11 August 1998
Supreme Court
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C.G. GOVINDAN Vs STATE OF GUJARAT

Bench: D.P. WADHWA
Case number: C.A. No.-000400-000400 / 1997
Diary number: 76579 / 1996
Advocates: HARISH J. JHAVERI Vs HEMANTIKA WAHI


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PETITIONER: C.G. GOVINDAN, STATE OF GUJARAT & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF GUJARAT & ORS., S.S. MURTHY & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       11/08/1998

BENCH: D.P. WADHWA

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                             With            CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 401 AND 402 OF 1997                       J U D G M E N T Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.      Civil Appeal  Nos. 401 and 402 of 1997 are filed by the State of  Gujarat against  a judgment of a Division Bench of the High  Court granting  to the  Private Secretaries to the Hon’ble Judges of the High Court pay-scales of Rs.3000-4500. For the sake of convenience the State of Gujarat is referred to as  the appellant and the original petitioners before the High Court  are referred  to as the respondents. While Civil Appeal No.  400 of  1997 is  filed by  one C.G.  Govindan, a Private Secretary  to a  Judge of  the  Gujarat  High  Court claiming the  pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500 from 1.1.1986, which appeal has been dismissed by the same common judgment. Factual background:      Prior to  1.1.1986, in  the Central  Secretariat of the Union of  India, there  were four  grades of  stenographers- Grade A,  B, C  and D.  Stenographer Grade A was in the pay- scale of  Rs.650-1200 while  Stenographer Grade B was in the pay-scale of Rs.650-1040. The 4th pay commission recommended (paragraphs 9.39  and 9.42 of the 4th pay Commission Report) that Grades  A and B should be merged and a uniform scale of Rs. 2000-3500  should be  provided for all posts in Grades A and B combined.      It   further    recommended,   "To    provide   further satisfactory promotional avenues for the members of the CSSS (Central Secretariat Stenographers Service), we recommend to Government of  India and equivalent officers may be upgraded and given  the scale  of Rs.3000-4500 ........". Pursuant to this recommendation,  the Government  of India,  Ministry of Personnel, Public  Grievances and  Pensions, by  its  Office Memorandum dated  7.10.1987 accepted  the recommendation  of the 4th  Central Pay  Commission in this regard and upgraded the existing  posts of  Private Secretaries to Government of India and  equivalent officers to the scale of Rs.3000-45000 with immediate effects. In the State of Gujarat:      In the  Secretariat of the Government of Gujarat, prior to 1.1.1986,  Stenographers Grade I carried the pay-scale of

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Rs.650-1040. Stenographers  Grade I-cum-Private  secretaries to the  High Court  Judges also had the pay-scale of Rs.650- 1040. On  the merger  of pay-scales Rs. 650-1200 and Rs.650- 1040, the revised pay-scale for them was Rs.2000-3500.      After the  Union Government accepted the recommendation of the  Fourth Central  Pay Commission  with regard  to  the upgradation of  the existing posts of Private Secretaries to Secretaries  to  the  Government  of  India  and  equivalent officers to the scale of Rs.3000-4500, the Government of the State of  Gujarat  appointed  a  committee  to  examine  the representation  in  that  connection  made  by  the  Gujarat Sachivalaya and  Allied Officers  Stenographers Association. The  committed   came  to  the  conclusion  that  there  was sufficient  justification   to  upgrade   certain  posts  of seniormost Private  Secretaries to the scale of Rs.3000-4500 equivalent  to  the  number  of  officers  of  the  rank  of Additional Chief  Secretaries and  above in the Sachivalaya. Thereafter by  its Resolution  dated 28.2.1990,  the Gujarat State Government  decided that  10% of the existing posts of Private  Secretaries  (English  and  Gujarati  Stenographers Grade I)  on the  Secretariat  cadre  in  the  pay-scale  of Rs.2000-3500, may  be upgraded  as Private Secretaries Class I, and  be given the pay-scale of Rs.3000-100-3500-125-4500. These upgraded posts may be filled by promotion from Private Secretaries  (Stenographers   Grade  I)   on  the  basis  of seniority-cum-merit. For  becoming eligible  to this  grade, the incumbent  must have put in at least 15 years of service as Stenographer Grade I. Present position:      Under the  Resolution of 18th of May, 1991, the revised pay-scales  relating   to  Stenographer   Grade  I   in  the Secretariat cadre are as follows: ------------------------------------------------------------ Designation        Current       Revised        Remarks                   Pay-scale      Pay-scale ------------------------------------------------------------ Stenographer      650-1040      2000-3500  Upgraded the Grade-I                                    present posts of                                            cadre steno upto                                            10% administrated                                            by Sachivalaya                                            and General                                            Administration                                            Deptt. into the                                            pay-scale of                                            3000-4500 of                                            Personal                                            Secretary ------------------------------------------------------------ Thereafter the  High Court  of Gujarat at Ahmedabad issued a corrigendum dated 27.11.1991 by which the Hon’ble the Acting Chief Justice  of the  High Court of Gujarat, in exercise of the powers  conferred  on  him  under  Article  229  of  the constitution, with  the approval of the Governor of Gujarat, directed amendment of certain entries in the Schedule to the High Court  Notification dated July 3, 1987 thereby revising the existing  pay-scales of  various officers  Gazetted  and Non-gazetted. Under  the Corrigendum  of 27.11.1991  at Item No.  4,  Private  Secretaries  to  the  Hon’ble  Judges  and Stenographers Grade  I had  their Pay-scales  revised in the following manner: ------------------------------------------------------------ Sr. Sr.No.in the  Designation  Present pay- revised Remarks     High Court                 scale shown   scale     Notification               in the High

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   No.A.1308/87               Court     dt.July 3,                 dt.July 3,     1987                       1987 ------------------------------------------------------------ GAZETTED  CLASS -II OFFICERS ------------------------------------------------------------ 4.       13    Private      2000-60-2300-  2000-60  10% of                Secretaries  KB-75-3200-    2300-    the                to the       100-3500       KB-75-   existing                Hon’ble                              post of                Judges &                             Stenogr-                Stenographer                         aphers                Gd.I                                 Grade I                                                   (Gujarati,                                                   English),                                                   on the                                                   establish-                                                   ment of                                                   the High                                                   Court, be                                                   upgraded                                                   as private                                                  Secretaries                                                  in the pay-                                                  scale of                                                  Rs.3000-100                                                  -3500-125-                                                   4500. ------------------------------------------------------------      On the  date  of  the  writ  petition,  therefore,  the Private  Secretaries   to  the   High   Court   Judges   and Stenographers Grade I were in the pay-scale of Rs.2000-3500; 10% of the existing posts of Stenographers Grade I, however, on the  establishment of  the High  Court were  upgraded  as Private Secretaries  in the  pay-scale of  Rs.3000-100-3500- 125-4500. This  was also the position of Stenographers Grade I in  the sachivalaya  and General Administration Department of the Government of Gujarat.      The Private  Secretaries  to  the  High  Court  Judges, however, contend  that all  Private Secretaries  to the High Court Judges irrespective of their length of service, should be put  in the pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500. The High Court has accepted the contention and granted the relief. Constitutional Provision:      Article 229 of the Constitution deals with the officers and servants,  and expenses  of the  High Court. Clause 2 of Article 229  provides that  subject to  any law  made by the legislature, the  conditions  of  service  of  officers  and servants  of  the  High  Court  shall  be  such  as  may  be prescribed by rules made by the Chief Justice, provided that in so  far as  they relate to salaries, allowances, leave or pensions, they  will require the approval of the Governor of the State.  Therefore, the  power of  the Chief Justice of a High Court on the administrative side to fix salaries of his staff is  not absolute. Presumably, since this would require financial outlay  and may have repercussions on the salaries of others, approval of the Governor is expressly required.      The Governor,  therefore, has a constitutional right to examine the  proposal of  the Chief  Justice relating to the salary of his staff and to either grant approval or withhold it. Power  to grant  approval implies  the power to withhold it. Of  course the power must be exercised reasonably and in public interest.  This constitutional methodology for fixing the salary  of the  High Court staff should not, ordinarily,

