthwith declare the result of candidates of all categories
on the basis of written examination alone, scrupulously excluding all
considerations of the viva voce test. Respondents No. 6 to 10 thereupon
preferred Civil Appeal No. 10160 of 1983 with special leave obtained from this
Court and similarly with special leave, Civil Appeal No. 10161 of 1983 was
preferred by 672 the State of Haryana and the Haryana Public Service Commission
against the judgment of the Division Bench. Since disparaging observations were
made against the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission
by the Division Bench in its judgment, three members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission who were impleaded as respondents No. 3, 4 and 5 in the writ
petitions also applied for special leave to appeal and on such leave being
obtained, preferred Civil Appeal No. 10161 of 1983. All these three appeals
were heard together since they were directed against the same judgment of the
Division Bench and we proceed to dispose them of by this common judgment.
The first question that arises for
consideration in these appeals is whether the Division Bench of the High Court
was right in condemning the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission as men lacking in integrity, calibre and qualification and alleging
corrupt motives against them. The answer must plainly be in the negative and
for more than one reason. In the first place, it is common ground that the
Haryana Public Service Commission consisted of 5 members including the Chairman
and all of them participated in the interviews save and except Shri. R.C.
Marya, who did not participate in the interview of his daughter-in-law
Shakuntala Rani and the brother of his son-in-law, Balbir Singh and Shri
Raghubar Dayal Gaur who did not participate in the interview of the son-in-law
of his sister, Trilok Nath Sharma. The Division Bench of the High Court cast
serious aspersions on all the members of the Haryana Public Service Commission
including the Chairman and observed that "in the matter of appointments to
the Haryana Public Service Commission, the actualities of work-a-day politics
have wholly whittled away the ideal and the purpose" in which the
constitutional institution of Public Service Commission was conceived. The
Division Bench of the High Court went to the length of holding that the
appointments of the Chairman and the member of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were made "wholly caste considerations and political
affiliations" and all of them including the Chairman did not satisfy the stringent
test of "men of high integrity, calibre and qualification". These
were highly disparaging observations made against the Chairman and member of
the Haryana Public Service Commission and cast serious refection on their
character and integrity.
Surprisingly, these condemnatory observations
were made against the Chairman and all the members of the Haryana public
Service Commission without their being party respondents to the writ petitions.
Three members namely S/Sh.
673 D. R. Chaudhary, Raghubar Dayal Gaur and
R. C. Marya were joined as respondent Nos. 3, 4 and 5 but the Chairman Shri B.
S. Lather and another member Shri Gurmesh Parkash Bishnoi were not impleaded in
the writ petitions and yet the most damaging observations were made against
them. This was clearly in violation of the principles of natural justice.
The observations made against Shri B. S.
Lather and Shri Gurmesh Prakash Bishnoi cannot therefore be allowed to stand
and if these observations are obliterated from the judgment, the entire super-structure
of the argument assailing the constitution of the Haryana Public Service
Commission as a whole must collapse.
Secondly, these observations against the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were made without
any factual basis in the pleadings or the evidence.
There were no averments made in any of the
writ petitions, save and except Civil Writ petition No. 3344 of 1983, regarding
the Chairman or any of the members of the Haryana Public Service Commission. It
was nowhere alleged in any of these writ petitions that the Chairman and
members of the Haryana public Service Commission were lacking in integrity,
calibre and qualification or that they were appointed on the Haryana Public
Service Commission purely on account of caste considerations or political
affiliations without any merit or competence. The only averments in regard to
the appointments of the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were to be found in paragraph 9 of Civil Writ petition No. 3344 of
1983 where a direct allegation was made that all the members of the Haryana
Public Service Commission including the Chairman had political links and
backing and their appointments were "only due to political and caste
considerations". The petitioners in this writ petition proceeded to point
out the relationship of the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission to one or the other member of the political party ruling the State
at the date of the respective appointments and sought to draw an inference from
such relationship that their appointments were on account of caste
considerations and political linkages and merit, competence and integrity were
sacrificed. The relationship alleged in paragraph 9 was not disputed on behalf
of the respondents but the inference sought to be drawn there from was stoutly
resisted and it was contended that there was no material at all on the basis of
which it could be said that the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission were appointed solely "due to political and caste
considerations" without taking into account calibre, competence or 674
integrity. In fact the State of Haryana in its counter affidavit seriously
disputed that the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission
had any political affiliations. Now it is difficult to see how on the basis of
a mere averment in paragraph 9 of one of the writ petitions, which averment was
disputed on behalf of the respondents, the Division Bench of the High Court
could possibly come to the conclusion that politics had played a major role in
appointment of the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission and that they were men lacking in integrity, calibre and
qualification, particularly when no such allegation was made by the petitioners
in any of the other writ petitions. We do not think that the Division Bench of
the High Court was at all justified in drawing from the facts set out in
paragraph 9 of Civil Writ petition No.
3344 of 1983 any inference that the Chairman
and members were totally unfit to be appointed on the Haryana Public Service
Commission or that they were not men of integrity calibre and qualification.
Merely because Shri B. S. Lather was the brother of Shri Mahinder Singh Lather
who was allegedly influential with the Government of Haryana when the Janta
Party was in power or Shri R. C. Marya was close to Shri Chand Ram who was a
Union Minister for State during the Janta regime or Shri D. R. Chaudhary was
close to Ch.
Devi Lal former Chief Minister of Haryana and
belonged to his caste as well as to his village or Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur was
close to and belonged to the caste of Shri Chiranji Lal Sharma who was a
Congress Member of Parliament or Shri Gurmesh Prasad Bishnoi was close to and belonged
the caste of Shri Bhajan Lal, present Chief Minister of Haryana, it does not
necessarily follow that they were not fit to be appointed but were appointed
solely on account of personal relationship and caste considerations. The
Division Bench of the High Court proceeded solely on surmises and conjectures
and committed a grievous error in jumping to the conclusion that the Chairman
and members of the Public Service Commission were lacking in integrity, calibre
and qualification and were appointed solely on account of extraneous
considerations. It is a very serious matter to cast aspersions on the
character, integrity and competence of men occupying the high office of
Chairman and members of a Public Service Commission and we wish the Division
Bench of the High Court had acted with care and circumspection in making such
imputation against the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission, when it was not even specifically alleged in paragraph 9 of Civil
Writ Petition 3344 of 1983 that the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission were unfit to hold the office to which they were appointed
or 675 were lacking in integrity, character and qualification. We may point out
that even if the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission
were appointed on account of political and caste considerations, they could
still be men of character, integrity and competence and the extraneous
considerations which might have weighed with the appointing authority need not
necessarily reflect upon their competence, character or fitness. The
condemnatory observations made against the Chairman and members of the Haryana
Public Service Commission thus not only went beyond the averments made in the
writ petitions but were also totally unjustified and unwarranted.
Thirdly, it is difficult to see how the
Division Bench of the High Court could possibly undertake an inquiry into the
question whether the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission were men of integrity, calibre and qualification or not. It was
totally irrelevant inquiry, because even if they were men lacking in integrity,
calibre and qualification, it would not make their appointments invalid, so
long as the constitutional and legal requirements in regard to appointment were
fulfilled.
