20 December 1973
Supreme Court
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C. P. DAMODARAN NAYAR AND P. S. MENON Vs STATE OF KERALA AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2629 of 1969


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PETITIONER: C.   P. DAMODARAN NAYAR AND P. S. MENON

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF KERALA AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT20/12/1973

BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1343            1974 SCR  (2) 867  1974 SCC  (4) 325  CITATOR INFO :  R          1981 SC2181  (27,28)  D          1987 SC 424  (23)

ACT: States  Reorganisation  Act, 1956, Ss.  115  and  117-Madras State  judicial Service Rules, 1953, r. 11-Applicability  to officers allotted to Kerala-"Seniority according to decision of   Central  Governmental-Right  of   State   Government,to constitute new cadres--’KLM’ principle and its scope.

HEADNOTE: Under s. 115(5) of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956., the Central  Government  may  establish  one  or  more  Advisory Committees for the purpose of assisting it in regard to, (a) the  division  and  integration of services  among  the  new Stites, and (b) the ensuring of fair and equitable treatment to   all  persons  affected.   Under  s.  177  the   Central Government  may  give  such directions  to  any  such  State Government as may appear to be necessary for the purpose  of giving  effect  to the provisions of the Act and  the  State Government shall comply with such directions.   Accordingly, a  meeting  of the Chief Secretaries of the  various  States that  were to be effected by the reorganisation was held  in May, 1956, at the invitation of the Central Government,  and certain  decisions were taken as to the  general  principles that should be observed with regard to the integration  work The   Central  Government  thereafter  informed  the   State Governments   that  they  had  decided  that  the  work   of integration  of  services, equation of  posts  and  relative seniority  should be dealt with by the State Governments  in the light of those general principles.  In 1962, the Central Government,  after  considering the representations  of  the officers made under s. 115(5) of the Act, in modification of the  earlier  principle  excluding  periods  for  which   an appointment  is  held as a purely ’stop gap  or’  fortuitous arrangement  in fixing seniority, decided that the  officers allocated  to Kerala State from the former Madras State  may be allowed benefit of emergency service towards seniority in the  equated  category  if  such  service  would  have  been regularised from the date of their emergency appointment and counted for seniority in Madras, on 1st November, 1956,  had those  officers  remained in Madras.   The  respondent-State

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accepted this decision of the Central Government. The  appellant  was selected as a District  Munsiff  by  the Madras  Public Service Commission and was posted as such  on May  26. 1951. and he has been in continuous  service  since then.   Consequent upon a decision of the Supreme  Court  of India,  the  Madras  State Judicial  Service  Rules  (Madras Rules)  were  framed in 1953, but were  given  retrospective effect from March 1951, and the service of the appellant and others  was regularised as from October 6, 1951.  The  State of  Kerala  came  into being on November 1,  1956,  and  the appellant  was  finally  allotted Kerala  with  effect  from October  24, 1956.  On March 26, 1966, the respondent  State published the final integrated list of the Travancore-Cochin and Madras personnel of the Judicial Officers as on November 1,  1956,  showing  respondents  6 and  7,  whose  dates  of commencement  of continuous service were July 20, 1951,  and October  1, 1951, respectively, as senior to the  appellant, on  the basis that October 6, 1951, was assigned to  him  as the date of commencement of his continuous service being-the date of his appointment to the post in the equated  category as  on November 1, 1956.  The respondent-State,  on  October 20, 1959, also provided that some posts of District and Sub- divisional   Magistrate  of  ’executive  origin’  would   be constituted   as  a  separate  service  outside  the   civil judiciary,   while   being  eligible  for   appointment   as subordinate judges and Munsiffs respectively.  The appellant filed  a writ petition in the High Court  questioning  inter alia (1) the rank and place of seniority given to him in the final  list, on the ground that the date of commencement  of his continuous service is May 26, 1951; and (2) the order of the   respondent-State   providing  a  special   cadre   for magistrates of executive origin, on the ground that, if that order  was  implemented  there was the  likelihood  of  sub- divisional Magistrates securing promotion over munsiffs with longer service.  The High Court dismissed the petition.-                868 in appeal to this Court, HELD  : (1) (a) Rule II of the Madras  Rules  deals with temporary appointments.  But it is not at  all relevant for the purpose of fixing the seniority of the  appellant. it is inapplicable to the  appellant  alter his  final  allotment to the State of kerala and  after  the clear  decision  of  the Government of  India  allowing  the benefit  of emergency service in regard to seniority,  which was accepted by the Kerala Government. [875 H] (b)  Assuming that the rule and the earlier decision of  the Government  of India in conformity with the  agreement  with the  Chief  Secretaries  referring  to  purely  stop-gap  or fortuitous   arrangements   may   be   invoked,   they   are inapplicable  to the appellant, because, it cannot  be  held that  the appellant’s service is either filled ’owing to  an emergency’  or  that it was held as a  ’purely  stop-gap  or fortuitous arrangement.’ The appellant had been appointed in a  regular manner through the public Service Commission  and his  appointment could not have been made as a purely  stop- gap  or fortuitous’ one.  The Government of India  had  also accepted  the position that an allotted employee should  not suffer any disadvantage if he would not have been  subjected to a like handicap in his parent State.  The  correspondence between the Madras and Kerala Governments after the  Central Government  communicated  its decision  that  the  allocated officers should be allowed the benefit of emergency  service in  regard to seniority, showed that the position in  Madras State  was that continuous service of the  officer,  whether regular, temporary or emergency, would have been taken  into

