22 September 1976
Supreme Court
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P.C. PATEL AND ORS. Vs SMT. T.H. PATHAK AND ORS.

Bench: SHINGAL,P.N.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1022 of 1975


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PETITIONER: P.C. PATEL AND ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT. T.H. PATHAK AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT22/09/1976

BENCH: SHINGAL, P.N. BENCH: SHINGAL, P.N. RAY, A.N. (CJ) BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH

CITATION:  1977 AIR  101            1977 SCR  (1) 677  1977 SCC  (1)  42

ACT:            Civil  service--Seniority--Irregular  recruitment   Regu-         larisation--Appointments  through  Public  Service   Commis-         sion--Recruitment  through  centralised recruitment scheme.

HEADNOTE:            The respondents Nos. 1 to 10 who were Writ PetitiOners in         the High Court, were appointed as clerks between June,  1963         to  January,  1967 on temporary basis and were  promoted  to         higher  posts thereafter.  They contended that at the  rele-         vant  time  there was, no rule or order requiring  that  ap-         pointments  to  their  posts shall be  made  through  Public         Service  Commission.  The Gujarat Government issued  Gujarat         Non-Secretariat  Clerks, Clerk Typists and ’Typists  (Direct         Recruitment Procedure) Rules, 1970.  Thereafter, by  resolu-         tion  dated 15-4-1971, it was stated that seniority  of  the         candidates who were to be selected for the posts of  Clerks,         Clerk  typists and typists shall be determined as  if  their         allotment or appointment was from 17-4-1970 irrespective  of         the  question whether they were in service or not, and  that         their names shall be arranged in a common seniority list  in         order  of merit in accordance with the principles laid  down         in the Rules.             The Writ petitioners filed a Writ Petition in the  Guja-         rat High Court feeling aggrieved by the said 1970 Rules  and         the 1971 resolution.             The  Writ  Petitioners  contended  that  the  Government         should be directed to treat their entire service as  regular         and that their seniority should be fixed on the basis of the         dates on which they had joined their respective posts.             The  State Government in its counter  affidavit  pointed         out  that  the Writ Petitioners were not  recruited  through         proper channel; that even though the centralised recruitment         scheme was in existence and was applicable with effect  from         January, 1963, the Writ Petitioners did not come through the         employment exchanges that their appointments were by way  of         a stop-gap arrangement.  The State, however, admitted in its         affidavit  that  the  Writ Petitioners were  not  under  the         purview of the Gujarat Public Service Commission at the time         of  their  appointment.  The State contended that  the  Writ         Petitioners  were irregularly appointed and that 1970  Rules

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       were  framed  on humanitarian considerations  to  regularise         their  appointments and that, their seniority could  not  be         counted  from  the dates of their appointment and  could  be         counted only from 17th April, 1970.             The  High Court came to the conclusion that the  Centra-         lised  Recruitment Scheme was not applicable when  the  Writ         Petitioners were appointed and that the posts were also  not         within the purview of the Gujarat Public Service  Commission         until March, 1969.  The High Court therefore, held that  the         appointments  of the petitioners were regular and  were  not         required  to be regularised under the 1970 Rules.   It  also         held  that  the State Government had no power to  issue  the         circular under rule 30 of the Rules for allotment and  fixa-         tion  of a seniority and that the instructions contained  in         the  resolution  of  1971 were not applicable  to  the  Writ         Petitioners.   The  High Court allowed  the  Writ  Petition,         struck  down  the  seniority list, and  directed  the  State         Government  and the Director of Civil Supplies to treat  the         services  of the petitioners as regular from the dates  when         they were appointed initially and not to apply the  instruc-         tions  contained in the resolution of 1971 to compute  their         seniority.             The  appellants,  who  claimed to  have  been  appointed         regularly  from the beginning and who contend that  the  ap-         pointments  of  the writ petitioners  were  irregular  filed         appeal by Special Leave. The appellants contended:                       1.  That the initial appointment of  the  Writ                  Petitioners  was irregular, being in  violation  of                  the  centralised  recruitment  scheme,  since   the                  office                  678                  of the Director of Civil Supplies became a part and                  parcel  of the Directorate of Civil  Supplies,  and                  that  the  centralised recruitment scheme  was  ap-                  plicable  to the recruitment of the Writ  Petition-                  ers.                     2. The appointment to the posts held by the Writ                  Petitioners were required to be made through Public                  Service  Commission,  but  as they  were  not  made                  through P.S.C. the appointments were irregular.         Dismissing the appeal with a modification,             HELD:  1. The High Court has rightly negatived both  the         contentions  of the appellants.  The State in its  affidavit         had  admitted that the posts, the Writ Petitioners were  not         within under the purview of the Public Service Commission at         the  time  of their appointment.  The High Court   has  also         rightly  held’ that by describing the cadre in question as a         "State Cadre", it could not be said that the modified scheme         was  made applicable to the Directorate.  It is  clear  from         the scheme that it governed the recruitment to the  regional         offices  and  not to the offices of  the  Directorate.  [680         C--E, F-G]             2.  Rule  29  of the 1970 Rules can apply  only  if  the         initial  appointment  was  irregular, i.e.,  if  the  Public         Service  Commission was not consulted when the  consultation         was  required  and if the recruitment had  not  taken  place         through  the  Centralised  Recruitment Scheme  when  it  was         necessary  to  do so.  In the’ present case Rule  29  cannot         apply because the appointments of the Writ Petitioners  were         regular. [681 G--H]             3.  The view taken by the High Court is quite  justified         and does not call for interference. [681 F]             4. The High Court, however, was not justified in direct-         ing that the seniority should be counted from the respective         dates of the appointment of the Writ Petitioners.  ’the High

