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Delhi Water Supply & Sewage Disposal Committee & Others v. J.p. Gupta & Others

Delhi Water Supply & Sewage Disposal Committee & Others
v.
J.p. Gupta & Others

(Supreme Court Of India)

Civil Appeal No. 527 & 528 Of 1986 | 28-10-1988


Jagannatha Shetty, J.

1. These two appeals by leave are from the judgment of the Delhi High Court dated 12 July, 1985 in L.P. No. 8 of 1978.

2. The first appellant in the first appeal is the Delhi Water Supply and Sewage Disposal Undertaking (the “Undertaking”). The appellants in the next appeal are some of the Executive Engineers in the Undertaking. The common case of the appellants is that the inter se seniority in the cadre of Executive Engineers after their regularisation should reflect the corres­ponding rankings in the feeding cadre of Assistant Engineers. But the con­testing respondents who are also Executive Engineers contend to the contrary. Their case is that the continuous officiation in the post till regu­larisation should be the basis for determining the seniority. These rival contentions are required to be decided in the appeals.

3. The facts leading to the appeals are not in dispute and may briefly be stated thus:

The Municipal administration of the Union Territory of Delhi is governed by an Act called the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act (the “Act”). The Act came into force on 7 April, 1958. Section 92 of theprovides power to the Undertaking to appoint certain categories of officers. But that power is not absolute. No appointment to any category of ‘A’ post shall be made except after consultation with the Union Public Service Commission (the “Commission”). That is the constraint in Section 96. Such consultation, however, is not required if the appointment is for a period not exceeding one year, or to such ministerial posts as may be specified in consultation with the Commission. The consultation with the Commis­sion is required to be made in accordance with the regulation framed under Section 97. The Regulation framed by the Commission has a long title called “The Union Public Service Commission (Consultation) by Delhi Municipal Corporation Regulations 1959. It provides procedure for promo­tion as well as direct recruitment of officers in the Corporation.


4. Section 98 confers power to the Corporation to make regulations with regard to conditions of services of officers and other employees appointed by the Corporation and other incidental matters. Section 480(2) States that no Regulation made by the Corporation shall have effect until it has been approved by the Central Government and published in the Official Gazette. Section 480(1) gives interim power to the Central Government to make regulation which the Corporation could have made under Section 98. In exercise of the power under Section 480(1) the Central Government has framed what is termed as the Delhi Municipal Corporation Service Regula­tions, 1959.

5. In 1964 four additional posts of Executive Engineers were created in the Undertaking. The Commissioner after considering the eligibility and suitability of the Assistant Engineers then available in the Undertaking recommended three names: J.P. Gupta, Mahbood Hussain and R.K. Kashyap for being appointed as Executive Engineers. He also intimated that there was nothing in record against those officers. On 17 April, 1964 they were appointed as Executive Engineers for a period of one year or till the posts are filled up in consultation with the Commission. These are respondents 1 to 3 in CA No, 527/86. Mr.S.S. Ramrakhyani (Respon­dent-4) and P.T. Gurnani (Respondent-6) were not then in the Undertaking. They were working as Assistant Engineers in the general wing of the Cor­poration. It appears they were selected as Executive Engineers in the Undertaking on 9 April, 1965. They reported as Executive Engineers in the Undertaking on 12 April, 1965 after they were relieved from the general wing of the Corporation. They were also appointed for one year in the first instance. On 5 February, 1965 their lien was cancelled in the general wing. They were, however, given the benefit of their service rendered as Assistant Engineers for all purposes. The other respondents were also appointed on ad hoc basis on like terms on different dates. S. Parkash respondent No. 5 was appointed on August 1965. A.V. Panat respondent No. 7 was appointed on 21 December, 1965. Respondents Nos. 10 and 11 in 1966, respondent 12 in 1967 and respondents 8 and 9 were appointed in 1969. They worked continuously in their respective posts till their services were regularised by the Commission. The Commission regularised their services with effect from 8 January, 1971.

