19 February 1993
Supreme Court
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Vs

Bench: RAMASWAMY,K.
Case number: /
Diary number: 1 / 3588


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PETITIONER: D. DASEGOWDA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF KARNATAKA AND ORS.T.R. DHANANJAYA AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/02/1993

BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. SAHAI, R.M. (J)

CITATION:  1993 SCR  (2)  54        1993 SCC  Supl.  (4)  53  JT 1993  Supl.     18    1993 SCALE  (3)307

ACT: Service Law: Karnataka  Municipal  Corporation Rules,  1977-Validated  by Karnataka     Municipal    Corporation     Amendment     Act 1981-Engineers-Appointment  of-Deputation from  PWD-Absorbed in Corporation-Promoted to higher posts-Repatriation to  PWD just before retirement-Validity of.

HEADNOTE: The appellant who was an Assistant Engineer in Public  Works Department  was transferred on deputation to  the  Bangalore City  Corporation  under  the  City  Bangalore  (Cadre   and Recruitment)   Regulation,  1971  which  permitted  75%   of vacancies  in  the cadre to be filed in by  deputation  from P.W.D. In  1977,  the Karnataka Municipal  Corporation  Rules  were framed  and the appellant was absorbed in  the  Corporation. On being challenged in a Writ Petition the High Court struck down the Rules and set aside the absorption of the appellant in  the  Corporation.  The Government  issued  an  ordinance removing the infirmity in the Rules.  It was replaced by the Karnataka  Municipal  Corporation Amendment Act,  1981.   In course  of  time  the appellant was  promoted  as  Executive Engineer, Superintending Engineer and Addl.  Chief Engineer. Ile  earlier Writ Petitioners approached the High  Court  by way of a Contempt Petition against the non-implementation of its  order.   Faced  with  this  situation,  the  Government repatriated  the appellant to his parent  department,just  a few months before his retirement. The appellant approached the Administrative Tribunal,  which dismissed his application as infructuous in view of the fact that the matter was pending before the High Court and in any case  the  appellant would get his pension either  from  the State Government or the Corporation.  Hence these appeals. 55 Allowing the appeals, this Court, HELD:  Under the Karnataka Municipal  Corporation  Amendment Act, 1981 the basis on which the Karnataka Municipal  Rules, 1977 were declared void was removed and appointments made or continued before the commencement of the Amendment Act  were declared to be valid and were always be deemed to have  been validly  made for all purposes as if the  said  appointments

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had been made under the Principal Act as amended by the Act. It is not in dispute that the State Legislature is competent to  make  the Act.  When the Act was made and  it  validated past  acts done or proceedings taken, it was valid  Act  and removed  the  defects  declared by the Court.   It  must  be deemed  and shall always be deemed that the  appointment  of the  appellant as Addl.  Chief Engineer is legal and  valid. Unfortunately, the Act was not brought to the notice of  the High  Court when the direction to repatriate  the  appellant was made by the High Court.  But the failure to bring to the notice  of the court does not have the effect of  nullifying the  valid  action legislatively  taken.   Consequently  the appellant  must be deemed to have been retired from  service as  Addl.  Chief Engineer of the Corporation. The  appellant is   entitled  to  all  the  consequential   benefits,   all pensionary benefits etc. from the Corporation. [58H; 59-A-D] Shri  Prithvi  Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr.  v.  Broach  Borough Municipality  &  Ors.,  [1970] 1 SCR  388;  Janapada  Sabha, Chhindwara, etc. v. Central Provinces Syndicate Ltd. & Anr., etc., [1970] 3 SCR 745 and Yadlapati Venkateswarlu v.  State of Anadhra Pradesh & Anr., [19901 Suppl.  1 SCR 381,  relied on.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 797-803  of 1993. From  the Judgment and Order dated 16.7.91 of the  Karnataka Administrative  Tribunal in Application No. 1443/91 &  dated 9.3.81, & 25.11.82 of the Karnataka High Court in W.P.  Nos. 20147, 20148/79, 11343/78 & 1016-1018 of 1981. S.S.Javali,   Gopal  Singh  and  E.C.  Vidyasagar  for   the Appellant. R.N.N.  Narasimha  Murthy, M.T. George,  S.K.  Kulkarni,  M. Veerappa and P. Mahale for the Respondents. The following Order of the Court was delivered: 56 Delay  condoned  in S.L.P  (C)  3464-3469/93  (CC-19593)/93. Both disposed of by this common order. Leave granted. The  appellant  who  was working as  Assistant  Engineer  in Public  Works  Department was transferred on  deputation  to Bangalore  City Corporation under City Bangalore (Cadre  and Recruitment   Regulation)  1971,  which  permitted  75%   of vacancies  in the cadre to be filled in by  deputation  from P.W.D.  In 1977 Karnataka Municipal Corporation  Rules  were framed  under which the appellant was absorbed as  Assistant Executive  Engineer in the Corporation.  Validity  of  these rules  and absorption of the appellant was assailed  in  the High Court by way of a Writ Petition which was allowed.  The rules  were struck down and the absorption of the  appellant in the Corporation was set aside.  In 1981 the Govt.  issued an  Ordinance removing the infirmity in the rules.   It  was replaced  by the Karnataka Municipal  Corporation  Amendment Act, 1981 (Act 40 of 1981), for short ’the Act’.               Section 8 of the Act reads thus:               "8. Validation :- (1) The Karnataka  Municipal               Corporations Rules, 1977 made in  notification               No.  HMA 270 MUN 77 dated 19th Dec., 1977  and               published as GSR 390 in the Karnataka  Gazette               (Extraordinary)   dated   22nd   Dec.,    1977               (hereinafter  referred to as the  said  rules)               shall,  notwithstanding anything contained  in               any judgment, decree or offer of any court  or

