19 August 1980
Supreme Court
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BALESHWAR DASS & ORS. ETC. Vs STATE OF U.P. & ORS. ETC.

Bench: KRISHNAIYER,V.R.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1317 of 1976


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PETITIONER: BALESHWAR DASS & ORS. ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P. & ORS. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/08/1980

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. PATHAK, R.S.

CITATION:  1981 AIR   41            1981 SCR  (1) 449  1980 SCC  (4) 226  CITATOR INFO :  F          1984 SC1527  (15)  E          1984 SC1595  (35,75,77)  D          1985 SC 774  (22)  F          1985 SC1558  (14)  F          1985 SC1605  (13)  RF         1986 SC 638  (12)  RF         1986 SC1445  (19)  E&D        1987 SC 424  (12,13,14,15,24)  RF         1987 SC1676  (10,11,15,20,28)  R          1988 SC 268  (16,17,18,25)  E&D        1988 SC 654  (10,12,13,14,16)  R          1989 SC 278  (16,18,21)  D          1990 SC1311  (7)  E&R        1990 SC1607  (39)  NF         1991 SC 284  (1,24)  D          1991 SC1406  (25)  D          1991 SC1818  (6)

ACT:      Service  matter-Duly  qualified  persons  appointed  as Assistant Engineers  in temporary posts officiating service- Whether could  count for  seniority-Seniority how counted-A- appointment in a substantive capacity whether should be to a permanent post-Substantive capacity-Meaning of.

HEADNOTE:      Under rule  3(b) of  the U.  P.  Service  of  Engineers (Junior and  Senior Scales) irrigation Branch Rules a member of the  service means  a government  servant appointed  in a substantive capacity  under the provisions of the rules to a post in  the cadre of the service. Rule 4 empowers the State Government to  increase the  cadre by  creating permanent or temporary  posts   from  time   to  time  according  to  the exigencies. Rules  S and  6 contemplate  recruitment (i)  by direct appointment  from amongst  engineer students  of  the Thomson Civil  Engineering College,  Roorkee, (ii) by direct appointment,  (iii)   by  appointment  of  officers  in  the temporary service  of the  United  Provinces,  Public  Works Department (Irrigation  Branch), (the selection in all these three categories  was to  be after  consulting  a  permanent Board of  Selection) and (iv) by promotion of members of the Subordinate Engineering Service, who have, in the opinion of

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the Government, shown exceptional merit. The proviso to rule S states  that it  would not  be necessary  to  consult  the Commission in the case of appointment of a temporary officer to a  permanent vacancy, if he has already been appointed to a temporary  post in the cadre of service after consultation with the  Commission. In  1950 recruitment  through  Thomson College was  stopped and in 1961 direct recruitment was made through the  Public Service  Commission. Rule 6 empowers the Government to  fill quotas  for members  of the  Subordinate Engineering  Service..   Rule  17  stipulates  a  period  of probation in  regard to  all candidates  who were not in the permanent employment  of  the  Irrigation  Branch.  Rule  19 provides the  mode of  confirmation of  a probationer in his appointment. Rule  23 regulating  the inter  se seniority of the officers  states that  seniority in the ser ice shall be determined according to the date of the order of appointment to it.      In 1948 by combining class I and class II officers into one service  the Government constituted the U. P. Service of Engineers (Junior  and Senior  Scales) but  since the  rules regulating their recruitment, conditions and classifications could not  be made,  the Government  followed the 1936 Rules which were  modified from time to time by Government orders. The High  Court struck  down the seniority list of engineers prepared by the State Government in 1965 and gave directions to  the   Government  to   re-determine  the   seniority  in accordance with  Rules 23 of the Rules. Purporting to act on these directions  a fresh seniority list was drawn up by the Government in  May, 1969 but that too was struck down by the High Court. 450      In appeal  to this  Court it  was contended that it was not correct  to say  that the  temporary Assistant Engineers were not  members of  the service  on the  ground that their appointment was  not in  a substantive capacity in permanent posts since  they had  fulfilled all the requirements of the rules for being appointed on a regular basis viz. possessing the requisite qualifications, selection by the State Service Commission etc.  irrespective of  whether their appointments were to  temporary posts  or not,  the long service they had put in must weigh in reckoning the seniority.      Allowing the appeal in part ^      HELD: The  G. O. Of December 1961 in so far as it fixes the proportion  of permanent vacancies to be filled from the various sources  had statutory  force being under rule 6. So much so,  the various  groups can  claim permanency  only in terms of  that proportion,  although not  being holder  of a permanent post  neither debars membership of the Service nor earning the  benefit of  officiating service for purposes of seniority. [470B-C]      While  temporary   and  permanent   posts  have   great relevancy  in   regard  to  the  career  of  the  government servants, keeping  posts temporary  for long,  sometimes  by annual renewals  for several years and denying the claims of the incumbents  on the score that their posts are temporary, makes  no  sense  and  is  arbitrary  especially  when  both temporary  and   permanent   appointees   are   functionally identified. If, in the normal course, a post is temporary in the real  sense and  the appointee  knows  that  his  tenure cannot  exceed  the  post  in  longevity,  there  cannot  be anything unfair or capricious in clothing him with no right. Not so,  if the  post is,  for certain  departmental or like purposes, declared  temporary, but  it is  within the ken of both the  government and  the appointee  that the  temporary