Article 316 of the Constitution makes
provision for appointment and term of office of members of a State Public
Service Commission. Clause (1) of this Article provides that the Chairman and
members of a State Public Service Commission shall be appointed by the Governor
of the State and the proviso to that clause enacts that "as nearly as may
be one half of the members of every Public Service Commission shall be persons
who at the dates of their respective appointments have held office for at least
ten years" under the Government of a State. Clause(2) of Article 316
declares that a member of a State Public Service Commission shall hold office
for a term of six years from the date on which he enters upon his office or until
he attains the age of sixty two years, which ever is earlier.
Article 319 lays down inter alia that on
ceasing to hold office, the Chairman of State Public Service Commission shall
not be eligible for any employment under the Government of India or the Government
of a State, save and except that of Chairman or any other member of the Union
Public Service Commission and similarly, a member of a State Public Service
Commission. These are the only provisions in the Constitution bearing on the
appointment of Chairman and members of a State Public Service Commission. Now
concededly none of these constitutional provisions was violated in making
appointments of the 676 Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service
Commission nor was any legal provision breached and the appointments of the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were in
conformity with the constitutional and legal requirements. If that be so, it
passes our comprehension as to how the appointments of the Chairman and members
of the Haryana Public Service Commission could be regarded as suffering from
any infirmity or any selections made by them could be said to be vitiated,
merely on the ground that they were not, in the opinion of the Division Bench
of the High Court possessed of integrity, calibre or qualification. We may take
an analogy to illustrate the point we are making. Suppose a District Judge is
appointed by the Governor of the State in consultation with the High Court in
accordance with the requirements of Article 233 and the appropriate rules made
in that behalf.
Can a judgment delivered by him be assailed
as invalid on the ground that he has not the requisite integrity, calibre or
qualification ? The judgment may be set aside if it is wrong but not because it
is given by a Judge who is lacking in integrity, calibre or qualification.
Similarly, selections made by the Chairman and members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission may be quashed if they are found to be vitiated by the
influence of extraneous considerations or are made in breach of the rules, but
they cannot be invalidated merely by showing in a general sort of way that they
were not men possessed of high integrity, calibre or qualification.
Lastly, we do not think that the Division
Bench of the High Court was justified in going into the question whether the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission were appointed an
account of caste considerations and political patronage or were lacking in
integrity, calibre or qualification, when the validity of their appointments
was not challenged in the writ petitions nor was any relief claimed for setting
aside their appointments.
The validity of their appointments could not
be questioned collaterally while considering the challenge to the selections
made by them. This view receives support from the observations of Chinnappa 677
Reddy, J. speaking on behalf of the Court in C. Ranga Raju v. State of Andhra
Pradesh [1981] 3 S.C.R. 474. There, the learned Judge pointed out: "The
defective appointment of a de facto judge may be questioned directly a
proceeding to which he be a party but it cannot be permitted to be questioned
in a litigation between two private litigants, a litigation which is of no
concern or consequence to the judge except as a judge. Two litigants litigating
their private title cannot be permitted to bring in issue and litigate upon the
title of a judge to his office. Otherwise as soon as a judge pronounces a
judgment a litigation may be commenced for a declaration that the judgment is
void because the judge is no judge. A judge's title to his office cannot be
brought into jeopardy in that fashion. Hence the rule against collateral attack
on validity of judicial appointments." We wholly endorse these
observations and conclude that the principle underlying these observations must
be held to be equally applicable in the present case and the title of the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission cannot be allowed
to be placed in jeopardy in proceeding for challenging the selections made by
them. This ground of attack against the validity of the selections must
therefore be rejected.
That takes us to the next ground of attack
which found favour with the Division Bench of the High Courts, namely that the
participation of Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Guar in the process of
selection introduced a serious infirmity in the selections. It was not disputed
and indeed on the record it could not be, than when the close relatives of Shri
R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Guar came up for interview, but, according
to the Division Bench of the High Court, such limited withdrawal from
participation was not enough and both the members, said the Division Bench
ought to have withdrawn from the selection process altogether. The Division
Bench of the High Court relied heavily on the fact that Trilok Nath Sharma, who
was the son-in-law of the sister of Shri Raghubar Dayal Guar obtained 160 marks
out of 300 in the viva voce test while Shakuntala Rani daughter-in- law of
Shri. R.C. Marya obtained 131 marks and Balbir Singh brother of the son-in-law
of Shri R.C. Marya obtained 130 marks and observed that "these 678
admitted facts are obviously telltale". The Division Bench went to the
length of imputing nepotism and favouritism to the Chairman and members of the
Haryana Public Service Commission by observing that each member of the Haryana
Public Service Commissions adjusted the relatives of the others and awarded low
marks in the interview to the other candidates with a view to ousting the
latter and bolstering up the former in the merit list. We are pained to observe
that such a serious aspersion should have been cast on the Chairman and members
of the Haryana Public Service Commission without any basis or justification.
Merely because Trilok Nath Sharma obtained 160 marks, Shakuntala Rani obtained
131 marks and Balbir Singh obtained 130 marks, no inference can necessarily be
drawn that these high marks were given to them in viva voce examination
undeservedly with a view to favouring them at the cost of more meritorious
candidates. There is nothing to show that these three candidates who happened
to be related to Shri Raghubar Dayal Guar and Shri R.C. Marya were not
possessed of any requisite calibre or competence or their performance at the
viva voce examination did not justify the marks awarded to them. The only
circumstance on which the Division Bench relied for raising the inference that
such high marks were given to these three candidates, not on merits, but as an
act of nepotism with a view to unduly favouring them so that they can some
within the range of selection, was that out of these three candidates, two were
related to Shri R.C. Marya and one was related to Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur.
This inference, we are constrained to observe, was wholly unjustified. We
cannot help remarking that the Division Bench indulged in surmises and
conjectures in reaching the conclusion that high marks were given unjustifiably
to these three candidates at the viva voce examination with a view to pushing
them up and low marks were deliberately given to other more meritorious
candidates with a view to pushing them down and thus facilitating the selection
of these three candidates who would not otherwise have come within the range of
selection. We fail to appreciate what is the basis on which the Division Bench
could observe that these three candidates got high marks at the viva voce
examination only because they were elated to Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar
Dayal Gaur. Can a relative of a member of a Public Service Commission, Central
or State, not get high marks at the viva voce examination on his own merit?
Must he always get low marks, so that if high marks are awarded to him, that
would necessarily be attributed to his relationship with the member of the
Public Service Commission? 679 The Division Bench sought to draw support for
its inference from an article written by Shri D.R. Chaudhari, a member of the
Haryana Public Service Commission, who is arrayed as respondent No. 3 in the
writ petition. This article was captioned "Public Service Commissions
under Pressures" and was written by Shri D.R. Chaudhari and published in
the issue of Tribune dated 13th March 1981.
Shri D.R. Chaudhari was appointed a member of
the Haryana Public Service Commission on 2nd December 1977. He had been such
member for over three years at the time of writing this article.
He pointed out in this article, and we are
quoting here a passage which has been strongly relied upon by the Division
Bench:
"With political morality in our system
at its lowest abb, the politicians are always in a hurry to pack the P.S. Cs
with such persons who would be pliable tools in the matter of recruitment.
Academic worth, intellectual calibre, experience of men and matters, and
integrity are of no relevance. What is important is a person's
"dependability." Narrow caste, communal and regional issues dominate
Indian Politics today and these considerations override questions of talent in
the matter of recruitment. In the process a member with little intellectual
calibre and less integrity begin to serve his own interests a those of his
political benefactor, No vender there is a widespread feeling in the States
(mercifully, with the U.P.S.C. as a possible exception) that every post carries
a price tag.