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account  for  the purpose of seniority.  The  appellant  had been  in continuous service from May 26,  1951.   Therefore, the  conclusion  is  irresistible, that  the  appellant  was entitled to the assignment of May 26, 1951, for the  purpose of  seniority,  and the appellant in the  connected  appeal, would  be  entitled  to  the  assignment  of  February   12, 1955.[876 C-G] (2)  There  is  no  force in the  contention  regarding  the reservation   of  the  separate  cadre  for   the   District Magistrate  and  sub-divisional  Magistrates  of   executive origin. It is open to the State Government to constitute  as many  cadres  as  they Choose  according  to  administrative convenience and expediency. [876 H] (3)  As  regards  the appellant in the connected  appeal  he would  not  be entitled to an earlier date as  the  date  of continuous appointment on the ground that an officer  junior to him who was provisionally allotted to the State of Kerala along  with  him  at initial stage when the  new  State  was constituted was assigned 1-7-1954 as his date of  continuous service; because, the ’KLM principle’ was not applicable  to that appellant.  According to the principle the seniority of the  Travancore personnel as between themselves, or  of  the Cochin personnel as between  themselves could not  disturbed while’ determining the relative seniority of the  Travancore and Cochin personnel in any class.  But the officer who  was junior  to the appellant had arranged for a mutual  transfer with an officer from Madras ’and could not be held to be  in service  in Kerala for the purpose of the  final  integrated list.  The question of inter se seniority cannot arise  when there  is  nothing. to fix such inter se  seniority  of  the appellant vis-a-vis his junior. Therefore the benefit of the principle cannot, be claimed by the appellant. [877C]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeals Nos. 2629 &  2630 of 1969. From  the judgment and order dated the 2nd April,.  1969  of the Kerala High Court at Ernakulam in Original Petition Nos. 2709 and 2708 of 1966, and Civil Appeal Nos. 304 & 305 of 1972.  Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order  dated the  2nd  April, 1969 of the Kerala High Court  in  Original Petition Nos. 2708 of 1966 and Sardar  Bahadur,  and  C.  P.  Damodaran  Nayar,   appellant appeared in person( in C.As 2629/69 & 305/72) 869 K.   T.  Harindra Nath and Vishnu Bahadur Saharya,  for  the appellant (in C.A. 2630/69).  V. A. Seiyid Mohmud and K. C. Dua, for respondent Nos.  1 & 4  (in  C. A. 2629/69 and respondent Nos.  1 &  3  (in  C.A. 2630/69). Gobind  Das and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 2 (in  C.As. 2629 and 2630). A.   V.  Rangam and A. Subhashini, for respondent No. 3  (in C.A. 2629/69). P.   C.  Chandi, for respondent No. 3 (in C.A.  304/72)  and respondents Nos.  1 & 4 (in C.A. 305/72). K.   M. K. Nair, for respondent No. 5 (in C.A.A. 2629/69). S.   Gopalakrishnan, for respondent Nos. 6&7 (in C.A. 2629/ 69). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GOSWAMI,  J.  These appeals by  certificate  are  directed against  the  judgment of the Kerala High Court  in  several

