01 September 1976
Supreme Court
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STATE OF U.P. Vs RAM CHANDRA TRIVEDI

Bench: SINGH,JASWANT
Case number: Appeal Civil 258 of 1976


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PETITIONER: STATE OF U.P.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAM CHANDRA TRIVEDI

DATE OF JUDGMENT01/09/1976

BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT KHANNA, HANS RAJ SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:  1976 AIR 2547            1977 SCR  (1) 462  1976 SCC  (4)  52  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1979 SC 429  (11)  R          1979 SC 684  (7)  F          1980 SC  42  (12,19)  RF         1980 SC1242  (11)  R          1984 SC 636  (11)  R          1987 SC1531  (46)  R          1987 SC2408  (9)  F          1989 SC1335  (33)

ACT:              Pracctice--Duty  of High Court when there  is  conflict         between decisions of the Supreme Court--Upsetting concurrent         findings  of  fact  in  second  appeal-Propriety.             Constitution  of  India, 1950 Art.  311--Termination  of         services  of temporary servant--Protection of  article  when         applicable.

HEADNOTE:            The  respondent was appointed as a temporary   clerk   in         an  engineering division of the Government.  The attempt  of         another clerk to impersonate and appear for him in a depart-         mental  examination was  detected.  The  Executive  Engineer         obtained explanations from both the clerks and reported  the         matter  to  the  Superintending Engineer,  who  brought  the         matter to the notice of the ChiefEngineer.  The Chief  Engi-         neer wrote to the Superintending Engineer to award  suitable         punishment.   The Superintending Engineer passed  the  order         that the respondent a "temporary clerk is hereby served with         one month’s notice to the effect that his services shall not         be required after one month from the date of receipt of this         notice."  The respondent filed a suit challenging the  order         on   the  ground  that  the  termination was one  passed  by         way  of  punishment  and  therefore  attracted  Art  311  of         the  constitution;.  and  since  the   provisions   of   the         Article had not been complied  had  not  been  complied with         the order was void. The Trial Court and the First  Appellate         Court  dismissed the suit.  But the High Court  went,through         the  official  correspondence preceding the passing  of  the         impugned order, and observing that a close scrutiny of the         facts  on record showed that the order was passed by way  of         punishment  on the basis of the enquiry proceeding and as  a

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       result  of  the  recommendation by  the  Executive  Engineer         followed by the direction issued by Chief Engineer,  allowed         the second appeal.         Allowing the appeal to this Court,             HELD  :(1) It is no longer open to any one to urge  that         the   constitutional  position  in regard to  cases  of  the         present  nature is not clear.  An examination of  the  deci-         sions of this Court shows that there is no real conflict  in         their  ratio  decidendi. Even if there is  a  conflict,  the         proper   course for a High Court is to find out  and  follow         the  opinion  expressed by larger benches of this  Court  in         preference  to  those expressed by smaller benches  of  this         Court.  This practice is followed by those Court itself  and         has hardened into a rule of law.  [475B-C]             Union  of   India & Anr. v.K.S.  Subramanian,  [1977]  1         S.C.R. 87, followed.             State  of  U.P. & Ors v. Sughar Singh [1974]  2  .S.C.R.         335: (1974) 1 S.C.C. 218, The State of Punjab v.P.S.  Cheema         A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 1096, Satish Chandra Anand v. The Union  of         India [1953]  S.C.R.  655, Shyam Lal v. State of U.P. [1955]         1 S.C.R. 26, Parshotam Lal Dhingra v. Union of India  [1958]         S.C.R. 828, Gopi Kishore Prasad v. Union of India AIR.  1960         S.C.   689, The State of Orissa & ,Anr. v. Ram  Narayan  Das         [1961] 1 S.C.R. 606, Madan Gopal v. State of Punjab [1963] 3         S.C.R.  716,  Rajendra Chandra Banerjee v.  Union  of  India         [1964]  2 SC.R. 135, Champakal Chimanlal Shah v.  The  Union         of.India  [1964]  3 S.C.R. 190, Jagdish Mitter v.  Union  of         India  A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 449, State of Punjab & Anr. v.  Shri         Sukh Raj Bahadur [1968] 3 S.C.R; 234, Union Of India         463         &  Ors. v.R.S. Dhaba [1969] 3 S.C.C. 603, State of  Bihar  &         Ors. v. Shiva Bhikshuk Mishra [1971] 2 S.C.R. 191. R.S. Sial         v.  The State of U.P. & Ors. [1974] 3 S.C.R.  754,  Shamsher         Singh & Anr. v. State of Punjab [1975] 1 S.C. R. 814 and The         Regional Manager & Anr. v. Pawan Kumar Dubey [1976] 3 S.C.R.         540 referred to.             (2)  Before  it is held that an  order  terminating  the         services  of a Government servant amounts to punishment  the         Court  must  hold that either of the two  tests,namely,  (a)         that the servant had a right to the post or (b) that he  had         been  visited with evil consequences such as  forfeiture  of         pay etc., is satisfied. Therefore, an order terminating  the         services  of  a temporary servant or probationer  under  the         Rules  of  employment  and without anything  more  will  not         attract  Art. 311.  Where a departmental enquiry is  contem-         plated  but an enquiry is not in fact proceeded  with,  Art.         311  will not be attracted unless it can be shown  that  the         order, though. unexceptionable in form, is made following  a         report based on misconduct.  Even though misconduct,  negli-         gence,  inefficiency  or other disqualification may  be  the         motive for the order of termination, if a right exists under         the  contract or the rules to terminate his  services,  then         Art. 311(2) is not attracted unless the misconduct or negli-         gence is the very foundation of the order.  Where there  are         no express words in the impugned order itself’ which throw a         stigma on the Government servant, the Court would not  delve         into  secretariat  files to discover whether  some  kind  of         stigma could be inferred on such research.  [469 A-B; 473 C;         471 H; 475 F]             Parshotam  Lal Dhingra v. Union of India  [1958]  S.C.R.         828,  R.S. Sial v. The State of U.P. & Ors. [1974] 3  S.C.R.         754,  Shamsher  Singh  & Ant. v. State of  Punjab  [1975]  1         S.C.R.  814  and 1. N. Saksena v. State  of  Madhya  Pradesh         [1967] 2 S.C.R. 496 followed.             (3) The respondent was a temporary hand and had no right