We have reached a state when the composition
and functioning of our P.S. Cs should be critically evaluated. This is
necessary if the institution has to survive as a meaningful body. Its
functioning should be brought 680 under public gaze. At present there is a halo
of secrecy surrounding the P.S.C. and secrecy always breeds corruption. It
would be suicidal to treat the P.S.C. as a sacred cow. There is nothing more
sacred than the public interest and the public interest demands that the
functioning of the P.S. Cs should be widely debated through the press and other
forums. I invite my, colleagues of the P.S. Cs and public spirited individuals
to join the debate." We may reasonably assume that a person who write such
an article would never be a party to any manipulations in the selection of
candidates nor would he debase or demean himself by indulging in or even
lending his support to, any acts of nepotism or favouritism. It would be quite
legitimate to infer that if there had been any attempt to manipulate the marks
at the viva voce examination with a view to favouring the undeserving or
pushing down the meritorious, Shri D.R. Chaudhuri would have protested against
such improper and unholy attempt. The very fact that Shri D.R. Chaudhari not
only did not register any dissent in regard to the marks awarded at the viva
voce examination but actually agreed with the evaluation made by his colleagues
shows that there was nothing wrong with the marking nor was there any
manipulation of marks indicating nepotism or favouritism. In fact Shri D.R.
Chaudhari filed an affidavit in these proceedings where he candidly said that
this article written by him was based on his direct experience of working in
the Haryana Public Service Commission and he proceeded to add boldly and
courageously:
"As a member of H.P.S.C., I noticed
various forces trying to undermine the independent functioning of the
Commission. What irked me most was the political interference. An attempt was
made to convert this august body into a petty government department where
politicians' writ could rung large. Besides this, caste lobbies and money bags
were active to influence its decisions at every stage.
I was in a state of agony. I decided to take
the matter to the public through the medium of the press. I knew 681 that I
would incur the wrath of the powers that be and dismay caste lobbies and money
bags.
I took a calculated risk and wrote the
article under question. It did infuriate the political posses as is evident
from a news item published in the Tribune dated June 25, 1981 (clipping
attached). But at the same time it served the purpose I had in mind. It started
a public debate. It created a furore. It was read and debated widely. A number
of letters to the Editor appeared in the Tribune. It also figured in the
session of the Haryana Vidhan Sabha.
The article had a desired effect. Pressures
ceased. Political operators and other manipulators were put on the alert. As
such I did not feel the necessity of writing again on the same issue though I
continued writing on other matters." Then speaking specifically about the
viva voce examination held by the Haryana Public Service Commission in the
present case, Shri D.R. Chaudhari stated:
"The interviews for the recruitment of
H.C.S. and Allied Services, which is the subject of writ petitions in the
Hon'ble Punjab and Haryana High Court, were conducted about two years after the
publication of the article. No pressure, political or otherwise, was exercised
on me, nor to the best of my knowledge, on any other colleague of mine in the
commission during the course of this recruitment." There is no reason why
this statement made by Shri D.R.
Chaudhari should not be believed. It is
indeed surprising that the Division Bench accepted readily what was said by
Shri D.R. Chaudhari in the article written by him on 13th March, 1981 but for
some inexplicable reason, refused to believe the same Shri D.R. Chaudhari when
he stated that this article had the desired effect and on account of the
exposure made in this article, pressures, political or otherwise, ceased so far
as the functioning of the Haryana Public 682 Service Commission was concerned
and in awarding of marks at the viva voce examination, no pressure, political
or otherwise, was exercised on Shri D.R. Chaudhari nor to the best of his
knowledge, on any of his other colleagues. We accept what has been stated by
Shri D.R. Chaudhari in his affidavit and disapprove of the observation made by
the Division Bench that high marks were undeservedly given to the three candidates
related to Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and low marks were
deliberately given to the meritorious candidates with a view to manipulating
the selection of the former at the cost of the latter. We are of the view that
there was no material whatsoever on record to justify such observation on the
part of the Division Bench.
In fact, far from there being any material
supportive of such observation. We find that there is one circumstance, which,
in our opinion, completely militates against the view taken by the Division
Bench and that circumstance is that the marks obtained by the candidates at the
written examination were not disclosed to the members of the Haryana Public
Service Commission who held the viva voce examination. If the members, who
interviewed the candidates, did not know what were the marks obtained by the
candidates at the written examination, it is difficult to see how they could
have manipulated the marks at the viva voce examination with view to pushing up
the three candidates related to Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur or
any other candidates of their choice so as to bring them within the range of
selection.
But the question still remains whether the
selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission could be said to be
vitiated on account of the fact that Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal
Gaur participated in the selection process, though Trilok Nath Sharma who was
related to Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and Shakuntala Rani and Balbir Singh both
of whom were related to Shri R.C. Marya, were candidates for selection. It is
undoubtedly true that Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur did not participate when Trilok
Nath Sharma came up for interview and similarly Shri R.C. Marya did not
participate when Shakuntala Rani and Balbir Singh appeared for interview at the
viva voce examination. But, according to the petitioners, this was not
sufficient to wipe out the blemish in the process of selection for two reasons:
firstly, because Shri R C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur participated in
the interviews of the other candidates and that gave rise to a reasonable
apprehension in 683 the mind of the candidates that Shri R.C. Marya and Shri
Raghubar Dayal Gaur might tend to depress the marks of the other candidates
with a view to ensuring the selection of the candidates related to them and
secondly, because there could be reasonable apprehension in the mind of the
candidates that the other members of the Haryana Public Service Commission
interviewing the candidates might, out of regard for their colleagues, tend to
give higher marks to the candidates related to them, The argument of the
petitioners was that the presence of Shri R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal
Gaur on the interviewing committee gave rise to an impression that there was
reasonable likelihood of bias in favour of the three candidates related to Shri
R.C. Marya and Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and this had the effect of vitiating
the entire selection process. This argument was sought to be supported by the
petitioners by relying on the decisions reported in D.K. Khanna v. Union of
India & Ors. Surinder Nath Goel v. State of Punjab and M.
Ariffudin v. D.D. Chitaley & Ors. We do
not think this argument can be sustained and for reasons, which we shall
presently state, it is liable to be rejected.
We agree with the petitioners that it is one
of the fundamental principles of our jurisprudence that no man can be a Judge
in his own cause and that if there is a reasonable likelihood of bias it is
"in accordance with natural justice and common sense that the justice
likely to be so biased should be incapacitated from sitting". The question
is not whether the judge is actually biased or in fact decides partially, but
whether there is a real likelihood of bias. What is objectionable in such a
case is not that the decision is actually tainted with bias but that the
circumstances are such as to create a reasonable apprehension in the mind of
others that there is a likelihood of bias affecting the decision. The basic
principle underlying this rule is that justice must not only be done but must
also appear to be done and this rule has received wide recognition in several
decisions of this Court. It is also important to note that this rule is not
confined to cases where judicial power stricto sensu is exercised. It is
appropriately extended to all cases where an independent mind has to be applied
to arrive at a fair and just decision between the rival claims of parties.
Justice is not the 684 function of the courts
alone; it is also the duty of all those who are expected to decide fairly
between contending parties. The strict standards applied to authorities
exercising judicial power are being increasingly applied to administrative
bodies, for it is vital to the maintenance of the rule of law in a welfare
state where the jurisdiction of administrative bodies in increasing at a rapid
pace that the instrumentalities of the State should discharge their functions
in a fair and just manner. This was the basis on which the applicability of
this rule was extended to the decision-making process of a selection committee
constituted for selecting officers to the Indian Forests Service in A.K.
