Shri P.K. Sarin & ANR Vs. State of
U.P. & Ors [1994] INSC 675 (14 December 1994)
A.M. AHMADI, CJI. & MADAN MOHAN PUNCHHI,
JJ.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
PUNCHHI, J.:
1.
This
bunch of matters comprising a Civil Appeal and a few writ petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution. have a common. aim and therefore can
conveniently be disposed of by a common order. Necessary facts can be gathered
from the Civil Appeal focussing the issue.
2.
The
appellants are members of the U.P. Civil Service (Judicial Branch) "Nyayik
Sewa". They were writ petition'rs in one of the many writ petitions
preferred before and disposed of by the Allahabad High Court. governing
judgment of which is in Dinesh Chander Srivastava & Ors. v. State of U.P.
reported in AIR 1977 All. 310. In sum that judgment is under appeal. The cause
settled therein was the one which arose as an aftermath of Chandra Mohan v.
State of Uttar Pradesh & Others [1967(1) SCR 77] and the steps taken by the
State of U.P. in pursuance thereof.
3.
Candidates
for recruiting District Judges in the State of Uttar Pradesh. under the U.P.
Higher Judicial Service Rules. framed by the Government under Article 309 of
the Constitution. could be drawn from flu' sources i.e. members of the Bar.
Judicial Officers (a misleading expression) who are members of the Executive
Department discharging magisterial and some revenue duties. and by promotion
from members of U.P. Civil Services (Judicial Branch) under the control of the
High Court. Six appointments from two of the afore-described services. i...
three from the Bar and three from the "Judicial Ofticrs" were
proposed to be made by the State. after involving the High Court. when Chandra
Mohan. a member of the U.P. Civil Service (Judicial Branch) and others filed a
writ petition in the High Court for the issuance of an appropriate writ
directing the Government not to make the appointments pursuant to the proposal.
Since the writ petition was dismissed and the matter was brought to this Court
in appeal. the canvass of dispute. on account of many points involved. was
widely spread. but for our purposes it would suffice to say that this Court
ruled that the Rules as such framed by the Governor empowering him to recruit
Judges from the "Judicial Officers" source were unconstitutional and
the recruitment of the "Judicial Officers" was bad. It was emphasised
by this Court that the Indian Constitution had provided for an Independent
Judiciary in the States and in order to put the independence of the subordinate
judiciary beyond question. provision had been made in Article 50 of the
Constitution in the Chapter of Directive Principles for the Separation of the
judiciary from the executive. and further in enacting Articles 233 to 237 in
Part VI. Chapter VI of the Constitution. the appointment of District Judges in
any State was envisaged to be made only from two sources i.e. (i) Service of
the Union or of the State; and (ii) members of the Bar. This Court went on to
rule that the Service of the Union or of the State men- 182 tioned in the first
category did not mean each and every service of the Union or of the State but
judicial service of the Union or of the State. "Judicial Service" as
defined in Article 236(b) meant a service consisting exclusively of persons
intended to fill the post of District Judge and other Civil judicial posts
inferior to the post of District Judge.
4.
Gathering
the history of the Service, it was noticed that after India attained
independence in 1947, there were, when the source' of recruitment of Indian
Civil Service had died out, only two sources from which District Judges had
been recruited, i.e., either from the Judicial Service or from the Bar, and
there was no case of a member of the executive having ever been promoted as a
District Judge. In this backdrop, it was thought that recruitment of District
Judges from the personnel available in the Executive Department could be
deleterious to the good name of the judiciary, and an attempt to undermine it
had to be frowned upon. In this backdrop, it was viewed by this Court that methodology
under Article 237 of the Constitution was available where the Governor had the
power to notify that Articles 223 to 226 could apply to Magistrates, subjected
to certain modifications or exceptions, if necessary, and then effect
integration of the Magistrates in the Judicial Service, which is one of the
sources of recruitment to the post of District Judges. It was emphasised that
till such step is taken in the manner envisaged by Article 237, the Magistrates
(Judicial Officers) were outside the scope of Articles 223 to 226 of the
Constitution. In sum, under the rules then existing, the State of Uttar Pradesh
could not justify the appointments of "Judicial Officers" as District
Judges and attracted a mandamus issued by the Court for not making any appointment
from the source of Magistrates/Judicial Ofricers. The Rules flamed by the
Governor, without resort to Article 237, empowering him to recruit District
Judges from the "Judicial Officers" were thus declared
unconstitutional and therefore the appointments of the concerned "Judicial
Officers" were declared bad.
