04 October 1991
Supreme Court
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R.S.RAGHUNATH Vs STATE OF KARNATAKA

Bench: KULDIP SINGH (J)
Case number: C.A. No.-005617-005617 / 1990
Diary number: 73825 / 1990
Advocates: Vs M. VEERAPPA


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PETITIONER: R.S. RAGHUNATH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF KARNATAKA AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT04/10/1991

BENCH: KULDIP SINGH (J) BENCH: KULDIP SINGH (J) REDDY, K. JAYACHANDRA (J) YOGESHWAR DAYAL (J)

CITATION:  1992 AIR   81            1991 SCR  Supl. (1) 387  1992 SCC  (1) 335        JT 1991 (4)    82  1991 SCALE  (2)808

ACT:     Service Law: Karnataka Civil Services (General  Recruit- ment) Rules, 1977--(General Rules)/Karnataka General Service (Motor  Vehicles Branch) Recruitment  Rules,  1976--(Special Rules)  Promotion  to  the post of  Deputy  Commissioner  of Transport--New   Rule   3  (2)  inserted  in   the   General Rule--Stipulating  seniority-cum-merit as  basis---  Special Rules  providing  selection as  basis--Whether  the  General Rules override the Special Rules,     Non-obstante clause---Whether has the effect of abrogat- ing the earlier Special law. Statutory Construction:     Non-obstante clause--Scope of--Whether to be necessarily and  always co-extensive with operative  portion--Courts  to examine  every word in its context and use it in its  widest sense,

HEADNOTE:     The  appellant was initially appointed as  Inspector  of Motor Vehicles and was promoted as Assistant Regional Trans- port  Officer  In 1976, when the Karnataka  General  Service (Motor  Vehicles Branch) (Recruitment) Rules, 1976  were  in force.   Karnataka  Civil  Services  (General   Recruitment) Rules,  1977 came into being thereafter. The  appellant  was promoted as Regional Transport Officer in 1981. The  General Rules of 1977 were amended in 1982 and sub-rule (2) of  Rule 3  was  inserted, and as per the new Rule  3(2)  the  second Respondent was promoted as Deputy Commissioner of  Transport on seniority-cum-merit basis.     The  appellant  filed an Application  before  the  State Administrative  Tribunal  questioning the promotion  of  the second  Respondent on the ground that promotion to the  post of Deputy Commissioner of Transport should have been made by selection  and  not on seniority-cure-merit basis.  He  also sought a declaration that the promotion of Respondent No.  2 was illegal and Respondent No.1 be directed to consider  the case  of the appellant for promotion to the post  of  Deputy Transport Commissioner with all consequential benefits.  The Tribunal dismissed the application on 388

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the  ground that Rule 3(2) of the General Rules,  which  was introduced  later, had the effect of overriding the  earlier special Rules, and hence the promotion made as per Rule 3(2) of the General Rule was valid.     Aggrieved  by the Tribunal’s order, the  appellant  pre- ferred the present appeal, by special leave.     On  behalf  of the appellant it was contended  that  the Special Rules were exclusively meant to govern the  recruit- ment  and  promotion of officers of various  cadres  of  the Motor Vehicles Department and the General Rules which gener- ally  regulate the recruitment of all State  Civil  Services broadly  even though later in point of time cannot  abrogate the  Special  Rules and that they were not meant  to  be  so since  the Special Rules were not superseded and  were  very much in force.     The  Respondent-State  contended that  the  non-obstante clause  in Rule 3(2) of the General Rules which  was  intro- duced  later clearly indicate the intention of the  Legisla- ture to supersede the Special Rules and promotions from  the cadre  of Regional Transport Officer to that of Deputy  Com- missioner of Transport could only be on the basis of senior- ity-cum-merit and not by selection. Allowing the appeal, this Court, HELD: (By the Court)     Sub-rule  (2)  of  Rule 3 of  Karnataka  Civil  Services (General  Recruitment) Rules, 1977- (General Rules) has  the overriding effect over the Karnataka General Service  (Motor Vehicles Branch) (Recruitment) Rules, 1976--(Special Rules). [400 D,E] Per Majority (By Reddy, J.-Kuldip Singh, .1. concurring)     1.   Examining the scope of Rule 3(2) particularly along with other General Rules, the context in which Rule 3(2)  is made  is  very  clear. It is not enacted  to  supersede  the Special Rules. [403-G]     2.1  The non-obstante clause is appended to a  provision with  a view to give the enacting part of the  provision  an overriding  effect  in case of a conflict. But  the  non-ob- stante  clause need not necessarily and always be  co-exten- sive  with  the operative part so as to have the  effect  of cutting down               389 the  clear  terms of an enactment and if the  words  of  the enactment  are clear and are capable of a clear  interpreta- tion  on a plain and grammatical construction of  the  words the non-obstante clause cannot cut down the construction and restrict the scope of its operation. In such cases the  non- obstante  clause  has  to be read as  clarifying  the  whole position and must be understood to have been incorporated in the enactment by the Legislature by way of abundant  caution and  not by way of limiting the ambit and scope of the  Spe- cial Rules. Courts should examine every word of a statute in its  context and use it in its widest sense. [402  E-G;  403 -B]     2.2  There should be a clear inconsistency  between  the two  enactments  before giving an overriding effect  to  the non-obstante clause but when the scope of the provisions  of an earlier enactment is clear the same cannot be cut down by resort to non- obstante clause. [403 G-H]     23  Even  the General Rules of which Rule 3(2)  forms  a part provide for promotion by selection. As a matter of fact Rules 1(3)(a), 3(1) and 4 also provide for the enforceabili- ty  of  the Special Rules. The very Rule 3  of  the  General Rules  which  provides  for recruitment  also  provides  for promotion by selection and further lays down that the  meth- ods  of  recruitment shall be as specified  in  the  Special