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       Court ought to have left the matter to the State  Government         to  re-examine the question of fixing the seniority to  give         effect  to  their intention of ameliorating the lot  of  the         writ petitioners. [682 A--B]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1022 of 1975.             Appeal  by  Special Leave from the Judgment  and   Order         dated’  27-2-75  of  the Gujarat High Court  in  Spl.  Civil         Appln. No. 767/74.         S.K. Dholakia and R.C. Bhatia, for the Appellants.             Hardayal Hardy, K.R. Nagaraja, S.K. Mehta and P.N. Puri,         for Respondents 2, 4, 5, 7-10.         R.N. Sachthey, for Respondent No. 11.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             SHINGHAL, J.---This appeal by special leave is  directed         against a, judgment of the Gujarat High Court dated February         28,  1975, in a writ petition filed by Smt. T.H. Pathak  and         nine others, who are now arrayed as respondent Nos. 1 to  10         and  will hereafter be referred to as the writ  petitioners.         They were appointed as clerks or accounts’ clerks from  June         19,  1963 to January 12, 1967, on a temporary basis. in  the         office  of the Director of Civil Supplies (Accounts),  Guja-         rat,  and  were promoted to higher posts  thereafter.   They         claimed that there was no rule or order until March 1, 1969,         requiring  that  appointments on their posts shall  be  made         through the Gujarat Public Service Commission, so that their         appointments were outside the purview of the Commission  and         were regular.  The State Government however made         679         the  Gujarat Non-Secretariat Clerks, Clerk-typists and  Typ-         ists (Direct Recruitment Procedure) Rules, 1970, hereinafter         referred  to  as the Rules, on April 17,  1970,  and  issued         instructions  for their enforcement, including  instructions         for determination of their seniority.  That was followed  by         a  resolution dated April 15, 1971, in which it  was  stated         that the seniority of the candidates who were to be selected         for  the  posts of clerks, clerk-typists and  typists  under         clause  (i) (a) of rule 29, shall be determined  from  April         17, 1970, as if their allotment and/or appointment was  from         that date irrespective of the question whether they were  in         service or not, and that their names shall be arranged in  a         common seniority list in order of merit, in accordance  with         the principles laid down in the  Rules.  The writ  petition-         ers  felt aggrieved against the provisions of the Rules  and         the  Government instructions, as well as the seniority  list         which  was  published thereunder on April  18,  1974.   They         prayed  for a direction requiring the authorities  concerned         to treat their service as regular, for  quashing the  afore-         said  resolution dated April 15, 1971, and for  a  direction         that their seniority may be fixed on the basis of the  dates         on which they had joined their respective posts.             The  respondents  to  the writ  petition  traversed  the         contentions  of the writ petitioners in their replies.   The         State Government stated in its reply that the writ petition-         ers  were not recruited through proper channel  even  though         the Centralised Recruitment Scheme was in existence and  was         applicable  to  their office with effect  from  January  21,         1963,  that  they did not come through  the  employment  ex-         changes,  that their appointments were by way of a  stop-gap         arrangement  pending  recruitment through  Centralised   Re-         cruitment Scheme or the  Public Service Commission, and that         as  they were  "irregularly appointed" their services  could

