06 October 1975
Supreme Court
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STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS. Vs BALBIR SINGH ETC. ETC.

Bench: UNTWALIA,N.L.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2029 of 1968


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PETITIONER: STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BALBIR SINGH ETC. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1975

BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. BENCH: UNTWALIA, N.L. ALAGIRISWAMI, A. GOSWAMI, P.K.

CITATION:  1977 AIR  629            1976 SCR  (2) 115  1976 SCC  (3) 242  CITATOR INFO :  D          1984 SC1271  (27)

ACT:      Art. 311(2) of The Constitution Civil Service-Reversion to substantive posts not by way of punishment-Punjab Service of  Engineers   (Class  II)  Rules  1965-Punjab  Service  of Engineers,  Building   &  Roads   Branch  (Recruitment   and Conditions of  Service) Rule  1942-Punjab Reorganisation Act 1966-Secs. 2  2(5),  82,  83,  88-Continuance  of  laws  and administrative   orders   after   reorganisation-Distinction between adjustment  of  territories  by  reorganisation  and change of  sovereignty by   succession,  conquest, merger or Integration-An administrative  order becomes  effective when made or when communicated-Refund of remuneration received by a Govt. employee losing writ petition Ultimately.

HEADNOTE:      The respondents  in the  above 13  appeals  by  Special leave alongwith 2 others filed 15 Writ Petitions in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana challenging. the order dated 28- 10-1966 made  by the  Government of  the erstwhile undivided State  of   Punjab  reverting   the  respondents   to  their substantive  ranks.   The  respondents   were  promoted  and appointed as  S.D.Os. on  officiating basis  in  the  Punjab Public Works Department on the various dates between the 1st March, 1956  and 10th  May, 1963.  The  erstwhile  State  of Punjab was  reorganised by  the Punjab  Reorganisation  Act, 1966. On  1st November,  1966 the  former  State  of  Punjab ceased to exist and the successor States of Punjab, Haryana, Union territory  of Chandigarh and the transferred territory came into  being. According  to section  82  of  the  Punjab Reorganisation Act  every person  who immediately before the appointed day  was serving in connection with the affairs of the existing  State of  Punjab would  on and  from that  day provisionally continue  to  serve  in  connection  with  the affairs of  the State  of Punjab  unless he  is required  by general or  special order of the Central Government to serve provisionally   in connection  with the affairs of any other successor State.  Section 83  provides that every person who immediately  before   the  appointed   day  is   holding  or discharging the  duties of  any post or office in connection

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with the affairs of the existing State of Punjab in any area which on  that day  falls within  any of the successor State shall continue  to hold  the same  post or  office  in  that successor State  and shall be deemed on and from that day to have been  duly appointed  to the  post  or  office  by  the Government or  other appropriate  authority in the successor State. Sec  88 provides  that  the  law  applicable  in  the territory will continue to apply after reorganisation unless otherwise provided  by a competent legislature. Section 2(g) of  the   Act  defines   law  as  including  any  enactment, ordinance,  regulation,   order,   by-law,   rule,   scheme, notification or  other instrument,  having the force of law. The impugned  orders of  reversion were  communicated to the respondents after 1st November, 1966. The orders were passed by the  Government in  consultation with  the Punjab  Public Service Commission  before 1st  November,  1966.  The  Chief Engineer sent the said orders on 30-10-1966. The orders were however received after 1st November, 1966.      Before the  learned Single Judge of the High Court. the respondents contended  that they were governed by the Punjab Service   of   Engineers,   Buildings   and   Roads   Branch (Recruitment and  Conditions of  Service) Rules  1942, under which they  became automatically confirmed as members of the service and could not be reverted without complying with the provisions of  Article 311  of the Constitution. The learned Single Judge allowed the Writ Petitions on that ground.      On  an  appeal  before  the  Divisional  Bench  by  the appellants, the  Division Bench divided the respondents into three categories.  (1) those  who were  promoted after  1942 Rules were  repealed: (2)  those who  were promoted within 3 years preceding  the repeal of ]942 Rules: and (3) those who were 116 promoted more  than three years prior to such repeal. In the case of  first category,  the High  Court held that the 1942 Rules did not apply. In the case  of the second category the Division Bench  held that  they were not entitled to get the benefits of  1942 Rules  since they  had not  completed  the period of  3 years probation to acquire the substantive post in  accordance   with  the   1942  Rules.   Regarding  those respondents who  fell in  the third  category, the  Division Bench held  that they were promoted in the erstwhile Patiala and East Punjab States where the similar rules did not exist and could  not be  given the  advantage of  1942 Rules.  The Division Bench  held that  Punjab Service of Engineers Class II 1965  Rules were  applicable  and  therefore  before  the respondents could  be absorbed  and  admitted  to  Class  II service  approval  of  the  Public  Service  Commission  was required. In  the present case, since the Commission did not find  them  suitable  they  had  to  he  reverted  to  their substantive ranks.  On a  consideration of  large number  of authorities the  Division Bench  came to the conclusion that the reversion  of the respondents was not hit by Art. 311(2) of the  Constitution since  the reversion  was not by way of punishment. The  Division  Bench,  however,  held  that  the impugned orders  were communicated  to the respondents after 1-11-1966 and hence they remained ineffective and still born by reason  of their  not having  been  communicated  to  the respondents before  1st November,  1966. The Division Bench, therefore, dismissed the appeals filed by the appellants.      In appeals  by Special  leave, the appellants contended that the  decision of  the Division Bench that the orders of reversion remained ineffective and still born was erroneous. ^      HELD:

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    1. The  Division Bench  rightly held that the orders of reversion were  not hit  by Art. 311(2) of the Constitution. This aspect  of the  matter is  now clearly  covered by  the decision of  this Court in the case of Shamsher Singh v. The State of Punjab [1975] S.C.R. 814. This part of the judgment of the Division Bench was not seriously disputed.                                                    [120-E-F]      2. The  impugned orders were not law within the meaning of s. 2 (g) and were, therefore not saved by s. 88. S.88 was introduced as  a matter  of abundant  caution. The law which was in force before the appointed day in the former State of Punjab were bound to continue until competent Legislature or authority of the successor States effect any change in those laws. If  this could  be the  position in the continuance of the law  in the  successor States on what principles one can say that  the administrative  orders made  by the  erstwhile State of  Punjab automatically  lapsed and came to an end on and from  the appointed  day on the coming into existence of the successor States.      3. When  there is  no change  of sovereignty  and it is merely an adjustment of territories by the reorganisation of a particular  State, the  administrative orders  made by the Government of  the erstwhile  State continue  to be in force and effective  and binding on the successor States until and unless they  are  modified  changed  or  repudiated  by  the Governments of  the  successor  States.  No  other  view  is possible to be taken. The other view will merely bring about chaos  in   the  administration   of  the  new  States.  The principles laid down by this Court in following cases:      (1) Rajvi  Amar Singh  v The  State of Rajasthan [1958] S.C.R. 1013 and      (2) Rajkumar  Narsingh Pratap  Singh  Deo  v  State  of      Orissa and Another [1964] 7 S.C.R. 112. are not applicable to the present case as this is not a case of  absorption  of  one  State  in  another  by  succession, conquest, merger  or integration.  It would  be  chaotic  if these  principles   were  to  be  applied  to  the  case  of reorganization of States in the same country. [123H, 124A-D]      4. On  the facts  and circumstances  of this  case  the successor State far from repudiating or modifying the orders of reversion  adopted those  orders as  their own.  The High Court was wrong in holding that the orders were communicated on or  after 1st  November, 1966  when  they  were  actually received by the 117 officers concerned.  Following the judgment of this Court in the case  of State  of Punjab v. Khemi Ram, A.I.R. 1970 S.C. 214, it was held that the orders were communicated either on 29-10-1966 or  surely on  30-10-1966. The  judgment of  this Court in  the case of Bachiter Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1962] 3 Suppl. S.C.R. 713, distinguished. [125A-C]      5. It is one thing to say that in the case of dismissal or the  like the  order becomes  effective only  after it is received by  the officer  concerned and a different thing to say that  an order  has  no  effect  at  all  before  it  is communicated in  the sense  of receipt  of the  order by the officer concerned.  The orders  in the  present case  became effective as  soon as they were sent out and for the purpose of section  83 of  the Act the respondents must be deemed to be holding  the posts  to which  they were  reverted on  1st November, 1966. [125-G-H 126A]      6 . About 9 years have passed after the impugned orders of reversion  were passed.  After the  High Court judgement, all the  respondents were  officiating in  the higher posts. After the  reversion orders  were passed and before the High

