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[Cites 20, Cited by 2]

Supreme Court of India

Federation Of All India Customs & ... vs Union Of India & Ors on 5 May, 1988

Equivalent citations: 1988 AIR 1291, 1988 SCR (3) 998, AIR 1988 SUPREME COURT 1291, 1989 LAB. I. C. 1157, (1988) 2 LAB LN 145, (1988) 2 JT 519 (SC), 1988 SCC (L&S) 673, 1988 (3) SCC 91

Author: Sabyasachi Mukharji

Bench: Sabyasachi Mukharji, R.S. Pathak

           PETITIONER:
FEDERATION OF ALL INDIA CUSTOMS & CENTRALEXCISESTENOGRAPHERS

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT05/05/1988

BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)

CITATION:
 1988 AIR 1291		  1988 SCR  (3) 998
 1988 SCC  (3)	91	  JT 1988 (2)	519
 1988 SCALE  (1)1088
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1989 SC  19	 (29)
 F	    1989 SC  30	 (3)
 F	    1989 SC1256	 (8)
 F	    1989 SC1308	 (11)
 R	    1990 SC1106	 (43)
 RF	    1991 SC1173	 (6)


ACT:
     Service matter-Stenographers  of Grade  I attached with
officers in  pay scale	of Rs.2500-2750	 (Level	 I)  in	 the
Customs	 and  Central  Excise  Departments  of	Ministry  of
Finance, seeking  pay parity  with stenographers attached to
Joint  Secretaries  and	 officers  above  in  the  Ministry,
alleging discrimination	 violative of  Articles 14 and 16(1)
of Constitution	 of India, and that there being no basis for
differentiation between petitioners and their counterparts.