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       to  the post. Under the contract of service and the  service         rules   applicable   to   him  the State had  the  right  to         terminate his services by giving him one month’s notice. The         order  ex-facie is an order of termination of  service  sim-         pliciter.  It does not cast any stigma on the respondent nor         does it visit him with evil consequences, nor is it  founded         on  misconduct.  Therefore, the respondent could not  invite         the  Court to go into the motive behind the order and  claim         the protection of Art. 311(2) of the Constitution.  [475  D-         E]             (4)  The  High  Court  failed  to  appreciate  the  true         legal .and constitutional position and upset the  concurrent         findings  of fact arrived at by the Courts  below,  ignoring         the  well  settled  principle of law that  a  second  appeal         cannot be entertained on the ground of erroneous findings of         fact, however, gross the error might seem to be.  [475 G-H]         Paras Nath Thakur v. Smt. Mohani Das & Ors. [1960] 1  S.C.R.         271. Sri     Ramanuja Jeer & Ors. v. Sri.Ranga Ramanuja Jeer         &   Anr.   [1962]   2 S.C.R. 509, P.  Ramachandra  Ayyar  v.         Ramalingam  [1963]  3  S.C.R.  604  and  Madamanchi  Ramappa         & ..Anr. v. Muthaluru Bojappa [1964] 2 S.C.R. 673,  referred         to.

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 258/76.             Appeal  by  Special Leave from the  Judgment  and  Order         dated  3-1-75 of the Allahabad High Court in  Second  Appeal         No. 2261/66.                  G.N. Dikshit and O.P. Rana, for the Appellant.                  Promod Swarup and Manoj Swarup, for the Respondent.                  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by                   JASWANT SINGH, J.  This appeal by special leave is                  directed against         464         the  judgment and decree dated January 3, 1975, of the  High         Court of Judicature at Allahabad setting aside the  judgment         and  decree  dated July 27, 1965, of the  Second  Additional         Civil  Judge, Jhansi, whereby the latter affirmed the  judg-         ment  and decree of the trial Court dismissing the  respond-         ent’s  suit  for declaration that order dated  November  29,         1961,  passed  by the Superintending  Engineer,  Circle  IV,         Irrigation  Works, Jhansi, U.P. terminating the services  of         the  respondent was void and ineffective in law and  he  was         entitled to recover a sum of Rs. 2147/-as arrears of pay and         dearness allowance from the appellant.             The  facts leading to this appeal are:   The  respondent         herein  was  appointed as a temporary clerk  in  Gur  Sarain         Canal Division, Jhansi. on May 16, 1954.  Seven years later,         he  was  required to appear in  a  departmental  examination         which was held in July, 1961.  On July 12. 1961, an optional         typewriting test was held by the Department.In that test the         Executive  Engineer,  Investigation and  Planning  Division,         Jhansi,  it is alleged, detected Gopal Deo Santiya, a  clerk         of  Bhander  Canal  Division, attempting  to  personate  and         appear  for the respondent. He obtained the  explanation  of         both the clerks and reported the matter to the  Superintend-         ing Engineer of his Division.  Considering the  explanations         tendered  by the clerks to be unsatisfactory,  the  Superin-         tending  Engineer  brought the matter to the notice  of  the         Chief  Engineer, Irrigation Department, Lucknow.  The  Chief         Engineer  wrote back to the Superintending  Engineer  asking         him  to  award  suitable punishment  to  the  aforesaid  two         clerks. The Superintending Engineer thereafter issued orders

