13 April 1989
Supreme Court
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MARATHWADA UNIVERSITY Vs SESHRAO BALWANT RAO CHAVAN

Bench: SHETTY,K.J. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 3927 of 1986


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PETITIONER: MARATHWADA UNIVERSITY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SESHRAO BALWANT RAO CHAVAN

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/04/1989

BENCH: SHETTY, K.J. (J) BENCH: SHETTY, K.J. (J) KULDIP SINGH (J)

CITATION:  1989 AIR 1582            1989 SCR  (2) 454  1989 SCC  (3) 132        JT 1989 (2)   276  1989 SCALE  (1)996

ACT:     Marathwada University Act, 1974: Sections 8, 10, 11, 19, 23,    24,   27   and   84--Vice   Chancellor    of    every university--Conscious     keeper     and      constitutional ruler--Responsible  for over all administration of  academic affairs--To act firmly to put down indiscipline and malprac- tice--Executive  Council has power of removal  ’to  regulate the work and conduct of the officers’--Whether implies power to take disciplinary action.     Administrative  Law: Delegation of  power--When  statute prescribes  a particular body to exercise  power--That  body alone   and  none  else  can  exercise  it--Unless   it   is delegated--Ratification--Cannot cure an ultra vires action.

HEADNOTE:     The  respondent was a Deputy Registrar of the  appellant University. As the Controller of Examinations had  proceeded on  leave the respondent was discharging the duties of  Con- troller  of  Examinations.  A complaint  alleging  that  the respondent  had delayed the payment of the bills of an  out- station  party who had printed the question papers  for  the annual  examination  was  received by  the  University.  The Executive  Council  of the University appointed  an  Enquiry Officer  to  hold an enquiry to find out whether  the  bills were deliberately kept pending with any ulterior motive. The Enquiry  Officer gave a clean chit to the respondent  as  to his  conduct  in  discharging the duties  as  Controller  of Examinations.     The Executive Council of the University did not take any decision on the report of the Enquiry Officer, but entrusted the  question to the Vice-Chancellor who was present at  the meeting. The Vice-Chancellor directed a departmental enquiry against  the  respondent and appointed an  advocate  as  the Enquiry Officer. The Enquiry Officer by his report held  the respondent  guilty of all the charges levelled against  him. The  Vice  Chancellor after giving a show cause  notice  and considering the reply of the respondent, dismissed him  from service. The respondent moved the High Court under Article 226 chal- 455 lenging  his dismissal. When the writ-petition was taken  up

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for hearing the High Court directed the entire matter to  be placed  before  the  Executive Council  for  an  appropriate decision. The Executive Council considered the matter at its meeting  and passed a resolution ratifying the action  taken by the Vice-Chancellor, and confirming the dismissal of  the respondent. At the final disposal of the writ petition,  the High  Court examined the matter on merits and held that  the action  taken by the Vice-Chancellor being without  any  au- thority or power, these defects could not be cured by  rati- fication by the Executive Council in its subsequent  resolu- tion.  The High Court accordingly quashed  the  departmental proceedings taken against the respondent, and also the order of termination of his services.     In the appeal to this Court, it was contended on  behalf of  the  University: (i)That on a true construction  of  the several  provisions of the Marathwada University Act,  1974, the  termination  of services of the  respondent  cannot  be assailed  for want of power or jurisdiction on the  part  of the Vice-Chancellor, and (2) that if the order was defective or  without  authority, the ratification  by  the  Executive Council had rendered it immune from any challenge. Dismissing the Appeal, the Court,     HELD: 1. The Vice-Chancellor in every university is  the conscious  keeper of the University and  the  constitutional ruler. He is the principal executive and academic officer of the  University. He is entrusted with the responsibility  of overall  administration of academic as well as  non-academic affairs. [464A-B]     2. As the principal executive officer the  Vice-Chancel- lor also carries with him an implied power, the  magisterial power. This power is essential for him to maintain  domestic discipline  in the academic and non-academic affairs.  In  a wide variety of situations in the relationship of tutor  and pupil, he has to act firmly and promptly to put down  indis- cipline  and malpractice. It may not be illegitimate  if  he could  call  to aid his implied powers  and  also  emergency powers to deal with all such situations. [464D-E]     3.  The  Marathwada University Act,  1974  confers  both express  and  implied  powers on  the  Vice-Chancellor.  The express powers include among others, the duty to ensure that the provisions of the Act, Statutes, Ordinances and  Regula- tions are observed by all concerned. [Section 11(3)] He  has a right to regulate the work and conduct of 456 Officers and teaching and other employees of the  University [Sec.  11(b)(a)]. He has also emergency powers to deal  with any  untoward situation [Section 11(4)] a  very  significant power.  If he believes that a situation calls for  immediate action,  he  can take such action as  he  thinks  necessary, though  in the normal course he is not competent to  do  so. However  he must report to the concerned authority or  body, who  would,  in  the ordinary course, have  dealt  with  the matter. [464B-C]      4.  The power ’to regulate the work and conduct of  the officers’  cannot  include the power  to  take  disciplinary action for their removal. [464F]      5.  When  a  statute prescribes a  particular  body  to exercise  a power, it must be exercised only by  that  body. [464G] Halsbury’s  Laws  of England Vol. 1, 4th Edn. page  32,  re- ferred to.      6.  The  Marathwada  University Act  confers  power  to appoint  officers on the Executive Council and it  generally includes  the power to remove. This power is  located  under Section 24(1) (XXIX) of the Act. [464F-G]

