11 May 1988
Supreme Court
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MEHMOOD ALAM TARIQ AND ORS. ETC. Vs STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS. ETC.

Bench: VENKATACHALLIAH,M.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 741 of 1987


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PETITIONER: MEHMOOD ALAM TARIQ AND ORS. ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT11/05/1988

BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:  1988 AIR 1451            1988 SCR  Supl. (1) 379  1988 SCC  (3) 241        JT 1988 (2)   417  1988 SCALE  (1)1150

ACT:      Rajasthan  State   and  Subordinate   Service   (Direct Recruitment  by   combined  Competition  Examination)  Rules 1962/Rajasthan Police  Service Rules  1954/Rajasthan  Forest Services Rules  1962/Rajasthan  Forest  Subordinate  Service Rules,  1963:   Rule  15(1)   Proviso/Rule  25-Proviso  (i)- Recruitment rule prescribing minimum qualifying marks in the viva  voce  test-Such  rule  whether  incurs  constitutional infirmity.      Statutory   Interpretation:   Validity   of   Statutory provision-To be  tested with  reference to its operation and efficacy in  generality of cases-Not by freaks or exceptions that its  applications might  in some  rare  cases  possibly produce.

HEADNOTE:      The Rajasthan  Public Service  Commission conducted  an examination in  1985 for appointments to State Services. The recruitment rules  contained  a  provision  that  candidates should secure  a minimum of 33% marks in the viva-voce test. Some of  the candidates  who failed  to secure  the  minimum marks in  viva-voce challenged  before the  High  Court  the constitutionality of  the provision in the Rules stipulating such minimum  cut-off marks.  The High  Court  declared  the provision unconstitutional.      Before this  Court, it  was  urged  on  behalf  of  the selected candidates and the State of Rajasthan, that (I) the High Court  fell into  a serious error in importing into the present  case   principles  ....   which  pertained  to  the proposition whether  the setting  apart of  an excessive and disproportionately high percentage of marks for viva-voce in comparison with  the marks  of the written-examination would be arbitrary; and (2) the prescription of minimum qualifying marks  for   the  viva-voce   test  would  not  violate  any constitutional principle  or  limitation,  but  was  on  the contrary a salutary and desirable provision.      On the other hand, it was urged that (1) the principles laid down  by this Court, which the High Court had accepted, were sound  and had  acquired  an  added  dimension  in  the context of the increasingly denuded standards of probity and rectitude in  the discharge  of public  offices, and (2) the

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real thrust of the principles was that any marking-procedure that made  the oral  test determinative  of the  fate  of  a candidate was,  in itself,  arbitrary, and  if this test was applied to this case, the decision reached by the High Court would be unexceptionable. 380      Allowing the appeals, it was, ^      HELD:(1)  A   sensitive,  devoted   and  professionally competent administrative  set-up could  alone undertake  the ever-expanding social and economic roles of a welfare state. [387A-B]      (2)  The   ’interview’  was  now  an  accepted  aid  to selection and  was  designed  to  give  the  selectors  some evidence of the personality and character of the candidates, which  qualities   were  necessary  and  useful  to  public- servants. [388G-H]      (3) Academic  excellence was one thing. Ability to deal with the  public with tact and imagination was another. Both were necessary  for an  officer. The  dose that was demanded may  vary   according  to   the  nature   of  the   service. Administrative and  Police Services  constituted the cutting edge of  the administrative machinery and the requirement of higher  traits   of  personality  was  not  an  unreasonable expectation. [391D]      Lila Dhar  v. State  of Rajasthan,  [1982]  1  SCR  320 referred to.      (4) The  observations made by this Court in Ashok Kumar Yadav were  in the context where the spread of marks for the viva-voce was so enormous, compared with the spread of marks for the written examination, that the viva-voce test ’tended to become  the determining factor’. The reference was to the possibility of  a candidate undeservedly being allotted high marks at the interview. That was a very different thing from the question  whether a  candidate should acquire at least a certain minimum percentage of marks at the viva-voce. [394B- C]      Ashok Kumar  Yadav v.  State of Haryana, [1985] Supp. 1 SCR 657 explained.      State of  U.P. v.  Rafiquddin &  Ors., (Judgment  Today (1987) 4 SC 257 referred to.      (5) The  prescription of minimum qualifying marks of 60 (33%) out  of the maximum of 180 set apart for the viva-voce examination did  not, by  itself, incur  any  constitutional infirmity. The  principles laid  down by  this Court  in the case of  Ajay Hasia  Lila Dhar and Ashok Kumar Yadav did not militate   against    or   render   impermissible   such   a prescription. [391B]      Ajay Hasia  v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & Ors., [1981] 2 SCR 79;  Lila Dhar  v. State  of Rajasthan & Ors., and Ashok Kumar Yadav v. State of Haryana, distinguished.      (6) A  mere possibility  of abuse  of a  provision, did not, by  itself, justify its invalidation. The validity of a provision must be tested with reference to its operation and efficiency in the generality of cases and not 381 by the  freaks or  exceptions that  its application might in some rare cases possibly produce. [394F-G]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil  Appeal No. 741 of 1987.      From the  Judgment and  order  dated  6.2.1987  of  the