HEADNOTE:
     By	 this	writ  petition,	  Personal  Assistants	 and
Stenographers (Grade  I) in  the pay-scale  of	Rs.  550-900
attached with  officers in  the	 pay-scale  of	Rs.2500-2750
(Level I)  i.e. heads  of the departments in the Customs and
Central Excise	Departments of	the Finance Ministry, sought
parity with  the pay  scale of the stenographers attached to
the  Joint   Secretaries  and	the  officers	above.	 The
petitioners  asserted	that  they   had   been	  and	were
discriminated  vis-a-vis   the	 personal   assistants	 and
stenographers attached	to the	Joint  Secretaries  and	 the
officers above in the Ministry, and claimed that they should
be placed  in the  pay scale of Rs.650-1040 with effect from
1st  January   1973.   They   contended	  that	 the   basic
qualifications, method, manner and source of recruitment and
grades of  promotion were  the same as of their counterparts
attached to  the  Joint	 Secretaries/Secretaries  and  other
officers in  the Secretariat. According to them, even on the
criteria adopted  by the  Third Pay  Commission there was no
basis for  any differentiation	between the  petitioners and
their counterparts.  While the	petitioners got	 a grade  of
Rs.550-900, their  counterparts were  in the  pay  scale  of
Rs.650-1040.   The    petitioners   asserted	that	this
differentiation	  without    any    rational	basis	 was
discrimination violative  of Articles  14 and  16(1) of	 the
Constitution of	 India. They  contended for  equal  pay	 for
equal work,  and alleged  discrimination in  the adoption of
the recommendation of the Third Pay Commission.
     The   respondents	  denied   that	   there   was	 any
discrimination, differentiation	 without basis	and referred
to the	Report of  the Third  Pay  Commission,	recommending
different and low scales of pay for the
999
stenographers  of   the	  non-participating   attached	 and
subordinate offices  in comparison with those in the Central
Secretariat. It	 was emphasised	 that the  difference in the
functional requirements	 of the	 work done  was a  point. In
devising any  scales of	 various posts/categories inter alia
the degree of skill, experience involved, training required,
responsibility	 taken,	   strain,   fatigue,	 risk	 and
confidentiality undertaken, mental and physical requirements
were the factors to be borne in mind.
     Dismissing the petition with an observation, the Court,
^
     HELD: The	petition had  to be disposed of on the basis
of the position prevailing prior to the report of the Fourth
Pay Commission and its acceptance/implementation. [1007B]
     Equal pay	for equal  work is  a fundamental right. But
equal pay  must depend	upon the nature of the work done. It
cannot be  judged by  the mere	volume of work; there may be
qualitative   difference    as	 regards   reliability	 and
responsibility.	 Functions   may  be   the  same   but	 the
responsibilities make  a difference. Often the difference is
a matter of degree and there is an element of value judgment
by those  who are  charged with the administration in fixing
the scales  of pay  and other conditions of service. So long
as such	 value judgment	 is made  bonafide, reasonably on an
intelligible criteria,	having a  rational  nexus  with	 the
object of  differentiation, such  differentiation  will	 not
amount to  discrimination. Equal  pay for  equal work  is  a
concomitant of	Article	 14  of	 the  Constitution.  But  it
follows that  equal pay	 for unequal work will be a negation
of that right. [1009A-C]
     Differentiation  in   implementing	 the  award  or	 the
recommendations of Pay Commission without rational basis may
amount to discrimination. However, in this case, there is an
element of  faith, reliability	and responsibility  and	 the
functional responsibilities  and the requirements of persons
doing the  same amount	of physical work may be different in
some cases,  depending	upon  the  officers  with  whom	 the
stenographers and  personal  assistants	 are  attached.	 The
basic principles  on which  differentiation would not amount
to discrimination,  violative of Article 14 or Article 16(1)
of the	Constitution are well-settled. Article 14 strikes at
the arbitrariness  in State  action and ensures fairness and
equality of  treatment. It  is attracted  where	 equals	 are
treated differently without any reasonable basis. Equal laws
must  be   applied  equally   and   there   should   be	  no
discrimination between	one person and another if as regards
the  subject-matter   of  either  administrative  action  or
legislation,  their  position  is  substantially  the  same.
Article 14 forbids
1000
class legislation  but permits reasonable classification for
the purpose  of legislation  or administrative	mandate. The
classification must,  however, be founded on an intelligible
basis which distinguishes persons or things grouped together
from those  left out  of the group and that differentia must
have a	rational nexus with the object to be achieved by the
differentiation made  in the  statute or  order in question.
There ought  to be  causal connection  between the  basis of
classification	and   the  object   of	classification.	 The
observations of the Constitution Bench of this Court in D.S.
Nakara &  Ors. v. Union of India, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 165 may be
seen in this connection. [1011B-G]
     In this  case, differentiation  had been  sought to  be
justified in  view of  the nature  and the types of the work
done, that  is, on  intelligible basis.	 The same  amount of
physical work  may entail  different quality  of work,	some
more sensitive,	 some  requiring  more	tact,  some  less-it
varies with  nature and	 culture of  employment. The problem
about  equal   pay  cannot   always  be	 translated  into  a
mathematical formula.  If it  has a  rational nexus with the
object to  be sought  for a certain amount of value judgment
of the	administrative authorities  charged with  fixing the
pay scale  has to  be  left  with  them	 and  it  cannot  be
interfered with	 by the Court unless it is demonstrated that
either it  is irrational  or based on no basis or arrived at
mala fide  either in  law or  fact.  In	 the  light  of	 the
averments made	and in	the facts  of this  case, it was not
possible to  say that  the differentiation  was based  on no
rational nexus	with the  object sought to be achieved. This
application must  fail and  was	 dismissed.  This,  however,
would not  in any  way prevent	or prejudice  the Government
from reviewing	the situation  in the light of the report of
the Fourth  Pay Commission or any other appropriate body, if
any, with  such	 modification  as  the	Government  and	 the
authorities concerned  considered fit  and  proper.  [1013G-
H;1014A-D]
     Purshottam Lal  & Ors.  v. Union  of India	 & Anr., AIR
1973 SC	 1088; Laljee Dubey & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1974] 2 S.C.R. 249; Randhir Singh v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1982] 3  SCR 298;  D.S. Nakara	 & Ors.	 v. Union  of India,
[1983] 2  SCR 165;  P.K. Ramachandra Iyer & Ors. v. Union of
India &	 Ors., [1984] 2 SCR 200; Delhi Vetrinary Association
v. Union  of India  & Ors.,  [1984] 3  SCR 429; P. Savita v.
Union of  India &  Ors., [1985]	 Suppl. 1  SCR 101; Surinder
Singh and Anr. v. Engineer-in-chief, C.P.W.D. & Ors., [1986]
1  SCC	 639;  Frank   Anthony	Public	 School	  Employees'
Association v.	Union of  India &  Ors., [1986]	 4 SCC	707;
Dhirendra Chamoli & Anr. v. State of U.P., [1986] 1 SCC 637;
Union of  India &  Anr. v. R.G. Kashikar & Anr., AIR 1986 SC
431; M.P. Singh Deputy Superintendent of Police,
1001
C.B.I. and  Ors.v. Union of India & Ors., J.T. 1987 1 SC 146
and M/s.  Mackinnon Mackenzie & Co. Ltd. v. Audrey D'Costa &
Anr., SLP  (Civil) No.	1265/87 decided	 on March  26, 1987,
referred to.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 5019 of 1982. (Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.) M.S. Ganesh for the Petitioner.