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    7.  The resolution of the Executive Council at a  meet- ing,  at  which the Vice Chancellor was also  present,  gave full  power  to the Vice-Chancellor ’to take a  decision  on this question’. By the power delegated under the resolution, the Vice-Chancellor could either accept or reject the report with intimation to the Executive Council. He could not  have taken any other action and indeed, he was not authorised  to take any other action. [465F-G] :        8. The resolution was also not in harmony with  the statutory  requirement.  Approval of the Chancellor  to  the delegation  of power by the Executive Council to  the  Vice- Chancellor was mandatory under section 24(1)(xii) read  with section/84 of the Marathwada University Act. The  resolution not being in conformity with the statutory requirement could not  confer  power on the Vice-Chancellor to take  action  j against the respondent. [465H; 466A-C]     9.  Ratification is generally an act of  principal  with regard to a contract or an act done by his agent. The  prin- ciples  of ratification in the context of the law of  agency apparently do not have any application with regard to  exer- cise  of power conferred under statutory  provisions.    The statutory authority cannot travel beyond the power conferred and 457 any  action  without power has no legal validity. It  is  ab initio void and cannot be ratified. [468A-B]     Friedman’s Law of Agency (5th Edn.) Chapter 5at page 73, Bowstead on Agency (14th Ed.) at page 39, Parmeshwari Prasad Gupta  v.  Union of India, [1974] 1 SCR 304 and  Bernard  v. National  Dock Labour Board, [1953] 1 All Eng.  Law  Reports 1113.     In  the instant case, there was no prior  delegation  of power  to  the Vice-Chancellor to take  disciplinary  action against  the respondent. There was no subsequent  delegation either.  Therefore,  neither the action taken by  the  Vice- Chancellor,  nor the ratification by the  Executive  Council could be sustained. [469F]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3927  of 1986.     From  the  Judgment and Order dated 18.6.  1986  of  the Bombay High Court in Writ Petition No. 10 of 1980.     S.K. Dholakia, A.M. Khanwilkar and Mrs. V.D. Khanna  for the Appellant.     V.M.  Tarkunde, Karanjawala, Mrs. Karanjawala  and  H.S. Anand for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by:     K. JAGANNATHA SHETTY, J. This appeal by leave is from  a decision of the Bombay High Court which allowed the respond- ent’s  petition  for a writ of certiorari. In so  doing  the court quashed departmental proceedings initiated against the respondent and the resultant order terminating his services.     The  facts are substantially undisputed and may  briefly be stated as follows:     Respondent-Seshrao  Balwant Rao Chavan was at the  rele- vant time the Deputy Registrar of the Marathwada University. One  Mr. Yelikar was working then as Controller of  Examina- tions.  In  or about April 1976, Mr.  Yelikar  proceeded  on leave  and the present respondent was directed to  discharge the  duties of the Controller of Examinations.  Accordingly, he joined his new assignment and continued to hold 458

