24 February 1988
Supreme Court
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DESOOLA RAMA RAO & ANR. Vs STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.

Bench: MISRA RANGNATH
Case number: Appeal Civil 1995 of 1977


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PETITIONER: DESOOLA RAMA RAO & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT24/02/1988

BENCH: MISRA RANGNATH BENCH: MISRA RANGNATH OZA, G.L. (J)

CITATION:  1988 AIR  857            1988 SCR  (3)  24  1988 SCC  Supl.  221     JT 1988 (1)   412  1988 SCALE  (1)384  CITATOR INFO :  D          1988 SC 860  (3)

ACT:      Andhra  Pradesh   (Roads  and   Buildings)  Engineering Service Special  Rules, 1967:  s.5/Andhra  Pradesh  State  & Subordinate Service  Rules, 1962: ss. 23(a) & 33(a)-Inter se seniority  in  the  cadre  of  Assistant  Engineers  between promotees and  direct recruits-In  the absence  of  specific Rule length of service to be the basis.

HEADNOTE: %      Rule 5  of the  Andhra Pradesh  (Roads  and  Buildings) Engineering Service  Special Rules,  1967 lays down that for promotion to  the post  of Executive  Engineer,  a  Graduate Assistant Engineer  should be  (a) a full member or approved probationer, (b)  a direct  recruit should  put in six years service as  Assistant Engineer  and (c) a promotee Assistant Engineer should  put in  five years  service.  There  is  no provision for  giving preference  to one  category over  the other for  promotion. Rule 23(a) of the Andhra Pradesh State and Subordinate  Service Rules, 1962 empowers the appointing authority to commence the probation of a person appointed to the service  with retrospective  effect. Rule 33(a) of these rules mandates  the determination  of  the  seniority  of  a person in a service by the date of first appointment.      The appellants  were directly  recruited  as  Assistant Engineers  in   April  1966.   Respondents  3   and  4  were temporarily appointed  Assistant Engineers  by  transfer  on 14th August,  1959 and  19th May,  1960 respectively.  Their services were regularised with effect from 19th May, 1961 by an order  dated 3rd May,1967 in exercise of the powers under s.  23(a)  of  the  General  Rules.  The  appellants  sought promotion to  the post  of Executive  Engineer on  the basis that they  were senior  to the promotee Assistant Engineers- respondents. Their  case was that the Chief Engineer was hot competent to  make the  order under  s.23(a) of  the General Rules. The  State Government  vide their  order dated August 10, 1983  decided that  the seniority of the direct recruits and promotees  has to  be determined with reference to their regular appointment  of the  category of Assistant Engineers

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and not  from the  date of confirmation in the said category and declared  that the  seniority of  the appellants was far below the  respondents and  they  would  be  considered  for promotion in their turn alongwith others. 25      A writ  petition filed  by the  appellants in  the High Court challenging  the said  order was dismissed by a Single Judge, and that dismissal was upheld in appeal.      Dismissing the appeal by special leave, ^      HELD: The law relating to inter-se seniority in a cadre is well settled. If there be a rule indicating the manner in which such  seniority has  to be  fixed, that is binding. In the absence  of such  a rule, length of service is the basis for fixing Inter-se seniority.      In the instant case, there is no provision in the Rules under  consideration   that  direct   recruits  would   have preference  over   promotees  for   purposes   of   inter-se seniority. In  the absence  of such  a rule  the  guidelines indicated in the General Rules, which provide that seniority shall be  determined by the date of first appointment to the service, have  to be  followed. Respondents 3 and 4 have put in longer  service  than  the  appellants  in  the  post  of Assistant Engineer. Their services had been regularised with effect from  May 19,  1961 in  exercise of  the powers under Rule 23(a)  of the General Rules, which date is not anterior to   their    appointment   as   Assistant   Engineer.   The regularisation  is   thus  not   vitiated  on   account   of arbitrariness. The  appellants would,  therefore, rank below respondents 3 and 4 in the cadre and the promotional benefit would be  given to them after the claim of the respondents 3 and 4 has been duly considered.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1995 of 1977.      From the  Judgment and  order dated  16.9.1975  of  the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition No. 584 of 1975 .      G.L.  Sanghi,   Subodh  Markandeya   and  Mrs.   Chitra Markandeya for the Appellants.      K.G. Bhagat,  Y. Prabhakar  Rao, T.V.S.N. Chari and Ms. Vrinda Grover for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      RANGANATH MISRA, J. This appeal is by special leave and is directed  against the  appellate judgment  of a  division bench  of  the  Andhra  Pradesh  High  Court  upholding  the rejection of the writ petition 26 by a  Single  Judge  of  that  High  Court.  Appellants  are Engineers in  the establishment of the Chief Engineer (Roads and Buildings  of the  Andhra  Pradesh  Government  and  the dispute is one of inter se seniority between them on the one side and respondents 3 and 4 on the other.      Appellants filed a writ petition being No. 4151 of 1972 in the  High Court of Andhra Pradesh claiming a direction to the State  Government for  considering them for promotion to the post  of Executive  Engineer on the basis that they were senior to  five  promotee  Assistant  Engineers.  A  learned Single Judge  disposed of the said writ petition by judgment dated 29th March, 1973, and gave the following directions:                "The respondents  1 and  2 (State  of  Andhra           Pradesh and its Chief Engineer respectively) will,           therefore, consider  the claims of the petitioners

