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[Cites 2, Cited by 13]

Supreme Court of India

Karam Chand vs Haryana State Electricity Board & Ors on 31 October, 1988

Equivalent citations: 1989 AIR 261, 1988 SCR SUPL. (3) 702, AIR 1989 SUPREME COURT 261, 1989 LAB. I. C. 1263, (1988) 4 JT 302 (SC), 1988 4 JT 302, (1989) 1 UPLBEC 486, 1989 SCC (SUPP) 1 342, 1989 SCC (L&S) 409, (1989) 1 LABLJ 144, (1988) 57 FACLR 833, (1989) 1 LAB LN 282, (1988) 5 SERVLR 660, (1989) 1 CURLR 102

Author: B.C. Ray

Bench: B.C. Ray, M.P. Thakkar

           PETITIONER:
KARAM CHAND

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
HARYANA STATE ELECTRICITY BOARD & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT31/10/1988

BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)

CITATION:
 1989 AIR  261		  1988 SCR  Supl. (3) 702
 1989 SCC  Supl.  (1) 342 JT 1988 (4)	302
 1988 SCALE  (2)1203


ACT:
    Punjab  P.W.D. (Electricity Branch)	 Provincial  Service
Class 111 (Subordinate Posts) Rules, 1952. Rule9-Seniority--
Fixation   of--Normally	 `in  accordance  to  the  date	  of
appointment'--Exception--Case of temporary promotion.