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that  post  when  the controversy which  culminated  in  his dismissal took  place.      It  is  said that one Mr. Swaminathan from  Madras  was entrusted  with the printing works needed to conduct  annual examinations of the University for the years 1974 and  1975. Mr.   Swaminathan  submitted  his  bills   amounting   about Rs.6,00,000  for the work performed by him. The  bills  were not  cleared immediately, and Mr. Swaminathan complained  to the University authorities. He also submitted a petition  to the  Prime  Minister  of India which was  forwarded  to  the University  for immediate action. This led to an enquiry  to find  out whether the bills were deliberately  kept  pending with  any  ulterior  motive. The Executive  Council  of  the University  appointed a four-member committee including  the Vice-Chancellor  to enquire into the matter.  The  committee after  investigation  submitted a report  in  November  1977 making some prima facie observations against the respondent. Thereupon, the Executive Council desired to have the  matter thoroughly  examined by another committee. It appointed  Mr. N.B.  Chavan  for the purpose. Mr. Chavan  made  a  detailed enquiry but found nothing against the respondent. On  Decem- ber 23, 1978, he submitted a report stating inter alia  that there  was no delay in clearing the said bills and if  there was any delay, it was justified in the circumstances. He has stated  that the University utilised the time  for  internal audit  in which it was found that the claim of Mr.  Swamina- than  was excessive to the extent of Rs.48,000 and odd.  The report of Mr. Chavan thus gave a clean chit to the  respond- ent as to his conduct in discharging the duties as  Control- ler of Examinations.     If  the  Executive Council had accepted the  report  and closed the matter that would have been better. But  unfortu- nately,  it was not done and another chapter was opened.  On March  22, 1979, the report of Mr. Chavan was placed  before the  Executive  Council which without  taking  any  decision entrusted  the  question to the Vice-Chancellor.  The  Vice- Chancellor was present in that meeting-and agreed to take  a decision  in  about a month. But what he  did  was  entirely different.  Purporting to act under the powers given to  him by  the Executive Council, he directed departmental  enquiry against the respondent. He appointed Mr. Motale, Advocate as an  Inquiry Officer who flamed three charges:  First  charge impeached  the  respondent  of  intentionally  delaying  the clearance of the bills of Mr. Swaminathan and thus  tarnish- ing the image of the University. Second charge alleged  that the  respondent did not place before the Executive  Council, the letters , addressed by the Chancellor of the  University on July 23, 1976 and 459 August 19, 1976. Third charge accused the respondent for not producing all the available papers for scrutiny by the  one- man committee headed by Mr. Chavan.     On  October 25, 1979, Mr. Motale submitted his’  enquiry report to the Vice-Chancellor holding the respondent  guilty of the charges. After a usual procedure of giving show cause notice and considering the reply thereto, the  Vice-Chancel- lor decided to dismiss the respondent. On January2, 1980, he accordingly made an order. The matter did not rest there. The respondent moved the High Court  under  Art. 226 of the Constitution  challenging  his dismissal. When the writ petition first came up for  hearing in November 1985, the High Court took a very curious  stand. It  observed  that the entire matter be  placed  before  the Executive Council for taking an appropriate decision. As per this  observation, the matter came up before  the  Executive

