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[Cites 5, Cited by 295]

Supreme Court of India

Lila Dhar vs State Of Rajasthan & Ors on 19 August, 1981

Equivalent citations: 1981 AIR 1777, 1982 SCR (1) 320, AIR 1981 SUPREME COURT 1777, 1981 LAB IC 1515, (1982) 95 MAD LW 33, (1982) 1 LAB LN 8, 1981 UJ (SC) 719, (1981) 2 LABLJ 297, 1981 SCC (L&S) 588, (1981) 2 SERVLJ 266, 1981 (4) SCC 159

Author: O. Chinnappa Reddy

Bench: O. Chinnappa Reddy, A.P. Sen, Baharul Islam

           PETITIONER:
LILA DHAR

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/08/1981

BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)

CITATION:
 1981 AIR 1777		  1982 SCR  (1) 320
 1981 SCC  (4) 159	  1981 SCALE  (3)1235
 CITATOR INFO :
 F	    1984 SC 873	 (9,10)
 R	    1986 SC 597	 (2)
 E&R	    1987 SC 554	 (23,25)
 RF	    1988 SC 162	 (11)
 R	    1988 SC1451	 (8)
 F	    1991 SC 295	 (13)
 D	    1991 SC1011	 (9)
 R	    1992 SC   1	 (20)


ACT:
     Selection to  a Public  Service-Ideal  mode-By  written
examination or	by oral test (viva voce) or by a combination
of both	 explained-Rajasthan Judicial Service Rules Schedule
111 prescribing	 the  criteria	to  be	considered  and	 the
matters to be tested in the viva voce examination-Allocation
of 25%	of the	total marks  for the  viva voce	 examination
whether arbitrary  so as to offend Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution.



