28 July 1976
Supreme Court
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G. SARANA Vs UNIVERSITY OF LUCKNOW & ORS.

Bench: SINGH,JASWANT
Case number: Appeal Civil 861 of 1975


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PETITIONER: G. SARANA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNIVERSITY OF LUCKNOW & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT28/07/1976

BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT RAY, A.N. (CJ) BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH

CITATION:  1976 AIR 2428            1977 SCR  (1)  64  1976 SCC  (3) 585  CITATOR INFO :  D          1990 SC1402  (26)  RF         1991 SC 933  (10)

ACT:              Doctrine of waiver--Bar of waiver, whether applicable to         later grivance against’bias’.              Constitution  of India, Article  226--When  alternative         remedies available, whether writ petition maintainable.

HEADNOTE:             The  appellant  and  respondent No. 8  applied  for  the         vacant  post of Professor of Anthropology in the Faculty  of         Arts,  in answer to an advertisement put up by  the  Lucknow         University.  A selection committee of five persons including         three  experts, interviewed them and recommended  respondent         No. 8 for the post.  The appellant’s writ petition challeng-         ing the recommendation was dismissed by the High Court.  The         appellant contended before this Court that two of the expert         members  of  the  selection  committee  were  unduly  biased         against  him and in favour of respondent No. 8.  The  appeal         was contested on two grounds. Firstly, that by submitting to         the  jurisdiction of the selection committee, the  appellant         had  waived his right to denounce its constitution and  sec-         ondly, that the impugned recommendation being an  interlocu-         tory  proceeding against which remedies were available,  the         writ petition was not maintainable.         Dismissing the appeal, the Court,           HELD: 1. Despite the fact that the appellant knew all  the         relevant facts,he seems to have voluntarily appeared  before         the  committee  and taken a chance of  having  a  favourable         recommendation from it  Having done so it is no now open  to         him  to  turn  round and question the  constitution  of  the         committee.[70 A-B]         Manak  Lal v. Prem Chand [1957] SCR 575=AIR 1957  S.C.  425,         applied.             Linahan [1943] 138 F. 2nd 650; A. K. Karipak v. Union of         India  [1970]  1 SCR 457=ALR 1970 SC 150; Nageshwar  Rao  v.         State of A.P. [1960] 1 SCR 580=AIR 1959 SC 1376; S.  Partha-         rarathi v. State of Andhra Pradesh [1974] 1 SLR 427;  Farooq         Ahmad  Bandey  and Ors. v.  Principal  Regional  Engineering         College  & Anr. [1975] I&K L.R. 427; Principles of  Adminis-

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       trative  Law by I.A.G. Griffith and H. Street (4th  edition)         and Judicial Review of Administrative Action’ (3rd  Edition)         by Prof. S.A. De Smith, referred to.         2.  The recommendation of the selection committee has  still         to be scrutinised by the Executive Council of the University         and  either accepted or rejected by  and other  remedies  by         way  of  representation  to the  executive  council  and  an         application  for reference of the matter under s. 68 of  the         Uttar Pradesh Universities (Reenactment and Amendment)  Act,         1974,  to the Chance or are till open to the  appellant  and         have  not  been exhausted  The writ petition or  he  present         appeal before us is not maintainable. [70 C-D]

