08 February 1977
Supreme Court
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A.P.M. MAYAKUTTY ETC. Vs SECRETARY, PUBLIC SERVICE DEPARTMENT, ETC.

Case number: Appeal Civil 841 of 1974


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PETITIONER: A.P.M. MAYAKUTTY ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SECRETARY, PUBLIC SERVICE DEPARTMENT, ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT08/02/1977

BENCH:

ACT:         Interstate  seniority  in equated posts consequent   to  the         reorganisation   of States--Whether services rendered  under         Rule 10(a) (i) (1) of the Madras State and Subordinate Serv-         ices Rules would count for the purpose of fixing the  inter-         state seniority--Kerala Government order dated 10-5-63 based         on  the   recommendation  of the  Central  Government  dated         16-2-1963---Validity of.

HEADNOTE:         The three appellants, who were appointed as temporary junior         engineers  in the Madras High Way Subordinate Service  under         rule   10(a)(i)(1)   of  the Madras  State  and  Subordinate         Services   Rules   on  13-6-1950,   6-6-1951   and  8-6-1951         respectively,  on being selected by the Public Service  Com-         mission and again appointed to the same posts were permitted         by  an order issued under rule 23(a) ibid to commence  their         probationary  period with effect from 15-3-1953,  4th  July,         1954  and 18th July 1954 respectively.   On  1-11-1956,   on         the re-organisation of States, they were allotted as  junior         engineers in the Kerala State which was formed by  inclusion         therein  of parts of the Slates of Madras   and  Travancore-         Cochin. For the propose of fixing the  interstate   seniori-         ty,  several orders were passed, from time to time, both  by         the  Central  Government  and the Government of  Kerala.   A         provisional  integrated gradation list of  junior  engineers         was prepared by the State Government in October 1962  giving         the appellants ranks therein at serial Nos. 123, 132 and 145         respectively.   On a representation by the employees of  the         Travancore-Cochin area, the Government of India  recommended         three alternatives for the acceptance of the Kerala  Govern-         ment on 16-2-1963.  They were: (1) The Officers allocated to         Kerala  from  the former Madras State may be   allowed   the         benefit   of   emergency service towards  seniority  in  the         equated   category if such service would  have been  regula-         rised from the date of their emergency appointment and if it         would have been counted for interstate seniority on   Novem-         ber   1,  1956 had  these officers remained in  Madras.  (2)         The  principles.  laid down by the Government of  Madras  in         their  order  dated July 17, 1957 be accepted  and  (3)  The         Government  of  India would have no objection  even  if  the         State  Government  was  to adopt the  rule  that  interstate         seniority would be determined on the basis of the length  of         continuous  service  in  the equated grade  subject  to  the         exclusion   of service rendered in purely stop-gap or  emer-         gency  arrangements  and that only short periods  for  which         appointment  was  held  under such  arrangements  should  be         excluded.  The Government of Kerala passed an order on   May         10,  1963  adopting the first two alternatives but  not  the         third.   The  writ petition filed by the appellants  in  the