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Rules,  if  any.  The object of these Rules  is  to  provide broadly  for recruitment to services of all the  departments and  they are framed generally to cover situations that  are not  covered by the Special Rules of any particular  depart- ment.  In  such a situation both the Rules  including  Rules 1(3)(a), 3(1) and 4 of General Rules should be read  togeth- er. If so read it becomes plain that there is no  inconsist- ency  and that amendment by inserting Rule 3(2) is  only  an amendment to the General Rules and it cannot be  interpreted as  to supersede the Special Rules. The Amendment also  must be read as being subject to Rules 1(3)(a), 3(1) and 4(2)  of the  General Rules themselves. The amendment cannot be  read as  abrogating  all other Special Rules in  respect  of  all departments. [403 H; 404 A-D]     2.4    Where there are no special rules to naturally the General  Rules would be applicable. Just because there is  a non-obstante  clause in Rule 3(2) it cannot  be  interpreted that  the said ammendment to the General Rules though  later in  point of time would abrogate the special rule the  scope of which is very clear and which co-exists particularly when no  patent conflict or inconsistency can be spelt out.  [404 D-E] 390     Maharaja Pratap Singh Bahadur v. Thakur Manmohan Dey and Ors., AIR 1966 SC 1931; Justiniane Augusto De Piedade Barre- to  v. Antonic Vicente Da Fonseca and Others etc.  [1979]  3 SCC 47, relied on.     Muniswamy v. Superintendent of Police, ILR 1986 Karnata- ka 344, approved.     Eileen  Louise Nicolle v. John Winter Nicolle, (1922)  I AC  284; In Re Chance, (1936) Ch. 266; Kunter  v.  Phillips, (1891) 2 Q.B. 267, referred to.     3. There is no doubt that a later statute may repeal  an earlier  one  either  expressly or by  implication.  In  the instant case there is no express repeal of the Special  Rule providing  for  promotion by selection. There is  no  patent inconsistency  between the General and Special Rules but  on the  other hand they co-exist. Therefore, there is no  scope whatsoever to infer the repeal by implication. [405 B,F]     Aswini  Kumar Ghosh and Ant. v. Arabinda Bose  and  Ant, [1953] SCR 1; The Dominion of India (Now the Union of India) and  Anr.  v. Shrinbai A. Irani and Anr, AIR  1954  SC  596; Union  of  India andAnother v. G.M. Kokil  and  Ors.  [1984] Suppl.  SCR 196; Chandavarkar Site Ratna Rao  v.Ashalata  S. Guram,  [1986] 4 SCC 447; State of West Bengal v.  Union  of India,  [1964]  1  SCR 371; Reserve Bank of  India  etc.  v. Peerless  General  Finance and Investment Co.  Ltd.  &  Ors, [1987]  1 SCC 424; Municipal Council Palai v.  T.J.  Joseph, AIR 1963 SC 1561, relied on.     Muniswamy v. Superintendent of Police, ILR 1986 Karnata- ka 344, approved.     Maxwell  on  The Interpretation  of  Statutes,  Eleventh Edition page 168, relied on.     4.  The Government is directed to consider the  case  of the  appellant for promotion to the post of  Deputy  Commis- sioner of Transport on the basis of promotion by  selection, as  provided in the Special Rules namely  Karnataka  General Service  (Motor Vehicles Branch) (Recruitment) Rules,  1976. [405 F-G]     Per  Yogeshwar  Dayal, J. (dissenting): 1. It  is  clear from  Rule  1 (3)(a) of the General Rules that  the  General Rules apply to recruitment to all State Services and to  all posts in connection with the affairs of the State. A perusal of different rules in the General Rules makes it clear  that the

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391 general  provisions which apply to recruitment to all  posts under the Government are specified in those Rules instead of repeating  them in each and every Special Rules of  recruit- ment relating to different departments. It would be impossi- ble  to limit the application of the General Rules only  for recruitment  to posts for which no Special Rules  have  been made. Thus Rule 1(3) of the General Rules which accepted the applicability  of Special Rules is itself a part of  General Rules  and the non-obstante clause is not merely to what  is mentioned  to  the contrary in the Special Rules but  it  is also notwithstanding anything contained in the General Rules itself. [410 B-D; 411 G]     2.  By the wording of rule 3(2) of the General Rules  it is  clear that the Government took conscious and  deliberate policy  decision  and gave a mandate to make only  posts  of Head  of  Departments,  Additional Head  of  Departments  as selection  posts  and all other posts on promotion  will  be filled  by adopting the criterion of  "seniority-cum-merit". To  give effect to that policy decision instead of  amending every  Special  Rules of recruitment relating  to  different State Civil Services, the Government made a provision in the General Rules by incorporating a non-obstante clause   stat- ing  that it would  apply  to  all services and  posts  not- withstanding  the provisions in the General Rules or in  the Special Rules of the State. [410 E-G]     3.1 The selection of ’best’ very often has an element of chance which may not be very conducive to proper climate and harmony in service. Probably because of that experience  the rule  making  authority thought it fit that the  process  of promotion by selection should be confined only to top  posts and for rest of the posts the method should be promotion  by adopting  the principle of seniority-cure-merit. There is  a clear mandate of latest intention of the rule making author- ity  contained  in Rule 3(2) of the General Rules  and  this must be respected by the Court. Court is not expert body  in knowing what is the best method for selection and to  assume that the purest method must be found by the Court and imple- mented  even  by violation of the Rule, will  not  be  sound rule of construction of statute. [412 D-F]     3.2  It is not the function of the Court to examine  the efficacy  of one form of selection or the other. It  is  for the recruiting authority, namely, the Government to  examine it and enforce it in the way it Likes. [413 C] 392     3.3    In  the  present case the respondent  No.  2  was promoted after the amendment of Rule 3 of the General  Rules and  there  is no dispute about his recruitment  by  way  of promotion  on the basis of seniority-cum-merit and that  the earlier  Special Rules which contemplated the  promotion  by selection were not followed in view of the latest  intention clearly given by a positive mandate. [411 G-H]     3.4    As laid down by this Court in Ajay  Kumar  Baner- jee’s case a prior special law would yield to a later gener- al  law if it satisfies either of the two  conditions  viz., that  the two are inconsistent with each other;, that  there is some express reference in the later to the earlier enact- ment.  In  the instant case, the  special  law  contemplated promotion  by ’selection’ whereas the later law, viz.,  Rule 3(2)   of   the  general  law  contemplated   promotion   by seniority-cum-merit.  The  two are  inconsistent  with  each other  and if fulfills the first condition. Since  the  non- obstante  clause in the later general law specifically  men- tions  its efficacy inspite of the Special Law,  the  second condition  is also fulfilled. Thus, in this case, the  later

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general  law prevails over the earlier Special  Law,  having fulfilled not one but both the conditions. [413 F-H; 414  A- B]     3.5   It was for the legislature to choose the method to indicate  its intention. The Courts should not defeat  their intention  by  over-looking it. Respondent No.  2  has  been selected for promotion by following the General Rules amend- ing the Special Rules and it was strictly in accordance with law. [414 C-D]     Ajay Kumar Banerjee and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors., [1984] 3 SCC 127, relied on.     Maharaja Pratap Singh Bahadur v. Man Mohan Dev, AIR 1966 SC  1931;  Muniswamv v. Superintendent of Police,  ILR  1986 Karnataka 344, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 5617 of 1990.     From the Judgment and Order dated 9.8.1990 of the Karna- taka  Administrative Tribunal, Bangalore in Application  No. 3155 of 1989.     P.P.  Rao,  S.R. Bhat, Alok Aggarwal and Ms.  Mohini  L. Bhat 1or the Appellant. 393     P.  Chidambaram, M. Veerappa (N.P.) and K.H Nobin  Singh for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     KULDIP  SINGH,  J. Even the General Law later  in  time, prevails  over  the earlier Special Law if  it  clearly  and directly  supersedes the said Special Law’-- is an  unexcep- tionable  proposition of law. K. Jayachandra Reddy,  J.  has interpreted  Rule  3(2) of General Rules  consistently  with Rules  1(3)(a),  3(1)  and 4(2) of the  same  Rules.  Giving harmonious construction to various provisions of the General Rules  the learned Judge has held that the General Rules  do not supersede the Special Rules. Yogeshwar Dayal, J. on  the other hand has focused his attention on the language of Rule 3(2)  of the General Rules and has concluded that  there  is clear  indication in the said Rule to supersede the  Special Rules.     I have given my thoughtful consideration to the  reason- ing adopted by the learned Judges in their respective  judg- ments.   Rule 1(3)(a) of the General Rules, which lays  down the extent and applicability of the General Rules,  specifi- cally provides that the General Rules shall not be  applica- ble to the State Civil Services for which there are  express provisions  under any law for the time being in force.  When the  General  Rules  were enforced the  Special  Rules  were already  holding the field. The Special Rules  being   "law" the  application  of the General Rules is  excluded  to  the extent the field is occupied by the Special Rules. I do  not agree  that  the  non-obstante clause in Rule  3(2)  of  the General  Rules has an overriding effect on Rule, 1(3)(a)  of the said Rules. With utmost respect to the erudite  judgment prepared  by Yogeshwar Dayal, J. I prefer the reasoning  and the  conclusions  reached by K. Jayachandra  Reddy,  J.  and agree with the judgment proposed by him.     K.JAYACHANDRA REDDY, J.  This appeal is directed against the order of the Administrative Tribunal, Bangalore dismiss- ing  an  application filed by the appellant.  The  principal question involved is whether SubRule (2) of Rule 3 of Karna- taka  Civil  Services  (General  Recruitment)  Rules,   1977 (’General  Rules’ for short) has the overriding effect  over