JUDGMENT:                  CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.  861                  of 1975.                  (Appeal  by  Special Leave from  the  Judgment  and                  Order dated                  1-3-1975  of  the  Allahabad  High  Court  (Lucknow                  Bench) in writ                  petition No. 405 of 1974.)                      A.K. Sen and S.K. Bisaria, for the appellant.                      C.P. Lal for respondents 1-3.                  Yogeshwar Prasad and R.N. Trivedi, for respondents.                  No. 8.                  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             JASWANT  SINGH, J. This appeal by special leave  is  di-         rected against the judgment and order dated March 31,  1975,         of Lucknow Bench of         65         the  Allahabad High Court dismissing the writ  petition  No.         405 of 1974 filed by the appellant challenging the recommen-         dation made by a Selection Committee of the Lucknow  Univer-         sity  (hereinafter  referred  to as  ’the  University’)  for         appointment of respondent No. 8 as Professor of Anthropology         in the Faculty of Arts of the University.             The  facts giving rise to this appeal are:  towards  the         end of the year 1973, the University put up an advertisement         inviting applications from candidates possessing the follow-         ing  qualifications  to  fill up a vacant post of  Professor         of Anthropology :---                        "Essential:   First  or  high  second   class                  Master’s  degree and Doctorate in the subject  con-                  cerned  with a good academic record, experience  of                  teaching  post-graduate  classes not  less  than  7                  years  and/or  having  conducted  and  successfully                  guided  research  work for 7 year’s  in  recognised                  institution  and  having  published  work  of  high                  standard in the subject concerned."                  Preferential:  High academic distinctions."                      The  appellant and( respondent No. 8  were  the                  only  two  candidates who applied for the  post  in                  response  to the advertisement.   Their  respective                  qualifications are as set out hereunder :--         S.No. Name           Age         Qualifications & Experience          1. Dr. G. Sarana,  38 years    H.S. (U. P. Bd) 1949-1 Div.          Head of Deptt.                 Inter (B.H.U.) 1951-1 Div.          of Anthropology,               B.A. (L.U.) 1953-I Div.          Karnatak University,           M.A. (L. U.) 1965-I Div.          Dharwar.                       Ph. D. (Harvard (U) 1966.                                         Published 28 research papers                                         and 3 books.                                         Worked as :-

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                                      (1) Temp. Lecturer in Anthro-                                         pology L.U. July,   1955-                                         April, 1962.                                         (2) Lecturer in   Anthropol                                          ogy Punjab U-April-August,                                          1962.                                         (3) Visiting  Lecturer-Univ.                                          of California at Santa                                          Barbara-July 1965-June                                          1966.                                          (4) Karnatak       Univer                                           sity (September  1966 upto                                           date as Reader and since                                           27  June 1970)  as  Profes                                           sor.         66         S.No.   Name        Age          Qualifications & Experience         2.Dr.K.S. Mathur,  44 years     H.S. (U. P. Bd) 1944-1 Divn.         Reader and Head of the       Inter (U. P. Bd) 1946- I Divn.         Deptt. of Anthropology,         B. Com (L. U.) 1950- I Divn.         Lucknow University.            Ph.D. (Australian National U)                                        1960.                                       Published several research                                       papers,                                       Worked as:-                                       (1) Lecturer  in  Anthropology                                       L.U.-1951-64.                                       (2)Reader in Anthropology                                        L.U. - 1964-continuing                                        (3) Sociologist-  National                                         Council of Appl. Economic                                         Research, New Delhi March’                                         September-1960.             On February 27, 1974,, a Selection Committee  consisting         of  Shri A.K.K. Mustafi, Vice-Chancellor of the  University,         Dr. K.N. Shukla, Dean, Faculty of Arts and Professor &  Head         of  the  Department of Hindi of the  University,  and  three         experts viz., Dr. S.C. Dube, Dr. S.R.K. Chopra and Dr.  T.B.         Mayak,  respondents  3, 4, 5, 6 and 7  respectively  met  to         interview the candidates and to make their recommendation to         the Executive Council of the University.  After interviewing         the  aforesaid two candidates, the Selection  Committee  re-         solved to recommend respondent No. 8 herein for  appointment         to the aforesaid post of Professor of Anthropology.             On  coming to know of the recommendation, the  appellant         filed  the  aforesaid  petition ’under Article  226  of  the         Constitution  challenging the recommendation mainly  on  the         ground that two out of the aforesaid three experts viz., Dr.         S.C. Dube and Dr. S.R.K. Chopra were biased against him  and         in favour of respondent No. 8.  It was alleged by the appel-         lant that the respondent had close relations with the afore-         said  two. experts as he was instrumental in obtaining  many         remunerative assignments for them.  It was. further  averred         by the appellant that whenever Dr. Dube visited Lucknow,  he         stayed  with respondent No. 8.  It was also averred  by  the         appellant that Dr. Chopra had strained relations with him on         account  of  straight election contest between him  and  the         latter  for  the  office of the  President  of  Anthropology         Section  of   the Indian Science Congress  for  19574.   The         appellant  further averred that in 1968 when he was  serving         in the Punjab University as a Lecturer in the Department  of         Anthropology  headed  by Dr. Chopra, the  latter  stubbornly         opposed  his application for leave to avail of the offer  of         fellowship  from Harvard University and  stopped  forwarding         his salary bills to the Executive, Council with the ulterior

