08 August 1966
Supreme Court
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CHANDRA MOHAN Vs STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ORS.

Bench: K. SUBBA RAO, CJ,M. HIDAYATULLAH,S.M. SIKRI,V. RAMASWAMI,J.M. SHELAT
Case number: Appeal (civil) 1136 of 1966


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PETITIONER: CHANDRA MOHAN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/08/1966

BENCH:

ACT: Constitution  of India   1950, Arts. 233 to  237--Scope  of- "Service  of  the  Union or of the  State"-If  includes  any service or only Judicial Service. Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 132 and 133-Appeal  filed against   all  respondents-Leave  to  appeal  against   some respondents  not  granted  by High  Court,  but  certificate misleading--Grant of special leave by Supreme Court.

HEADNOTE: The procedure for recruiting district judges in the State of U.P,  was  prescribed by the U.P.  Higher  Judicial  Service Rules   made  by  the  Governor  under  Art.  309   of   the Constitution.  Under the Rules, the Governor decides on  the number  of candidates to be selected, Prescribes the  quali- fications  of  the  candidates, the  High  Court  calls  for applications, the Selection Committee constituted under  the Rules  screens  the applications, gives interviews  only  to those   persons   who   it   thinks   have   the   necessary qualifications and selects from among them suitable  persons for  appointment,  and sends two lists to the  High  Court-a main and a supplementary list-the High Court submits to  the Governor  the names of candidates considered  suitable  from the   lists,   and  thereafter,  the  Governor   makes   the appointments from the said lists.  In 1961-62, the Registrar of  the  Allahabad High Court called  for  applications  for recruitment  to  the cadre of the district judges  from  the members  of the Bar of more than 7 years’ standing and  from "judicial  officers"  who  were  members  of  the  executive department discharging some revenue and magisterial  duties. The rules empowered the recruitment of district judges  from Such "judicial officers".  The Selection Committee  selected 6  candidates  3  from  the Bar and  3  from  the  "judicial officers"-and  sent  their name.-, to the High  Court.   The Registrar of the High Court sent a copy of the report of the Committee  to the Government mentioning that the High  Court had  approved  the selection of the  said  candidates.   The appellant,  a  member of the U.P. Civil  Services  (Judicial Branch) and others filed petition in the High Court for  the issue of an appropriate writ directing the Government not to make  the appointments pursuant to the Said selection.   The petitions  were dismissed.  On the application for leave  to appeal to this Court, the High Court observed that the  case of  the Advocates did not raise any substantial question  of law  as  to the interpretation of the  Constitution  or  any question  of  public importance, but that the  case  of  the "Judicial Officers" raised such questions.  The High  Court, however, issued a certificate in general terms that the case was a lit one for appeal to the Supreme Court.

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in  appeal to this Court it was contended by the  "Advocate- recruits"  that in view of the order on the application  for leave,  the appellant could not canvass the  correctness  of the  judgment of the High Court in so far as it  related  lo them; and the appellant contended that : (i)While under Art. 233(1)  of  the Constitution the Governor has  to  make  the appointments in consultation with the High Court  concerned. under 78 the  Rules  he  has  to  consult  the  Selection   Committee constituted thereunder, and therefore, the appointments made in  consultation  with  two authorities instead  of  one  as provided by the Constitution were illegal; that as a  matter of  fact,  under  the  Rules, the  High  Court  was  only  a transmitting  authority  while the Selection  Committee  was made  the real consultative body; and (ii) the Governor  had no  power  to  appoint district judges  from  the  "judicial officers" as they were not members of the judicial service. HELD : (i) The case was a fit one for granting special leave to  the appellant to appeal to this Court even in so far  as it  related to the ’.advocate-recruits" after  excusing  the delay in filing the appeal. The  appellant was misled by the certificate issued  by  the High  Court  in general terms as it appeared  to  cover  the entire case.  If he went wrong in not scrutinising the order granting  leave  closely,  the  advocate  respondents   were equally  negligent in not getting the  certificate  amended. [82 B] (ii)  The  Rules contravene the constitutional  mandates  of Art.  233(1) and (2) and therefore the Rules as well as  the appointments made thereunder were illegal. Under  Art. 233(1) the Governor can appoint a person to  the post  of  a  district  judge  from  the  services  only   in consultation  with  the  High Court.  This  mandate  can  be disobeyed  by  not consulting the High Court; and  also,  by consulting  the High Court and other persons,  because,  his mind  may be influenced by those other persons who  are  not entitled  to advise him.  In the present case the Rules  say that   the  Governor  can  appoint  a  district   judge   in consultation with the Selection Committee subject to a  kind of  veto by the High Court which may be accepted or  ignored by  the Governor.  The High Court is practically reduced  to the position of a transmitting authority of the lists.   The only discretion left to it is to refuse to recommend all  or some  of the persons in the lists, but it cannot  scrutinise the other applications which were screened by the  Committee or recommend for appointment persons not found in the lists. In  the  case of the "Advocate-recruits", the  Governor  can only appoint   those  recommended  by the High  Court  under Art.  233(2).But under the Rules, the High Court can  either endorse  the  recommendations  of the  Committee  or  merely create a deadlock. [83 A-D; 85 F; 86 C] Even  if  it was open to the Governor to, make  a  provision under  Art. 309 for consultation with bodies other than  the High Court, he cannot avoid consultation with the High Court directly   or   indirectly,  and  under   the   Rules,   the consultation  with the High Court is an empty formality  and travesty  of the constitutional provision.  The Governor  in effect  and substance does neither consults the  High  Court nor  acts  on  its recommendations  but  only  consults  the Committee or acts on its recommendations. [86 D-F] (iii)  The  Rules framed by the Governor empowering  him  to recruit  district  judges from the "judicial  officers"  are also unconstitutional and, the recruitment of the  "Judicial officer respondents" was bad.