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writ   applications  filed  there  challenging   the   final integration  list  of judicial officers allotted  to  Kerala State under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, briefly the Act.  The appellant in Civil Appeal No. 2629 of 1969,  which we  will  take  first, was a practicing  Advocate.   He  was recruited along with 82 others by the Madras Public  Service Commission,  briefly  the Commission,  and  was  temporarily appointed as a District Munsiff by the Madras Government  on November  25, 1950.  This appointment was under rule  7A  of the  Madras  State Judicial Service Rules, ’then  in  force. The  Madras  High  Court  posted  him  for  training   which commenced on January 16, 1951 and while undergoing  training he  was posted as District Munsiff at Calicut where he  took charge’ of this post on May 26, 1951. Since then he has been in   continuous  service  as  Munsiff,  subordinate   Judge, District   Magistrate  and  as  District  Judge.    One   B. Venkataramans, who had not been selected as District Munsiff along  with the appellant and ’others ’in  1950,  challenged the  selection  made by the Commission in  a  writ  petition before this Court.  This Court allowed the petition and  the decision  is  reported in V. Venkataramana v. The  State  of Madras & ’Another’ (1) :This Court held that the Communal G. 0. of the Madras Government which besides making reservation of posts for Harijans and backward Hindus, as sanctioned  by cl. (4) of Art. 16, also made reservation of posts for other communities  viz.  Muslims, Christians,  Non-Brabmin  Hindus and Brahmins was repugnant to the provisions of Art. 16  and was  as such void and illegal.  The Court, however, did  not cancel  all  the  appointments  made  during  the  year  but directed  the  Government  to consider and  dispose  of  the application  of  Venkataramana  on its  merits  and  without applying  the,  rule  of  communal  rotation.   It  may   be mentioned  that  the appellants .here and  other  successful candidates were not joined as respondents in ’the said  writ petition before this Court.  Venkataramana was (1) A.I.R. 1951 870 accordingly  selected and appointed as District Munsiff  and he took charge of his office on October 6, 1951,  Consequent upon  the  decision in that case the Madras  State  Judicial Service  Rules  (briefly the Madras Rules)  were  framed  on October  6, 1953 under Article 234 read with Article 309  of the   Constitution.    These   Rules   came   into    effect retrospectively  from  March 22, 1951.  It is  averred  that appointment of the appellant is thus under rule 11(2) of the Madras  Rules.  On November 2, 1953, the  Madras  Government directed that the services of the appellant along with other candidates be, regularised w.e.f. October 6, 1951, the  same date from which Venkataramana’s appointment has been so done (vide  Ext.  P-7).  It is also mentioned in this order  that the  82  officers  mentioned in the schedule  to  the  order including  Venkataramana (serial No. 27) and  the  appellant (serial No. 72) will commence probation from that date.  The Government, however, sanctioned increment in the time  scale to  the appellant and the other District Munsiffs  appointed in 1950 and 1951 from the date of commencement of continuous service  (vide Ext.  P-6).  Consequent upon the  passing  of the  States  Reorganisation  Act  on  August  31,  1956,  51 judicial  officers  including  the  appellant  belonging  to different  cadres like District Judge, District  Magistrate, Sub-Judge, Munsiff and Sub-Magistrate were transferred  from the Madras State to the Kerala State on September 11,  1956. The appellant was finally allotted to Kerala w.e.f.  October 24,  1956,  as per order of the Government  of  India  dated August  24,  1960, under the Act.  The State of  Kerala  was