Kraipak v. Union of India happened in this
case was that one Naquisbund, the acting Chief Conservator of Forests, Jammu
and Kashmir was a member of the Selection Board which had been set up to select
officers to the Indian Forest Service from those serving in the Forest
Department of Jammu and Kashmir. Naquisbund who was a member of the Selection
Board was also one of the candidates for selection to the Indian Forest
Service. He did not sit on the Selection Board at the time when his name was
considered for selection but he did sit on the Selection Board and participated
in the deliberations when the names of his rival officers were considered for
selection and took part in the deliberations of the Selection Board while
preparing the list of the selected candidates in order of preference. This
Court held that the presence of Naquishbund vitiated the selection on the
ground that there was reasonable likelihood of bias affecting the process of
selection. Hegde, J. speaking on behalf of the Court countered the argument
that Naquisbund did not take part in the deliberations of the Selection Board
when his name was considered, by saying:
"But then the very fact that he was a
member of the Selection Board must have its own impact on the decision of the
Selection Board. Further, admittedly, he participated in the deliberations of
the Selection Board when the claims of his rivals ... were considered. He was
also party to the preparation of the list of selected candidates in order of
preference. At every stage of his participation in the deliberation of the
selection board, there was a conflict between his interest and duty . ... The
real question is not whether he was biased. It is difficult to prove the state
of mind of a person. Therefore what we 685 have to see is whether there is
reasonable ground for believing that he was likely to have been biased
.......... There must be a reasonable likelihood of bias. In deciding the
question of bias we have to take into consideration human probabilities and
ordinary course of human conduct." This Court emphasised that it was not
necessary to establishes as but it was sufficient to invalidate the selection
process if it could be shown that there was reasonable likelihood of bias. The
likelihood of bias may arise on account of proprietory interest or on account
of personal reasons, such as, hostility to one party or personal friendship or
family relationship with the other.
Where reasonable likelihood of basis is
alleged on the ground of relationship, the question would always be as to how
close is the degree of relationship or in other words, is the nearness of
relationship so great as to give rise to reasonable apprehension of bias on the
part of the authority making the selection.
The High Court of Himachal Pradesh in D.K.
Khanna's case (supra) drawing inspiration from A.K. Kraipak's case, held that
where one of the members of the Committee constituted for selecting members of
the State Civil Service for promotion to the Indian Administrative Service, was
the son-in-law of a candidate who was competing for inclusion in the list of
selected candidates, the entire selection process was vitiated by the presence
of such member, though he did not take any part in the consideration of his
father- in-law's candidature or in any manner try to influence his colleagues
in regard to his father-in-law. The High Court observed that the degree of relationship
in this case was so close as to reasonably give an impression to the other
candidates that there was a real likelihood of the son-in- law espousing the
cause of his father-in-law as his own. So also in Surinder Nath Goel's case
(supra), the High Court of Punjab and Haryana took the same view where it was
found that two of the candidates appearing for selection were related to one of
the members of the Selection Committee.
The same approach was adopted by the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh in M. Aiffurdin's case (supra) where one of the members
of the Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission who sat on the Commission and
participated in the selection for the posts of Professor and Lecturer in the
Andhra Pradesh Technical Education Service, was a partner with some of the
candidates appearing for the selection and it was held that the 686 entire
selection process was vitiated, because there was clearly reasonable likelihood
of bias in favour of those candidates on the part of such member of the Commission.
We may point out that so far as this last decision is concerned, it does not
appear that the member of the Commission who was a partner with some of the
candidates, withdrew when those candidates came to be interviewed and did not
participate in the consideration of their candidature.
We must straightaway point out that A.K.
Kraipak's case is a landmark in the development of administrative law and it
has contributed in a large measure to the strengthening of the rule of law in
this country. We would not like to whittle down in the slightest measure the
vital principle laid down in this decision which has nourished the roots of the
rule of law and injected justice and fair play into legality. There can be no
doubt that if a selection committee is constituted for the purpose of selecting
candidates on merits and one of the members of the Selection Committee is
closely related to a candidate appearing for the selection, it would not be
enough for such member merely to withdraw from participation in the interview
of the candidate related to him but he must withdraw altogether from the entire
selection process and ask the authorities to nominate another person in his
place on the selection committee, because otherwise all the selections made
would be vitiated on account of reasonable likelihood of bias affecting the
process of selection. But the situation here is a little different because the
selection of candidates to the Haryana Civil Service (Executive) and allied
services is being made not by any Selection Committee constituted for that
purpose but it is being done by the Haryana Public Service Commission which is
a Commission set up under Article 316 of the Constitution. It is a Commission
which consists of a Chairman and a specified member of members and is a
Constitutional Authority. We do not think that the principle which requires
that a member of a Selection Committee whose close relative is appearing for
selection should decline to become a member of the selection committee or
withdraw from it leaving it to the appointing authority to nominate another
person in his place, need be applied in case of a Constitutional Authority like
the Public Service Commission, whether Central or State. If a member of a
Public Service Commission were to withdraw altogether from the selection
process on the ground that a close relative of his is appearing for selection,
no other person save a member can be substituted in his place. And it may
sometimes happen that no other member is available to take the place of such 687
member and the functioning of the Public Service Commission may be affected.
When two or more members of a Public Service Commission are holding a viva voce
examination. they are functioning not as individuals but as the Public Service
Commission. Of course, we must make it clear that when a close relative of a
member of a Public Service Commission is appearing for interview, such member
must withdraw from participation in the interview of that candidate and must
not take part in any discussion in regard to the merits of that candidate and
even the marks or credits given to that candidate should not be disclosed to
him. Chinnappa Reddy, J observed to the same effect in Javid Rasool Bhat v.
State of J and K while dealing with a similar question which arose before him
for consideration:
"The procedure adopted by the Selection
Committee and the member concerned was in accord with the quite well-known and
generally accepted procedure adopted by the Public Service Commission
everywhere. It is not unusual for candidates related to members of the Service
Commission or Other Selection Committee to seek employment. Whenever such a
situation arises, the practice generally is for the member concerned to excuse
himself when the particular candidate is interviewed. We notice that such a
situation had also been noticed by this Court in the case of Nagarajan v.
State of Mysore where it was pointed out that
in the absence of mala fides, it would not be right to set aside the selection
merely because one of the candidates happened to be related to a member of the
Selection Committee who had abstained from participating in the interview of
that candidate.
Nothing unusual was one by the present
Selection Committee. The girl's father was not present when she was
interviewed. She was one among several hundred candidates. The marks obtained
by her in the written test were not even known when she was interviewed......
In the case before us, the Principal of the
Medical College, Srinagar, dissociated himself from the written test and did
not participate in the proceedings when his daughter was interviewed. When the
other candidates were interviewed, he did not know the marks obtained either by
his daughter or by any of the candi- 688 dates. There was no occasion to
suspect his bona fides even remotely. There was not even a suspicion of bias,
leave alone a reasonable likelihood of bias. There was no violation of the
principles of natural justice." We wholly endorse there observations. Here
in the present case it was common ground between the parties that Shri Raghubar
Gaur Dayal Gaur did not participate at all in interviewing Trilok Nath Sharma
and likewise Shri R.C. Marya did not participate at all when Shakuntala Rani
and Balbir Singh came to be interviewed and in fact, both of them retired from
the room when the interviews of their respective relatives were held. Moreover,
neither of them took any part in any discussion in regard to the merits of his
relatives nor is there anything to show that the marks or credits obtained by
their respective relatives at the interviews were disclosed to them. We are
therefore of the view that there was no infirmity attaching to the selections
made by the Haryana Public Service Commission on the ground that, though their
close relative were appearing for the interview, Shri Raghubar Dayal Gaur and
Shri R.C. Marya did not withdraw completely from the entire selection process.