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The   Indian  Constitution  provides  for   an   independent judiciary  in  the  States,  and  in  order  to  place   the independence  of the subordinate judiciary beyond  question, provides  in  Art. 50 of the Directive  Principles  for  the separation  of the judiciary from the executive and  secures such independence by enacting Arts. 233 to 237 in Chapter VI of  the Constitution.  Under these Articles the  appointment of the district judges 79 in any State shall be made by the Governor of the State, and the  two  sources of recruitment are : (i)  service  of  the Union  or  of the State and (ii) members of  the  Bar.   The words "service of the Union or of the State" do not mean any service  of  the  Union or of the  State  but  the  judicial service of the Union or of the State, for the entire Chapter VI is only dealing with judicial service.  Judicial  service is  defined  in  Art. 236(b) to mean  a  service  consisting exclusively  of  persons intended to fill the  post  of  the district judge and other civil posts inferior to the post of district judge.  The definition is exhaustive of the service because   the  expressions  "exclusively"   and   "intended" emphasise  the fact that the judicial service consists  only of persons intended to fill the posts of district judges and other civil judicial posts, and that judicial service is the exclusive  service  of judicial officers.  In  the  case  of appointment  of persons to the judicial service, other  than as  district  judges, they will be made by the  Governor  in accordance with rules framed by him in consultation with the High Court and the Public Service Commission.  But the  High Court  has control over all the district courts  and  courts subordinate   thereto,   subject   to   certain   prescribed limitations.  Having defined "judicial service" in exclusive terms,  having provided for appointment to that service  and having  entrusted the control of the service to the care  of the  High  Court, the makers of the Constitution  would  not have  conferred a blanket power on the Governor  to  appoint any person from any service as a district judge. [89 B, E-90 D; 91 A] Under  Art. 237, the Governor may notify that Arts.  233  to 236   will   apply  to  magistrates   subject   to   certain modifications   or  exceptions,  and  they  will   then   be integrated  in  the  judicial service which is  one  of  the sources of recruitment to the post of district judges.   The article emphasises the fact that till such an integration is brought  about,  the magistrates are outside  the  scope  of Arts. 233 to 236. [91 B-D] Moreover,,  the posts of district and Sessions  judges  were originally filled by persons from the Indian Civil  Service. In   1922,   the  Governor-General  in  Council   issued   a notification   empowering  the  local  Government  to   make appointments  also  from  members of  the  Provincial  Civil Service  (Judicial Branch) or from the members of  the  Bar. Under  the  Government  of India Act, 1935,  and  the  Rules thereunder, the Governor was given the power to appoint to a district  judge’s post a member of the Indian Civil  Service or  a  member of the judicial service of the province  or  a member  of  the Bar, but the rules did not  empower  him  to appoint  to the reserved post of a district judge  a  person belonging  to  a service other than  the  judicial  service. After  India attained independence in 1947, the  recruitment to  the 1. C. S. was discontinued and district  judges  have been recruited only from either the judicial service or from the  Bar.   There was no case of a member of  the  executive having  been promoted as a district judge.  If that was  the factual position at the commencement of the Constitution, it