6. The list of names of officers whose services were regularised by the Commission evidently did not reflect their inter-se seniority in the cadre. The Commissioner, therefore, was asked to prepare their seniority list. But there is nothing on record to indicate that the Commissioner did anything of the kind. He, however, appears to have followed the seniority in the cadre of Assistant Engineers for the purpose of posting the Executive Engineers on current duty charge of the post of Superintendent Engineers. Some of the officers thereupon moved the High Court with Writ Petition No. 237/1973 seeking a direction to the Undertaking to prepare a proper seniority list of Executive Engineers. The High Court accepted the Writ Petition and directed the Undertaking to prepare a seniority list of Execu­tive Engineers (Civil).

7. Accordingly, the Undertaking prepared a seniority list. The services rendered on ad hoc appointments were excluded for the purpose, The seniority was determined reflecting the respective rankings in the feeding cadre.

8. The aggrieved officials challenged the validity of that seniority list before the Delhi High Court in CW No. 1339 of 1973. The learned single judge before whom the Writ Petition came for disposal dismissed the same. He held that Rule 6 of the Delhi Administration Seniority Rules 1965 would govern the determination of seniority of the officers. He also held that seniority should be in the order of regularisation and not on the basis of original ad hoc appointments. But the Division Bench upon appeal took a different view. The learned judges held that the determination of seniority of officers is not governed by any statutory rule and continuous officiation in the post should be the basis. To be more specific, the learned judges observed:


“The normal rule is that seniority is governed by the period of con­tinuous officiating service in the absence of any other seniority rule.

The period of continuous officiating in the case of the present peti­tioners will, therefore, be the governing principle.”


X X X X

“The reason we have found is that the delay in making recruit­ment rules and making regular appointment in accordance with the procedure envisages by the really been the result of a conflict between the Corporation and the Union Public Service Commission. In the result, for years on, the persons have continued on an ad hoc basis. This has happened even in cases where the appointment was not on ad hoc basis initially. In such cases, the period of continuous ad hoc service cannot be treated as a stop gap arrangement. This is, infact a regular appointment, which is held in abeyance because the recruitment rules were not settled and the procedure not finalised. These appointments have eventually been regularised after the recruitment rules had been settled and the procedure laid down”.


9. The correctness of the view taken by the High Court has been challenged in these appeals.

10. We have heard the Counsel on both sides and examined the various contentions carefully. The first question for consideration is whether the Delhi Municipal Corporation Service Regulation 1959 is appli­cable to employees of the Undertaking. As earlier noticed, the Regulation was framed by the Government of India under Section 480(1) of the. Regulation 3 provides:


“3. Unless otherwise provided in the or these regulations, these regulations shall apply to all Municipal Officers and other Municipal employees whose pay is chargeable to the “General Account” of the Municipal Fund;

Provided that nothing in these regulations shall apply to such Municipal Officers and other Municipal employees as are appointed under any contract or render part-time service or are in receipt of daily wages”.


11. As is obvious significantly from Regulation 3, the regulations shall apply only to Municipal officers and other Municipal employees whose pay is chargeable to the “General Account” of the Municipal Fund. Section 99 of theprovides for establishment of the “Municipal Fund”. It consists of three different accounts:

"(i) Electric Supply Account;

(ii) Water Supply and Sewage Disposal Accounts; and

(iii) General Account."


12. General Account is only one of the three accounts. The Under­taking has a separate account of its own. It is called “Water Supply and Sewage Disposal Accounts”. It is said that the income and expenditure or the accounts of the Undertaking is separate from and independent of the “General Account” of the Municipal Fund. O.P. Kelkar Deputy Com­missioner (Water) in his affidavit filed in C.A. No. 527/1986 has also expressly stated so. The salary of the employees in the Undertaking is paid out of the account of the Undertaking and not from the “General Account” of the Municipal fund. The Service Regulation 1959 do not apply, to those who are paid out of other accounts. It applies only to those who are paid out of “General Account”.

