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[Cites 11, Cited by 175]

Supreme Court of India

General Officer Commanding-In-Chief & ... vs Subhash Chandra Yadav & Anr on 25 February, 1988

Equivalent citations: 1988 AIR 876, 1988 SCR (3) 62, AIR 1988 SUPREME COURT 876, 1988 LAB. I. C. 1014, (1988) 2 SCJ 109, (1988) 1 SERVLR 759, (1988) 2 LAB LN 937, (1988) 1 JT 458 (SC), 1988 SCC (L&S) 542, 1988 (2) SCC 351

Author: M.M. Dutt

Bench: M.M. Dutt, Misra Rangnath

           PETITIONER:
GENERAL OFFICER COMMANDING-IN-CHIEF & ANR.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SUBHASH CHANDRA YADAV & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/02/1988

BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:
 1988 AIR  876		  1988 SCR  (3)	 62
 1988 SCC  (2) 351	  JT 1988 (1)	458
 1988 SCALE  (1)414


ACT:
     Cantonments Act,  1924: Section  280(2)(c)-Rule  making
power-Cantonment Funds	Servants Rules	1937,  Rule  5C-Held
void being in excess of rule making power.
     Cantonment Funds  Servants Rules 1937: Rule 5C-Services
of employees  of Cantonment Boards-Transfer of-From one post
in one Board to another post in another Board-Whether valid-
Rule SC	 held void-Excess of rule making power under section
280(2)(c) of Cantonments Act, 1924.