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posts are  virtually long-lived.  It is irrational to reject the claim of the temporary appointee on the nominal score of the terminology of tho post. [462 D]      Officiating service  in a  post is  for  all  practical purposes of seniority as good as service on a regular basis. It may  be permissible,  within limits,  for  government  to ignore officiating  service and  count only  regular service when claims  of seniority come before it, provided the rules in that  regard are  clear and categoric and do not admit of any ambiguity  and an  arbitrary cut  off of  long years  of service  does   not  take   place.  While  rules  regulating conditions of  service are within the executive power of the State or its legislative power under proviso to Article 309, such rules  have to  be reasonable,  fair  and  not  grossly unjust if  they are  to survive  the test of articles 14 and 16. [462 G-H]      For purposes  of seniority,  one has to go by the order of appointment to the Service in a substantive capacity. But no fixed  connotations can be attributed to expressions like ’substantive capacity’,  ’service’,  ’cadre’  and  the  like because probation  even for temporary appointees is provided for  in   the  rules   which  means   that  even   temporary appointments  can   be  substantive.  For  there  cannot  be probation for a government servant who is not to be absolved substantively in the Ser ice on completion thereof.      Permanency carries  with  it  other  rights  than  mere seniority and promotion. Permanent posts and temporary posts are in  official terminology  sharply different  but in  the historical context of the U.P. service of Engineers there is no  difference   because  recruitment   of  even   temporary engineers requires  consultation  with  the  Public  Service Commission, undergoing physical fitness tests, probation and 451 departmental  tests.   The   temporary   appointees,   whose appointments have  received   the  approval  of  the  Public Service Commission  and who  have run  out the  two years of probation must  be deemed  to be  appointed in a substantive capacity. [465 D-E]      It is  not correct  to  say  that  when  Engineers  are appointed to  temporary posts  but after  fulfilling all the tests for  regular appointment  they are  not appointed in a substantive capacity.  It was  concluded by the State in its counter- affidavit  that all  the persons  appointed to  the service who  are not  already in the permanent employment of the Irrigation  Department shall  be placed on probation for four years  (since reduced  to two  years), which means that persons  who   were  not   permanently  appointed  but  only temporarily appointed  are  also  placed  on  probation  and officer are  not put  on probation  unless they arc on their way to membership in the Service on completion of probation. That is  to say  although they  are temporary appointees, if their  probation   was  completed   and  other   formalities fulfilled,  they  become  members  of  the  service.  Merely because the  person is  a temporary  appointee it  cannot be said that  he is  not substantively  appointed if he fulfils the necessary  conditions for  regular appointment  such  as probation  and   consultation  with   the   Public   Service Commission. [466 A-D]      Rule 23  is  the  relevant  rule  when  a  question  of seniority arises.  The order of appointment in a substantive capacity is  the significant  starting point  for  reckoning seniority. The  appointment in  a substantive  capacity need not necessarily  be to  a permanent  post. It  is sufficient even if  it is to a temporary post of long duration. [467 E- G]

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    An appointee  to  a  permanent  post  acquires  certain rights which  one who  fills a  temporary post cannot claim. Nevertheless, when  the post  is not  purely temporary or ad hoc or  of short  duration or of an adventitious nature, the holder of  such temporary  post cannot  be degraded  to  the position of  one, who,  by accident of circumstance or for a fugitive tenure  occupies the  temporary post for a fleeting term. [468 F]      A person  is said  to hold  a  post  in  a  substantive capacity  when   he  holds  it  for  an  indefinite  period, especially of long duration in contradistinction to a person who holds  it for  a definite or a temporary period or holds it on  probation subject to confirmation. If the appointment is to  a post  and the  capacity in which the appointment is made is  of  indefinite  duration,  if  the  Public  Service Commission has been consulted and has approved, if the tests prescribed have been taken and passed, if probation has been prescribed and  has been approved, one may well say that the post was  held by  the incumbent  in a substantive capacity. [469 D-E]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: CIVIL APPEAL NOS . 1317- 1318 of 1976.      Appeals by  Special Leave  from the Judgment and order, dated 13-9-1973  of the  Allahabad High Court in CIVIL Misc. Writ Petition NOS. 2719/69 & 4034/69.                             AND                WRIT PETITION NOS. 864 / 79 and 251 / 80                (Under Article 32 of the Constitution) 452      R. K.  Garg, V.  J. Francis, D. K. Garg and Sunil Kumar Jain for  the Appellants in CA No. 1317/76 and Petitioner in WP 251/80.      K. K. Singhvi, Anil Kumar Gupta, Brij Bhushan, Virendra Singh, N. P. Mahendra, A. M. Tripathi and S. S. Khanduja for the Appellant in CA 1318 / 76.      Yogeshwar Prasad,  Ashok K.  Srivastava and  Mrs.  Rani Chhabra for the Petitioners in WP No. 864/79.      D. V.  Patel, Anil  Kumar Gupta, Brij Bhushan, Virendra Singh, N.  P. Mahendra and A. M. Tripathi for the Intervener in CA No. 1317/76.      G. N.  Dikist and  O. P.  Rana for  Respondent No. 1 in both the appeals.      Shanti Bhushan  and M.  C. Bhndare  for the Respondents Nos. 2-3 in CA No. 1317/76 & R-21 in CA No. 1318/76.      S. Markandaya  and V.  P. Singh  for R.  9  in  CA  No. 1318/76.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      KRISHNA IYER,  J.-This case illustrates the thesis that unlimited  jurisdiction   under  Art.  136  self-defeatingly attracts unlimited  litigation which,  in turn, clogs up and slows down  to zero-speed  the flow  of ultimate  decisions, what with  the lengthy  orality and legal nicety of lawyers’ advocacy. This  bunch of appeals, affecting this fortunes of a large  number of  engineers, is  evidence of  the flood of ’service’ litigation  which overwhelms the courts, paralyses public offices  and demands  of our pyramidal Justice System basic changes,  jurisdictional and processual. The perennial problems of  Service  Justice,  which  currently  crowd  the dockets of  the higher  courts,  save  all  cases  of  basic breaches of  the fundamental  law, may  well be made over to expert bodies,  high-powered and  final but presided over by

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top  judicial   personnel.  Service   Jurisprudence   is   a specialised branch  best administered  by Special tribunals, not routinely  under Art.  226. We  do not  pontificate  but share thoughts.      We are  concerned mainly with the competitive claims to seniority  mainly  as  between  three  groups  of  engineers belonging to  the U.  P. Service  of  Engineers  (Irrigation Branch-Graduate engineers  directly recruited  by the Public Service  Commission  by  competitive  examination,  graduate engineers once appointed in 453 numbers but  later  absorbed  after  consultation  with  the Public Commission  and  diploma-holders  later  promoted  as Assistant Engineers. Brushing aside the hoary history of the Service when  the British  were hardly  concerned  with  the development of  India’s natural  resources, we may start the story with  the U.  P. Public  Works Department of which the Irrigation Wing was a part, the other branch being Buildings and Roads.  Later on, separate departments for Buildings and Roads  and   for  irrigations  were  formed  in  1946  as  a developmental imperative  of the  State. Recruitment  to the Service-we are  here  concerned  only  with  the  Irrigation Department was governed by vintage Rules framed under s. 96B of the  Govt. Of  India Act,  1919,  which  had  a  confused course,  and   that  factor   i.e.  lack   of  comprehensive structural engineering  of the  Engineering Service Rules-is largely responsible  for frequent  group clashes  among  the broad brotherhood  of engineers whose whole-hearted service, now  distracted   by  litigation,  is  needed  for  national reconstruction. But  national dedication so vital to poverty eradication,, is  subject to  one rider  in our society viz. charity begins  at home.  And  so,  for  their  own  justice oriented survival,  the groups  are fighting in courts while the demands  of developmental  justice to  the  people  need their presence in the countryside.      There were,  to  begin  with,  Class  I  and  Class  11 officers, but in 1948, the two were fused into one, viz. the U. P.  Service of  Engineers (Junior and Senior Scales). The Service came  into being but fresh rules of recruitment were not made.  Thus, a  Service was  born  but  then  the  rules regulating recruitment,  conditions and classifications were unborn. So,  Government relied  on the old Rules of 1936 for these purposes  with  some  G.  O.  Or  other  issued  under pressure of  exigencies. The past projected into the present with ad  hoc changes-a  process which,  not being scientific nor systematic.  was bound  to produce injustice, as it has, in  this  Service.  The  dialectics  of  Justice  to  Public Services lead  to conflicts  between  the  thesis  (the  old conditions and  anti-thesis (the  new expectations  until  a synthesis realist  equilibrium  without  discrimination)  is reached be enlightened governmental policy-making. Had Rules for the  Service, in  tune with  the  Constitution  and  the updated facts  of life  been made  by Government, instead of flirting with the past and improving for the present, things would have  been different. Court litigation is not designed for the  end, but judges cannot but make-do with what fossil Service Rules  with engrafted mutations survive. To dig into the past is our lot in this case. We do not blame Government for failure  to make  a whole  scheme  of  post-Constitution Rules of  Service, pre-occupied as it may well be with other priorities. 454      The  struggle   between  the   various  groups  is  for seniority, in  some cases  even  for  retention  of  regular appointment. The  State. had  prepared a  list of  seniority

