HARYANA RAJYA SAINIK BOARD Vs MOHAN LAL
Bench: R.V. RAVEENDRAN,LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA, , ,
Case number: C.A. No.-005607-005607 / 2008
Diary number: 7452 / 2006
Advocates: SUSHIL BALWADA Vs
PREM MALHOTRA
NON-REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL No. 5607 OF 2008 [Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.7127 of 2006]
Haryana Rajya Sainik Board-cum- Defence & Security Relief Fund & Member Management Committee ..... Appellant
Versus
Mohan Lal & Anr. ..... Respondents
J U D G M E N T
Lokeshwar Singh Panta, J.
1. Delay condoned.
2. Leave granted.
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3. This appeal arises out of judgment and order dated
26.04.2005 passed by the Division Bench of the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh in CWP No.
563/2003 and order dated 27.09.2005 in Review Application
No. 236/2005. By the impugned order, the High Court
allowed the writ petition of Mohan Lal - the respondent herein
and directed the appellant to regularise his services and
granted him all benefits as a regular employee. The review
petition filed by the appellant-Haryana Rajya Sainik Board-
cum-Defence & Security Relief Fund & Member Management
Committee against the order of the High Court in the said writ
petition was dismissed.
4. Briefly stated the facts of the case are that the appellant-
Haryana Rajya Sainik Board-cum-Defence & Security Relief
Fund & Member Management Committee (hereinafter referred
to as “the Committee”) is a social welfare organization
registered as a Society under the Societies Registration Act,
1860. The aim, object and purpose of the Committee are to
look after the welfare of war widows, their dependents, ex-
servicemen, disabled armed officials, their dependents and
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dependents of the serving officials. The appellant-Committee
does not receive any grant from the Central Government. It
receives its finance from the Defence Security Relief Fund
which had been raised in the years 1965 and 1972 out of
public donations during declaration of hostilities between
India and Pakistan. The grant-in-aid is being provided by
Haryana Government only to augment the Defence and
Security Relief Fund [for short ‘DSR Fund’].
5. The appellant-Committee on 01.10.1991 appointed
Mohan Lal–respondent as Mali on daily wage. As per the
terms and conditions of the letter of engagement placed on
record of this appeal, the services of the respondent were
liable to be terminated at any point of time. The services of
the respondent were terminated with effect from 27.02.1993
being temporary in nature.
6. The respondent claimed reference under the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 [hereinafter referred to as ‘the I.D. Act’]
alleging that his services were terminated without following
the provisions of Section 25-F of the I.D. Act. The Haryana
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Government vide Notification No. 12307 dated 22.01.1994
made the following reference to the Labour Court:-
“Whether the termination of services of Shri Mohan Lal is valid and justified? If not so, to what relief is he entitled?”
7. The Additional District and Sessions Judge, Presiding
Officer, Labour Court, Ambala, by Award dated 02.02.1999 in
Reference No. 10/1994 held the termination of the services of
the respondent illegal and unjustified and accordingly,
directed his reinstatement with continuity in service.
However, the claim with regard to back wages was given up by
the respondent, therefore, he was not held entitled to back
wages.
8. Thereafter, the respondent No. 1 filed writ petition in the
year 2003 [W.P. No.563/2003] before the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh praying for issue of
mandamus directing the appellant-Committee to regularise his
services. The Division Bench of the High Court, on the basis
of Policy Instructions dated 07.03.1996 issued by the State of
Haryana with regard to regularizing the work
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charged/casual/daily-rated employees of the departments of
the State Government, directed the appellant-Committee – “to
regularize the services of respondent and, accordingly, grant
him other benefits as a regular employee”. The appellant-
Committee being dissatisfied with and aggrieved by the order
of the Division Bench filed a review application before the High
Court, which came to be dismissed on September 27, 2005.
Hence, the appellant-Committee has filed this appeal by way
of special leave petition challenging the correctness and
validity of the orders of the High Court.