HEADNOTE:
     Pursuant to  the Rajasthan	 Judicial Service Rules made
by the	Governor  of  Rajasthan	 in  consultation  with	 the
Rajasthan Public  Service Commission  and the  High Court of
Rajasthan, the	Rajasthan Public  Service Commission  held a
competitive examination	 for  recruitment  of  Munsifs.	 The
competitive examination	 consisted of  a written examination
with two  papers in  law carrying  100 marks  each  and	 two
papers, one in Hindi and the other in English, each carrying
SO marks and a viva voce examination carrying 100 marks. The
viva voce examination was conducted by a Board consisting of
Hon'ble Mr Justice P. D. Kudal, Judge, Rajasthan High Court,
Shri Hari  Dutt Gupta,	Chairman, Rajasthan  Public  Service
Commission,  Adaviappa,	 Member,  Rajasthan  Public  Service
Commission and	an expert.  The expert Member was either Dr.
I.C. Saxena,  or Shri  Kagzi  or  Shri	Jallan	who  sat  by
rotation. Out of the 39 candidates (respondents 3 to 41) who
were selected for appointment, one belonged to the scheduled
caste and  the rest  belonged to  the general  category. The
last of the candidates belonging to the general category who
was selected  for appointment  obtained a total of 190 marks
in the examination, 135 in the written examination and 55 in
the viva  voce. The  petitioner who  obtained a total of 189
marks, 159  in the  written test and 30 in the viva voce was
not selected  for appointment.	Hence the  writ petition, by
the petitioner	contending: (a)	 the allocation	 of so	high
percentage of  marks for  the interview	 test introduced  an
irredeemable  element  of  arbitrariness  so  as  to  offend
Articles 14  and 16  of the  Constitution; (b)	awarding  of
marks in  the interview test in a single lot instead of sub-
dividing and  awarding marks  separately under various heads
for the	 various matters  tested in the interview was bad in
law.
     Dismissing the writ petition, the Court
^
     HELD: 1.  The object  of any  process of  selection for
entry into  a public  service is  to secure the best and tho
most suitable  person for  the job,  avoiding patronage	 and
favouritism. Selection	based on  merit, tested	 impartially
and objectively,  is the  essential foundation of any useful
and efficient public service. [324 C-D]
321
     1:2. While a written examination assesses a candidate's
knowledge and  intellectual ability,  an interview  test  is
valuable to  assess a  candidate's overall  intellectual and
personal qualities.  While a written examination has certain
distinct advantages over the interview test there are yet no
written test:  which can  evaluate a candidate's initiative,
alertness resourcefulness, dependableness, co-operativeness,
capacity for  clear and	 logical presentation, effectiveness
in discussion,	effectiveness in  meeting and  dealing	with
others, adaptability,  judgement, ability  to make decision,
ability to  lead, intellectual	and moral integrity. Some of
these qualities	 may be	 evaluated, perhaps with some degree
of error,  by an  interview  test,  much  depending  on	 the
constitution  of  the  interview  Board.  Thus	the  written
examination assesses  the man's	 intellect and the interview
test the man himself and "the twain shall meet" for a proper
selection. [325 C-E, 326 F]
     2. As regards the weight to be attached respectively to
the written test and the oral test, there cannot be any rule
of thumb  regarding the	 precise weight to be given. It must
vary from  service to  service according to the requirements
of the	service, the minimum qualifications, prescribed, the
age group  from which  the selection is to be made, the body
to which  the task of holding the interview test is proposed
to be  entrusted and a host of other factors. It is a matter
for determination by experts and for research. It is not for
courts to  pronounce upon  it unless  exaggerated weight has
been given  with proven	 or obvious oblique motives. [326 F.
327 C-D]
     Periakaruppan v.  State Tamil Nadu, [1971] 2 S.C.R. and
Ajay Hasia  etc. v.  Khalid Mujlb  Sehravardi & Ors., A.I.R.
1981 S.C. 487, explained.
     3.	 Ordinarily   recruitment  to	public	services  is
regulated by  rules made under the proviso to Article 309 of
the Constitution  and courts  would be	usurping a  function
which  is  not	theirs,	 if  they  try	to  redetermine	 the
appropriate method  of selection  and the relative weight to
be attached  to the  various tests.  If the  courts do that,
they will  be rewriting the rules but, however, courts would
interfere certainly  in cases  of proven  or obvious oblique
motives. [330 C-D]
     In the  instant case,  the selection  cannot ba  struck
down on the ground that more than due weightage was given to
the interview test: (a) The Rajasthan Judicial Service Rules
have been  made by the Governor of Rajasthan in consultation
with the  High Court  of Rajasthan  and the Rajasthan Public
Service	 Commission.   Both  are  well-acquainted  with	 the
particular needs  of their  State and  the  people.  If	 the
Governor, in consultation with the High Court and the Public
Service Commission  of the  State  makes  rules	 stipulating
seventy	 five	per  cent  of  the  marks  for	the  written
examination and twenty five per cent for the interview test,
Courts have  no basis  on which	 to say that twenty five per
cent for  the interview	 test is  on the  high side; (b) the
interview test	is  generally  conducted  and  was,  in	 the
present case,  conducted by  a body consisting of a Judge of
the High  Court, the  Chairman and  a member  of the  Public
Service Commission and a special invitee-expert, and as such
no legitimate  grievance or  hint of  arbitrariness could be
made against this body; (c) the candidates expected to offer
themselves for	selection are  not raw graduates freshly out
of college  but are  persons who  have	already	 received  a
certain amount of professional training. The source material
is such	 that some  weightage must be given to the interview
test
322
and (d)	 the marks obtained by the candidates at the written
examination were  not made  available to  the members of the
interviewing Board  either before  or at  the  time  of	 the
interview. [327 E-H, 328 A-C]
     4. Courts	cannot sit  in judgment	 over the methods of
marking employed by interviewing bodies unless, it is proven
or obvious  that the  method  of  marking  was	chosen	with
oblique motive. In the instant case, the Rajasthan Judicial
Rules generally	 indicate the  criteria to  be considered in
the interview  test without dividing the interview test into
distinct sub-tests.  It is for the interviewing body to take
a general decision whether to allocate marks under different
heads or  to award marks in a single lot. The award of marks
under different heads may lead to a distorted picture of the
candidate on  occasions. On  the other hand, the totality of
the impression	created by the candidate on the interviewing
body may  give a  more accurate	 picture of  the candidate's
personality. [328 D-G]
     Periakaruppan v.  State of	 Tamil Nadu, [1971] 2 S.C.R.
430 and Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sheravardi and Ors.,
A.I.R. 1981 S.C. 487, discussed and distinguished.



JUDGMENT:

ORlGlNAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 2701 of 1981. (Under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India.) S. K Mehta, P. N. Puri, E. M. Sardul Anam, M. K Dua and K M. Jain for the Petitioner.

V. M. Tarkunde and S. K Jain for Respondents Nos. 7, 8, 15, 25-28, 29, 31, 33, 38, 41.

K Parasaran Sol. Gen. and Badri Das Sharma for Respondent No. 1.

N.L. Jain and Badri Das Sharma for Respondent No. 2. Badri Das Sharma for Respondent No. 3.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. What is the ideal mode of selection to a Public Service, by written examination, by oral test (viva voce), or by a combination of both ? If the last, what is the proper, relative weight that should be attached to the written examination and the oral test ? Is the oral test so pernicious in practice, as suggested by some, that it should be abandoned without regrets or the weight to be attached to it be made minimal ? Has any such consensus emerged among the informed- and the cognoscenti as to require the Court to scrap a selection as arbitrary on the sole ground that the weight accorded to the oral test appeared to be high ?