13. In view of the stand taken by the Undertaking and also in the light of the said provisions of the it must be held that the Service Regulation 1959 has no application to the category of officers with whom we are concerned in these appeals.

14. It was, however, argued for the appellants that the office memo­randum of the Home Ministry of the Government of India dated 22 December 1959 could be called into aid for the purpose of determining the seniority of officers in the Undertaking. Reference was made to General Principle 5(i) with the Explanatory memorandum thereunder which directs that where promotion is made on the basis of selection by Departmental Pro­motion Committee, the seniority of such promotees shall be in the order in which they are recommended for such promotion by the Committee. But there is hardly any substance in this contention too. It is basically faulty. The office memorandum proprio vigore does not apply to employees of the Undertaking it could be applied if it could fall within the scope of “Rules” as defined in Regulation 1959. Since Service Regulation 1959 itself is not attracted to employees of the Undertaking it would be futile to contend that the office memorandum would govern their seniority.

15. The real question to be considered is what should happen to the valuable service rendered by officers in ad hoc appointments Should it be excluded altogether while determining their seniority If not, what should be the method to be employed in the absence of any rule or order providing for any procedure. It was argued that since the Commission regularised the services of all Executive Engineers with effect from a common date i.e. 8 January 1971, the inter-se seniority in the lower cadre should be the proper basis in the higher cadre also. As, otherwise, it was urged that a senior in the lower cadre might be junior in the higher cadre which would be contrary to all concepts in service jurisprudence. In this context, we were referred to a large number of authorities on either side. Most of the authorities involved the question of applicability of the quota rule linked up with the seniority of direct recruits and promotees. We are not concer­ned with that question, We may, however, refer to some of the decisions which have some bearing on the question before us:

16. In Baleshwar Dass and Ors. etc. v. State of U.P. [1981(1) SCR 449 at 469] Krishna lyer, J., had this say:

“If a public servant serves for a decade with distinction in a post known to be not a casual vacancy but a regular post, experimentally or otherwise kept as temporary under the time honoured classifica­tion, can it be that his long officiation turns to ashes like a Dead Sea fruit because of a label and his counterpart equal in all functional respects but with ten years less of service steals a march over him because his recruitment is to a temporary vacancy We cannot anathematize officiation unless there are reasonable differentiations and limitations.”


X X X X

“The normal rule consistent with equity is that officiating service even before confirmation in service has relevancy to seniority if eventually no infirmities in the way of confirmation exists. We see nothing in the scheme of the Rules contrary to that principle. Therefore, the point from which service has to be counted is the commencement of the officiating service of the Assistant Engineers who might not have secured permanent appointments in the beginning and in that sense may still be temporary, but who, for all other purposes, have been regularised and are fit to be absorbed into permanent posts as and when they are vacant.”


17. In A Janardhan v. Union of India [AIR 1983 SC 769 [LQ/SC/1983/125] =1983(2) SCR 936] D.A. Desai, J., said (at 960):

“It is a well recognised principle of service jurisprudence that any rule of seniority has to satisfy the test of equality of opportunity in public service as enshrined in Article 16. It is an equally well recog­nised canon of service jurisprudence that in the absence of any other valid rule for determining inter-se seniority of members belonging to the same service, the rule continuous officiation or the length of service or the date of entering in service and continuous uninterrupted service thereafter would be valid and would satisfy the tests of Article 16”.


18. In G.P. Doval v. Chief Secretary, Government of U.P, and Ors. [1985 (1) SCR 70 [LQ/SC/1984/167] ] Desai, J., following Baleshwar Dass reiterated (at 85-87):