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         for promotion as Executive Engineers having regard           to their  seniority  in  the  cadre  of  Assistant           Engineers  in   relation  to   the  seniority   of           respondents  3   to  7.   I,   therefore,   direct           respondents 1  and 2  to take the seniority of the           petitioners, who  were full members of service, in           relation to the seniority of respondents 3 to 7 in           the cadre  of Assistant Engineers and consider the           case of the petitioners for promotion to the posts           of Executive  Engineers  in  accordance  with  the           rules." The State  Government, in  compliance  with  the  directions issued to  it, by  order dated  10th August,  1983, made  an order stating:                "As per Rule 5 of the said Special Rules, for           promotion  to  the  post  of  Executive  Engineers           (ordinary Grade)  a  Graduate  Assistant  Engineer           should be:                (a) a full member or approved probationer;                (b) a  direct recruit should put in six years                service as Assistant Engineer; and                (c) a  promotee Assistant Engineer should put                in five years service.           No preference  is provided  for persons,  who were           either direct  recruit Assistant  Engineers or who           secured earlier  confirmation. In  the absence  of           specific provision in the 27           Special Rules  for giving any preference to direct           recruit  Assistant  Engineers  in  the  matter  of           promotion to  the category of Executive Engineers,           only the provisions of General Rules for State and           Subordinate Services  have to be applied therefor.           According to  Rule  33(a)  of  General  Rules  for           Andhra Pradesh State and Subordinate Services, the           seniority  of   a  person  in  a  service,  class,           category or  grade,  shall,  unless  he  has  been           reduced to  a  lower  rank  as  a  punishment,  be           determined by  the date  of first  appointment  to           such service,  class, category  or grade.  So, the           seniority  of   the  Writ   Petitioners  and   the           respondents has to be considered with reference to           their dates of regular appointment to the category           of Assistant  Engineers (R  & B)  but not from the           date of  confirmation in  the said  category,  for           purpose of  promotion as  Executive Engineers. The           dates  of   commencement  of   probation  of   the           respondents and  Writ Petitioners  is as indicated           below:           Sl.  Name of the Asstt.          Date of Comm-           No.  Engineer                    encement of                                            probation ___________________________________________________________                Respondents           1.   Sh. B.V. Venkataramana      19.5.1961           2.   Sh. C.M. Ramachandramurthy  19.5.1961                Writ Petitioners           1.   Sh. Desoola Rama Rao        18.7.1966           2.   Sh. V. Murahari Reddy       30.6.1966 ___________________________________________________________           (Names of the three others stated in the order are           not extracted as are not relevant).           Thus the  respondents  commenced  their  probation           between 1959  to 1963  while the  writ petitioners           commenced  their   probation  in  1966  and  their