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       terminating the services of both the clerks.  The order that         was passed in respect of and served on the respondent ran as         follows :-         "No. E-70/IV/259                                              Dated Jhansi,                                           November 29, 1961         OFFICE MEMORANDUM                        Shri  Ram Chandra Trivedi, Temporary  Routine                  Grade  Clerk  is  hereby served  with  one  month’s                  notice to the effect that his services shall not be                  required  after one month from the date of  receipt                  of this Notice.                                                sd/- S.P. Sahni,                                          Superintending Engineer."             The  respondent attempted to have  the above  order  re-         scinded by making representations to the Chief Engineer, and         the Minister of Irrigation, U.P. which proved abortive.  The         respondent  thereupon  challenged  the  aforesaid  order  of         termination  of  his services by instituting  the  aforesaid         suit  averring inter alia that the order not being an  order         of  termination  of his service simpliciter  but  being  one         passed by way of punishment, attracted the applicability  of         Article  311 of the Constitution which not having been  com-         plied with rendered the order void and ineffective, in  law.         The  suit was resisted by the appellant on the  ground  that         the  respondent  was only a temporary hand; that  under  the         contract  of service as also the rules applicable to  tempo-         rary  Government servants, the respondent was liable  to  be         discharged  any time even though an enquiry in respect of  a         charge of misconduct might have been insti-         465         tuted  against him; and that the impugned order  not  having         been  passed     a measure of punishment but being a  simple         order  of termination of the respondent’s  services  without         casting  any stigma on him or visiting him with evil  conse-         quences,  was valid both under the aforesaid rules  and  the         contract of service.  The grounds of attack made against the         impugned  order  did not find favour with  the  trial  Court         which  dismissed  the suit.  Aggrieved by the  judgment  and         decree of the trial Court, the respondont took the matter in         appeal  to  the Second Additional Civil Judge,  Jhansi,  who         affirmed the judgment and decree of the trial Court.             Both the Courts found that the impugned order was  valid         in  law as it was a simple order of termination  of  service         and not having been passed by way of punishment, it did  not         attract  the provisions of Article 311 (2) of the  Constitu-         tion.   Dissatisfied  with these judgments,  the  respondent         preferred a second appeal to the High Court of Judicature at         Allhabad,  which as already stated was allowed by a  learned         Single Judge of that Court.             While  oversetting the concurrent findings of  fact  ar-         rived at by the courts below and decreeing the  respondent’s         aforesaid  suit, the learned single Judge went  through  the         official  correspondence preceding  the passing of  the  im-         pugned order and observed that a close scrutiny of the facts         on record showed that the order was passed by way of punish-         ment on the basis of the enquire proceedings and as a result         of  the recommendation made by the Executive  Engineer  fol-         lowed by the direction issued by the Chief Engineer that the         respondent  should be suitably punished. It is against  this         judgment  and decree that the present appeal has  been  pre-         ferred by the State of U.P.             Mr.  Dixit, learned counsel appearing on behalf  of  the         appellant, has urged that the High Court acted illegally  in         reversing the concurrent findings of fact arrived at by  the

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       courts  below  and quashing the impugned order which  was  a         simple order of termination of the respondent’s services and         had been validly passed in accordance with the rules  relat-         ing  to  temporary Government servants and the  contract  of         service.  He has further contended that the  learned  Single         Judge could not probe into the departmental files to support         his  finding that the impugned order was passed against  the         respondent by way of punishment.  He has. in support of  his         submissions,  relied  upon  a number of  decisions  of  this         Court.         As  against this, it has been vehemently urged by Mr.  Garg,         learned counsel for the respondent, that the  constitutional         position  in regard to     orders of the impugned nature  is         not  well  settled in view of the conflicting  decisions  of         this Court particularly in view of the observations made  in         State  of  U.P. & Ors. v. Sughar Singh(1) and The  State  of         Punjab  v.P.S.  Cheema (2), Mr. Garg has  further  contended         that  the circumstances attending the issue of the  impugned         order clearly establish that it was passed by way of punish-         ment.              It would, in our opinion, be appropriate at the  outset         to  refer to the   I decisions of this Court which  have  an         important bearing on the instant         (1) [1974] 2 S.C.R. 335 =[1974] 1 S.C.C. 218.         (2) A.I.R 1975 S.C. 1096.         466         case  and to dispel the doubts sought to be created  by  Mr.         Garg with regard to the constitutional position in  relation         to the applicability of Article 311 (2) of the Constitution,         resulting from the said decisions.             In Satish Chandra Anand v. The Union of India(1), it was         held by this Court that any and every termination of service         does not amount to dismissal or removal and a termination of         service brought about by exercise of a contractual right  is         not  per  se dismissal or removal.  On the  same  reasoning,         this  Court laid down in Shyam Lal v. State of U.P.(2)  that         the  termination  of service by  compulsory   retirement  in         terms of specific rule regulating the conditions of  service         is not tantamount to the infliction  of punishment and  does         not attract Article 311(2).             In  Parshotam Lal Dhingra v. Union of India(3) which  is         regarded as the Magna Carta of the Indian Civil Servant Das,         C.J. speaking for the majority made the following illuminat-         ing observations :--                        "Shortly  put, the principle is that  when  a                  servant   has right to a post or to a  rank  either                  under  the terms  of  the contract  of  employment,                  express  or implied, or under the  rules  governing                  the  conditions of his service, the termination  of                  the service of such a servant or his reduction to a                  lower  post is by itself and prima facie a  punish-                  ment, for it operates as a forfeiture of his  right                  to  hold  that  post or that rank and  to  get  the                  emoluments and other benefits attached thereto. But                  if  the servant has no right to the post, as  where                  he  is appointed to a post, permanent or  temporary                  either on probation or on an officiating basis  and                  whose  temporary  service has not  ripened  into  a                  quasi-permanent service as defined in the Temporary                  Service  Rules, the termination of  his  employment                  does  not  deprive  him of any  right  and  cannot,                  therefore, by itself be a punishment.  One test for                  determining whether the termination of the  service                  of a Government servant is by way of punishment  is                  to  ascertain  whether  the servant, but  for  such