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the  Karnataka  General  Service  (Motor  Vehicles   Branch) (Recruitment) Rules, 1976 (’Special Rules’ for short).     For  a  better appreciation of the question  it  becomes necessary  to state few facts. The appellant  was  appointed initially as Inspector of Motor’ Vehicle and was promoted as Assistant Regional Transport Officer in the 394 year  1976 in which year the Special Rules were  framed.  In the year 1981 the appellant was promoted as Regional  Trans- port Officer. Some of the General Rules of 1977 were amended in  the year 1982 and Sub-Rule 2 of Rule 3 was  inserted  in the  said Rules. In the year 1989 the second respondent  was promoted  as Deputy Commissioner of Transport on  seniority- cure-merit basis alone as purported to have been provided in new Rule 3(2) of General Rules. Being aggrieved by the  same the  appellant filed an Application No. 3155/89  before  the Karnataka Administrative Tribunal questioning the  promotion of second respondent on the ground that the promotion to the post of Deputy Commissioner of Transport should be by selec- tion  from the cadre of Regional Transport Officers and  not merely  on  seniority-cum-merit basis. His  application  was dismissed by the Tribunal holding that Rule 3(2) of  General Rules  which  was  introduced later  overrides  the  earlier Special Rules. It is this order which is questioned in  this appeal.     Shri P.P. Rao, learned counsel appearing for the  appel- lant contended that the Special Rules are exclusively  meant to  govern  the  recruitment and promotion  of  officers  of various  cadres  of  the Motor Vehicle  Department  and  the General  Rules which generally regulate the  recruitment  of all State Civil Services broadly even though later in  point of time cannot abrogate the Special Rules and that they  are not  meant  to do so since the Special Rules also  are  very much  in force inasmuch as they are not superseded. Shri  P. Chidambaram,  learned  counsel for the  State  of  Karnataka contended  that the non-obstante clause in Rule 3(2) of  the General  Rules which was introduced later  clearly  indicate the  intention  of he Legislature to supersede  the  Special Rules  and promotions from the cadre of  Regional  Transport Officer  to that of Deputy Commissioner of  Transport  could only  be  on  the basis of seniority-cam-merit  and  not  by election.  From  the rival contentions it emerges  that  the real  question  involved is one of construction  of  non-ob- stante  clause  in Rule 3(2) and its fleet  on  the  Special Rules providing for promotion to the post of Deputy -Commis- sioner of Transport by selection from the cadre of  Regional Transport Officers.     We  shall now refer to the relevant Special and  General Rules.  The  special Rules were framed in  exercise  of  the powers  conferred by the proviso to Article 309 of the  Con- stitution  of India in the year 1976. The special  Rules  of recruitment for the category of post of Deputy  Commissioner of Transport reads thus: 395    Category of       Method of          Minimum    posts             recruitment        Qualification 1.                  2.                   3. Deputy  Transport   By promotion by       Must have  put  in not Commissioner        selection  from the     less  than  five years of                    cadre of Regional     service in cadre of                    Transport Officers    Regional Transport                                          Officers."     It  can be seen that this part of Special Rules  clearly

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provides for promotion to the post of Deputy Commissioner of Transport by selection from the cadre of Regional  Transport Officers  who have put in not less than five years of  serv- ice. The General Rules were framed in the year 1977 and Rule 3 reads as under:               "Method of recruitment-(1) Except as otherwise               provided  in  these rules or any  other  rules               specially made in this behalf,  recruitment to               any  service or post shall be made  by  direct               recruitment which may be either by competitive               examination  or by selection, or by  promotion               which  may  be either by selection or  on  the               basis  of seniority- cure- merit. The  methods               of recruitment and qualifications shall be  as               specified in the rules of recruitment special-               ly made in that behalf,’                        provided  that in respect  of  direct               recruitment  to any service or post  when  the               method of recruitment is not specified in  the               rules  of  recruitment  specially  made,   the               method of recruitment be by selection after an               interview  by the Commission, the Advisory  of               Selection Committee or the Appointing Authori-               ty as the case may be.               Provided  further  that  no  person  shall  be               eligible for promotion unless he has satisfac-               torily  completed the period of  probation  or               officiation,  as the case may be, in the  post               held by him.               (2)  Notwithstanding  anything  contained   in               these  rules  or in the rules  of  recruitment               specially made in respect of any service or               (a)  the  promotion  to the post  of  Head  of               Department or the               396               post  of an Additional Head of Department,  if               it  is  in a grade equivalent to that  of  the               Head  of  Department concerned,  shall  be  by               selection;               Provided that for the purpose of promotion  by               selection, the number of persons to be consid-               ered shall be such number of persons  eligible               for promotion in the order of seniority, as is               equal to five times the number of vacancies to               be filled.               (b) the promotion to all other posts shall  be               on the basis of seniority-cam-merit."               (Emphasis supplied)  It  may be noted that Sub-Rule 3(2) with  which we are mainly concerned was inserted in the year 1982. Shri Chidam- baram  strongly relying on the non-obstante clause  in  Rule 3(2)  with which this Sub-Rule begins, contended  that  this general  rule dearly supersedes the special law  and  there- fore,  according to him, the Tribunal was right  in  holding that  the  promotion to the post of Deputy  Commissioner  of Transport could be only on the basis of seniority-cum-merit. It is true that a simple reading of Rule 3(2) appears to lay down that notwithstanding anything contained in the  General Rules or in the Special Rules, the promotion to the post  of a  Head or Additional Head of a Department only shall be  by selection and that the promotion to all other posts shall be on  the  basis Of seniority- cum-merit. This clause  (b)  of Sub-Rule  (2) is in general terms and as already  noted  the General  Rules indicate that they regulate general  recruit- ment  to all the Karnataka State Civil Services broadly.  It

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is not in dispute that just like the Special Rules providing for  recruitment of the Transport Department there are  such special rules in respect of many other departments also.  It is therefore clear that while General Rules broadly indicate that  they regulate general recruitment including  promotion to  all the State Civil Services but at the same  time  each Department has its own Special Rules of recruitment and they are  co-existing. Such Special Rules of recruitment for  the Motor Vehicles Department are not repealed by any  provision of the General Rules which are later in point of time. As  a matter of fact Rule 21 which provides for repeal does not in any  manner  indicate that any of the  Special  Rules  stood repealed. It is in this background that we have to  consider the  interpretation of non-obstante clause in Rule  3(2)  of the General Rules.     At  this juncture it is necessary to note that  some  of the rules of the General Rules also provide for promotion by way  of selection and that Special Rules providing for  such promotion by selection should be adhered 397 to. They are Rule 1(3)(a), the first part of Rule 3 and Rule 4  which  are existing. In Sub-rule 1(3)(a) of  the  General Rules, we find the following               "1(3)(a)  These rules shall apply to  recruit-               ment to all State Services and to all posts in               connection  with the affairs of the  State  of               Karnataka  and to members of all  State  Civil               Services  and to the holders of posts  whether               temporary  or permanent except to  the  extent               otherwise expressly provided-               (i) by or under any law for the time being  in               force; or               XX                                      XX               (emphasis supplied)     This  is  the opening rule of the General Rules  and  it abundantly  makes  it clear that the rest of the  rules  are subject to any other rules expressly providing for  recruit- ment. Then in clause (1) of Rule (3) of the General Rules we find the words "Except as otherwise provided in these  Rules or any other rules specially made in this behalf recruitment to any  service or post shall be made by direct  recruitment which may be either by competitive examination or by  selec- tion or by promotion which may be either by selection or  on the  basis of seniority-cum-merit.  The methods of  recruit- ment and qualification shall be as specified in the rule  of recruitment  specially  made in that behalf." This  part  of General Rule 3 provides for recruitment by way of  promotion either  by selection or on the basis of  seniority-cum-merit as  specified  in the said Rules  of  recruitment  specially made.   Further the opening words of clause (1)  "Except  as otherwise  provided in these Rules or any other  Rules  spe- cially made" give a clue that the special rules would govern and  regulate the method of recruitment including  promotion by  way  of selection. Further Rule 4 of the  General  Rules which  lays down the procedure of appointment contains  Sub- Rule 2 which reads as under:               "4. Procedure of appointment - subject to  the               provisions  of   these rules,  appointment  to               any service or post shall be made -                   xxxx           xxxx      xxxx               (2) in the case of recruitment by promotion --               (a) if it is to a post to be filled by  promo-               tion by, selection, by selection of a               398               person, on the basis of merit and  suitability