5.
The
State of Uttar Pradesh went about clearing the fail out of Chander Mohan's case
since the High Court on the administrative side was also anxious to do justice
tO the Magistrates/Judicial Officers. We would in the language of the High
Court, say that the Governor of Uttar Pradesh issued the notification dated
March 12, 1975, under Article 237 of the Constitution directing that the
provisions of Chapter VI of Part VI of the Constitution and any rules made
thereunder shall with effect from the date of notification apply to Judicial
Magistrates (including Chief Judicial Magistrates) in the State who are members
of the U.P.
Judicial Officers Service as they apply in
relation to persons appointed to the Judicial service of the State subject to
two exceptions, namely, (1) the members of the U.P. Judicial Ofricers Service
shall constitute a judicial service to fill in the post of Additional Sessions
Judge only for purposes of Articles 233 and 236 of the Constitution and (2) the
U.P.Judicial Officers Service shall be a service distinct and separate from the
U.P. Civil Service (Judicial Branch). By means of this notification the
Judicial Magistrates who are members of the Judicial Officers Service have
become eligible for appointment to the post of Additional Sessions Judge
included within the definition of "District Judge" as defined by
Article 183 236 of the Constitution. The notification further declares that the
Judicial Officers Service shall be a judicial service.
6.
By
another notification dated March 21, 1975, the Governor of Uttar Pradesh in
exercise of his powers under Article 309 read with Article 233 of the
Constitution framed rules, namely, the U.P. Higher Judicial Service Rules,
1975, regulating recruitment and appointment to the U.P. Higher Judicial
Service. Under R.4 the Higher Judicial Service consists of a single cadre
comprising the posts of District and Sessions Judges and Additional District
and Sessions Judges. Rule 5 lays down the sources of recruitment to the
service: according to it, recruitment to the service is to be made by two
sources (a) by direct recruitment of pleaders and advocates of not less than
seven years standing and (b) by promotion of confirmed members of the U.P.
Nyayik Sewa (Members of the U.P. Civil Service, Judicial Branch) who may have
put in not less than seven years service in that cadre.
In addition to that Judicial Magistrates and
Judicial Officers have also been mad eligible for appointment but only to the
post of Additional Sessions Judge. Rule 6 prescribes quota for recruitment to
the service from the three sources prescribed by R.5. The rule lays down that
70% of the vacancies are to be filled in by promotion from the members of the
Nyayik Sewa, while 15% of the vacancies are to be filled by direct recruitment
of Advocates and the remaining 15% of the vacancies are to be filled in by
promotion from amongst the members of the U.P. Judicial Officers Service
(Judicial Magistrates).
7.
In
Part VI of Chapter VI of the Constitution, the word "Magistrate",
though employed, in Article 237, does not figure to be defined and thus
inevitably resort has to be made to Section 3(32) of the General Clauses Act,
1897 to note that a "Magistrate" shall include every person
exercising all or any of the powers of the Magistrate under the Code of
Criminal Procedure for the time being in force.
Coming to the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973, as now existing, we have Courts and Magistrates classified under section
6 thereof, the latter as Judicial Magistrates and Executive Magistrates, and
the Court of Session heading the classification. Section 9 provides that very
Court of Session shall be presided over by a Judge to be appointed by the High
Court. The High Court may also appoint Additional Sessions Judges and Assistant
Sessions Judges to exercise jurisdiction in a Court of Session. The Executive
Magistrates have roles and functions assigned to them under the Cod such as
undertaking proceedings under sections 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 133, 133 and
145 Cr.P.C. Judicial Magistrates, on the other hand, are assigned their roles
under the Code primarily of trial of offences, as envisaged under section 26 of
the Code.