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Rajasthan High  Court in  D.B. Civil Writ Petition No. 1632, 1758, 1826, 340, 1723, 344, 342, 343, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1982 of 1986, 170/87 and S.A. No. 341 of 1986      V.M. Tarkunde, Mrs. M. Karanjawala and Ezaz Maqbool for the Appellant in C.A. No. 741/87      Dushyant Dava, Ezaz Maqbool, Mrs. Manik Karanjawala for the Petitioners in W.P. No. 286/87.      C.M. Lodha, P.P. Rao, Badri Das Sharma, Raj Kumar Gupta and P.C. Kapur for the Respondents.      P.K. Jain for the Intervener in W.P. No. 286/1987.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      VENKATACHALIAH, J.  These  appeals  by  Special  Leave, arise out  of the  judgment, dated,  February 6, 1987 of the Division Bench of High Court of Rajasthan, disposing of by a common judgment  a batch of writ-appeals and writ petitions, in which  was involved  the  question  of  the  validity  of certain  provisions   of  the  Recruitment  Rules  made  and promulgated  under   the  proviso  to  Article  309  of  the Constitution  by   which,  in   respect  of  the  scheme  of competitive examinations  to  be  conducted  by  the  Public Service Commission  for recruitment  to certain  branches of the  civil   services  under   the  state,  certain  minimum qualifying marks in the viva-voce test were prescribed.      The Division  Bench,  by  its  judgment  under  appeal, declared as arbitrary and unconstitutional this prescription in  the   rules  which  required  that  the  candidates  for selection to Administrative Service, the Police Service, and the Forest  Service of  the State should secure a minimum of 33% of  the marks  prescribed for the viva-voce examination. In these appeals the correctness of the High Court’s view is questioned by  the State  of Rajasthan,  its Public  Service Commission and  the successful  candidates whose  selections were, in consequence of invalidation of the rule, quashed by the High Court.      The Writ-Petition  No. 286  of 1987  before us,  is  by another batch  of candidates  selected by the Public Service Commission for  issue of  a writ  of mandamus, directing the State to effectuate the selection and 382 issue orders  of appointment.  By an  inter-locutory  order, dated 13.3.1987  the operation  of the judgment under appeal was stayed  by this  court. The  result of this stay is that there was  no impediment to effectuate the Select-List dated 17.7.1986.      2. The Rajasthan State and Subordinate Services (Direct Recruitment  by  Combined  Competitive  Examinations)  Rules 1962, (’1962 Rules for Short’); the Rajasthan Administrative Service Rules 1954, the Rajasthan Police Service Rules 1954, the Rajasthan Forest Service Rules 1962 contain a provision, special to  the said  three services,  and not applicable to other services,  that candidates, other than those belonging to Scheduled  Castes and  Scheduled Tribes,  should secure a minimum of  33% of  marks in  the viva-voce test. It is this Rule which  is the  centre of  controversy. The  Rules  also stipulate that candidates for these three services must also secure 50%  in the  written examinations; but that is not in the area of controversy.      Proviso (1) to Rule 15 of the ’1962 rules’ which is the relevant Rule brings out the point. It provides:           15.  Recommendations  of  the  Commission-(1)  The           Commission shall  prepare for each Service, a list           of the  candidates arranged  in order  of merit of           the candidates as disclosed by the aggregate marks           finally awarded  to each candidate. If two or more           of such  candidates  obtain  equal  marks  in  the