HEADNOTE:
%
     The  first	  respondent  was  appointed  a	 Sub-Charge,
Cantonment General Hospital, Lucknow by the Cantonment Board
by an  appointment letter dated 23.4.1969, and was confirmed
in that	 post on 1.12.1969. The conditions of service of the
employees of  the Cantonment  Board, a statutory board, were
governed by  the provisions of the Cantonment Funds Servants
Rules, 1937. At the time of appointment, the services of the
respondent were	 not transferable  as per  the provisions of
the Rules  as then  prevailing. His  appointment letter also
did not include any condition for transfer from one Board to
another.
     By a  notification dated  16.12.1972,  the	 Rules	were
amended and  a new rule, being rule 5-C was added to provide
for the	 transfer of  the services  of the  employees of the
Cantonment Boards from one post in one Board to another post
in another Board within the same State.
     The G.O.C.-in-Chief, Central Command by his order dated
October 27,  1986 transferred  the first respondent from the
Cantonment General  Hospital,  Lucknow,	 to  the  Cantonment
General Hospital, Varanasi, and the incumbent at Varanasi in
turn being  transferred to  the Cantonment General Hospital,
Bareilly.
     Being aggrieved  by the  order of transfer passed under
rule 5-C  of the  Rules, the  first respondent	filed a writ
petition in  the High  Court challenging the validity of the
order of  transfer on  the ground  that rule  5-C was  ultra
vires the  provisions of  the Cantonments  Act and  as such,
void.
63
     The High  Court struck  down rule	5-C as	being  ultra
vires the  provisions of  the Cantonments Act, 1924 and held
that the  services of  the employees of the Cantonment Board
are neither  centralised nor  is there	a common State level
service and  that rule	5-C having provided for the transfer
of the	employees of  one Board to another Board by the GOC-
in-Chief, Central Command is beyond the rule making power of
the Central  Government as  contained in  clause (c) of sub-
section (2)  of section	 280 of	 the Cantonments  Act as  it
stood before  it was  amended. It  accordingly	quashed	 the
order of  transfer dated October 27, 1988 passed by the GOC-
in-Chief, Central Command.
     In the  appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the	appellants: (1)	 that after  the amendment of clause
(c) of sub-section (2) of Section 280 of the Cantonments Act
conferring on  the Central  Government the power to lay down
the conditions	of service  of the  employees of the Boards,
which include the power to make rules for transfer, rule 5-C
is valid being in conformity with the provisions of the rule
making power  under section  7.80(2)(c) of  the Act, and (2)
that the  respondent would not be in the least prejudiced by
the transfer  inasmuch as  full safeguard  has been provided
for in rule 5-C.
     On behalf	of the respondent it was contended that: (1)
service under  the Cantonment  Board is	 not  a	 centralised
service or  a service  at  the	State  level,  and  (2)	 the
transfer of an employee from one Cantonment Board to another
would  mean  the  termination  of  the	appointment  of	 the
employees  in	the  Cantonment	  Board	 from  which  he  is
transferred and a fresh appointment in the Board where he is
so transferred.
     Dismissing the Appeal,
^
     HELD: 1.  The High Court was justified in striking down
rule 5-C  of the Rules and in quashing the order of transfer
of the respondent. [172G]
     2. Rules  framed under the provisions of a statute form
part of	 the statute. Rules have statutory force. But before
a rule	can have  the effect  of a  statutory provision	 two
conditions must be fulfilled, namely, (1) it must conform to
the provisions	of the statute under which it is framed; and
(2) it	must also  come within	the scope and purview of the
rule making  power of  the authority  framing the  rule.  If
either of  these two conditions is not fulfilled the rule so
framed would be void. [69F-G]
     3. When Rule 5-C was inserted in the Rules, it was void
as being
64
contrary to  and in  excess of	the rule making power of the
Central Government  as contained in the unamended clause (c)
of sub-section	(2) of	Section 280  of the Act. It does not
become valid  merely because of the amendment of clause (c),
conferring power  on the  Central Government  to frame rules
relating to conditions of service.[69C]
     4. The  position remains  the  same  even	though	sub-
section (2)  of Section	 281 of	 the  Act  has	specifically
provided that  after the rules are framed and published they
shall have  effect as if enacted in the Act. In spite of the
provision of sub-section (2) of Section 281, any rule framed
under the  Cantonments Act  has to fulfil the aforementioned
two conditions regarding their validity. [69G-H]
     Jestamani v. Scindia Steam Navigation Company, [1961] 2
SCR 811, distinguished.
     5. The  Cantonment Board  are statutory  and autonomous
bodies controlled  entirely by	the  Cantonments  Act.	Each
Cantonment Board  is an	 independent body functioning within
its  limited  jurisdiction.  The  Board	 is  the  appointing
authority  of	its  employees.	  The  services	  under	 the
Cantonment Board  is not  a centralised	 service nor is it a
service at the State level. [70C]
     6. One  autonomous body cannot transfer its employee to
another autonomous  body even  within the same State, unless
the services  of the employees of these two bodies are under
a centralised or State-level service. [70E-F]
     In the  instant case, the GOC-in-Chief, Central Command
is not	the appointing	authority of  the respondent  or the
employees of  the Cantonment  Board, and  so transfer of the
respondent by the GOC-in-Chief is not permissible. [70E]
     Om Prakash	 Rana v.  Swarup Singh	Tomar, [1986]  3 SCC
118, referred to.
     7. Even  in spite	of substituted	clause (c)  of	sub-
section (2)  of Section	 280 the Central Government will not
be entitled  to frame rules for transfer of an employee from
one Cantonment	Board to  another within  the State  for the
reasons: (t)  the Cantonment  Boards are  autonomous bodies;
(2) the	 service under	the Cantonment	Board is  neither  a
centralised service  nor is  it a service at the State-level
and  (3)   any	such  transfer	of  an	employee  will	mean
termination of service of the
65
employee  in   the  Cantonment	 Board	from   where  he  is
transferred and	 a fresh appointment by the Cantonment Board
which he joins on such transfer. [72B-C]
     8. The  Central Government, however, has power to frame
rules about transfer of servants of the Board in exercise of
its powers under clause (c) of subsection (2) of Section 280
of the	Act within  the region	in respect  of which  it has
jurisdiction. For  example, the	 respondent in	the  instant
case,  could   be  transferred	from  one  hospital  of	 the
Cantonment Board,  Lucknow, to	another hospital  under	 the
same Board. [72E-F]
     9. The  Central  Government  had  better  consider	 the
question  of   making  the   Cantonment	 Board	 Service   a
centralised service  so 85 to enable one Cantonment Board to
transfer its employees to another Cantonment Board. [72D],,



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 754 of 1988.