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brought  into  being w.e.f. November 1, 1956.  We  may  note here that the new Kerala State was formed under section 8 of the Act comprising the territories of the existing State  of Travancore-Cochin, excluding the territories transferred  to the  State  of  Madras by section  4;  and  the  territories comprised  in  Malabar district, excluding  the  islands  of Laccadive  and Minicoy and Kasaragod taluk of  South  Kanara district. The  Government  of  Kerala passed  an  order  (Ext.   P-16) regarding  reorganisation of judicial services.   After  the reorganisation  of  States,  principles  were  evolved   and formulated  by the Central Government at the  conference  of Chief   Secretaries  of  the  different   States   regarding integration  of  services.   The  Kerala  Government  framed principles and procedures regarding integration of  services of  Travancore-Cochin personnel with the personnel  allotted from  Madras (vide Ext.  P-13).  The Madras Government  also framed  general  principles for integration of  services  by their  order  dated July. 17, 1957 (vide Ext.   P-14).   The Government  of  Kerala issued orders regarding  equation  of posts  in  the  Judicial  Department  for  the  purpose   of integration  of services on May 27, 1958 (vide Ext.   P-17). The equation was as follows "Travancore-Cochin (1)  District Judge-I Grade-    District Judges-II Grade-Rs. Rs. 800-1000.                        1000-1800. District & Sessions Judge,    District Magistrate. (Judl.) II Grade-Rs. 500-800.  Grade-500-700 plus Spl.                         pay Rs. 50/-  871 (iii) District Magistrate     Sub Judges on-Rs.  550- 700. Grade- Rs. 500-800. Addl.  District and Sessions Judges and Sub-judges Grade-Rs. 450-600, (iv) Sub  Divisional  Magistrates District Munsiff  and  Sub Divisional Magistrate Rs. 300-700. I    Grade-Rs. 450-600. Munsiffs and Sub-Divisional Magistrate  Grade II on-Rs. 250-500. (v)  Sub Magistrate  Rs. 200- 300." Sub Magistrates Rs. 200-300. The appellant preferred an appeal against this order through the  Kerala High Court and the Government of Kerala  to  the Advisory  Committee  constituted by the  Central  Government under  section,  115(5) of the Act challenging  among  other things  that  the principles evolved for  the  equation,  of posts were illegal and unjust.  Meanwhile the Government  of Kerala  on September 24, 1959, ordered that it would not  be proper  to  equate  the District Magistrates  and  the  Sub- Divisional  Magistrates  of Grades I and  II  of  ’executive origin’  belonging to the erstwhile Travancore-Cochin  State with the Civil Judicial Officers and that the same should be kept  separate until the Magisterial Officers  were  induced into  the  Civil Judiciary in the  manner  prescribed  under Article  234 of the Constitution.  By the same order it  was provided  that the three posts of the  District  Magistrates (actually  four since one was omitted through  mistake)  and eight posts of Sub-Divisional Magistrates of the Travancore- Cochin  area  would  be constituted as  a  separate  service outside  the Civil Judiciary so as to enable the  incumbents to  continue in their posts (vide Ext.  P-21).  On the  same date, the Government of Kerala passed an order under Article 234  of the Constitution by which the  salaried  Magisterial

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Officers  of  the  former  Travancore-Cochin  State  in  the categories   of   District   Munsiffs   and   Sub-Divisional Magistrates  were  made  eligible  for  appointment  to  the categories  of Subordinate Judges and Munsiffs  respectively (vide  Ext.   P-27).   The  appellant  preferred  an  appeal against  the  order (Ext.  P-21) on October, 20  1959  (vide Ext.   P-22).   He pointed out that if the  aforesaid  order (Ext.   P-21)  was implemented there was likelihood  of  the Sub-Divisional Magistrates who had got far less service than that of the Munsiffs securing promotion over such  Munsiffs. The  Kerala  Government passed a final order  regarding  the equation  of posts in the judiciary on July 24, 1961  (vide, Ext.  P-23) and informed the appellant that the. appeals had been rejected by the Government of India.  The Government of Kerala published the preliminary integrated list of Judicial Officers  on April 24, 1962 (vide Ext.P-24).  The  appellant preferred  an  appeal against this list (vide  Ext.   P-25). Other  officers  also  filed  representations  and   appeals against the same.  In the, preliminary integrated  gradation list  of the Travancore-Cochin and Madras personnel  as  Ion November 1, 1956, the appellant was 872 shown against serial No. 44 and his date of commencement  of continuous service as well as the date of appointment to the post  of  equated  category  was  shown  as  May  26,  1951. Respondents 6 and 7 were shown below him against serial Nos. 46  and  47  respectively  in  the  list.   Their  dates  of commencement  of  continuous service are July 20,  1951  and October  1, 1951 respectively and the same are the dates  of appointment  to  the post of equated category in  the  list. After  publication of the preliminary integrated  list,  the Government  of Kerala issued two orders on May 16, 1962  and May  10, 1963 (vide Exts.  R-1 and R.2)  respectively.   R-2 has superseded the earlier order R-1 and some other  orders. We may quote the relevant portion of the order in Ext.   R-2 which rans as follows               "The  Government of India have considered  the               representations  of  the  officers  and   have               decided as follows :-               (i)   The  officers  allotted to  Kerala  from               Madras may be allowed the benefit of emergency               service  towards  seniority  in  the   equated               category  if  such  service  would  have  been               regularised from the- date of their  emergency               appointment   and  counted   for   inter-state               seniority  in integration in Madras  on  1-11-               1956 had they remained in Madras.               X.                x                   x               x This decision of the Government of India was accepted by the Kerala  Government.  On the subject of taking  into  account the  emergency service there was correspondence between  the Central  Government and the Government of Kerala (vide  Ext. P-32  dated March 1, 1962) On the same subject matter  there were two letters from the government of Madras addressed  to the  Kerala Government (vide Exts. p-34 dated July 20,  1963 and  P-35 dated November 7, 1963) to the Secretary  allotted Agricultural  Officers’  Association, certain  ad-hoc  rules (vide  Ext.P-28)  for absorption of Criminal  side  Judicial Officers of the Travancore-Cochin Branch who’ were kept in a separate  cadre.  These rules inter alia provided  that  for the   purpose   of  determining  seniority   the   date   of commencement of continuous  service in the post of  District Magistrate  shall  be  deemed  to  be,  the  date  of  first appointment to, the category of Sub-Judge.  The  appellants’