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             in  all respects to discharges the  duties  of               the  post  with due regard to  seniority  from               among persons eligible for promotion.               (b)  if  it is to a post other than  that  re-               ferred to in sub-clause (a) by selection of  a               person  on the basis of  seniority-cure-merit,               that  is, seniority subject to fitness of  the               candidate to discharge the duties of the post,               from among persons eligible for promotion."               (emphasis supplied)      Though  Rule  3(2)  of the General  Rules  is  inserted later, the above mentioned Rules remain undisturbed and they co-exist.  They  provide for recruitment  and  promotion  by selection  to certain categories of posts and for others  on the  basis of seniority-cure-merit. From a combined  reading of  these  provisions of General Rules it follows  that  re- cruitment  to any service     by promotion as  regulated  by Special Rules can be by way of selection. "Then the question is  whether Rule 3(2) of the General Rules which  is  intro- duced in 1982 particularly providing the method of promotion by  selection to the post of heads and additional  heads  of departments  has altogether dispensed with the promotion  by selection  to all other posts and whether, the  non-obstante clause  in this rule, in these circumstances can  be  inter- preted as to have the overriding effect as contended by  the learned counsel for the respondents. The non-obstante clause is  sometimes appended to a section or a rule in the  begin- ning  with a view to give the enacting part of that  section or rule in case of conflict, an overriding effect  over  the provisions or act mentioned in that clause. Such a clause is usually  used  in the provision to indicate  that  the  said provision should prevail despite anything to the contrary in the provision mentioned in such  non-obstante clause. But it has to be noted at this stage that we are concerned with the enforceability of special law on the subject inspire of  the general  law. In Maxwell on the Interpretation or  Signites, Eleventh  Edition   at page 168, this principle  of  law  is stated as under:               "A  general  later law does  not  abrogate  an               earlier  special  one  by  mere   implication.               Generalia  specialibus  non derogant,  or,  in               other words," where there are general words in               a later Act capable of reasonable and sensible               application without extending them to subjects               specially  dealt with by earlier  legislation,               you  are not to hold that earlier and  special               legislation  indirectly repealed, altered,  or               derogated from merely by force of such               399               general  words,  without any indication  of  a               particular  intention to do so. In such  cases               it  is presumed to have only general cases  in               view, and not particular cases which have been               already otherwise provided for by the  special               Act."      In Maharaja Pratap Singh Bahadur v. Thakur Manmohan Dey and ors. ,AIR 1966 S.C. 1931, applying this principle it  is held that general law does not abrogate earlier special  law by mere implication. In Eileen Louise Nicoole v. John Winter Nicolle, [1992] 1 AC 284, Lord Phillimore observed as under:                     "It  is a sound principle of all  juris-               prudence  that a prior particular law  is  not               easily to be held to be abrogated by a  poste-               rior  law, expressed in general terms  and  by               the  apparent generality of its  language  ap-

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             plicable to and covering a number of cases, of               which the particular law is but one. This,  as               a  matter of jurisprudence, as  understood  in               England, has been laid down in a great  number               of cases, whether the prior law be an               express  statute, or be the underlying  common               or  customary     law of  the  country.  Where               general words in a later Act are       capable               of reasonable and sensible application without               extending  them  to subjects  specially  dealt               with by earlier legislation,  that earlier and               special  legislation is not to be  held  indi-               rectly        repealed, altered, or  derogated               from merely by force of such               general  words,  without any indication  of  a               particular intention to do so."     In  Justiniane  Augusto De Piedade  Barreto  v.  Antonio Vicente  Da Fortseca and others etc., [1979] 3 SCC 47,  this Court  observed that A law which is essentially  general  in nature may contain special provisions on certain matters and in  respect  of these matters it would be  classified  as  a special  law. Therefore unless the special law is  abrogated by  express repeal or by making provisions which arc  wholly inconsistent with it, the special law cannot be held to have been abrogated by mere implication.     I have already noted that even in the General Rules  the promotion by selection is provided for and if there are  any special  rules in that regard they are not abrogated  except by an express repeal.     I  shall now examine whether the interpretation of  non- obstante  clause in Rule 3(2) of the General Rules as  given by  the Tribunal is warranted.  The Tribunal has  held  that the non-obstante clause which was 400 introduced in the General Rules clearly indicates the inten- tion  to  supersede the special law. The Tribunal  has  also noted even a later general law provision can override earli- er  special  law if it clearly indicates  the  intention  to supersede  the  special  law. As a proposition  of  law  one cannot dispute this part of the finding but I am not able to agree with the finding of the Tribunal that the non-obstante clause in Rule 3(2) clearly abrogates earlier special law.     This  very  question was considered  by  Karnataka  High Court  in  Muniswamy v. Superintendent of Police,  ILR  1986 Karnataka 344 (Vol. 36). In that case also the same  General Rules and particularly Rule 3(2) inserted later came up  for consideration.  The  Special Rules were  that  of  Karnataka State  Police State Recruitment Rules, 1967.   The  Director General  of  Police  issued a circular for  the  purpose  of recruitment of Head Constables on purely seniority-cum-merit basis.  It was contended that the posts of the Head  Consta- bles  have  to  be filled up by promotion  by  selection  as provided  in the Special Rules and Rule 3(2) of the  General Rules  cannot  have an overriding effect inspire of  a  non- obstante  clause. The Division Bench of the  Karnataka  High Court held that Sub-rule (2) of Rule (3) which is an  amend- ment to the General Rules cannot be treated as an  amendment to  the  Special Police Rules and that Rule 3(2)  cannot  be read  as amending all other special rules of recruitment  of all  other  department  of Government in  general.  It  also further  observed that this amendment to the  General  Rules must  be  read as subordinate to the  application  of  Rules declared  by  Rule 1(3) of the Rules and cannot be  read  as enlarging  the  scope. This judgment rendered  by  the  High Court  in the year 1986 has become final. The fact that  the