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         aggregate, the Comission shall arrange their names           in the  order of  merit  on  the  basis  of  their           general suitability for the service:                Provided that:                (i) the  Commission shall  not recommend  any                candidate  for   the  R.A.S./R.P.S.  who  has                failed to  obtain a  minimum of  33% marks in                the personality and viva voce examination and                a minimum  of 50%  marks in the aggregate. It                shall also  not recommend  any candidate  for                other services  who has  failed to  obtain  a                minimum of 45% marks in the aggregate.                (ii)------------------------------------                (2)  Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in                proviso (i),  the Commission shall in case of                candidates belonging  to the Scheduled Castes                or Scheduled  Tribes recommend  the names  of                such candidates, upto the 383                number of  vacancies reserved  for  them  for                amongst.  those   who  have   qualified   for                interview, even  if they  fail to  obtain the                minimum marks  in viva  voce or the aggregate                prescribed under proviso (i) above. "                                          (emphasis supplied)      Similar is the purport of Proviso (i) to Rule 25 of the Rajasthan Administrative  Service Rules  1954; the Rajasthan Police Service  Rules 1954;  the  Rajasthan  Forest  Service Rules 1962  and the  Rajasthan  Forest  Subordinate  Service Rules 1963. The Rajasthan Public Service Commission conducts the competitive examination for selection for appointment to these and  several  other  services  under  the  State.  The maximum marks  for the  written-examination is  1400 and for the viva-voce and personality test is 180, which constitutes 11.9% of  the aggregate  marks. Rules  in  relation  to  the Administrative  Police  and  Forest  Services  require  that candidates should  secure 33% as minimum qualifying marks in the  viva-voce.   The  High  Court  has  struck  down  these provisions stipulating  the minimum  cut-off  marks  at  the viva-voce.      3. In  the  year  1985  the  Rajasthan  Public  Service Commission  initiated   proceedings  for   selection  to  16 services including  the said  three  services.  The  written examinations were  conducted in  october 1985 the results of which  were   published  in   April,  1986.   The  viva-voce examinations and  personality test  were  conducted  between June 11 & July 11, 1986. The final Select-List was published on 17.7.1986. The five appellants in CA 741 of 1987 secured, respectively, 19th  23rd, 20th,  12th and 11th places. The 5 petitioners in WP 286 of 1987 secured 10th, 13th, 14th, 17th and 18th places respectively in the Select-List.      Some of  the candidates  who failed  to  secure  .  the requisite  minimum   of  60  marks  out  of  the  180  marks prescribed for  the viva-voce and could not, therefore, make the grade  in the  said three services challenged before the High  Court.   The  Select-List   on  the   ground  of   the unconstitutionality  of   the   provision   in   the   Rules stipulating such  minimum cut-off  marks. They  filed  Writ- Petitions 1632  of 1986, 1723 of 1986, 1826 of 1986, 1842 of 1986, 1982  of 1986  and 170  of 1987 in the High Court. The petitions were  referred to and came before a Division Bench and were  heard along with the special Appeals 340 to 344 of 1986 which had been preferred against an earlier decision on the same question by a single judge of the High Court.      4. We  have heard Sri C.M. Lodha, Sri Tarkunde, and Sri

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Shanti Bhushan,  learned Senior  Advocates respectively, for the State of 384 Rajasthan, the  Public Service  Commission and the selected- candidates; and  Shri P.P.  Rao Learned  Senior Advocate for the unsuccessful  candidates at  whose instance  the Select- List was quashed by the High Court.      It was  contended for  the  appellants  that  the  High Court, in  reaching  such  conclusions  as  it  did  on  the constitutionality of  Proviso (i)  to Rule  15 of the " 1962 rules" and  of the  corresponding Provisions  in  the  Rules pertaining to  the other  services wholly  misconceived  the thrust and  emphasis of  the pronouncements of this court in Ajay Hasia  v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & Ors. etc., [1981] 2 SCR 79; Lila Dhar v. State of Rajasthan & Ors., [1982] 1 SCR 320 and Ashok Kumar Yadav v. State of Haryana and Ors. etc., [1985] Suppl.  1 SCR  657. It  was urged that the High Court fell into  a serious  error in  importing into  the  present case, principles laid down in a wholly different context and that in  the said  three decisions  the question  whether  a minimum qualifying marks could be prescribed for a viva-voce examination or  not did not fall for consideration much less decided, by  this court. What was considered in those cases, counsel  say,  pertained  to  the  proposition  whether  the setting apart  of an  excessive and  disproportionately high percentage of marks for the viva-voce in comparison with the marks of the written-examination would be arbitrary. Learned Counsel further submitted that reliance by the High Court on the Report  of the  Kothari Commission on the basis of which the prescription  of minimum  qualifying marks for the viva- voce was  done away with in the Competitive Examinations for the Indian  Administrative Service, Police Service and other central-services was  erroneous as that report was merely an indication of a policy-trend. It was submitted that even the Kothari Commission  had itself advised further evaluation of the matter. It was further submitted for the appellants that the  prescription   of  minimum   qualifying-marks  for  the written-examination or  the viva-voce or for both, is a well recognised aspect  of  recruitment  procedures  and  that  a prescription of  a maximum  of 11.9%  of the total marks for the  viva-voce   examination,  with  a  condition  that  the candidate must  get at  least, 33%  out of  these marks  for selection to  the three  key-services would  not violate any constitutional principle  or limitation; but on the contrary would, indeed,  be a  salutary and  desirable  prescription, particularly having  regard to the nature of the services to which  recruitment  is  envisaged.  It  was  submitted  that personnel recruited  to the high echelons of Administrative, Police and  Forest services  with  the  prospect,  with  the passage of time, of having to assume higher responsibilities of  administration  in  these  three  vital  departments  of Government, should  be tried  men with  dynamism and special attain 385 ments of  personality. It  was pointed  out that  though the pay-scale of  the Accounts Service and Insurance Service are the same  as that  of the  Administrative  Service,  such  a prescription is  not attracted  to the  selection  to  these other services.      5. Shri  P.P. Rao,  learned Senior  Advocate, appearing for the  candidates who  had failed to secure the minimum at the viva-voce  and whose challenge to the selection had been accepted by  the High  Court, submitted  that the principles which the  High Court  had accepted  were sound and that the decision under  appeal would  require to  be upheld. Sri Rao

