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[Cites 3, Cited by 34]

Supreme Court of India

D.P. Sharma & Ors vs Union Of India & Anr on 21 February, 1989

Equivalent citations: 1989 AIR 1071, 1989 SCR (1) 791, AIR 1989 SUPREME COURT 1071, 1989 LAB. I. C. 1294, (1990) 3 SERVLJ 30, (1989) 1 KER LT 67, (1989) 1 JT 359 (SC), 1989 SCC (SUPP) 1 244, 1989 SCC (L&S) 353, (1989) 2 LABLJ 155, (1989) 58 FACLR 546, (1989) 2 SERVLJ 56, (1989) 1 LAB LN 550, (1989) 1 SERVLR 780, (1989) 1 CURLR 397

Author: K.J. Shetty

Bench: K.J. Shetty, Kuldip Singh

           PETITIONER:
D.P. SHARMA & ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT21/02/1989

BENCH:
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
BENCH:
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)

CITATION:
 1989 AIR 1071		  1989 SCR  (1) 791
 1989 SCC  Supl.  (1) 244 JT 1989 (1)	359
 1989 SCALE  (1)459


ACT:
    Armed  Forces  Headquarters	 Clerical  Services   Rules,
1968:  Seniority of officials appointed in the common  cadre
of  LDC	 prior	to  coming  into  force	 of  Rules--Fixation
of--Whether  to be determined on basis of length of  service
as prescribed in various memoranda or on basis of  confirma-
tion--Whether 1968 Service Rules have retrospective effect.



HEADNOTE:
    The	 Armed Forces Headquarters Clerical  Service  Rules,
1968  were brought into force with effect from March,  1968.
The  rules provided that seniority in the service  shall  be
determined  on the basis of date of confirmation.  Prior  to
this, the seniority in the cadre of service was required  to
be  determined	on the basis of length of service,  as	laid
down by several official memoranda of the Government or that
of the Defence Ministry.
    After  the rules came into force, the seniority  of	 the
appellants  who	 joined	 the Armed  Forces  Headquarters  as
L.D.Cs. between 1960 and 1964, on transfer/posting from	 the
lower defence installations, in public interest, and some of
whom  were later promoted as U.D.Cs., was sought to be	dis-
turbed, on the basis of confirmation as prescribed under the
rules.	The  appellants,  therefore, moved  the	 High  Court
contending that the length of service should be the basis of
inter se seniority.
    A  Single Judge of the High Court held  that  ordinarily
the  appellants	 would	have been governed  by	the  general
principle of seniority based on the date of confirmation  as
laid  down in the 1959 Memorandum of the Home Ministry,	 but
since the Ministry of Defence had preferred to continue	 the
principle  of length of service which it had been  following
prior to 1959, even after the 1959 Memorandum, and which had
been  incorporated in 1963 Memorandum and reiterated in	 all
memoranda issued thereafter, the seniority of the appellants
should be decided by length of service. i.e., their date  of
joining the Army Headquarters as L.D.Cs.
On  appeal by Union of India, the Division Bench  held	that
the
 792
seniority  of the appellants must fail to be  determined  on
the  basis of confirmation as prescribed by the	 rules,	 and
not on the length of service. Aggrieved by this, the  appel-
lants filed appeals before this court.
Allowing the appeals,
    HELD: The general rule is if seniority is to be regulat-
ed  in	a particular manner in a given period, it  shall  be
given  effect  to and shall not be  varied  to	disadvantage
retrospectively. [795F-G]
    The	 Armed Forces Headquarters Clerical  Service  Rules,
1968  no  doubt provide that all persons  substantially	 ap-
pointed to a grade shall rank senior to those holding  offi-
ciating	 appointments  in the grade. But the rules  have  no
retrospective  effect.	It  could not  impair  the  existing
rights	of  officials who were appointed long prior  to	 the
Rules came into force. [795A-B]
    The	 various  office memoranda clearly  laid  down	that
length of service should be the guiding principle of arrang-
ing inter se seniority of officials. [795B]
    The appellants being governed by those memoranda had the
right to have their seniority determined accordingly  before
the Rules came into force. That being their right, the rules
cannot take it away to their prejudice. The Division  Bench,
was,  therefore,  clearly  in error in	directing  that	 the
seniority  shall  follow  their	 respective   confirmations.
[795B-C]
    Union of India v. M. Ravi Varma & Anr., [1972] 2 SCR 992
at 1002. relied on.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 41334 134 of 1984.

From the Judgment and Order dated 5.3.1982 of the Delhi High Court in L.P.A. No. 125 and 115 of 1981.

Ashok Mahajan, G.D. Gupta and R. Venkataramani for the Appellants.

Anil Dev Singh, Mrs. Indra Sawhney, Mrs. Sushma Suri and C.V.S. Rao for the Respondents.