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first in December 1965. This list was attacked as bad in law and the  High Court by its judgment of October 1967 in Civil Misc. Writ No. 4416 of 1966 ordered:           "The petition, therefore, succeeds and is allowed.      The respondents  are directed not to give effect or act      in virtue  of the  seniority list announced on December      30, 1965.  They are further directed to redetermine the      seniority inter  se of the petitioner and respondents 2      to 49 in accordance with rule 23."      Purporting to  act on  this direction a fresh seniority list was  drawn up  by Government  in May 1969, and this, in turn was  challenged by many as violative of Art. 14 and the High Court allowed some of the writ petitions and held:           "For the  reasons set  out above, Civil Misc. Writ      Petition ... No. 2719 of 1969 is allowed. The orders of      appointment in  the substantive capacity of respondents      Nos. 2  to 169  and the seniority list, dated 13-5-1969      (Annexure ’K’  to the  petitions are quashed. The State      Government is  directed to  make fresh appointments and      draw seniority  list in  accordance with law keeping in      view the office Memorandum. dated 7-12-1961"      The broad  perspective we must adopt is plain enough in the light  of this  Court’s  decision  (see  the  concluding observations of  Chandrachud, J.  in the  State of Jammu and Kashmir v.  Shri Triloki  Nath Khosa and Ors. The goal of an egalitarian society  must be  reflected in  the  process  of classification of services, equalisation being the essential direction and perpetration of divisions and proliferation of classes being reduced to the minimum. Humanism-cum-equalism, as a  way of  life, is  integral to our constitutional order and slow  though the  process be,  sure shall  our steps  be towards fusion,  not fission  in the  various Departments of Public Service. Unfortunately, this constitutional ethos has yet to  be imprinted  upon the  genetic code  of the "United Provinces Service  of Engineers  Class II  Irrigation Branch Rules" framed  under s.  96B of the Government of India Act, 1919 and  continued under  Art. 313 of the Constitution. The result is micro-classifications ad hoc amendments, uncertain service conditions,  litigative excursions,  and  indefinite postponement of even a Seniority List.      The ancient year extant 1936 Rules relating to Class II service framed  under different conditions, still govern the Service with such 455 patch-work modifications  through  Government  Memoranda  as were   made by  the State  from time  to time.  A garment of seams  and   stitches  to-day  drapes  this  developmentally strategic  department   despite  Reports   by   two   expert Committees. and  this anachronistic  set of  Rules  must  be adapted by  the Court  now to  fit the over-grown anatomy of Irrigation Engineers (Junior Division).      The fury  of the  controversy rages  round seniority in service among  the triple  categories of Assistant Engineers which we  will   presently describe.  Before that. the basic rules of  1936. Rule  23 regulates  inter se  seniority  and reads thus:           "Seniority in  the  service  shall  be  determined      according to  the date  of the  order of appointment to      it, provided  that if  the order  of the appointment of      two or  more candidates  bears  the  same  date,  their      seniority inter se shall be determined according to the      order in which their appointment has been notified".                                             (emphasis added)      So, the order of appointment to the Service is decisive of seniority  and the  service horoscope  of each  Assistant

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Engineer has  to be  cast with  reference to his appointment order. The  next question  then, is,  when  is  an  engineer appointed to  the Service? When, under the Rules, he becomes a member  of the Service. For. until he gains entry into the Service he  cannot claim  to be  appointed to  it. To  hover around with  prospects of  entry is  not the  same as actual entry. Therefore,  we  have  to  examine  when  an  engineer becomes a  member of the Service under the Rules. Clause (b) of Rule  3  defines  ’Member  of  the  Service’  to  mean  a government servants  ’appointed in  a  substantive  capacity under the provisions of these rules.. to a post in the cadre Of the  Service.’ What,  then, is  the cadre of the Service? What do  we mean by appointment in a substantive capacity to a post  in the cadre? Can there be a temporary post included in the cadre? Here, r. 1 becomes relevant. Rule 4 prescribes the sanctioned  strength of  the cadre. It provides that the government may,  subject to  the provisions  of r. 40 of the Civil Services  (Classification. Control  and Appeal) Rules, 1930 ’increase  the cadre by creating permanent or temporary posts from  time to  time as  may be  found necessary.’ So a cadre post  can be permanent or temporary and if an engineer were appointed  substantively to  a temporary  or  permanent post he  becomes a  member of  the Service.  The  touchstone then, is  the substantive  capacity of the appointment. Here we get  into service  jargon  with  slippery  semantics  and flavoured officialese. 456      Now, we  must go  to the  plural sources of recruitment the arrangement  of the  ratio among  the  sources  and  the requirements for them to get into the Service. Rules S and 6 relate to this branch of enquiry. The sources of recruitment are set out thus: Sources of Recruitment:           (i) by  direct appointment  from amongst  engineer      students who  have passed  out  of  the  Thomson  Civil      Engineering College.  Roorkee, and who have completed a      course of training in the Irrigation Branch as engineer      students,  after   consulting  a   permanent  Board  of      Selection,           (ii) by direct appointment after advertisement and      after consulting a permanent Board of Selection;           (iii)  by  the  appointment  of  officers  in  the      temporary service  of the  United Provinces.  in Public      Works Department, Irrigation Branch, after consulting a      permanent Board of Selection;           (iv)  by   promotion  of  members  of  the  United      Provinces Subordinate  Engineering Service  or of Upper      Subordinates in the Public Works Department, Irrigation      Branch, who  have. in  the opinion  of Government shown      exceptional merit. We have  stated earlier  that these  Rules were  framed long before the  Constitution of  India and  have  suffered  many amendments one  of which  is the  substitution of the Public Service Commission  for a  permanent Board  of Selection.  A Proviso has been added to r. S and that runs thus:           "Provided  that  it  will  not.  be  necessary  to      consult the Com mission in the case of appointment of a      temporary officer  to a  permanent vacancy  if  he  has      already been appointed to a temporary post in the cadre      of service  after consultation with the Commission. The      amendments  shall   have  effect   from  the   date  of      notification." This Proviso  shows ’that  temporary officers (whatever that expression means)  could be appointed to permanent vacancies without  consultation  with  the  Commission,  if  they  had