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       Kerala High Court  challenging  he  said  orders  dated         10-5-1963 was rejected.             In appeal by special leave, the appellants contended:              (1)   The   emergency  service  rendered   under   Rule         10(a)(i)(1)  of  the Rules ought to be  taken  into  account         because  such service can be taken into account  under  Rule         23(a) ibid (ii) Such service is not liable to be excluded by         reason  of the directives issued earlier by  the  Government         of .India on 3rd April 1957 and 1st March 1962, (iii) If the         appellants  had  remained in Madras, the  temporary  service         rendered  by  them would have been taken in.to  account  for         fixing their seniority and (iv) Such service should count in         view  of  the grant of increments to them from the  date  of         their initial appointments in view of  the temporary service         rendered  by them having been  counted for the   purpose  of         eligibility  for promotion to the higher post  of  Assistant         Engineers,  they being duly qualified to hold the  posts  of         Junior  Engineers, they having been permitted to appear  for         departmental tests which are open only to the  probationers,         their  service  books having been opened from the.  date  of         their appointment and the concurrence of the Public  Service         Commission  having  been  obtained for  continuing  them  in         service after the expiry of three  months  and  again  after         the -expiry of one year of their emergency service.         938         Dismissing the. appeals, the Court,             HELD: (1) A fact of fundamental importance which  perme-         ates  every one of these cOnsiderations is that  the  appel-         lants  were appointed under rule 10(a) (i)(1) of the  Madras         State and Subordinate Services Rules.  In face of the provi-         sions  of these rules and the express  terms of  their   ap-         pointment,  to  the effect, "that appointments  were   under         rule   10(a)  (i)  (1)  purely   temporary  necessitated  on         account of the non-availability of regularly selected candi-         dates, conferring no claim for future appointment as  junior         engineers and they were liable to be terminated at any  time         without previous notice", it is clear. that the appointments         were purely as a matter of stop-gap or  emergency   arrange-         ment  and such service cannot be taken into account for  the         purpose of seniority from the date of their initial appoint-         ment. [941 E, H, 942 A]             (2) Clauses (iii) and (iv) of rule 10(a) reflect signif-         icantly on the nature of the appointment held by the  appel-         lants and show that the appellants were appointed  initially         on  a  uniquely precarious tenure.   Such   tenures   hardly         even count for seniority in any system of service  jurispru-         dence. [942-C-D]             (3) The fact that the appellants were qualified to  hold         the  posts  cannot, in view of clause (iii)  of  rule  10(a)         entitle  them to  count for  the  purpose  of seniority  the         period  during which they served in a stop-gap or an   emer-         gency arrangement. [942 B]            (4) The contention that if the appellants had remained in         Madras   their  entire service would have  counted  for  the         purpose of seniority is without any merit and one of  specu-         lation as to what course the appellants’ destiny  would have         taken had they remained in Madras.  The Government of Madras         itself did not treat the entire service of the appellants as         regular  when  they   were selected by  the  Public  Service         Commission.  That parent government undoubtedly assigned  to         them  artificial dates for fixing the commencement of  their         probationary periods but such dates, though anterior to  the         dates  of their actual selection by the Public  Service.Com-         mission, were quite subsequent to the dates of their initial         appointment.  The services rendered by them under rule 10(a)

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       (i)(1)  were treated by the Government which appointed  them         as  a matter of stop-gap, emergency or  fortuitous  arrange-         ment. [942 D-G]             (5) The concurrence of the Public Service Commission  to         the  continuance  of the appellants in the  post  filled  by         them, first after the expiry of three months and then  after         the  expiry  of  one year was obtained not with  a  view  to         regularising the appointments but for the purpose of meeting         the requirements of a provision under which such concurrence         is  necessary  to.  obtain if an  appointment  made  without         selection  by the Public Service Commission is required  for         any  reason to be continued beyond three months or  a  year.         [943 E-F]             (6) In the instant case, the initial appointment was not         only  made without any reference to the Public Service  Com-         mission but the various rules and the terms of the  appoint-         ment  shove that the appellants were appointed purely  as  a         matter of fortuitous or stop-gap arrangement.  Their initial         temporary  services  cannot  therefore be  counted  for  the         purpose of seniority. [943 B-C]             C.P.  Damodaran Nayar v. State of Kerala [1974]  2,  SCR         867, distinguished and held not applicable.

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 841 of 1974.             Appeal  by  Special Leave from the  Judgment  and  Order         dated 30-3-1970 of the Kerala High Court in Writ Appeal  No.         39/70 and Civil Appeal No. 1575 of 1970.             Appeal  by Special Leave from the  Judgment  and   Order         dated  22-12-1969   of  the  Kerala  High  Court   in   O.P.         No.  211/65,         939             V.  Sivarama Nair and ,4. S. Nambiar for the  Appellants         in both :the Appeals.             M.C. Bhandare and K.M.K. Nair for Respondent No. 1 in CA         841 and R. 2 in CA 1575/70.             (Mrs.)  Shyamla Pappu and Girish Chandra for  Respondent         No. 1 in CA No. 1575/70.             K.S.  Ramanurthi,  N.  Sudhakaran and  P.K.  Pillai  for         Respondent No. 45 in CA 1575/70.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             CHANDRACHUD, J.--Since these two appeals involve identi-         cal questions, we propose to state the facts of one of these         only.   The decision in Civil Appeal No. 1575 of  1970  will         govern the other appeal.             The three appellants were .appointed as temporary Junior         Engineers  in the Madras High Way Subordinate Service  under         rule  10(a)(i)(1) of the Madras State and Subordinate  Serv-         ices Rules.  Appellants 1 and 2 were appointed on June 6 and         June  8,  1951 respectively while the  third  appellant  was         appointed  on  June 30, 1950.  A few years later  they  were         appointed  to  the very same posts after  selection  by  the         Public  Service  Commission and in course  of  time,  orders         were issued under rule 23(a) of the aforesaid rules  permit-         ting  them  to commence their probation from dates  anterior         to  the dates of their appointments after selection  by  the         Public  Service  Commission but subsequent to the  dates  of         their initial  ’appointments  under  rule 10(a)(i)(1).   The         first appellant was permitted to commence  his  probationary         period on July 4, 1954, the second on July 18,  1954 and the         third on March 15, 1953.             On  November 1, 1956, on the reorganisation  of  States,         appellants were allotted as Junior Engineers to.  the Kerala