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       be  terminated at any time.  It was pleaded that it was  for         that reason that the Government made a provision in rule  29         of the Rules, on humanitarian considerations, to  regularise         the  appointments in accordance with the provisions  of  the         Rules.  It was accordingly contended that the writ petition-         ers could not claim seniority from the dates of their irreg-         ular appointments and their service. for purposes of senior-         ity, could only be counted from April 17, 1970.             The  High Court took the view that the  Centralised  Re-         cruitment Scheme was not applicable when the writ  petition-         ers  were  appointed in the Directorate  of  Civil  Supplies         (Accounts) or in the office of the Deputy Director of  Civil         Supplies  (Accounts),  and that their posts  were  also  not         within the purview of the Gujarat Public Service  Commission         until March 1, 1969.  The High Court therefore held that the         appointments  of the writ petitioners were regular and  were         not  required to be regularised under rule 29 of the  Rules.         It held that the State ’Government had no power to issue the         circular  under  rule 30 of the Rules  for  "allotment"  and         fixation  of  seniority  of the writ  petitioners,  and  the         instructions  contained  in the resolution dated  April  15,         1971  were not applicable to them.  It  accordingly  allowed         the  writ  petition,  struck down the seniority  list  dated         April 18, 1974, directed the State Government and the Direc-         tor of Civil Supplies (Accounts) to treat the service of the         writ petitioners as regular from the dates when they were         680         appointed initially, not to apply the instructions contained         in  the resolution dated April 15, 1971 to them, to  compute         their  seniority from the dates of their respective  initial         appointments  and  to  fix their seniority  afresh  on  that         basis.   The  appellants, who claim to have  been  appointed         regularly  from  the very beginning, and challenge  the  ap-         pointments  of the writ petitioners as irregular,  feel  ag-         grieved, and this is how the present appeal has come up  for         consideration before us.             It  has been argued by counsel for the  appellants  that         the initial appointments of the writ petitioners were irreg-         ular  and the High Court erred in taking the view  that_rule         29  of the Rules was not applicable to them.  This  argument         has  been  advanced on the grounds that the  office  of  the         Director  of  Civil Supplies (Accounts) became  a  part  and         parcel of the Directorate of Civil Supplies and appointments         to  the posts to which the writ petitioners  were  initially         appointed  were  therefore required to be made  through  the         Public Service Commission, and that the Centralised Recruit-         ment  Scheme  was made applicable to those  appointments  in         pursuance,  at  any rate, of the resolution  dated  July  9,         1964.   We find that both these contentions have been  exam-         ined by the High Court and it has given satisfactory reasons         for taking the view that this was not so.  It will be enough         to say that the Dircctorate    of Civil Supplies  (Accounts)         was  not included in appendix B to the Scheme  which  formed         part  of  the resolution dated November 21,  1960  by  which         certain posts were brought within the purview of the  Public         Service  Commission.   It has in fact been admitted  in  the         affidavit  of K.K. Joshipura, Under Secretary to the   State         Government,  dated September 4, 1974, that it was "true  the         office  of  the D.C.S.(A) was not under the purview  of  the         Gujarat  Public Service Commission  at the time of  the  ap-         pointment  of the petitioners." There is  therefore  nothing         wrong with the view which has prevailed with the High  Court         that  the Directorate did not come under the purview of  the         Public Service Commission until March 1, 1969.             As  regards the Centralised Recruitment Scheme  and  the