323

Pursuant to the Rajasthan Judicial Service rules made by the Governor of Rajasthan in consultation with the Rajasthan Public Service Commission and the High Court of Rajasthan, the Rajasthan Public Service Commission held a competitive examination for recruitment of Munsifs. The competitive examination consisted of a written examination with two papers in law carrying 100 marks each and two papers, one in Hindi and the other in English, each carrying SO marks and a viva voce examination carrying 100 marks. The viva voce examination was conducted by a Board consisting of Hon'ble Mr. Justice P. D. Kudal, Judge, Rajasthan High Court, Shri Hari Datt Gupta, Chairman, Rajasthan Public Service Commission, Adaviappa, Member, Rajasthan Public Service Commission and an expert. The expert Member was either Dr. I. C. Saxena, or Shri Kagzi or Shri Jallan who sat by rotation. Schedule III of the Rajasthan Judicial Service rules prescribes the criteria to be considered and the matters to be tested in the viva voce examination. The relevant paragraph is as follows:

"In interviewing the candidates, the suitability for employment to the judicial service shall be decided with reference to his record at the school, College and University and his character, personality, address and physique. The questions which may be put up to him may be of a general nature and will not necessarily be academic or legal. The candidates will also be put questions to test the general knowledge including knowledge of current affairs and present day problems. The marks so awarded shall be added to the marks obtained in the written test by each candidate.'. The result of the competitive examination was announced by the Rajasthan Public Service Commission on March 12, 1981 and respondent Nos. 3 to 41 were declared selected for appointment. Out of the 39 candidates who were selected for appointment, one belonged to the scheduled castes and the rest belonged to the general category. The last of the candidates belonging to the general category who was selected for appointment obtained a total of 190 marks in the examination, 135 in written examination and 55 in the viva voce. The petitioner who obtained a total of 189 marks, 159 in the written test and 30 in the viva voce was not selected for appointment. He has filed the present writ petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution questioning the selection.
324
Shri Mehta learned counsel for the petitioner raised two principal contentions before us. The first was that the entire selection was vitiated by the allocation of 25 percent of the total marks for the viva voce examination. The submission was that the allocation of so high a percentage of marks for the interview-test introduced an irredeemable element of arbitrariness so as to offend Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. In support of this submission reliance was placed on the decisions of this Court in Ajay Hasia etc. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & ors. etc.(l) Shri Mehta's second contention was that marks were awarded in the interview-test in a single lot instead of sub dividing and awarding marks separately under various heads for the various matters tested in the interview. Reliance was placed on Periakaruppan v. Stare of' Tamil Nadu (2).
The object of any process of selection for entry into a public service is to secure the best and the most suitable person for the job, avoiding patronage and favouritism. Selection based on merit, tested impartially and objectively, is the essential foundation of any useful and efficient public service. So, open competitive examination has come to be accepted almost universally as the gateway to public services". "The ideal in recruitment is to do away with unfairness(3)". "Competitive examinations were the answer to the twin problems represented by democracy and the requirements of good administration. They were the means by which equality of opportunity was to be united with efficiency.. By this means favouritism was to be excluded and the goal of securing the best man for every job was to be achieved(4)". "open competitive examinations are a peculiarly democratic institution. Any qualified person may come forward. His relative competence for appointment is determined by a neutral, disinterested body on the basis of objective evidence supplied by the candidate himself. No one has "pull"; everyone stands on his own feet. The system is not only highly democratic it is fair and equitable to every competitor. The same rules govern, the same procedures apply, the same yardstick is used to test competence(S).
How should the competitive examination be devised ? The 325 Kothari Committee on Recruitment Policy and Selection methods in their report said:
"A system of recruitment almost totally dependent on assessment of a person's academic knowledge and skills, as distinct from ability to deal with pressing problems of economic and social development, with people, and with novel situations cannot serve the needs of today, much less of tomorrow.. We venture to suggest that our recruitment procedures should be such that we can select candidates who can not only assimilate knowledge and sift material to understand the ramifications of a situation or a problem but have the potential to develop an original or innovative approach to the solution of problems".