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Court  judgment  was  delivered  the  respondents  were  not working in  the  higher  posts.  The  appellant,  therefore, claimed the  difference of  salary paid  to the  respondents during this period when they were not working as S.D.Os. The respondents contended that even during this period they were either  working  as  S.D.Os  or  had  gone  on  leave  while continuing in  such  posts.  In  the  circumstances  justice requires that  the Government should not claim any refund of any part  of the  salary paid to the respondents up to date. [126G-H, 127A-C]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 518 to 530 of 1970.      Appeals by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and order dated the  21st May,  1969 of  the Punjab  and Haryana  High Court in  L.P.As. Nos.  286, 327,  340, 368,  374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 502 and 511 of 1968.      O.P. Sharma  (In all  appeals) V.  C. Mahajan  (In C.A. 518) Kapil  Sibal (In  C.As. 529-530) and N. S. Das Bahl (In C. A. 519-528 for the Appellants.      M. N.  Phadke, Mrs.  Archana Kumar, M. R. Agnihotri and P. C. Bhartari for Respondents in C.A. 526.      K. P.  Bhandari (In CA 521) M. R. Agnihotri (In CA 522) K.J.John (in  Cas. 524, 527 and 528), and P. C. Bhartari (In all appeals) for the Respondents.      S. K.  Mehta, K. R. Nagaraja, M. Qamaruddin, P. N. Puri and K. L. Mehta for Respondents (In CA. 530).      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      UNTWALIA, J.  -In these 13 appeals by special leave the appellants are  (1) the State of Punjab, (2) Union of India. Respondent no.  1 in  Civil Appeal  No. 519  of 1970 and the sole respondent  in each of the remaining 12 appeals are the concerned  Government   servants.  The  said  13  Government servants alongwith  two more  filed  15  writ  petitions  to challenge order  dated the  October 28,  1966  made  by  the Government of the erstwhile undivided State of Punjab. Their writ applications  were allowed by a learned single Judge of the High  Court of  Punjab and  Haryana  at  Chandigarh.  15 Letters Patent  Appeals were  filed by  the appellants. They have been dismissed by a 118 Division Bench  of the  High Court.  13  appeals  have  been brought to  this Court  and not  the other  two.  Since  the Division Bench  of High  Court has  disposed of  all the  15 Letters Patent  appeals  by  a  common  judgment,  to  avoid confusion in  the statement  of facts  we think it better to state in  a chart  form the  number of  the Civil Appeal the corresponding number  of the  L.P.A. and  the  name  of  the Government servant concerned. Civil Appeals  of 1970        L. P. As of Names of the Govt. servants 1968      518 ................. 286 Balbir Singh      519 ..................327 Bhagwan Singh      520 ..................340 Surmukh Singh      521 ............... . 368 Dasaundi Ram      522 ..................374 Jagdish Singh      523 ..................375 R. R. Bhanot      524 ..................376 Surat Singh      525 ..................377 Shamsher Singh      526 ..................378 Bakhatawar Singh      527 ..................379 Jodh Singh      528...................380 Kartar Singh

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    529...................502 Gurcharan Singh      530 ..................511 Gurbux Singh      nil ..................289 Devdutta      nil ..................328 Sushil Kumar Khallar At the  outset it may be stated that the respondent in Civil Appeal No.  521 Dasaundi  Ram is  dead and  that appeal  has abated on  that account.  Bhagwan Singh, respondent in Civil Appeal No. 519 does not seem to be in service any longer and no body has appeared in this Court on his behalf. Out of the remaining 11  respondents, we were informed at the Bar, that the 7  respondents in  Civil Appeals 522 to 527 and 529 have since retired  from service.  Only 4  of the  respondents in Civil Appeals 518, 520, 528 and 530 are still in service.      Respondents Balbir  Singh, Surmukh Singh, Dasaundi Ram, Jagdish Singh,  Surat Singh,  Kartar Singh  and Gurbux Singh were promoted  and appointed  on officiating  basis as  Sub- Divisional Officers  in the  Punjab Public  Works Department (Buildings and  Roads Branch) on various dates between 30-7- 1960 to  10-5-1963. Respondents R. R. Bhanot, Jodh Singh and Gurcharan Singh  were so  appointed between dates 17-12-1957 and 10-12-1959.  Respondents Shamsher  Singh and  Bhakhtawar Singh  were   promoted   on   22-10-1956   and   1-3-   1956 respectively.  Respondent   Kartar  Singh   was  working  as planning Assistant-cum-Draftsman while the other respondents were Overseers  before they  were appointed  as  officiating Sub-Divisional Officers. By the impugned order dated October 28, 1966  the then  Government of the erstwhile Punjab State reverted them  to their  original rank.  The orders of their reversion were  challenged by  the said  respondents on  the ground that  they were  governed by  the Punjab  Service  of Engineers,  Buildings  and  Roads  Branch  (Recruitment  and Conditions of  Service) Rules,  1942 (for  brevity, the 1942 Rules). They claimed that they 119 had become automatically confirmed as members of the service under the  said Rules  and could  not  be  reverted  without complying with  the provisions  of  Article  311(2)  of  the Constitution of India and the other statutory Rules relating to disciplinary  matters. This  was  the  only  point  which succeeded before the learned single Judge and he allowed all the   writ   applications,   it   appears,   without   fully appreciating, the  distinction of facts of the various cases for the acceptance of this ground.      Respondent Bhagwan  Singh was  appointed  as  temporary Assistant Engineer  on completion of his six months training period with  effect from  December 3,  1960. His service was terminated by  the then  Punjab Government  by  order  dated October 28,  1966 on  the ground  of his  having been  found unsuitable for  appointment  to  P.S.E.  Class  II  (B  &  R Branch). Bhagwan  Singh also  relied upon  1942 Rules before the learned single Judge and succeeded.      The Division  Bench has  very carefully and elaborately considered the application of the 1942 Rules to the cases of the respondents.  It has  disagreed with  the single Judge’s view. After  copiously quoting from the 1942 Rules, the High Court in  appeal has  referred  to  the  Punjab  Service  of Engineers Class  I P.W.D. (Buildings and Roads Branch) Rules 1960  (for   brevity,  the   1960  Rules)   regulating   the recruitment and  conditions of  service of persons appointed to the  P.S.E. Class  I service.  The 1960  Rules came  into force on  and from  March 18, 1960. It had repealed the 1942 Rules by  Rule 24  with  a  saving  clause  in  the  proviso appended thereto. The High Court then referred to the Punjab Service of  Engineers, Class  II P.W.D. (Buildings and Roads Branch) Rules,  1965 (for brevity, Class II 1965 Rules). The