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State did not appeal or repeal the Special Rules suitably in spite  of  the decision clinchingly shows that  it  accepted this position.     In  Aswini Kumar Ghosh and Another v. Arabinda Bose  and Another, [1953] SCR 1, it was observed as under:               "It  should  first  be  ascertained  what  the               enacting  part  of the section provides  on  a               fair construction of the words used  according               to their natural and ordinary meaning, and the               non  obstante  clause is to be  understood  as               operating  to  set aside as  no  longer  valid               anything  contained in relevant existing  laws               which is inconsistent with the new enactment." It was further held that: 401               "Nor  can we read the non obstante  clause  as               specifically  repealing  only  the  particular               provisions which the learned Judges below have               been at pains to pick out from the Bar   Coun-               cils  Act and the Original Side Rules  of  the               Calcutta,  and Bombay High Courts. If,  as  we               have pointed out, the enacting part of section               2  covers all Advocates of the Supreme  Court,               the non obstante clause can reasonably be read               as  overriding  "anything  contained"  in  any               relevant  existing law which  is  inconsistent               with the new enactment, although the draftsman               appears  to have had primarily in his  mind  a               particular type of law as conflicting with the               new Act. The enacting part of a statute  must,               where it is clear, be taken to control the non               obstante  clause  where both  cannot  be  read               harmoniously;   for,  even  apart  from   such               clause,  a  later law abrogates  earlier  laws               clearly inconsistent with it. Posteriors leges               priores  contrarias abrogant  (Broomo’s  Legal               Maxims, 10th Edn., p.347)."               (emphasis supplied)     In  The Dominion of India (Now the Union of  India)  and another v. Shribai A. Irani and another, AIR 1954 S,C.  596, it was observed as under:               "While recognising the force of this  argument               it  is however necessary to observe  that  al-               though  ordinarily  there should  be  a  close               approximation between the non-obstante  clause               and  the  operative part of the  section,  the               non-obstante  clause need not necessarily  and               always  be  co-extensive  with  the  operative               part, so as to have the effect of cutting down               the clear terms of an enactment.  If the words               of the enactment are clear and are capable  of               only  one interpretation on a plain and  gram-               matical  construction of the words  thereof  a               non-  obstante  clause  cannot  cut  down  the               construction  and  restrict the scope  of  its               operation.  In  such  cases  the  non-obstante               clause has to be read as clarifying the  whole               position  and must be understood to have  been               incorporated in the enactment by the  Legisla-               ture by way of abundant caution and not by way               of limiting the ambit and scope of the  opera-               tive part of the enactment".               (emphasis supplied) In  Union  of India and Another. v. G.M. Kokil and  0  hers. [1984]

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402 Suppl. SCR 196, it was observed as under:               "It  is well-known that a non obstante  clause               is  a  legislative  device  which  is  usually               employed to give overriding effect to  certain               provisions over some contrary provisions  that               may  be found either in the same enactment  or               some other enactment, that is to say, to avoid               the  operation  and  effect  of  all  contrary               provisions."     In  Chandavarkar Sita Ratna Rao v. Ashalata S. Guram,  [ 1986]  4  SCC 447, the scope of non-obstante clause  is  ex- plained in the following words:               "A   clause  beginning  with  the   expression               "notwithstanding  anything contained  in  this               Act or in some particular provision in the Act               or  in some particular Act or in any  law  for               the  time being in force, or in any  contract"               is  more often than not appended to a  section               in  the  beginning  with a view  to  give  the               enacting  part of the section in case of  con-               flict an overriding effect over the  provision               of  the Act or the contract mentioned  in  the               non  obstante  clause.  It  is  equivalent  to               saying  that in spite of the provision of  the               Act  or  any other Act mentioned  in  the  non               obstante  clause or any contract  or  document               mentioned the enactment following it will have               its  full  operation or  that  the  provisions               embraced in the non obstante clause would  not               be  an  impediment  for an  operation  of  the               enactment."     On a conspectus of the above authorities it emerges that the  non-obstante clause is appended to a provision  with  a view to give the enacting part of the provision an  overrid- ing  effect  in  case of a conflict.  But  the  non-obstante clause need not necessarily and always be co-extensive  with the operative part so as to have the effect of cutting  down the  clear  terms of an enactment and if the  words  of  the enactment  are clear and are capable of a clear  interpreta- tion  on a plain and grammatical construction of  the  words the non-obstante clause cannot cut down the construction and restrict the scope of its operation. In Such cases the  non- obstante  clause  has  to be read as  clarifying  the  whole position and must be understood to have been incorporated in the enactment by the Legislature by way of abundant  caution and  not by way of limiting the ambit and scope of the  Spe- cial Rules.     Further,  the influence of a non-obstante clause has  to be  considered on the basis of the context also in which  it is used. In State of West Bengal v. Union of India, [1964] 1 SCR 371, it is observed as under:               "The Court must ascertain the intention of the               legislature by               403               directing  its  attention not  merely  to  the               clauses  to  be construed but  to  the  entire               statute;  it must compare the clause with  the               other  parts  of the law and  the  setting  in               which the clause to be interpreted occurs."     It  is also well-settled that the Court  should  examine every word of a statute in its context and to use context in its widest sense. In Reserve Bank of India etc. v.  Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd. & Ors.. [1987] 1 SCC 424, it is observed that "That interpretation is best  which

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makes  the textual interpretation match the contextual".  In this  case, Chinnapa Reddy, J. noting the importance of  the context in which every word is used in the matter of  inter- pretation of statutes held thus:                        Interpretation  must  depend  on  the               text  and the context. They are the  bases  of               interpretation.  One may well say if the  text               is  the  texture, context is  what  gives  the               colour.  Neither  can  be  ignored.  Both  are               important.  That interpretation is best  which               makes  the  textual interpretation  match  the               contextual. A statute is best interpreted when               we  know why it was enacted. With this  knowl-               edge,  the  statute must be read, first  as  a               whole  and then section by section, clause  by               clause, phrase by phrase and word by word.  If               a statute is looked at, in the context of  its               enactment,  with the glasses of  the  statute-               maker,  provided by such context, its  scheme,               the  sections, clauses, phrases and words  may               take colour and appear different than when the               statute  is  looked  at  without  the  glasses               provided by the context. With these glasses we               must  look at the Act as a whole and  discover               what  each section, each clause,  each  phrase               and each word is meant and designed to say  as               to  fit into the scheme of the entire Act.  No               part of a statute and no word of a statute can               be construed in isolation. Statutes have to be               construed  so that every word has a place  and               everything is in its place".     If we examine the scope of Rule 3(2) particularly  along with other General Rules, the context in which Rule 3(2)  is made  is  very  clear. It is not enacted  to  supersede  the Special Rules.     As already noted, there should be a clear  inconsistency between  the  two  enactments before  giving  an  overriding effect to the non-obstante clause but when the scope of  the provisions of an earlier enactment is clear the same  cannot be cut down by resort to non-obstante clause. In the instant case  we have noticed that even the General Rules  of  which Rule 404 3(2)  forms a part provide for promotion by selection. As  a matter of fact Rules 1(3)(a) and 3(1) and 4 also provide for the enforceability of the Special Rules.  The very Rule 3 of the  General Rules which provides for recruitment also  pro- vides for promotion by selection and further lays down  that the  methods  of recruitment shall be as  specified  in  the Special Rules, if any. In this background if we examine  the General Rules it becomes dear that the object of these Rules only  is to provide broadly for recruitment to  services  of all  the departments and they are framed generally to  cover situations that are not covered by the Special Rules of  any particular  department. In such a situation both  the  Rules including Rule 1(3)(a), 3(1)and 4 of general rules should be read together. If so read it becomes plain that there is  no inconsistency  and that amendment by inserting Rule 3(2)  is only  an  amendment to the General Rules and  it  cannot  be interpreted as to supersede the Special Rules. The Amendment also  must be read as being subject to Rules  1(3)(a),  3(1) and  4(2)  of the General Rules  themselves.  The  amendment cannot  be  read as abrogating all other  Special  Rules  in respect of all departments. In a given case where there  are no  Special Rules then naturally the General Rules would  be