HEADNOTE:
    The	 appellant,  who  belongs to  the  Scheduled  Castes
community, joined service as a clerk on February 20, 1954 in
the   Electricity   Branch  of	the  Punjab   Public   Works
Department.  In February 1959, the Punjab State	 Electricity
Board  was constituted and the employees of the	 Electricity
Branch	were transferred to the said Board.  The  conditions
of  service of the employees were governed by  the  existing
terms and conditions. as well as the existing service rules.
    In	1967,  the  Haryana  State  Electricity	 Board	 was
constituted  and  the appellant was allocated  to  the	said
Board.	The Electricity Board by its resolution dated  March
16.  1976  adopted the circular letter dated   December	 18,
1972 providing for reservation of 22% of Vacancies both	 for
initial	 recruitment  as  well	as  for	 promotion  to	 the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes as well as to  members
of the backward classes.
    The	 appellant  was promoted on September  25,  1973  as
Deputy	Superintendent.	 The  respondent  No.  2  was	also
promoted  by  the  same	 order	as  Deputy   Superintendent.
However,  in  the said order, it was made clear	 by  a	note
appended thereto that the earlier promotion of the officials
will  not confer on them any right to claim  seniority	over
others.	 On  April 27, 1972, a circular was  issued  by	 the
Chief	Secretary,   Government	 of  Haryana  to   all	 the
Departments  regarding	the  criteria  for  reservation	 for
members	 of  Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes   in	 the
service and fixation of their seniority. As the seniority of
the  appellant	was  not determined from  the  date  of	 his
appointment to the post of Deputy Superintendent, he made  a
representation	 to   the   Board    requesting	  for	 its
determination. This representation was, however, rejected on
the  ground  that seniority in the promoted  rank  would  be
accorded  only with reference to the inter se  seniority  in
the  previous  post, and on January 21, 1977, the  appellant
was finally informed that his seniority will not be computed
						  PG NO 702
						  PG NO 703
from  the  date	 of  his promotion to  the  post  of  Deputy
Superintendent. On January 12, 1977 respondents 2 and 3	 who
were  junior to the appellant as Deputy Superintendent	were
promoted  as  Superintendent superseding the  claim  of	 the
appellant.
    Aggrieved	by  the	 aforesaid  action  of	 the   first
respondent  in promoting respondents 2 and 3, the  appellant
filed  a  writ	petition in the High Court  for	 a  mandamus
directing  respondent 1 to consider his case  for  promotion
for the post of Superintendent on the basis of his being the
senior-most  Deputy  Superintendent. The writ  petition	 was
contested  on behalf of the respondent l who stated  in	 its
counter-affidavit  that	 the  petitioner  could	 not   claim
seniority  above  the  respondents 2 and 3 in  the  rank  of
Deputy	Superintendent on the ground that his seniority	 had
already	 been fixed in accordance with the  exception  below
rule 9 of the 1952 Service Rules.
    A  Single  Judge of the High Court	dismissed  the	writ
petition  on the ground that the instructions governing	 the
matter of promotion in favour of Scheduled Castes  candidate
had nothing to do with the determination of the seniority of
these	candidates  and	 that  the  letter   promoting	 the
petitioner  had	 specifically  mentioned  that	the  earlier
promotion  would  not confer on him any right  of  claim  to
seniority  over and above those who are otherwise senior  to
him in the cadre from which he was promoted and that in	 the
light of the exception to rule 9 of the 1952 Service  Rules,
the  petitioner	 being promoted temporarily,  his  seniority
cannot	be counted from the date of his appointment  in	 the
higher	post  and  that respondents 2 and 3,  who  could  be
treated	 senior to him in the rank of Deputy  Superintendent
as  the	 were  senior  to the petitioner  in  the  grade  of
assistants.
    The Letters Patent Appeal filed by the appellant  having
been  dismissed	 summarily, the appellant appealed  to	this
Court by special leave.
    Allowing the Appeal,
    HELD.  1. On a plain reading of Rule 9 it  appears	that
the  seniority of the members of the service serving  in  an
officiating   capacity	 shall	be   determined	  prior	  to
confirmation   `in   the  order	 of  the  dates	  of   their
appointment'  and  after confirmation  by  their  respective
dates of confirmation. The exception to this Rule is that if
a  member of the is promoted temporarily to a  post  earlier
than  his senior for reasons other than inefficiency of	 the
senior	person	they will take rank inter  se  according  to
						  PG NO 704
their  relative seniority in the class from which they	were
promoted  and  the Junior person so promoted  shall  not  be
confirmed from a date earlier than the date of	confirmation
of the senior. [709F-G]
    In the Instant case, the appellant has been promoted  to
the  post of Deputy Superintendent which was reserved  under
the  block system for members of the Scheduled	Castes.	 The
appointment  to	 the said reserved post on  promotion  is  a
regular	 one.  The  appointment letter does  not   that	 the
promotion   of	 the  appellant	 to  the  post	 of   Deputy
Superintendent was purely temporary. This being the position
the  exception to Rule 9(11) cannot be applied to  determine
the  seniority	of   the appellant in  the  post  of  Deputy
Superintendent,	 and  his  seniority  cannot  be  based	  in
accordance with the inter se seniority of respondent Nos. 2
and  3	wee promoted to he post	 of  Deputy  Superintendent.
[710A-D]
    2. The appellant is thus senior to respondent Nos. 2 and
3 in the rank of Deputy Superintendent	the was promoted  to
the said post earlier them the respondents Nos. 2 and 3	 and
as   such   his	 claim	for  promotion	to   the   post	  of
Superintendent on the dates when the respondent Nos. 2 and 3
were promoted to such post is legal and valid. [710E]
    3/	Respondent No. 1 is directed to treat the  appellant
promoted  to  the  post	 of  Superintendent  from  the	date
respondent  Nos. 2 and 3 were promoted to the said post	 and
to  pay	 him  the emoluments attached to the  said  post  of
Superintendent	 minus	 the  emoluments  paid	 us   Deputy
Superintendent	from  that date till May 29,  1981  date  of
actual appointment is Superintendent. [711A-B]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: APPeal NO 4454 of 1985. From the Judgment and Order dated 15.2.1984 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in L.P.A. No. 224 of 1984. V.M. Tarkunde, Miss Meenakshi Arora, R.N. Karanjawala and Mrs. Manik Karan jawala for the Appellant. K.K Jain, A.D. Sanger, Ajay K. Jain, Pramod Dayal, B.R. Appeal, P.G. Gokhale, Janendra Lal and Miss Yashmin Tarapore for the Respondents.