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       State.   which  was formed by inclusion therein of parts  of         the  States  of Madras and Travancore-Cochin.  As  in  other         States,  so in Kerala, it became necessary to fix  rules  of         seniority governing  employees drawn  from different States,         parts  of which were integrated in Kerala.  A conference  of         Chief  Secretaries of various States was held on May 18  and         19, 1956, to consider problems arising out of reorganisation         of  States  and  the  consequent  integration  of  services.         Pursuant  to  the  decision taken in  that  Conference,  the         Government  of Kerala passed an order on December  29,  1956         providing  that  the relative seniority as  between  persons         drawn from different States and holding posts declared to be         equivalent shall be determined by considering the length  of         continuous service in the equated grade, whether such  serv-         ice  is  temporary   or  officiating,  quasi   permanent  or         permanent.  The order,  however, expressly provided that  in         the  aforesaid  determination, the period for which  an  ap-         pointment  was held "in a purely stop-gap or  emergency  ar-         rangement"  was to be excluded.  On April 3, 1957 the.  Gov-         ernment of India issued a directive under section 117 of the         States ReorganisatiOn Act stating that it was agreed that in         determining  the relative seniority as between  two  persons         holding posts declared as equivalent to each other and drawn         ’from different States the length 12--206sC1/77         940         of  continuous service, whether temporary or  permanent,  in         the particular grade should be taken into  account,  exclud-         ing  "periods  for which an appointment is held in a  purely         stop-gap or fortuitous arrangement."   On April 2, 1958  the         Government  of Kerala issued a clarificatory  order  stating         that for computing length of continuous service "only  short         periods for which an appointment was held in purely stop gap         or  emergency  appointment  will be  excluded."   It  issued         another  order on August 16, 1961 stating that one  year  of         temporary  service of Junior Engineers allotted from  Madras         would  be excluded for the purposes of fixing  their  inter-         state  seniority.   Representations were made  against  this         order to the Government Of India which directed by an  order         dated March 1, 1962 that services rendered under provisional         or  emergency  appointments by  the   Travancore-Cochin   or         Madras personnel prior to November 1, 1956 before  regulari-         sation  of their appointments should be taken  into  account         for  the purposes of deciding interstate seniority, only  if         such   service  is either regularised, or it is in  a  time-         scale of pay and is reckoned for grant of increments in  the         time-scale and is continuous.   On May 16, 1962 the  Govern-         ment of Kerala passed an order modifying its earlier  orders         so as to conform to the decision taken by the Government  of         India  on March 1,  Consequently, in October 1962 a   provi-         sional  integrated  gradation list of Junior  Engineers  was         prepared  by the State Government giving to  the  appellants         ranks therein at serial nos. 145, 137 and 123 respectively.             Employees  drawn from the Travancore-Cochin  area  being         evidently  prejudiced by the decision of the Kerala  Govern-         ment made representations to the Government of India  which,         on February 16, 1963 recommended three alternatives for  the         acceptance of Kerala Government.  The first alternative thus         recommended  was that the officers allocated to Kerala  from         the former Madras State may be allowed the benefit of  emer-         gency service  towards seniority in  the equated category if         such  service would have been regularised  from the date  of         their emergency appointment and if it would have been count-         ed for interstate seniority on  November 1, 1956, had  these         officers  remained  in Madras.  The second  alternative  was         that   the principles laid down by the Government of  Madras