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be circumvented  by the  High Court  by passing  a  judicial order which,  in effect,  directs the  State  to  grant  the salary scale  desired by the High Court without the approval of the  Governor. FA  mandamus of  this kind  should not  be issued unless  there is  a breakdown  of the  constitutional machinery resulting  in grave injustice or public detriment. There can  be genuine  differences in  perception and honest differences of  opinion between  the Chief  Justice and  the Governor/State on  the question  of salaries,  allowances or pension of  the High  Court Staff. It is desirable that such issues are  resolved administratively in a reasonable manner by both  sides and  the provisions  of the  Constitution  in Article 229 are honoured.      The circumstances  set out above in the present case do not  show   any  reason  for  resorting  to  a  mandamus  to circumvent Article  229. When  the writ  petition was filed, the Chief  Justice’s recommendation  to upgrade  10% of  the posts had  been accepted. And the Chief Justice had not made nay recommendation  for granting  the upgraded  pay-scale to all judges’ secretaries.      The principle  of equal  pay for  equal work  was  also invoked in  this connection,  presumably as  between Private Secretaries of the High Court Judges and Private Secretaries to the Secretaries in the State Secretariat. However, as the original petitioners  have themselves  pointed out, the work done by  the Private  secretaries to  the Secretaries of the Gujarat Government.  There is,  therefore,  no  question  of equal work.  However, since  over the  years parity has been maintained between  the salary scales drawn by Stenographers Grade I  in the State Secretariat and Stenographers Grade I- cum-Private Secretaries  in the  High Court, any increase in the pay-scales  in the  State Secretariat  would lead  to  a legitimate expectation  of similar  increase  for  the  High Court staff.  Under the  corrigendum of the High Court dated 27.11.1991, this parity has been maintained. As in the State Secretariat, so  in the High court also, 10% of the posts of Private Secretaries-cum-Stenographers  Grade I were upgraded and Stenographers  Grade I  with 15 years of service were to be selected  for the higher pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500 on the basis of their seniority-cum-merit.      Also this  promotional  pay-scale  has  been  given  to senior stenographers  Grade I-cum-Private secretaries to the High Court Judges in order that they may not stagnate in the same grade.  What the  respondents now  desire is  more than parity. Rather,  they contend  that their work is comparable only to  the work of Stenographers in the Sachivalaya in the upgraded 10%  bracket. At  the same  time they  contend that their work  is different  and more strenuous. Article 14 has no application here. A general parity between the pay-scales of the  High Court  and the  Secretariat staff  has not been disturbed. On  the contrary,  to give  the higher  grade  of Rs.3000-4500  to   all  Stenographers   Grade  I-cum-Private secretaries to  the High  court Judges,  irrespective of the years of service put in by them, would upset this parity and also defeat  the very  purpose of providing this promotional avenue to  a higher  pay-scale to those who have put in more than 15 years of service.      This is  also not  a  case  where  one  can  apply  the doctrine of  equal pay for equal work as between the Private secretaries to  the Judges inter se. The quality of work put in by  a person  will also depend upon his experience. Those who have gained the experience of more than 15 years can not be equated with others who do not have such experience.      The original petitioner contended that the 10% upgraded posts in  the Gujarat  secretariat were  occupied by Private

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Secretaries to Secretaries, Government of Gujarat, drawing a pay of  Rs.8000. Hence  all the  Private secretaries  of the High Court Judges should also have the upgraded pay-scale of rs.3000-4500. This  contention is accepted by the High Court in the  impugned judgment.  But the  pay-scale which, on the basis of  recommendation of  the Fourth  Pay commission, has been granted  by the Gujarat State Government, as well as by the High  Court  of  Gujarat  to  the  Stenographers/Private Secretaries, is  not correlated  with the  pay-scale of  the officer whose Private Secretaries these persons are. It is a promotional pay-scale  given to  10% of  those Stenographers Grade I-cum-Private  Secretaries who  are otherwise  in  the pay-scale of  Rs.2000-3500, to  prevent  stagnation  at  the senior level.  It may be, that in the Secretariat, by reason of their  seniority, those  who have  completed 15  years of service and  are selected  on the  basis  of  seniority-cum- merit, may  be allotted  to  senior  officers  such  as  the Secretaries to  the Government.  The same  may happen in the High Court. But this does not mean that the higher pay-scale is linked (except in the case of the Chief Justice possibly) to the officers whose Private Secretaries they are. The pay- scale is  given to  them in  their own  right, if  they  are selected for promotion to that pay-scale.      The respondents  i.e. the  original petitioners  placed reliance upon a decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of A.K.  Gulati v.  Union  of  India  (C.W.  No.  289  1991, judgment dated  7.5.1991). The  petitioners before the Delhi High Court  were also Private Secretaries, but to the Judges of the  Delhi High  Court. Their  original pay-scale for Rs. 775-1200  was   revised   to   Rs.2000-3500.   The   Private Secretaries contended  before the  Delhi High Court that the revised pay-scale  for Rs.775-1200 should have been Rs.3000- 4500. The  Delhi  High  Court  on  the  administrative  side contended that  the revised  pay-scale of  Rs.3000-4500  had been granted  to the  next promotional  posts  of  Assistant Registrars. And  hence it  could not be granted to the lower post of  Private Secretaries. The Delhi High Court, however, held that  the pay-scale  of Rs.775-1200  when  was  earlier granted to  the Private  Secretaries, was the same pay-scale which had  been granted  to the  Private Secretaries  to the Secretaries to the Government of India. Since the Government of India  Resolution of  13.3.1987 granted  to  the  Private secretaries of  Secretaries, Government of India, the higher pay-scale of  Rs.3000-4500, the same higher pay-scale should be granted  to the  Private Secretaries  of the  High  Court Judges. The  High Court noted the anomaly created by its won judgement because,  as a result of its judgment, the Private Secretaries of  the High Court Judges got the same pay-scale which they  would get  on promotion  as Assistant Registrars also. But  the High  Court did not consider this as a matter of significance;  observing in the judgment that the post of Assistant registrar  would still  be a  promotional post for them although they will get the same pay-scale!      This judgment does not help the orignial petitioners in the present  matter. In  the first  place, originally  , the pay-scales of  Private Secretaries  in the  Delhi High Court were higher  (Rs.775-1200) than  in the  Gujarat High  Court (Rs.650-1040). There  was also  a parity  between their pay- scales and  the pay-scales  of Private  Secretaries of a the Secretaries of the Government of India. On the basis of this parity, the  Delhi High  Court gave  the Higher pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500 to  the Private  Secretaries of  the Delhi High court Judges.      In the present case, on has to examine the scales given by the  State of  Gujarat to  Stenographers Grade  I in  the