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submitted that  the principles enunciated in the Ajay Hasia, Lila Dhar  and Ashok  Kumar Yadav acquire an added dimension in the  context of  the increasingly  denuded  standards  of probity and rectitude in the discharge of public offices-and that attempts  to vest  a wide  discretion in  the selectors should not  be too  readily approved.  According to Sri Rao, the real thrust of the principle laid down in these cases is that  any   marking-procedure  that   make  the   oral  test determinative of  the fate  of a  candidate is,  in  itself, arbitrary. Shri  Rao relied  upon the  following passage  in Ashok Kumar Yadav’s case [1985] Suppl. 1 SCR 657 at 697-98):           "... The  spread of  marks in  the viva-voce  test           being enormously  large compared  to the spread of           marks in  the written  examination, the  viva-voce           test tended  to become a determining factor in the           selection process,  because even  if  a  candidate           secured  the   highest  marks   in   the   written           examination, he could be easily knocked out of the           race by awarding him the lowest marks in the viva-           voce test  and correspondingly,  a  candidate  who           obtained  the   lowest  marks   in   the   written           examination  could  be  raised  to  the  top  most           position in the merit list by an inordinately high           marking in  the viva-voce  test. It  is  therefore           obvious  that   the  allocation  of  such  a  high           percentage of  marks as  33.3 per  cent opens  the           door wide  for  arbitrariness,  and  in  order  to           diminish,   if   not   eliminate   the   risk   of           arbitrariness,  this   percentage   need   to   be           reduced..."                                          (emphasis supplied)      Shri Rao  submitted that the correct test, flowing from the earlier  decisions, is  to  ask  whether  the  viva-voce tended to  become the  determing  factor  in  the  selection process. If  so, it would be bad. If this test is applied to the present  case Sri  Rao says, the requirement of minimum, cut-off marks in the viva-voce makes that viva-voce a "de- 386 termining factor"  in the selection-process and falls within the dictum  of the earlier cases and the decision reached by the High  Court accordingly  is  unexceptionable.  Sri  Rao, sought to  demonstrate how the Rule operated in practice and as to  how candidates  at the top of the results in written- examination had  failed even  to secure  the minimum  in the viva-voce, particularly in the Interview Board presided over by a  certain Sri  Khan. He showed with reference to several instances how the performance in the written-examination and the viva-voce bear almost an inverse proportion.      The  High   Court  accepted   those  grounds  urged  in invalidation of the impugned rule and held:           " .  .  .  The  question  before  us  is  slightly           different and relates to the essential requirement           of obtaining the prescribed minimum qualifying one           third marks  out of  those allotted  for the viva-           voce test, since the percentage of marks allot ted           for the  viva-voce test as compared to the written           test is  within the permissible limit. The test of           arbitrariness even  in such  a  case  is  however,           indicated by  the ratio  decidendi of  Ashok Kumar           Yadav case (supra).                It was  clearly held  by the Supreme Court in           Ashok Kumar  Yadav’s case  (supra) that any method           which  makes  the  viva-voce  test  a  determining           factor in  the selection  process resulting  in  a           candidate  securing  high  marks  in  the  written