“Now if there was no binding rule of seniority it is well-settled that length of continuous officiation prescribes a valid principle of seniority. The question is from what date the service is to be recko­ned It was urged that any appointment of a stop-gap nature or pending the selection by Public Service Commission cannot be taken into account for reckoning seniority. In other words, it was urged that to be in the cadre and to enjoy place in the seniority list, the service rendered in a substantive capacity can alone be taken into consideration. We find it difficult to accept this bald and wide sub­mission. Each case will depend upon its facts and circumstances. If a stop-gap appointment is made and the appointee appears before the Public Service Commission when the letter proceeds to select the candidates and is selected, we see no justification for ignoring his past service. At any rate, there is no justification for two persons selected in the same manner being differently treated. That becomes crystal clear from the place assigned in the seniority list to petitioner No. 1 in relation to respondent No. 7. In fact if once a person appointed in a stop-gap arrangement is confirmed in his post by proper selection, his past service has to be given credit and he has to be assigned seniority accordingly unless a rule to the contrary is made. That has not been done in the case of all the petitioners. The error is apparent in the case of petitioner 1 and respondent No. 7. These errors can be multiplied but we consider it unnecessary to do so. In fact a fair rule of seniority should ordinarily take into account the past service if the stop-gap arrangement is followed by confirmation. This view which we are taking is borne out by the decision of this Court in Baleshwar Dass and Ors. etc v. State of U.P. and Ors. etc.

X X X X

It is thus well-settled that where officiating appointment is followed by confirmation unless a contrary rule is shown, the service rendered as officiating appointment cannot be ignored for reckoning length of continuous officiation for determining the place in the seniority list.”


19. Again in G.S. Lamba v. Union of India [1985 (3) SCR 431 [LQ/SC/1985/101] ] Desai, J., likewise commented (at 459-60):


“In the absence of any other valid principle of seniority it is well established that the continuous officiatibn in the cadre grade of service will provide a valid principle of seniority. The seniority lists having not been prepared on this principle lare liable to be quashed and set aside.”


20. Counsel for appellants, however, placed strong reliance on the decision in Ashok Gulati and Ors. v. B.S. Jain and Ors. [AIR 1987 SC 424 [LQ/SC/1986/529] ] and in particular the following observations of Sen, J., (at 438):

“That in the absence of any other valid principle of seniority the inter-se seniority between direct recruits and promotees should as far as possible be determined by the length of continuous service whether temporary or permanent in a particular grade or post (this should exclude periods for which an appointment is held in a purely stop-gap or fortuitous arrangement). No doubt, there are certain observations in the two cases of G.P. Doval [AIR 1984 SC 1527 [LQ/SC/1984/167] ] and Narender Chadha, [AIR 1986 SC 638 [LQ/SC/1986/31] ] winch seems to run counter to the view we have taken, but these decisions turned on their own peculiar facts and are therefore clearly distinguishable and they do not lay down any rule of universal application”.


21. We do not consider that this observation is of any assistance to the appellants in this case. It must be read in the context in which it appears and against the background of the facts of that case. It has been said more often and we repeat here that the judgments of Court or obser­vations made thereon are not to be read as statutes. They are made in the setting of facts obtained in a particular case. It is no exception in Ashok Gulati case. There this Court was concerned with the service rendered by certain officers in a purely stop-gap or fortuitous arrangement. In the Public Works Department of the State of Haryana, certain persons were appointed as temporary engineers (ad hoc) for a period of six months. Some of them were drawn from the Employment Exchange. The appoint­ment was not made in accordance with the cadre rules of the department. In the order of appointment given to each individual it was specified that their appointment was purely on ad hoc basis on a fixed salary of Rs. 400 allowances. It was also notified that their services would be terminable without notice. It was further stated that the service rendered would not enure to their benefit under the cadre rules. Later on, those posts were advertised by the Public Service Commission for regular recruitment some of these persons applied and were also selected. They were appointed regularly in the cadre. Then they claimed that their antecedent service in the ad hoc appointment should be taken into consideration for determining their seniority. This Court said “No”. The reason was obvious. The terms of their ad hoc appointment did not allow them any benefit therefrom. It was a stop-gap arrangement contrary to tne cadre rules. They were, therefore, not entitled to count that service for determining the seniority. If it were allowed to them, it would have impaired the rights of persons ranked above them in the merit list of the Public Service Commission. It was in that context, the learned Judge made the aforesaid observation. It was not intended to be a discordant note against the normal rule of deter­mining seniority as laid down in Baleshwar Dass case. In fact, the learned judge in a later decision in G.C. Gupta v. N.K. Pandey [1988 (1) SCC 316 [LQ/SC/1987/833] ] has approved the rule laid down (i) in Baleshwar Dass v. State of U.P. (ii) N.K. Chauhan v. State of Gujarat [1977 (1) SCR 1037 [LQ/SC/1976/413] ] and (iii) S.B. Patwardhan v. State of Maharashtra (1977 (3) SCR 775 [LQ/SC/1977/208] ).] It has been con­sistently held in these cases that in the absence of seniority rule, the conti­nuous officiation in the post should be the guiding factor for determining the seniority.