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already been appointed to temporary posts after consultation with the  Commission. Thus,  we gel  the idea  of  temporary posts and  permanent posts,  provisional -  appointments and substantive appointments.  Indeed, the  bewildering  variety was  brought  out  during  arguments  by  reference  to  the Fundamental Rules. A permanent posts means           "a post carrying a definite rate of pay sanctioned      without limit of time 457 A temporary post means A           "a post carrying a definite rate of pay sanctioned      for a  limited time                                                  [FR 9(30)] Fundamental  Rule   22B  speaks  of  holding  a  post  in  a substantive, temporary  of officiating  capacity.  But  this jargon is  not the  last word after the Constitution came to be enacted.      Be that  as it  may, the  sources of recruitment are 4- fold. The Thomson College appointments were formally stopped by a  G. O.  Of 1950.  Another big change took place. Direct recruitment, routed  through the  Public Service  Commission was introduced  in 1961.  The rules  of procedure for direct recruitment and  kindred matters  are provided  by an office Memorandum of  December 1961  which we  will  consider  more closely as they bear upon the crucial controversy.      Rule 6  gives power to Government to fix quotas for the various sources  and not  less than 20% of the vacancies are reserved for  selected qualified  members of the Subordinate Engineering Service  who are category 4 in r. S. Persons who are recruited  in terms of rr. 5 and 6 are appointed subject to r.  17 which stipulates a spell of probation in regard to all  candidates   who  are  not  already  in  the  permanent employment of the Irrigation Branch. We quote the rule:           17. All  persons appointed  to the service who are      not already  in the  permanent employ of the Irrigation      Branch of  the United  Provinces  Government  shall  be      placed on  probation for  four years provided that such      of  them   as  have   undergone  training  as  engineer      students, or  have served as temporary engineers in the      Irrigation Branch  of the  United Provinces Government,      may be  permitted to  count the period of such training      and  service   respectively  towards   this  period  of      probation:           Provided also  that the  Government may extend the      period of  probation in  any case. The Govt. may at any      time during  the period  of probation dispense with the      service of  an officer,  after giving  him  one  moth’s      notice. , G The probationer  is confirmed  in  his  appointment  on  his satisfactory  completion  of  probation  after  passing  the necessary tests.  Rule 19  relates to  confirmation  in  the appointment of a probationer and reads thus:           19(i) A  probationer shall  be  confirmed  in  his      appointment when-                (a) he has completed the prescribed period on           probation, 458                (b) he has passed all the tests prescribed in           the last preceding rule, and                (c) the  Government are  satisfied that he is           fit for confirmation.           (ii) All  confirmations under  this rule  shall be      notified in the United Provinces Gazette.      Two vital  factors must guide us in this interpretative exercise. If a dated rule of colonial times is to be applied

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to-day. that  meaning which  sustains it as constitutionally valid must  be preferred  to another which may be appealing, going by  officialese or literal sense. We have to regard it as a  case of ’new wine in old bottle’. We must re-interpret the  rules   to  comport   with   Arts.   14   and   16   by constitutionally   acceptable    construction,   not   rigid connotation given  to expressions  in the vintage vocabulary of British  Indian days.  We Stress  this aspect because the argument  urged   is  one   of  unconstitutionality  of  the Seniority List and of the Rules which deprive many engineers appointed in  the normal  course and  serving for long years arbitrarily and  unreasonably of  the credit of such service merely because  the literal rigour of old Rules requires it. We must  strive  to  salvage  the  Rules,  if  need  be,  by assigning a fresh sense, language permitting, which will fit the Rules  into the  "fundamental rights" mould. We are thus thrown  into   the  meaning   of  meanings,   released  from officially sanctified  meanings. In short, while reading the Rules we must remember the Constitution.,      Secondly,  words  themselves  are  but  them  skins  of thought and  once we  get that,  the root  though which  the language of  the rules  seeks to  express, it is possible to interpret the words accordingly. Even so, we cannot run away from the Rules as they are, though moth-eaten by time and by tinkering amendments.      One of  the principal groups in this forensic battle is the direct  recruits selected  by competitive  tests by  the Public Service  Commission. So we must bestow some attention on their genesis and position in the total scheme. We reject the submission  that the  official Memorandum  incorporating these Rules,  not being expressed to have been issued in the name of  the Governor,  is of  no legal  validity. We cannot ’bastardize’ these Rules made and published under Government authority, acted  upon for two decades and recruitments made by the Public Service Commission and universally accepted as binding  ’Rules  Regulating  Selection  for  Recruitment  of Assistant Engineers (U. P. Service of Engineers class II) in the Various State Engineering Services in Uttar Pradesh’. We will set out some parts of these Rules of December 7, 1961. 459      We may,  at this  point, crystallise  the effect of the Rules read  A so far, so that it may serve as a spring board for further  discussion. The  battle between  the parties or groups very  much turns  on what is the intent and effect of Rules 23,  3, 4,  S, 6,  17 and  18 and their impact on r.23 read in  the new  context of  this 1961  Rules. We  have  to grapple with  the crucial  question of seniority which, when we hark  back to  r.23, in turn, revolves round the "date of the order  of appointment".  The  effect  of  probation  and confirmation is  also another  consideration. But  r.23 sets out the guideline and the entire endeavour of both sides has been to  supply an  answer which  gives one group a superior position as against another in the competition for seniority which  apparently   has  promotional  value  when  posts  of Executive Engineers fall vacant      We must  confess that  because  of  the  absence  of  a coherent policy of recruitment and conditions of service and on   account   of   frequent   changes   through   executive instructions, apart from the mystique of officialese, it has become difficult  for us to rationalise the rules and decode the principles  underlying regular  appointments relevant to seniority. Even  in court, as the argument proceeded. judges and advocates  had to  wrestle with  the rules  to extract a coherent system  out of  them. The  High Court,  on both the occasions, when  challenges were made, quashed the seniority