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         examination being  easily knocked  out in the race           by awarding  him low  marks in  the viva-voce test           and vice  versa is  arbitrary and  is liable to be           struck down on that ground . . ."      6.  We   may  now  examine  the  merits  of  the  rival contentions. The  modern state  has moved  far away from its concept  as   the  ’Leviathan’  with  its  traditional  role symbolised by  the two  swords it wielded-one of war and the other of  justice.  The  modern,  pluralist,  social-welfare state with  its ever-expanding  social and economic roles as wide-ranging as  that of  an Economic-Regulator,  Industrial Producer and  Manager, Arbitrator, Educationist, Provider of Health  and  Social-Welfare  services  etc.,  has  become  a colossal service-corporation. The bureaucracy, through which the executive  organ of  the state  gives itself expression, cannot escape  both the excitement and the responsibility of this immense  social commitment  of the Welfare-State. Today the bureaucracy  in this  country  carries  with  it,  in  a measure never before dreamt 387 Of, the privilege and the burden of participation in a great social and  economic transformation,  in tune with the ethos and promise  of the  constitution for the emergence of a new egalitarian  and   eclectic  social   and  economic  order-a national  commitment   which  a   sensitive,   devoted   and professionally competent  administrative  set-up  alone  can undertake.  A   cadre  comprised  of  men  inducted  through patronage,  nepotism  and  corruption  cannot,  morally,  be higher than  the methods  that produced  it and be free from the sins  of  its  own  origin.  Wrong  methods  have  never produced right results.      What, therefore,  should impart  an added dimension and urgency to  the Recruitment to the services is the awareness of  the  extraordinary  vitality  and  durability  of  wrong selections. With  the constitutional  guarantee of security, the machinery for removal of a Government Servant on grounds of in-efficiency and lack of devotion remains mostly unused. The authors of a work on "Britain’s Ruling Class"*** say:           "ONE OF  THE MAIN  ATTRACTIONS of  working for the           Civil Service  is job  security. Once they let you           in,  you   have  to   do  something  spectacularly           improper  to  get  kicked  out.  In  1978  out  of           5,67,000 non-industrial  civil servants,  just  55           were sacked  for  disciplinary  reasons;  57  were           retired  early  ’on  grounds  of  inefficiency  or           limited efficiency’;  123 were  retired  early  on           grounds of redundancy’. In practice, a modest dose           of common sense and propriety allows you to stay a           civil servant  until you retire. In the middle and           senior administration grades many do just that. 82           per cent of permanent Secretaries have been in the           Civil Service for 25 years or more; so have 79 per           cent of  Deputy Secretaries,  62 per cent of Under           Secretaries and  70 per  cent of  Senior Executive           officers."           "... Recruiting  civil servants  means picking  as           many potential  high flyers as possible-and at the           same time  as few  potential albatrosses.  It is a           task carried  out by the Civil Service Commission-           with   scrupulous    honesty,   but   questionable           efficiency."      The history  of the  evolution of the civil services in some  countries   is  in   itself  study   in  contrasts  as fascinating as it is disquieting. ***  The Civil Servants; An Inquiry into Britain’s

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    Ruling Class: Peter Kellnor and Lord Crowther-Hunt at 388 In  France,  until  the  Revolution,  almost  every  office, central or  local, excepting  the dozen or so of the highest offices were  attainable only  by private  purchase, gift or inheritance. All Public officer were treated as a species of private property and voluminous jurisprudence governed their transmission. Of  this spectacle,  a  learned  authority  on Public Administration says:           "Prices rose,  but there  was  a  frantic  buying.           Ministers  made   the  most   of  their  financial           discovery. As  it soon  be came  too difficult  to           invent new  offices, the  old ones were doubled or           trebled-that is, divided up among several holders,           who exercise  their functions  in rotation, or who           did what  the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries           were  too   fond  of   doing,  employed  a  humble           subordinate to carry them out           "offices  were   sought,  then,  with  a  frenzied           energy,  and   they  were  created  with  synicism           Desmarets,  one   of  Louis   XIV’s   Comptroller-           Generals,   had   proposed   to   the   King   the           establishment of  some quite  futile offices,  and           the latter  asked who  would ever  consent to  buy           such situation?  ’Your Majesty’ replied Desmarets,           ’is forgetting  one of  the most  splendid of  the           prerogatives of  the Kings of France-that when the           King creates  a job  God  immediately  creates  an           idiot to buy it." (See Theory  and Practice of Modern Government-Herman Finer- page 751)      The much  desired transformation from patronage to open competition  is   later  development,  to  which,  now,  all civilised governments  profess commitment.  However,  though there is  agreement in  principle that  there  should  be  a search for  the best  talent  particularly  in  relation  to higher posts,  however, as  to the  methods of assessment of efficiency, promise  and aptitude, ideas and policies widely vary, though  it has  now come to be accepted that selection is an  informed professional  exercise which is best left to agencies independent of the services to which recruitment is made. The  ’interview’ is  now an  accepted aid to selection and is  designed to  give the selectors some evidence of the personality and  character of  the candidates.  Macaulay had earlier clearly  declared that a youngmen who in competition with his  fellowmen of the same age had shown superiority in studies might  well be  regarded as  having shown  character also since he could not have pre 389 pared himself  for  the  success  attained  without  showing character eschewing  sensual pleasures.  But  the  interview came to  be recognised A as an essential part of the process of selection on the belief that some qualities necessary and useful to  public-servants which  cannot be  found out  in a written test  would be  revealed in a viva-voce examination. In justification  of the value and utility of the viva-voce, the committee on Class I examinations in Britain said: B           "....... It  is sometimes  urged that a candidate,           otherwise well  qualified,  may  be  prevented  by           nervousness from  doing himself justice viva-voce.           We are  not sure that such lack of nervous control           is not  in itself  a serious  defect, nor that the           presence  of  mind  and  nervous  equipoise  which           enables  a   candidate  to  marshall  all  of  his           resources in  such conditions  is not  a  valuable