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State Secretariat as compared to the pay-scales given to the Private Secretaries of the Judges of the Gujarat High Court. The State  Government has  not given  a uniform  higher pay- scale of  Rs.3000-4500 to  all Private  secretaries  of  the Secretaries. It  has a  cadre  of  Private  Secretaries-cum- Stenographers Grade  I in  the pay-scale of Rs.2000-3500. It has upgraded  10% of  these posts in the higher pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500 which  are promotional posts. The same has been done in the High Court where also all Private Secretaries to the High  Court Judges-cum-Stenographers  Grade I are in the pay-scale of  Rs.2000-3500. 10%  of these  posts  have  been upgraded as promotional posts for Private Secretaries to the High Court  Judges-cum-Stenographers Grade I. Therefore, the parity has  been maintained.  The financial  position  of  a State Government  also would  be  very  different  from  the financial position  of the  Government of  India or  of  the Delhi Administration.  Therefore, when on is considering the pay-scales of Private Secretaries to the Judges of the State High Court,  one must look for parity with the pay-scales in the secretariat  of that State rather than at the pay-scales granted  by   the  Government   of  India   in  the  Central Secretariat.      It is  pointed out  by the original petitioners who are respondents before  us, that  a special  leave petition from the judgement  of the  Delhi High court was dismissed. This, however, does  not carry  the matter any further. As against the view  taken by  the Delhi  High court,  the Kerala  High court in  O.P. No.  2716 of  1994 along with other connected cases, by  its judgment  dated 22nd of March, 1995 dismissed the writ  petition filed by the employees of the Kerala High Court asking  for parity  of their  pay-scales with the pay- scales in  the Delhi  High Court  and the  Supreme Court  of India. Rejecting  the submission  of  the  petitioners,  the Kerala High  Court held  that the  claim of  the petitioners before it to be treated on a par with employees of the Delhi High Court  and of  the supreme  Court was  not proper.  The Delhi High  Court was in Union Territory and the expenditure of the  Delhi High  Court and  the salaries of the staff and Judges were charged on the consolidated fund of the Union of India. While  the expenditure  on salaries  of the staff and Judges  of   the  Kerala  High  Court  was  charged  on  the consolidated fund  of the  State of  Kerala. The  High Court rightly held  that there  can only be parity of treatment as between  the   High  Court  employees  and  the  Secretariat employees of  the State  concerned. It also rightly observed that the  principle of equal pay for equal work applies only in cases  where both  sets of employees work under that same employer and  do similar work. It , therefore, held that the Delhi High  Court’s pay-scales  can not  be applied  to  the staff of  the Kerala  High Court.  A special  leave petition from this  judgment was also dismissed by this Court. It has also been  pointed out that a similar special leave petition which came  from the  Allahabad High  Court was withdrawn by the  Allahabad   High  Court   as  not  pressed.  The  fact, therefore, that the special leave petition from the judgment of the  Delhi High  Court was  dismissed will  not be of any assistance   to    the   present    respondents    (original petitioners).      This Court  in the  case of  Supreme  Court  Employees’ Welfare Association  v. Union of India and Anr. (1989(4) SCC 187 at page 206 paragraph 22) has observed that it is a well settled principle  of law that when a special leave petition is  summarily   dismissed   under   Article   136   of   the Constitution, by such dismissal this Court does not lay down any law as envisaged by Article 141 of the Constitution. It,

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therefore, follows  that when  a special  leave petition  is dismissed simpliciter,  it can  not be  said that  there has been a declaration of law by this Court under Article 141 of the Constitution.   Referring  to this  very judgment of the Delhi  High   Court  and  dismissal  of  the  special  leave petition, it  was held  that the  judgment of the Delhi High Court would  not govern  the case  of the  employees of  the Supreme Court  which was  before it.  Dealing with  the pay- scales demanded  by the employees of the Supreme Court, this Court has  further observed,  (at page 212 paragraph 36) "It is not  the business  of this Court to fix the pay-scales of the  employees   of  any  institution  in  exercise  of  its jurisdiction under  Article 32 of the Constitution. If there be violation of any fundamental right by virtue of any order or judgment,  this Court  can  strike  down  the  same  but, surely, it  is not  within the province of this Court to fix the scale  of  pay  of  any  employee  in  exercise  of  its jurisdiction under  Article 32  of the Constitution". In the above judgment  this Court gave certain directions as agreed to by  the Chief  Justice   of India, to the effect that the Chief Justice of India would consider the recommendations of the Fourth pay Commission and frame suitable Rules by making necessary amendments  to the  existing Rules and forward the same to the President of India for his approval.      This Delhi High Court’s judgment, therefore, can not be automatically applied  nor  can  the  Court  direct  that  a particular pay-scale  be given to its employees. Appropriate Rules would  have to  be framed  by the Chief Justice of the State under Article 229 with the approval of the Governor of the State.  In this  connection a reference can also be made to the State of Manipur v. Thingujam Brojen Meetei (1996 (9) SCC page  29), where  this  Court  reiterated  that  a  non- speaking order  dismissing a special leave petition does not constitute a law laid down by the Supreme Court.      In the present case, there is no challenge to the Rules so framed  by the  Chief Justice  of the  Gujarat High Court under Article 229 by issuing the notification of 27.11.1991, with the  approval for  the Governor.  Instead, the original petitioners have  sought and  obtained a  direction from the High Court  to abolish the 10% ceiling on posts carrying the higher pay-scale, and have obtained a direction that all the posts in  that cadre  should have a higher pay-scale. Such a direction was  not justified.  [(See also in this connection Supreme Court  Employees Welfare  Association  v.  Union  of India and Anr. (1993 Supp. (3) SCC 727)].      In  the   State  of   Andhra  Pradesh   and  Anr.  V.T. Gopalakrishnan Murthi  and Ors.  (1976 (2)  SCC  883),  this Court dealt  with the power of the Chief Justice of the High Court under  Article 229 (2). It dealt with a case where the recommendation of  the Chief  Justice of  the High Court for treating the  High Court  staff at  par with the Secretariat staff was not accepted by the Governor. This Court held that the non-acceptance  of the  recommendation will  not justify the issuance of a writ of mandamus for its acceptance.      Attention has  also been  drawn to  a decision  of this Court in the State of U.P. and Anr. v. C.L. Agrawal and Anr. (1197 (5)  SCC 1).  This judgment does not directly apply in the present  case since  there is  no challenge  here to the authority of  the Chief  Justice of  the State under Article 229 of  the Constitution  or to  any  action  of  the  Chief Justice of the High Court or the approval or non-approval of any recommendation  of the  Chief Justice  of the High Court Article 229.      Learned counsel for the respondents, however, stated in the course  of argument  that subsequent  to the  directions