793

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by K. JAGANNATHA SHETTY, J. These two appeals by special leave raise the question of determination of seniority of the appellants in the cadre of Lower Division Clerks. The appeals are preferred against the judgment of the High Court of Delhi dated March 5, 1982 in LPA No. 125 of 1981. The appellants were originally recruited as Civilian School Masters or L.D.Cs., Leading Hand (Technical), etc. either in the Lower Defence Installations comprising Ordnance Factories, Ordnance Depots, Workshops, Regimental Centres, Units, Command Headquarters, etc. under the control of Army Headquarters, New Delhi. Some of the appellants were declared as surplus in those establishments and they came to be posted/transferred to the Armed Forces Headquarters and inter-service organisations as LDCs. Their posting/transfer was done in the public interest. They joined the service in the Armed Force Headquarters on various dates between 1960 to 1964. Some of them were later promoted as Upper Division Clerks. While they were thus continuing in service, rules flamed under proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution known as "The Armed Forces Headquarters Clerical Service Rules, 1968 ("The Rules")" were brought into force with effect from March 1, 1968. The Rules inter alia, provide that the seniority in the service shall be determined on the basis of date of confirmation. Prior to the coming into force of the Rules, the seniority in the cadre of service was required to be determined on the basis of length of service. It was so laid down by several official memorandums of the Government or that of the Defence Ministry. After the Rules came into force, the seniority of the appellants was sought to be disturbed on the basis of confirmation as prescribed under the Rules. The appellants, therefore, moved the High Court of Delhi under Article 226 of the Constitu- tion contending inter alia, that length of service should be the basis of inter-se seniority. They also raised some other questions with which we are not concerned. The learned single Judge accepted the claim of the appellants and made an order dated April 8, 1981. The relevant portion of the order runs as follows:

"It is not disputed by the respond- ents that the only principle of seniority laid down by various Memoranda was the principle of seniority laid down by various Memoranda was the principle of length of service. No memo- randa of Administrative Instructions are brought to my notice by 794 the respondents, where any other principle has been laid down. The petitioners, in all the three petitioners were originally in common LDC cadre and are in the common cadre of U.D.C. now. It cannot be said that some of them (Writ Petition No. 423 of 1975) will all be governed by the principles of length of service and no others because they have not expressly stated that their seniority should be fixed on the principles of length of serv- ice. It may be noted that in 1959 the Home Ministry issued general principles of seniori- ty to be followed in all Government services except where a service follows a different set of principles. The said Memorandum lays down that seniority of all Government employees, employed subsequent to the issuance of the said Memoranda, will be decided on the basis of the date of confirmation. It further lays down that all confirmed employees would be treated senior to the non-confirmed employees. The petitioners would have been ordinarily governed by these principles since they joined the Armed Forces on transfer after 1959. But the Ministry of Defence preferred to continue the principles of length of service (which they had been following prior to 1959), even after the 1959 Memorandum came into operation. The 1963 Memorandum of the Defence Ministry incorporated the said principles and all Memoranda issued thereafter reiterated the principles of length of service. In these circumstances, the contention of respondents cannot be accepted. The seniority of the peti- tioners shall be decided by the principle of length of service, that is, their date of joining the Army Headquarters as LDCs. Of course, some of them entitled to additional benefit of past service under the said Memo- randum were given that benefit. Since this is the question raised in Civil Writ Petition No. 423/1975, it must succeed."

Being aggrieved by the above decision, the Union of India preferred an Appeal before the Division Bench of the High Court. The Division Bench reversed the above view holding that the seniority of the appellants must fall to be determined on the basis of confirmation as prescribed by the Rules and not on the length of service. The view taken by the Division Bench has been challenged in these appeals. We have perused the judgment of the Division Bench and also considered the submissions of the parties. The view taken by the Divi-

795

sion Bench appears to be erroneous. The Rules, no doubt provide that all persons substantially appointed to a grade shall rank senior to those holding officiating appointments in the grade. But the Rules have no retrospective effect. It could not impair the existing rights of officials who were appointed long prior to the Rules came into force. The office memorandums to which learned single Judge has re- ferred in detail and which we have extracted above clearly laid down that length of service should be the guiding principle of arranging the inter-se seniority of officials. The appellants being governed by those memorandums had the fight to have their seniority determined accordingly before the Rules came into force. That being their right, the Rules cannot take it away to their prejudice. The Division Bench was, therefore, clearly in error in directing that the seniority shall follow their respective confirmations. In construing similar office memorandums in a different context, this is what this Court has observed in Union of India v. M. Ravi Varma & Anr., [1972] 2 SCR 992 at 1002:

"As the said Office Memorandum has, except in certain cases with which we are not concerned, applied the rule of seniority contained in the Annexure thereto only to employees appointed after the date of that Memorandum, there is no escape from the con- clusion that the seniority of Ganapathi Kini and Ravi Varma, respondents, who were appoint- ed prior to December 22. 1959. would have to be determined on the basis of their length of service in accordance with Office Memorandum dated June 22, 1949 and not on the basis of the date of their confirmation."

These considerations apply equally to the present case as well. The general rule is if seniority is to be regulated in a particular manner in a given period, it shall be given effect to, and shall not be varied to disadvantage retro- spectively. The view taken by the Division Bench, which is in substance contrary to this principle is not sound and cannot be supported.

In the result, these appeals are allowed with costs. In reversal of the judgment of the Division Bench, we restore that of the learned single Judge.

N.P.V.						     Appeals
allowed.
796