9. We have heard Mr. Alok Sangwan, learned counsel for
the appellant-Committee and Mr. Prem Malhotra, learned
counsel for the respondent – Mohan Lal, and with their
assistance perused orders of the High Court and other
material on record.
10. The defence of the appellant-Committee in its counter
affidavit filed before the High Court in opposition to the writ
petition was that the appellant-Committee was registered as a
Society in the backdrop of the following eventualities:-
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“In 1965, large scale incursion into Jammu and Kashmir by subversion elements from Pakistan flared into declaration of hostilities between India and Pakistan. The patriotic fervour of our people rose to the occasion and they offered large quantities of cash and valuables. In the Punjab (which then included Haryana) the general response was overwhelming. A fund, known as ‘Punjab Defence and Security Fund’ was instituted to account for this donation. The initial target was set at Rs. 50 lakhs, but by 15.11.1966, the collection by the people approximated Rs. 3.75 crores.
In, 1966, the composite Punjab was re- organised into the new states of Punjab and Haryana. Haryana’s share of the fund was transferred to it for the benefits of war widows and ex-servicemen belonging to Haryana and their families. The transferred fund came to be known as the Haryana Defence and Security Relief Fund now DSR Fund in short. Later on the contribution of this Fund was made by the people of Haryana during 1971 war. To manage the DSR Fund, a Committee was set up.”
11. It was the specific and categorical case of the appellant-
Committee that the DSR Fund is neither a Government
Department nor a statutory body or an instrumentality of the
State. It is a Committee which comprises the Chief Minister of
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the State as its Chairman and other unspecified number of
officials and non-officials as its Members. Its strength and
composition continues to be ad hoc from the beginning. The
DSR Fund gets aid from the Haryana Government only to
augment the DSR Fund. Haryana Defence and Security Relief
Fund Committee has been registered under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860.
12. The appointment of the respondent as ‘Mali’ (Gardener)
by the Assistant Manager, Sainik Pariwar Bhawan,
Chhachhrauli, with effect from 01.10.1991 (FN) as per the
daily wage fixed by the Deputy Commissioner is not in
dispute. The services of the respondent were terminated on
27.02.1993 in terms of the engagement letter. Against the
termination order, the respondent raised the industrial
dispute which was referred to the Labour Court by the State of
Haryana and finally the Labour Court, as stated above,
directed the appellant-Committee to reinstate the respondent
with continuity in service without back-wages. Before the
High Court, it was the categorical defence of the appellant-
Committee that the respondent was appointed as Mali for a
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temporary period at the rate fixed by the Deputy
Commissioner, Yamuna Nagar. The respondent, in
compliance to the Award of the Labour Court, has been
reinstated by the appellant-Committee. It was also contended
that the appellant-Committee has not received any grant from
the Central Government or the State Government of Haryana,
but it receives its finances from the DSR Fund which has been
raised out of public donations received in the wake of 1965
and 1972 wars with Pakistan. However, the grant-in-aid is
being provided by Haryana Government only to augment the
DSR Fund which was set up for the welfare of ex-servicemen
and their dependents, war widows, soldiers’ widows and their
dependents, etc. etc. The appellant-Committee also stated
that none of the daily wagers working with the Committee
have been regularized by the appellant-Committee against the
vacancy which is reserved only for ex-servicemen and war
widows, etc. It was also submitted that no other employee
was selected or engaged in place of the respondent after the
Award of the Labour Court which was complied with by the
appellant-Committee.