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said Rules came into force from February 19, 1965. The stand on behalf  of the  State of  Punjab in the High Court was :- (1) that  the 1942  Rules did  not govern  the cases  of the respondents as  the said  Rules applied  to class  I service consisting of  Assistant Executive Engineers and officers of higher ranks  only; (2) that the respondents had to be taken in P.S.E.  Class II service in accordance with Rule 6(5) (b) of Class II 1965 Rules read with paragraph 1 (d) of Appendix ’G’ of  the said  Rules, in  consultation  with  the  Punjab Public Service Commission; (3) that since the Commission did not find  them suitable  for being admitted to that service, they were  reverted to  their substantive rank in accordance with the  terms and  conditions of  their service and not by way of punishment.      The High  Court made a comparative study of 1942 Rules, 1960   Rules and  Class  II  1965  Rules  and  came  to  the conclusion that  the officiating Sub-Divisional officers, as the  respondents   were,  not   being  Assistant   Executive Engineers, were not governed by the 1942 Rules. None of them had claimed  that he  was  holding  the  rank  of  Assistant Executive Engineer  in any capacity. The view of the learned single Judge that the Sub-Divisional Engineers were included in the  category of  Assistant Executive  Engineers did  not find favour  with the  Bench. The  Bench further pointed out that  the   respondents  should   be  divided   into   three categories: (a) those who were promoted subsequently to the 9-L1276SCI/75 120 repeal of  the 1942  Rules, (b) those who were promoted with him three years preceding such repeal and (c) those who were promoted more  than three  years prior  to such  repeal. The respondents  promoted   on  dates   between  30.7.1960   and 10.5.1963 fell  within the  first category.  Obviously  they could not  claim the  protection on the basis of 1942 Rules. The three respondents who were appointed as officiating Sub- Divisional officers  between 17-12-1957  and 10-12-1959 fell within the second category. The High Court rightly held that they had  not completed  the maximum  period of  three years probation to acquire the substantive posts of Sub-Divisional officers fixed under Rule 12(3) of 1942 Rules, even assuming that they  could take  advantage of  the  same.  Respondents Shamsher Singh and Bakhatawar Singh had been promoted in the year 1956  and fell  within the third category. The Division Bench pointed  out that  in their case the difficulty in the application of the 1942 Rules was that they were promoted in the erstwhile Patiala and East Punjab States Union. It could not be  shown that  there were any statutory Rules governing their  conditions   of  service  and  appointments  as  Sub- Divisional Officers. Since on the date of the impugned order dated 28.10.1966  they had  put in  more than  10  years  of service as  officiating Sub-Divisional  officers, their case was considered  to be a hard one. But for the purpose of the law they  could not be given the advantage of the 1942 Rules and obviously so.      It is  plain that  the case  of none of the respondents was covered by the 1942 Rules. All the respondents had to be absorbed  and   admitted  to  P.S.E.  Class  II  service  in accordance with  Class II  1965 Rules  and that required the approval of  the Public Service Commission. Since Commission did not find them suitable, they had to be reverted to their substantive ranks.  On a  consideration of a large number of authorities  the   High  Court   has  rightly  come  to  the conclusion that  their reversion  was not hit. On account of the non  compliance with the provisions of Article 311(2) of the Constitution  or any  Rules governing  the  disciplinary