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is  unreasonable  to  attribute to its makers,  who  had  so carefully provided for the independence of the judiciary, an intention to destroy it by an, indirect method, for, nothing could be more deleterious to the good name of the  judiciary than to permit, at the level of district judges, recruitment from the executive departments. [91 E 92B]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1136  and 1638 of 1966. Appeals  by certificate/Special Leave from the Judgment  and Order dated February 21, 1966 of the Allahabad High Court in W. P. No. 526 of 1965. 80. R.  K.  Garg,  S. C. Agarwala, M. K. Ramamurthi  and  D.  P. Singh, for the appellant (in both the appeals). C.  K.  Daphtary, Attorney-General and O. P. Rana,  for  the respondent No. 1 (in both the appeals). Bishan Narain and B. P. Maheshwari, for the respondents Nos. 2-4 (in both the appeals). J. P. Goyal, for respondent No. 5 (in both the appeals). O. P. Verma, for respondent No. 6 (in both the appeals). Naunit Lal, for the intervener (in C. A. No. 1136 of 1966). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Subba Rao, C.J. These appeals-the former by certificate  and the latter by special leave-raise the question of the  scope of the field of recruitment to the cadre of District Judges. The facts may be briefly stated.  During the years 1961  and 1962,  the Registrar of the Allahabad High Court called  for applications  for recruitment to ten vacancies in the  Uttar Pradesh Higher Judicial Service from Barristers,  Advocates, Vakils  and Pleaders of more than seven years’ standing  and from   "judicial   officers".   The   expression   "judicial officers"  is a euphemism for the members of  the  Executive department  who  discharge  some  revenue  and   magisterial duties.  The Selection Committee constituted under the  U.P. Higher Judicial Service Rules, hereinafter called the Rules, in  accordance  with  the  provisions  of  the  said  Rules, selected six candidates from the said applicants as  persons suitable for appointment to the said service.  Respondents 2 to  7 are the candidates so selected by the said  Committee. Respondents  2, 3 and 4 were Advocates and respondents 5,  6 and  7  were "judicial officers".  The  Selection  Committee sent  two  lists,  one comprising the  names  of  the  three Advocates  and the other comprising the names of  the  three "judicial  officers"  to the High Court.   On  September  4, 1964, the Registrar of the Allahabad High Court sent a  copy of the report of the Selection Committee to the Secretary to the Government, Uttar Pradesh, Lucknow, wherein be mentioned that  the  Court had approved of the selection of  the  said candidates.   Thereafter, the appellant, who belongs to  the U.P.  Civil Services (Judicial Branch) and who was  at  that time  acting  as  a District Judge,  and  others,  who  were similarly situated as the appellant, filed petitions in  the High  Court at Allahabad under Art. 226 of the  Constitution for an appropriate writ directing the Government not to make the  appointments  to  the  U.P.  Higher  Judicial   Service pursuant to the said selection. The  said  petitions were heard by a Division Bench  of  the Allahabad High Court.  The learned Judges, Mathur and Takru, JJ.  agreed on all points except on one: while  they  agreed that  the selection from the Bar was good, J. N.  Takru,  J. expressed the

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81 view  that, as no notification was issued under Art. 237  of the Constitution, the selection from the cadre of  "Judicial Officers"  was  bad.   The  question  on  which  there   was difference of opinion was referred to Oak, J., and the  said learned  Judge agreed with the view of Mathur, J.  that  the recruitment from both the sources was good, with the  result the  writ petitions were dismissed.  The appellant filed  an application  before  the  High Court for  a  certificate  of fitness to appeal to this Court.  The learned Judges, in the course  of their order, observed that in regard to the  case of  the Advocates as well as of the "Judicial  Officers"  no certificate  could be granted under Art. 133(1) (a)  of  the Constitution  inasmuch as no money value could be  given  to the  subject-matter  of the dispute,  that  the  certificate could be issued only under Art. 132(1) or Art. 133(1) (c) of the  Constitution  if the terms of the  said  articles  were complied with, that the case of the Advocates did not  raise any substantial question of law as to the interpretation  of the Constitution or any question of public importance as  to attract either of the said two articles and that the case of the  judicial officers raised such a question as to  attract the  said provisions.  Having made those  observations,  the court  allowed  the  application  and  gave  the   requisite certificate  under  Art. 132(1) and Art.  133(1)(c)  of  the Constitution.  Pursuant to that order the High Court  issued a certificate in general terms, which reads:               "It  is certified that the case is a  fit  one               for   appeal  under  Articles  132   (1)   and               133(1)(c) of the Constitution of India." Pursuant  to  that  certificate,  on  March  4,  1966,   the appellant   filed  a  petition  to  appeal  in  this   Court impleading  all  the six candidates belonging  to  both  the groups as respondents.  Subsequently, on March 10, 1966,  he filed another petition in this Court alleging that the  High Court  had  no  jurisdiction to restrict the  scope  of  the certificate  and  that the appellant would  be  entitled  to canvass  all  the grounds agitated before  the  High  Court; alternatively,  he prayed that he might be allowed to  raise the additional grounds enumerated therein against the  order of the High Court. Mr.  Bishan Narain, learned counsel for the Advocates,  con- tended that there was no appeal before this Court in so  far as the order of the High Court related to the Advocates  and that,  therefore,  the  appellant  could  not  canvass   the correctness of the order in so far as it related to them. There  is  justification  for this contention;  but  we  are satisfied  that the appellant was misled by the  certificate issued  by  the  High  Court  in  general  terms.   If   the certificate  alone was looked into, it would appear that  it covered the entire case that was before the High Court.  But if it was read along with the order passed by the High Court in  the  application for certificate, it would  support  the argument that the High Court intended only to restrict the 82 certificate  to  that  part  of the  case  relating  to  the "judicial  officers".   But  so  long  as  the   certificate remained  as  it  was framed, the  appellant  was  certainly justified  in  assuming  that the  certificate  covered  the entire   case.    If  the  appellant  went  wrong   in   not scrutinising  the order closely to appreciate the  scope  of the  certificate, the respondents were equally negligent  in not  getting  the certificate amended so as to bring  it  in conformity  with the order.  In the said  circumstances,  we give special leave to the appellant to appeal to this  Court