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lists and  directed fresh  lists to  be prepared. But in the absence of  clear judicial  guidelines the  exercise by  the Executive would lead to further confusion and cavil and that is why  we express  our dismay  at the whole situation where from stage to stage, chaos, not cosmos, has been the result.      Reference was  made to  an  investigation  by  the  Lal Committee and  the Shukla  Committee  which  went  into  the question of  rationalisation of  the scheme  of recruitment. classification, seniority and promotion; but as late as 1980 we are  in no better position than when the moth-eaten rules and instructions  were made decades ago. May be, the Reports of the Lal Committee and Shukla Committee to which reference was made  need not,  as is  the fate of most Reports, gather dust but  give light  where the  will to  seek light exists. This is  a sad  commentary on  the functional failure at the Service level  of the  State Government  which has  led  not merely to incessant litigations among engineers, uncertainty about their future but also discontent and disincentive vis- a-vis their work in the Irrigation Department.      We  see   nothing  arbitrary  in  the  1961  Memorandum although in  its application,  we have to remember the prior rules and when the 460 two are  woven into  each other  or, rather,  when the later 1961 Memorandum  is devetailed to the 1936 Rules the results that may  follow will  have to  be ascertained with care and consistently until  the ratio of the decisions of this Court in cognate situations.      What is  significant to  know its that Govt. decided in 1961 to  resort to direct recruitment of Assistant Engineers through competitive  examinations held by the Public Service Commission. It  was, however, alive to the fact that massive appointments had already been made, in the years gone by, to the  posts  of  Asst.  Engineers  from  among  graduates  in engineering by  direct selection  and later  approval by the Public  Service   Commission  apart   from  Thomson  College graduates in  engineering. The  Government was also aware of the promotional claims of those in the subordinate services. Moreover, there  were vacancies  permanent and temporary and there were appointees, permanent and temporary. The equities of the  situation had to be taken Dote of because Government could not,  without being  guilty of cruel snobbery relegate all those, except direct recruits, from among degree-holders by  competitive  examinations  through  the  Public  Service Commission, to  a secondary status. In this holistic view it was that  the office  Memorandum, dated December 7, 1961 was promulgated. We extract it because its import and impact are decisive to an extent of the fate of the cases before us:           The   principles    regulating    selection    for      recruitment  to   permanent  and   temporary  posts  of      Assistant Engineers  in the  various State  Engineering      Services  have   been  under   the   consideration   of      Government  for  some  time  past  and  after  thorough      consideration the  Governor is pleased to order that in      future  direct   recruitment  to   both  permanent  and      temporary  vacancies  of  Assistant  Engineers  (Civil,      Electrical  and   Mechanical)  in   the  Public  Works,      Irrigation  and   Local   Self-Government   Engineering      Departments will  be made on the results of competitive      examinations to  be conducted  by  the  Public  Service      Commission. Candidates  possessing technical  and other      qualifications prescribed  in the  rules for  the Uttar      Pradesh  Service   of  Engineers   in  the  Departments      concerned will be eligible to appear at the examination      for that particular service.

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         2. Successful  candidates in  order of  merit will      subject  to   the  relevant  rules  regarding  physical      fitness and  other matters.  be appointed  directly  on      probation against  vacant  permanent  posts  and  those      following will be appointed against temporary posts. 461           3. All  vacancies in  the permanent  cadre in  the      Irrigation  and   Local   Self-Government   Engineering      Departments in  a particular  year will  be pooled  and      filled as follows:                (a) 50 per cent by direct recruitment through           competitive examination.                (b) 20 per cent by promotion from subordinate           services.                (c) 30  per cent  by selection  from  amongst           temporary Assistant  Engineers  recruited  through           the Public Service Commission.                xx             xx             xx           However, as  measure of concession to the existing      temporary Assistant  Engineers who  were  recruited  as      temporary Assistant  Engineers on  the  advice  of  the      Public Service  Commission prior to the introduction of      this  scheme   for  the   time  being  distribution  of      vacancies in the permanent cadre of Assistant Engineers      will be as follows:                (a) 30 per cent by direct recruitment through           competitive  examination  (25  per  cent  for  the           Public Works Department),                (b) 20 per cent by promotion from subordinate           service  (25   per  cent   for  the  Public  Works           Department),                (c) 50  per cent  by selection  from  amongst           existing temporary  Assistant Engineers  who  were           recruited as temporary Assistant Engineers through           the Public Service Commission.           The distribution  of vacancies  in  the  permanent      cadre in  the above  manner  will  be  subject  to  the      condition that  the Governor  in consultation  with the      Public Service  Commission, may,  for special  reasons.      increase  or   decrease  the   percentage   fixed   for      recruitment by selection and competitive examination in      any particular year.           The  candidates   selected  on   the  results   of      competitive examination and appointed against permanent      vacancies shall  be placed on probation for a period of      3  years.   However,  in  the  case  of  such  directly      recruited  candidates  who  have  served  as  Assistant      Engineers  in  a  particular  department  in  temporary      capacity,  continuous   period  of   temporary  service      rendered  as   Assistant  Engineer  immediately  before      selection for  permanent post of Assistant Engineer may      be allowed to count towards this period of probation.           The candidates will not be required to possess one      year’s practical experience, prescribed in the existing      rules for  recruitment of Assistant Engineers as a pre-      requisite qualification for 462      recruitment  of   Assistant  Engineer  in  the  various      departments. The period of practical experience will be      covered by the period of probation.           During the  probationary period candidates will be      required   to   pass   the   Departmental   Examination      prescribed by the various departments. Probationers may      be confirmed  subject to passing these examinations and      their work continuing to be satisfactory.