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given by the learned Single Judge in the present proceeding, the Chief Justice of the High Court made a recommendation to the Governor  for granting  the higher pay-scale of Rs.3000- 4500 to  all the Private Secretaries-cum-Stenographers grade I of  the High  Court Judges.  He further  stated that  this recommendation has  been rejected.  Since the recommendation appears to  be based on the directions given in the judgment of the  learned Single Judge, nothing further is required to be done  in  that  connection  in  view  of  this  judgment. Needless to  add, the  Chief Justice  of a  High  Court  can always exercise  his powers  under Article 229 in consonance with the terms thereof.      Civil  appeal  Nos.  401-402  of  1997  are,  therefore allowed. The  impugned judgment  in  these  appeals  in  set aside, and  the corrigendum  dated 27.11.1991  issued  under article 229(2) of the constitution is upheld.      Civil Appeal No.400/1997:      Civil Appeal  No.400 of  1997 is  by one  C.G. Govindan from the  same judgment  and order  of the Division Bench of the Gujarat  High Court Dismissing his Letters Patent Appeal No.441 of  1995 before  it. The appellant Govindan is also a Private Secretary  to a  Judge of the Gujarat High Court. He had asked for his placement in the pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500 from 1st  of January,  1986 although  he was  at  that  time working as  Private Secretary  in the  City Civil  Court  at Ahmedabad. He  came to  the High Court has rightly negatived his contention  that he should get the benefit of the higher pay-scale for  the period  prior to his joining the cadre of Private  Secretaries   in  the   High  Court.   The  appeal, therefore, of the appellant Govindan for grant to him of the pay-scale of  Rs.3000-4500 from 1st of January, 1986 must be dismissed. He will be eligible for the pay-scale of Rs.3000- 4500 only  after he fulfils the requisite criteria for being upgraded to the higher pay-scale as a Private Secretary to a High Court Judge.      In the  premises, appeals  of the  State of Gujarat are allowed while  the appeal  of C.G.  Govindan  is  dismissed. There will, however, be no order as to costs.      I regret  I am  unable to  agree with  my  learned  and respected sister Sujata Manohar, J. That appeal filed by the State of Gujarat be allowed.      These are  three appeals.  Two appeals are by the State of Gujarat  aggrieved by  the judgment of the Division bench dated October  10, 1996  of the Gujarat High Court upholding the judgment of the single Judge on a writ petition filed by Private Secretaries to the Judges of the High Court where in the single Judge gave the following directions:      "(i) The Chief Justice may consider      the anomaly  in the  matters of pay      scales of  the Private  Secretaries      to the  High   Court Judges and the      Private Secretaries attached to the      officers drawing  pay at  Rs.8000/-      in the  Government Secretariat  and      keeping in  view of the observation      made hereinabove,  may consider  as      to  what   pay  scales   should  be      prescribed for  the holders  of the      posts of Private Secretaries to the      High Court Judges.      (ii)  In  case  the  Chief  Justice      decides and prescribes that the pay      scale of the Private secretaries to      the High Court Judges should be the      pay scale  of Rs.3000-4500 such pay

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    scale shall  be given  to  all  the      Private Secretaries  to the  Judges      of the High Court as decided by the      Chief Justice  in  accordance  with      the provisions of Article 229(2) of      the Constitution  of India  and  in      accordance with  the rules  made by      the Chief Justice in this behalf."      Third appeal  is by  one of the Private Secretaries who was earlier  working in  the City  Civil courts at Ahmedabad and came  to be appointed as a Private Secretary in the High Court after 1990 and who had sought his placement in the pay scale  or  Rs.3000-4500  from  January  1,  1986.  His  writ petition was  dismissed by  the  learned  single  Judge  and Letters  Patent  Appeal  was  also  dismissed  by  the  very impugned judgment dated October 10, 1996.      Appellant has  submitted that  the High  Court  wrongly proceeded  on  the  footing  that  the  fourth  Central  Pay commission had  recommended the pay scale of Rs.3000-4500 to Private Secretaries working with the officers drawing pay of Rs.8000/- and  that the  pay scale  of a  post could  not be dependent upon  the  pay  of  the  officers  with  whom  the incumbent was attached/working. It was, thus, contended that under no circumstance the pay scale of the Private Secretary could be  dependent upon  the pay  of the Hon’ble Judge with whom  the  Private  Secretary  was  attached.  It  was  then submitted that  the pay  scale of Rs.3000-4500 was by way of providing promotional avenues by upgrading the post and that the grant  of pay  scale of  Rs.3000-4500 to all the Private Secretaries of  the Hon’ble  Judges some  of whom might have been newly  recruited would  create anomalous  situation  as there would  be no  distinction between  a Private Secretary newly recruited  and that  who has  put  in  long  years  of service.      In may  view, the  approach of  the State Government in advancing such  a plea  is erroneous  and a contradiction in terms.      By a  Resolution dated October 24, 1986, the Government of Gujarat  in the Finance Department decided, in principle, to accept  the recommendations  of the  Fourth  Central  Pay Commission including its date of effect. On the basis of the recommendations of  the Fourth  Central Pay Commission which was accepted by the Central Government, it was directed that the posts  of Private  Secretaries to  the Secretary  of the Government of  India and equivalent officers may be upgraded and given  the scale  of Rs.3000-4500. On the representation of  the   Gujarat  Sachivalaya   and  the   Allied  Officers Stenographers  association   that  the   post   of   Private Secretaries in  the pay scale of Rs.3000-4500 as was done in the Central  Government be  created,  the  State  Government appointed a  Committee to  examine the  representations. The Committee came  to the  conclusion that there was sufficient justification  to  upgrade  certain  posts  of  senior  most Private Secretaries  to the scale of Rs.3000-4500 equivalent to the  number of  officers of  the rank of Additional Chief Secretary and  above in  the Secretariat.  Thereafter  by  a Resolution dated  February 28,  1990, the  State  Government decided  that   10%  of   the  existing   posts  of  Private Secretaries cadre  may be  upgraded  in  the  pay  scale  of Rs.3000-4500 and that the upgraded posts may be filled up by promotion from Private Secretaries in the lower grade on the basis of seniority-cum-merit with the preimposed eligibility condition of  having put in 15 years of service in the lower grade. Result  of such  decision was that not only the Chief Secretary, Additional  Chief Secretary  or officers  of  the

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equivalent posts  but those  lower in  rank were also having Private Secretaries attached or working with them in the pay scale of  Rs.3000-4500. Based on these recommendations, High Court of  Gujarat at  Ahmedabad issued  a corrigendum  dated November 27,  1991 by  which the  acting  Chief  Justice  in exercise of powers conferred on him under Article 229 of the Constitution with  the approval  of the  Governor of Gujarat directed amendment  of relevant entry in the Schedule to the rules relating  to the  Private Secretaries  to  the  Judges thereby revising their existing pay scales as under: ------------------------------------------------------------ Sr.No. Sr.No.in Designation Present Pay-  Revised  Remarks        the High             shown in the  pay scale        Court Noti-          Court Noti-        fication             fication        No.A-1308/87         No.A-1308/87,        dt.July 3,1987       dt.July 3,                             1987 ------------------------------------------------------------ GAZETTED CALSS-II OFFICERS ------------------------------------------------------------ 4.      13.    Private    2000-60-2300   2000-60  10% of the                Secreta-   -EB-75-3200-   2300-EB- existing                ries to    100-3500       75-3200- post of               the Hon’ble                100-3500 Steno-                                                   graphers                                                   Grade I                                                   (Gujarati,                                                   English),                                                   on the                                                   establish-                                                  ment of the                                                  High Court,                                                  be upgraded                                                  as private                                                  Secretaries                                                  in the pay                                                  scale of                                                  Rs.3000-100                                                  -3500-125-                                                  4500 ------------------------------------------------------------ Reference may be made at this stage to two decisions of this Court in Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association’s case. The decision  in Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association vs. Union  of India  & Anr.  [1993 Supp.  (3) SCC 727] is an off-shoot of  its earlier  decision in  [(1989 4  SCC 187.]. Decision in  the second  case of  Supreme  Court  Employees’ Welfare Association  has been given on various interlocutory application filed in the earlier writ petition [W.P. (C) No. 801/86 and  W.P. (C)  No. 1201/86  reported in [(1989) 4 SCC 187]. In  the earlier  writ petition the prayer was that the staff of  the Supreme  Court of  India be  placed in  higher scales of  pay than what are admissible to the corresponding Staff working  in the Delhi High Court. A direction was also sought that  as an  interim measure the staff working in the Registry of the Supreme Court be paid the same pay scales as were being  paid to  the holders  of the corresponding posts working  in  the  Registry  of  the  Delhi  High  Court.  On September 25,  1986, this  Court  passed  an  interim  order saying that  pending final disposal of the writ petition the officers and staff of the Supreme Court Registry may be paid the same  pay scales  and allowances  which were  then being enjoyed by  the officers and the members of the staff of the

