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[Cites 5, Cited by 66]

Supreme Court of India

Manmohan Singh Jaitla, Etc. Etc vs The Commissioner. Union Territory ... on 19 December, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 364, 1985 SCR (2) 479, AIR 1985 SUPREME COURT 364, 1985 LAB. I. C. 672, 1985 UJ (SC) 411, 1984 SCC (SUPP) 540, 1985 SCC (L&S) 269, (1985) 1 LAB LN 954, (1985) 1 LABLJ 514, (1985) 1 SERVLR 505, (1985) 1 SERVLJ 90

Author: D.A. Desai

Bench: D.A. Desai, V. Khalid

           PETITIONER:
MANMOHAN SINGH JAITLA, ETC. ETC

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER. UNION TERRITORY CHANDIGARH AND ORS. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/12/1984

BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
KHALID, V. (J)

CITATION:
 1985 AIR  364		  1985 SCR  (2) 479
 1984 SCC  Supl.  540	  1984 SCALE  (2)991
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1986 SC1571	 (57)
 R	    1989 SC 341	 (14)


ACT:
     Punjab Aided Schools (Security of Service) Act, 1969-S.
3-Holding of  inquiry before  dismissing an  employee of  an
aided school  is mandatory-S.  3 is  beneficial provision-On
appointment teacher  asked  to	enter  into  agreement	with
school	management-Agreement   in  derogation  of  mandatory
provision-Managing Committee  terminated service  of teacher
without holding inquiry by invoking conditions of agreement-
Whether amounts	 to  colourable	 exercise  of  power-Whether
order of termination of service bad and ab initio void.
       Constitution   of  India	  Art  227-Scope   of	writ
jurisdiction-Expression 'Tribunal  in Art.  227	 comprehends
Deputy Commissioner  and Commissioner  which  are  statutory
quasi-judicial authorities  under the  Punjab Aided  Schools
(Security  of  Service)	 Act  1969-Deputy  Commissioner	 and
Commissioner are amenable to the writ jurisdiction.
      Interpretation-Any  agreement not	 in consonance	with
the statutory  provisions beneficial  to a  class in need of
protection  cannot   be	 given	effect	to    it  stands  in
derogation of the mandatory provisions of the statute.