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         quality.  Further,   there  are  undoubtedly  some           candidates who  can never do themselves justice in           written examinations, just as there are others who           under the  excitement of  written  competition  do           better than  on ordinary  occasions .. We consider           that the  viva-voce can  be made  a  test  of  the           candidate’s    alertness,     intelligence     and           intellectual outlook,  and as  such is better than           any other .. .." As to  the promise  as well  as the limitations of the viva- voce, Herman Finer says: E           "If we  really care  about the  efficiency of  the           civil service  as  an  instrument  of  government,           rather than  as a  heaven-sent opportunity to find           careers  for   our   brilliant   students,   these           principles should be adopted. The interview should           last at least half an hour on each of two separate           occasions. It should be almost entirely devoted to           a discussion  ranging over  the academic interests           of the  candidate  as  shown  in  his  examination           syllabus, and  a  short  verbal  report  could  be           required on  such a  subject, the  scope of  which           would be  announced at  the interview. As now, the           interview should be a supplementary test and not a           decisive selective  test. The  interviewing  board           should include  a  business  administrator  and  a           university  administrator.  The  interview  should           come after and not before the written examination,           and if this means some inconvenience to candidates           and examiners,  then they  must remember that they           are helping  to select  the government  of a great           state, and a little inconvenience H 390           is not to be weighed against such a public duty .. (See Theory  and Practice  of Modern Government-Herman Finer at page 779)      The problems  of assessment  of personality are indeed, complicated. On the promise as well as dangers of the purely ’personal-interview’  method,   Pfiffner-Presthus   in   his ’Public Administration’ at page 305 says:           "Pencil-and-paper tests  that measure some aspects           of personality  are now  available. Notable  among           these are the so-called temperament or personality           inventories. These  consist of  questions in which           the  applicant   is  asked   to  evaluate  himself           relative to  certain  aspects  of  psychiatry  and           abnormal psychology.  Such tests  are subject to a           great deal  of controversy however, and there is a           school   of   experimental   psychologists   which           condemns  them,  mainly  on  two  grounds.  First,           individuals will  not give  honest  answers  in  a           competitive test  that asks them to describe their           abnormal  and   intimate  behaviour   or  beliefs.           Second, it  is maintained  that the value of these           tests  lies  in  their  use  as  the  repeutic  or           clinical aids  rather than  as  vehicles  for  com           petition . . .           "... Appointing officers are afraid that examining           procedures will  fail to  give proper attention to           such qualifications. The result is that they often           feel they could do a better job of selection using           only the  personal interview.  There are  at least           two reasons  why this cannot be allowed. The first           relates  to   the  protective  tendency  of  civil           service; appointing officers may appoint brothers-