V.K. Kanth, N.S. Das Behal and Ms. Sushma Relan for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. This petition under Article 32 of the Constitution, in a representative capacity on behalf of the stenographers (Grade I) who are attached with officers in the pay scale of Rs.2500-2750 (Level I), seeks parity with the pay scale of the stenographers attached to the Joint Secretaries and officers above that rank. It is stated that the petitioners are in the pay scale of Rs.550-

900. The petitioners claim that they should be placed in the pay scale of Rs.650-1040 with effect from 1st of January, 1973. It must, however, be mentioned that this petition was filed on or about 7th of May, 1982 and submissions on this petition were made in the end of November, 1986. Therefore, the position pertaining to the controversy in this case is prior to the report or the implementation of the Fourth Pay Commission. In short, the petitioners are personal assistants and stenographers attached to the heads of the departments in the Customs and Central Excise Departments of the Ministry of Finance. They assert that they have been and are discriminated vis-a-vis personal assistants and stenographers attached to the Joint Secretaries and officers above them in the Ministry. In brief, it is the case of the petitioners that between 28th of January, 1955 to 8th of November, 1957 the Ministry of Finance prescribed certain educational qualifications and technical proficiency qualifications for both Stenographers and Steno-typists. On or about 26th of April, 1968, the Department of Revenue, Central Board of Excise and Customs made provisions for filling the posts of Stenographers by direct recruitment and prescribed qualifications etc. for the same. In July, 1969 the Government of India, Ministry of Home Affairs classified the posts of Stenographers sanctioned at different levels into four grades viz., Grade III, II, I and Selection Grade. Posts attached to Secrataries and Additional Secretaries were classi-

1002

fied as Selection Grade originally and were given pay of Rs.350 (500)900 with effect from 1st of August, 1969; Stenographers Grade-II (Rs.210-530) placed with Joint Secretaries and officers of equivalent rank were upgraded to Grade I in the pay scale of Rs.350(400)-770;Grade-II stenographers were given Rs.210-530; Grade III stenographers were given Rs.130-280 and Grade-III in petitioners' offices were given Rs.130-300. It is the case of the petitioners that the counterparts of the petitioners (Grade-II Stenographers) were in the pay scale of Rs.210-530 and petitioners in Rs.210-425. Criteria of pay scales/status/rank of officers for the scale of pay of stenographers were made out. In 1970 Ministry of Home Affairs set out the category of officers viz. Joint Secretaries to the Government of India and officers of equivalent rank are entitled to the sanction of scale of category of stenographers Grade-I-Sr.P.A. in the pay-scale of Rs.350-770. Criteria of status/rank of an officer was again established for the pay scale of stenographers. Ministry of Home Affairs on or about 29th of June, 1972 pursuant to the decision taken on that date reached in the NCJCM relates to creation of posts of Stenographers Grade-I and Grade-II in subordinate offices and other offices of the Government of India and also identified/set out/clarified that the posts of Stenographers attached to officers whose status is higher than that of Deputy Secretary to the Government of India shall be in the scale of Rs.210-425. Criteria of status of an officer for scale of pay of Stenographers was again established. Thereafter there was the Third Pay Commission's report which was accepted and recommendations were given effect to. As a result of the various Government notifications thereafter and Rules framed, it is the case of the petitioners that their counterparts, that is to say, Stenographers Grade-I attached/sanctioned to the Joint Secretaries and equivalent officers were given the pay scale of Rs.650(710)-1040; whereas the petitioners whose posts were/are sanctioned and attached with the officers of the same Government Ministry of Finance and the Department of Revenue and the same administration and Grade Level I (Rs.2500-2750) Joint Secretaries and Level-II (Rs.2250-2500) Directors, who are also Heads of Departments, and are at par in seniority/promotion with the counterparts officers in the Department of Revenue were given only Rs.425-700, whereas the Stenographers Grade-I/Senior Grade, the petitioners discharged the same functions and indeed, have sometimes more onerous duties and responsibilities than their counterparts attached with Joint Secretaries and Level-II Directors, according to the petitioners. From the affidavit filed on behalf of the petitioners in reply to the opposition by the respondents, it appears that the method of recruitment in respect of Grade-I stenographers in the Department are as follows:

1003
(i) Petitioners' counterparts in the so-called Secretariat & participating attached offices-CSSS.