It is now well recognised that while a written examination assesses a candidate's knowledge and intellectual ability, an interview test is valuable to assess a candidate's overall intellectual and personal qualities. While a written examination has certain distinct advantage over the interview test there are yet no written tests which can evaluate a candidate's initiative, alertness, resourcefulness, dependableness, cooperativeness, capacity for clear and logical presentation, effectiveness, in discussion, effectiveness in meeting and dealing with others, adaptability, judgment, ability to make decision, ability to lead, intellectual and moral integrity. Some of these qualities may be evaluated, perhaps with some degree of error, by an interview test, much depending on the constitution of the interview Board. O. Glenn Stahl in his Public Personnel Administration points out:

"Any form of written test possesses certain administrative advantages over the oral and performance types. The written form is much easier and cheaper to administer. It can be given to a large number of individuals at the same time, thus conserving the time of the examiners. As a general rule it is easier to evaluate objectively, and the technical proficiency demanded in rating is usually, although not always, less.-The oral test has long served as a basic selection tool in private employment but has been more slowly accepted in the public field. This conservatism arises out of three considerations: (I) the difficulty of developing valid and reliable oral tests; (2) the difficulty of securing a reviewable record of an oral test; and (3) public suspicion of the oral as a channel for the exertion of politi-
326
cal influence through the destruction of anonymity. Despite these acknowledged disadvantages, however, orals have been used increasingly in public personnel testing and have become important instruments wherever tests of personal attributes are considered essential. As we have noted no satisfactory written tests have yet been devised for measuring such personal characteristics as initiative, ingenuity and ability to elicit cooperation, many of which are of prime importance. When properly employed, the oral test today deserves a place in the battery used by the technical examiner.. The general principle is that resort should never be had to an oral if the relevant factor to be tested can be measured at some other point in the examining process. The reason is that the reliability of the oral, even under the best of conditions, tends to be lower than that of the well designed written test. The oral test should be confined, then, to the evaluation of relevant traits which cannot be measured in any other way" (p. 92) In the United Nations Hand Book on Civil Service Laws and Practice it is said:
".. the written papers permit an assessment of culture and intellectual competence. The interview permits an assessment of qualities of character which written papers ignore; it attempts to assess the man himself and not his intellectual abilities".

Thus, the written examination assesses the man's intellect and the interview test the man himself and "the twain shall meet" for a proper selection. If both written examination and interview test are to be essential features of proper selection, the question may arise as to the weight to be attached respectively to them. In the case of admission to a college, for instance, where the candidate's personality is yet to develop and it is too early to identify the personal qualities for which greater importance may have to be attached in later life, greater weight has per force to be given to performance in the written examination. The importance to be attached to the interview test must be minimal. That was what was decided by this Court in Periakaruppan v. State of Tamil Nadu, Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & ors. etc., (supra) and other cases. On the other hand, in the case of services to which recruitment has necessarily to be made from persons of mature 327 personality, interview test may be the only way, subject to basic and essential academic and professional requirements being satisfied. To subject such persons to a written examination may yield unfruitful and negative results, apart from its being an act or cruelty to those persons. There are, of course, many services to which recruitment is made from younger candidates whose personalities are on the threshold of development and who show signs of great promise, and the discerning may in an interview test, catch a glimpse of the future personality. In the case of such services, where sound selection must combine academic ability with personality promise, some weight has to be given, though not much too great weight, to the interview test. There cannot be any rule of thumb regarding the precise weight to be given. It must vary from service to service according to the requirements of the service. the minimum qualifications prescribed, the age group from which the selection is to be made, the body to which the task of holding the interview test is proposed to be entrusted and a host of other factors. It is a matter for determination by experts. It is a matter for research. It is not for Courts to pronounce upon it unless exaggerated weight has been given with proven or obvious oblique motives. The Kothari Committee also suggested that in view of the obvious importance of the subject, it may be examined in detail by the Research Unit of the Union of Public Service Commission.

In this background, let us now examine the situation presented by the Rajasthan rules. The Rajasthan Judicial Service rules leave been made by the Governor of Rajasthan in consultation with the High Court of Rajasthan and the Rajasthan Public Service Commission. The High Court may be expected to know the precise requirements of the judicial service of the State and the calibre of the available source-material, while the Public Service Commission is an expert body thoroughly conversant with recruitment policies and selection methods. Both the High Court and the Public Service Commission are independent bodies, outside executive control, occupying special positions and enjoying special status under the constitution. Neither is an outside agency. Both are well-acquainted with the particular needs of their State and the people. If the Governor, in consultation with the High Court and the Public Service Commission of the State makes rules stipulating seventy five percent of the marks for the written examination and twenty five percent for the interview test, on what basis can a Court say that twenty five percent for the interview test is on the high side ? It must not also be forgotten that the interview test is generally conducted 328 and was, in the present case, conducted by a body consisting of a Judge of the High Court, the Chairman and a member of the Public Service Commission an d a special invitee-expert. There can surely be no legitime grievance or hint of arbitrariness against this body. Yet another factor worthy of consideration is that the candidates expected to offer themselves for selection are not raw Graduates freshly out of college but are persons who have already received a certain amount of professional training. The source material is such that some weightage must be given to the interview test and can it possibly be said that twenty five per cent of the total marks is an exaggerated weightage. We may add here that it has been made clear by the Chairman, Rajasthan Public Service Commission on whose behalf a counter affidavit has been filed before us that the marks obtained by the candidates at the written examination were not made available to the members of the interview Board either before or at the time of the interview. We are unhesitatingly of the view that the selection cannot be struck down on the ground that more than due weightage was given to the interview test.