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action. The  reversion was  not by  way of  punishment. This aspect of the matter is now squarely covered by the decision of this Court in Shamsher Singh & Anr. v. State of Punjab(1) (vide page 837).      A  few   new  points   were  urged  on  behalf  of  the respondents in  the Letters  Patent appeals.  They were  not allowed  to  be  raised  except  the  one  which  eventually succeeded and the Letters Patent appeals were allowed on the basis of that point.      The  decision   of  the  High  Court  as  respects  the application  of   the  1942   Rules  to  the  cases  of  the respondents and  the order of reversion not being hit by the alleged  non   compliance  with   Article  311(2)   of   the Constitution could not be seriously challenged before us. We agree with  the view  expressed by the Division Bench. It is not necessary  to repeat  all that has been said by the High Court in  that regard.  We now  proceed to consider the only substantial question  which falls for determination in these appeals.      (1) [1975] 1 S. C. R. 814. 121      The erstwhile  State of  Punjab was re-organized by the Punjab Re-organisation  Act, 1966, Central Act XXXI of 1966, hereinafter called  he Act.  On the appointed day i.e. On 1- 11-1966 the  former State  of Punjab ceased to exist and the successor States  of Punjab,  Haryana,  Union  Territory  of Chandigarh and  the Transferred  Territory came  into being. All the  respondents except respondent Bhagwan Singh came to be allocated  to the  new State of Punjab. Bhagwan Singh was allocated to  Haryana and then to Himachal Pradesh. The High Court  took   the  view   that  the   impugned  orders  were communicated  to  the  respondents  concerned  on  or  after 1.11.1966 and  hence they  "remained ineffective  and still- born by  reason of their not having been communicated to the respondents before  1.11.1966." Though  this point  had been taken in  the writ  petitions, it does not seem to have been pressed before  the learned single Judge. The Division Bench treating it  as a  pure question  of law  allowed it  to  be raised  in   the  Letters   Patent  appeals  and  ultimately dismissed the appeals by holding in favour of the appellants that since  the impugned  orders were  communicated to  them after coming  into force  of the  new successor  States they could not  affect their  status and position which they held on 1.11.1966.      The factual  position in relation to the point at issue is like  this. The  erstwhile State  of Punjab was under the President’s Rule  before its  re-organization. The  order in the name  of the  President  of  India  .  authenticated  by Secretary to Government of Punjab, P.W.D. B&R/ P.H. Branches recited "The  President of  India, in  consultation with the Punjab Public  Service Commission,  does  not  consider  the following officiating  Sub-Divisional  officers  of  Punjab, P.W.D. B  & R  Branch, suitable  for appointment  to  P.S.E. Class II (B & R Branch) and accordingly they are reverted as indicated below  with immediate  effect." The  list contains the  names  of  20  officers  including  the  ’names  of  12 respondents other  than respondent  Bhagwan Singh.  An Issue Book was  shown to  us at  the time  of the hearing of these appeals by  the State counsel indicating that the Government order aforesaid  was forwarded  to  the  Accountant  General Punjab, Simla  and to  the Chief  Engineer Punjab P.W.D. & R Branch, Patiala,  for information  and necessary action. The Chief Engineer  as it  appears from  the  statement  in  the counters filed on behalf of the State communicated the order to the  officers concerned  as per  his Memo  No.  8E/47/Re-