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appeals  were  ultimately  rejected-by  the  Government-  of India.    On-March  26,  1966,  the   Government-of   Kerala published the final integrated list of the Travancore-Cochin and Madras personnel of the Judicial Officers as on November 1,  1956 (vide Ext.  P-31) showing respondents 6 and 7,  who were junior to him as per the, preliminary integrated  list, now  placed above him in, the final list In the  preliminary list although his date of commencement of continuous service was  shown  as May 26, 1951, he was assigned in  final  list October  6, 1951 being the date of his appointment-  to  the post in the equated category as on November 1, 1956.  In the above 873 background,  the appellant filed a writ application  in  the High,  Court  of Kerala praying for  restraining  the  State Government  and  the  Registrar  of  the  High  Court   from implementing  Ext.  P-31, the final. list, and to  award  to the   appellant   appropriate  rank  and   seniority   above respondents 6 and 7, amongst other prayers.  His application came  up before a Full Bench of the High court and the  same was  rejected.  The respondents were impleaded in  the  High Court  in  a representative capacity and  the  High  Court’s order  under or.1 r.8, Civil Procedure Code,  were  obtained and the notice was published in the newspaper. Several questions were raised before the High Court, but the appellant here has made two main submissions :               (1)   His   seniority   in  service   in   the               integrated  judicial service in Kerala  should               be  counted  from May, 26, 1951, the  date  on               which he joined service and from which he  has               continuously been working.               (2)   There  is  no justification in  law  for               creation  of a separate cadre for  Magistrates               of the executive origin and for reserving four               posts of District Magistrates, exclusively  in               favour   of  Sub-Divisional   Magistrates   of               executive origin. The  appellant’s  grievance  is that  he  should  have  been assigned  May  26, 1951 instead of October 6, 1951.   It  is clear  that  under section 115(5) of the  Act  "the  Central Government  may  by  order establish one  or  more  Advisory Committees for the purpose of assisting it in regard to-               (a)   the  division  and  integration  of  the               services  among the new States and the  States               of Andhra Pradesh and Madras; and               (b)   the  ensuring  of  fair  and   equitable               treatment  to  all’ persons  affected  by  the               provisions  of  this section  and  the  proper               consideration ’of any representation made’  by               such persons". Under  section 1 17 of the Act, "the Central Government  may at  any  time before or after the appointed  day  give  such directions  to any .State Government as may appear to it  to be  necessary  for  the  purpose of  giving  effect  to  the foregoing provisions of this Part and the, State  Government shall comply with such directions".  In accordance with ’lie provisions  of this Act, a meeting of the Chief  Secretaries of  the,  various  States that were to be  affected  by  the reorganisation,  was  held  on  May  18-19,  1956,  at   the invitation of the Central Government In this meeting certain decisions  were  taken  as to the  general  principles  that should be observed with regard to the integration work.  The government-of India thereafter informed the State Government that  they  had  decided that the  work  of  integration  of services  should be dealt with by the State  Governments  in