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Council  in  the meeting held on December 26/27,  1985.  The Executive Council passed a resolution inter alia,  ratifying the  action taken by the Vice-Chancellor and confirming  the dismissal of the respondent. This has added a new  dimension to the case.     At  the  final disposal of the writ petition,  the  High Court, however, examined the merits of the matter. The  High Court held that the action taken by the Vice-Chancellor  was without authority of law. As to the ratification made by the Executive Council, the High Court held: "That the acts  done by the Vice-Chancellor remain the acts without any authority or powers and that defects cannot be cured by the subsequent resolution." With these conclusions, the High Court  quashed the  departmental proceedings taken against  the  respondent and also the order of termination of his services.      Being aggrieved by the judgment, the Marathwada Univer- sity by obtaining special leave has appealed to this Court.      Learned counsel for the appellant put his contention in two  ways: First, he said that on the true  construction  of the  relevant provisions of the Marathwada  University  Act, 1974,  the termination of services of the respondent  cannot be assailed for want of power or jurisdiction on the part of the Vice-Chancellor. Counsel next said that if the order was defective  or  without authority, the  ratification  by  the Executive Council has rendered it immune from any challenge. In  order to appreciate these submissions, we  must  outline the 460 statutory provisions of the Marathwada University Act,  1974 (called shortly "the Act"). Section 8 specifies the officers of  the University. The Vice-Chancellor is one of the  offi- cers. Section 10 provides for appointment of the  Vice-Chan- cellor.  He shall be appointed by the Chancellor  and  shall ordinarily  hold office for a term. of three years.  Section 11 reads, so far as material, as follows:                         "11(1): The Vice-Chancellor shall be               the  principal executive and academic  officer               of the University, and shah in the absence  of               the Chancellor, preside at the meetings of the               Senate and at any Convocation of the Universi-               ty  ....  "                         "11(3):  It shah be the duty of  the               Vice-Chancellor to ensure that the  provisions               of  this  Act, the  Statutes,  Ordinances  and               Regulations   are  faithfully  observed.   The               Chancellor  shall, for this purpose, have  the               power to issue directions to the Vice-Chancel-               lor  who shall give effect to any such  direc-               tions."                         11(4):   If  there  are   reasonable               grounds  for  the Vice-Chancellor  to  believe               that  there  is an  emergency  which  requires               immediate  action to be taken, he  shall  take               such action as he thinks necessary and  shall,               at the earliest opportunity, report in writing               the  grounds for his belief that there was  an               emergency,  and  the action taken by  him,  to               such  authority or body as would in the  ordi-               nary    course,    have   dealt    with    the               matter . ...."                         11(6)(a): It shall be lawful for the               Vice-Chancellor,  as the  principal  executive               and academic officer, to regulate the work and               conduct of the officers, and of the  teaching,               academic and other employees of the  Universi-

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             ty, in accordance with the provisions of  this               Act,    the    Statutes,    Ordinances     and               Regulations."                         "11(7):  The  Vice-Chancellor   shah               exercise  such other powers and  perform  such               other  duties as are prescribed by  the  Stat-               utes, Ordinances and Regulations."                   Section  19 enumerates the authorities  of               the  University. The Executive Council is  one               of the authorities specified thereunder.               Section  23 to the extent necessary is in  the               following terms:               461                        "23(1):  The Executive Council  shall               be  the principal executive authority  of  the               University, and shall consist of the following               members,  namely,: (i) the  Vice-Chancellorex-               officio Chairman."                   Section  24  deals  with  the  powers  and               duties of the Executive Council. These  powers               and  duties  are  wide and varied  and  it  is               sufficient if we read sub-sections (1), (xxix)               and (xii) of sec. 24. They are as follows:                        "24(1): Subject to such conditions as               are  prescribed  by  or under  this  Act,  the               Executive Council shall exercise the following               powers  and  perform  the  following   duties,               namely  ........  "                         "24(1)(xxix):  appoint officers  and               other  employees of the University,  prescribe               their  qualifications, fix  their  emoluments,               define  the  terms  and  conditions  of  their               service  and discipline and  where  necessary,               their duties."                         "24(1)(x1i):  delegate,  subject  to               the  approval  of the Chancellor, any  of  its               powers (except the power to make  Ordinances),               to  the Vice-Chancellor, the Registrar or  the               Finance  Officer,  or such other  officers  or               authority  of  the University or  a  committee               appointed by it, thinks fit."                   Two other provisions are material, namely,               secs.  37  and 84. Section  37,  omitting  the               unnecessary, is in these terms:               Sec.  37 Subject to the conditions  prescribed               by or under this Act, the Senate may make  the               Statutes  to  provide for all or  any  of  the               following matters namely:               (xvi):  The term of office, duties and  condi-               tions  of  service of officers,  teachers  and               other employees of the University, the  provi-               sions of pension, insurance and provident fund               and the manner of termination of their service               and other disciplinary action and their quali-               fications, except those of teachers."               Section 34 is as follows:               "Delegation  of powers: Subject to the  provi-               sions of               462               this Act and Statutes any officer or authority               of the University may, by order, delegate  his               or its powers, except.the power to make  Stat-               utes, Ordinances and Regulations, to any other               officer or authority under his or its control,               and  subject to the conditions that the  ulti-