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org/11670 710  dated 30.10.1966.  The respondents,  however, seem to  have received the orders on or after 1.11.1966. The question for  consideration is  whether the view of the High Court that  the orders  being administrative  in nature were not laws  within the  meaning of the  Act and hence were not saved by  section 88 is correct and whether r’ they remained ineffective and inoperative because they not communicated to the respondents before 1.11.1966.      Under the  Act certain territories were carved out from the appoint  ed day  from the then existing State of Punjab. Under sections  3 and 4 were formed the State of Haryana and the Union Territory of Chandigarh. The territories mentioned in section  5 were  added to  the then  Union  territory  of Himachal Pradesh. The balance was to 122 remain in  the State  of Punjab under- section 6. Sections 3 to 6  occur in  Part II  of the Act. Part III deals with the representation in the Legislatures and allocation of sitting members etc.  Part IV  concerns the  making of  the existing High Court  as the common High Court for Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh. Part  V is  headed "Authorisation of Expenditure and  Distribution   of  Revenue."   Part   VI   deals   with ’Apportionment of  Assets and  Liabilities." Part  VII makes provisions as  to certain Corporations. Part VIII relates to Bhakra Nangal  and Beas Projects. We are concerned with some of the  sections of Part IX headed Provisions as to services and  Part  X  making  Legal  and  miscellaneous  provisions. Section 81  in Part  IX contains  provisions relating to All India Services.  Section 82  (1) is  important and  reads as follows:           "Every person who immediately before the appointed      day is  serving in  connection with  the affairs of the      existing State  of Punjab  shall, on and from that day,      provisionally continue  to serve in connection with the      affairs of  the State  of Punjab unless he is required,      by general  or special order of the Central Government,      to serve  provisionally in  connection with the affairs      of any other successor State." According to  the provision  aforesaid all  the  respondents provisionally continued  to serve  in  connection  with  the affairs of  the State  of Punjab  and eventually also all of them (except  Bhagwan Singh)  continued to  serve with  that State. We  shall now read section 83 on which great reliance was placed on behalf of the respondents:           "Every person who immediately before the appointed      day is holding or discharging the duties of any post or      office in  connection with  the affairs of the existing      State of  Punjab ill  any area  which on that day falls      within any  of the  successor States  shall continue to      hold the  same post  or office  in that successor State      and shall be deemed, on and from that day, to have been      duly appointed  to the post or office by the Government      of, or  other appropriate  authority in, that successor      State:      Provided that  nothing in  this section shall be deemed to prevent  a competent  authority on or after the appointed day from  passing in  relation  to  such  person  any  order affecting his continuance in such post or office." Section 88 occurring in Part X provides:      "The provisions  of Part II shall not be deemed to have effected any  change in  the territories to which any law in force  immediately  before  the  appointed  day  extends  or applies, and  territorial references  in any such law to the State of  Punjab  shall,  unless  otherwise  provided  by  a competent  Legislature  or  other  competent  authority,  be

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construed as  meaning  the  territories  within  that  State immediately before the appointed day." 123      Law is defined in clause (g) of section 2 of the Act to say:           "law"   includes    any   enactment,    ordinance,      regulation, order,  bye-law, rule, scheme, notification      or other  instrument  having,  immediately  before  the      appointed day,  the force of law in the Whole or in any      part of the existing State of Punjab; We agree  with the  High Court  that the  impugned orders in question were not law within the meaning of section 2(g) and hence were,  in terms, not saved by section 88. We think the High Court is right when it says:           "Section 88  appears to  have been introduced as a      matter  of   abundant  caution.  In  my  opinion,  mere      splitting up  of the  territories of  Punjab into  four      successor States  would not  ipso facto  result in  the      abrogation or repeal of the laws which were immediately      in force before the appointed day in those territories.      There is nothing in the 1966 Act, not l even in Section      88, which  expressly or by necessary intendment repeals      the law  which were  in force  immediately be  fore the      appointed day  in the territories of the former Punjab.      Those laws  derived their  force de  hors the 1966 Act.      The first part of Section 88 is merely clarificatory of      any doubts  which  might  arise  as  a  result  of  the      reorganisation of Punjab, while the latter part of this      section is  merely  an  adaptative  provision,  to  the      effect, that the territorial references in any such law      to the  State of  Punjab shall  continue  to  mean  the      territories within  that State  immediately before  the      appointed day.  Thus, read  as a whole Section 88 merly      dispels doubts as to the continuity of the laws which .      were in  force before  the appointed  day in the former      State of  Punjab, until  the competent  legislature  or      authority of the successor States effects any change in      those laws."      If this could be the position in the continuance of the law in  the successor States, on what principles one can say that the administrative order made by the erstwhile State of Punjab automatically  lapsed and  came to an end on and from the appointed  day on  the  coming  into  existence  of  the successor States.  Is it  possible to take the view that the Legislature when  it made  so many  provisions in the Act in its various  parts in regard to the matters already referred to, did not think it appropriate to make a provision for the continuance of  the  effect  of  the  administrative  orders passed by  the Government  of the  erstwhile State of Punjab until the  Governments of  the successor  States modified or changed it  ? or,  is it?  as a matter of law and propriety, reasonable to think that the Legislature did not consider it necessary at  all to  make such an express provision, as the continuance of the effect of such orders was to obvious even without such  a provision ? In our Judgment when there is no change of  sovereignty and  it is  merely an  adjustment  of territories by the reorganization of a particular State, The administrative  orders   made  by   the  Government  of  the erstwhile 124 State continue  to be  in force and effective and binding on the successor  States until  and unless  they are  modified, changed or  repudiated by  the Governments  of the successor States. No  other view  is possible  to be  taken. The other view will merely bring about chaos ill the administration of