HEADNOTE:
      Section  3 of  the Punjab	 Aided Schools	(Security of
Service) Act,  1969 ('1969  Act' for short) provides that no
employee shall	be dismissed  or removed  or reduced in rank
except after  an inquiry to be held in the manner prescribed
therein. Sub-sec. (2) provides that no order of dismissal or
removal or  reduction in  rank of  an  employee	 shall	take
effect	unless	 it  has   been	 confirmed   by	 the  Deputy
Commissioner who may refuse to do so. if in his opinion, the
provisions of sub-sec. (I) have not been complied with. Sub-
sec. (S)  permits an  aggrieved person	to prefer  an appeal
against any  decision or  order of  the Deputy	Commissioner
under the section to the Commissioner.
      The  appellant in	 the civil  appeal was	appointed as
Headmaster of  an aided	 school which received 95 percent of
its expenses  as grant	from the  Government. As required by
the conditions	of his	appointment, the  appellant  entered
into an	 agreement with	 the management	 of the	 school. The
appellant's  appointment  was  confirmed  by  the  concerned
authority. The	appellant was  confirmed in  his post as the
Headmaster. The appellant was
480
awarded	 a   certificate  of   honour  by   the	  Chandigarh
administration in  token of  appreciation of the outstanding
performance of the appellant. After the term of the Managing
Committee which	 appointed the appellant expired and the new
Managing Committee  took over, the services of the appellant
were terminated	 invoking the  conditions of  the  agreement
entered into by the appellant. The appellant's appeal to the
Deputy Commissioner  and the  Commissioner were turned down.
The appellant's	 writ petition	was dismissed  by  the	High
Court in  limine. The High Court observed that as the school
cannot be  said to be 'other authority' under Art. 12 of the
Constitution, it  was not  amenable to the writ jurisdiction
of the High Court. Hence this appeal by Special Leave.
      The petitioner in the writ petition was appointed as a
Drawing	  Teacher in  1976. As required by the conditions of
his appointment	 the petitioner	 entered into  an  agreement
with the  management. In 1983 the petitioner's services were
terminated invoking  the conditions  of the  agreement.	 The
petitioner  approached	 the  Deputy  Commissioner  and	 the
Commissioner without success. Thereupon he field the present
writ petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
      Allowing both the appeal and the writ petition,
^
       HELD:  Any  agreement  not  in  consonance  with	 the
statutory provisions  beneficial  to  a	 class	in  need  of
protection cannot  be  given  effect  to  if  it  stands  in
derogation of  the  mandatory  provisions  of  the  statute.
Section 3  of the  1969 Act  makes it  obligatory to  hold a
disciplinary inquiry  before an	 employee of an aided school
can be either dismissed removed or reduced in rank. In order
to circumvent  this mandatory  provision, a  resort  to	 the
provisions of  the agreement in the context of the fact that
an inquiry  was commenced and given up clearly indicates the
true nature  of the  order as well as colourable exercise of
power. And this was done by the new Managing Committee which
appeared to  be keen to dispense with the service of persons
appointed by the outgoing Managing Committee. This smacks of
malafide. For  these reasons  the order	 of  termination  of
service of the appellant is bad and ab initio void. [485E-G]
      The  High Court  declined to  grant any  relief on the
ground that  an aided  school is not 'other authority' under
Act. 12 of the Constitution and is therefore not amenable to
the writ  jurisdiction of  the High  Court. The	 High  Court
clearly overlooked  the point  that Deputy  Commissioner and
Commissioner are  statutory authorities	 operating under the
969, Act.  They are  quasi-judicial authorities and that was
not disputed.  Therefore, they	 will be comprehended in the
expression  'Tribunal'	 as  used   in	Art.   227  of	 the
Constitution which confers power of superintendence over all
courts and  tribunals  by  the	High  Court  throughout	 the
territory in  relation to  which it  exercises jurisdiction.
Obviously, therefore,  the decision  of the statutory quasi-
judicial authorities which can be appropriately described as
tribunal will be subject to judicial review namely a writ of
certiorari  by	 the  High  Court  under  Art.	227  of	 the
Constitution. The  decision questioned before the High Court
was  of	  the  Deputy	Commissioner  and  the	Commissioner
exercising power  under Sec.  3 of  the 1969  Act. And these
statutory
481
authorities are	 certainly amenable to the writ jurisdiction
of the High Court. [485G-H; 486A-C]
      After  the decision  of the Constitution Bench of this
Court in Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi and Ors.
etc. the  aided school	receiving 95%  of expenses by way of
grant from  the public	exchequer and  whose employees	have
received the statutory protection under the 1969 Act and who
are  subject   to  the	 relations  made  by  the  Education
Department of  the Union Territory of Chandigarh as also the
appointment of	Headmaster to  be valid	 must be approved by
the Director  of Public	 Instructions ,	 would certainly  be
amenable to  the writ jurisdiction of the High Court. [486C-
D]
      Ajay  Hasia etc.	v. Khalid  Mujib Sehravardi and Ors.
etc., [1981] 2 SCR 79, referred to.
      The  Deputy Commissioner and the Commissioner in terms
held in	 both the  cases that  because of  the terms  of the
agreement entered  into by  each of  the teachers  with	 the
management of the school, it would not be open to them to go
behind the  order and  to find	out the	 true nature  of the
order. Now  if the  management	of  the	 school	 intends  to
circumvent the	mandatory provisions  of Sec.  3 of the 1969
Act, it	 has merely  to terminate  the service by giving one
month's	 notice	  as  provided	in  the	 agreement  and	 the
provisions  controlling	  the  arbitrary   powers   of	 the
management to  hire and	 fire can  be rendered nugatory. The
Deputy Commissioner  cannot take  an easy  recourse becoming
oblivious to  his duties  merely to  pay lip sympathy to the
order made by the management and decline even to examine the
allegation of malafide as also the true nature and character
of the impugned order. [484B-D]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2137 of 1984.

From the Judgment and Order dated 24.2.83 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ No.1086/83.