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       in   their  order dated July 17, 1957 be accepted.   By  the         third  alternative  it  was stated that  the  Government  of         India  would have no objection even if the State  Government         was  to  adopt the rule that interstate seniority  would  be         determined on the basis of the length of continuous  service         in  the  equated grade subject to the exclusion  of  service         rendered  in purely stop-gap or emergency  arrangements  and         that  only   short periods for which appointment   was  held         under  such   arrangements should be excluded.  On  May  10,         1963  the Government of Kerala passed an order adopting  the         first two alternatives but not the third.             The  appellants thereafter field a writ petition in  the         Kerala High Court which was disposed of in December 1964  by         directing them to file representations to the Government  of         India  on  the basis of a certain decision rendered  by  the         High Court earlier.  The appellants accordingly made  repre-         sentations  and on. those being rejected, they filed a  writ         petition in the High Court in August 1965.  That writ  peti-         tion  having been dismissed, they have filed this appeal  by         special leave.         941             The  question which arises for decision is  whether  the         services rendered by the appellants under rule 10(a) (i) (1)         of  the Madras State and Subordinate Services Rules must  be         taken into account for the purpose of fixing. their seniori-         ty in the service of the Kerala Government as from  November         1,  1956.  It is urged on behalf of the appellants that  the         aforesaid  service  ought to be taken into  account  because         such  service can be taken into account under rule 23,  sec-         ondly because such service is not liable to be  excluded  by         reason  of  the directives issued earlier by the  Government         of India and  thirdly because if the appellants had remained         in  Madras,  the  temporary service rendered by  them  would         have  been  taken into account for fixing  their  seniority.         Counsel  for  the  appellants says that  they  were  granted         increments from the date of theft initial appointments, that         the temporary service rendered by them was counted for  the.         purpose  of eligibility for promotion to the higher post  of         Assistant  Engineers, that they were duly qualified to  hold         the  post of Junior Engineers, that they were  entitled  and         permitted  to appear for departmental tests which  are  open         only  to  the probationers, that their  service  books  were         opened from the data of their initial appointments, and that         the  concurrence  of the Public Service Commission  was  ob-         tained  for continuing them in service after the  expiry  of         three  months and then again after the expiry of  one  year.         These facts and circumstances, according to the  appellants,         would justify the counting of temporary service rendered  by         them for the purpose of fixing their seniority.             Having  given every consideration to these   matters  we         think  it impossible to accept the appeal.  A fact of funda-         mental importance which permeates every one of these consid-         erations  is that the appellants were appointed  under  rule         10(a)(i)(1)  of  the Madras State and  Subordinate  Services         Rules which runs thus:                             "10. Temporary  appointments.--(a)(i)(1)                       Where  it is necessary in the public  interest                       owing  to.  an emergency which has  arisen  to                       fill immediately a vacancy in a post borne  on                       the cadre of a service, class or category  and                       there  would  be undue delay  in  making  such                       appointment  in  accordance with  these  rules                       and  the Special  Rules, the   appointing  au-                       thority  may  temporarily  appoint  a  person,                       otherwise  than  in accordance with  the  said