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applicable. Just because there is a non-obstante clause,  in Rule  3(2) it cannot be interpreted that the said  amendment to  the  General Rules though later in point of  time  would abrogate  the special rule the scope of which is very  clear and which co-exists particularly when no patent conflict  or inconsistency  can  be  spelt out. As  already  noted  Rules 1(3)(a), 3(1) and 4 of the General Rules themselves  provide for  promotion  by selection and for enforceability  of  the Special  Rules in that regard. Therefore there is no  patent conflict or inconsistency at all between the General and the Special Rules.      Shri P. Chidambaram, in this context, however,  submit- ted that the intention of the Legislature is to do away with promotion by selection and instead of amending every special rule, the General Rule in the form of Rule 3(2) is  inserted and  therefore by virtue of non- obstante clause  all  other special  rules governing the recruitment to all  departments stand  abrogated.  I  am unable to agree. If  such  was  the intention  of the amendment then I see no reason as  to  why even  in the General Rules as noted above the  promotion  by selection  is recognised and provided for and  these   Rules remain unaffected. This is also clear from the fact that the Government did not even appeal against the High Court  deci- sion rendered in  Muniswamy’s case.     Shri  P. Chidambaram, however, further submitted that  a plain  reading of Rule 3(2) which is later in point of  time would clearly indicate that 405 the  Special  Rule providing for promotion by  selection  is repealed  at least by implication. There is no doubt that  a later statute may repeal an earlier one either expressly  or by  implication. In the instant case we have  already  noted that there is no express repeal of the Special Rule  provid- ing for promotion by selection. The Courts have not favoured such repeal by implication. On the other hand it is indicat- ed  by  the courts that if earlier and  later  statutes  can reasonably  be  construed in such a way that both can  be  . given effect to, the same must be done. In Re Chance  [1936] Ch. 266 Farewell, J. observed that "If it is possible it  is my  duty so to read the section  .....  as not to effect  an implied repeal of the earlier Act".     In Kunter v. Phi/lips [1891] 2 Q.B. 267 it is held that: "It is only when the provisions of a later enactment are  so inconsistent  with  or  repugnant to the  provisions  of  an earlier one then only the two cannot stand together and  the earlier stands abrogated by the later". In Municipal Council Palai  v.  T.J.  Joseph, AIR 1963 SC 1561,  this  Court  has observed  that  there is a presumption against a  repeal  by implication;  and  the reason of this rule is based  on  the theory  that  the  Legislature while enacting a  law  has  a complete knowledge of the existing laws on the same  subject matter  and therefore, when it does not provide a  repealing provision,  it  gives  out an intention not  to  repeal  the existing legislation.     It  is further observed that such a presumption  can  be rebutted and repeal by necessary implication can be inferred only when the provisions of the later Act are so  inconsist- ent with or repugnant to the provisions of the earlier  Act, that the two cannot stand together.     I  am  satisfied that there is no  patent  inconsistency between the General and Special Rules but on the other  hand they  co-exist. Therefore, there is no scope  whatsoever  to infer the repeal by implication as contended by the  learned counsel Shri. Chidambaram.     In  the result the appeal is allowed and the  Government

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is directed to consider the case of the appellant for promo- tion to the post of Deputy Commissioner of Transport on  the basis of promotion by selection, as provided in the  Special Rules  namely  Karnataka  General  Service  (Motor  Vehicles Branch)  (Recruitment) Rules, 1976. In the circumstances  of the case there will be no order as to costs.     YOGESHWAR  DAYAL,  J. I have had the pleasure  of  going through the judgment prepared by my learned brother, Justice K.J.  Reddy. However, with due respect, 1 regret 1 have  not been able to persuade myself to 406 agree to either his reasoning or the conclusion. There is no quarrel that general principle is that special law  prevails over  general law but the learned Judge has failed  to  note that  even  there  is an exception to such  a  general  law, namely -- it is a later general law which prevails over  the earlier special law if it clearly indicates the intention to supersede the special law.     This appeal by Special Leave has been filed by Sri  R.S. Raghunath against the order of the Karnataka  Administrative Tribunal,  Bangalore,  dated 9th August,  1990.  Before  the Tribunal the appellant sought a declaration that the  promo- tion  of  Shri I.K. Devaiah, respondent No.  2  herein,  was illegal  and to direct the respondent No. 1 to consider  the case  of the appellant for promotion to the cadre of  Deputy Transport Commissioner with all consequential benefits.  The Tribunal  dismissed the application filed by the  appellant. The  Tribunal was called upon to construe Rule 3(2)  of  the Karnataka  Civil Services (General Recruitment) Rules,  1977 as  amended in June, 1982 (hereinafter referred to  as  "the General  Rules’)The Tribunal, after considering the  general Rules  took  the view that the non-obstante clause  in  Rule 3(2) of the General Rules which was introduced after framing of  the  Karnataka General Service (Motor  Vehicles  Branch) (Recruitment)  Rules,  1976 (in short ’the  Special  Rules’) clearly  indicates  the intention to supersede  the  special law.  The Tribunal took the view that the general  principle that  the special law prevails over the general law has  one exception  and  that is a later general  law  prevails  over earlier special law if it clearly indicates the intention to supersede  the  special law. The Tribunal held that  a  non- obstante clause in Rule 3(2) of the General Rules, which was enacted  after  the  Special Rules,  clearly  indicates  the intention  to  supersede the special  law.  The  controversy rises in the following circumstances.     The  Special  Rules  came into force on  or  about  10th December, 1976 on the publication of the same in the  Karna- taka  Gazette  (Extraordinary).  It consisted  of  only  two Rules-  (I)  and (II). The first Rule gave  the  ’title  and commencement’ and the second Rule dealt with the ’method  of recruitment and minimum qualifications’. There was a  sched- ule attached to Rule 1I. In the schedule for the post speci- fied  in  column  1 thereof the method  of  recruitment  and minimum  qualification were specified in  corresponding  en- tries  in columns 2 and 3 thereof. It dealt with roughly  35 categories  of posts. I may mention that there was only  one post,  namely the post of Deputy Transport Commissioner  for which  the method of recruitment was by selection  from  the cadre  of Regional Transport Officers who must have  put  in not less than five years of service in that cadre. 407 For  all the rest of the posts in the schedule there was  no provision for recruitment by way of promotion by  selection. For  all the posts the method of recruitment was  either  by promotion or by deputation or by direct recruitment, or both