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         seniority is far below the respondents.                The Government,  after careful examination of           the judgment  of the High Court, with reference to           the  statutory   rules  and  in  relation  to  the           seniority obtaining  between the  respondents  and           the writ petitioners, decide that the 28           turn of the two writ petitioners for promotion has           not yet  come  and  that  their  claims  shall  be           considered for  promotion as  Executive  Engineers           (ordinary Grade)  in their turn, along with others           according to  their seniority  as  per  rules  and           eligibility." The appellants thereafter filed a second writ petition being Writ Petition  No.  6157  of  1973  before  the  High  Court challenging the  Government order.  As already  stated,  the learned Single  Judge has  dismissed the  writ petition  and such dismissal has been upheld in appeal.      Appellants  were   directly  recruited   as   Assistant Engineers on  29th April,  1966 and  Special Rules for Roads and Buildings  Division of  the public Works Department were made on  27th June,  1967, but  were given  effect from  1st April, 1965.  According to  the Rules,  appointment  to  the posts  of  Assistant  Engineers  can  either  be  by  direct recruitment  or   by  recruitment   by  transfer  of  Junior Engineers and  Supervisors or  Draftsmen (Special  Grade) or Draftsmen (Grade  I)  Under  the  Rules,  appellants  became eligible for  promotion to the post of Executive Engineer in 1971 and  when their  claim for promotion was overlooked the first writ petition, as already stated, was filed. According to the  appellants, respondents  3 and  4 were  appointed by transfer under  Rule 10-A  of the  Rules and  were  approved probationers. They  contend that  the promotees are approved probationers and  until confirmation  as full members of the service, they  would not  be  entitled  to  the  benefit  of seniority in  service and,  therefore, the  appellants  were senior to  them. They,  therefore, challenged the Government order referred  to above  and contended  that the High Court went wrong in not holding that appellants were senior to the two respondents  and on  that basis  they were  entitled  to consideration  for   promotion  to  the  post  of  Executive Engineer in preference to those respondents.      There  is  no  dispute  that  both  directly  recruited Assistant Engineers as also promotee Assistant Engineers are entitled to  promotion  as  Executive  Engineers.  The  rule requires direct recruits to have put in six years of service while for  promotees  the  prescription  is  five  years  of service for  being eligible  to be considered for promotion. As in many other service rules, there is no provision in the Rules under  consideration that  direct recruits  would have preference  over   promotees  for   purposes  of   inter  se seniority. In  the absence  of such  a rule  the High  Court followed the  guideline indicated in the General Rules which provides that  seniority shall  be determined by the date of first appointment  to the service. The High Court found that respondents 3 29 and 4  came to  serve as Assistant Engineers long before the appellants were recruited as Assistant Engineers. In fact in paragraph 6 of his judgment, the learned Single Judge in the second writ  petition has indicated that respondents 3 and 4 were temporarily  appointed as  Assistant Engineers  on 14th August, 1959 and 19th May, 1960 respectively. In exercise of power under Rule 23(a) of the General Rules, the services of the two  respondents had  been  regularised  retrospectively

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with  effect   from  19th   May,  1961   and  the  order  of regularisation had  been passed by the Chief Engineer on 3rd May,  1967.   In  the  instant  case  the  date  from  which regularisation has  been directed  to  take  effect  is  not anterior to  their appointment  as Assistant Engineers. That being  the  position,  regularisation  is  not  vitiated  on account of  arbitrariness. The  only other  aspect argued on this score  was that the Chief Engineer was not competent to make the  order. Rule  23(a) of the Andhra Pradesh State and Subordinate Services Rules provides:           "If a  person, having  been appointed  temporarily           under sub-rule  (a) or  sub-rule(c) of  rule 10 to           post borne  on the  cadre of any service, class or           category or  having been appointed to any service,           class or  category otherwise  than  in  accordance           with the  rules governing  appointment thereto  is           subsequently appointed  to any  service, class  or           category in  accordance with  the rules,  he shall           commence his  probation  from  the  date  of  such           subsequent appointment  or from  such earlier date           as  the   appointing  authority   may  determine."           (Underlining is ours) The vires  of this rule had not been challenged but the only contention in  this regard was that the appointing authority being the  State Government,  the Chief  Engineer should not have made  the order  fixing the  date  of  commencement  of probation. It  is the case of the respondents that the State Government has  delegated that  power to  the Chief Engineer and the order of delegation of that power is on record.      The law  relating to  inter se  seniority in a cadre is well-settled. If  there be  a rule  indicating the manner in which such  seniority has  to be  fixed, that is binding. In the absence  of such  a rule, length of service is the basis for fixing inter se seniority. The High Court has found, and there is  no longer  any dispute,  that respondents  3 and 4 have put  in longer  service than the appellants in the post of Assistant Engineer. In that view of the matter, the State Government was right, and the High 30 Court appropriately  approved it,  that the appellants would rank below  the respondents  3 and  4 in  the cadre  and the promotional benefit  would be  given to them after the claim of the respondents 3 and 4 has been duly considered.      We see  no merit  in  the  appeal.  It  is  accordingly dismissed. There would be no order for costs. P.S.S.                                Appeal dismissed. 31