PG NO 705 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by RAY, J. The only question that arises for decision in this appeal is whether an employee promoted to a post reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes is entitled to have his seniority determined from the date of his appointment to the post or his seniority inter se will be reckoned as it was in the class or grade from which he was promoted to a post in a higher rank.

The appellant, who is a Scheduled Caste joined service as a Clerk in the Electricity Branch of the Punjab Public Works Department on February 20, 1954. The terms and conditions of his service were governed by the Punjab P.W.D. (Electricity Branch) Provincial Service Class-111 (Subordinate posts) Rules, 1952. In February, in and Punjab State Electricity Board was constituted under Section 3 of the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948 and the employees of the Electricity Branch were transferred to the Board. The conditions of service of the employees were governed by their existing terms and conditions as well as existing service Rules. In 1967 the Haryana State Electricity Board was constituted and the appellant was allocated to the Haryana State Electricity Board with existing terms and conditions of service. The Board being a statutory corporation was requested by letter dated December 13, 1972 by the Government to provide for reservation of 22% of vacancies--initial recruitment and promotion posts for being filled up by members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes as well as by members of backward classes. The Haryana State Electricity Board adopted the above circular by its Resolution dated March 1976 providing for reservation of posts both for initial requirement as well as for promotion. The appellant was promoted on September 1973 as Deputy Superintendent the respondent No.2, Rajinder Singh Marya was also promoted by the same order as Deputy Superintendent. In the said order of appointment the following note was appended:

The earlier promotion of the above officials as Deputy Superintendent will not confer upon them any right to claim seniority over those who may otherwise be senior to them due to any reason whatsoever.
On April 27, 1972 a circular was issued by the Chief Secretary Government of Haryana to all its departments regarding reservation for members of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in service and fixation of seniority Paragraphs 2 and 4 of the said circular which are relevant are quoted hereinbelow:
PG NO 706

"2. It has to be pointed out that this was irregular and inter se seniority of all the candidates taken together (i.e. whether appointed against reserved vacancies or against open ones) must be fixed according to the combined merit list and not otherwise. Vacancies assigned to Scheduled Castes/Backward Classes under block system are so assigned for the purposes of reservation only and are not intended for fixing inter se seniority of the candidates contrary to their order in the combined merit list prepared by the Public Service Commission/Subordinate Service Selection Board.

4. The above instructions, regarding determination of inter se seniority will however? apply only in those cases where the departmental service rules do not provide for seniority being determined from the date of joining or from the date of confirmation or by a method otherwise than the merit determined by the Public Service Commission/S.S.S. Board. In other words, in all cases where the service rules have not yet been framed, or where the service rules provide for seniority being determined according to the merit laid down by the Commission/S.S.S. Board, the seniority of the officials shall be determined in the manner stated above. In other cases, where the service rules specifically provide for seniority being determined from the date of joining or from the date of confirmation by the recruiting authority the seniority shall be determined by such different methods."

As the seniority of the appellant was not determined from the date of his appointment to the post of Deputy Superintendent he made a representation to the Board requesting for determination of his seniority from the date of his appointment to the promoted post and also for considering his case for promotion to the post of Superintendent. This representation of the appellant was rejected on the ground that:

"The officials belonging to the scheduled castes/tribes and backward classes who are promoted against the posts reserved for them under the block system and for reasons other than inefficiency of their seniors will not be assigned seniority from the date of their joining in the PG NO 707 promoted rank. They shall be assigned seniority in the promoted rank with reference to their inter se seniority of their previous posts.
Thereafter, on January 20, 1977 the appellant was finally informed that his seniority will not be computed from the date of his promotion to the post of Deputy Superintendent. On January 12, 1977 the respondent Nos. 2 and 3 i.e. Rajinder Singh Marya and Jagdish Lal Lamba who were junior to the appellant as Deputy Superintendents, were promoted as Superintendents superseding the claim of the appellant.
Aggrieved by this, the appellant instituted an application under Article 226 of the Constitution of India in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana praying for a writ of mandamus directing the respondent No. 1 to consider his case for promotion to the post of Superintendent on the basis of his being seniormost Deputy Superintendent according to the continuous length of service on that post and to promote him to the post of Superintendent with effect from the date his juniors have been promoted and for other consequential reliefs. An affidavit was filed on behalf of Respondent No. 1 verified by Shri R. Prakash, Secretary, Haryana State Electricity Board wherein in para 3 it has been submitted that:
" .....the seniority of the petitioner has been determined in the post of Deputy Superintendent in accordance with the exception below Rule 9 of the 1952 Rules."

In Para 5 it has been admitted that the appellant was promoted as Deputy Superintendent on 25th September, 1973 and since then he is continuing on the said post. It has further been submitted that the promotion of the appellant was in an officiating capacity and he still continues to officiate as Deputy Superintendent. The appellant was promoted to the post of Deputy Superintendent against a post which was reserved for the Scheduled Castes, though he was far junior in the cadre of Assistants. In para 7 it has been stated that:

"... The petitioner cannot claim seniority above those two officials in the rank of Deputy Superintendent. In view of the exception to Rule 9, if a member of service is promoted temporarily to a post earlier than his senior for PG NO 708 reasons other than the inefficiency of the senior person, they will take rank inter se according to their relative seniority in the class from which they were promoted and junior persons thus promoted shall not be confirmed from a date earlier than the date of confirmation of his senior except on the score of inefficiency of the latter. In the present case, the petitioner was promoted temporarily to the post of Deputy Superintendent earlier to the other two officials on the ground that the petitioner belonged to the scheduled castes. The other two officials were not superseded on the ground of inefficiency ..."

On February 4, 1984 the learned single Judge of the High Court dismissed the writ petition holding inter alia that the instructions governing the matter of promotion in favour of the Scheduled Caste candidates had nothing to do with the determination of the seniority of these candidates. Moreover, in the letter promotion the petitioner it was specifically mentioned that the earlier promotion would not confer on him any right or claim to seniority over and above those who were otherwise senior to him in the cadre from which he had been promoted. It was further held that m the light of exception to Rule 9, the petitioner being promoted temporarily, his seniority cannot be counted from the date of his appointment in the higher post and the respondent Nos. 2 and 3 would be treated senior to him in the rank of Deputy Superintendent as they were senior to the petitioner in the grade of Assistants. It was therefore, found that respondent Nos. 2 and 3 were entitled to be promoted as Superintendents earlier to the petitioner . Against this judgment and order Letters Patent Appeal being LPA No. 224 of 1984 was filed. The said appeal was however. dismissed summarily as being without any merit. The appellant, thereafter, filed the instant appeal assailing the said judgment. Before proceeding to consider the question whether the appellant's seniority was properly determined under Rule 9 of the Punjab P.W.D. (Electricity Branch) Provincial Service Class 111 (Sub-ordinate posts) Rules 1952 (in short to be referred herein as the said Rules) it is necessary to set out herein the relevant provision of Rule 9:

"9. Seniority of the members of the Service--The seniority of the members of the Service for the time being serving in each class of appointment shown in Appendix `A' shall be determined as follows:
PG NO 709
(i) Prior to confirmation (i.e. in the case of persons serving on probation or in an officiating capacity) in the order of the dates of their appointment or if such date be the same in respect of two or more persons, in the order of their ages, the older being placed above the younger.
(ii) After confirmation by their respective dates of confirmation, provided that where two or more members are confirmed w.e.f. the same date they will retain the order to confirmation.