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         Temporary  and   officiating  Assistant  Engineers      possessing the  requisite technical qualifications will      be eligible  to appear  in the competitive examination.      The maximum  age limit  in the case of those working in      the department  with the  approval of the Commission or      after having  been recruited  by the Commission will be      40 years.           Plan  and   the  syllabus   of   the   competitive      examination will  be as  shown in Appendix ’A’ enclosed      with these orders. There is more of this maze of rules and notifications but we desist from bringing them on record since they have not much bearing on the ultimate result. We must emphasise that while temporary and permanent posts have great relevancy in regard to  the   career  of   government  servants,  keeping  posts temporary for long, sometimes by annual renewals for several years, and denying the claims of the incumbents on the score that their posts are temporary makes no sense and strikes us as arbitrary,  especially when  both temporary and permanent appointees are  functionally identified.  If, in  the normal course, a  post is  temporary in  the  real  sense  and  the appointee knows  that his  tenure cannot  exceed the post in longevity, there  cannot be anything unfair or capricious in clothing him  with no  rights. Not  so, if  the post is, for certain departmental  or like  purposes, declared temporary, but it  is within  the ken  of both  the government  and the appointee that the temporary posts are virtually long-lived. It is  irrational to  reject the  claim of  the  ’temporary’ appointee on  the nominal  score of  the terminology  of the post. We  must also  express emphatically that the principle which  has   received   the   sanction   of   this   Court’s pronouncements is  that officiating service in a post is for all practical  purposes of seniority as good as service on a regular basis.  It may  be permissible,  within limits,  for government to  ignore officiating  service  and  count  only regular service  when claims  of seniority  come before  it, provided the  rules in  that regard are clear and categorise and do not admit of any ambiguity and cruelly arbitrary cut- off of long years of service does not take place or there is functionally and  qualitatively, substantial  difference  in the service rendered in the two types of posts. 463 While rules  regulating conditions of service are within the executive power  of the State or its legislative power under proviso to  Article 309,  even so,  such rules  have  to  be reasonable, fair  and not  grossly unjust  if  they  are  to survive the test of Articles 14 and 16.      While assessing  the effect  of the totality of the two sets of  rules placed  before us,  we have to make the broad approach set  out above  and not  become  prisoners  of  the ’official’ meaning of abstruse expressions used in the rules which themselves  have frequently  changed with  a  view  to "rationalisation". The two committees (the Lal Committee and the Shukla Committee) examined the entire matter but we have no idea, from the Government’s affidavits, as to how far the rules ave been intelligently moulded by these reports.      Right in the beginning, we have indicated that r. 23 is of spinal  significance, and  for purposes of seniority, one has to  go by  the order  of appointment to the Service in a substantive capacity.  It is  difficult to overlook r. 23 or slur over  the expression  ’substantive  capacity’.  But  we cannot attribute  fixed  connotations  to  expressions  like ’substantive capacity’,  ’service’,  ’Cadre’  and  the  like because we find that probation even for temporary appointees is provided for in the rules which means that even temporary

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appointments  Gan  be  substantive.  For,  there  cannot  be probation for a government servant who is not to be absorbed substantively in  the Service  on completion  thereof.  With this background,  if we  approach the scheme unfolded by the Office Memorandum  of December 1961 superimposed on the 1936 Rules, we  get three categories of Assistant Engineers and a fixation of the proportion among them. Firstly, there are to be direct  recruits through  open competition  held  by  the Public Service  Commission. 50% of the posts will go to them although it  is stated that the vacancies are to be "in that permanent cadre".  Secondly, the  subordinate services  will get 20%  by promotion  and thirdly,  30% will  belong to the temporary Assistant  Engineers recruited  through the Public Service Commission  in the past. The office Memorandum makes it clear  that direct  recruitments will  be made  to  "both permanent and  temporary vacancies  of Assistant Engineers". But this scheme of 1961 cannot stand in isolation and has to be read  as subordinate  to the  1936 Rules.  After all, the 1961 Memorandum  cannot override  the Rules  which are valid under Art.  313, and so must be treated as filling the gaps, not flouting  the provisions. So, read, what is the eventual conclusion?      The State, in its counter-affidavit, has urged that all parties must  be deemed to have accepted the decision of the High Court  in its  judgment of  October  30,  quashing  the seniority list  of December  30, 1965.  We are  inclined  to proceed on that footing because, after that decision 464 was rendered,  Government accepted  it and  went through the exercise of  preparing a  fresh seniority  list and  all the engineers concerned  acquiesced in  the decision  and  never raised any objection to the fresh preparation of a seniority list consequent  upon the  High Court’s  decision  of  1967. That, by  itself, does  not give us any conclusive answer to the present  question which  has been  agitated  before  us. First of  all, we must understand the two grievances brought to our  notice by  the appellant  and the  writ petitioners. Their contention  is that whether their appointments were to temporary posts  or not,  the long  service they have put in must weigh  in reckoning seniority. Their further contention is that  if the  Public Service  Commission has arranged the order of  merit in  a particular  manner and if appointments have been  made irregularly  without reference to that order or  priority,   they  have  no  objection  to  marginal  re- adjustments while  arranging the  seniority of  the  various appointees by giving effect to The order in which the Public Service Commission  has made its recommendations. It is also fairly apparent  from the  arguments, although  not formally conceded by  counsel, that  officiation, from  the date from which temporarily  appointed Assistant  Engineers have  been formally  approved  by  the  Public  Service  Commission  on reference by  the State  Governments must be given credit or at least  from the  date of  Government’s acceptance. Of the Commission’s recommendation.  There was  nothing more by way of  impediment   in  their  appointments  being  treated  as regular. They were Assistant Engineers duly qualified. Their appointments might  have been temporary, but temporary posts and temporary  appointments are within the Rules. The Public Service  Commission   has  since   been  consulted  and  has concurred and  Government has accepted it. Every indicium of regular appointment is thus present. There is nothing relied on by  the rivals  to dislodge  the reckoning of service for purposes  of   seniority  from   then  on  except  the  sole contention that  the temporary  Assistant Engineers  are not members of  the Service  because their appointment is not in