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       object of depriving him of the opportunity to attain  higher         academic  qualification and thereby better his future  pros-         pects  with the result that he was compelled to  resign  his         job and surrender three months’ salary in lieu of notice  to         avail of the offer.         67             The petition was vigorously contested by respondent  No.         8.   On consideration of the material placed before it,  the         High Court, however, dismissed the application holding  that         though  respondent No. 8 was the head of the  department  of         Anthropology,  he  was not the only person  responsible  for         bestowing  various assignments either on Dr. Dube or on  Dr.         Chopra  and  that it was the Executive   Council   and   the         Academic  Council  which were responsible for  giving  those         assignments to Dr. Dube and Dr. Chopra.  It was further held         by the High Court that there was nothing unusual in Dr. Dube         and  Dr.  Chopra’s knowing and enjoying the  hospitality  of         respondent No. 8.  The fact that the appellant had an  elec-         tion contest with Dr. Chopra was also, in the opinion of the         High Court, of no significance, as  such like  contests were         very  common and’ it could not be said that Dr.  Chopra  had         developed  such a degree of ill-will and  hostility  against         the  appellant  for  the latter’s standing  as  a  candidate         against  him so as to render him incapable of acting  impar-         tially  when  the task of selecting the best  candidate  was         assigned  to  him and that it was not possible  to.  presume         that Dr. Dube and Dr. Chopra were in a position to influence         the decision of the entire Selection Committee by  injection         bias  in  the minds of the other members.   The  High  Court         finally  held that from the facts relied upon by the  appel-         lant,  bias  could  not be spelt out.  In  arriving  at  its         decision, the High Court relied upon the following  observa-         tions  made by Frank, J. of the United States of America  in         re. Linahan.(1)                        "If,  however,  "bias"  and  "partiality"  be                  defined to mean the total absence of preconceptions                  in the. mind of the Judge, then no one has ever had                  a.  fair  triaL,, and no one ever will.  The  human                  mind, even at infancy, is no blank piece of  paper.                  We are born with predispositions and the  processes                  of education, formal and informal, create attitudes                  which  precede: reasoning in  particular  instances                  and   which,  therefore, by definition, are  preju-                  dices."             The  High  Court  also held that  the  appellant  having         submitted to the jurisdiction of the Selection Committee, he         could  not be permitted to turn round and denounce the  con-         stitution of the Committee.             Counsel  for the parties have reiterated before  us  the         contentions  raised  on behalf of their clients  before  the         High  Court.  In addition, it has been contended by  counsel         for respondent  No. 8 that the impugned recommendation being         in  the nature of an interlocutory proceeding,, neither  the         writ  petition  nor the appeal arising  therefrom  could  be         maintained.             It  is  needless  to emphasize that  the  principles  of         natural  justice which are meant to .prevent miscarriage  of         justice are also applicable to domestic enquiries and admin-         istrative   proceedings  (See  A.K.  Karipak  v.  Union   of         India(2). It cannot also be disputed that one of the  funda-         mental  principles  of natural justice is that  in  case  of         quasi  judicial  proceedings,  the  authority  empowered  to         decide the  dispute         (t) [1943], 138F. 2nd 650 at 652.         (2)  [1969] 2 S.C.C. 262 :[1970] 1 S.C.R. 457  :A.I.R.  1970