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             mate  responsibility for the exercise  of  the               powers so delegated shall continue to vest  in               the officer or authority delegating them."                   With these provisions, we turn to consider               the  first question urged for  the  appellant.               The  question is whether  the  Vice-Chancellor               was  competent to direct  disciplinary  action               against  the respondent. In this  context,  we               may make a few general observations about  the               position  and powers of  the  Vice-Chancellor.               The  University  Education Commission  in  its               report  (Vol. I December 1948 to August  1949)               has  summarised the powers and duties as  fol-               lows (at 421):                        "Duties  of Vice-Chancellor--A  Vice-               Chancellor is the chief academic and executive               officer  of his university. He  presides  over               the  Court  (Senate)  in the  absence  of  the               Chancellor,  Syndicate  (Executive   Council),               Academic  Council,  and  numerous   committees               including  the  selection committees  for  ap-               pointment of staff. It is his duty to know the               senior members of the staff intimately and  to               be  known  to  all members of  the  staff  and               students.  He  must command  their  confidence               both  by adequate academic reputation  and  by               strength  of  personality. He  must  know  his               university  well enough to be able  to  foster               its points of strength and to foresee possible               points of weakness before they become  acute.’               He  must  be the ’keeper of  the  university’s               conscience’, both setting the highest standard               by  example  and dealing promptly  and  firmly               with indiscipline and malpractice of any kind.               All  this  he must do and it can  be  done  as               constitutional  ruler; he has not, and  should               not  have autocratic power. Besides,  this  he               must be the chief liaison between his  univer-               sity and the public, he must keep the  univer-               sity alive to the duties it owes to the public               which  it serves, and he must win support  for               the university and understanding of its  needs               not merely from potential benefactors but from               the general public and its elected representa-               tives.  Last,  he must have  the  strength  of               character  to  resist unflinchingly  the  many               forms  of pressure to relax standards  of  all               sorts, which are being applied to universities               today."               463                   This  has been approved by  the  Education               Commission,  1964-66.  In the  report  of  the               Education Commission, 1971 (pages 610-11  para               13.32) it was stated:                        "The  person who is  expected,  above               all, to embody the spirit of academic  freedom               and  the  principles of good management  in  a               university  is the Vice-Chancellor. He  stands               for the commitment of the university to schol-               arship  and  pursuit of truth and  can  ensure               that  the executive wing of the university  is               used  to assist the academic community in  all               its  activities. His selection should,  there-               fore,  be governed by this overall  considera-               tion."

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             Dr.  A.H.  Homadi in his  wise,  little  study               about  the role of the Vice-Chancellor in  the               university administration in developing  coun-               tries has this to state (at 49):               The President or the Vice-Chancellor:               "The  President  must be willing to  accept  a               definition  of  educational  leadership   that               brings  about change to the academic  life  of               the  institution. He must be fired by  a  deep               concern  for  education. He  should  instil  a               spirit  and keeness about growth and  develop-               ment  in  such a way  that  the  professiriate               feels  that their goals are  interlinked  with               those  of the University, that  their  success               depends  upon the success of  the  University.               The professors should be given detailed infor-               mation  about the jobs that they have to  per-               form  and  their good  performance  should  be               given due recognition by administration  lead-               ership.  Even  such small  encouragement  will               boost  theft  morale to greater  heights.  The               President should have faith in his own  abili-               ties  as  well as on the  abilities  of  other               professors   and  administrators  and   should               provide  guidelines about the kind of  efforts               he  would like his professors and  administra-               tors  to make, setting an example by  his  own               actions  and exercises. The negative force  of               fear,  when  used and no one  denies  that  an               element  of  hard  headedness  is  some  times               required as a persuasive inducement to profes-               sors  and administrators of university  should               be  employed  judiciously.  Under  no  circum-               stances should the apathy and belligerence  of               the professors and administrators be  aroused.               These call for strong but sympathetic  leader-               ship in the President." 464     The  Vice-Chancellor  in every university  is  thus  the conscious keeper of the University and constitutional ruler. He  is the principal executive and academic officer  of  the University.  He  is  entrusted with  the  responsibility  of overall  administration of academic as well  as  nonacademic affairs.  For these purposes, the Act confers  both  express and  implied  powers  on the  Vice-Chancellor.  The  express powers  include  among others, the duty to ensure  that  the provisions of the Act, Statutes, Ordinances and  Regulations are  observed by all concerned. (Section 11(3)).  The  Vice- Chancellor  has a right to regulate the work and conduct  of officers and teaching and other employees of the  University (Section  11(6)(a)).  He has also emergency powers  to  deal with  any  untoward  situation (Section  11(4)).  The  power conferred  under  sec. 11(4) is indeed significant.  If  the Vice-Chancellor believes that a situation calls for  immedi- ate  action, he can take such action as he thinks  necessary though in the normal course he is not competent to take that action. He must, however, report to the concerned  authority or  body who would, in the ordinary course, have dealt  with the  matter.  That is not all. His pivotal position  as  the principal  executive officer also carries with him  the  im- plied  power. It is the magisterial power which is,  in  our view,  plainly to be inferred. This power is  essential  for him  to  maintain domestic discipline in  the  academic  and non-academic affairs. In a wide variety of situations in the relationship  of tutor and pupil, he has to act  firmly  and