8.
The
High Court rcorded its understanding of the new role of the Magistracy alter
the 1973 Code in paragraph 9 of its judgment as follows:
"The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973,
conferred power on the High Court to appoint Sessions Judge, Magistrates, Chief
Judicial Magistrate and Special Magistrates and to confer Magisterial powers on
any person or authority. Under the new Code, the Executive has nothing to do
with the appointment of Magistrates. In pursuance of the provisions of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973, the High Court of Allahabad appointed Chief 184
Judicial Magistrates and the Magistrates' with effect from l st April, 1974.
The persons so appointed are the same persons who were earlier functioning as
Judicial Magistrates who had been appointed by the Governor and were
functioning as Judicial Officers. After their appointment by the High Court,
control over the Magistrates vested in the High Court.
The Governor in order to effectuate the
policy underlying An.50 of the Constitution issued the impugned notification
dated 12th March, 1975 applying all the provisions of Chap. VI of Part VI of
the Constitution to the existing class of Magistrates. The intention and
purpose behind the issue of the notification is to make the Magistracy free
from Executive influence and to make them part of the Judicial Service of the
State along with Civil Judiciary"
9.
At
this place, Articles 233, 234, 235, 236 and 237 from Part VI, Chapter VI of the
Constitution may be read with advantage:
"233. APPOINTMENT OF DISTRICT JUDGES - (
1 ) Appointments of persons to be and the posting and promotion of, dialrig
Judges in any State shall be made by the Governor of the State in consultation
with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State.
(2) A person not already in the service of
Union or of the State shall only be eligible to be appointed a district judge
if an advocate or a pleader and is recommended by the High Court for
appointment." "234. RECRUITMENT OF PERSONS OTHER THAN DiSTRICT JUDGE
TO THE JUDICIAL SERVICE - Appointment of persons other than district judges to
the judicial service of a State shall be made by the Governor of the State in
accordance with rules made by him in that behalf after consultation with the
State Public Service Commission and with the High Court exercising jurisdiction
in relation to such State.' ' "235. CONTROL OVER SUBORDINATE COURTS - The
control over district courts and courts subordinate thereto including the
posting and promotion of, and the grant of leave to, persons belonging to the
judicial service of a State and holding any post inferior to the post of
district judge shall be vested in the High Court, but nothing in this article
shall be construed as taking away from any such person any right of appeal
which he may under the law regulating the conditions of his service or as
authorising the High court to deal with him otherwise than in accordance with
the conditions of his service prescribed under such law.'' "236.
INTERPRETATION - In this Chapter - (a) the expression 'district judge' includes
judge of a city civil court, additional district judge. joint district judge.
assistant district judge, chief Judge of a
small course court, chief presidency magistrate. additional chief presidency
megistrate , sessions judge. additional sessions judge and assistant sessions
judge;
(b) the expression 'judicial service' means a
service consisting exclusively of persons intended to fill the post of district
judge and other civil judicial posts inferior to the post of district
judge." "237. APPLICATION OF THE PROVISIONS OF THIS CHAFFER TO
CERTAIN CLASS OR CLASSES OF MAGISTRATES - The Governor may by public
notification direct that the foregoing provisions of this Chapter and any rules
such date as may be fixed by him in that 185 behalf apply in relation to any
class or classes of magistrates in the State as they.
apply in relation to persons appointed to the
judicial service of the State subject to such exceptions and modifications as
may be specified in the notification.''
10.
Much
before the issuance of the impugned notification the Government by notification
dated September 30, 1967 issued under Article 237 of the Constitution, had
directed separation of the Judicial Magistrates/Judicial Officers from the
Executive who were thereafter placed under the Administrative control and
superintendence of the High Court with effect from October 2, 1967. The
Government, it appears, stopped thereafter recruitment to the Judicial Officers
service. On the other hand they continued to remain ineligible for appointment
to a post in the U.P.