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the new States. We find no principle in support of the stand that administrative  orders made  by the Government r of the erstwhile  State  automatically  lapsed  and  were  rendered ineffective  on   the  coming  into  existence  of  the  new successor States.      On behalf  of the  respondents reliance was placed upon the decision  of this Court in Rajvi Amar Singh v. The State of Rajasthan(1)  and’ Rajkumar  Narsingh Pratap Singh Deo v. State of  Orissa and  another(2) Bose,  J..  delivering  the judgment of  the Court  in the former ease had: said at page 1018:           "Now it is well established that when one State if      absorb ed  in another,  whether by accession, conquest,      merger or integration, all contracts of service between      the prior  Government and  its  servants  automatically      terminate and  thereafter those  who elect  to serve in      the new  State and  are taken  on by  it, serve on such      terms and  conditions as  the new  State  may choose to      impose. This is nothing more, (though on a more exalted      scale), than  an  application  of  the  principle  that      underlines the  law of Master and Servant when there is      a change of masters." The said  principle is not applicable to the case on hand as it is  not a  case of  absorption of one State in another by accession, conquest  merger  or  integration.  It  would  be chaotic in  this principle were to be applied to the case of re-organization of  States in  the same country. In the case of Raj  Kumar N. P. Singh Deo (supra) a question arose as to whether the  sanad granted by the ruler of Dhenkanal who was an absolute  monarch and  which State  after independence of India came  to be merged in the State of Orissa was a purely executive act  or a law within the meaning of Article 372 of the Constitutional.  This Court decided that this was purely an executive act. The Orissa Government had discontinued the payment of the allowance under the sanad to the grantee. The action was  upheld on  the ground  that the executive act of the ruler of another sovereign State could not be binding on the Orissa Government and that Government had full authority to discontinue  the payment of the allowance. Indirectly the said decision  of this Court supports the view which we have ex pressed above. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the impugned orders  passed by  the Government  of the erstwhile State  of   Punjab  continued   to  be  the  orders  of  the Governments of  the concerned  successor  States  until  and unless they  were modified,  changed or  repudiated by  them Nothing of  the kind  was done  by the  new State of Punjab; rather, by  treating that  order as valid and adopting it as its  own,   the  new  State  of  Punjab  resisted  the  writ applications and  pursued the  matter in  the Letters Patent appeals and up to this Court in these appeals. (1) [1958] S. C. R. 1013.         (2) [1964] 7 S. C. R. 112; 125      On the facts and in the circumstances of these cases we do not   agree with the High Court that the communication of the orders was on or after 1-11-1966 when they were actually received by  the officers  concerned. Following the ratio of the decision  of a  Bench of  4 Judges of this Court, in the case of  State of  Punjab v.  Khemi Ram(1)  we hold that the orders were  communicated either  on 29-10-1966 or surely on 30-10-1966. The  earlier decisions  of this  Court have been considered by  Shelat, J.  in  the  decision  aforesaid.  In Bachillar Singh v. The State of Punjab(2) no formal order of the  Government   had  even   been  drawn   up,  much   less communicated, and,  therefore,  it  was  held  that  it  was neither an  order  of  the  Government  nor  was  the  order

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communicated. What  is the  meaning of  communication of the order in  a given case did not fall for decision before this Court in the case of Bachittar Singh.      In the  case of State of Punjab v. Amar Singh Harika(3) the order of dismissal passed on 3rd June, 1949 was actually communicated to  the officer  concerned  on  2/3rd  January, 1953. But  before the said date the said officer had come to know on  28th May  1951 about the dismissal order. This date was taken  to be  the date  of communication. Shelat, J. has considered the earlier cases of this Court including the one in S’. Pratap Singh v. The State of Punjab(4) a paragraph 16 of the judgment the law laid down is:           "lt will  be seen  that in all the decisions cited      before us  it was  the communication  of  the  impugned      order which was held to be essential and not its actual      receipt by the officer concerned and such communication      was held  to be  necessary because  till the  order  is      issued and  actually sent  out to  the person concerned      the authority  making such order would be in a position      to change its mind and modify it if it thought fit. But      once such  an order  is sent  out, it  goes out  of the      control of such an authority, and therefore there would      be no  chance whatsoever  of its  changing its  mind or      modifying it.  In our view, once an order is issued and      it is  sent out to the concerned government servant, it      must be  held to  have been  communicated  to  him,  no      matter when he actually received it." Applying the principle of law aforesaid we find in this case that the  orders went  out of  the control  of the authority which had passed that order on 29-10-1966 when copies of the orders were  forwarded to  the Accountant  General  and  the Chief Engineer.  In any event, we think that the orders were despatched from  the office  of the  Chief Engineer on 3-10- 1966. It  is one  thing to say that in the case of dismissal or the  like the  order becomes  effective only  after it is received by  the officer  concerned and a different thing to say that  an order  has  no  effect  at  all  before  it  is communicated in  the sense  of receipt  of the  order by the concerned officer. In the sense we have said above the (1) A. I. R. 1970 S. C. 214.    (2) [1962] 3 Suppl. S. C. R.                                                         713. (3) A. I. R. 1966 S. C. 1313.      (4) [1964] 4 S. C. R. 733 126 orders were communicated to all the respondents before 1-11- 1966. They  became effective  as soon as they were sent out. And  for   the  purposes  of  section  83  of  the  Act  the respondents must  be deemed to be holding the posts to which they were reverted on 1-11-1966.      Reliance was  placed on  behalf of the respondents upon the decision  of a  learned single  Judge of  the  Punjab  & Haryana High  Court in  the case  of Shil Saran Dass Sood v. The State  of Punjab  and others(1) wherein it was held that there is no provision in the Act where under the proceedings for disciplinary  action against  a public  servant, who  is allotted to  a State other than one in which the proceedings are pending,  could be  continued  by  the  Inquiry  officer already appointed  nor could such Inquiry officer submit his report to  the corresponding authority in the State to which the public  servant is  allocated. We wish to point out that the proposition  of law  enunciated in such a bald manner is not correct.  The Inquiry  officer may  not be  competent to continue the  enquiry and  submit the  report for  different reasons. But it is not correct to say that:           "the   Inquiry    officer   appointed    by    the      Commissioner,  Ambala   Division,  prior   to  the  re-