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                     rules."         This provision contemplates the making of temporary appoint-         ments  when it is necessary in the public interest to do  so         owing to an emergency which has arisen for filling a vacancy         immediately.  Such appointments, in terms, are permitted  to         made  otherwise  than  in accordance with  the  rules.   The         letters  of  appointment issued to  the  appellants  mention         expressely that they were appointed under rule 10(a) (i)(1),         that the appointments were "purely temporary necessitated on         account of the non-availability of regularly selected candi-         dates  conferring no claim for future appointment as  Junior         Engineers   ....  and that the appointment is liable  to  be         terminated at any time without previous notice." In face  of         the provisions of the rule and the terms of the  appointment         it  seems  to us clear that the  appellants  Were  appointed         purely  as  a matter of stop-gap or  emergency  arrangement.         Since         942         such  service cannot be taken into account for  purposes  of         seniority,  the  appellants cannot contend that  the  entire         service  rendered   by them from the date of  their  initial         appointment must count for purposes of seniority.             Clause  (iii) of rule 10(a) makes’this position  clearer         by providing that a person appointed under clause (i) shall,         whether or’  not he possesses the qualifications  prescribed         for the service, be replaced as soon as possible by a member         of  the service or an approved candidate qualified  to  hold         the  post  under  the relevant  rules.  The  fact  that  the         appellants were qualified to. hold the posts cannot,  there-         fore,  entitle them to count for the purposes  of  seniority         the  period during which they served in a stop-gap or  emer-         gency arrangement.  Clause (v) of rule 10(a) provides that a         person appointed under clause (i) shall not be regarded as a         probationer, that he is not entitled by reason only of  such         appointment to any preferential claim to future  appointment         to the service .and that the services shall be liable to  be         terminated at any time without notice and without  assigning         any reason.  These provisions reflect significantly  on  the         nature  of the appointment held by the appellants  and  show         that the  appellants were appointed initially on a  uniquely         precarious  tenure. Such tenures hardly ever count for  sen-         iority in  any system of service  jurisprudence.             It  is  now only necessary to consider  the  appellant’s         argument  that  had they remained in  Madras,  their  entire         service  would have counted for purposes of  seniority.   In         support  of this argument reliance was placed on the  corre-         spondence between the Governments of Kerala and Madras,  but         neither  that correspondence nor a certain order dated  June         11, 1960, which is at Ex. P-17 in the record, can avail  the         appellants.  In a way of saying, the proof of pudding is  in         the  eating. It is needless to speculate as to  what  course         the  appellants’ destiny would have taken had they  remained         in  Madras, because the Government of Madras itself did  not         treat  the entire service of the appellants as regular  when         they  were selected by the Public Service  Commission.  That         parent  government undoubtedly assigned to. them  artificial         dates  for  fixing the commencement  of  their  probationary         periods  but  such dates, though anterior to  the  dates  of         their  actual  selection by the Public  Service  Commission,         were quite subsequent to the dates of their initial appoint-         ment.   As  stated earlier, the  appellants  were  appointed         initially in June 1951 and June 1950, but the Government  of         Madras,  prior  to  the reorganisation of  the  States,  had         directed that their probationary periods should be deemed to         commence  in July 1954 and March 1953.  This shows that  the

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       services  rendered by the appellants under rule  10(a)(i)(1)         were  treated  by the Government which appointed them  as  a         matter of stop-gap, ’emergency or  fortuitous arrangement.             The  decision   in  C.P. Damodaran  Nayar  v.  State  of         Kerala(1) on which the appellants’ counsel has placed  reli-         ance for showing that temporary service of the kind rendered         initially by the appellants can         (1) [1974] 2 S.C.R. 867.         943         be counted for the purposes of seniority has no  application         to the instant case.  One of the appellants in that case was         selected  as a District Munsif by the Madras Public  Service         Commission  and was posted as such on May 26, 1951.  He  was         in continuous service in than post since his appointment but         on being allotted to the State of Kerala on November 1, 1956         his  seniority  was  reckoned from October 6,  1951  on  the         footing  that the said date was assigned to him as the  date         of  commencement of his continuous  service.   Dealing  with         the  appeal arising out of the dismissal of his  writ  peti-         tion,  this  Court  held that the service  rendered  by  the         appellant after his initial appointment was neither emergen-         cy  service nor was it a purely stop gap or  fortuitous  ar-         rangement.  The distinguishing feature of  that case,  which         is  highlighted  in the judgment of the Court, is  that  the         appellant therein was "appointed in a regular manner through         the Public Service Commission" and therefore his appointment         could  not "by any stretch of imagination" be  described  as         having  been  made to fill a purely stop-gap  or  fortuitous         vacuum  (p. 876).  In our  case the initial appointment  was         not  only made without any reference to the  Public  Service         Commission but the various rules and the terms of the appel-         lants’  appointment  to which we have drawn  attention  show         that  the  appellants were appointed purely as a  matter  of         fortuitous or stop-gap arrangement.  The  concurrence of the         Public  Service Commission to the continuance of the  appel-         lants in the posts filled by them, first after the expiry of         three  months  and then after the expiry of  one  year,  was         obtained  not with a view to regularising  the  appointments         since  their  inception but for the purpose of  meeting  the         requirements of a provision under which such concurrence  is         necessary  to obtain if an appointment made without   selec-         tion by  the  Public Service Commission is required for  any         reason to be continued beyond three months or a year.             For  these reasons we confirm the judgment of  the  High         Court and dismiss this appeal.  There will be no order as to         costs.             Civil  Appeal No. 841 of 1974 will also stand  dismissed         but without an order of costs.         S.R.                                          Appeals   dis-         missed.         944