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promptly  to put down indiscipline and malpractice.  It  may not  be  illegitimate if he could call to  aid  his  implied powers  and  also  emergency powers to deal  with  all  such situations.     Counsel for the appellant argued that the express  power of  the Vice-Chancellor to regulate the work and conduct  of officers  of  the University implies as well, the  power  to take disciplinary action against officers. We are unable  to agree  with this contention. Firstly, the power to  regulate the work and conduct of officers cannot include the power to take  disciplinary action for their removal.  Secondly,  the Act  confers  power  to appoint officers  on  the  Executive Council and it generally includes the power to remove.  This power  is located under sec. 24(1)(xxix) of the Act. It  is, therefore,  futile to contend that the  Vice-Chancellor  can exercise  that  power which is conferred  on  the  Executive Council.  It is a settled principle that when the  Act  pre- scribes  a particular body to exercise a power, it  must  be exercised  only  by  that body. It cannot  be  exercised  by others unless it is delegated. The law must also provide for such  delegation. Halsbury’s Laws of England  (Vol.14th  Ed. para 32) summarises these principles as follows: 465                        "32.  Sub-delegation  of  powers.  In               accordance  with  the  maxim  delegatius   non               potest  delegare,  a statutory power  must  be               exercised only by the body or officer in  whom               it has been confided, unless sub-delegation of               the  power is authorised by express  words  or               necessary  implication.  There  is  a   strong               presumption  against  construing  a  grant  of               legislative, judicial or disciplinary power as               impliedly authorising sub-delegation; and  the               same may be said of any power to the  exercise               of  which the designated body  should  address               its own mind."                   The counsel for the appellant next submit-               ted that the Executive Council in the  instant               case  had delegated its disciplinary power  to               the  Vice-Chancellor and the Act provides  for               such delegation. In support of the  contention               he relied upon the following resolution of the               Executive Council:                        "Full  power  be given to  the  Vice-               Chancellor to take a decision on this question               and the Vice-Chancellor informed the Executive               Council that he will take decision in about  a               month-  On this decision, Shri  Gangadhar  Pa-               thrikar  gave his opinion that  the  Executive               Council  should  take a decision on  the  note               dated  16.1. 1979 submitted by him  and  other               two members and since it was not accepted,  he               does not agree with the above decision."     This resolution, in our opinion, is basically faulty  at least for two reasons. It may be recalled that the Executive Council without considering the report of Mr. Chavan, wanted the Vice-Chancellor to take a decision thereon. It may  also be noted that the Vice-Chancellor was present at the meeting of the Executive Council when the resolution was passed.  He was  given  "full  power to take a decision"  which  in  the context, was obviously on the report of Mr. Chavan, and  not on any other matter or question. He said that he would  take a  decision in about a month. In our opinion, by  the  power delegated  under the resolution, the  Vice-Chancellor  could either  accept or reject the report with intimation  to  the