WITH Writ Petition No. 11238 of 1983 Under Article 32 of the Constitution K.G. Bhagat, Additional Solicitor General and Vimal Dave for the appellant in CA. No. 2137/84.

K.G. Bhagat, Additional Solicitor General and Ms. Asha Rani Jain for the petitioner in WP. N o. 11238/83.

Prithvi Raj and R.C. Pathak for the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 482 DESAI, J. Guru Nanak Khalsa High School ( ' School' for short) an aided school and hence governed by The Punjab Aided Schools (Security of Service) Act, 1969 ('1969 Act' for short) in its application to the Union territory of Chandigarh dispensed with the service of the Headmaster of the School, appellant Shri Manmohan Singh Jaitla, and the drawing teacher Amir Singh claiming to exercise power under an agreement executed by each of them with the management of the school. Admittedly, the school receives 95% of its expenses as grant from the Government and for contribution 5% of the expenses claims thoroughly arbitrary powers to be presently pointed out which appears to be anachronistic. The action of the Managing Committee of the school in dispensing with the services of both the aforementioned persons is questioned in these two matters on more or less identical grounds and therefore they were heard together and are being disposed of by this judgment.

In Re: C.A. No. 2137/84:

Pursuant to an advertisement inviting application for the post of Headmaster of the School, appellant- Shri Manmohan Singh Jaitla applied for the same. He was interviewed on March 28, 1976 and on the same day by the order of the same date, he was offered the post of Headmaster in the school in the prescribed scale with usual allowances sanctioned by the Education Department, Chandi- garh Administration for grant-in-aid Schools. The order of appointment provided that the appointee will be on probation for a period of one year and that he will be required to enter into an agreement with the school. The appellant accepted the appointment order and joined service. As required by the regulations of the Education Department of Chandigarh Administration, his appointment was subject to confirmation by the Director of Public Instruction. The confirmation was granted as per the order dated August 11, 1976. By the resolution of the Managing Committee of the School dated June 2, 1977, the appellant was confirmed with effect from May 1, 1977 in post as the Headmaster. In token of the appreciation of the outstanding performance of the appellant as Headmaster in the field of academic work/co- curricular activities and administration during the session 1980-81, he was awarded a certificate of honour by the Finance and Education Secretary, Union Territory of Chandigarh, on August 10, 1981. It appears that the term of the earlier Managing Committee expired and a new Managing Committee took over with effect from March 24,1982. On January 31,1983, the Education Managing Committee of' the school informed the appellant that his 483 services were no longer required with effect from that very day i.e. January 1983 and in terms of Condition No. (iii) of the agreement entered into by him, he would cease to be in the employment of the school and was directed to hand over charge to Mrs. Gurcharan Kaur. The appellants application for relief to the Deputy Commissioner under sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 3 of the 1969 Act was turned down. After an unsuccessful appeal to the Commissioner, the appellant approached the High Court of Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh under Art. 227 of the Constitution. The High Court rejected the writ petition in limine but by a speaking order observing that as the school] cannot be said to be 'other authority' under Art. 12 of the Constitution, it was not amenable to the writ , jurisdiction of the High Court. Hence this appeal by special leave.
In Re W. P. No. 11238/83:
Petitioner Amir Singh was appointed by the Managing Committee of the School on March 21, 1976 as a Drawing Teacher as per the appointment order No.1265 dated March 21, 1976. This appointment was made upon an application made by the petitioner and after he was interviewed by the concerned committee of the school. The appointment order spells out some of the conditions of appointment, one of them may be noticed. The appointee had to enter into an agreement with the management of the school. The petitioner was informed by a letter dated February 28, 1983 that as per the resolution adopted by the Managing Committee of the school, it was resolved to terminate the service of the petitioner as no longer required with effect from the fore-noon of March 4, 1983 in terms of first part of clause (6) of the agreement entered into between the petitioner and the Management. The petitioner approached the Deputy Commissioner and the Commissioner without success. Thereupon he filed present petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