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                termination, had the right to hold the post.  If he                  had  a  right  to the post as in  the  three  cases                  hereinbefore  mentioned,  the  termination  of  his                  service will by itself be a punishment and he  will                  be  entitled to the protection of Article 311.   In                  other  words  and broadly speaking, Art.  311  (2),                  will  apply  to those cases  where  the  Government                  servant, had he been employed by a private  employ-                  er,  will  be entitled to maintain  an  action  for                  wrongful  dismissal, removal or reduction in  rank.                  To put it in another way, if the Government has, by                  contract,   express  or  implied,  or,  under   the                  rules,the right to terminate the employment at  any                  time, then such termination in the manner  provided                  by the contract or the rules is prima facie and per                  se not a punishment and does not attract the provi-                  sions of Art. 311.            It does not, however, follow that, except in  the   three         cases mentioned above. in all other cases.  termination  of          (1) [1953] S.C..R.. 655.          (2) [1955]1 S.C..R. 26.          (3) S..C..R. 828.         467         service  of   a Government servant who has no right  to  his         post,  e.g., where he was appointed to a post, temporary  or         permanent,  either on probation or on an  officiating  basis         and had not acquired a quasi-permanent status, the  termina-         tion  cannot, in any circumstance, be dismissal  or  removal         from service by way of punishment’ Cases may arise where the         Government  may  find a servant unsuitable for the  post  on         account  of  misconduct, negligence, inefficiency  or  other         disqualification.   If  such a servant was appointed  to   a         post,  permanent or temporary, either on probation or on  an         offciating basis, then the very transitory character of  the         employment implies that the employment was terminable at any         time  on reasonable notice given by the  Government.   Again         if the servant was appointed to a post, permanent or  tempo-         rary,  on the express condition or term that the  employment         would be terminable on say a month’s notice  as in  the case         of Satish Chander Anand v. The Union of India (supra),  then         the Government might at any time serve the requisite notice.         In  both  cases the Government may proceed  to  take  action         against  the  servant in exercise of its  powers  under  the         terms of the contract of employment, express or implied,  or         under the rules regulating the conditions of service, if any         be  applicable,  and  ordinarily in such  a  situation   the         Government  will take this course.  But the  Government  may         take   the view that a simple termination of service is  not         enough  and that the conduct of the servant. has  been  such         that he deserves a punishment entailing penal  consequences.         In such a case the Government may choose to proceed  against         the  servant  on the basis of  his  misconduct,  negligence,         inefficiency  or the like and inflict on him the  punishment         of  dismissal,  removal or reduction carrying  with  it  the         penal   consequences.   In such a case the servant  will  be         entitled to the protection of Art. 311 (2).             The  position may, therefore, be summed up  as  follows:         Any  and every termination of service is not  a   dismissal,         removal  or reduction in rank.  A termination   of   service         brought about by the exercise of a contractual right is  not         per se dismissal or removal, as has been held by this  Court         in  Satish  Chander Anand v. The Union of   India   (supra).         Likewise  the termination of service by compulsory   retire-         ment  in terms of a specific rule regulating the  conditions         of service is not tantamount to the infliction of a  punish-

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       ment  and  does not attract Art. 311 (2), as has  also  been         held  by  this  Court in Shyam Lal v. The  State  of   Uttar         Pradesh (supra).  In either of the two above mentioned cases         the  termination of the service did not carry with  it   the         panel consequences of loss of pay, or allowances under r. 52         of the Fundamental Rules.  It is true that  the  misconduct,         negligence,  inefficiency or other disqualification  may  be         the  motive  or  the inducing factor  which  influences  the         Government  to take action under the terms of the   contract         of employment or the specific service rule, nevertheless, if         a         468             right exists, under the contract or the rules, to termi-         ate  the    service the motive operative on the mind of  the         Government  is, as Chagla C.J. has said in Shrinivas  Ganesh         v.  Union  of India(1) wholly irrelevant. In short,  if  the         termination of service is founded on the right flowing  from         contract   of   the service rules then,  prima  facie,   the         termination   is  not a  punishment and carries with  it  no         evil  consequences  and so Art. 311 is not  attracted.   But         even if the Government has,  by contract or under the rules,         the  right  to   terminate  the   employment  without  going         through the procedure prescribed  for inflicting the punish-         ment  of dismissal  or  removal  or     reduction  in  rank,         the  Government may, nevertheless, choose     to punish  the         servant and if the termination of  service  is     sought to         be  founded on misconduct, negligence,  inefficiency      or         other  disqualification, then it is a punishment   and   the         requirements  of Art. 311 must be complied with. As  already         stated  if  the Servant has got a right to continue  in  the         post  then, unless the contract of employment or  the  rules         provide      to the contrary, his services cannot be  termi-         nated otherwise     than for misconduct, negligence, ineffi-         ciency or other good and sufficient cause.  A termination of         the service of such a     servant on such grounds must be  a         punishment  and,  therefore, a dismissal or  removal  within         Art.  311, for it operates a forfeiture of his right and  he         is visited with  the  evil  consequences of loss of pay  and         allowances.   It  puts  an indelible stigma on  the  officer         affecting his  future  career. A reduction in rank  likewise         may be by way of punishment or it may be an innocuous thing.         If the Government servant has a right to a particular  rank,         then  the  very reduction from that rank will operate  as  a         penalty,  for he, will then lose the emoluments  and  privi-         leges  of that rank.  If,  however, he has no right  to  the         particular  rank, his reduction from an  officiating  higher         rank to his substantive lower rank will not ordinarily be  a         punishment. But the mere fact that the servant has no  title         to the post or the rank and the Government has, by contract,         express or implied, or under the rules, the right to  reduce         him to a lower post does not mean that an order of reduction         of  a servant to a tower post or rank cannot in any  circum-         stances  be  a  punishment. The real  test  for  determining         whether  the reduction in such cases is or is not by way  of         punishment  is  to find out if the order for  the  reduction         also  visits  the servant with   any   penal   consequences.         Thus if the order entails or provides for the forfeiture  of         his  pay or allowances or the loss of his seniority  in  his         substantive  rank or the stoppage or postponement   of   his         future  chances  of promotion, then  that  circumstance  may         indicate that although in form the Government had  purported         to  exercise  its right to terminate the  employment  or  to         reduce  the servant to a lower rank under the terms  of  the         contract  of  employment or under the rules,  in  truth  and         reality  the Government has terminated the employment as and