_______________________________________________________ Grade of Classi- Designation/level/ Date of Stenographers fication. status/rank/grades sanction/ and scale of and pay scales of or up pay. officers for whom gradation.

sanctioned/attached.

_______________________________________________________ (1) (2) (3) (4) _______________________________________________________ Grade-B Central (i) Joint Secretaries (Grade-I) Civil & Equivalent.

Rs.650-(710)- Service Rs.2500-2750 1.1.1973 1040. Group 'B' (Gazetted)(ii) Directors & Equivalent.

			     Rs.2250-2500    12.11.1975
		       (iii) Directors &
			     Equivalent.
			     Rs.2000-2250     23.1.1984

_______________________________________________________

(ii) Petitioners' Officers i.e. so called non-participating attached and subordinate offices (Directorates & Collectorates of Customs & Central Excise):

_______________________________________________________ (1) (2) (3) (4) _______________________________________________________ Grade-I Central (i) Heads of the Departments Rs.550-900 Civil *Directors/ Service Collectors of Group 'B' Customs & Central (non- Excise Level-I gazetted). Equivalent to Joint Secretaries Rs.2500-2750. 4.7.78
(ii) Directors/ Collectors of Customs & Central Excise Level-II Equivalent to Directors (IRS IC & CE Service 1004 Rs.2250-2500 4.7.1978
(iii) Directors/ * * Generals/ Principal Collectors i.e. Level-I Col lectors + Rs.250 S.P. Equivalent to pay scale of Addl. Secretary Rs.3000 i.e. Rs.2500
-2750 + SP of Rs.250 */** All Heads of the Depart-

ments.

x      x	 x	   x	     x	       x      x
(iii)  Comparative	     Position

_______________________________________________________ Officers' pay scales Pay scales of Petitioners in the two offices Stenographers pay scales with (Petitioners & their Gr. I in Sectt.these officers.

counterparts)	     & Participating
		     Offices (Petitioners
		     counterparts)
		     sanctioned with these
		     officers.
    (1)			(2)		    (3)

_______________________________________________________ Rs.2500-2750 Rs.650(710)-1040 Rs.425-700 w.e.f.1.1.1973. w.e.f.1.1.73 Rs.550-900 w.e.f.4.7.78 Rs.2250-2500 Rs.650(710)-1040 Rs.425-700 w.e.f.12.11.75. w.e.f.1.1.73 Rs.550-900 w.e.f.4.7.78.

Rs.2000-2250	     Rs.650(710)/1040	     Rs.425-700
		     w.e.f.23.1.1984.	 w.e.f.1.1.1973
Rs.2500-2750+	     Rs.650(775)-1200	     Rs.550-900
Spl Pay of Rs.250    w.e.f.1.1.73
i.e.Rs.3000

_______________________________________________________ 1005 In the rejoinder filed on behalf of the petitioners in this application by one Ved Bhardwaj, General Secretary of the Federation, it is stated that the correct position of recruitment and position vis-a-vis the petitioners counterparts in the so-called secretariat and participating attached offices are as follows:

"(i) The petitioners and their Secretariat counterparts are both members of the same Central Civil Service;
(ii) They are both Stenographers Grade-I belonging to Group 'B' of the Service except that the Secretariat Stenographers are gazetted, whereas the petitioners are not. This exception is a purely fortuitous circumstances;
(iii) The petitioners and their counterparts are both sanctioned, assigned to and attached with officers who are in the pay scales of Rs.2500- 2750, Rs.2250-2500 and Rs.2000-2250;
(iv) Majority of the petitioners' posts are sanctioned/ attached with Heads of the Department."