Exception: If a member of the service is promoted temporarily to a post earlier than his senior, for reasons other than the inefficiency of the senior person they will take rank inter-se according to their relative seniority in the class from which they were promoted and the junior person thus promoted shall not be confirmed from a date earlier than the date of confirmation of his senior except on the score of inefficiency of the latter.

Provided further that if a member is appointed to a higher class later than a person who was junior to him in the lower class for reasons which the appointing authority may certify in writing to be connected with the Public interest the person so appointed shall be given the same seniority in the higher class vis-a-vis such junior as he held in the lower class.

Thus, on a plain reading of the Rule it appears that the seniority of the members of the Service serving in an officiating capacity shall be prior to confirmation `in the order of the dates of their appointment' and after confirmation by their respective dates of confirmation. There is an exception to this Rule to the effect that if a member of the Service is promoted temporarily to a post earlier than his senior for reasons other than inefficiency of the senior person they will take rank inter-se according to their relative seniority in the class from which they were promoted and the junior person so promoted shall not be confirmed from a date earlier than the date of confirmation of the senior. The provision contained in the exception to Rule 9 is applicable only in the case of temporary promotion of a member of the service to a post earlier than his senior for the purposes other than inefficiency of the senior persons.

PG NO 710 In the instant case admittedly the appellant has been promoted to the post of Deputy Superintendent which was reserved under the block system for members of the Scheduled Castes. The appointment to the said reserved post on promotion is a regular one and this has been admitted in paragraph 5 of the counter-affidavit referred to hereinbefore. The appointment letter does not articulate that the promotion of the appellant to the post of Deputy Superintendent was purely temporary. The promotion has been made on a regular basis to the post of Deputy Superintendent reserved on the basis of quota of vacancies for being filled up by promotion of members belonging to the Scheduled Castes. The appointment of the appellant to the said promotional post of Deputy Superintendent, in our considered opinion cannot be designated to be purely a temporary promotion. This being the position the exception to Rule 9(ii) of the said rules cannot be applied to determine the seniority of the appellant in the post of Deputy Superintendent and his seniority cannot be based in accordance with the inter-se seniority of the respondent Nos. 2 and 3 in the cadre of Assistants from which the appellant and respondent Nos. 2 and 3 were promoted to the post of Deputy Superintendent. Rule 9(i) of the said Rules is applicable in this case and the seniority of the appellant is to be reckoned from the date of his appointment In the post of Deputy Superintendent. The appellant is thus senior to respondent Nos. 2 and 3 in the rank of Deputy Superintendent as he was promoted to the said post earlier than the respondents Nos. 2 and 3 and as such his claim for promotion to the post of Superintendent on the dates when the respondent Nos. 2 and 3 were promoted to such post is legal and valid. It may be mentioned that during the pendency of the writ petition, the appellant had been promoted to the post of Superintendent on 29.5.1981 and as such he pleaded in para 6 of the special leave petition that his seniority in the cadre of Deputy Superintendent should not be affected on the basis of the judgments rendered by the High Court.

On a consideration of the facts and circumstances stated hereinbefore, the finding of the High Court that the appellant was promoted temporarily and so exception to Rule 9(ii) applies for determination of seniority of the appellant as Deputy Superintendent, in our considered opinion, cannot be sustained as we have already held that the promotion of the appellant in a reserved vacancy, is a regular one and it does not smack of purely temporary character. The seniority of the appellant is to be reckoned from the date of his appointment to the said post according to the provisions of Rule 9(i) of the said Rules. The judgments of the High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 224 of 1984 as well as in the writ petition No. 773 of 1977 are PG NO 711 set aside and the appeal is allowed. The respondent No. 1 is directed to treat the appellant promoted to the post of Superintendent from the date the respondent Nos. 2 and 3 were promoted to the said post and to pay him the emoluments attached to the said post of Superintendent minus the emoluments paid as Deputy Superintendent from that date till the date of his actual appointment as Superintendent, i.e. May 29, 1981. The appeal is thus allowed with costs.

N.V.K.					     Appeal allowed.