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by  direct recruitment and promotion or by merely posting  a suitable officer or by direct recruitment through employment exchange  etc.  The only recruitment to the post  of  Deputy Transport Commissioner was by method of promotion by  selec- tion.     At the time when the aforesaid Special Rules were enact- ed the Karnataka State Civil Services (General Recruitment ) Rules,  1957 (in short the General Rules of 1957 )  were  in operation which were repelled by the General Rules. So  long as  the  General Rules of 1957 continued the  Special  Rules continued  to govern the method of recruitment of the  posts as  specified in the schedule attached to the  said  Special Rules.     The  General  Rules  of 1957, as  stated  earlier,  were repelled by the General Rules which came into force on  25th June,  1977.  Rule  1(3)(a) of the  General  Rules  provided thus:-               "1.(3)  (a)   These rules shall apply  to  re-               cruitment  to  all State Services and  to  all               posts  in connection with the affairs  of  the               State of Karnataka and to members of all State               Civil  Services  and to the holders  of  posts               whether  temporary or permanent except to  the               extent otherwise expressly provided-               (i) by or under any law for the time being  in               force; or                    (ii)    in respect of any member of  such               service by a contract  or agreement subsisting               between such member and the              State               Government".     It is thus clear from the provision of Rule 1(3)(a) that the  General Rules were applicable for all purposes to  mem- bers  of all State Civil Services including the Motor  Vehi- cles Branch except to the extent otherwise expressly provid- ed  by  the Special Rules. The Special Rules,  as  mentioned earlier, dealt with the method of recruitment and qualifica- tion for the Motor Vehicles Branch and so far as the post of Deputy  Transport Commissioner was concerned, the method  of recruitment was "promotion by selection". The Special  Rules dealt with nothing else. It is also clear from Rule 1(3)  of the  General  Rules itself as to what is the  scope  of  its applicability. It was applicable to all posts except to  the extent  otherwise  expressly  provided for  by  the  Special Rules. Rule 3(1) of the General 408 Rules,  before the insertion of sub-rule (2), reads as  fol- lows:-               "3.  Method  of recruitment -  (1)  Except  as               otherwise provided in these rules or any other               rules specially made in this behalf,  recruit-               ment  to any service or post shall be made  by               direct  recruitment  which may  be  either  by               competitive examination or by selection, or by               promotion which may be either by selection  or               on  the  basis  of  seniority-cum-merit.   The               methods  of  recruitment  and   qualifications               shall be as specified in the rules of recruit-               ment specially made in that behalf:               Provided that in respect of direct recruitment               to  any  service or post when  the  method  of               recruitment  is not specified in the rules  of               recruitment  specially  made,  the  method  of               recruitment  shall  be by selection  after  an               interview  by the Commission, the Advisory  or               Selection Committee or the Appointing Authori-

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             ty as the case may be.               Provided  further  that  no  person  shall  be               eligible for promotion unless he has satisfac-               torily  completed the period of  probation  or               officiation  as the case may be, in  the  post               held by him."     The  substantive  part of Rule  3(1)  described  various methods  of recruitment but stated that the methods  of  re- cruitment  and qualifications shall be as specified  in  the rules  of  recruitment specially made in that  behalf.   The first  proviso described that when in the Special Rules  for recruitment no provision is made for direct recruitment, the method of recruitment shall be by selection after an  inter- view by the Commission, the Advisory or Selection  Committee to the Appointing Authority, as the case may be. The  second proviso  to Rule 3(1) contemplated that no person  shall  be eligible  for promotion unless he has satisfied  three  com- pleted  years of probation or officiation, as the  case  may be, in the post held by him. The second proviso is by way of abundant  caution  in view of the Karnataka  Civil  Services (Probation)  Rules,  1977 (hereinafter referred to  as  ’the Probation  Rules’) because of Probation  Rules  contemplated that the period of probation shall be as may be provided for in  the rules of recruitment specially made for any  service or post, which shall not be less than two years’. The Proba- tion  Rules  also contemplated declaration  of  satisfactory completion of probation at the end of the prescribed  period of  probation as extended or reduced by the  appointing  au- thority. It may be useful to note that Rule 19 of the Gener- al  Rules  also  dealt with probation  and  appointments  by promotion. It is clear from reading of Rules 1, 2 and 409 3,  as originally enacted, of the General Rules that so  far as  the Special Rules expressly provided to  any  particular branch  of  the State Service that was to prevail  over  the General Rules. Rule 3A, as amended, provided for  qualifica- tion in respect of ex-servicemen, irrespective of the provi- sions of the Special Rules. Rule 4 provided the procedure of appointment. It also provided that if the appointment is  by way of selection, how a selection has to be conducted and if the  recruitment  is by way of promotion, how it has  to  be done. Rule 5 provided for disqualification for  appointment. Rule  6 provided the age limit for appointment. Rule 8  pro- vided for reservation of appointments for scheduled  castes, scheduled  tribes,  backward tribes etc.  Rule  9  contained provision  for  ex-servicemen  and  physically   handicapped notwithstanding  anything  contained in the  Special  Rules. Rule 10 contemplated conditions relating to suitability  and certificates  of character. Rule 11 provided  for  procedure how  the  applications  have to be made  by  the  Government servants  for recruitments. Rule 16 provided for  relaxation notwithstanding  the  provisions contained  in  the  General Rules or the Special Rules. Rule 16 A provided for  appoint- ment  by transfer. Rule 17 dealt with appointment by  direct recruitment or by promotion in certain cases notwithstanding anything  contained  in the General or  Special  Rules.  All these  Rules arc applicable to all the posts except  to  the extent as contemplated by Rule(3) of the General Rules. This was  the position at the time of enactment of General  Rules in 1977.      appears  that Rule 3 of the General Rules  was  amended and subrule (2) was added to Rule 3. Rule 3(2) of the Gener- al Rules, so added in June, 1982, reads thus:               "3(2).  Notwithstanding anything contained  in               these  rules  or in the rules  of  recruitment

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             specially  made in respect of any  service  or               post--                     (a) the promotion to the post of Head of               Department  of the post of an Additional  Head               of Department, if it is in a grade  equivalent               to  that of the Head of Department  concerned,               shall be by selection:               Provided that for the purpose of promotion  by               selection, the number of persons to be consid-               ered shall be such number of persons  eligible               for promotion in the order of seniority, as is               equal to five times the number of vacancies to               be filled.               410                      (b)  the promotion to all  other  posts               shah be on the basis of seniority-cum-merit".      We are really concerned with the scope of Rule 3(2)  of the General Rules for proper decision of this case. Both the General Rules and the Special Rules have been framed by  the Government of Karnataka in exercise of powers under  Article 309 of the Constitution of India.      It is clear from Rule 1(3)(a) of the General Rules that the General Rules apply to recruitment to all State Services and  to  all  posts in connection with the  affairs  of  the State.  A  perusal of different rules in the  General  Rules makes  it clear that the general provisions which  apply  to recruitment to all posts under the Government are  specified in  those Rules instead of repeating them in each and  every Special  Rules of recruitment relating to different  depart- ments.  For  example, provisions relating to age  limit  for recruitment, disqualification for recruitment, joining  time etc.  should find place in Special Rules and  normally  they should  be uniform for all categories of posts.  Instead  of repeating them in all Special Rules of each department  they have  been  put  in one set of rules known  as  the  General Rules.  It would be impossible to limit the  application  of the General Rules only for recruitment to posts for which no Special  Rules have been made. If that was so, what arc  the provisions relating to disqualification, age limit,  joining time  etc.  for posts for which Special Rules  governing  of recruitment  have been made ? There are no other rules  gov- erning the subject except the General Rules.      By the wording of Rule 3(2) of the General Rules it  is clear  that  the Government took  conscious  and  deliberate policy  decision  and gave a mandate to make only  posts  of Head  of  Departments,  Additional Head  of  Departments  as selection  posts  and all other posts on promotion  will  be filled by the criterion of "seniority-cum-merit’.      To  give  effect  to that policy  decision  instead  of amending  every  Special Rules of  recruitment  relating  to different State Civil Services, the Government made a provi- sion  in the General Rules by incorporating  a  non-obstante clause stating that it would apply to all services and posts j notwithstanding the provisions in the General Rules or  in the  Special Rules of the State. This aspect  is  absolutely clear by a mere reading of Rule 3(2) of the General Rules.      In  the  case of Maharaja Pratap Singh Bahadur  v.  Man Mohan Dev. AIR 1966 SC 1931, the Supreme Court approved  the following quotation from Maxwell on Interpretation of  Stat- ute:/ 411               "A  general  later law does  not  abrogate  an               earlier  special  one  by  mere   implication.               Generalia  specialibus  non derogant,  or,  in               other words, "where there are general words in