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substantive capacity and not a permanent post.      We are  free  to  confess  that  the  rules,  stricking divergent notes,  like ill-tuned  cymbals, have  vexed us  a while. The  touchstone of  valid  interpretation  being  the Constitution and  harmonisation of  rules  with  fundamental rights being  the proper path we have tried to sensitize the provisions to  do equal  justice under  the law  refusing to petrify r.  23 or  the other relevant rules we have referred to Rule 4 of the 1936 Rules clearly contemplates a cadre, as covering "permanent  or temporary  posts". So, a cadre takes in  temporary  posts.  Once  we  cease  to  be  allergic  to ’temporary posts’ as a component of a cadre we reach 465 the next  step that  a cadre  is, as it were, a layer in the Service. Rule  4 itself,  while dealing with the strength of the cadre,  speaks of  a holder  of a  post in  a cadre as a member of  the Service may be the holder of a temporary or a permanent post.      We have  two, perhaps  three, types of direct recruits. The first  is the  vanishing species  of Roorkee  University ’engineer students’.  They were  directly appointed but on a temporary footing.  Massive appointments  were made of other degree-holders as Assistant Engineers on a temporary footing to meet  the massive  developmental requirements. No one can imagine that  the guaranteed  posts to the brilliant Roorkee boys  was  temporary  only  or  that  the  large  number  of graduates were  being lured  into employment  for  long-term engineering requirements  on a  fleeting footing  for a  few months. Surely,  Government wanted  to  recruit  them  on  a regular basis  but hesitated  to appoint  them to  permanent posts as  such because  budgetary  provisions,  creation  of permanent posts  by assessment of the total requirements and the like  were not  instant jobs  but needed  more time. The Plan was  to take  these degree holders on a regular lasting basis  but  to  make  them  permanent  after  study  of  the situation. Permanency carries with it other rights than mere seniority and promotion. Permanent posts and temporary posts are, in  ordinary officialese,  sharply different but in the historical context of the evolving U.P. Service of Engineers ’thin partition  do their bounds divide’. The recruitment of even temporary engineers under source (iii) of r. 5 requires consultation with the Public Service Commission. Likewise r. 14 requires  for all  the three  types of  direct  recruits, temporary included, physical fitness tests.           14. No  person shall  be appointed  as a member of      the service  unless he  is in  good mental  and  bodily      health and  free from  any physical  defect  likely  to      interfere with  the efficient performance of his duties      as a  member of  the service.  Before  a  candidate  is      finally approved  for appointment  to the service under      the provisions  of rules 5(i), 5(ii) or 5(iii) he shall      be required  to pass  an examination by a Medical Board      at his  own expenses  and shall pay a fee of Rs. 16 for      such examination. Probation, tests and confirmation are laid down under rr. 17 to 19  for "all  persons appointed to the service". We delve into these  details to  drive home the propinquity in status of  permanent   and  temporary   engineers  in  the  special conspectus of facts here.      We see  no reason  to  hold  that  when  engineers  are appointed to  temporary posts  but after  fulfillment of all the tests  for regular  appointments, including consultation with  the   Public  Service   Commission,   they   are   not appointments  in   a  substantive   capacity.   In   Service terminology,

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466 perhaps, eye-brows  may be  raised when we say so, but then, we must  remember that  the State  itself  in  its  counter- affidavit has  construed r.  17 of  the Rules  as  providing "that all  persons appointed  to the  Service  who  are  not already  in  the  permanent  employment  of  the  Irrigation Department shall  be placed  on probation  for  four  years" (since reduced  to two  years). This  means that persons who are not permanently appointed but only temporarily appointed are also  placed on  probation and  officers are  not put on probation unless  they are on their way to membership in the Service on completion of probation. That is to say, although they  are   temporary  appointees,  if  their  probation  is completed  and  other  formalities  fulfilled,  they  become members of  the Service.  It follows that merely because the person is a temporary appointee it cannot be said that he is not substantively  appointed if  he  fulfils  the  necessary conditions for  regular appointment  such as  probation  and consultation with  the Public  Service Commission  etc. From this stand  of the  State Government  it  follows  that  the temporary appointees,  whose appointments  have received the approval of  the Public  Service Commission and who have run out the  two years  of  probation,  must  be  deemed  to  be appointed in  a substantive capacity. The only advantage for permanent appointees, i.e. Assistant Engineers who have been appointed to  vacancies  in  the  permanent  cadre  is  what belongs to  permanent public servants under various rules in different areas of official life.      We are  not interested  in the arithmatics given in the affidavits and  counter-affidavits regarding  the  permanent vacancies in  the various  categories designated as A, B and C. What  we focus  on is  the set  of principles  which must regulate the service available for computation of seniority. In paragraph  22 of the State’s counter affidavit the break- up of  the vacancies  available in  the various years to the various categories  has been set out. Their accuracy has not been shown  to be  wrong and we may, perhaps, proceed on the correctness of  those figures.  It is also made clear by the State that many officers belonging to the class of temporary Assistant Engineers  were directly  recruited before October 1958 and  some of them were promoted as temporally Assistant Engineers from  the Subordinate  Engineers  Service.  "These officers had  been approved for temporary appointment by the Public Service  Commission before  1958". Likewise,  for the other years, particulars have been furnished. The Government has also  clearly undertaken  that the competitive seniority as between  direct recruits and the temporary appointees who have been  regularised may have to be taken up later on. The State’s affidavit asserts:           "It is  also correct that in the appointment order      it was  mentioned that  seniority inter  se and  on the      list of permanent Assistant 467      Engineer of the officers will be determined later on."      We do  not consider  it right  or necessary  to fix the seniority vis-a-vis  the date  of appointment of the various parties,  as   that  is   the  administrative   function  of Government. Nor  do we  think we  should interfere  with the order of  the High Court setting aside the seniority list of 1969. A  fresh list  has anyway  to be prepared but the more meaningful judicial  exercise is  to lay  down  the  correct principles  and   guidelines,   free   from   discriminatory infirmities and  fairly in  keeping with  the extant Service Rules. The  Rules are,  we make it clear, those made in 1936 under the  Government of  India Act,  1919 and  continued by

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force of  Art. 313  of the  Constitution. Changes wrought by orders and  instructions such  as the 1961 Memorandum cannot over-ride the  Rules themselves  but will operate subject to them in  case of  inconsistency. Even  an Administration  of Inaction Unlimited  must remember  that a  systematic set of Service Rules  is vital  not  only  in  fulfillment  of  its constitutional obligation  under the proviso to Art. 309 but also to keep the morale and to promote contentment among the Civil Services by eliminating the ’inglorious uncertainties’ about career  prospects which  cut at  the root  of  planned living. So  we hope  that, what  with two  expert  committee reports slumbering in the Secretariat cells, Government will frame rules,  tuned to  the finer notes of Art. 16 and other mandates and  in consonance  with the realities obtaining in this and  sister services, after hearing affected sides as a stroke of  fair-play and without being file-logged for long. We hold  that r. 23 is the relevant mariner’s compass when a question of  seniority arises. Deducing therefrom we get the further  guideline  that  the  order  of  appointment  in  a substantive capacity  is the  significant starting point for reckoning seniority.      Substantive capacity  is a  flexible  expression  which cannot  be   frozen  by  current  officialese,  nor  by  the conditions that  obtained in  the remote  past when the rule was framed.  On the contrary, its meaning must be consistent with Art.  16 and  must avoid  the pitfalls of arbitrariness and irrational  injustice.  So  viewed,  we  hold  that  the appointment need  not necessarily be to a permanent post. It is sufficient  even if  it is  to a  temporary post  of long duration. In  a Department  which had  permanent  posts  and temporary posts  of a  quasi-permanent nature,  there is not much to  distinguish the  quality of  service as between the two. Patwardhan’s  case and Chauhan’s case have primarily or in passing clarified the equal value of officiating service. 468      In Patwardhan’s  case, Chandrachud,  J. Observed in the course of the discussion "There is no universal rule, either that a  cadre cannot consist of both permanent and temporary employees or  that it  must consist  of  both."  Later,  the learned Judge observed in the same strain:           The fact  that the permanent strength of the cadre      was determined  on the  basis of permanent posts at any      given time,  as for  example when the Bombay Government      passed resolutions on March 22, 1937 and April 13, 1945      cannot detract,  from the  position that even temporary      posts of  Deputy Engineers  were treated  as additions,      though temporary, to Class IV cadre. The Court,  in that case, also held that confirmation cannot be  the  sole  touchstone  of  seniority  as  that  will  be indefensible:           Confirmation   is    one   of    the    inglorious      uncertainties of  government service  depending neither      on efficiency  of the incumbent nor on the availability      of substantive  vacancies. A  glaring  instance  widely      known in  a part  of our  country is of a distinguished      member of  the judiciary  who was confirmed as District      Judge years  after he  was confirmed  as a Judge of the      High Court. It is on the record of these writ petitions      that officiating  Deputy Engineers  were not  confirmed      even though  substantive vacancies  were  available  in      which they  could have  been confirmed.  It shows  that      confirmation does  not have to conform to any set rules      and whether  an employee  should be  confirmed  or  not      depends  on   the  sweet   will  and  pleasure  of  the      government.