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       resolution  of  January 21, 1963, the High Court  has  again         rightly  held that the resolution applied to recruitment  of         clerks  in district and  regional offices and as the  Direc-         torate of Civil Supplies (Accounts) was not such an  office,         the  Scheme did not apply to it.  We have gone  through  the         other  resolution  dated July 9, 1964,  which  modified  the         Scheme, but here again the High Court has rightly taken  the         view  that  merely because of use of the  expression  "state         cadre",  it could not be said that the modified  scheme  was         made  applicable to the Directorate.  We have  gone  through         the  whole  of  the  Scheme and we have  no  doubt  that  it         governed  recruitment to district and regional offices,  and         there  is  no justification for the argument that it  become         applicable  for recruitment of clerks in the Directorate  of         Civil Supplies (Accounts) as well.             As  it  is, nothing has been shown to justify  the  view         taken by the State Government that the initial  appointments         of the writ petitioners were irregular and had to be regula-         rised  in accordance with the provisions of rule 29  of  the         Rules.  The rule provides as follows,--               "29. Notwithstanding anything contained in these rules         the following eases shall be regularised in the manner shown         681         below  in relaxation of their upper age, provisions  of  Re-         cruitment  Rules  concerned  and/or  rules  for  pre-service         training  made  by Government in this behalf to  the  extent         indicated below :--               (1) (a) Persons  initially  recruited  otherwise  than         through  the Gujarat Public Service Commission, or  Central-         ized Recruitment Scheme, as clerks, clerk-typists or typist-         sin the offices to which the Rules apply, and who have  ren-         dered not less than 2 years’ continuous service, as clerk or         clerk-typist  or  typist,  as the case may be,  as  on  31st         December, 1968 in one or more offices and who are continuing         in  Government service as clerks, clerk-typists or  typists,         as the case may be, on the date of this notification or such         persons whose names are kept on the Waiting List for  provi-         sional  appointment for the reason that they had to be  dis-         charged  for want of posts even though they had  rendered  2         years’ continuous service as on 31st December, 1968 shall be         required  to  appear  at the special  interview  and/or  the         special typing test to be held for them for their  selection         for  appointment to the post of clerk, clerk-typist or  typ-         ist, as the case may be."         Then  follow the other sub-rules with which we are not  con-         cerned.   The  writ  petitioners  were  initially  recruited         otherwise  than  through the Gujarat Public Service  Commis-         sion  and  the Centralised Recruitment Scheme and  they  had         rendered  not  less than two years’  continuous  service  as         clerk, clerk-typists or typists by December 31, 1968,  but,’         as would appear from the history of their service, it  could         not be said that they were continuing in Government  service         as clerks, clerk-typists or typists on April 17, 1970, which         was  the date of the notification of the Rules.   The  State         Government  therefore  again erred in  thinking  that  their         service  was   governed by rule  29(1) (a).   So   when  the         appointments of the writ petitioners were not irregular, and         they  were not continuing in Government service  as  clerks,         clerk-typists  or typists on April 17. 1970, rule 30 of  the         Rules was also not applicable to them and it was not permis-         sible  for  the  authorities concerned  to  determine  their         allotment and seniority under that rule.  The view taken  by         the  High  Court is therefore quite justified and  does  not         call for interference.             The write petitioners had put in several years of  serv-

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       ice, and had received pro.motions from time to time.   Their         appointments   were however temporary all  through.   It.ap-         pears  that  the State Government  thought  of  ameliorating         their  lot for that reason and attempted to do so by  making         the aforesaid rule 29 of the Rules.  But, as has been shown,         in doing so the State Government laboured under the  impres-         sion  that the initial appointments of the writ  petitioners         were irregular, and had to be regularised.  As this was  not         a  correct premise, and as rule 29 is not really  applicable         to the writ petitioners for the reasons mentioned above,  it         would  perhaps be advisable for the SLate Government to  re-         examine  the whole matter and to take appropriate action  to         give  effect to their intention of ameliorating the  lot  of         the writ petitioners.  That is however not a matter for this         Court to decide.  The         689         High Court was therefore not justified in directing that the         seniority of the writ petitioners should be computed on  the         basis  that "their services with effect from the  respective         dates of their joining service as Clerks in the  Directorate         of Civil Supplies (Accounts) were regular and in  accordance         with law."  As it would have been enough for the High  Court         to say that the State Government ,may reexamine the question         of fixing the seniority of the writ petitioners and to  take         appropriate  action  to ameliorate their  lot  as  temporary         employees,  the operative part of the impugned  judgment  of         the  High  Court  is modified to this  extent.   The  appeal         otherwise fails and is dismissed.In the circumstances of the         case, we leave the parties to pay and bear their own costs.         P.H.P.                                Appeal dismissed.         683