The second ground of attack must fail for the same reason as the first ground of attack. The rules themselves do not provide for the allocation of marks under different heads at the interview test. The criteria for the interview test bas been laid down by the rules. lt is for the interviewing body to take a general decision whether to allocate marks under different heads or to award marks in a single lot. The award of marks under different heads may lead to a distorted picture of the candidate on occasions. On the other hand the totality of the impression created by the candidate on the interviewing body may give a more accurate picture of the candidate's personality. It is for the interviewing body to choose the appropriate method of marking at the selection to each service. There cannot be any magic formulae in these matters and courts cannot sit it judgment over the methods of marking employed by interviewing bodies unless, as we said, it is proven or obvious that the method of marking was chosen with oblique motive.

Both the cases cited before us Periakaruppan's case and Ajay Hasia's case were cases of admission to colleges. We have already pointed out that the provision for marks for interview test need not and cannot be the same for admission to colleges and entry into public services. In fact in Periakaruppan's case, even in the case of college admissions the Court observed:

329
"While we do feel that the marks allotted for interview are on the high side and it may be appropriate for the Government to re-examine the question, we are unable to uphold the contention that it was not within the power of the Government to provide such high marks for interview or that there was any arbitrary exercise of power".

It is true that in Periakaruppan's case the Court held that the non allocation of marks under various heads in the interview test was illegal but that was because the instructions to the Selection Committee provided that marks were to be awarded at the interview on the basis of five distinct tests. It was thought that the failure to allocate marks under each head or distinct test was an illegality. But, in the case before us, the rule merely and generally indicates the criteria to be considered in the interview test without dividing the interview test into distinct, if we may so call them, sub-tests. We do not think that Periakaruppan's case, which, as we said, deals with admission to a college, affords any true guidance to us. Ajay Hasia's case was also a case of admission to a college. The Court while upholding the interview test as not irrational or irrelevant though unsatisfactory and capable of abuse, made the following observation:

"We would, however, like to point out that in the matter of admission of colleges or even in the matter of public employment, the oral interview test as presently held should not be relied upon as an exclusive test, but it may be resorted to only as an additional or supplementary test and, moreover, great care must be taken to see that persons who are appointed to conduct the oral interview test are men of high integrity, calibre and qualification".

The Court then proceeded to consider the next question raised before them, whether the allocation of 33 113 percent of the total marks for the interview test vitiated the selection procedure as arbitrary and unreasonable. It was held that it did and reference was made to the fact that even for selection of candidates for the Indian Administrative Service the marks allocated for the interview test were only 12.2 percent of the total. It was then observed, "under the existing circumstances, allocation of more than 15% of the total marks for the oral interview would be arbitrary and unreasonable and would be liable to be struck down as constitutionally invalid". The observations of the Court were made, primarily 330 in connection with the problem of admission to colleges, where naturally, academic performance must be given prime importance. The words "or even in The matter of public employment" occurring in the first extracted passage and the reference to the marks allocated for the interview test in the Indian Administrative Service examination were not intended to lay down any wide, general rule that the same principle that applied in the matter of admission to colleges also applied in the matter of recruitment to public services. The observation relating to public employment was per incuriam since the matter did not fall for the consideration of the Court in that case. Nor do we think that the Court intended any wide construction of their observation. As already observed by us the weight to be given to the interview test should depend on the requirement of the service to which recruitment is made, the source material available for recruitment, the composition of the interview Board and several like factors. Ordinarily recruitment to public services is regulated by rules made under the proviso to Art. 309 of the Constitution and we would be usurping a function which is not ours, if we try to redetermine the appropriate method of selection and the relative weight to be attached to the various tests. If we do that we would be rewriting the rules but we guard ourselves against being understood as saying that we would not interfere even in cases of proven or obvious oblique motive. There is none in the present case. The Writ Petition is therefore dismissed but in the circumstances there will be no order regarding costs.

V.D.K.					 Petition dismissed.
331