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             other  authority or in the principal  Act,  be               deemed  to be as valid and effective  for  all               purposes  as if the said rules had  been  made               under the Principal Act as amended by this Act               and accordingly               (a)   all  actions  or things  taken  or  done               (including  appointments and promotions  made)               under  the said rules shall, for all  purposes               be deemed to be and to have always been  taken               or done in accordance with law;               (b)   (i)  suit or other proceedings shall  be               maintained  or  continued  in  any  court   or               tribunal  or before any authority  questioning               the  validity of any action or thing taken  or               done under the said rules; and               57               (ii)court  shall  recognise  or  enforce   any               decree or order declaring that the said  rules               or   any  action  or  thing  taken   or   done               thereunder as invalid, on the ground that  the               rules  were  made  without  giving  reasonable               opportunity  to persons likely to be  affected               by   it   to   file   their   objections   and               suggestions.               (2)   Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               any judgment, decree or order of any court  or               other  authority or in the principal  Act  all               appointments   of   Administrators   made   or               continued before the commencement of this  act               shall be deemed to have been validly made  for               all  purposes as if the said  appointment  had               been  made under the Principal Act as  amended               by  this act and accordingly all  actions  and               things taken or done by or under the authority               of  the Administrators shall be and  shall  be               deemed  to have always been validly  taken  or               done  and no suit or other  proceedings  shall               lie or be continued in any court of law or any               other authority on the ground that at the time               when  such action or thing was taken  or  done               the   appointment   or  continuance   of   the               Administrator was not authorised by law." Since  the  law  had  been amended  and  all  actions  taken including  appointments  and promotions were  validated  the appellant  after coming into force of the Act, was  promoted as  Executive Engineer and Superintending Engineer  in  1981 and  1990 and Addl.  Chief Engineer respectively.   In  1991 those  persons  who had challenged validity  of  appellant’s appointment approached the High Court once again in contempt jurisdiction  for non-implementation of the order passed  in 1979.   Faced with this situation the Govt. repatriated  the appellant  to his parent department, just few months  before his retirement. According to the appellant this affected him,  prejudicially both  in  status and pensionary  benefits.   He,  therefore, approached  the  Administrative  Tribunal  which  being   of opinion  that  since it could not examine the’  validity  of orders  in favour of appellant challenging  his  continuance which  was pending in the High Court and the  appellant  was not going to suffer as he is bound to be paid pension either by the Corporation or the State 58 Govt.,   the  petition  had  spent  out  its  utility   and, therefore, dismissed it as infructuous. In  Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd & Anr. v.  Broach  Borough

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Municipality & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 388, this court held thus:               "When a legislature sets out to validate a tax               declared by a court to be illegally  collected               under  an ineffective or an invalid  law,  the               cause  for ineffectiveness or invalidity  must               be  removed before validation can be  said  to               take  place effectively.  The  most  important               condition, of course, is that the  legislature               must possess the power to impose the tax, for,               if  it does not, the action must  ever  remain               ineffective and illegal.  Granted  legislative               competence,  it is not sufficient  to  declare               merely  that the decision of the  Court  shall               not  bind for that is tantamount to  reversing               the  decision  in exercise of  judicial  power               which  the  legislature does  not  possess  or               exercise.  A court’s decision must always bind               unless the conditions on which it is based are               so  fundamentally  altered that  the  decision               could  not  have  been given  in  the  altered               circumstances..........               If  the  legislature has the  power  over  the               subject matter and competence to make a  valid               law, it can at any time make such a valid  law               and make it retrospectively so as to bind even               past   transactions.    The  validity   of   a               validating   law,  therefore,   depends   upon               whether   the   legislature   possesses    the               competence  which it claims over  the  subject               matter and whether in making the validation it               removes the defect which the courts had  found               in   the  existing  law  and  makes   adequate               provisions  in the Validating law for a  valid               imposition of the tax." In  the above case the Validation Act was upheld.  The  same view was reiterated in Janapada Sabha, Chihindwara, etc.  v. Central Provinces Syndicate Ltd. & Anr., etc., [1970] 3  SCR 745 and Yadlapati Venkateswarlu v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Anr., 119901 Suppl.  1 SCR 381. It  is seen that under the Act the basis on which  the  1977 Rules were declared void was removed and a appointments made or continued before 59 the  commencement of the Amendment Act were declared  to  be valid  and  shall always to be deemed to have  been  validly made  for all purpose as if the said appointments  had  been made in the Principal Act as amended by the Act.  It is  not in  dispute that the State legislature is competent to  make the Act.  When the Act was made and validated past acts done or  proceedings  taken, it was a valid Act and  removed  the defects declared by the Court.  It must be deemed and  shall always been deemed that the appointment of the appellant  as Addl.   Chief Engineer is legal and  valid.   Unfortunately, the Act was not brought to the notice of the High Court when the  direction to repatriate the appellant was made  by  the High  Court.  But the failure to bring to the notice of  the court  does  not  have the effect of  nullifying  the  valid action legislatively taken. In  these  circumstances, the order of the  High  Court  and consequent  order  of the Govt. repatriating  the  appellant from  the  Corporation  service to  the  State  service  are declared illegal.  Consequently the appellant must be deemed to  have been retired from service as Addl.  Chief  Engineer of  the Corporation.  The appeals are  accordingly  allowed. The appellant is entitled to all the consequential benefits,

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all  pensionary  benefits  etc. from  the  Corporation.   No costs. G.N. Appeals allowed. 60