This ground urged on behalf of the
petitioners must therefore be rejected.
There was also one other contention which
found favour with the Division Bench in support of its conclusion that there
was reasonable likelihood of bias vitiating the "whole gamut of the
selection process". This contention was based on the fact that though only
61 vacant posts were advertised for being filled up, over 1300 candidates
representing more than 20 times the number of available vacancies, were called
for the viva voce examination. The Division Bench pointed out that in order to
have a proper balance between the objective assessment of a written examination
and the subjective assessment of personality by a viva voce test, the
candidates to be called for interview at the viva voce test should not exceed
twice or at the highest, thrice the number of available vacancies. This
practice of confining the number of candidates to be called for interview to
twice or at the highest, thrice the number of vacancies to be filled up, was
being followed consistently by the Union Public Service Commission in case of
Civil Services Examination, but in the present case, observed the Division
Bench, a departure was made by the Haryana Public Service Commission and
candidates numbering more than 20 times the available vacancies were called for
interview. The result, according to the Division Bench, was that the area of 689
arbitrariness in the viva voce test was considerably enlarged and even a
student who had got poor marks in the written examination and who having regard
to dismal performance at the written examination did not deserve to be called
for interview, could get a chance of being called and he could then be pulled
up within the range of selection by awarding unduly high marks at the viva voce
examination.
This conclusion was sought to be buttressed
by the Division Bench by relying on a comparison of the marks obtained by some
of the petitioners in the written examination and at the viva voce test. This
comparison showed that eight of the petitioners secured "a percentage of
around 60 per cent rising up to a highest of 68.5 per cent" in the written
examination, but they were awarded "a disastrously low percentage of marks
in the viva voce ranging from the rock bottom of 13 per cent to 21 per
cent", making it impossible for them to bridge the difference so as to be
able to come within the range of selection. How could such brilliant candidates
who had done so well in the written examination fare so poorly in the viva voce
test that they could not get more than 20 per cent marks, asked the Division
Bench? The Division Bench also pointed out that some out of these eight
petitioners had appeared in an earlier examination held in 1977-78 and at the
viva voce test held at that time. they had secured more than 50 to 55 per cent
marks and it was difficult to believe that during the next three succeeding
years, they had deteriorated to such an extent that they slumpted down to 20
per cent marks. The Division Bench also analysed the comparative marks obtained
by the first 16 candidates who topped the list in the written examination and
noted that on account of the poor marks obtained by them at the viva voce test,
10 out of these 16 candidates were "knocked out of the race" because
their ranking, on the basis of the total marks obtained by them in them in the
written examination and the viva voce test, went for below 61 and only 4 out of
the remaining 6 could rank within the first 16 so as to be eligible for
appointment in the Haryana Civil Service (Executive Branch) which is a superior
service compared to other allied services. It was also pointed out by the
Division Bench that out of 16 candidates who topped the list on the basis of
combined marks obtained in the written and viva voce examinations and who
consequently secured appointment to posts in the Haryana Civil Service
(Executive Branch), 12 could make it only on account of the high marks obtained
by them at the viva voce examination, though they were not high up in ranking
in the written examination. On the basis of 690 these facts and circumstances,
the Division Bench concluded that the petitioners had discharged the burden of
showing that there was reasonable likelihood of bias vitiating the entire
selection process.
We do not think we can agree with this
conclusion reached by the Division Bench. But whilst disagreeing with the
conclusion, we must admit that the Haryana Public Service Commission was not
right in calling for interview all the 1300 and odd candidates who secure 45
per cent or more marks in the written examination. The respondents sought to
justify the action of the Haryana Public Service Commission by relying on
Regulation 3 of the Regulations contained in Appendix 1 of the Punjab Civil
Service (Executive Branch) Rules 1930 which were applicable in the State of
Haryana and contended that on a true interpretation of that Regulation, the
Haryana Public Service Commission was bound to call for interview all the
candidates who secured a minimum of 45 per cent marks in the aggregate at the
written examination. We do not think this contention is well founded. A plain
reading of Regulation 3 will show that it is wholly unjustified. We have
already referred to Regulation 3 in an earlier part of the judgment and we need
not reproduce it again. It is clear on a plain natural construction of
Regulation 3 that what it prescribes is merely a minimum qualification for eligibility
to appear at the viva voce test. Every candidate to be eligible for appearing
at the viva voce test must obtain at least 45 per cent marks in the aggregate
in the written examination. But obtaining of minimum 45 per cent marks does not
by itself entitle a candidate to insist that he should be called for the viva
voce test. There is no obligation on the Haryana Public Service Commission to
call for the viva test all candidates who satisfy the minimum eligibility
requirement.
It is open to the Haryana Public Service
Commission to say that out of the candidates who satisfy the eligibility
critarion of minimum 45 per cent marks in the written examination, only a
limited number of candidates at the top of the list shall be called for
interview. And this has necessarily to be done because otherwise the viva voce
test would reduced to a farce. It is indeed difficult to see how a viva voce
test for properly and satisfactorily measuring the personality of a candidate
can be carried out, if over 1300 candidates are to be interviewed for
recruitment to a service. If a viva voce test is to be carried out in a
thorough and scientific manner, as it must be in order to arrive at a fair and
satisfactory evaluation of the personality of a candidates, the interview must
take anything between 10 to 30 691 minutes. In fact, Herman Finer in his book
on "Theory and Practice of Modern Government" points out that
"the interview should last at least half an hour". The Union Public
Service Commission making selections for the Indian Administrative Service also
interviews a candidate for almost half an hour. Only 11 to 12 candidates are
called for interview in a day of 51/2 hours. It is obvious that in the
circumstances, it would be impossible to carry out a satisfactory viva voce
test if such a large unmanageable number of over 1300 candidates are to be
interviewer. The interviews would then tend to be casual, superficial and
sloppy and the assessment made at such interviews would not correctly reflect
the true measure of the personality of the candidate. Moreover, such a course
would widen the area of arbitrariness, for even a candidate who is very much
lower down in the list on the basis of marks obtained in the written
examination, can, to borrow an expression used by the Division Bench,
'gate-crash' into the range of selection, if he is awarded unduly high marks at
the viva voce examination. It has therefore always been the practice of the
Union Public Service Commission to call for interview, candidates representing
not more than twice or thrice the number of available vacancies. Kothari
Committee's Report on the 'Recruitment Policy and Selection Methods for the
Civil Services Examination' also points out, after an indepth examination of
the question as to what should be the number of candidates to be called for
interview :
"The number of candidates to be called
for interview, in order of the total marks in written papers, should not
exceed, we think, twice the number of vacancies to be filled.. ."
Otherwise the written examination which is definitely more objective in its
assessment than the viva voce test will lose all meaning and credibility and
the viva voce test which is to some extent subjective and discretionary in its
evaluation will become the decisive factor in the process of selection. We are
therefore of the view that where there is a composite test consisting of a
written examination followed by a viva voce test, the number of candidates to
be called for interview in order of the marks obtained in the written examination,
should not exceed twice or at the highest, thrice the number of vacancies to be
filled. The Haryana Public Service Commission in the present case called for
interview all candidates numbering over 1300 who satisfied the minimum
eligibility requirement by securing a 692 minimum of 45 per cent marks in the
written examination and this was certainly not right, but we may point out that
in doing so the Haryana Public Service Commission could not be said to be
actuated by any malafide or oblique motive, because it was common ground
between the parties that this was the practice which was being consistently
followed by the Haryana Public Service Commission over the years and what was
done in this case was nothing exceptional. The only question is whether this
had any invalidating effect on the selections made by the Haryana Public
Service Commission.