From the Judgment and order dated 31.8.1987 of the Allahabad High Court in W.P. No. 7899 of 1986 Raja Ram Aggarwal, V.K. Pandita, E.C. Aggarwala and Atul Sharma for the Appellants.

S.C. Misra and P.K. Chakraborty for the Respondents. Manoj Swarup and Ms. Lalita Kohli for the Interveners. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by DUTT, J. As elaborate submissions have been made by both the parties at the preliminary hearing of the special leave petition, we proceed to dispose of the points involved in the case on merits after granting special leave.

The appeal is directed against the judgment of the Allahabad High Court striking down rule 5-C of the Cantonment Funds Servants Rules, 1937, hereinafter referred to as 'the Rules', as ultra vires the provisions of the Cantonment A rt, 1924 and also quashing the impugned order of transfer dated October 27, 1986 passed by the GOC-in- Chief, Central Command.

66

The respondent, Dr. Subhas Chandra Yadav, was appointed a Sub-Charge, Cantonment General Hospital, Lucknow, by the Cantonment Board by the appointment letter dated 23.4.1969. He was confirmed in that post on 1.12.1969 by an order issued by the Cantonment Board. The conditions of service of the employees of the Cantonment Board, which is a statutory body, are governed by the provisions of the Rules. At the time of the appointment of the respondent, his services were not transferable as per the provisions of the Rules then prevailing. His appointment letter also did not include any condition for transfer from one Board to another.

By a notification dated 16.12.1972, the Rules were amended and a new rule, being rule 5-C was added to the Rules. Rule S-C reads as follows:

"R.5-C. (1) The service of a servant shall be transferable from one post in one Board to another post in another Board.
Provided that:
(a) The transferor and transferee Boards are situated within the same State; and
(b) The posts in both the Boards are similar and carry the same scales of pay.
(2) Subject to such general directions as the Central Government may issue from time to time, the officer Commanding-in-Chief, the Command, or such other authority as may be authorised by the Central Government in this behalf, shall be the competent authority to transfer a servant under this rule.
(3) A servant on transfer under sub-rule (I) from one Board to another may, for the purpose of determination of seniority and eligibility for promotion opt:
(i) to be governed by the conditions applicable in this behalf to the servants of the Board from which he has been transferred (hereinafter referred to as the transferor Board); or 67
(ii) to be governed by the conditions applicable in this behalf to the servants of the Board to which he has been transferred (hereinafter referred to as the transferee Board):
Provided that where a servant does not opt under this rule within thirty days from the date of assumption of charge in the transferee Board, he shall, for purposes of promotion and seniority, be governed by the conditions application in this behalf to the servants of the transferor Board .
(4) Save as provided in sub-rule (3), the terms and conditions of service of a servant transferred under this rule shall be deemed to be these applicable to the servants of the transferee Board.
(5) Where the servant opts under clause (ii) of subrule (3), the service put in by him under the transferor Board before his transfer shall be deemed to be service under the transferee Board."

For the first time, rule 5-C provided for the transfer of the services of the employees of the Cantonment Boards from one post in one Board to another post in another Board within the same State. The GOC-in-Chief, Central Command, by his order dated October 27, 1986 transferred the respondent from the Cantonment General Hospital, Lucknow, to the Cantonment General Hospital, Varanasi, in place of one Dr. Bansal, who was also transferred by the same order to the Cantonment General Hospital, Bareilly.

Being aggrieved by the said order of transfer passed under rule 5-C of the Rules, the respondent filed a writ petition in the Allahabad High Court challenging the validity of the order of transfer on the ground that rule 5- C was ultra vires the provisions of the Cantonment Act and, as such, void.

As has been stated already, the High Court has struck down rule 5-C holding, inter alia, that the services of the employees of the Cantonment Board are neither centralised nor is there a common State-level service and that the impugned rule 5-C, having provided for the transfer of the employees of one Board to another Board by the GOC-in-Chief, Central Command, is beyond the rule making power 68 of the Central Government as contained in clause (c) of sub- section (2) of section 280 of the Cantonment Act as it stood before it was amended. Hence this appeal.