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         in-law  or   personal  favourites.   In  addition,           psychological  research   has   shown   that   the           interview is of questionable validity, even in the           hands of an experienced executive."      7. The  arguments in  the case  on the  legality of the prescription of  minimum qualifying  marks in  the viva-voce turned more on the undesirability of such a condition in the background of  the increasing  public suspicion  of abuse of such situations  by  the  repositories  of  the  power.  The standards of  conduct in  public-life, over the years, have, unfortunately, not  helped to lessen these suspicions. Tests of this  kind owing  to  be  repeated  on  sloughts  on  the sensibilities of the public in the 391 past, tend themselves too readily to the speculation that on such occasions  considerations other  than  those  that  are relevant prevail.      8. On  a careful  consideration of  the matter,  we are persuaded to  the view  that  the  prescription  of  minimum qualifying marks of 60 (33%) out of the maximum marks of 180 set apart for the viva-voce examination does not, by itself, incur any constitutional infirmity. The principles laid down in the cases of Ajay Hasia, Lila Dhar, Ashok Kumar Yadav, do not  militate   against  or   render  impermissible  such  a prescription. There  is nothing unreasonable or arbitrary in the stipulation  that officers  to be  selected  for  higher services and  who are, with the passage of time, expected to man increasingly  responsible position  in the core services such as  the Administrative Services and the Police Services should be  men endowed  with personality traits conducive to the levels  of performance  expected in such services. There are  features  that,  distinguish,  for  instance,  Accounts Service from  the Police  Service-a distinction  that  draws upon and  is accentuated  by the  personal qualities  of the officer. Academic  excellence is  one thing. Ability to deal with the  public with  tact and imagination is another. Both are necessary  for an  officer. **Administrative  and Police Services constitute  the cutting  edge of the administrative machinery  and   the  requirement   of  higher   traits   of personality is not an unreasonable expectation.      Indeed in Lila Dhar v. State of Rajasthan, [1982] 1 SCR 320, this Court observed:           "Thus, the written examination assessees the man’s           intellect and  the interview  test the man himself           and ’the twain shall meet’ for a proper selection.           If both written examination and interview test are           to be  essential feature  of proper  selection the           question may arise as to the weight to be attached           respectively to  them. In the case of admission to           a college,  for  instance,  where  the  candidates           personality is  yet to develop and it is too early           to  identify  the  personal  qualities  for  which           greater importance  may have  to  be  attached  in           later life,  greater weight  has per  force to  be           given to  performance in  the written examination.           The importance  to be  attached to  the  interview           test must be minimal. That was what was decided by           this Court  in Periakaruppan  v.  State  of  Tamil           Nadu; Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & ** The  dose that  is demanded  may vary  according  to  the nature of the service . 392           Ors. etc.  and other  cases. On the other hand, in           the case  of A  service to  which recruitment  has           necessarily to  be made  from  persons  of  mature

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         personality, interview  test may  be the only way,           subject  to   basic  and  essential  academic  and           professional requirements being satisfied .. "                                          (emphasis supplied)           " .  . .  There are,  of course,  many services to           which recruitment  is made from younger candidates           whose  personalities   are  on  the  threshold  of           development and  who show  signs of great promise,           and the discerning may in an interview test, catch           a glimpse of the future personality in the case of           such services,  where sound selection must combine           academic ability  with personality  promise?  some           weight has  to be given, though not much too great           weight, to the interview test. There cannot be any           rule of  thumb regarding  the precise weight to be           given.  It  must  vary  from  service  to  service           according to  the requirement  of the service, the           minimum qualifications  prescribed, the  age group           from which  the selection  is to be made, the body           to which the task of holding the interview test is           proposed  to   be  entrusted  and  host  of  other           factors. It  is  a  matter  for  determination  by           experts. It  is a  matter for  research. It is not           for courts to pronounce upon it unless exaggerated           weight has  been  given  with  proven  or  obvious           oblique  motives.   The  Kothari   Committee  also           suggested that  in view  of the obvious importance           of the  subject, it  may be  examined in detail by           the Research  Unit of  the  Union  Public  Service           Commission."                                          (emphasis supplied)      This Court  indicated that  in matters  such as  these, which reflect matters of policy, judicial wisdom is judicial restraint.  Generally   matters  of   policy   have   little adjudicative disposition.      9. Indeed,  the point  raised in  the appeals admits of the answer found in the pronouncement of this court in State of U.P.  v. Rafiquddin  & Ors.,  Judgments Today 1987 (4) SC 257 where  this Court  considered the  permissibility of the prescription of minimum qualifying or cut-off marks in viva- voce examination,  while dealing  with clause  (ii)  of  the proviso to Rule 19 (as it stood prior to the 1972 amendment) of the  U.P. Civil Service (Judicial Branch) Rules 1951. The provision required  the selection  committee, inter alia, to ensure that  persons who  did not  secure sufficiently  high marks in the interview were not 393 recommended for  the  posts.  Pursuant  to  the  power  thus reserved to  it, the selection committee, prescribed certain minimum  cut-off   marks  for   the  interview.  This  court upholding the  validity of the prescription observed at page 264 and 265:           " .  . .  Aggregate marks  obtained by a candidate           determined his  position  in  the  list,  but  the           proviso of  the rule  required the  Commission  to           satisfy itself  that the  candidate  had  obtained           such aggregate  marks in  the written  test as  to           qualify him for appointment to service and further           he had  obtained such  sufficiently high  marks in           viva-voce which would show his suitability for the           service. The  scheme underlying  Rule 19  and  the           proviso made  it apparent  that obtaining  of  the           minimum aggregate  marks in  the written  test and           also the  minimum in  the viva-voce  was the sine-           qua-non before  the Commission  could  proceed  to