We do not think that the selections made by
the Haryana Public Service Commission could be said to be vitiated merely on
the ground that as many as 1300 and more candidates representing more than 20
times the number of available vacancies were called for interview, though on
the view taken by us that was not the right course to follow and not more than
twice or at the highest thrice, the number of candidates should have been
called for interview. Something more than merely calling an unduly large number
of candidates for interview must be shown in order to invalidate the selections
made. That is why the Division Bench relied on the comparative figures of marks
obtained in the written examination and at the viva voce test by the
petitioners, the first 16 candidates who topped the list in the written
examination and the first 16 candidates who topped the list on the basis of the
combined marks obtained in the written examination and the viva voce test, and
observed that these figures showed that there was reasonable likelihood of
arbitrariness and bias having operated in the marking at the viva voce test.
Now it is true that some of the petitioners did quite well in the written
examination but faired badly in the viva voce test and in fact their
performance at the viva voce test appeared to have deteriorated in comparison
to their performance in the year 1977-78. Equally it is true that out of the
first 16 candidates who topped the list in the written examination, 10 secured
poor rating in viva voce test and where knocked out of the reckoning while 2
also got low marks in the viva voce test but just managed to scrape through to
come within the range of selection. It is also true that out of the first 16
candidates who topped the list on the basis of the combined marks obtained in
the written examination and the viva voce test, 12 could come in the list only
on account of the high marks obtained by them at the viva voce test, though the
marks obtained by them in the written examination were not of sufficiently high
order. These 693 figures relied upon by the Division Bench may create a
suspicion in one's mind that some element of arbitrariness might have entered
the assessment in the viva voce examination. But suspicion cannot take the
place of proof and we cannot strike down the selections made on the ground that
the evaluation of the merits of the candidates in the viva voce examination
might be arbitrary. It is necessary to point out that the Court cannot sit in
judgment over the marks awarded by interviewing bodies unless it is proved or
obvious that the marking is plainly and indubitably arbitrary or affected by
oblique motives. It is only if the assessment is patently arbitrary or the risk
of arbitrariness is so high that a reasonable person would regard arbitrariness
as inevitable, that the assessment of marks at the viva voce test may be
regarded as suffering from the vice of arbitrariness. Moreover, apart from the only
three candidates, namely. Trilok Nath Sharma, Shakuntala Rani and Balbir Singh
one of whom belonged to the general category and was related to Shri Raghubar
Dayal Gaur and the other two were candidates for the seats reserved for
Scheduled Castes and were related to Shri R.C. Marya, there was no other
candidate in whom the Chairman or any member of the Haryana Public Service
Commission was interested, so that there could be any motive for manipulation
of the marks at the viva voce examination. There were of course general
allegations of casteism made against the Chairman and the members of the
Haryana Public Service Commission, but these allegations were not substantiated
by producing any reliable material before the Court. The Chairman and members
of the Haryana Public Service Commission in fact belonged to different castes
and it was not as if any particular caste was predominant amongst the Chairman
and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission so as even to remotely
justify an inference that the marks might have been manipulated to favour the
candidates of that caste. We do not think that the Division Bench was right in
striking down the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission on
the ground that they were vitiated by arbitrariness or by reasonable likelihood
of bias.
That takes us to the next ground of challenge
which found acceptance with the Division Bench. This ground of challenge was
strenuously urged on behalf of the petitioners and it was sought to be
supported by reference to the decision of this Court in Ajay Hasia v. Khalid
Mujjubudin.
The contention of the petitioners under this
694 ground of challenge was that in comparison to the marks allocated to the
written examination, the proportion of the marks allocated to the viva voce
test was excessively high and that introduced an irredeemable element of
arbitrariness in the selection process so as to offend Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution. It is necessary in order to appreciate this contention and to
adjudicate upon its validity to consider the relative weight attached by the
relevant rules to the written examination and viva voce test. We have already
referred to the Punjab Civil Service (Executive Branch) Rules 1930 as
applicable in the State of Haryana.
Rule 9 of these rules prescribes that a
competitive examination shall be held in accordance with the Regulations set
out in Appendix 1 for the purpose of selection by competition of candidates to
the Haryana Civil Service (Executive Branch) and other allied services and
under Regulations 1 and 5 every ex-service officer has to appear in a written
examination in 5 compulsory subjects carrying in the aggregate 400 marks and a
viva voce test carrying 200 marks and likewise, every candidate belonging to
the general category has to appear in a written examination in 8 subjects
carrying in the aggregate 700 marks and for him also there is a viva voce test
carrying 200 marks. The argument of the petitioners was that in case of
ex-service officers the marks allocated for the viva voce test were 200 as
against 400 allocated for the written examination so that the marks allocated
for the viva voce test came to 33.3% of the total number of taken into account
for the purpose of making selection. So also in the case of candidates belonging
to the general category, the marks allocated for the viva voce test were 200 as
against 700 allocated for the written examination with the result that the
marks allocated for the viva voce test came to 22.2% of the total number of
marks for the competitive examination. This percentage of 33.3% in the case of
ex-service officers and 22.2% in the case of other candidates was, according to
the Division Bench, unduly high and rendered the selection of the candidates
arbitrary. The correctness of this view has been challenged before us on behalf
of the respondents.
This Court speaking through Chinnappa Reddy,
J. pointed out in Liladhar v. State of Rajasthan that the object of any process
of selection for entry into public service is to secure the best and the most
suitable person for the job, avoiding patronage and favouritism. Selection
based on merit, tested impartially and objectively, is the 695 essential
foundation of any useful and efficient public service. So open competitive
examination has come to be accepted almost universally as the gateway to public
services. But the question is how should the competitive examination be
devised? The competitive examination may be based exclusively on written
examination or it may be based exclusively on oral interview or it may be a
mixture of both. It is entirely for the Government to decide what kind of
competitive examination would be appropriate in a given case. To quote the
words of Chinnappa Reddy, J. "In the very nature of things it would not be
within the province or even the competence of the court and the Court would not
venture into such exclusive thickets to discover ways out, when the matters are
more appropriately left" to the wisdom of the experts. It is not for the
Court to lay down whether interview test should be held at all or how many
marks should be allowed for the interview test. Of course the marks must be
minimal so as to avoid charges of arbitrariness, but not necessarily always.
There may posts and appointments where the only proper method of selection may
be by a viva voce test. Even in the case of admission to higher degree courses,
it may sometimes be necessary to allow a fairly high percentage of marks for
the viva voce test. That is why rigid rules cannot be laid down in these matters
and not any courts. The experts bodies are generally the best judges. The
Government aided by experts in the field may appropriately decide to have a
written examination followed by a viva voce test.
It is now admitted on all hands that while a
written examination assesses the candidate's knowledge and intellectual
ability, a viva voce test seeks to assess a candidate's overall intellectual
and personal qualities.