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High Court  of Delhi  belonging to  the same  category  with effect from the date from which such scales of pay have been allowed to  the officers and the members of the staff of the High Court  of Delhi.  In the  first Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association  case it  was  pointed  out  that  under Article  146(2)  of  the  Constitution,  the  conditions  of service of  officers and  servants of the Supreme Court have to be  prescribed by  Rules made  by the  Chief  Justice  of India. As  such, the  urgency  of  framing  such  rules  was impressed and  a direction  was  given  to  the  parties  to maintain status  quo  as  regards  the  scales  of  pay  and allowances but  it was also directed that the interim orders passed by  this Court shall continue. Thereafter, it appears that Chief  Justice of  India  constituted  a  Committee  of Judges to  go into  the question regarding pay scales of the officers and  staff of the Supreme Court. The Committee made its  recommendations   which  were  accepted  by  the  Chief justice. These,  however, could  not take  the shape  of the Rules till  approved by  the President. In the meanwhile, it would appear  that a  writ petition  was filed  in the Delhi High Court  on behalf  of the Court Masters, Superintendents and Private Secretaries of the Delhi High Court claiming the pay scales  of Rs.3000-4500,  w.e.f. January  1, 1986.  That writ petition  was allowed on November 14,1991 directing the Union  of   India  to  fix  the  salary  of  Court  Masters, Superintendents and  other category  of petitioners  of that writ application  in the  pay scale  of Rs.3000-4500, w.e.f. January 1,  1986. This  Court noticed  that a  petition  for special leave  to appeal  (C) No.  2594/92 was  filed by the Union of  India before  this Court and that it was dismissed after hearing the parties concerned on March 25, 1992 saying that no  ground for  interference was made out. On the basis of this  decision, various  interlocutory applications  were filed in  Writ Petition  (c) No.  801/86 seeking a direction that in  view of the order passed by the High Court of Delhi directing  payment   w.e.f.  January   1,  1986  to  various categories of  employees of  the said  Court which order has been affirmed  by this  Court by  dismissal of  the  special leave petition  on March  25, 1992,  earlier interim  orders directing  payment   of  pay   scales   of   staff   holding corresponding posts  should also  be revised  till the Rules are framed under Article 146 of the Constitution. This Court allowed such  a plea holding that the recommendations of the Committee of  Judges which  had been  accepted by  the Chief Justice of  India  can  certainly  form  basis  for  issuing interim directions  regarding payment  of revised pay scales to the  holder of  different categories  of posts within the Registry of  this Court  w.e.f. January  1, 1986. This Court has thus  exercised  powers,  though  by  means  of  interim orders, in  fixing pay-scales  of staff of the Supreme Court under Article  146 which  provisions are  similar  to  those under Article 229 of the Constitution applicable to staff of the High Courts.      So far  as parity  of the  Private Secretaries  in  the Secretariat and  in the  Gujarat High  Court  prior  to  the acceptance  of   the  Fourth   Central  Pay   Commission  is Concerned, the  corrigendum issued by the Gujarat High Court may be  correct. As in the case of Andhra Pradesh High Court (State of  Andhra Pradesh  Vs. T.  Gopalakrishna Murthy) the State of  Gujarat is  not disputing  the existence of parity between the  staff of  High Court  and that  working in  the Secretariat in the matter of pay-scales. It is, however, not the exact issue involved in the present case. It is also not material in  the present  controversy as to what was the pay scale drawn  by the Private Secretaries to the Judges of the

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High  Court.  When  this  principle  evolved  by  the  State Government of  10% is  applied to  the  Private  Secretaries working in  the High Court, only 5 Private Secretaries would get benefit  of pay scale of Rs.3000-4500. Here it is a case of discrimination.  It was  in this  context that  the  High Court examined  the status  of the  High Court  Judges.  The submission of  the State  Government shows its utter lack of knowledge of  the working  of Private  Secretaries  who  are attached/working with  the Judges  of the  High Court. Their job is  much more  arduous. Basis  of the upgradation of 10% posts of  Private Secretaries  in the Secretariat is not the decision of  the Central  Government upgrading  the existing post of  Private  Secretaries  to  the  Secretaries  to  the Government of India and equivalent officers. The High Court, therefore, examined, if a Judge of the High Court is holding a post  equivalent to  that of  the Chief  Secretary of  the State and came to the conclusion that he is holding a higher post even  than that  of the  Chief Secretary  in  a  State. Though, the  High Court  examined the pay scale of the Chief Secretary and  that of  a Judge  of the  High Court,  a High Court Judge  holds the  constitutional post unlike the Chief Secretary and if we see the Warrant of Precedence dated July 19, 1979  issued by  the President  of India,  a High  Court Judge ranks  higher than  the Chief  Secretary to  the State Government.  There  is  a  controversy  if  the  Warrant  of Precedence is  constitutionally valid  inasmuch as  in  some instances persons  holding constitutional  posts  are  shown lower in  rank than  those appointed under law passed by the Parliament. That,  however, is  not relevant  in the present case as the Warrant of Precedence as it stands today, a High Court Judge  finds his  place at  serial no.17  and a  Chief Secretary at serial no.23. Is it not, therefore, paradoxical in such a circumstance, that a Private Secretary to the High Court Judge  should be in a lower pay scale than the Private Secretary to  an officer  even lower  in rank than the Chief Secretary The argument of the State Government that a junior most stenographer  when attached  to a  High Court  Judge is again without  any basis.  Rules can  certainly be framed to overcome such  a situation  if at  all it existed. A Private Secretary, who is joining the service after January 1, 1986, will be drawing less pay though in the same pay scale.      This  Court   in  similar  circumstance  dismissed  the appeals of  Union of  India and  Delhi Administration in one case and  that of  the State  of U.P. in another against the decisions of  the Delhi  High Court and Allahabad High Court respectively granting  pay scale  of Rs.3000-4500 to Private Secretaries to  the Judges  of the  High Courts. On this, an argument was  raised that  the special  leave  petitions  in those cases  had been  dismissed in limine and it could not, therefore, be  said that this Court approved the law laid by the High  Court of Delhi and Allahabad High Court. Reference was made to a decision of this Court in the State of Manipur vs. Thingujam  Brojen Meetei (1996 (9) SCC 29) where it said that the  dismissal of  a special  leave petition  by a non- speaking order  which  does  not  contain  the  reasons  for dismissal does not amount to acceptance of acceptance of the correctness of  the decision  sought to  be appealed against and  that  the  effect  of  such  a  non-speaking  order  of dismissal without  anything more  only means that this Court has decided only that it is not a fit case where the special leave petition  should be  granted. There is no quarrel with this proposition  but the circumstances show that this court upheld  the  decisions  of  the  High  Court  of  Delhi  and Allahabad High  Court on  merit. Delhi  High Court  in  A.K. Gulati’s case  allowed the  writ petition  and directed that