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against the order of the High Court in so far as it  related to  the  Advocates, after excusing the delay in  filing  the same. The  arguments of the learned counsel for the appellant  may be  placed conveniently under the following five heads:  (1) While  under Art. 233 (1) of the Constitution  the  Governor has  to make appointments of persons to be, and the  posting and promotions of, district judges in consultation with  the High  Court concerned, under the Rules made by the  Governor under Art. 309 of the Constitution he has to consult, before making such appointments, a selection committee  constituted thereunder   and,  therefore,  the  appointments   made   in consultation with two authorities instead of one as provided by the Constitution, were illegal. (2) On a fair reading  of the  provisions of the Rules, it is manifest that  the  High Court  is  a  transmitting  authority  while  the  selection committee  is  made the real consultative body, that  is  to say,  the  Governor  has to make  the  appointments  not  in consultation  with the High Court as it should be under  the Constitution   but  in  consultation  with   the   committee constituted  under the Rules. (3) The Governor has no  power to  appoint district judges from judicial officers  as  they are  not members of the judicial service. (4) The  exclusion of  the  members of the judicial service in  the  matter  of direct   recruitment  offends  Arts.  14  and  16   of   the Constitution;  or,  alternatively,  the  exclusion  of   the members  of  the judicial service in the  matter  of  direct recruitment to the post of district judges while  permitting "judicial  officers"  to be so recruited  offends  the  said articles.  And (5) the recruitment is to the post of  "Civil and  Sessions Judges" and they are not "District Judges"  as defined by Art. 236 of the Constitution and, therefore,  the recruitment to those posts in terms of Art. 233 is bad. The first question turns upon the provisions of Art. 233  of the Constitution.  Article 233(1) reads:               "Appointments  of  persons  to  be,  and   the               posting  and promotion of, district judges  in               any State shall be made by the Governor of the               State  in  consultation with  the  High  Court               exercising  jurisdiction in relation  to  such               State." we  are assuming for the purpose of these appeals  that  the "Governor"  under  Art. 233 shall act on the advice  of  the Ministers.   So,  the  expression  "Governor"  used  in  the judgment means Governor 83 acting  on the advice of the Ministers.  The  constitutional mandate is clear.  The exercise of the power of  appointment by the Governor is conditioned by his consultation with  the High Court, that is to say, he can only appoint a person  to the  post  of district judge in consultation with  the  High Court.   The object of consultation is apparent.   The  High Court is expected to know better than the Governor in regard to  the  suitability  or otherwise of  a  person,  belonging either  to  the  "judicial service" or to  the  Bar,  to  be appointed as a district judge.  Therefore,a duty is enjoined on the Governor to make the appointment in consultation with a body which is the appropriate authority to give advice  to him.   This mandate can be disobeyed by the Governor in  two ways,  namely, (i) by not consulting the High Court at  all, and  (ii)  by  consulting  the High  Court  and  also  other persons.   In one case he directly infringes the mandate  of the Constitution and in the other he indirectly does so, for his mind may be influenced by other persons not entitled  to advise  him.   That this constitutional mandate has  both  a

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negative  and  positive significance is made  clear  by  the other   provisions  of  the  Constitution.    Wherever   the Constitution  intended to provide more than one  consultant, it  has said so: see Arts. 124(2) and 217(1).  Wherever  the Constitution  provided for consultation of a single body  or individual  it  said so: see Art. 222.   Art.  124(2),  goes further and makes a distinction between persons who shall be consulted  and  persons who may be  consulted.   These  pro- visions  indicate that the duty to consult is so  integrated with  the  exercise  of  the power that  the  power  can  be exercised  only in consultation with the person  or  persons designated  therein.   To  state it  differently,  if  A  is empowered  to appoint B in consultation with C, he will  not be  exercising  the  power in the manner  prescribed  if  he appoints B in consultation with C and D. We  would,  therefore, hold that if the  Rules  empower  the Governor   to  appoint  a  person  as  district   judge   in consultation with a person or authority other than the  High Court,  the said appointment will not be in accordance  with the provisions of Art. 233(1) of the Constitution. In  this  context, the Rules whereunder  the  selections  in question were made are relevant.  The relevant rules may  be read:               "Rule  8. Number of appointments to be  made.-               (1)  The Governor shall decide the  number  of               recruits  to be taken at each  selection  from               each   of  the  two  sources  of   recruitment               specified  in rule 5. Rules 9 to 12  prescribe               the  qualifications  for  the  candidates  for               appointment to the higher judicial service  of               the State.               Rule   13.   Recruitment   by   promotion.-The               following procedure for selection by promotion               under rule 5(i) shall be observed:               84               (c)   The   selection  shall  be  made  by   a               Committee consisting of two Judges of the High               Court   and   the   Judicial   Secretary    to               Government.               Rule     14.      Direct     -Recruitment.-(1)               Applications  for  direct recruitment  to  the               service shall be called for by the High  Court               and shall be made in the prescribed form which               may  be  obtained from the  Registrar  of  the               Court.               (2) The applications by barristers, advocates,               vakils   or  pleaders,  should  be   submitted               through the District Judge concerned, and must               be   accompanied  by  certificates   of   age,               character, nationality and domicile,  standing               as  a  legal  practitioner,  and  such   other               documents as may be prescribed in this  behalf               by  the  Court.   Applications  from  Judicial               Officers  should  be submitted  in  accordance               with  the rules referred to in clause 2(b)  of               rule 5 of these Rules.  The District Judge  or               other officer through whom the application  is               submitted shall send to the Court, along  with               the  application,  his  own  estimate  of  the               applicant’s   character   and   fitness    for               appointment to the service.               Rule   15.    Interview.-(1)   The   Selection               Committee  ,shall scrutinise  the  application               received  by  the  Court,  and  require   such               candidates as seem best qualified for appoint-

