PANCHI DEVI Vs STATE OF RAJASTHAN .
Bench: S.B. SINHA,CYRIAC JOSEPH, , ,
Case number: C.A. No.-007556-007557 / 2008
Diary number: 20446 / 2005
Advocates: SHANKAR DIVATE Vs
ITEM NO.202 COURT NO.4 SECTION XV S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal (Civil) No(s).21083-21084/2005 (From the judgement and order dated 15/12/1998 in D.B.Special Appeal No.295/1997 and final order dated 7.4.2005 in DBCRP No. 43/2004 in DBCSA No. 295/1997 of The HIGH COURT OF RAJASTHAN AT JAIPUR)
PANCHI DEVI Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS. Respondent(s) (With appln(s) for c/delay in filing SLP,exemption from filing c/c of the impugned Judgment,permission to place addl. documents on record and office report)(for final disposal)
Date: 18/12/2008 These Petitions were called on for hearing today.
CORAM : HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE S.B. SINHA HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE CYRIAC JOSEPH
For Petitioner(s) Ms. Nilofar Qureshi, Adv. Ms. Kiran Kapoor, Adv. Mr. Vipin Kumar, Adv.for
Mr. Shankar Divate,Adv.
For Respondent(s) Mr. Milind Kumar, Adv. Mr. Mukul Kumar, Adv.for
Mr. Aruneshwar Gupta,Adv. UPON hearing counsel the Court made the following O R D E R
Leave granted.
For the reasons given in the Reportable signed order, we are of the opinion that apart from the question of delay, even on merit, the appellant has no case.
The Appeals are dismissed accordingly.
(Parveen Kr. Chawla) Court Master
(Pushap Lata Bhardwaj) Court Master
[Reportable Signed Order is placed on the File]
REPORTABLE IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.7556-7557 OF 2008 (Arising out of SLP(C) Nos.21083-21084 of 2005)
Panchi Devi ..Appellant
versus
State of Rajasthan & Others ..Respondents
O R D E R
Leave granted.
Appellant's husband, who was working as work charge employee in the Public
Works Department in the year 1958 and confirmed on the said post vide order dated
22.8.1972 with effect from 31.3.1970, died in the year 1978. Appellant after 14 years of
her husband's death claimed family pension of her husband under Rule 22A of the
Rajasthan Public Works Department (B&R) including Garden, Irrigation, Water Works
and Ayurvedic Department Work Charge Employees Service Rules, 1964 (for short 'the
Rules) which came into force with effect from 17.09.1980. Since, no order was passed
on her representation, she filed a writ petition bearing No. 6890 of 1992 before the High
Court of Rajasthan, Jaipur Bench, Jaipur. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
dismissed the said writ petition. Appellant thereafter filed a Special Appeal bearing
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No. 295 of 1997 before the Division Bench of the High Court. By reason of the
impugned order dated 15.12.1998, the said Special Appeal has been dismissed, inter
alia, on the premise that the appellant had approached the High Court after 14 years of
her husband's death and since all the dues admissible to the appellant's husband were
duly settled during his life time and the widow of the deceased (appellant herein)
received all the dues including gratuity and, thus, the question of her entitlement to
family pension does not arise.
Being aggrieved, the appellant filed a review petition No.43 of 2004 along
with an application for condonation of delay. The said review application has also been
dismissed on the premise that the application for condonation of delay in filing the
review petition has been dismissed.
Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant, however, would draw
our attention to the fact that in the case of one Prabhati Devi, whose husband was also
working as a work charge employee and did not opt for pension, a learned Single Judge
of the same High Court held that the benefit of the said rule can be claimed even by the
widows whose husbands died prior to coming into force of the said Rules. Before the
said learned Judge, a contention was raised that the sub-rule (6) of Rule 22A having
prescribed a date namely 01.09.1982, the same was prospective in nature. The said
contention was
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repelled stating:
I am not impressed with the submission of learned Additional Advocate General that the widows of the work charged employees died
after September1, 1982 were only entitled to opt for pension. I do not find any difference between two widows to work charged employees, one who died prior to September 1, 1982 and another who died after the said date. Interpretation of sub rule (6) of Rule 22A, that discriminates between the two widows cannot be accepted. Language of sub rule (6) is very clear and it mandates that with effect from September 1, 1982 the widows of deceased work charged employees who were permanent and eligible for CPF but died without opting for pension, could also exercise option for pension.”
The special appeal filed by the State of Rajasthan against the order of the
learned Single Judge was dismissed as withdrawn by the High Court on the plea that
issue was settled by another Division Bench of the High Court in D.B.Civil Special
Appeal No.782 of 2002 titled State of Rajasthan vs. Girraj, decided on 03rd January,
2003.
The Rajasthan High Court did not declare the said provision to be ultra vires.
Prior to insertion of Rule 22A by way of amendment in the Rules, there was no
provision for grant of pensionary benefits to the employees who retired as work charge
employees. The amendment was made vide notification dated September 17, 1980. It
was provided by Rule 22 that a work charge employee having been or on being
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declared permanent on completing 10 years service shall have the option to elect either
to continue to contribute towards contributory provident fund or to opt for pensionary
benefits. Sub-clause (iv) of the said rule provides that the option shall have to be
exercised in writing within a period of six months from the date of amended rule came
into force from 17.08.1980. Vide notification dated December 11, 1989 sub-rule (6) was
added in Rule 22 which was made effective from September 1, 1982, in terms whereof
widows of the work charged employees were also given the liberty to exercise such
option.
The State, therefore, had indisputably made the said rules applicable with a
prospective effect i.e. from 1.9.1982. If that be so, the question of grant of any benefit
in favour of the appellant herein did not and could not arise as admittedly her husband
died in the year 1978. The question of exercising the right of option, as provided for,
under rule 22A would arise only if the employees were eligible therefor on the date of
coming into force thereof. It has not been given retrospective effect. As no
retrospective effect to the rule has been given, the question of extending the benefit
thereto to those who were not otherwise entitled thereto does not and cannot arise. A
delegated legislation, as is well known, is ordinarily prospective in nature. A right or a
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liability which was created for the first time, cannot be given a retrospective effect.
Furthermore, the intention of the State in giving a prospective effect to that rule is clear
and explicit; the amendment in Rule 22A was also to be effective from 1.9.1982 itself.
No relief can be granted to the appellant herein on the basis of the decision in Prabhati
Devi (supra). The said decision did not lay down the correct law. Article 14 of the
Constitution of India has a positive concept. Equality, it is trite, cannot be claimed in
illegality. Even otherwise the writ petition as also the review petition have rightly not
been entertained on the ground of delay and laches on the part of the appellant.
For the reasons aforementioned, we are of the opinion that apart from the
question of delay, even on merit, the appellant has no case.
The Appeals are dismissed accordingly.
.........................J. [S.B. SINHA]
NEW DELHI; ..........................J. DECEMBER 18, 2008. [CYRIAC JOSEPH]