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       S.C. 150.         68         between  opposing parties must be one without bias by  which         is meant an operative prejudice, whether conscious or uncon-         scious  towards one side or the other in the dispute.   (See         Nageswara Rao v.A.P. State Road Transport Corporation(1) and         Gullapalli  Nageshwar  Rao  v State of A.P.(2).             It  would be advantageous at this stage to refer to  the         following  observations made by this Court in Manak  Lal  v.         Prem Chand(3).                        "Every member of a tribunal that sits to  try                  issues   in judicial or  quasi-judical  proceedings                  must be able to act. judicially; and the essence of                  judicial  decisions and judicial administration  is                  that  judges  should be able  to  act  impartially,                  objectively  and without any bias.  In  such  cases                  the test is not whether in fact a bias has affected                  the judgment; the test always is and must be wheth-                  er  a  litigant could reasonably apprehend  that  a                  bias attributable’to a member of the tribunal might                  have operated against him in the final decision  of                  the tribunal.  It is in this sensethat it is  often                  said  that justice must not only be done  but  must                  also appear to be done."                      Again as held by this Court in A. K.  Karipak’s                  case   (supra),  reiterated in S.  Parthasarthi  v.                  State of Andhra Pradesh(4) and followed by the High                  Court  of Jarainu & Kashmir in Farooq Ahmed  Pandey                  and Ors. v. Principal Regional Engineering  College                  & Anr.(5) the real question is not whether a member                  of   an  administrative  Board   while   exercising                  quasi-judicial powers or discharging quasi-judicial                  functions was biased, for it is difficult to  prove                  the  mind  of  a person.  What has to  be  seen  is                  whether there is a reasonable ground for  believing                  that he was likely to have been biased.  In  decid-                  ing  the question of bias, human probabilities  and                  ordinary  course of human conduct have to be  taken                  into  consideration.  In a group  deliberation  and                  decision  like that of a Selection Board, the  mem-                  bers  do not function as computers. Each member  of                  the  group or board is bound to influence the  oth-                  ers,  more so if the member concerned is  a  person                  with  special  knowledge.  His bias  is  likely  to                  operate in a subtle manner.                      At  page 156 of "Principles  of  AdministratiVe                  Law"  by  J.A.G.  Griffith and  H.  Street  (Fourth                  Edition), the position with regard to bias is aptly                  and succinctly stated as follows :-                        "The  prohibition  of  bias  strikes  against                  factors  which may improperly influence a judge  in                  deciding in favour of one party.  The first of  the                  three  disabling types of bias is bias on the  sub-                  ject-matter.  Only rarely will this bias invalidate                  proceedings.   "A  mere  general  interest  in  the                  general object to be pursued would not disqualify,"                  said  Field J., holding that a magistrate who  sub-                  scribed to the Royal Society for the Prevention  of                  Cruelty to Animals was not thereby disabed                   (1)  [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 319 :A.I.R.  1959  S.C.                  308.                   (2) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 1376: [1960] 1 S.C.R. 580.                   (3) [1957] S.C.R. 575 :A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 425.                   (4) [1974] S.L.R. 427.                   (5) [1975] J & K.L.R. 427.