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Executive Council. He could not have taken any other  action and indeed, he was not authorised to take any other action.     The  other infirmity in the said resolution goes  deeper than what it appears. The resolution was not in harmony with the  statutory requirement. Section 84 of the  Act  provides for delegation of powers and 466 it  states that any officer or authority of  the  University may  by  order, delegate his or its power (except  power  to make  Ordinance  and Regulations) to any  other  officer  or authority  subject  to provisions of the Act  and  Statutes. Section  24(1)(xii) provides for delegation of power by  the Executive Council. It states that the Executive Council  may delegate any of its power (except power to make  Ordinances) to  the Vice-Chancellor or to any other officer  subject  to the  approval of the Chancellor. (underlying is  ours).  The approval  of the Chancellor is mandatory. Without  such  ap- proval the power cannot be delegated to the Vice-Chancellor. The record does not reveal that the approval of the Chancel- lor  was ever obtained. Therefore, the resolution which  was not  in conformity with the statutory requirement could  not confer  power on the Vice-Chancellor to take action  against the respondent.     This  takes  us to the second contention urged  for  the appellants.  The contention relates to the legal  effect  of ratification  done by the Executive Council in  its  meeting held  on  December 26/27, 1985. The decision  taken  by  the Executive  Council  is in the form of a  resolution  and  it reads as follows:                        "Considering  the issues, the  Execu-               tive Council resolved as follows:                        1.  The  Executive  Council  at   its               meeting  held  on  March 22, 1979,  had  by  a               resolution  given full authority to the  Vice-               Chancellor for taking further proceedings  and               decision  in both the cases of the  defaulting               officers.                        2.  In exercise of  above  authority,               the   Vice-Chancellor  appointed  an   Inquiry               Officer and as suggested by the Inquiry  Offi-               cer  issued Show Cause notices,  obtained  re-               plies  from  the Officers  and  lastly  issued               orders for terminating their services;               XXX XXX XXX XXX XXX               It was further resolved that--               (i)  There has been no inadequacy in the  pro-               ceedings against both the officers;               (ii)  The punishment ordered against both  the               officers is commensurate with the defaults and               allegations proved               467               against both the officers; and               (iii) The Executive Council, therefore,  whol-               ly,  endorses  the actions taken by  the  then               Vice-Chancellor against both the officers."                   By  this resolution, we are told that  the               Executive  Council  has  ratified  the  action               taken by the Vice-Chancellor. Ratification  is               generally an act of principal with regard to a               contract  or  an  act done by  his  agent.  In               Friedman’s  Law  of  Agency  (Fifth   Edition)               chapter 5 at p. 73, the/principle of ratifica-               tion has been explained:                         "What the ’agent’ does on behalf  of               the  ’principal’  is done at a time  when  the