Higher Judicial Service by the dictate of
Chander Mohan's case. The Judicial Officers service thereupon became a
suffocated and dying cadre. as members of that service were left with no avenues
of promotion even though most of them had sufficient experience of criminal
judicial work. The High Court appreciated their predicament and moved into the
matter. The State Government on the recommendations of the High Court thought
it prudent to utilize the experience of the Judicial Magistrate trying criminal
cases and providing to them avenues of promotion. With that end in view. the
State of U.P. issued the two notifications impugned before the High Court. as
also here, the effect of which, was that the Judicial Officers became eligible
for appointment only to the post of Additional Sessions Judge only. and the
Judicial Officers Service was declared as a Judicial Service. becoming a third
source for recruitment under Rule
6. getting a quota of l 5 per cent. But, in
the event of non-availability of the prospective candidates or exhaustion of
their members, the quota meant for Judicial Officers/Judicial Magistrates was
to go to add to the quota of the U.P. Civil Services (Judicial Branch)
vis-a-vis direct advocate recruits. Thus in the nature of things, it was a self
consuming measure, working itself out in the foreseeable future.
11.
Article
237 of the Constitution enables the Governor to apply the provisions of Chapter
VI of Part VI of the Constitution and any Rules made thereunder, to certain
class or classes of Magistrates and not to any other class or classes of
Officers. This is a ladder upon which a class or classes of Magistrates in the
State can be made to climb and get transformd, with effect from a certain date,
as persons appointed to a Judicial Service of the State. subject to such
exceptions and modifications as may be specified in the notification. The
Constitution recognizes the judicial element permeating in the Magistracy, for
they deal with the liberty and property of individuals, functioning as criminal
courts. To put it tersely magistracy alone is recognized as judge-material
meant for such transformation. Now in the impugned notification, it is clear
that the promotional avenues of the Magistrates stop at the level of the
Additional Sessions Judge. a court which is a creation of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. In no way is this designation confused with that of the Additional
District Judges. Under Article 236, which is the interpretation box for Chapter
VI. the inclusive definition of the expression "District Judge"'
includes an Additional Sessions Judge but only for the purposes of the Chapter.
and not for any other purpose. The Additional Sessions Judge is a
"District Judge" for the limited purpose of his appointment as 186
District Judge in terms of Article 233 of the Constitution.
12.
As
is evident the domain of the present litigation is confined to the members of
the U.P.Judicial Officers Service, recruitment to which was stopped after
October 2, 1967. The service thenceforth became subject to all subtractions but
no addition. The sweep of Article 237 covers Magistrates existing prior to the
separation of judiciary from the executive, those who may not have been
appointed in accordance with the rules framed under Article 234 or who might
not have been under the control of the High Court under Article 235. It is
towards achieving that end that the Governor stood empowered under Article 237
to act by means of a notification, with such exceptions or modifications, as he
might consider fit. The powers thus conferred were unfettered by any
restriction. The Governor could apply all or only some of the provisions of
Chapter IV. That here the Governor in exercising his power under Article 237,
issued the notification of March 12, 1975, classifying Magistrates (including
Chief Judicial Magistrates) in the State as those belong to the Uttar Pradesh
Judicial Officers Service and applying to them all the Articles contained in
Chapter VI of Part VI of the Constitution, barring of course Article 237, as
they apply in relation to persons appointed to the Judicial Service of the
State subject to the exceptions and modifications namely, (i) the members of
the U.P. Judicial Service Officers shall constitute a Judicial Service to fill
in the post of Additional Sessions Judge only for the purpose of Article 233
and 235 of the Constitution; (ii) U.P. Judicial Officers Service shall be a
service distinct and separate from the UP. Civil Service (Judicial Branch).
13.