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             ment  to  the service under  these  Rules,  to               appear  before  the committee  for  interview.               Candidates  from  among  legal   practitioners               shall be required to defray their own expenses               for the interview.               (2) In assessing the merits of a candidate the               Selection Committee, shall have due regard for               his    professional    ability,     character,               personality, physique and general  suitability               for appointment to the service as indicated by               his record and interview.               Rule 17.  Waiting list of candidates. -(1) The               Selection  Committee shall draw tip a list  of               the candidates selected for direct recruitment               in order of merit; provided that in case  this               list  includes  two or  more  candidates  from               among Judicial Officers, their names shall  be               so  arranged  as to be in  accord  with  their               inter se seniority as Judicial Officers.   The               number  of selected candidates to be  included               in the list shall correspond to the number  of               vacancies for direct recruitment as decided by               the  Governor on each occasion  in  accordance               with   rule  8,  with  a  supplementary   list               prepared  as aforesaid for, meeting  unforseen               vacancies.               (2) The Court shall submit to the Governor the               two  lists of candidates  considered  suitable               for appointment               85               to  the  service  from  the  two  sources   of               recruitment  as  prepared in  accordance  with               rule 13, and clause (1) of this rule.               Rule 19.  Appointment.-(1) The Governor shall,               on receipt from the Court of the waiting lists               prepared   under   rules  13  and   17,   make               appointments to the service on the  occurrence               of substantive vacancies, by taking candidates               from  those lists in the order in  which  they               stand in the respective lists, subject, in the               case   of   the  waiting   list   for   direct               recruitment, to the provisions of rules 7  and               18,   and  provided  that  the   Governor   is               satisfied  that  they are duly  qualified               for appointment to the service." It  will  be  seen from the said  Rules  that  the  Governor decides on the number of candidates to be selected, that the qualifications  of  the  candidates are  prescribed  by  the Rules,  that  the Court calls for  applications  for  direct recruitment,  that the Selection Committee  appointed  under the Rules screens the applications, gives interviews only to persons who it thinks have the necessary qualifications  and selects from among them suitable persons for appointment  to the  service on the basis of the record and  the  interview, that  the  Selection Committee sends two lists to  the  High Court,  one  main list and the other a  supplementary  list, arranged  in  the  order of merit and that  the  High  Court submits  to the Governor the names of candidates  considered suitable  for  appointment  to the service  from  the  lists prepared  under r. 17(1), and that thereafter  the  Governor makes  the  appointments  from  the  said  lists  if  he  is satisfied  that they are duly qualified for  appointment  in all  respects.   It is clear from the Rules  that  the  High Court   is  practically  reduced  to  the  position   of   a transmitting  authority of the fists of suitable  candidates

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for  appointment prepared by the Selection  Committee.   The only  discretion  left to it is to refuse to  recommend  for appointment all or some of the persons included in the lists sent to it by the Selection Committee.  It cannot scrutinise the other applications which were screened by the  Selection Committee.  It cannot recommend for appointment persons  not found in the lists. The learned Attorney-General argued that the High Court can, under the Rules, refuse to recommend any of the names  found in the list and go on doing so every time a new list is sent to  it  till’ the names it finds suitable are found  in  the list.  This suggestion of obstructive tactics on the part of the  High  Court  to achieve its objective  may  indicate  a loophole  in the Rules but it clearly demonstrates that  the Rules  are intended to tie down the hands of the High  Court in  the matter of consultation.  Apart from the fact that  a High Court cannot be expected to resort to such  obstructive tactics,  the Governor can easily prevent such a  situation, as he 86 may  appoint persons recommended by the Selection  Committee on  the  ground that the refusal by the High Court  to  send their names complied with the constitutional requirement  of consultation.  While the constitutional provisions say  that the Governor can appoint District Judges from the service in consultation with the High ’Court, these rules say that  the Governor  can  appoint in consultation  with  the  Selection Committee, subject to a kind of veto by the High Court which can be accepted or ignored by the Governor. The  position  in  the case  of  district  judges  recruited directly  from the Bar is worse.  Under Art. 233(2)  of  the Constitution,  the  Governor  can  only  appoint   advocates recommended  by  the High Court to the  said  service.   But under  the  Rules,  the High Court can  either  endorse  the recommendations of the Committee or create a deadlock.   The relevant   rules,   therefore,   clearly   contravene    the constitutional  mandates  of  Arts. 233(1) and  (2)  of  the Constitution and are, therefore, illegal. The discussion on the first question, to some extent, covers the  second question also.  The two questions  overlap.   On the  assumption  that it is open to the Governor to  make  a provision under Art. 309 for consultation with bodies  other than  the High Court, even so he cannot  avoid  consultation with  the  High Court directly or indirectly.   As  we  have noticed  earlier, under the Rules the consultation with  the High  Court is an empty formality.  The Governor  prescribes the qualifications, the Selection Committee appointed by him selects  the candidates and the High Court has to  recommend from  the lists prepared by the said Committee.  This  is  a travesty of the constitutional provision.  The Governor,  in effect  and substance, does neither consult the  High  Court nor  acts  on  its recommendations, but  only  consults  the Selection Committee or acts on its recommendations.  In that view   also,  the  relevant  rules  are  illegal   and   the appointments made thereunder are bad. The  third point raised is one of  far-reaching  importance. Can  the Governor after the Constitution,  directly  appoint persons  from a service other than the judicial  service  as district judges in consultation with the High Court?  Can he appoint   "judicial  officers"  as  district  judges?    The expression  "judicial officers" is a misleading one.  It  is common case that they belong to the executive branch of  the Government,   though  they  perform  certain   revenue   and magisterial  functions.  The relevant article on which  both the  parties  rely  upon  in  support  of  their  respective