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       by way         (1) A.I.R. 1956 Bom. 455.         469                  of penalty.  The use of the expression  ’terminate’                  or ’discharge’ is not conclusive.  In spite of  the                  use of such innocuous expressions, the court has to                  apply  the two tests mentioned above, namely, (1  )                  whether the servant had a right to the post or  the                  rank  or (2) whether he has been visited with  evil                  consequences of the kind hereinbefore referred to ?                  If the case satisfied either of the two tests  then                  it must be held that the servant has been  punished                  and  the termination of his service must  be  taken                  as.  a  dismissal or removal from  service  or  the                  reversion to his substantive rank must be  regarded                  as  a reduction in rank and if the requirements  of                  the  rules and Art. 311, which give  protection  to                  Government servant have not been complied with, the                  termination of the service or the reduction in rank                  must be held to be wrongful and in violation of the                  constitutional right of the servant."            In Gopi Kishore Prasad v. Union of India(1), it was  held         by  this Court that if the Government proceeded against  the         probationer in the direct way without casting any  aspersion         on  his honesty or competence, his discharge would not  have         the  effect of removal by way of punishment, but if  instead         of  taking  the easy course, the Government chose  the  more         difficult one of holding an enquiry into his alleged miscon-         duct and branded him as a dishonest and incompetent officer,         it would attract Article 311 (2) of the Constitution.             In  The State (2)  Orissa & Anr. v. Ram  Narayan  Das(2)         where  July 28, 1954, a notice was served on the  respondent         who  was  appointed as a Sub-Inspector on probation  in  the         Orissa  Police Force in the year 1950 to show cause  why  he         should  not be discharged from service for gross neglect  of         duties  and unsatisfactory work and  where  the  explanation         tendered  by him was considered to be unsatisfactory by  the         Deputy  Inspector-General  of Police who  passed  an   order         discharging  the respondent from service for  unsatisfactory         work and conduct and where the respondent contended that the         order was invalid on two grounds: (i) that he was not  given         a reasonable opportunity to show cause against the  proposed         action   within  the  meaning  of Article 311 (2), and  (ii)         that he was not afforded an opportunity  to be heard nor was         any evidence taken on the charge, it was held that the order         of discharge did not amount to dismissal and did not attract         the protection of Article 311 (2) of the Constitution as the         respondent  was a probationer and had no right to  the  post         held by him and  his services were terminated in  accordance         with  the rules which permitted his being discharged at  any         time during the period of probation.             The case of Madan Gopal V. State of Punjab(3) where  the         order terminating the employment of the appellant who was  a         temporary  Government servant was qashed on the ground  that         it  was  in  the nature of an order of punishment which  had         been passed without complying with the provisions of Article         311  (2) of the  Constitution  is  clearly  distinguishable.         In that case, the order of termination of the         (1) A.I.R. 1960 S.C. 689.         (2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 606.         (3) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 716.         470         appellant’s  service which was preceded by an  enquiry  into         his  alleged misconduct was based on the finding of  miscon-         duct which amounted to casting a stigma affecting his future