The
point for consideration before the High Court as also here is whether the
Governor could transform the existing U.P. Judicial Officers Service to be a
Judicial Service of the State alongside the existing U.P. Civil Service
(Judicial Branch). The following passage from Chandra Mohan's case was put
across to contend that a distinct service could not be created:
"Article 237 enables the Governor to
implement the separation of the judiciary from the executive. Under this
Article, the Governor may notify that Articles 233, 234, 235 and 236 of the
Constitution will apply to magistrates subject to certain modifications or
exceptions; for instance, if the Governor so notifies, the said magistrates
will become members of the judicial service, they will have to be appointed in
the manner prescribed in Article 234, they will be under the control of the
High Court under Article 235 and they can be appointed as District Judges by
the Governor under Article 233(1). To state it differently, they will then be integrated
in the judicial service which is one of the sources of recruitment to the post
of district judges. Indeed, Article 237 emphasises the fact that till such an
integration is brought about, the magistrates are outside the scope of the said
provisions. The said view accords with the constitutional theme of independent
judiciary and the contrary view accepts a retrograde step."
14.
Reliance
on Chandra Mohan's case is mis-placed as we view it. The above passage talks of
an instance of action but is by no means exhaustive. The State is not bound to
adopt the course of making magistrates become members of the existing Judicial
Service. They may obviate the procedure to be followed in making appointments
in the manner prescribed under Article 234, State is not bound to cause 187 any
integration so that the Magistrates may become members of the existing Judicial
Service. No bar anywhere could be pointed out to us by learned counsel for the
appellant/petitioners by which the State could be prohibited from creating a
parallel judicial service in which the magistracy of the kind involved herein
was transformed. As said before, the Constitution recognises, and it is plain
otherwise, that Magistrates perform judicial functions when trying offences
under the Indian Penal Code and other statutes, empowered as they are under the
Code of Criminal Procedure. There could thus be no bar to confining the
promotional avenues of the Magistrates to be uptill the Court of the Additional
Sessions Judge and none other. The grievance of the members of the U.P. Civil
Service (Judicial Branch) is highly over-blown when it is scanned to discover
that they without functioning as criminal courts and without gaining any
experience in that field, get on to become Additional District & Session
Judges merely on the experience gained on the civil side. This discloses that
what is needed at that stage is judicial temper. Their attempt to thwart the
promotional benefit given by the impugned notification to the Judicial
Magistrates in becoming Additional Sessions Judges is on the face of it unequal
in comparison to the service benefit obtained by the personnel of the U.P.
Civil Service (Judicial Branch). The entire matter has to be viewed on the
touchstone of Article 50 of the Constitution. In separating judiciary from the
executive, the personnel of judicial service so retrieved by separation have to
be given a place as a class as members of the judiciary, either by integration
in the existing judicial service or by transformation into a separate judicial
service. There apparently is no other way to place them. Articles 233 to 237
would have to be viewed in this light. On doing so, we go to agree with the
High Court that the impugned notification of March 12, 1975 and the others
consequential notification stood validly issued by the Governor under Article
237 of the Constitution and that the erstwhile Magistrates, members of the U.P.
Judicial Officers Service, became members of a separate Judicial Service of the
same name intended to be promoted as Additional Sessions Judges only in the
post meant for the Additional District and Sessions Judge and to stay apart
alongside the U.P.
Civil Service (Judicial Branch). We also view
that the said service was validly created.
15.
Before
we conclude, we must notice a three-member Bench decision of this court in M.L.
Sharma v. Union of India [1992 (Supp)(2) SCC 430] cited, wherein it was ruled
that even if a particular person comes within the definition given under
Article 236 of the Constitution, it is open to the State Government under
appropriate rules to classify such officer included in the inclusive definition
not to be a District Judge proper and to belong to a category different from
that. 'That was a case in converse where a person claimed to have become a
District Judge by means of the inclusive definition and to have become, by this
logic, a member of the Haryana State Superior Judicial Service.
This Court repelled the claim. This case is
of no assistance to either side.
16.
There
is thus no merit either in the appeal or in the writ petitions. All of them
fail and are dismissed but without any order as to costs.
Back