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             a later Act capable of reasonable and sensible               application without extending them to subjects               specially dealt. with by earlier  legislation,               you  are not to hold that earlier and  special               legislation  indirectly repealed, altered,  or               derogated from merely by force of such general               words, without any indication of a  particular               intention  to  do  so." In such  cases  it  is               presumed  to have only general cases in  view,               and  not  particular  cases  which  have  been               already otherwise provided for by the  special               Act?’     It is stated therein that for the general principle that the  special  law  prevails over general law  there  is  one exception  and  that is a later general  law  prevails  over earlier special law if it clearly indicates the intention to supersede  the special law. The non-obstante  clause  intro- duced by amending Rule 3 of the General Rules by adding Rule 3(2) which was enacted after the Special Rules indicates the clear  intention to supersede the Special Law to the  extent that for the posts which arc not Head of the Departments  or Additional  Head of Departments the promotion,  if  provided for by way of selection, would mean on the basis of seniori- ty-cum-merit and not on the basis of merit only.     As I have noticed earlier if we look at the Special  Law it  contained  various methods of recruitment  to  about  35 posts mentioned in the Schedule annexed thereto but there is only one post for which the promotion was proposed by selec- tion.  Surely it would have been flimsy way of  drafting  if one particular clause of a particular Special Law was sought to  be individually repelled by enacting a repealing  clause for  that purpose. To get over that the non-obstante  clause is  introduced later on by the same authority which  enacted both  the General and Special Laws to give its  latest  man- date. The latest mandate cannot be ignored.     Rule  1(3) of the General Rules which accepted  the  ap- plicability  of  Special Rules is itself a part  of  General Rules  and the non-obstante clause is not merely to what  is mentioned  to  the contrary in the Special Rules but  it  is also notwithstanding anything contained in the General Rules itself.     In  the  present case the respondent No.  2  herein  was promoted after the amendment of Rule 3 of the General  Rules and  there  is no dispute about his recruitment  by  way  of promotion  on the basis of seniority-cummerit and  that  the earlier  Special Rules which contemplated the  promotion  by selection were not followed in view of the latest  intention clearly given 412 by a positive mandate.     The  learned counsel for the appellant  strongly  placed reliance on the decision of the Karnataka High Court in  the case  of Muniswamy v. Superintendent of Police,  dated  18th July, 1986 (Annexure ’F’ pages 66 to 108 of the paper-book). That  decision dealt with the General Rules and the  Special Rules  in  relation to Karnataka State Police  Service  (Re- cruitment) Rules,. 1967.     We  have  to  construe the meaning of  Clause  3(2)  for ascertaining  the object and purpose which  the  legislature had  in view in enacting the said provision and the  context thereof.  It  appears to me that the Special Rules  for  re- cruitment to some of the services had been in force  provid- ing a particular method of either selection or promotion. It appears that because of the experience the Government had of

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its  working, it was thought proper to change  this  policy, namely  -  instead of providing selection on  the  basis  of merit to every post, in certain posts, it thought it fit  to give due weightage to seniority and merit instead of  having the  ’best’. The selection of ’best’ very often has an  ele- ment  of  chance which may not be very conducive  to  proper climate  and harmony in service. It appears that because  of that  experience  the rule making authority thought  it  fit that  the process of promotion by selection should  be  con- fined only to top posts and for rest of the posts the method should be promotion by adopting the principle of  seniority- cum-merit.  I find that there is a clear mandate  of  latest intention  of  the rule making authority contained  in  Rule 3(2) of the General Rules and this must be respected by  the Court. The Courts are not expert body in knowing what is the best  method  for selection and to assume  that  the  purest method  must be found by the Court and implemented  even  by violation  of the Rule, will not be sound rule of  construc- tion of statute.     I  am afraid I have not been able to persuade myself  to agree  with the reasoning of the learned Division  Bench  in the aforesaid case of Muniswamy v. Superintendent of Police.     The  learned Division Bench had restricted the scope  of Rule  3(2) to only such officers whose "service or  post  is not  regulated by any Special Rules. then and then only  the posts  of  Head of Departments of Government as  defined  in 1982  Rules had to be filled by promotion by  selection  and all  other  posts in such Departments have to be  filled  by promotion  on  seniority-cure-merit  basis".   The  Division Bench also examined the merits and demerits of various forms of selection at great length and took the view in  paragraph 41 of the judgment as under:               "We  were  shocked  and  surprised  when   the               learned Govern-               413               ment Advocate submitted before us that he  was               supporting the stand urged by Sri Bhat and the               circular issued by the Director under instruc-               tions  from Government. We have no doubt  that               the Government had not really reflected on the               untenable  stand  it was  urging  before  this               Court  which,  if accepted  would  have  meant               death knell to .efficiency in the services  of               the State."     I am surprised with this type of approach. It is not the function of the Court to examine the efficacy of one form of selection or the other. It is for the recruiting  authority, namely  the Government to examine it and enforce it  in  the way  it  like.  To use such an expression  "death  knell  to efficiency" really gives the mind of the Court that it wants to  enforce  the particular policy even  though  the  latest mandate is for change of the policy in the name of efficien- cy.  This  type  of reasoning really  ignores  the  specific provision  of the non-obstante clause applying to  even  "in the  rules of recruitment specially made in respect  of  any service or post".     In Ajay Kumar Banerjee and others v. Union of India  and others, [1984] 3 SCC 127 at page 153 Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. (as His Lordship then was) observed thus:--               "As mentioned herein before if the scheme  was               held  to be valid, then the question  what  is               the  general law and what is the  special  law               and  which law in case of conflict would  pre-               vail  would  have arisen and that  would  have               necessitated the application of the  principle

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             "Generalia  specialibus  non  derogant".   The               general  rule to be followed in ease  of  con-               flict  between  the two statutes is  that  the               later  abrogates  the earlier  one.  In  other               words,  a prior special law would yield  to  a               later  general law, if either of the two  fol-               lowing conditions is satisfied.               (i) The two are inconsistent with each other.               (ii)  There is some express reference  in  the               later to the earlier enactment.               If  either  of these two  conditions  is  ful-               filled,  the later law, even  though  general,               would prevail". It  is  thus  clear that both the  conditions  mentioned  by Mukharji, J., 414 speaking  for the Bench are fulfilled. In this case  whether the  promotion has to be by the method of selection or  sim- plicitor  promotion on the basis of seniority-cum-merit,  is the  contest.   The Special Law  contemplated  promotion  by selection  whereas the later law contemplates  promotion  by the method of seniority-cum-merit. The two are  inconsistent with  each other. This fulfills the first condition. So  far as  the  second condition is concerned there is  an  express reference  in the later general law "in the  earlier  enact- ment". But as per the proposition of Mukharji, J., if either of  the  two conditions are fulfilled the  later  law,  even though  general,  would  prevail. Surely  the  provision  of recruitment  contemplated  in the Special  Police  Rules  is inconsistent with the latest general provision applicable to all posts in Karnataka. In the present case the later gener- al  law  prevails over the earlier special law  because  the non-obstante  clause  specifically  mentions  its   efficacy inspite  of the Special Law. It was for the  legislature  to choose  the  method of indicate its  intention.  The  Courts should  not  defeat their intention by overlooking  it.  The respondent No. 2 has been selected for promotion by  follow- ing the General Rules amending the Special Rules and I  find it was strictly in accordance with law. I am, therefore,  of the considered view that the appeal deserves to be dismissed with parties to bear their own costs. G.N.                                                  Appeal allowed.                                 1 ? 415