Section 280 of the Cantonment Act confers power on the Central Government to make rules. The relevant portion of section 280 of the Cantonment Act is as follows:

"S. 280. POWER To MAKE RULES: The Central Government may after previous publication, make rules to carry out the purposes and objects of this Act.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may provide for all or any of the following matters, namely:
(a).........................................
(b).......................................... (bb)........................................
(c) the tenure of office, salaries and allowances, provident funds, pensions, gratuities, leave of absence and other conditions of service of servants of Boards;"

Clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 280 was substituted by the amendment of the Cantonment Act by Act XV of 1983. Before such amendment in 1983, clause (c) was as follows:

"(c). the appointment, control supervision, suspension, removal, dismissal and punishment of servants of Boards;"

It is apparent that before the amendment, clause (c) did not confer on the Central Government power to frame rules regarding conditions of service which necessarily include transfer of the employees of the Boards. Rule 5-C, which was inserted in the Rules by a notification dated November 23, 1972 providing for the transfer of the employees of the Cantonment Boards, is on the face of it contrary to the rule making power of the Central Government, as it stood before the amendment of the Act in 1983.

69

It is, however, contended by Mr. Raja Ram Aggarwal, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellants, that after the amendment of clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 280 of the Cantonment Act, conferring on the Central Government the power to lay down the conditions of service of the employees of the Boards, which include the power to make rules for transfer, rule 5-C is valid, being quite in conformity with the provisions of the rule making power under section 280(2)(c) of the Cantonment Act. We are unable to accept the contention.

When rule 5-C was inserted into the Rules, it was void as being contrary to and in excess of the rule making power of the Central Government as contained in the unamended clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 280 of the Cantonment Act. It does not become valid merely because of the amendment of clause (c), inter alia, conferring power on the Central Government to frame rules relating to conditions of service.

Our attention has been drawn to the provision of sub- section (2) of section 281 of the Cantonment Act, which provides that all rules made under the Act shall be published in the official Gazette and in such other manner, if any, as the Central Government may direct and, on such publication, shall have effect as if enacted in the Act. It is urged on behalf of the appellants that in view of sub- section (2) of section 281, rule 5-C became a part of the statute and, accordingly, the question of its being contrary to the provisions of the Cantonment Act does not at all arise.

This contention is unsound. It is well settled that rules framed under the provisions of a statute form part of the statute. In other words, rules have statutory force. But before a rule can have the effect of a statutory provision, two conditions must be fulfilled, namely, (1) it must conform to the provisions of the statute under which it is framed; and (2) it must also come within the scope and purview of the rule making power of the authority framing the rule. If either of these two conditions is not fulfilled, the rule so framed would be void. The position remains the same even though sub-section (2) of section 281 of the Act has specifically provided that after the rules are framed and published they shall have effect as if enacted in the Act. In other words, in spite of the provision of sub-section (2) of section 281, any rule framed under the Cantonment Act has to fulfil the two conditions mentioned above for their validity. The observation of this Court in Jestamani v. Scindia Steam Navigation Company, [1961] 2 SCR 811, 70 relied upon by Mr. Aggarwal, that a contract of service may be transferred by a statutory provision, does not at all help the appellants. There can be no doubt that a contract of service may be transferred by statutory provisions, but before a rule framed under a statute is regarded a statutory provision or a part of the statute, it must fulfil the above two conditions. Rule 5-C was framed by the Central Government in excess of its rule making power as contained in clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 280 of the Cantonment Act before its amendment by the substitution of clause (c); it is, therefore, void.

It is not disputed that the Cantonment Boards are statutory and autonomous bodies controlled entirely by the Cantonment Act. Each Cantonment Board is an independent body functioning within its limited jurisdiction. The Board is the appointing authority of its employees. The service under the Cantonment Board is not a centralised service nor is it a service at the State-level.