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the Private  Secretary of  the Judge  of Delhi High Court be given pay scale of Rs.3000-4500 which pay scale was given to the Private  Secretary  to  the  Chief  Secretary  of  Delhi Administration and  Secretary to  the Government  of  India. Union of  India and  the Delhi  Administration filed special leave petition  no.13229/91 against  the order  of the  High Court  which  was  dismissed  on  August  26,  1981  by  the following Order:      "The  Special   Leave  Petition  is      dismissed."      Thereafter, Superintendents  and Court  Masters of  the Delhi High  Court filed  a writ  petition in  the Delhi High Court  claiming   parity  of  pay  scale  with  the  Private Secretaries.   In   the   Delhi   High   Court,   posts   of Superintendents, Court  Masters and  Private  Secretary  are equivalent posts. This writ petition was allowed and against that Union  of India  filed a special leave petition in this court which was dismissed on March 25, 1992 in limine by the following order:      "No  grounds   to  interfere.   The      Special    Leave     Petition    is      dismissed."      Against the  order of the Allahabad High Court granting pay scale  of Rs.3000-4500 to the Private Secretaries to the Hon’ble Judges,  the High  Court of  Allahabad also  filed a special leave  petition in  which this  Court granted  leave (Civil Appeal  No.840/95). Special  leave petition  was also filed by  the State of Uttar Pradesh [SLP No.-/95 (CC-294)]. The appeal  filed by  the Allahabad High Court was dismissed as withdrawn on March 26, 1996 with the following order:      "I.A. No. is allowed.      Learned counsel  for the appellant-      High Court  of Allahabad  States on      instructions that  this  appeal  is      not pressed  by the  appellant. The      appeal is dismissed as withdrawn"      The SLP  filed  by  the  State  of  Uttar  Pradesh  was dismissed on the same day by the following order:      "Delay condoned.      The High Court of Allahabad has not      pressed  its  appeal,  i.e.,  Civil      Appeal No.840/95  against the  same      judgment. Moreover,  in view of the      dismissal   of    the    SLP    (C)      No.13229/1991  decided  on  26.8.91      (Union of  India and  Anr. Vs. Shri      A.K. Gulati & Ors.) learned counsel      for the  petitioner-State of  Uttar      Pradesh is  unable to  support this      special       leave       petition.      Accordingly, special leave petition      is dismissed on merits."      This  Court   in  Supreme   Court   Employees   Welfare Association case  [1993 Supp.  (3) SCC  727] stated that the special leave  to  appeal  No.2594/92  was  dismissed  after hearing the  parties concerned on March 25, 1991 saying that "No ground  for interference  was made  out". All these lead only to one inference that this Court upheld the decision of the Delhi  High Court in A.K. Gulati’s case on merit holding that private  Secretaries to  the Judges of Delhi High Court were entitled to pay scale of 3000-4500.      In State  of Andhra Pradesh & Anr. vs. T. Gopalakrishan Murthi &  Ors. [(1976)  2 SCC 883.], the Issue concerned the scope of the power of Chief Justice under Article 229 (2) of the Constitution. The Chief Justice of the High Court wanted

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the High  Court staff  to be  paid at  the scales  of pay of equivalent posts  in the Secretariat staff of the Government of Andhra  Pradesh. The  Government did  not agree to do so. The respondents  who were  members of the High Court service belonging to  the categories of bench clerks, lower division clerks, typists  and certain  other categories  filed a writ petition in  the High  Court for  a writ of mandamus against the   appellants    directing   them    to   implement   the recommendations of  the Chief Justice of the High Court made to the Government from time to time to fix the pay scales of the various  categories to which the respondents belonged in accordance with  the scales  of pay  as revised by the State Government in  case of  corresponding categories detailed in the Andhra  Pradesh  Secretariat  Service.  The  High  Court allowed the  writ petition and directed the State Government to give  effect to the recommendations of the Chief Justice. Aggrieved, the  State Government  filed appeal in this Court which was  allowed. In  this  case,  a  pay  Commission  was appointed by  the  government  to  make  recommendations  in regard to the revision of pay scales of government employees in the  various services.  The Pay  Commission submitted its report in 1967. In respect of certain categories of the High Court staff, But not all, the Commission recommended to give them  the   pay  scales   of  their   counterparts  in   the secretariat. This Court observed as under:      "If there  is a  law  made  by  the      Legislature  of   the  State   then      subject  to   that  law,  otherwise      without it,  the Chief  Justice  or      some other  Judge or officer of the      Court  authorised   by  the   Chief      Justice is  empowered to make rules      laying  down   the  conditions   of      service of  the High  Court  staff.      But if  the rules made under clause      (2) relate to salaries, allowances,      or pension  then since  in them  is      involved the  question  of  finance      the  framing  of  the  rules  under      clause (2) requires the approval of      the Governor - that means the State      Government. On should expect in the      fitness of  things and  in view  of      the  spirit  of  Article  229  that      ordinarily   and    generally   the      approval should  be  accorded.  But      surely it  si wrong to say that the      approval is  a mere  formality  and      in  no  case  it  is  open  to  the      Government  to   refuse  to  accord      their approval. On the facts and in      the circumstances  of this case and      in the background of the conditions      which are prevalent in other States      Government could  have  been  well-      advised to  accord approval  to the      suggestion of the Chief Justice, as      the  suggestion  was  nothing  more      than to  equate the  pay scales  of      the High  Court staff with those of      the   equivalent    post   in   the      Secretariat.  That  merely  because      the  government  is  not  right  in      accepting the  Chief Justice’s view      and refusing to accord the approval