It is not in dispute that the school is governed by the 1969 Act. It is an aided school receiving aid from the State Government to the tune of 95% of its expenses. Sec. 3 of the 1969 Act provides that no employee shall be dismissed or removed or reduced in rank except after an inquiry to be held in the manner prescribed therein. Sub-sec. (2) provides that no order of dismissal or removal or reduction in rank of an employee shall take effect unless it has been confirmed by the Deputy Commissioner who may refuse to do so, if in his opinion, the provisions of sub-sec. (1) have not been complied with. Sub-sec. (5) permits an aggrieved person to prefer an appeal 484 against any decision or order of the Deputy Commissioner under the section within a period of thirty days to the Commissioner. Sub-sec. (6) provides that the order of the Commissioner shall be Final and binding between the parties.
The Deputy Commissioner and the Commissioner in terms held in both the cases that because of the terms of the agreement entered into by each of the teachers with the management of the school, it would not be open to them to go behind the order and to find out the true nature of the order. It was also submitted on behalf of the respondent that under the relevant regulations of the Education Department of the Chandigarh Administration every employee of an aided school has to enter into an agreement with the management of the school. Now if the management of the school intends to circumvent the mandatory provisions of Sec. 3 of the 1969 Act, it has merely to terminate the service by giving one month's notice as provided in the agreement and the provisions controlling the arbitrary powers of the management to hire and fire can be rendered nugatory. The Deputy Commissioner cannot take an easy recourse becoming oblivious to his duties merely to pay lip sympathy to the order made by the management and decline even to examine the allegation of malafide as also the true nature and character of the impugned order. In the garb of enforcing a term of the agreement what was sought to be done in this case was to impose the penalty of removal. And there is sufficient material on record to show that the action was malafide.
Turning to the case of Manmohan Singh Jaitla, the Headmaster, the facts herein above narrated would affirmatively show that he was fully qualified and that he was appointed after interview and selection. He was confirmed. He received a certificate of merit from the Chandigarh Administration. The moment the Managing Committee changed exposing the inter-se squabbles amongst persons trying to usurp control of the management of the school, almost wholly financed by the public exchequer, to wreck vengeance against those who were appointed by the outgoing management which may have been defeated at the hustings, the agreement was invoked and the services terminated. Throwing out persons appointed by out going management is only one side of the coin. The moment the vacancy occurs, nepotism or corruption will have field day. Since the new management took, over quietly within a few months, service of the Headmaster was terminated on the ground that his service was no longer required. We repeatedly asked Mr. Prithvi Raj, 485 learned counsel for the respondent-school management as to how it would run a school without a Headmaster. We naggingly persisted with the question as to why it became necessary, obviously in the middle of the term or session on January 31, 1983, to dispense with the service of a Head Master and a Drawing teacher on the ground that they were no longer required. We waited for the answer in vain. Obviously, there could be none and that provides proof, if any was needed, to expose the chink in the cupboard revealing the malafides of the newly elected Managing Committee. We cannot efface the feeling that ignoring the meritorious service for a period of seven years the service of the appellant was dispensed with for a reason wholly untenable but only because he was appointed by the outgoing Managing Committee ignoring that his appointment was confirmed by the competent authority of the Chandigarh Administration. Coupled with this is the fact that a charge-sheet was served on the appellant on April 9, 1979 and a disciplinary enquiry was commenced by the school management. But the same was withdrawn and the power to terminate the service under the agreement was invoked and exercised. This gives a clear indication as to the punitive character of the order namely punishment for a possible misconduct and also colourable exercise of power by resorting to the agreement. Any agreement, not in consonance with the statutory provisions beneficial to a class in need of protection cannot be given effect to if it stands in derogation of the mandatory provisions of the statute. Sec. 3 makes it obligatory to hold a disciplinary enquiry before an employee of an aided school can be either dismissed, removed or reduced in rank. In order to circumvent this mandatory provision, a resort to the provisions of the agreement in the context of the fact that an enquiry was commenced and given up clearly indicates the true nature of the order as well as colourable exercise of power. And this was done by the new Managing Committee which appeared to be keen to dispense with the service of persons appointed by the outgoing Managing Committee . This smacks of malafide.

For all these reasons the order of termination of service of the appellant is bad and ab initio void.