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       career.             In  Rajendra  Chandra  Banerice v.  Union  of   India(1)         where  the appellant was appointed as a probationer for  one         year   (which  was extended from time to time) on  condition         that his services might be terminated without any notice and         cause  being assigned during  that period and he agreed  and         joined  the service and where later on during the period  of         his  probation,  he was called upon to show  cause  why  his         services  should  not be terminated and he was  finally  in-         formed that the explanation given by him was not satisfacto-         ry  and his services would stand terminated on  a  specified         date, it was held by this Court that the termination of  his         service  was not by way of punishment and  could not  amount         to dismissal or removal within the meaning of Article 311.             In  Champaklal Chimanlal Shah v. The Union  of  India(2)         where the appellant, whose appointment being temporary,  was         liable to be terminated on one month’s notice on either side         was  informed  without assigning any cause after the  expiry         of  about five years that his services  would be  terminated         with  effect from a specified date but before  the  termina-         tion,  he was called upon to explain certain  irregularities         and  was also asked to submit his explanation and  to  state         why  disciplinary action should not be taken against him and         certain  preliminary enquiries were also held against him in         which he was not heard, but no regular departmental  enquiry         followed  and the proceedings  were dropped, it was held  by         this  Court  after  considering the cases  of  Gopi  Kishore         Prasad  v. Union of India (supra), State of Orissa  v.   Ram         Narayan Das (supra). Madan Gopal v. State of Punjab  (supra)         and Jagdish Mitter v. Union, of India(3) that such a regular         departmental  enquiry  though  contemplated  was  not   held         against  the  appellant  and no punitive  action  was  taken         against  him, there-was no question of the case  being  gov-         erned  by Article 311(2) or the Constitution.  It  was  fur-         ther  held in that case that it is only when the  Government         decides  to  hold  a regular departmental  enquiry  for  the         purpose  of  inflicting one of the three major  punishment’;         that  the Government servant gets the protection of  Article         311.               In State of Punjab & Anr. v. Shri Sukh Raj  Bahadur(4)         where  the Punjab Government reverted the  respondent   from         his   officiating  appointment in the Punjab  Civil  Service         (Executive  Branch)  to  his substantive post in  the  Delhi         Administrative after issuing him a charge sheet to which the         respondent replied but the enquiry was  not  proceeded with,         it  was  held by this Court that the respondent  could   not         complain against the order reverting him to his former  post         because the order of reversion was not by way of punishment.         In  that case, Mitter, J. who spoke for the Bench laid  down         the following propositions :--          (1) [1964] 2 S.C.R. 135.          (2) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 190.          (3) A.I R. 1964 S.C. 449.          (4) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 234.         471                     "1.  The  services of a temporary servant  or  a                  probationer  can be terminated under the  rules  of                  his  employment and such termination  without  any-                  thing   more   would not attract the  operation  of                  Art. 311 of the Constitution.                     2.  The circumstances preceding or attendant  on                  the  order  of termination of service  have  to  be                  examined  in each case, the motive behind it  being                  immaterial.                     3. If the order visits the public servant   with

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                any   evil  consequences  or  casts  an   aspersion                  against  his  character or integrity,  it  must  be                  considered  to  be  one by way  of  punishment,  no                  matter  whether  he  was a mere  probationer  or  a                  temporary servant.                     4.  An order of termination of service in  unex-                  ceptionable form preceded by an enquiry launched by                  the superior authorities only to ascertain  whether                  the  public servant should be retained in  service,                  does  not attract the operation of Art. 311 of  the                  Constitution.                     5. If there be a fulI-scale departmental enquiry                  envisaged  by Art. 311 i.e. an Enquiry  Officer  is                  appointed,  a charge sheet  submitted,  explanation                  called  for  and considered, and order of  termina-                  tion  of service made thereafter will  attract  the                  operation of the said Article."             The principles laid down in Parshotam Lal Dhingra’s case         (supra), Champaklal Chimanlal Shah’s case (supra), and  Shri         Sukh  Raj  Bahadur’s case (supra) were  reiterated  by  this         Court  in  Union of India & Ors. v.R.S. Dhaba(1).  State  of         Bihar & Ors.  v.  Shiva  Bhikshuk Mishra(2) and R.S. Sial v.         The State of U.P. & Ors.(3) where it was laid down that  the         test  for attracting Article 311(2) of the  Constitution  is         whether  the misconduct or negligence is a mere  motive  for         the order of reversion or termination of service or  whether         it  is  the very foundation of the order of  termination  of         service  of the temporary employee.  The form of the  order,         however,   is   not  conclusive  to its  true  nature.   The         entirety  of  circumstances preceding or  attendant  on  the         impugned  order must be examined by the court and the  over-         riding test will always be whether the misconduct is a  mere         motive or is the very foundation of the order.           In    R.S. Sial v. The ;State of U.P. & Ors. (3) to  which         one  of  us (brother Khanna, J.) was a party,  it  was  made         clear  in unambiguous terms that it may be taken to be  well         settled  that even  though  misconduct, negligence,  ineffi-         ciency  or other disqualifications may be the motive or  the         inducing  factor  which  influence the  Government  to  take         action under the express or implied terms of the contract of         employment  or under the statutory rule, nevertheless  if  a         right exists, under         (1) [1969] 3 S.C.R. 603.         (2) [1971] 2 S.C.R. 191.         (3) [1974] 3 S.C.R. 754.         472         the  contract  or the rules to terminate  the  services  the         motive  operating  on the mind of the Governments is  wholly         immaterial.   The   same rule would hold good if  the  order         passed is not for  termination  of service but for reversion         of  a Government servant from a higher post to a lower  post         which he holds in a substantive capacity.             The  decision of this Court in State of Uttar Pradesh  &         Ors.   v.  Sughar Singh (supra) where the order of  the  re-         spondent’s   reversion  held to have been passed by  way  of         punishment to which our attention has been drawn by Mr. Garg         and  which has led to a certain amount  of  misunderstanding         turned upon a clear statement made before the High Court  by         the  Standing Counsel for the State that the  foundation  of         the  order  of reversion was the adverse entry made  in  his         confidential character roll.             The  constitutional position has now been  made  crystal         clear  by a Bench of seven Judges of this Court in  Shamsher         Singh & Anr. v. State     Punjab(1) where the learned  Chief         Justice after an exhaustive review of the decisions of  this