There is much force in the contention of the respondent that as service under the Cantonment Board is not a centralised service or a service at the State-level, the transfer of an employee from one Cantonment Board to another would mean the termination of appointment of the employee in the Cantonment Board from which he is transferred and a fresh appointment in the Board where he is so transferred. The GOC-in-Chief, Central Command, is not the appointing authority of the respondent or the employees of the Cantonment Board, and so transfer of the respondent by the GOC-in-Chief is not permissible. In any event, one autonomous body cannot transfer its employee to another autonomous body even within the same State, unless the services of the employees of these two bodies are under a centralised or a State-level service. In this connection, we may refer to a decision of this Court in Om Prakash Rana v. Swarup Singh Tomar, [1986] 3 SCC 118. Pathak, J. (as His Lordship then was) speaking for the Court observed as follows:

"As is clear by now, the fundamental basis of the contention that the power of transfer under the Education Act and its Regulations continues in force even after the enactment of the Services Commission Act rests on the assumption that the power of appointment does not include the power of transfer. In our opinion, the assumption is unsustainable. The scheme under the Education Act envisages the appointment of a Principal in relation to a specific college. The appointment is in relation to that college and to 71 no other Moreover, different colleges may be owned by different bodies or organisations, so that each Principal serves a different employer. Therefore, on filling the office of a Principal to a college, a new contract of employment with a particular employer comes into existence. There is no State- level service to which Principals are appointed. Had that been so, it would have been possible to say that when a Principal is transferred from one college to another no fresh appointment is involved. But when a Principal is appointed in respect of a particular college and is thereafter transferred as a Principal of another college it can hardly be doubted that a new appointment comes into existence. Although the process of transfer may be governed by considerations and move through a machinery different from the considerations governing the appointment of a person ab initio as Principal, the nature of the transaction is the same, namely, that of appointment, and that is so whether the appointment be through direct recruitment, through promotion from the teaching staff of the same institution or by transfer from another institution."

The observation extracted above clearly supports 'the contention made on behalf of the respondent that the employees of one Cantonment Board cannot be transferred to another Cantonment Board inasmuch as the service under the Cantonment Board is not a centralised service or a service at the State-level.

Mr. Aggarwal, however, submits that the respondent would not be in the least prejudiced by the transfer in as much as full safeguard has been provided for in rule 5-C. The question whether the interest of the transferee has been protected or full safeguard has been provided for by rule 5-C is quite irrelevant, if it is invalid and void. Moreover, the provisions of rule 5-C are clumsy and lack clarity and a transfer may affect the transferee prejudicially. It is not necessary for us to discuss how the provisions of rule 5-C may be prejudicial to the interest of an employee transferred to another Cantonment Board within the State, for, we are of the view that rule 5-C is ultra vires the provision of the rule making power of the Central Government under the Cantonment Act.

The question, however, is whether the Central Government is entitled to frame rules for transfer of the employees of the Cantonment Boards under the substituted clause (c) of sub-section (2) of 72 section 280 of the Cantonment Act. It is true that under clause (c), as it now stands, the Central Government can frame rules pertaining to conditions of service of the Cantonment Board employees. But, in our opinion, even in spite of substituted clause (c), the Central Government will not be entitled to frame rules for transfer of an employee from one Cantonment Board to another within the State for the reasons stated already, namely, (1) the Cantonment Boards are autonomous bodies; (2) the service under the Cantonment Board is neither a centralised service nor is it a service at the State level; and (3) any such transfer of an employee will mean termination of service of the employee in the Cantonment Board from where he is transferred and a fresh appointment by the Cantonment Board which he joins on such transfer.

So long as the Cantonment Board service is not made a centralised service or at least a State-level service, there can be no transfer from one Cantonment Board to another Cantonment Board within the same State. The Central Government has better consider the question of making the Cantonment Board service a centralised service so as to enable one Cantonment Board to transfer its employees to another Cantonment Board.

As has been held by the High Court, the Central Government has power to frame rules about the transfer of the servants of the Board in exercise of its powers under clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 280 of the Act within the region in respect of which it has jurisdiction. For example, the respondent could be transferred from one hospital of the Cantonment Board, Lucknow, to another hospital under the same Board. But that apart, the Cantonment Act does not authorise the Central Government to frame rules for transfer from one Cantonment Board to another.

The High Court was, therefore, quite justified in striking down rule 5-C of the Rules and in quashing the impugned order of transfer of the respondent.

For the reasons aforesaid, the judgment of the High Court is affirmed and this Appeal is dismissed. There will, however, be no order as to costs.

N.V.K.					   Appeal dismissed.
73