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    is no  ground for holding that by a      writ of mandamus the Government may      be directed to accord the approval.      The High Court staff has not always      been  treated   at  par   with  the      Secretariat staff in the matters of      scales  of   pay.  Chief  Justices’      conference and  with several  State      Governments.  Most   of  them  have      acceded to  the request of the High      Court to  bring its  staff  at  par      with the  Secretariat staff  in the      matter of  pay etc. It is, however,      not possible  to take the view that      merely because the State Government      does not  see its  way to  give the      required approval  it will  justify      the issuance  of a writ of mandamus      under   Article    226    of    the      Constitution as  if the  refusal of      the  state   Government  was  ultra      vires  or   made  mala   fide   and      arbitrary."      It will  be seen  that in  the case from Andhra Pradesh High Court the Claim made by the staff of the High Court was that their  pay-scales the fixed in accordance with the pay- scales of  the corresponding staff in the Secretariat of the State Government.  This Court  was of the view that the High Court  had   not  always   been  treated  at  par  with  the secretariat staff  in the  matter of  scales of pay. this is not the issue involved in the present case before us.      Decision of the Kerala High Court in P.S. Sidhan & Anr. vs. The  Hon’ble Chief  Justice, High  Court Kerala  &  Ors. [O.P. No.2716/94] decided on 22.3.1995 which has been relied on by the appellant is quite distinguishable.  This decision was rendered  in a number of writ petitions filed by various categories of  officers and  staff  of  the  High  Court  of Kerala. In  all these  writ petitions , the employees of the High court  had claimed  that they  were entitled to be paid salaries as  were applicable  to the  Staff and employees of the Delhi  High Court and supreme Court of India inasmuch as the State Government had accepted the principle of parity of treatment between  its employees  and the  employees of  the Central Secretariat at Delhi. The Court said:      "The Kerala  High  Court  employees      are not entitled to claim parity of      treatment with the Delhi High Court      employees   and    Supreme    Court      employees. They  are not  employees      under the  same employer.  They are      working in  different States and in      different environments and there is      nothing to  indicate that the Rules      for  appointment,  recruitment  and      qualifications are similar and that      their duties are also similar."      It is,  therefore, apparent  that the  decision of  the Kerala High  Court proceeds  entirely on different lines. It failed to  take notice of the decision of the Allahabad High Court and  the Delhi  High Court which had attained finality as special  leave petitions  against  those  judgments  were dismissed by  this court  on merit.  High Court also did not examine the  question of arbitrariness, unreasonableness and unfairness in  the approach  of  the  State  Government.  It cannot be  said that Private Secretaries of the Judge of the

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Kerala High  Court or those of High Court of Gujarat perform work which  is different  than that performed by the Private Secretary to  the Judges  of Delhi High Court. Judges of the High Courts  in all High Courts perform same duties of their office and  Private Secretaries  attached to  them per force perform the  same work  in every  High Court. The contention that financial  position of a State does not warrant payment of higher  scale of  pay to  the Private  Secretaries of the Judges of  the High  Court  cannot  be  given  any  credence without more.  A court  is to  guard itself  against such  a submission when  advanced without  any particulars though in first instance  it may appear to be attractive. It is stated that a special leave petition against the aforesaid judgment of the  Kerala High  Court Was  Dismissed By  This Court  in limine  but  that  is  of  no  consequence  insofar  as  the controversy in the present case before us is concerned.      After judgment  dated 9/10th  March,  1995  of  learned single Judge  (M.R. Calla, J.) in writ petition filed by the Private Secretaries  to the  Judges of  Gujarat High  Court, Chief Justice  of the  High Court  prepared a  detailed note dated June  30, 1995.  He took  into account the judgment of the Delhi  High Court  in A.K.  Gulati vs.  Union of  India, which was relied on by the learned single Judge and also the fact that  the Union  of India  had filed  a  special  leave petition in this Court against the aforesaid judgment of the Delhi  High   Court  but  the  special  leave  petition  was dismissed.      Chief Justice  in his  note referred  to paras 9.39 and 9.42 of  Chapter IX  of the Report of the fourth Central Pay Commission  wherein   pay-scale  of   Rs.2000-3500  for  the Stenographers in  the posts  in Grade  "A" and Grade "B" was recommended. It was further recommended as follows:-      "....To       provide       further      satisfactory  promotional   avenues      for  the   members  of   CSSS,   we      recommend  that  posts  of  private      secretaries   to   secretaries   to      Government of  India and equivalent      officers may  be upgraded and given      the scale of Rs.3000-4500".      Again, in  paragraph 9.42  of the  said report  of  the Fourth Central  Pay Commission  it is  stated that there are stenographers working  in other  organisations who  were not participating  in  the  Central  secretariat  Stenographers’ Scheme but  those posts  are in  comparable grades and it is recommended that stenographers in these organizations may be placed in  the same  grades of  pay as have been recommended for Central Secretariat Stenographers’ Scheme.      The  Chief  Justice  noticed  that  the  Government  of Gujarat  in  the  Finance  Department  by  resolution  dated October 24,  1986 resolved  that "therefore,  after  careful consideration, Government has decided to scrap the report of the Gujarat  State Third  Pay commission  and to  accept, in principle,  to  apply  the  recommendations  of  the  Fourth Central pay  Commission including  its date of effect". Then the Chief Justice records as under:-      "The pay  of the  Hon’ble Judges of      the High  Court is  Rs.8,000/-  per      month i.e.  the same pay as that of      the Secretaries  to  the  Govt.  of      India.  The   pay  of  the  Private      Secretaries who are attached to the      Secretaries to  the Govt.  of India      has been  fixed  in  the  scale  of      Rs.3000-4500 and there is no reason

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    why in the case of the Gujarat High      Court only  10% of the posts of the      Private Secretaries  have  been  to      the pay scale of Rs.3000-4500.      The aforesaid recommendation of the      Fourth   Central   Pay   Commission      fixing the  pay scale  of  Rs.3000-      4500 for the Private Secretaries to      the  Hon’ble   Judges  has   become      applicable to  the Delhi High Court      in view  of the  decision given  in      the case of A.K. Gulati. Therefore,      in view of this decision, which has      been upheld by the Supreme Court of      India, and  also  in  view  of  the      direction  given   by  Mr.  Justice      Calla vide  his judgment  dated 9th      /10th March  1995 in  Special Civil      Application Nos.  12921 of 1994 and      3601 of  1994 and  keeping in  view      the  recommendations  contained  in      paragraph-9.39 of Chapter IX of the      Report of  the Fourth  Central  Pay      Commission read with the Resolution      dated 24.10.1986  of the  Govt.  of      Gujarat, I  decide, as  directed in      the aforesaid  judgment,  that  the      pay-scale  of   all   the   Private      Secretaries to  the Hon’ble  Judges      of the Gujarat High Court should be      that of  Rs.3000-4500. Furthermore,      as per  the direction  given in the      case of  A.K. Gulati the higher pay      scale  should   be  effected   from      1.1.1986."      It was against the judgment of the learned single Judge State of  Gujarat filed  Letters Patent  Appeal in  the High Court, which was dismissed by the Division Bench by judgment dated October 10, 1996 which is impugned.      Meanwhile, when  the matter  was referred  by the Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court to the State Government in terms of aforesaid  note, counsel  for the State of Gujarat at the time of conclusion of the argument before the Division Bench made the  following State which was recorded in the impugned judgment:      "His  Excellency  the  Governor  of      Gujarat has concurred with the view      of the Government that, the Private      Secretaries attached  to the Judges      of the High Court of Gujarat cannot      be given  the pay scale of Rs.3000-      4500  beyond  what  is  permissible      under the  present  rules  and  the      Government Resolution."      From the note of the Chief Justice, Gujarat High Court, it is  apparent that  independently of the directions issued by the  single Judge,  he arrived  at  the  conclusion  that Private Secretaries  to the  Judges of  his High  Court were entitled to  pay scale of Rs.3000-4500. The State Government could not  by a  terse statement  through its  counsel brush aside the  recommendations of  the Chief  Justice.  Such  an approach  by   the  State  Government  is  contrary  to  the observations of  the Constitution  Bench of  this  Court  in State of  U.P. vs.  C.L. Agrawal  & Anr.  [(1997) 5  SCC  1] reaffirming what  this Court  earlier said  in Supreme Court