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    organisation of  the State,  cannot be  taken to be the      Inquiry  officer   appointed   by   the   Commissioner,      Jullundur Division,  after November 1, 1966 as there is      no provision  in the  Punjab Re-organisation  Act where      under the proceedings for disciplinary action against a      public servant,  who is allocated to a State other than      the one  in which the proceedings are pending, could be      continued by  the Inquiry officer already appointed nor      could such  Inquiry officer  submit his  report to  the      corresponding authority  in  the  State  to  which  the      public servant is allocated." Shorn of  the complications  of other  facts if  the Inquiry officer was  appointed by  the Commissioner  of  a  Division which  was   a  part   of  the   undivided  State   and   on reorganisation  becomes   a  part  of  the  new  State,  the disciplinary proceeding  started earlier  can undoubtedly be continued and  concluded without a fresh order of starting a disciplinary proceeding.      We therefore,  hold that  the view  taken by  the  High Court that  the  orders  were  still  born  and  ineffective because They were received by the respondents on or after 1- 11-1966 is not correct.      After careful  consideration we  have  arrived  at  the conclusion that.  the impugned  orders  of  reversion  dated October 28, 1966 were valid. About 9 years have passed since then and  some complications have arisen during this period. Admittedly,  after   the  High   Court  judgment   all   the respondents were  officiating in  the higher  posts. At  the time of  the hearing  of these  appeals, we  were  given  to understand at  the Bar  that none  of  the  respondents  was reverted pursuant to the impugned order We asked the parties to ascertain the correct position and file their statements. On behalf of the Government we have been inform- (1) 72 Punjab Law Reporter 950. 127 ed that  they will not claim any refund of the salaries paid to the  respondents for  the  period  they  have  worked  as officiating Sub-Divisional  officers in  the Department. But they claimed  that the  respondents were not working as such after the reversion order and before the High Court Judgment and hence  they are  entitled to get back the difference. Of salary paid  to the respondents for the period they have not worked as  Sub-Divisional officers  and had  worked only  as overseers and  Draftsmen in  their  substantive  posts.  The difference of  salary for the intervening period between the order of  reversion and  the High Court Judgment was paid to them subject to the furnishing of the bank guarantee. On the other hand,  it is claimed on behalf of the respondents that even during those periods they were working as S.D.O. or had gone on  leave  while  continuing  in  such  posts.  In  the circumstances justice  requires that  the Government  should not claim  any refund  of any part of the salary paid to the respondents  until   today.  Partly   in   view   of   their understanding and  partly  because  of  the  requirement  of justice, we direct the Government not to do so.      The final result of the appeals is as follows:      Civil Appeal  No. 521/1970  is dismissed  as abated  on account of  the death  of the  respondent. The respondent of Civil Appeal  No 519,  it is  admitted on  all hands,  is no longer in  service. This  appeal is, therefore, dismissed as infructuous. The  remaining  11  appeals  are  allowed,  the judgments and  orders of  the High  Court both of the single Judge and  the Division  Bench are  set aside.  But this  is subject to  the directions  given above  in  regard  to  the salary paid  to the  respondents so  far. There  will be  no

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order as to costs in any of the appeals. P.H.P 128