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the  light  of  general principles already  decided  in  the meaning of the Chief Secretaries.  With regard 874 to  the  principle  for,determining equation  of  posts  and relative  seniority, the following conclusions were  reached at the conference of the Chief Secretaries :               "It   was  agreed  that  in  determining   the               equation  of  posts,  ,the  following  factors               should be borne in mind               (i)   the nature and duties of a post;               (ii)  the    responsibilities    and    powers               exercised  by the officer holding a post;  the               extent of territorial or other charge held  or               responsibilities discharged;               (iii) the  minimum.  qualifications,  if  any,               prescribed for recruitment to the post;               (iv)  the salary of the post; It  was  agreed that in determining  relative  seniority  is between  two  persons holding posts declared  equivalent  to each  other, and drawn from different States, the  following points should be taken, into account               (i)   Length  of Continuous  service,  whether               temporary or permanent, in a particular grade;               this  should  exclude  periods  for  which  an               appointment  is held in, a purely stop-gap  or               fortuitous arrangement;                (ii) age  of the person; other factors  being               equal,   for   instance,  seniority   may   be               determined on the basis of age.                Note  :  It was also. agreed that as  far  as               possible,  the  inter se senority  of  officer               drawn  from  the  same  State  should  not  be               disturbed". This position was altered as already noted earlier when  the Central Government, after considering the representations of the officers made under section 115(5) of: the- Act  decided that  "the  officers allocated to Kerala State  from  former Madras,  may  be allowed the benefit  of  emergency  service towards  seniority in the equated category if such  services towards service(sic) would have been registered from  the date of  their  emergency- appointment  and counted for inter-state  seniority   in, integration  on   1st  November 1956, hadthese officers remained in Madras " (vide Ext.  P- 33 dated 16-2-1963 which modified Ext. P-32 dated  1-3-1962) We  have also referred to a  letter  from the Government  of Madras to the Kerala Government dated to a letter from 1963 (Ext. P34) wherefrom the following extract is relevant:-                "   According   to  sub-paragraph   (2)    of               paragraph  1 of the  said G.O. the  date  from               which  an  allottee to this  State   from  the               former     Travancore-Cochin     State     was               continuously  holding the  corresponding  post               in the former Travancore-Cochin State is taken               into  account  for the purpose  of fixing  his               seniority in the equated  cadre in this state.               Therefore  for (3)of  paragraph 1  of  said               G.O. only continuous service 875               whether regular, temporary or emergency of the               allottees is taken into account".               Hence   the   position  in  Madras   is   that               continuous  service of the appellant  "whether               regular,  temporary or emergency"  would  have               been  taken  into account for the  purpose  of               seniority.   It  is also clear  and  not  even