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         make its  recommendation in  favour of a candidate           for appointment  to the service. The Commission in           view of  clause (ii)  of the  proviso had power to           fix the  minimum marks  for viva-voce  for judging           the suitability of a candidate for service. Thus a           candidate who  had merely  secured the  minimum of           the aggregate  marks or  above was not entitled to           be included  in the  list of successful candidates           unless he had also secured the minimum marks which           had been prescribed for the viva-voce test           "... The  Commission had,  therefore, power to fix           the norm  and in  the instant case it had fixed 35           per cent  minimum marks  for viva-voce  test.  The           viva-voce test  is  a  well-recognised  method  of           judging  the   suitability  of   a  candidate  for           appointment to public services and this method had           almost  universally   been  followed   in   making           selection  for  appointment  to  public  services.           Where selection is made on the basis of written as           well  as  viva-voce  test,  the  final  result  is           determined on the basis of the aggregate marks. If           any minimum marks either in the written test or in           viva  voce   test  are   fixed  to  determine  the           suitability of  a candidate  the same  has  to  be           respected. Clause  (ii) of  the proviso to Rule 19           clearly confers  power on  the Commission  to  fix           minimum marks  for viva-voce  test for judging the           suitability of  a candidate for the service. We do           not find any constitutional legal infirmity in the           provision."                                          (emphasis supplied) 394 This  should,   in  your   opinion,  conclude   the  present controversy in favour of the appellants.      10. Shri  Rao’s reference  to  and  reliance  upon  the observations in Yadav’s case is somewhat out of context. The context in  which the  observations were  made was  that the spread of  marks for the viva-voce was so enormous, compared with spread  of marks  for the written examination, that the viva-voce test  ’tender to  become the  determining factor’. The  reference   was  to  the  possibility  of  a  candidate underservedly being  allotted high  marks at  the interview. That is  a very  different thing from the question whether a candidate  should   acquire  at   least  a  certain  minimum percentage of marks at the viva-voce. The distinction in the two sets  of situations  is brought  out in  the words of an administrator Sir Ross Barket:      "My experience,  which has  been  chiefly  confined  to      cases in  which the  number of  candidates was  not  so      large, is  that the  whole  process  is  dangerous  and      infinitely hazardous. I think most selection committees      on which  I have  served have  been very doubtful about      the results of what they had done. They have done their      best on  insufficient materials. The process is I think      fairly successful  in weeding  out the worst candidates      ...."                                          (emphasis supplied)      (See ’Union  Public Service  Commission-M.A.  Muttalib-      page 135)      11. It  is important  to keep  in mind that in his case the results of the viva-voce examination are not assailed on grounds of  mala fides  or bias  etc. The  challenge to  the results of  the viva-voce  is purely  as a  consequence  and incident of  the challenge  to the  vires of the rule. It is also necessary to reiterate that a mere possibility of abuse

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of  a   provision,  does   not,  by   itself,  justify   its invalidation. The  validity of  a provision  must be  tested with  reference   to  its  operation  and  efficacy  in  the generality of cases and not by the freeks or exceptions that its application  might in  some rare cases possibly produce. The affairs  of Government cannot be conducted on principles of distrust.  If the  selectors had  acted mala fide or with oblique motives,  there are,  administrative law remedies to secure reliefs  against such abuse of powers. Abuse vitiates any power.      We think  that on  a consideration  of the  matter, the High Court was in error in striking down the impugned rules. Accordingly, these 395 appeals are  allowed and the judgement dated 6.2.1987 of the Division A  Bench of  the High  Court is  set aside  and the writ-petitions filed  before it  challenging the validity of the impugned  rules are  dismissed. It  is not  necessary to issue express  directions in W.P. 286 of 1987 in view of the fact that  pursuant to  the orders  of stay dated 13.3.1987, the select-list  dated 17.7.1986 became amenable to be acted upon. With  the setting  aside of  the Judgment  of the High Court under  appeal, the  impediment in  the effectuation of select-list  dated   17.7.1986  stands   removed.   In   the circumstances of  these cases,  there will be no order as to costs. R.S.S.                                 Appeals allowed. 397