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       Court observed :--                        "No  abstract  preposition can be  laid  down                  that where the services of a probationer are termi-                  nated without saying anything more in the order  of                  termination  than that the services are  terminated                  it  can  never amount to a punishment in the  facts                  and circumstances of the case.  If a probationer is                  discharged on the ground of misconduct, or  ineffi-                  ciency  or  for  similar reason  without  a  proper                  enquiry and without his getting a reasonable oppor-                  tunity  of showing cause against his  discharge  it                  may in a given case amount to removal from  service                  within  the meaning of Article 311 (2) of the  Con-                  stitution.                        Before a probationer is confirmed the author-                  ity  concerned is under an obligation  to  consider                  whether the work of the probationer is satisfactory                  or  whether  he is suitable for the post.   In  the                  absence  of  any Rules governing a  probationer  in                  this respect the authority may come to the  conclu-                  sion  that on account of inadequacy for the job  or                  for any  temperamental or other object not  involv-                  ing  moral turpitude the probationer is  unsuitable                  for  the  job  and hence must  be  discharged.   No                  punishment is involved in this.  The authority  may                  in  some cases be of the view that the  conduct  of                  the probationer may result in dismissal or  removal                  on  an inquiry.  But in those cases  the  authority                  may  not hold an inquiry and may  simply  discharge                  the probationer with a view to giving him a  chance                  to  make  good  in other walks of  life  without  a                  stigma  at the time of termination   of  probation.                  If,   on the other hand, the probationer  is  faced                  with an enquiry  on charges of misconduct or  inef-                  ficiency  or  corruption, and if his  services  are                  terminated  without  following the  provisions   of                  Article 311 (2) he can claim protection  .....         (1) [1975] 1 S.C.R. 814.         473                         The fact of holding an inquiry is not always                  conclusive. What is decisive is whether  the  order                  is  really  by way of punishment  ......  A  proba-                  tioner  whose  terms of service  provided  that  it                  could be terminated without any notice and  without                  any  cause  being  assigned  could  not  claim  the                  protection of Article 311 (2).                         An  order  terminating  the  services  of  a                  temporary servant or probationer under the Rules of                  Employment  and  without  anything  more  will  not                  attract Article 311.  Where a departmental  enquiry                  is  contemplated and if an enquiry is not  in  fact                  proceeded  with Article 311 will not  be  attracted                  unless it can be shown that the order though  unex-                  ceptionable  in  form is made  following  a  report                  based on misconduct."             The Division Bench judgment of this Court in P.S.  Chee-         ma’s  case (supra) on which strong reliance has been  placed         by Mr. Garg is also clearly distinguishable and no help  can         be derived  therefrom by the respondent.  In that case, both         the trial Court and the first appellant Court had come to  a         concurrent  finding   of fact  that the  impugned  order  of         termination  was  by  way of punishment.  It would  also  be         seen that in that case on a representation being made by the         respondent  to  the then Chief Minister of  the  State,  the         latter after consideration of the matter had ordered that in

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       view  of the respondent’s previous good record, he  did  not         deserve  the "punishment of termination of service  only  on         account of a few bad reports and that the respondent  should         continue  in service and his case  should be reviewed  after         he  earned  another  report from  the  Excise  and  Taxation         Commissioner for the year 1964-65".             In  a  recent  decision of this Court  in  The  Regional         Manager  & Anr. v. Pawan Kumar Dubey(1) to which one  of  us         was a party,  Sughar Singh’s case (supra) which is the sheet         anchor of Mr. Garg’s contention was also adverted to and  it         was  explained  therein that that case did not  depart  from         earlier  decisions  on applicability of Article 311  (2)  or         Article 16 of the Constitution.  The following  observations         made in Pawan Kumar Dubey’s case (supra)  should suffice  to         clear  the doubts that may still be lurking in some quarters         as to the ratio decidendi of Sughar Singh’s case (supra) :--                        "We  think  that the principles  involved  in                  applying  Article 311(2) having been   sufficiently                  explained   in   Shamsher Singh’s case  (supra)  it                  should  no longer be possible to urge  that  Sughar                  Singh’s  case  (supra)  could  give  rise  to  some                  misapprehension  of  the law.  Indeed,  we  do  not                  think   that  the principles of  law  declared  and                  applied  so  often  have really changed.   But  the                  application  of the same law to the differing  cir-                  cumstances and facts of  various  cases  which                  (1) [1976] 3 S.C.R. 540.                  474                  have come up to this Court could create the impres-                  sion sometimes that there is some conflict  between                  different  decisions  of this  Court.   Even  where                  there   appears to be some conflict, it  would,  we                  think, vanish when the ratio decidendi of each case                  is  correctly understood. It is the rule  deducible                  from  the application of law to the facts and  cir-                  cumstances  of a case which constitutes  its  ratio                  decidendi   and  not  some  conclusion  based  upon                  facts which may appear to be similar. One addition-                  al  or different fact can make a  world of  differ-                  ence between conclusions in two cases even when the                  same principles are applied in each case to   simi-                  lar facts.  This Court’s judgment in Sughar Singh’s                  case  (supra) shows that it was only following  the                  law  on Article 311(2) of the Constitution as  laid                  down repeatedly earlier  by this Court.  It specif-                  ically referred to the following cases:  Parshottam                  Lal  Dhingra  v. Union of India (supra);  State  of                  Punjab v. Sukh Raj Bahadur (supra); State of Orissa                  v.  Ram Narayan Das (supra); R.C. Lucy v. State  of                  Bihar(1)   Jagdish   Mitter  v.  Union   of   India                  (supra);A.   G.  Benjamin  v.  Union  01  India(2);                  Ram   Gopal   Chaturvedi  v.   State.   of   Madhya                  Pradesh(3);  Union of India v.  Galendra  Singh(4);                  Divisional Personnel Officer v. Raghavendrachar(5);                  Union  of India v. Joswant Ram(6); Madhav v.  State                  of  Mysore(7);  State of Bombay  v.Abraham(8).   In                  Sughar Singh’s case (supra), this Court  summarised                  the  propositions of law deducible from  the  cases                  mentioned  above;  and, while considering  the  ap-                  plicability  of some of the propositions of law  to                  the facts of the case, it did observe that, on  the                  face of it, the action against Sughar Singh did not                  appear  to be punitive.   Nevertheless, on a  total                  consideration  of  all  the  facts,  including  the                  admission  in the High Court before Verma, C.J.  by