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             disputed  that  the  appellant  has  been   in               continuous  service from May 26,  1951.   That               being   the   position,  the   conclusion   is               irresistible  in  view  of  the   Government’s               decision (vide Ext.  P-33) that the  appellant               was entitled to the assignment of May 26, 1951               for the purpose of his seniority..               Dr.  Syed  Mohamad,  on  behalf  of  the   1st               respondent,  submits that the question has  to               be decided with reference to rule 11(2) of the               Madras Rules.  The same may be set out :               11(2) : "Where the appointment of a person  as               District  Munsiff  in  accordance  with  these               rules would involve, excessive expenditure  on               travelling  allowance  or  exceptional   admi-               nistrative  inconvenience,  the  Governor  may               appoint  any  other  person  in  the  list  of               approved candidates.  A person appointed under               this  rule shall not be regarded as  a  proba-               tioner in the service or be entitled by reason               only  of such appointment to any  preferential               claim to future appointment to the service".               "The High Court accepted this submission  when               it observed as follows:--                "The  appointment  under  rule  11(2)  is   a               temporary  appointment and it is so stated  in               the rule itself.  Appointment under rule 11(3)               also  is a temporary appointment  though  this               can  be even of persons who do not  figure  at               all  in  any select list  prepared  after  the               selection by die Public Service Commission.  A               reading of the rule--rule 11(3) of the  Madras               State Judicial Service Rules--shows that  this               rule   will  be  resorted  to  in   cases   of               emergency.  Suffice to say at this stage  that               service  rendered in a temporary  capacity  by               virtue  of appointments under rules  11(2)  or               11(3),  at any rate the whole of it,  did  not               necessarily count for the purpose of inter  se               seniority  among the persons who  belonged  to               the particular service in the State or Madras.               The  Government  of India  decided  that  this               service  which  did  not count  for  inter  se               seniority  among the Madras personnel  in  the               State  of Madras and did not count for  inter-               State  seniority in the matter of  integration               of the personnel that remained in the State of               Madras  with those that have been allotted  to               the State of Madras, will not count for inter-               State seniority of personnel allotted from the               State  of Madras to the State of Kerala,  for,               the   purpose   of   integration   with    the               Travancore-Cochin personnel-". It is true that  rule in deals with temporary appointments.: Rule 11(3), however, is not at- all relevant for the purpose of the present case 876 The  question that arises for consideration is that  whether after final allotment of the appellant under the Act to  the State  of Kerala, the application of the Madras Rules  would be  at  all  relevant in face of a  clear  decision  of  the Government of India made under the Act.  We have to hold  in the negative.  Apart from that, the Government of India took a  decision  which also the Kerala Government  had  accepted (vide  Ext.  R-2) as already set out.  In this view  of  the

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matter  we are Unable to agree with the High Court that  the appellant  had been correctly assigned his date  October  6, 1951 instead of May 26, 1951. It  is  next submitted by the learned counsel  for  the  1st respondent that the appointment of the appellant was "purely stop-gap  or  fortuitous arrangement" as  mentioned  in  the principles agreed at the meeting of ,the Chief  Secretaries. He also tries to reinforce his argument by referring to rule 11(3)     which provides that "where it is necessary in  the public  interest owing to an emergency which has  arisen  to fill  immediately  a vacancy in, the  category  of  District Munsifs........ Assuming that rule 11(3) may be invoked  and the   earlier  decision  of  the  Government  of  India   in conformity  with  the agreement of  the  Chief  ’Secretaries referring to "purely stop-gap or fortuitous arrangement" are applicable,  we  are unable to agree  that  the  appellant’s service  is, either filled "owing to an: emergency" or  that the  same  is  held in a  "purely  stop-gap.  or  fortuitous arrangement".   The learned counsel for the  1st  respondent followed by the counsel for the Union of India has submitted that on account of the writ application by Venkataramana  in the  High Court the appointment of the appellant had  to  be made  as  a temporary measure as has been mentioned  in  the letter  of appointment itself.  We are, however,  unable  to accept  this been appointed in a regular manner through  the Public Service Commission and his-appointment cannot by  any stretch  of imagination be made to fill a "’purely  stop-gap or  fortuitous" vacuum.  As noticed earlier, the  Government of India has accepted the position that an allotted employee should not suffer any disadvantage if he Would not have been subjected  to  a like handicap in his parent State.   It  is clear  from  the position taken by the Madras  ’  Government that  the  appellant  would  have got  the  benefit  of  his continuous appointment’ in Madras w.e.f. May 26, 1951  (Vide Ext.  P-34).  That being the position the submissions of the learned counsel for the respondents are of no avail. we hold that  he  appellant  should  be given  the  benefit  of  his seniority reckoning his continuous appointment and assigning the  date.  26th May 1951 and substituting the same  in  the final list for 6th October, 1951. With  regard  to  the. second submission  of  the  appellant regarding  the  reservation of a separate cadre  e  for  the District   Magistrate  And  Sub-Divisional  Magistrates   of executive origin, we do not see any force in his contention. It  is open, to the, State Government to constitute as  many cadres   as   they  choose   according   to   administrative convenience  and expediency .There is,  therefore, no  merit in  the  objection to the creation of a separate   cadre  of District  Magistrates  and  sub-Divisional   Magistrates  of executive  origin.   The  submission  of  the  appellant  is without any force. purchases and there would be no disincentive to the- dealers to  desist from selling goods to unregistered purchasers  in course  of  inter-State  trade.   The  object  of’  the  law apparently  is  to deter inter-State sales  to  unregistered dealers as such inter--State Sales would facilitate  evasion of tax. [984 C] 877 With regard to Civil Appeal No. 2630 of 1969 of P. S. Menon, Sub-Judge,   Quilon,   the  above  submissions,   which   we have  dealt With, were also advanced in his case.   For  the same reasons, the appellant in this appeal will be  entitled to  assignment  of  12th  February, 1955,  as  the  date  of continuous employment of his service after allotment to  the Kerala State for the purpose of his seniority.  The  learned