The petitioners assert that the above facts reinforce the petitioners' submissions that as between them and their Secretariat counterparts all things are equal i.e., all relevant considerations governing both are the same and they hold identical posts. According to the petitioners they discharge the same functions and, indeed, some times more onerous duties and responsibilities than their counterparts whether in the Ministry of Finance or other Ministeries in the Central Secretariat. In the very nature of their service and its concomitant duties and obligations, which concern the administration and execution of matters falling under the Customs Act, 1962, the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, the Foreign Exchange Regulations Act, 1973 and other Acts. The petitioners have various duties to perform which according to them are as follows:

"(a) long and arduous hours of work, generally extending late in the evening beyond normal office hours and sometimes throughout the night in cases of emergency that have become all too frequent owing to increased punitive and preventive detention cases arising under these Acts resulting in proceedings before all levels of Courts including this Honourable 1006 Court, and a spate of Parliament Questions affecting the Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, and the petitioners' Department in particular in all its administrative aspects and ramifications. The petitioners have no option but to discharge these duties when called upon to do so and their willingness to forego overtime (in cases where the Stenographers are entitled) is not accepted by the officers as affording an excuse to relieve the petitioners of such duties and hours of work.
(b) an excessively recurring volume of dictation and typing, day to day to cope with the normal and emergent exigencies, including written correspondence, recording and transcribing of notes on inspection tours and preparation of investigation and tour reports for the superior officers; of notes and memoranda for counsel in court proceedings, of briefs for official statements and conferences and replies to Parliament Questions and the Public Accounts Committee, Chambers of Commerce, Customs and Central Excise Advisory Councils and other bodies on fiscal policies like Commissions/Committees, detailed reports constituting background material with reference to cases or matters falling within the purview of any one or more of the aforesaid Acts, and so on.
(c) observing the very stringent requirements of secrecy necessarily involved in such cases or matters,
(d) the consequent constant exposure to security risks and to personal safety with accompanying mental tension and strain."

The petitioners assert that basic qualifications, method, manner and source of recruitment and grades of promotions are the same as their counterparts attached to the Joint Secretaries/Secretaries and other officers in the Secretariat. According to the petitioner even on the criteria adopted by the Third Pay Commission they seek herein to demonstrate that there was no basis for any differentiation between the petitioners and their counterparts. While the petitioners get a grade of Rs.550- 900 their counterparts are in the pay scale of Rs.650-1040. The petitioners assert that this is discrimination. This differenti 1007 ation without any rational basis is discrimination violative of Article 14 and Article 16(1) of the Constitution of India. They clamour for equal pay for equal work. They also allege that their has been discrimination in the adoption of the recommendations of the Third Pay Commission as detailed in their petition.

This petition has been disposed of on the basis of the position prevailing prior to the report of the Fourth Pay Commission and its acceptance or implementation. The respondents on the other hand deny that their is any discrimination, differentiation without basis. The respondents by their affidavit filed by one Shri S.P. Kundu, Under Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of Finance assert that the Secretariat of the Ministries/Departments of the Government of India together constitute Headquarters Organisation. In the administrative hierarchy of the Central Government, the Secretariat occupy according to respondents a key position and the main role of the Secretariat is to help the Government in the tasks of formulation of policies, to prepare programmes in order to translate these policies, into co-ordinated action and to ensure the effective execution of Government policies through periodical review. The Secretariat also helps Ministers to discharge their accountability to Parliament including the various Parliamentary Committees. According to the respondents detailed execution of Government's policies specially in the field is left to the agencies outside the Secretariat which are called attached or subordinate offices of the Ministries, but they are always subject to supervision by the Secretariat. The respondents state that to man the various stenographic posts in the Headquarters, the Government constituted the Central Secretariat Stenographers Service (CSSS) which also cater to the needs of such posts in several attached offices which are known as participating offices. But none of the attached offices, assert the respondents, of the Department of Revenue are participating offices. Therefore, keeping in view the importance and the nature and the type of the work performed in the Ministries/Departments of the Government of India vis-a-vis those in the attached and subordinate offices and consequently the nature of stenographic assistance required, according to the respondents the Third Pay Commission recommended different scales of pay for Stenographers in CSSS and those in the non-participating attached and subordinate offices. The respondents in this connection have drawn our attention to the Report of the Third Pay Commission in recommending different and lower scales of pay for the stenographers of the non-participating attached and subordinate offices in comparison with those in the Central Secretariat as follows:

1008
"As a general statement, it is correct to say that the basic nature of a stenographer's work remains by and large the same whether he is working with an officer in the secretariat or with an officer in the subordinate office. We feel, however, that the position needs to be examined a little more critically because the size of a stenographer's job is very much dependent upon the nature of the work entrusted to that officer. It would not be correct therefore to go merely by status in these matters and disregard the functional requirements. By the very nature of Secretariat working the volume of dictation and typing work can be expected to be heavier than in a subordinate office. Also the requirement of secrecy even in the civil offices of the Secretariat can be very stringent. Considering the differences in the hierarchical structure and in the type of work transacted in the Secretariat and in the subordinate offices, we are not in favour of adopting a uniform pattern. Once the functional requirements are seen to be different for the Secretariat and the subordinate office, it will not be worth while to aim for absolute parity in the pay scale of Stenographers working on the two sides."

What was emphasised before us was that the difference in the functional requirements of the work done was one of the points. The respondents say that in devising any scales of various posts/categories, inter alia, the degree of skill, experience involved, training required, responsibility taken, strain, fatigue, risk and confidentiality undertaken, mental and physical requirements are factors to be borne in mind. It has been emphasised by the respondents that though the duties and works are identical between the petitioners and their counterparts attached to the Secretaries in the Secretariat, their functions are not identical with regard to their duties and responsibilities. The respondents state that the stenographers attached with the officers in the Secretariat formed a distinguishable class as they have to assist the officers in the discharge of their duties and high responsibilities which according to the respondents are of a much higher nature than in the attached and subordinate offices. According to the respondents the Joint Secretaries and Directors in the Central Secretariat performed functions and duties of higher responsibilities than those performed by the Heads of Departments although they are borne on identical scales of pay. It is in this background of the facts that the claims of the petitioner have to be judged.

1009

Equal pay for equal work is a fundamental right. But equal pay must depend upon the nature of the work done, it cannot be judged by the mere volume of work, there may be qualitative difference as regards reliability and responsibility. Functions may be the same but the responsibilities make a difference. One cannot deny that often the difference is a matter of degree and that there is an element of value judgment by those who are charged with the administration in fixing the scales of pay and other conditions of service. So long as such value judgment is made bona fide, reasonably on an intelligible criteria which has a rational nexus with the object of differentiation, such differentiation will not amount to discrimination. It is important to emphasise that equal pay for equal work is a concomitant of Article 14 of the Constitution. But it follows naturally that equal pay for unequal work will be a negation of that right.

We may briefly note the principles evolved by this Court in this respect in the backdrop of varied set of facts. Differentiation in implementing the award or the recommendations of Pay Commission without rational basis may amount to discrimination. In Purshottam Lal & Others. v. Union of India & Anr., A.I.R. 1973 SC 1088 it was held that implementation of the revised pay scale in a particular category of servants from a date later than that recommended by the Pay Commission and thus non-implementation of its report only in respect of those persons amounts to violation of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution, the Constitution Bench held. In Laljee Dubey and Others v. Union of India and Others, [1974] 2 S.C.R. 249 this principle was reiterated again. This Court in Randhir Singh v. Union of India & Ors., [1982] 3 S.C.R. 298 had to deal with the case of a driver constable in the Delhi Police Force under the Delhi Administration. The scale of pay in the Delhi Police Force was for non-matriculate drivers Rs.210-70 and for matriculate drivers Rs.225-308. The scale of pay of a driver in the Railway Protection Force was Rs.260-400. The scale of pay of drivers in the non-secretariat offices in Delhi was Rs.260-6-326-EB-8-350, while that of Secretariat offices in Delhi was Rs.260-6-290-EB-6-326-8-366-EB-8-8-8-390-10-400. The scale of pay of drivers in the office of the Language Commission was Rs.260-300 while the drivers of heavy vehicles in the Fire Brigade and the Department of Light House was Rs.330-480. The petitioner and other driver constables made a representation to the authorities that their case was omitted to be considered separately by the Third Pay Commission and that their pay scales should be the same as the drivers of heavy vehicles in other departments. As their claims for better scales of pay did not meet with success, the said application was filed by the petitioner for the issue of 1010 a write under Art.32 of the Constitution. It was allowed by the Court. Chinnappa Reddy, J. speaking for a Bench of three learned judges of this Court reiterated the following principles:

"(a)'Equal pay for equal work' is not a mere demagogic slogan but a constitutional goal capable of attainment through constitutional remedies, by the enforcement of constitutional rights (under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
(b)The stand (of the Government of India) that the circumstance that persons belonging to different departments of the Government is itself a sufficient circumstance to justify different scales of pay irrespective of the identity of their powers, duties and responsibilities, is unacceptable and untenable.
(c) While equation of posts and equation of pay are matters primarily for the Executive Government and expert bodies like the Pay Commission and not for the Courts, where all things are equal i.e. where all relevant considerations are the same, persons holding identical posts may not be treated differentially in the matter of their pay merely because they belong to different departments.
(d) The principle of equal pay for equal work is not an abstract doctrine when applied to Government servants performing similar functions and having identical powers, duties and responsibilities.
(e) As matter of interpretation, the Directive Principles, e.g. Article 39(d) of the Constitution, have to be and have been read into the Fundamental Rights, e.g. Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. So read, the principle of equal pay for equal work, though not expressly declared by our Constitution to be a fundamental right, is a constitutional goal. Construing Articles 14 and 16 in the light of the Preamble and Article 39(d), the principle of 'equal pay for equal work' is deducible from those Articles and may be properly applied to cases of unequal scales of pay based on no classification or irrational classification though those drawing the different scales of pay do identical work under the same employer."
1011

The Court further expressed the view that on the aforesaid interpretation in the facts of that case, it was proper to direct the Central Government to fix pay scales on par for persons doing identical work under the same employer. It is, however, to be borne in mind what has been emphasised by the respondents in the instant case on this aspect. That case related to the drivers who had been doing physical work, in the case of stenographers and personal assistants, there is an element of faith, reliability and responsibility and the functional responsibilities and the requirements of persons doing same amount of physical work may be different in some cases depending upon the officers with whom the stenographers and personal assistants are attached. On behalf of the petitioners, it is emphasised that Heads of Departments who are in the senior Administrative Grade-Level-I (Rs.2500-2750) which is equivalent to the pay scale of the Joint Secretaries in the Ministries and their nature of work is virtually the same. They have also to deal with sensitive matters. The basic principles on which differentiation would not amount to discrimination, violative of either Article 14 of Article 16(1) of the Constitution are well settled. Article 14 of the Constitution strikes at the arbitrariness in State action and ensures fairness and equality of treatment. It is attracted where equals are treated differently without any reasonable basis. The principle underlying the guarantee is that all persons similarly circumstanced shall be treated alike both in privileges conferred and liabilities imposed. Equal laws must be applied equally and there should be no discrimination between one person and another if as regards the subject-matter of either administrative action or of legislation, their position is substantially the same. Article 14 forbids class legislation but permits reasonable classification for the purpose of legislation or administrative mandate. The classification must, however, be founded on an intelligible basis which distinguishes persons or things that are grouped together from those that are left out of the group and that differentia must have a rational nexus with the object to be achieved by the differentiation made in the statute or order in question. In other words, there ought to be causal connection between the basis of classification and the object of the classification. See in this connection the observations of the Constitution Bench of this Court in the case of D.S. Nakara & Others v. Union of India, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 165. See also P.K. Ramachandra Iyer & Others v. Union of India & others, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 200, where this Court at page 226 of the Report reiterated that the principle of 'equal pay for equal work' is deducible from those Articles 14 and 16 in the light of the Preamble and Article 39(d) of the Constitution and might be applied properly in the cases of unequal scales of pay based on no classification or irrational classification 1012 though those drawing the different scales of pay do identical work under the same employer. In Delhi Veterinary Association v. Union of India & Others, [1984] 3 S.C.R. 429, which was dealing with Veterinary Assistant Surgeons working in the Delhi Administration. It was observed dismissing the writ petition that the question of the fixation of pay scale for Veterinary Assistant Surgeons should be left to be decided by the Government on the basis of the recommendation of the Fourth Pay Commission. The question of discrimination cannot be decided in isolation. This Court reiterated that in addition to the principle of 'equal pay for equal work', the pay structure of the employees of the Government should reflect many other social values. This Court also emphasised the need for evolution and implementation of a scientific national policy of incomes, wages and prices. In P. Savita v. Union of India & Ors., [1985] Suppl. 1 S.C.R.101 this Court was dealing with Senior Draughtsmen doing the same work and discharging the similar functions and duties. They were classified into two groups, on the basis of seniority with two different pay scales. The question was whether it was discriminatory. It was held that it was. This Court reiterated that a group of draughtsmen entitled to higher scale of pay was not selected by any process nor is it based on any merit-cum-seniority basis, but is based only on seniority-cum-fitness. Moreover, it was found that the senior draughtsmen divided into two groups were in the same department doing identical and same work. It was not a case of different grades created on the ground of higher qualification either academic or otherwise or an entitlement by any other criteria. Thus the classification between the two groups of senior draughtsmen was without any basis. In view of the total absence of any plea in that case on the side of the respondents that the Senior Draughtsmen who were placed in the advantageous group do not perform work and duties more onerous or different from the work performed by the appellants groups in that case, it was held that this grouping violated Article 14 of the Constitution. It reiterated that the principle of 'equal pay for equal work' would be an abstract doctrine not attracting Article 14 if quality is made critarion for differentiation. See also Surinder Singh and Anr. v. Engineer-in-Chief, C.P.W.D. and Others, [1986] 1 SCC 639. This Court in a different context had to decide this question in Frank Anthony Public School Employees' Association v. Union of India and Others, [1986]4 SCC 707. It was held that there cannot be discrimination in pay and other conditions of service of school teachers merely on the basis of aided and unaided minority schools.