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                the  Standing  Counsel appearing on behalf  of  the                  State,  that the reversion order could not  be  ex-                  plained  except  as a result of the  adverse  entry                  made two years earlier, it had finally applied  the                  ratio  decidendi  of the State of  Bihar  v.  Shiva                  Bhikshuk   Mishra  (supra), where  this  Court  had                  affirmed  the opinion of the High Court, on  facts,                  that  the reversion was not in the usual course  or                  for  administrative  reasons but it was  after  the                  finding on an enquiry about some complaint  against                  the Plaintiff and by way of punishment to him.                        On  this view of the case, it was not  really                  necessary  for this Court to consider  whether  the                  reversion  of  Sughar  Singh was  contrary  to  the                  provisions of Article 16 also.                  C.A. No. 590 of 1962 decided on 23-10-1963 .                  (2) [1967] 1 S.C.R. 718.                  (3) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 472.                  (4) [1972] 2 S .C.R. 660.                  (5) [1966] 3 S.C.R. 106.                  (6) A.I.R.1958 s.c. 905.                  (7) [19621 1 S.C.R. 886.                  (8) [1962] Supp. 2 SC.R. 92.                  475                          We  do not think that Sughar  Singh’s  case                  (supra)  in any way, conflicts with what  has  been                  laid   down  by this Court  previously  on  Article                  311(2)  of  the Constitution or Article 16  of  the                  Constitution."             Thus  on  a conspectus of the decisions of  this   Court         referred   to  above, it is obvious that there  is  no  real         conflict  in their ratio decidendi and it is no longer  open         to any one to urge with any show of  force that the  consti-         tutional  position  emerging  from the  decisions  of   this         Court in regard to cases of the present nature is not clear.         It  is also to be borne in mind that even in cases  where  a         High  Court finds any conflict between the  views  expressed         by  larger   and  smaller benches of this Court,  it  cannot         disregard or skirt the views expressed by the larger  bench-         es.   The proper course for a High Court in such a case,  as         observed  by  this  Court in Union of India  &  Anr.  v.K.S.         Subramanian(1) to which one of us was a party, is to try  to         find out and follow the opinion expressed by larger  benches         of  this Court in preference to those expressed  by  smaller         benches  of the  Court  which practice, hardened as  it  has         into a rule of law is followed by this Court itself.             Keeping  in  view the principles extracted   above,  the         respondent’s  suit could not be decreed in his favour.    He         was  a temporary hand and had no right to the post.   It  is         also not denied that both under the contract of service  and         the service rules governing the respondent, the State had  a         right  to terminate his services by giving him  one  month’s         notice.   The order to which exception is taken is ex  facie         an order of termination of service simpliciter.  It does not         cast any stigma on the respondent nor does it visit him with         evil consequences, nor is  it founded on misconduct.  In the         circumstances, the respondent could not invite the Court  to         go into the motive behind the order and claim the protection         of Article 311 (2) of the Constitution.             We, therefore, agree with the submission  made on behalf         of the appellant that the High Court was in error in  arriv-         ing at the finding that the impugned order was passed by way         of  punishment by probing into the departmental  correspond-         ence  that  passed between the superiors of  the  respondent         overlooking  the  observations made by this  Court  in  I.N.

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       Saksena v. State of Madhya Pradesh(2) that when there are no         express  words  in the impugned order itself which  throw  a         stigma   on  the Government servant, the  Court  would   not         delve into Secretariat flies to discover  whether some  kind         of stigma could be inferred on such research.             We also find ourselves in agreement with the  contention         advanced  on  behalf of the appellant that  the  High  Court         failed  to  appreciate  the true  legal  and  constitutional         position  and upset the concurrent findings of fact  arrived         at  by the Courts below  that the impugned order was not  by         way of punishment ignoring the well settled principle of law         that  a second appeal cannot  be. entertained on the  ground         of erroneous finding of fact, however gross the error  might         seem to be.  (See Paras         (1) [1977] 1 S.C.R. 87.         C2) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 496.         476         Nath Thakur v. Smt. Mohani Dasi & Ors.(1); Sri Sinna Ramanu-         la  Jeer  & Ors. v. Sri Ranga Ramanuja Jeer & Anr.  (2);  R.         Ramachandra Ayyar v. Ramalingam(3) and Madamanchi Ramappa  &         Anr. v. Muthaluru Bojappa(4).             For the foregoing reasons, the contentions of Mr.  Dixit         are upheld and those of Mr. Garg are repelled.             In the result, we allow the appeal, set aside the  judg-         ment  and, decree of the High Court, restore  the  judgments         and  decrees  of the Courts below and dismiss  the  respond-         ent’s suit.  In the circumstances  of the case, the  parties         are,  however, left to pay and bear their own costs of  this         appeal.         V.P.S.                                      Appeal allowed.         (1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 271.         (2) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 509.         (3) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 604.         477