While a written examination has certain
distinct advantages over the viva voce test, there are yet no written tests
which can evaluate a candidate's initiative, alertness, resourcefulness,
dependableness, cooperativeness, capacity for clear and logical presentation,
effectiveness in discussion, effectiveness in meeting and dealing with others,
adaptability, judgment, ability to make decision, ability to lead, intellectual
and moral integrity. Some of these qualities can be evaluated, perhaps with
some degree of error, by a viva voce test, much depending on the constitution
of the interview Board.
Glenn Stahl has pointed out in his book on
Public Personnel Administration that the viva voce test does suffer from
certain disadvantages such as the difficulty of developing a valid and reliable
oral test, the difficulty of securing a reviewable record of an oral test 696
and public suspicion of the oral test as a channel for the exertion of
political influence and, as pointed out by this Court in Ajay Hasia' case
(supra), also of other corrupt, nepotistic or extraneous considerations, but
despite these acknowledged disadvantages, the viva voce test has been used
increasingly in the public personnel testing and has become an important
instrument whenever tests of personnel attributes are considered essential.
Glenn Stahl proceeds to add that "no satisfactory written tests have yet
been devised for measuring such personnel characteristics as initiative,
ingenuity and ability to elicit cooperation, many of which are of prime
importance. When properly employed, the oral test today deserves a place in the
battery used by the technical examiner." There can therefore be no doubt
that the viva voce test performs a very useful function in assessing personnel
characteristics and traits and in fact, tests the man himself and is therefore
regarded as an important tool along with the written examination. Now if both
written examination and viva voce test are accepted as essential features of
proper selection in a given case, the question may arise as to the weight to be
attached respectively to them. "In the case of admission to a college for
instance", as observed by Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Liladhar's case,
"where the candidate's personality is yet to develop and it is too early
to identify the personal qualities for which greater importance may have to be attached
in later lief, greater weight has perforce to be given to performance in the
written examination" and the importance to be attached to the viva voce
test in such a case would therefore necessarily be minimal. It was for this
reason that in Ajay Haisa's case this Court took the view that the allocation
of as high a percentage of marks as 33.3% to the viva voce test was
"beyond all reasonable proportion and rendered the selection of the
candidates arbitrary". But, as pointed out by Chinnappa Reddy, J.,
"in the case of services to which recruitment has necessarily to be made
from persons of mature personality, interview test may be the only way subject
to basic and essential academic and professional requirements being
satisfied". There may also be services "to which recruitment is made
from younger candidates whose personalities are on the thresh hold of
development and who show sings of great promise" and in case of such
services where sound selection must combine academic ability with personality
promise, some weight has to be given to the viva voce test. There cannot be any
hard and fast rule regarding the precise weight to be given to the viva voce
test as against the written examination. It must vary from service to service
697 according to the requirement of the service, the minimum qualification
prescribed, the age group from which the selection is to be made, the body to
which the task of holding the viva voce test is proposed to be entrusted and a
host of other factors. It is essentially a matter for determination by experts.
The Court does not possess the necessary equipment and it would not be right
for the Court to pronounce upon it, unless to use the words of Chinnappa Reddy,
J. in Liladhar's case "exaggerated weight has been given with proven or obvious
oblique motives." We may now, in the background of this discussion,
proceed to consider whether the allocation of as high a percentage of marks as
33.3 per cent in case of ex-service officers and 22.2 per cent in case of other
candidates, for the viva voce test renders the selection process arbitrary.
So far as ex-service officers are concerned,
there can be no doubt that the percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce
test in their case is unduly high and it does suffer from the vice of
arbitrariness. It has been pointed out by the Division Bench in a fairly
elaborate discussion that so far as the present selections in the category of
ex-service officers are concerned, the spread of marks in the viva voce test
was inordinately high compared to the spread of marks in the written
examination. The minimum marks required to be obtained in the written
examination for eligibility for the viva voce test are 180 and as against these
minimum 180 marks, the highest marks obtained in the written examination in the
category of ex-service officers were 270, the spread of marks in the written
examination thus being only 90 marks which works out to a ratio of 22.2 per
cent. But when we turn to the marks obtained in the viva voce test, we find
that in case of ex-service officers the lowest marks obtained were 20 while the
highest marks secured were 171 and the spread of marks in the viva voce test
was thus as wide as 151 in a total of 200 marks, which worked out to an
inordinately high percentage of 76. The spread of marks in the viva voce test
being enormously large compared to the spread of marks in the written
examination, the viva voce test tended to become a determining factor in the
selection process, because even if a candidate secured the highest marks in the
written examination, he could be easily knocked out of the race by awarding him
the lowest marks in the viva voce test and correspondingly, a candidate who
obtained the lowest marks in the written examination could be raised to the top
most position in the merit list by an inordinately high marking in the viva
voce test. It is therefore obvious that the allocation of 698 such a high
percentage of marks as 33.3 per cent opens the door wide for arbitrariness, and
in order to diminish, if not eliminate the risk of arbitrariness, this
percentage need to be reduced. But while considering what percentage of marks
may legitimately be allocated for the viva voce test without incurring the
reproach of arbitrariness it must be remembered that ex-service officers would ordinarily
be middle aged persons of mature personality and it would be hard on them at
that age to go through a long written examination involving 8 subjects and
hence it would not be unfair to require them to go through a shorter written
examination in only 5 subjects and submit to a viva voce test carrying a higher
percentage of marks than that might be prescribed in case of younger
candidates. The personalties of these ex-service officers being fully mature
and developed, it would not be difficult to arrive at a fair assessment of
their merits on the basis of searching and incisive viva voce test and
therefore in their case, the viva voce test may be accorded relatively greater
weight.
But in any event the marks allocate for the
viva voce test cannot be as high as 33.3 per cent.
The position is no different when we examine
the question in regard to the percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce
test in case of persons belonging to the general category. The percentage in
the case of these candidates is less than that in the case of ex-service
officers, but even so it is quite high at the figure of 22.2. Here also it has
been pointed out by the Division Bench by giving facts and figures as to how in
the case of present selections from the general category the spread of marks in
the viva voce test was inordinately high compared to the spread of marks in the
written examination so that a candidate receiving low marks in the written
examination could be pulled up to a high position in the merit list by inordinately
high marking in the viva voce test. The viva voce test in the general category,
too, would consequently tend to become a determining factor in the process of
selection, tilting the scales in favour of one candidate or the other according
to the marks awarded to him in the viva voce test. This is amply borne out by
the observations of the Kothari Committee in the Report made by it in regard to
the selections to the Indian Administrative Service and other allied services.
The competitive examination in the Indian Administrative Service and other
allied services also consists of a written examination followed by a viva voce
test. Earlier in 1948 the percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce 699
test was 22 and it was marginally brought down to 21.60 in 1951 and then again
in 1964, it was scaled down to 17.11.
The Kothari Committee in its Report made in
1976 pleaded for further reduction of the percentage of marks allocated for the
viva voce test and strongly recommended that the viva voce test should carry
only 300 out of a total of 3000 marks. The Kothari Committee pointed out that
even where the percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce test was 17.11,
nearly 1/4th of the candidates selected owed their success to the marks
obtained by them at the viva voce test.