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contentions is Art. 233.  It reads:               "(1)  Appointments of persons-to be,  and  the               posting  and promotion of, district judges  in               any  State  shall be made by the  Governor  of               the, State in consultation with the High Court               exercising  jurisdiction in relation  to  such               State.               87               (2)   A  person not already in the service  of               the  Union  or  of the  State  shall  only  be               eligible to be appointed as district judge  if               he  has been for not less than seven years  an               advocate  or a pleader and is  recommended  by               the High Court for appointment." While  the learned counsel for the appellant  contends  that the  said  article  must be read along  with  the  group  of articles embodied in Ch.  VI of Part VI of the  Constitution and also in the background of the history of said provisions and  that, if so read, it would be clear that  the  Governor can  only appoint district judges either from  the  judicial service  or  from  the  Bar, the  learned  counsel  for  the respondents,  on  the other hand, argues that  Art.  233  is expressed  in general terms and that there is no warrant  to restrict  the scope of the said article by  construction  or otherwise. Before   construing  the  said  provisions,  it  should   be remembered  that the fundamental rule of  interpretation  is the  same  whether  one  construes  the  provisions  of  the Constitution or an Act of Parliament, namely, that the court will have to find out the expressed intention from the words of  the Constitution or the Act, as the case may  be.   But, "if, however, two constructions are possible then the  Court must  adopt  that which will ensure  smooth  and  harmonious working of. the Constitution and eschew the other which will lead to absurdity or give rise to practical inconvenience or make well established provisions of existing law  nugatory." The  Indian  Constitution,  though it does  not  accept  the strict  doctrine  of separation of powers, provides  for  an independent  judiciary in the States; it constitutes a  High Court   for   each  State,  prescribes   the   institutional conditions  of  service  of  the  Judges  thereof,   confers extensive  jurisdiction  on it to issue writs  to  keep  all tribunals,  including in appropriate cases the  Governments, within  bounds and gives to it the power of  superintendence over all courts and tribunals in the territory over which it has  jurisdiction.  But the makers of the Constitution  also realised that "it is the Subordinate Judiciary in India  who are  brought most closely into contact with the people,  and it is no less important, perhaps indeed even more important, that  their  independence should be placed  beyond  question than  in  the case of the superior  Judges."  Presumably  to secure the independence of the judiciary from the executive, the  Constitution introduced a group of articles in Ch.   VI of  Part VI under the heading "Subordinate Courts".  But  at the  time the Constitution was made, in most of  the  States the   magistracy  was  under  the  direct  control  of   the executive.   Indeed  it  is common knowledge  that  in  pre- independent  India  there was a strong  agitation  that  the judiciary  should be separated from the executive  and  that the  agitation,  was based upon the assumption  that  unless they were separated, the independence of the judiciary 88 at  the lower levels would be a mockery.  So article  50  of the  Directive  Principles of Policy states that  the  State shall  take  steps  to  separate  the  judiciary  from   the

