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RUMA PAL, J.

Leave granted.

The undisputed facts of this case are that the appellant No. 4 was notionally promoted to the post of Additional Director General (Works) of the Public Works Department with effect from 22nd February, 1995. The notional promotion was given by an order dated 10th June, 1998 in terms of instructions contained in the DPTs O.M. No.22011/05/86 Estt. D, dated 10th April, 1989 as amended from time to time. In the meanwhile on 1st July 1997, the post of Director General,(Works) CPWD fell vacant. The mode of selection to the post has been laid down in the Central Public Works Department (Director General of Works) Recruitment Rules, 1986, which were amended on 23rd March 1992 by the Central Public Works Department (Director General of Works) Recruitment (Amendment) Rules, 1992. The amendment came into force on 4th April 1992. The Schedule to the Rules ( referred to hereinafter as the said Schedule) provides that the post of Director General (Works) is a selection post to be filled up by promotion from amongst, inter-alia, Additional Director General (Works) with two years regular service in the grade. Since Krishnamoorti had been granted notional promotion to the post of Additional Director General on 10.6.98 w.e.f. 22nd February 1995, his name was considered for the post of Director General when the Departmental Promotion Committee met in January, 1999. Shri K.B. Rajoria ( the Respondent No.1 before us) filed an application before the Central Administrative Tribunal claiming that he was also eligible to be considered for the post of Director General. According to Rajoria, if the Departmental Promotion Committee had been held in 1995- 96, he could have been appointed to the post of Additional Director General which had fallen vacant on 1.5.1995. His case was that he too should have been given notional promotion with effect from 1.5.95 in which case he would have also been eligible for promotion to the post of Director General. Rajoria claimed that he had been unfairly discriminated against because only Krishnamoorti was being considered for the post of Director General. It was however made clear before the Tribunal that Rajoria was not challenging the eligibility of Krishnamoorti to be considered but was only seeking consideration of his own case along with Krishnamoorti for the post of Director General. The Tribunal dismissed the respondent No. 1's application on 12th May 1999. The respondent No. 1 challenged the decision of the Tribunal before the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. The High Court held that neither the respondent no.1 nor Krishnamoorti were eligible on the cut off date i.e. 1st July, 1997 for promotion to the post of Director General. According to the High Court the words regular service in the Rules means actual service and that the fiction of notional promotion could not amount to the two years experience necessary under the Rules. The High Court was of the view that the notional seniority granted to Krishnamoorti by the order dated 10th June 1998 was no substitute for the requirement of two years regular service as Additional Director General (Works) which had been laid down in the relevant rules as the eligibility criteria for promotion to the post of Director General (Works). In our view, the High Courts decision cannot be sustained. First, the concession of Rajoria before the Tribunal that he was not challenging the eligibility of Krishnamoorti to be considered for promotion was overlooked. Second, the High Court erred in not dismissing the writ petition on the ground of the obvious lack of locus standi in Rajoria who had never been granted notional promotion because the DPC was not in fact held for reasons which the High Court felt were unavoidable. Rajorias case was built on hypothetical situations, and his position could not reasonably be equated with that of Krishnamoorti. Third, the High Court erred in construing the words regular service in the grade as actual physical service. If that were so, then an ad hoc appointee who actually serves in the post could also claim to be qualified to be considered for the post of Director General. The High Court itself held that ad hoc service rendered by any of the parties would not count towards eligibility Finally, while considering the definition of the word regular in the Concise Oxford Dictionary, Ninth Edition, the High Court noted that it meant: (1) conforming to a rule or principle, systematic; (2) harmonious, symmetrical; (3) acting or done or recurring uniformly or calculably in time or manner, habitual, constant, orderly; (4) conforming to a standard of etiquette or procedure, correct, according to convention; (5) properly constituted or qualified, not defective or amateur, pursuing an occupation as ones main pursuit.