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Employees Welfare  Association vs.  Union of India [(1989) 4 SCC 187]. In State of U.P. vs. C.L. Agrawal & Anr. [(1997) 5 SCC 1]  the Court  referred to  an earlier  passage  in  its judgment in  the case  of Supreme  Court  Employees  Welfare Association vs. Union of India [1989] 4 SCC 187] as under:      "There is a passage in the judgment      in  the   case  of   Supreme  Court      employees’ Association that, in the      context  of   the  *   before   us,      deserves to  be set out. We endorse      what is  observed and commend it to      the States  so that  they may  deal      with proposals  made by their Chief      Justice  with   due  deference  and      respect.      57. So far as the Supreme Court and      the High  Courts are concerned, the      Chief  Justice  of  India  and  the      Chief Justice of the concerned High      Court, are empowered to frame rules      subject to this that when the rules      are framed  by the Chief Justice of      India or  by the  Chief Justice  of      the   High    Court   relating   to      salaries,  allowances,   leave   or      pension,  the   approval   of   the      President of  India or the Governor      case may  be, is  required.  It  is      apparent that  the Chief Justice of      India and  the Chief Justice of the      High Court  have been  placed at  a      higher  level   in  regard  to  the      framing  of  rules  containing  the      condition of  service. It  is  true      that the  President of India cannot      be compelled  to grant  approval to      the  rules   framed  by  the  Chief      Justice  of   India   relating   to      salaries,  allowances,   leave   or      pensions, but  it is  equally  true      that  when  such  rules  have  been      framed by  a very high dignitary of      the State, it should be looked upon      with respect  and unless  there  is      very  good   reason  not  to  grant      approval,   the   approval   should      always be granted. If the President      of India  is of  the view  that the      approval  cannot   be  granted,  he      cannot straightway  refuse to grant      such approval, but before doing so,      there must  be exchange of thoughts      between the  President of India and      the Chief Justice of India."      It has  been said  that grant  of   higher pay scale of Rs.3000-4500 was  to provide promotional avenues for members of the  Secretarial Service.  To my  mind that is one way of looking at  the things.  reference may be made to the Office Memorandum dated  October 7,  1987, issued by the Government of India in the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions (Department  of Personnel and Training). First para of this office Memorandum is as under:-      The undersigned  is directed to say      that  the   recommendation  of  the      Fourth Central  Pay Commission that

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    in    the    Central    Secretariat      Stenographer Service  the posts  of      Private    Secretary     to     the      Secretaries to  Government of India      and  equivalent   officers  may  be      upgraded and  given  the  scale  of      Rs.3000-4500   was    accepted   by      Government  vide  the  Ministry  of      Finance’s     Notification      No.      F.15(7)/IG/86  dated  13.5.87  13th      March, 1987.  Accordingly  sanction      of the President is hereby conveyed      to the  upgradation of the existing      posts  of   Private  Secretary   to      Secretaries to  the  Government  of      India and  equivalent officers,  to      the  scale   of  Rs.3000-4500  with      immediate effect.!      Subsequent paragraphs refer to modalities of filling up of these posts of Private Secretaries by selection method on a centralized  basis stated  to be  under consideration.  It will be thus seen that only the Private Secretaries attached to the  Secretaries to  Government of  India and  equivalent officers were  to be given the pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500. In other words,  number of  posts of Private Secretaries in the scale of  Rs.3000-4500 is equal to number of officers of the rank of  Secretaries in  the Government  of India. The fact, therefore,  remains  that  the  officer  with  whom  Private Secretary in the scale of Rs.3000-4500 is attached is of the rank of  Secretary or equal rank in the Government of India. One cannot,  therefore, divorce  the officer  of the rank of Secretary  or  equivalent  rank  to  the  Private  Secretary attached  to  him.  In  the  present  case  when  the  State Government  decided   to  upgrade   10%  posts   of  Private Secretaries in  the scale of Rs.3000-4500 the net result was that  Chief   Secretary,  Additional   Chief  Secretary  and officers  of   equal  rank   became  entitled   to   Private Secretaries in  the scale  of Rs.3000-4500. In this context, promotion avenues of a stenographer in the scale of Rs.3000- 4500 is  only to  post him  with the officers in the rank of Chief Secretary  or equivalent  rank in  the State.  If  the whole exercise  was merely to provide promotional avenues to the stenographers  there was  no need  to say  that posts of Private Secretary  to the Secretaries to Government of India and equivalent  officers may be upgraded and given the scale Rs.3000-4500. Modality adopted by the State Government is to achieve the  same purpose and now Private Secretaries to the Chief secretary,  Additional Chief Secretary and officers of equal rank  are in  the pay  scale of Rs.3000-4500. This, in fact, would  rather appear  to be  the motivation behind the script.      The State Government decided to scrap the report of the Gujarat  State  Third  Pay  commission  and  to  accept,  in principle, the  recommendations of  the Fourth  Central  Pay commission.  The   Committee,  which  the  State  Government appointed to  examine the  representations  of  the  Gujarat Sachivalaya   and    the   Allied   Officers   Stenographers Association, had  found  justification  to  upgrade  certain posts of  senior most  Private Secretaries  to the  scale of Rs.3000-4500 equivalent  to the  number of  officers of  the rank  of   Additional  Chief  Secretary  and  above  in  the Secretariat. Thereafter,  the State  Government decided that 10% of  the existing+ posts of Private Secretaries cadre may be upgraded  in the  pay-scale of  Rs.3000-4500 with certain riders. The effect of this has been that Private Secretaries

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working with the Chief Secretary, Additional Chief Secretary and other  officers of  the similar  rank were given the pay scale of  Rs.3000-4500. We  have not been given any instance where any  such officer  has a  private secretary in a lower scale of  pay. Not  only that officers even lower in rank to that  of  Additional  Chief  Secretary  are  having  Private Secretaries in  the pay-scale of Rs.3000-4500. The result of the decision of the State Government has been the same: that as recommended  by the  Fourth Central  Pay Commission  that posts  of  Private  Secretaries  to  the  Secretary  to  the Government of  India and equivalent officers be upgraded and given  the   scale  of  Rs.3000-4500  and  so  also  Private Secretaries to  the number  of officers of the rank of Chief Secretary,  Additional   Chief  Secretary   and   equivalent officers in  the State  of Gujarat  were given the same pay- scale of  Rs.3000-4500. On  this basis  as  well  the  Chief Justice of  the Gujarat  High Court rightly, therefore, came to the  conclusion that Private Secretaries working/attached with the  High Court  Judges are  entitled to  pay-scale  of Rs.3000-4500.      Whatever that may be, here I find that the stand of the State Government  is a  clear case  of  discrimination  with arbitrariness writ  large on  the face  of it.  It cannot be allowed to  stand otherwise  it will amount to putting stamp of approval on what is patent disparity. Private Secretaries to the  Judges of the Gujarat High Court are all entitled to pay scale of Rs.3000-4500 w.e.f. January 1, 1986.      In this  view of the matter, I would rather dismiss the appeals  filed  by  the  State  Government  with  costs.  I, however,  agree  that  appeal  filed  by  C.G.  Govindan  be dismissed.