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             relation  of  principal  and  agent  does  not               exist:  (hence the use in this  sentence,  but               not  in subsequent ones, of inverted  commas).               The  agent,  in fact, has no authority  to  do               what  he does at the time he does  it.  Subse-               quently,  however,  the  principal,  on  whose               behalf,  though without whose  authority,  the               agent has acted, accepts the agent’s act,  and               adopts  it, just as if there had been a  prior               authorisation  by the principal to do  exactly               what  the  agent  has  done.  The  interesting               point,  which has given rise  to  considerable               difficulty  and dispute, is that  ratification               by the principal does not merely give validity               to  the agent’s unauthorised act as  from  the               date  of the ratification: it is antedated  so               as to take effect from the time of the agent’s               act. Hence the agent is treated as having been               authorised  from the outset to act as he  did.               Ratification  is ’equivalent to an  antecedent               authority’ ."               In Bowstead on Agency (14th Ed.) at p. 39)  it               is stated:                         "Every act whether lawful or  unlaw-               ful,  which is capable of being done by  means               of  an  agent (except an act which is  in  its               inception void) is capable of ratification  by               the person in whose name or on whose behalf it               is done .....  The words "lawful or unlawful",               however,  are included primarily  to  indicate               that  the  doctrine can apply to  torts.  From               them  it  would  follow that  a  principal  by               ratification may retrospectively turn what was               previously an act wrongful against the princi-               ple,  e.g. an unauthorised sale, or against  a               third party, e.g. a wrongful distress, into  a               legitimate one; or become liable for the  tort               of another by ratifying." 468     These principles of ratification, apparently do not have any application with regard to exercise of powers  conferred under  statutory provisions. The statutory authority  cannot travel  beyond  the power conferred and any  action  without power has no legal validity. It is ab initio void and cannot be ratified.     The  counsel  for the appellant,  however,  invited  our attention  to  the case of Parmeshwari Prasad Gupta  v.  The Union of India, [1974] 1 SCR 304. It was a case of  termina- tion of services of the Secretary of a Company. The Board of Directors  decided to terminate the services of  the  Secre- tary. The Chairman of the Board of Directors in fact  termi- nated  his  services. Subsequently, in the  meeting  of  the Board  of  Directors the action taken by  the  Chairman  was confirmed. In the suit instituted by the Secretary challeng- ing the termination of his services, the Court upheld on the principle that the action of the Chairman even though it was invalid  initially, could be validated by ratification in  a regularly  convened meeting of the Board of  Directors.  Ma- thew,  J. while considering this aspect of the  matter,  ob- served [at pp. 307 and 308]               "Even  if it be assumed that the telegram  and               the  letter  terminating the services  of  the               appellant by the Chairman was in pursuance  to               the invalid resolution of the Board of  Direc-               tors passed on December 16, 1953 to  terminate

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             his  services,  it would not follow  that  the               action  of the Chairman could not be  ratified               in  a regularly convened meeting of the  BOard               of Directors. The point is that even  assuming               that  the Chairman was not legally  authorised               to terminate the services of the appellant, he               was  acting on behalf of the Company in  doing               so, because, he purported to act in  pursuance               of  the invalid resolution. Therefore, it  was               open to a regularly constituted meeting of the               Board  of  Direction  to  ratify  that  action               which, though unauthorised, was done on behalf               of  the  Company.  Ratification  would  always               relate  back to the date of the  act  ratified               and  so it must be held that the  services  of               the  appellant  were  validly  terminated   on               December  17,  1953.  The  appellant  was  not               entitled to the declaration prayed for by  him               and the trial court as well as the High  Court               was right in dismissing the claim."                   These principles of ratification governing               transactions  of a company where  the  general               body is the repository of all powers not be               469               extended  to  the present case. We  were  also               referred  to  the  decision of  the  Court  of               Appeal  in  Barnard v.  National  Dock  Labour               Board, [1953] 1 All Eng. Law Reports 1113  and               in particular the observation of Denning L.J.,               (at 1118 and 1119):                         "While  an  administrative  function               can  often be delegated, a  judicial  function               rarely can be. No judicial tribunal can  dele-               gate its functions unless it is enabled to  do               so  expressly or by necessary implication.  In               Local  Government  Board v.  Arlidge  (2)  the               power  to  delegate  was  given  by  necessary               implication,  but  there is  nothing  in  this               scheme authorising the board to delegate  this               function  and  it cannot be  implied.  It  was               suggested  that it would be impracticable  for               the  board  to sit as a board  to  decide  all               these  cases, but I see nothing  impracticable               in that. They have only to fix their quorum at               two  members and arrange for two members,  one               from  each side, employers and workers, to  be               responsible for one week at a time.                        "Next, it was suggested that, even if               the board could not delegate their  functions,               at  any rate they could ratify the actions  of               the  port manager, but, if the board  have  no               power to delegate their functions to the  port               manager, they can have no power to ratify what               he  has already done. The effect of  ratifica-               tion  is to make it equal to a prior  command,               but as a prior command, in the shape of  dele-               gation, would be useless, so also is a ratifi-               cation."     These observations again are of little assistance to  us since  we have already held that there was no prior  delega- tion  of power to the Vice-Chancellor to  take  disciplinary action  against  the  respondent. There  was  no  subsequent delegation  either. Therefore, neither the action  taken  by the  Vice-Chancellor, nor the ratification by the  Executive Council could be sustained.

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         In  the result, the appeal fails and is  dismissed with costs. N.V.K.                                         Appeal   dis- missed. 470