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executive  in  the public services of  the  States.   Simply stated,  it  means that there shall be a  separate  judicial service free from the executive control. With  this  background, if the following provisions  of  the Constitution  are  looked  at, the meaning  of  the  debated expressions therein would be made clear:               We have already extracted Art. 233.               Article  234.-Appointments  of  persons  other               than  district judges to the judicial  service               of  a State shall be made by the  Governor  of               the State in accordance with rules made by him               in  that  behalf after consultation  with  the               State  Public Service Commission and with  the               High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation               to such State.               Article 235.  The control over district courts               and  courts subordinate thereto including  the               posting  and  promotion of, and the  grant  of               leave  to, persons belonging to  the  judicial               service  of  a  State  and  holding  any  post               inferior  to the post of district judge  shall               be  vested in the High Court, but  nothing  in               this Article shall be construed as taking away               from any such person any right of appeal which               he  may  have  under the  law  regulating  the               conditions  of his service or  as               authorising  the High Court to deal  with  him               otherwise   than   in  accordance   with   the               conditions  of  his service  prescribed  under               such law.               Article 236.  In this Chapter-               (a)  the expression "district judge"  includes               judge  of  a  city  civil  court,   additional               district   judge,   joint   district    judge,               assistant  district  judge, chief judge  of  a               small    cause   court,    chief    presidency               magistrate,   additional   chief    presidency               magistrate,    sessions   judge,    additional               sessions judge and assistant sessions judge:               (b) the expression "judicial service" means  a               service  consisting  exclusively  of   persons               intended  to fill the post of  district  judge               and other civil judicial posts inferior to the               post of district judge. Article 237.  The Governor may by public notification direct that the foregoing provisions of this Chapter and any  rules made  thereunder shall with effect from such date as may  be fixed  by him in that behalf apply in relation to any  class or  classes  of magistrates in the State as  they  apply  in relation to persons appointed in the judicial service 89 of the State subject to such exceptions and modifications as may be specified in the notification. The  gist  of  the  said  provisions  may  be  stated  thus: Appointments of persons to be, and the posting and promotion of,  district  judges  in any State shall  be  made  by  the Governor   of   the  State.   There  are  two   sources   of recruitment,  namely,  (i) service of the Union  or  of  the State,  and (ii) members of the Bar.  The said  judges  from the first source are appointed in consultation with the High Court and those from the second source are appointed on  the recommendation  of  the  High Court.  But  in  the  case  of appointments  of persons to the judicial service other  than as district judges, they will be made by the Governor of the State in accordance with rules framed by him in consultation

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with the High Court and the Public Service Commission.   But the High Court has control over all the district courts  and courts  subordinate thereto, subject to  certain  prescribed limitations. So far there is no dispute.  But the real conflict rests  on the  question whether the Governor can appoint  as  district judges  persons  from  services  other  than  the   judicial service;  that is to say, can he appoint a person who is  in the  police,  excise,  revenue or such other  service  as  a district judge?  The acceptance of this position would  take us  back  to the pre-independence days and that too  to  the conditions  prevailing  in  the  Princely  States.   In  the Princely States one used to come across appointments to  the judicial  service from police and other  departments.   This would   also  cut  across  the  well-knit  scheme   of   the Constitution  and the principle underlying it,  namely,  the judiciary  shall be an independent service.   Doubtless,  if Art. 233(1) stood alone, it may be argued that the  Governor may appoint any person as a district judge, whether  legally qualified  or  not, if he belongs to any service  under  the State.  But Art. 233(l)is nothing more than a declaration of the  general  power  of  the  Governor  in  the  matter   of appointment  of district judges.  It does not lay  down  the qualifications  of the candidates to be appointed or  denote the sources from which the recruitment has to be made.   But the sources of recruitment are indicated in cl. (2) thereof. Under cl. (2) of Art. 233 two sources are given, namely, (i) persons  in  the service of the Union or of the  State,  and (ii)  advocate  or  pleader.  Can it be  said  that  in  tie context  of  Ch.   VI of Part VI of  the  Constitution  "the service  of the Union or of the State" means any service  of the  Union  or  of the State or does it  mean  the  judicial service  of the Union or of the State?  The  setting,  viz., the  chapter dealing with subordinate courts, in  which  the expression "the service" appears indicates that the  service mentioned therein is the service pertaining to courts.  That apart, Art. 236(b) defines the expression "judicial service" to mean a service consisting exclusively of persons intended to fill the post of district judge and other civil  judicial posts inferior Sup.C.1/66-7 90 to the post of district judge.  If this definition,  instead of appearing in Art. 236, is placed as a clause before  Art. 233(2),  there cannot be any dispute that "the  service"  in Art.  233(2)  can  only  mean  the  judicial  service.   The circumstance that the definition of "judicial service" finds a place in a subsequent Article does not necessarily lead to a  contrary  conclusion.  The fact that in Art.  233(2)  the expression  "the service" is used whereas in Arts.  234  and 235  the  expression  "judicial service"  is  found  is  not decisive  of  the  question  whether  the  expression   "the service"  in  Art. 233(2) must be something other  than  the judicial  service, for, the entire chapter is  dealing  with the  judicial service.  The definition is exhaustive of  the service.   Two expressions in the definition bring  out  the idea  that  the judicial service consists  of  hierarchy  of judicial  officers starting from the lowest and ending  with district   judges.    The  expressions   "exclusively"   and "intended"  emphasise  the fact that  the  judicial  service consists  only of persons intended to fill up the  posts  of district  judges and other civil judicial posts and that  is the exclusive service of judicial officers.  Having  defined "judicial  service" in exclusive terms, having provided  for appointments  to  that  service  and  having  entrusted  the