As is evident the facts of the instant case are entirely different.

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Here the differentiation is sought to be justified on the similarity of the functional work but on the dissimilarity of the responsibility, confidentiality and the relationship with public etc. In Dhirendra Chamoli and another v. State of U.P., [1986] 1 SCC 637, this Court was concerned with the casual workers on daily wage basis engaged by the Government in different Nehru Yuvak Kendras in the country performing the same duties as performed by the regular Class-IV employees against the sanctioned strength. The claim was allowed with certain directions on the basis of the facts found. See in this connection Union of India & Anr. v. R.G. Kashikar & Anr., AIR 1986 SC 431. In Writ Petition (Civil) Nos. 13097-13176 of 1984, M.P. Singh Deputy Superintendent of Police, C.B.I. and Others v. Union of India & Others, (Judgments Today 1987 1 SC 146), this Court on the facts of that case found that among the employees of the Central Bureau of Investigation, there are two classes of officials deputationists and non-deputationists amongst Sub- Inspectors, Inspectors and Deputy Superintendent of Police. There has been discrimination among two groups with regard to payment of special pay. Special pay related to arduous nature of duties to be performed. Whether they belong to the category of deputationists or non-deputationists payment of different rates of Special pay, it was held in the facts of the case, did not pass the test of classification. This Court reiterated that it was well settled that in order to pass the test of permissible classification of persons belonging to the same class into groups for purposes of differential treatment two conditions must be fulfilled, namely, that the classification must be founded on an intelligible differentia which distinguishes persons who were grouped together from others left out of the group and that differentia must have a rational relation to the objects sought to be achieved by the law which brings about discrimination between the two groups. In M/s. Mackinnon Mackenzie & Co. Ltd. v. Audrey D'Costa & Anr., (SLP (CIVIL) No. 1265/87 decided on March 26,1987), the question was the different treatment between male and female stenographers. But there differentiation was based on the ground of sex. It was struck down. It will clearly be violative of Article 14 and Article 16 of the Constitution.

In this case the differentiation has been sought to be justified in view of the nature and the types of the work done, that is, on intelligible basis. The same amount of physical work may entail different quality of work, some more sensitive, some requiring more tact, some less--it varies from nature and culture of employment. The problem about equal pay cannot always be translated into a mathematical formula. If it has a rational nexus with the object to be sought for, as 1014 reiterated before a certain amount of value judgment of the administrative authorities who are charged with fixing the pay scale has to be left with them and it cannot be interfered with by the Court unless it is demonstrated that either it is irrational or based on no basis or arrived mala fide either in law or in fact. In the light of the averments made and in the facts mentioned before, it is not possible to say that the differentiation is based on no rational nexus with the object sought for to be achieved. In that view of the matter this application must fail and it is accordingly dismissed without any order as to costs.

We must, however, make it clear that this will not in any way prevent or prejudice the Government from reviewing the situation in the light of the report of the Fourth Pay Commission or any other appropriate body, if any, with such modification as the Government and the authorities concerned considered fit and proper.

S.L.				    Petition dismissed.
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