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counsel, however, additionally contends that he should  have the benefit of what is described as the K.L.M. Principle  in the following circumstances : One  Sethu  Madhavan,  who  is  admittedly  junior  to   the appellant, was provisionally allotted to the State of Kerala along  with the appellant at the initial stage when the  new State  was  constituted. Later on  however,  Sethu  Madhavan arranged  a  mutual transfer with a  Judicial  Officer  from Madras  who desired to take transfer to Kerala and for  that ;,reason his provisional allotment was cancelled and he  was not  finally allotted to Kerala.  In the  final  integration list Sethu Madhavan’s name therefore, does not appear. If  Sethu Madhavan had remained in Kerala, the  position  of the appellant in the list sight have been different,  since. Sethu  Madhavan’s  date of continuous service  is  1-7-1954. But the final list will now have to be judged without taking note  of Sethu Madhavan who had already left the State.   It is submitted that since the final list has been prepared  as on  1-11-1956, the appellant should get the benefit  of  his date.   Since, however, Sethu Madhavan cannot be held be  in service  in Kerala for the purpose of the  final  integrated list  the  appellant is not entitled to  assignment  of  his date. We  may  now  describe what the K.L.M.  Principle  is.   The expression  ’K.L.M. Principle’ which came into existence  in the   Travancore-Cochin  State  by  an  order   dated   27th September,  1950, has been described in the following  words by the High Court in the judgment               "The relative seniority of the Travancore  and               Cochin personnel in any class or grade in  the               common seniority list will be determined  with               reference  to  the  date  of  commencement  of               continuous  service  in the  same  or  similar               class  or grade of posts subject, however,  to               the  condition  that  the  Seniority  of   the               Travancore personnel as between themselves  or               of the Cochin personnel as between  themselves               should not thereby be disturbed".               Dealing with the point the High Court observed               as follows               "Though  the  said  Sethu  Madhavan  commenced               service earlier in the State of Madras he  was               admittedly   junior  to  the  petitioner   and               therefore   it  will  become   necessary   for               settling   the  inter  se  seniority  of   the               petitioner vis-a-vis Sethu Madhavan to  assign               to the petitioner in integrated gradation list               a  place above the said Sethu Madhavan.   This               is  so because the principle settled as  early               as  29th  December 1956 by G.O. of  that  date               clearly  provided  that  in  effecting,  inte-               gration  the inter se seniority of persons  in               either branch that               878               are  integrated should not be  affected.   The               question however cannot arise when there is no               need  to  fix the inter se  seniority  of  the               petitioner vis-a-vis the said Sethu Madhavan". We  agree with the above observations of the High Court  and reject  the submission of the appellant that he is  entitled to  the benefit of the K.L.M. Principle on the basis of  the provisional allotment of Sethu Madhavan. It  may be mentioned that we had allowed  without  objection from  the respondent CMP No. 9761 of 1973 and  admitted  the documents mentioned therein.

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In  the result the appeals are partly allowed.  The 1st  and 2nd respondents are directed to assign to the appellant, C.P Damodaran Nayar, the date May 26, 1951, by substituting  the same for October 6, 1951, in the final integration list  and to  give him the consequential benefits to which he  may  be entitled  by  virtue  of this  assignment’..  The  aforesaid respondents  are also directed to assign to ;the  appellant, P.  S.  Menon,  the date February 12,  1956,  in  the  final integration  list and to give him such consequential  relief as-he  may be entitled to in pursudance of the new  assigned date.   The judgment of the High Court is set aside only  to the extent indicated above.  The appellants are entitled  to costs in this Court.  Two sets only. Civil Appeals Nos. 304 and 305 of 1972 are identical by  the same  two appellants and they’stand disposed of  accordingly by this V.P.S.             Appeals partly allowed. 879