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                69                  from trying a charge brought by that body of cruel-                  ty  to a horse.  There must be some direct  connec-                  tion with the litigation.  If there is such  preju-                  dice,  on  the subject-matter that ,the  court  has                  reached  fixed  and  unalterable   conclusions  not                  founded  on reason or understanding, so that  there                  is  not a fair hearing, that is bias of  which  the                  courts  wilt take account, as where a  justice  an-                  nounced  his intention of convicting anyone  coming                  before  him on a charge of supplying  liquor  after                  the permitted hours  ...........                  Secondly,  a pecuniary interest,  however,   slight                  will disqualify, even though it is not proved  that                  the decision is in any way affected.                        The  third type of bias is personal bias.   A                  Judge may be a relative, friend or business associ-                  ate of a party, or he may be personally hostile  as                  a  result  of  events happening  either  before  or                  during the course of a trial.  The courts have  not                  been  consistent in laying down when bias  of  this                  type  will.  invalidate a hearing.   The  House  of                  Lords in Frome United Brewering v. Bath Justices(1)                  approved  an earlier  test of whether "there  is  a                  real  likelihood of bias."  the House of Lords  has                  since  approved  a  dictum  of   Lord  Hewart  that                  "justice  should  not  only be  done,,  but  should                  manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done"  al-                  though it did not mention another test suggested by                  him  in  the same judgment: Nothing is to  be  done                  which creates even a suspicion that there has  been                  an  improper interference with the course  of  jus-                  tice."                      At page 225 of his Treatise on "Judicial Review                  of  Administrative Action" (Third  Edition),  Prof.                  S.A. De Smith, has stated as follows with regard to                  Reports and Preliminary decisions :--                        "The  case-law on the point is thin,  but  on                  principle  it  would seem that where  a  report  or                  determination lacking final effect may nevertheless                  have  a  seriously judicial effect on  the  legally                  protected interests of individuals (e.g. when it is                  a  necessary  prerequisite of a  final  order)  the                  person  making the report or  preliminary  decision                  must  not be affected by interest or likelihood  of                  bias."             From the above discussion, it clearly follows that  what         has  to  be seen in a case where there is an  allegation  of         bias,  in respect of a member of an administrative Board  or         body  is whether there is a reasonable ground for  believing         that  he  was likely to have been biased.   In  other  words         whether  there is substantial possibility of bias  animating         the mind of the member against the aggrieved party.             We do not, however, consider it necessary in the present         case  to go into the question of the.reasonableness of  bias         or  real  likelihood or bias as despite the fact  that,  the         appellant  knew  all the relevant facts, he did  not  before         appearing for the interview or at the time  of the         (1) [1926] A.C. 586.         70         interview raise even his little finger against  the  consti-         tution.  of   the  Selection Committee.  He  seems  to  have         voluntarily appeared before the Committee and taken a chance         of having a favourable recommendation from it.  Having  done         so,  it is not. now open to him to turn round  and  question

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       the constitution of the Committee.  This view gains strength         from a decision of this Court in Manak Lal’s  case   (Supra)         where  in  more or less similar circumstances, it  was  held         that the failure of the appellant to take the identical plea         at the earlier stage of the proceedings created an effective         bar  of waiver against him. The following observations  made         therein are worth quoting:---                        "It  seems dear that the appellant wanted  to                  take  a chance to secure a favourable  report  from                  the  tribunal  which was constituted  and  when  he                  found  that he was confronted with an  unfavourable                  report,  he  adopted  the  device  of  raising  the                  present technical point."             It is also difficult to understand how the writ petition         or for that matter the present appeal before us is maintain-         able when the recommenlation of the Selection Committee  has         still  to be scrutinzed by the Excutive Council of the  Uni-         versity  and  either  accepted or rejected by  t  and  other         remedies by way of representation to. the Executive  Council         and an application for reference of the matter under section         68  of  the  Uttar  Pradesh  Universities  (Reenactment  and         Amendment) Act, 1974, 0 the Chancellor are still open to the         appellant and have not been. exmusted.             For  the foregoing reasons, we find ourselves unable  to         allow  the appeal.  In the result, the appeal fails  and  is         hereby dismissed but in the circumstances of the case  with-         out any order as to costs.         M.R.                                                  Appeal         dismissed.         71