The High Court declined to grant any relief on the ground that an aided school is not 'other authority' under Art. 12 of the Constitution and is therefore not amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Court. The High Court clearly overlooked the point that Deputy Commissioner and Commissioner are statutory authorities operating under the 1969 Act. They are quasi-judicial authorities and that was not disputed. Therefore, they will be comprehen-

486

ded in the expression 'Tribunal' as used in Art. 227 of the which confers power of superintendance over all courts and tribunals by the High Court throughout the territory in relation to which it exercises jurisdiction. Obviously, therefore, the decision of the statutory quasi-judicial authorities which can be appropriately described as tribunal will be subject to judicial review namely a writ of certiorari by the High Court under Art. 227 of the Constitution. The decision questioned before the High Court was of the Deputy Commissioner and the Commissioner exercising powers under Sec. 3 of the 1969 Act. And these statutory authorities are certainly amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Court.

The matter can be viewed from a slightly different angle as well. After the decision of the Constitution Bench of this Court in Ajay Hasia etc.v. Khalid Mujib Sehrvardi & Ors. etc-(l) the aided school receiving 95%- of expenses by way of grant from the public exchequer and whose employees have received the statutory protection under the 1969 Act and who is subject to the regulations made the Education Department of the Union Territory of Chandigarh as also the appointment of Head Master to be valid must be approved by the Director of public Instructions, would certainly be amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Court. The High Court unfortunately, did not even refer to the decision of the Constitution Bench in Ajay Hasia's case rendered on November 13, 1980 while disposing of the writ petition in 1983. In Ajay Hasia's case, Bhagwati, J. speaking for the Constitution Bench inter alia observed that 'the financial assistance of the State is so much as to meet almost entire expenditure of the corporation, it would afford some indication of the corporation being impregnated with governmental character.' Add to this the existence of deep and pervasive State control may afford an indication that the Corporation is a State agency or instrumentality Substituting the words 'public trust' in place of the 'corporation' and the reasons will mutatis mutandis apply to the school. Therefore, also the High Court was in error in holding that the third-respondent school was not amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Court.

It would thus appear that the order of termination of service is unsustainable for more than one reason and therefore, the order of termination of service No. 58/83/20 dated January 31,1983 is quashed and set aside and the appellant Manmohan Singh Jaitla is reinstated in service as the Headmaster of the school with continuity (1)[1981] 2 S.C.R. 79.

487

in service and full backwages. If under the orders of this Court A dated March 2, 1983, May 2, 1983 and subsequent orders, the appellant-Headmaster is paid his monthly salary, credit shall be taken for the same.

Amir Singh, the Drawing Teacher has met with the same fate. He was appointed pursuant to his application for a vacant post of a Drawing Teacher. Right from the inception, he was a confirmed hand in the sense that he was not put on probation. Suddenly, after the new Managing Committee got into saddle, his service was terminated with effect from March 4, 1983 on the ground that it was no longer required. No attempt was made before us to sustain the order on this untenable ground. Therefore, the only distinguishable feature of this case with the case of the Headmaster Manmohan singh Jaitla is that no charge-sheet was served upon the petitioner teacher. Save and except this difference, all the reasons which weighed with us in quashing the order of termination of service of Headmaster- Mr Jaitla would mutatis mutandis apply to the case of this Drawing Teacher. To restate these reasons would merely add to the length of this judgment. As a corollary, the rule will have to be made absolute after quashing and setting aside the order of termination of service dated February 28, 1983 and directing reinstatment of Drawing Teacher Amir Singh in service with continuity in service with full backwages.

Accordingly, C. A. No. 2137/84 is allowed and the order terminating the service of Headmaster Manmohan Singh Jaitla is quashed and set aside as also the decisions of the Deputy Commissioner and the Commissioner and the Judgment of the High Court are quashed and set aside. The appellant Headmaster Shri Manmohan Singh Jaitla is reinstated in service with continuity in service and full backwages subject to the fact that if backwages have been paid under the orders of this Court, credit may be given for the same.

Rule is made absolute in the writ petition filed by Drawing Teacher Amir Singh and the order terminating his service dated February 28, 1913 is quashed and set aside as also the orders of the Deputy Commissioner and Commissioner and he is reinstated in service with continuity in service with back-wages.

The respondent-School management shall pay the costs to both the employees separately quantified in each case at Rs 1, 500.

H.S.K.				Petition and appeal allowed.
488