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control  of the said service to the care of the High  Court, the  makers of the world Constitution not have  conferred  a blanket power on the Governor to appoint any person from any service as a district judge. Reliance  is  placed  upon the decision  of  this  court  in Rameshwar  Dayal  v. State of Punjab(1) in  support  of  the contention  that  "the  service" in Art.  233(2)  means  any service  under  the State.  The question in that  case  was, whether a person whose name was on the roll of advocates  of the East Punjab High Court could be appointed as a  district judge.   In  the  course  of the judgment  S.  K.  Das,  J., speaking for the Court, observed:               "Article  233  is a self  contained  provision               regarding the appointment of District  Judges.               As  to a person who is already in the  service               of  the  Union  or of the  State,  no  special               qualifications are laid down and under cl. (1)               the  Governor can appoint such a person  as  a               district   judge  in  consultation  with   the               relevant  High  Court.   As to  a  person  not               already  in service, a qualification  is  laid               down  in cl. (2) and all that is  required  is               that  he should be an advocate or  pleader  of               seven years’ standing." This passage is nothing more than a summary of the  relevant provisions.   The  question whether "the  service"  in  Art. 233(2)  is any service of the Union or of the State did  not arise  for  consideration  in that case nor  did  the  Court express any opinion thereon. (3) (1961) 2 S.C.R. 874. 91 We, therefore, construe the expression "the service" in  cl. (2) of Art. 233 as the judicial service. But,  it is said that this construction ignores Art. 237  of the  Constitution.   We do not see how Art.  237  helps  the construction of Art. 233(2).  Art. 237 enables the  Governor to  implement  the  separation of  the  judiciary  from  the executive.  Under this Article, the Governor may notify that Arts.  233, 234, 235 and 236 of the Constitution will  apply to   magistrates   subject  to  certain   modifications   or exceptions;  for instance, if the Governor so notifies,  the said  magistrates  will  become  members  of  the   judicial service,  they  will  have to be  appointed  in  the  manner prescribed  in Art. 234, they will be under the  control  of the  High Court under Art. 235 and they can be appointed  as District Judges by the Governor under Art. 233(1).  To state it differently, they will then be integrated in the judicial service  which is one of the sources of recruitment  to  the post  of district judges.  Indeed, Art. 237  emphasises  the fact  that  till such an integration is brought  about,  the magistrates  are outside the scope of the  said  provisions. The  said  view  accords with the  constitutional  theme  of independent  judiciary  and  the  contrary  view  accepts  a retrograde step. The  history of the said provisions also supports  the  said conclusion.   Originally the posts of district and  sessions judges and additional sessions judges were filled by persons from    the   Indian   Civil   Service.    In    1922    the Governor-General-in-Council issued a notification empowering the  local  government  to make  appointments  to  the  said service  from  the members of the Provincial  Civil  Service (Judicial  Branch)  or  from the members  of  the  Bar.   In exercise of the powers conferred under S. 246(1) and s.  251 of he Government of India Act, 1935, the Secretary of  State for  India Framed rules styled Reserved Posts (Indian  Civil

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Service)  Rules, 1938.  Under those Rules, the Governor  was given  the power of appoint to a district post a  member  of the judicial service of the Province or a member of the Bar. Though  s.  254(1) of the said Act was  couched  in  general terms  similar  to  those contained in Art.  233(1)  of  the Constitution, the said rules did not empower him to  appoint to the reserved post of district judge a person belonging to a  service  other  than the judicial  service.   Till  India attained independence, the position was that district judges were  appointed by the Governor from three sources,  namely, (i)  the Indian Civil Service, (ii) the Provincial  Judicial Service,  and  (ii)  the  Bar.   But  after  India  attained independence  in  1947,  recruitment  to  the  Indian  Civil Service was discontinued and the Government of India decided that the members of the newly created Indian  Administrative Service  would  not  be  given  judicial  posts.  thereafter district  judges  have been recruited only from  either  the judicial  service or from the Bar.  There was no case  of  a member 92 of  the executive having been promoted as a district  judge. If   that  was  the  factual  position  at  the   time   the Constitution   came  into  force,  it  is  unreasonable   to attribute  to  the makers of the Constitution,  who  had  so carefully provided for the independence of the judiciary, an intention  to destroy the same by an indirect method.   What can  be more deleterious to the good name of  the  judiciary than to permit at the level of district judges,  recruitment from  the executive departments?  Therefore, the history  of the  services  also  supports  our  construction  that   the expression  "the service" in Art. 233(2) can only  mean  the judicial service. For the aforesaid reasons, we hold that the Rules framed  by the Governor empowering him to recruit district judges  from the "judicial officers" are unconstitutional and, therefore, for that reason also the appointment of respondents 5, 6 and 7 was bad. In this view, it is not necessary to express our view on the last two questions. In the result, we hold that the U.P. Higher Judicial Service Rules  providing for the recruitment of district judges  are constitutionally void and, therefore, the appointments  made thereunder were illegal.  We set aside the order of the High Court and issue a writ of mandamus to the 1st respondent not to  make any appointment by direct recruitment to  the  U.P. Higher Judicial Service in pursuance of the selections  made under  the  said Rules.  The last respondent  will  pay  the costs  of  the appellant.  The other respondents  will  bear their own costs.        V.P.S.                      Appeal allowed. 93