This proportion was regarded by the Kothari
Committee as "somewhat on the high side". It is significant to note
that consequent upon the Kothari Committee Report, the percentage of marks
allocated for the viva voce test in the competitive examination for the Indian
Administrative Service and other allied services was brought down still further
to 12.2. The result is that since the last few years, even for selection of
candidates in the Indian Administrative Service and other allied services where
the personality of the candidate and his personnel characteristics and traits
are extremely relevant for the purpose of selection, the marks allocated for
the viva voce test constitute only 12.2 per cent of the total marks. Now if it
was found in the case of selections to the Indian Administrative Service and
other allied services that the allocation of even 17.11 per cent marks for the
viva voce test was on the higher side and it was responsible for nearly 1/4th
of the selected candidates securing a place in the select list owing to the
marks obtained by them at the viva voce test, the allocation of
22.2 per cent marks for the viva voce test
would certainly be likely to create a wider scope for arbitrariness. When the
Kothari Committee admittedly an Expert Committee, constituted for the purpose
of examining recruitment policy and selection methods for the Indian
Administrative Service and other allied services took the view that the
allocation of 17.1 per cent marks for the viva voce test was on the higher side
and required to be reduced, it would be legitimate to hold that in case of
selections to the Haryana Civil Services (Executive Branch) and other allied
services, which are services of similar nature in the State, the allocation of
22.2 per cent marks for the viva voce test was unreasonable. We must therefore
regard the allocation of
22.2 per cent of the total marks for the viva
voce test as infecting the selection process with the vice of arbitrariness.
But the question which then arises for
consideration is as to what is the effect of allocation of such a high
percentage of marks 700 for the viva voce test, both in case of ex-service
officers and in case of other candidates, on the selections made by the Haryana
Public Service Commission. Though we have taken the view that the percentage of
marks allocated for the viva voce test in both these cases is excessive, we do
not think we would be justified in the exercise of our discretion in setting
aside the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission after the
lapse of almost two years. The candidates selected by the Haryana Public
Service Commission have already been appointed to various posts and have been
working on these posts since the last about two years.
Moreover the Punjab Civil Service (Executive
Branch) Rules 1930 under which 33.3 per cent marks in case of ex-service
officers and 22.2 per cent marks in case of other candidates, have been
allocated for the viva voce test have been in force for almost 50 years and everyone
has acted on the basis rules. If selections made in accordance with the
prescription contained in these rules are now to be set aside, it will upset a
large number of appointments already made on the basis of such selections and
the integrity and efficiency of the entire administrative machinery would be
seriously jeopardised. We do not therefore propose to set aside the selections
made by the Haryana Public Service Commission though they have been made on the
basis of an unduly high percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce test.
Now if the allocation of such a high
percentage of marks as 33.3 in case of ex-service officers and 22.2 in case of
other candidates, for the viva voce test is excessive, as held by us, what
should be the proper percentage of marks to be allocated for the viva voce test
in both these cases. So far as candidates in the general category are concerned
we think that it would be prudent and safe to follow the percentage adopted by
the Union Public Service Commission in case of selections to the Indian
Administrative Service and other allied services. The percentage of marks
allocated for the viva voce test by the Union Public Service Commission in case
of selections to the Indian Administrative Services and other allied service is
12.2. and that has been found to be fair and just, as striking a proper balance
between the written examination and the viva voce test. We would therefore
direct that hereafter in case of selections to be made to the Haryana Civil
Services (Executive Branch) and other allied services, where the competitive
examination consists of a written examination followed by a viva voce test, the
marks allocated for 701 the viva voce test shall not exceed 12.2 per cent of
the total marks taken into account for the purpose of selection.
We would suggest that this percentage should
also be adopted by the Public Service Commissions is other States, because it
is desirable that there should be uniformity in the selection process
throughout the country and the practice followed by the Union Public Service
Commission should be taken as a guide for the State Public Service Commissions
to adopt and follow. The percentage of marks allocated for the viva voce test
case of ex-service officers may, for reasons we have already discussed, be
somewhat higher than the percentage for the candidates belonging to the general
category. We would therefore direct that in case of ex- service officers,
having regard to the fact that they would ordinarily be middle aged persons
with personalities fully developed the percentage of marks allocated for the
viva voce test may be 25. Whatever selections are made by the Haryana Public
Service Commission in the future shall be on the basis that the marks allocated
for the viva voce test shall not exceed 12.2 per cent in case of candidates
belonging to the general category and 25 per cent in case of ex-service
officers.
Before we part with this judgment we would
like to point out that the Public Service Commission occupies a pivotal place
of importance in the State and the integrity and efficiency of its
administrative apparatus depends considerably on the quality of the selections
made by the Public Service Commission. It is absolutely essential that the best
and finest talent should be drawn in the administration and administrative
services must be composed of men who are honest, upright and independent and
who are not swayed by the political winds blowing in the country.
The selection of candidates for the
administrative services must therefore be made strictly on merits, keeping in
view various factors which go to make up a strong, efficient and people
oriented administrator. This can be achieved only if the Chairman and members
of the Public Service Commission are eminent men possessing a high degree of
calibre, competence and integrity, who would inspire confidence in the public
mind about the objectivity and impartiality of the selections to be made by
them. We would therefore like to strongly impress upon every State Government
to take care to see that its Public Service Commission is manned by competent,
honest and independent persons of outstanding ability and high reputation who
command the confidence of the people and who would not allow themselves to be
deflected by 702 any extraneous considerations from discharging their duty of
making selections strictly on merits. Whilst making these observations we would
like to make it clear that we do no for a moment wish to suggest that the
Chairman and members of the Haryana Public Service Commission in the present
case were lacking in calibre, competence or integrity.
We would also like to point out that in some
of the States, and the State of Haryana is one of them, the practice followed
is to invite a retired Judge of the High Court as an expert when selections for
recruitment to the Judicial Service of the State are being made and the advice
given by such retired High Court Judge who participates in the viva voce test
as an expert is sometimes ignored by the Chairman and members of the Public Service
Commission. This practice is in our opinion undesirable and does not commend
itself to us. When selections for the Judicial Service of the State are being
made, it is necessary to exercise the utmost care to see that competent and
able persons possessing a high degree of rectitude and integrity are selected,
because if we do not have good, competent and honest judges, the democratic
polity of the State itself will be in serious peril. It is therefore essential
that when selections to the Judicial Service are being made, a sitting Judge of
the High Court to be nominated by the Chief Justice of the State should be
invited to participate in the interview as an expert and since such sitting
Judge comes as an expert who, by reason of the fact that he is a sitting High
Court Judge, knows the quality and character of the candidates appearing for
the interview, the advice given by him should ordinarily be accepted, unless
there are strong and cogent reasons for not accepting such advice and such
strong and cogent reasons must be recorded in writing by the Chairman and
members of the Public Service Commission. We are giving this direction to the
Public Service Commission in every State because we are anxious that the finest
talent should be recruited in the Judicial Service and that can be secured only
by having a real expert whose advice constitutes a determinative factor in the
selection process.
We accordingly allow the appeals, set aside
the judgment of the Punjab and Haryana High Court and reject the challenge to
the validity of the selections made by the Haryana Public Service Commission to
the Haryana Civil Services (Executive Branch) and other allied services. But in
view of the fact that an unduly large number of candidates were called for
interview and the marks 703 allocated in the viva voce test were excessively
high, it is possible that some of the candidates who might have otherwise come
in the select list were left out of it, perhaps unjustifiably. We would
therefore direct that all the candidates who secured a minimum of 45 per cent
marks in the written examination but who could not find entry in the select
list, should be given one more opportunity of appearing in the competitive
examination which would now have to be held in accordance with the principles
laid down in this Judgment and this opportunity should be given to them, even
though they may have passed the maximum age prescribed by the rules for
recruitment to the Haryana Civil Services (Executive Branch) and other allied
services. We would direct that in the circumstances of the case the fair order
of costs would be that each party should bear and pay his own costs throughout.
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