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    In Chauhan’s case this Court observed:           "Seniority, normally,  is measured  by  length  of      continuous officiating  service-the  actual  is  easily      accepted as the legal." Of course, an appointee to a permanent post acquires certain rights which  one who  fills a  temporary post cannot claim. Nevertheless, when  the post  is not  purely temporary or ad hoc or  of short  duration or of an adventitious nature, the holder of  such temporary  post cannot  be degraded  to  the position of  one who  by accident  of circumstance  or for a fugitive tenure  occupies the  temporary post for a fleeting term. We  must make this distinction not only to be truthful to the facts of Service life but also to do justice to those who have  otherwise rendered  long and  satisfactory work in the Irrigation  Department. In  short, while  we do  make  a distinction between  permanent and  temporary posts, when we come to the dimension of mere seniority, we whittle down the difference considerably.  A post of short duration, say of a few   months,   is   different   from   another   which   is terminologically temporary  but is  kept on  for ten or more years under  the head  ’temporary’ for  budgetary  or  other technical reasons. Those who are appointed 469 and hold  temporary posts  of the  latter category  are also members of  the Service  provided they  have been  appointed substantively to that temporary post.      What, in  the context, is a substantive capacity vis-a- vis an  appointment to  a post  ? In  our view, the emphasis imparted by  the adjective  "substantive" is that a thing is substantive if it is "an essential part B’ or constituent or relating to  what is  essential". We may describe a capacity as substantive  if it  has "independent  existence" or is of "considerable amount  or quantity". What is independent in a substantial  measure   may  reasonably   be   described   as substantive. Therefore,  when  a  post  is  vacant,  however designated in  officialese, the capacity in which the person holds  the   post  has  to  be  ascertained  by  the  State. Substantive capacity  refers to  the  capacity  in  which  a person holds  the post  and not necessarily to the nature or character of  the  post.  To  approximate  to  the  official diction used  in this  connection, we  may well  say that  a person is said to hold a post in a substantive capacity when he holds  it for  an indefinite  period especially  of  long duration in  contra distinction to a person who holds it for a definite  or temporary  period or  holds it  on  probation subject to confirmation.      Once we  understand ’substantive capacity’ in the above sense, we  may be  able to rationalise the situation. If the appointment is  to a  post and  the capacity  in  which  the appointment is made is of indefinite duration, if the Public Service Commission  has been  consulted and has approved, if the  tests   prescribed  have  been  taken  and  passed,  if probation has been prescribed and has been approved, one may well say  that the  post was  held by  the  incumbent  in  a substantive capacity.      Government will  ascertain from  this angle whether the capacity in  which posts  have been  held was substantive or temporary. If  it is  not, the further point to notice is as to whether the appointments are regular and not in violation of  any   rule,  whether  the  Public  Service  Commission’s approval has  been obtained  and whether  probation, medical fitness etc.,  are  complete.  Once  these  formalities  are complete the  incumbants can  be taken  as holding  posts in substantive capacities  and the  entire efficiating  service can be considered for seniority. For other purposes they may

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remain temporary. It may well be that another interpretation may make  r. 23 vulnerable. If a public servant serves for a decade with  distinction in  a post known to be not a casual vacancy but a regular post, experimentally or otherwise kept as temporary  under the time-honoured classification, can it be that  his long officiation turns to ashes like a Dead Sea fruit because of a label and his counterpart equal in all 470 functional respects  but with  ten  years  less  of  service steals a  march. Over  him because  his recruitment  is to a permanent vacancy? We cannot anathematize officiation unless there are reasonable differentiations and limitations.      We take  the view that the G.O. of December 1961, in so far as  it fixes the proportion of permanent vacancies to be filled from  the various  sources, has statutory force being under r.  6. So  much so.  the  various.  groups  can  claim permanency only  in terms  of that  proportion although  not being holder  of a  permanent post neither debars membership of the  Service  nor  earning  the  benefit  of  officiating service for purposes of seniority.      The  normal   rule  consistent   with  equity  is  that officiating service, even before confirmation in service has relevancy to  seniority if  eventually no infirmities in the way of  confirmation exist.  We see nothing in the scheme of the Rules  contrary to  that principle. Therefore, the point from which  service has to be counted is the commencement of the officiating service of the Assistant Engineers who might not have secured permanent appointments in the beginning and in that sense may still be temporary, but who, for all other purposes have  been regularised  and are  fit to be absorbed into permanent posts as and when they are vacant.      We, therefore, direct that a seniority list be prepared in the  light of  the principles  laid down by us. It is not for the  court to  find out  how many  among  the  temporary Assistant Engineers  are eligible  for permanency,  how many have  cleared   all  the   requirements  regarding   regular appointments even  in temporary vacancies-in short, how many must be  deemed to  have been  appointed  in  a  substantive vacancy though  temporary. That  will be  worked but  by the State in  the light  of what  we have  laid down.  We do not agree with the High Court in the partly misleading reasoning it has  adopted, but  do concur  in the  conclusion that the seniority list deserves to be set aside. We do so in partial allowance of  the appeals  and dismiss  the writ  petitions. Parties will  be ’heard’  by Government  through written  or oral representations  as it  chooses,  when  it  prepares  a seniority list  but the  principles we  have put  down shall govern. The parties will bear their costs through out. P.B.R.    Appeals partly allowed.      Petitions dismissed. 471