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13. In the factual situation of the case and legal proposition
governing the terms and conditions of the services of the
respondent, in our considered opinion, the High Court has
misapplied the Policy Decision/Instructions dated 07.03.1996
issued by the Government of Haryana with regard to the
regularization of work-charged / daily wage / daily-rated
employees employed by the various Departments of the State
to the claim of the respondent. We have gone through the
said Policy decision which is placed on record of this case as
Annexure-P3. The Policy decision reveals that there are three
categories of employees, namely, work-charged employees,
casual daily wage employees and daily-rated employees (class-
III) of the State Government who are covered under the said
Policy decision. The policy decision provides that the casual
daily-rated employees, who have completed five years service
on 31st January, 1996, shall be regularized provided they have
worked for a minimum period of 240 days in each year and
the break in service in any year is not more than one month at
the time. A further condition stipulated was that such
employees who have worked on different posts having different
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designations in the same Department shall also be regularized
if they fulfill their conditions. On regularization, they shall be
put in the time-scale of pay applicable to the lowest Group ‘D’
cadre in the Government and they would be entitled to all
other allowances and benefits available to regular Government
Servants of the corresponding grade.
14. We are not in a position to accept the finding of the
learned Judges of the High Court that the services of the
respondent are governed by the said Policy decision of the
State of Haryana in the matter of regularization. The
respondent was not an employee of the State of Haryana in
Group ‘C’ or Group ‘D’ posts nor was he engaged in any
Department or other authority of the State on daily wage by
the competent authority of the State Government or the
authority, as the case may be. Indisputably, he was
appointed by the appellant-Committee as Mali on daily wage
and not in the cadre of ex-servicemen for which the vacancy is
reserved in terms of the Sainik Parivar Bhawan’s Haryana
Service (Common Cadre) Rules, 1999. Thus, the High Court
gravely erred by holding that the Policy decision of the State of
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Haryana dated 07.03.1996 will be ipso facto applicable to the
employees of the appellant-Committee without proving that
the same has been adopted by the appellant-Committee and
made applicable to its employees. The appellant-Committee
has framed its own Service Rules called ‘The Sainik Parivar
Bhawan’s Haryana Service (Common Cadre) Rules, 1999’, for
regulating the recruitment and conditions of service of the
persons appointed to Sainik Parivar Bhawan’s Haryana.
Details of posts authorized in Saink Parivar Defence
Organisation prescribing qualifications/experience required
and pay equalency are mentioned in Appendix ‘A’ of the said
Rules. The post of Peon-cum-Mali is shown at Serial No. 22
of Appendix ‘A’ for which the essential qualification is 5th class
with two years experience of gardening. The footnote provides
that certain posts, including the post of Peons and Peon-cum-
Mali, are reserved for ex-servicemen/war widows and widows
only. In the teeth of the separate service rules of the
appellant-Committee framed for governing the service
conditions of its employees, the High Court was not justified
in applying the Policy decision/Instruction of 1996 of the
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State Government to the employees of the appellant, which
undoubtedly is an independent body registered under the
Societies Act exclusively for the welfare of the widows and
their dependents (males/females) and dependents of ex-
servicemen and serving Armed Forces personnel, etc. of
Haryana.
15. In the facts and circumstances narrated hereinabove,
the judgment of the High Court directing the appellant-
Committee “to regularize the services of the respondent and,
accordingly, grant him all other benefits of regular employee”
is unjustified and unsustainable both on facts and in law and
the same deserves to be set aside on this short ground
without entering upon the merits of other issues involved in
regard to the power of the High Court to issue mandamus in
mandatory form directing regularization of the respondent
against the service rules of the appellant-Committee and
granting him all benefits of a regular employee.
16. In the result, for the aforesaid reasons, the judgment
and order dated 26.04.2005 of the Division Bench passed in
CWP No. 563/2003 and order dated 27.09.2005 dismissing
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the Review Application No. 236/2005 in the said writ petition,
are quashed and set aside. The writ petition filed by the
respondent would stand dismissed. The appeal is accordingly
allowed.
17. In the facts and circumstances of the case, the parties
are left to bear their own costs.
........................................J. (R. V. Raveendran)
........................................J. (Lokeshwar Singh Panta)
New Delhi, September 11, 2008.
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