22. In a more recent decision in Vasant Kumar Jaiswal v. State of M.P. [1987 (4) SCC 450 [LQ/SC/1987/640] ] Sabyasachi Mukherji, J., has also reiterated the same principle. The learned Judge said that in the absence of any statutory rule or executive memorandum or order for determination of seniority in a grade, the normal rule would be to determine the seniority on the basis of length in service.

23. Our attention was drawn to the decision of this Court in Dr. S.D. Choudhury v. State of Assam [1976 (1) SCC 283 [LQ/SC/1975/496] ] in support of the contention that the order in which the Commission regularised the services of the Engineers should be the basis for determining their seniority. In that case the appellants and respondent No. 4 to 6 were initially appointed as Assistant Professors under Regulation 3(e) of the Assam Public Service Commission Regulations on an officiating basis. It was obligatory, in terms of that Regulation to consult the Service Commission, as soon as possible. Their services were eventually regularised by the Service Commission in one batch and their inter-se seniority list was fixed on the recommendations of the Commission. The Commission recommended that it should be fixed as per the instructions of the Government under notification dated February 5, 1964. That notification provided among others that if the appointments of a number of persons are regularised in one batch then the inter-se seniority of these persons should be according to the merit list of the Service Commission. Even if the Service Commission does not give any merit list the appointing authority should request the Service Commission to indicate the order of preference of those persons. Accordingly, the inter-se seniority of the persons were fixed after consulting the Commission and in accordance with the rankings assigned to them in the merit list of the Commission. The High Court said that the seniority list was correctly prepared. This Court dismissed the appeal against the judgment of the High Court. In the course of the judgments, this Court observed (at p. 285):


“5. It is not in dispute that the appellants and respondents No. 4, 5 and 6 were initially appointed Assistant Professors under Regula­tion 3 (e) of the Regulations, on an officiating basis to avoid delay, and it was obligatory, in terms of that regulation, to consult the Service Commission as soon as possible. The appointments were thus defensible, and could not give rise to any legal right in favour of the parties, It is therefore futile to contend that as the appellants joined as Assistant Professors on an earlier date, they were entitled to rank senior to respondents Nos. 4, 5, and 6 irrespective of the result of the final recruitment through the Service Commission”.


24. This Court could not have taken into consideration the officiat­ing service of the persons therein in view of the Government notification dated February 5, 1964 which specifically provided the principles for deter­mining the seniority of persons whose services were regularised by the Service Commission. Since all of them were regularised in one batch after reference to the Service Commission their inter-se seniority had to be determined according to the merit list of the Commission. The decision as to seniority in that case, therefore, rested on the specific notification of the Government.

25. We may also mention that in regard to officers of Delhi Municipal Corporation where there was ad hoc appointments followed by regularisation of service, the Delhi High Court has taken a consistent view that such persons should get their service in the ad hoc appointment for determining seniority in the absence of any specific rule to the contrary. (See Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. K.K. Bhatia [AIR 1986 (LAB) IC 1489 at 1492].

26. So much as regards to general principle governing seniority in service jurisprudence. There is, however, one other important and funda­mental principle which should not be forgotten in any case. The principle of counting service in favour one should not be violative of equality of opportunity enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. If ad hoc appointment or temporary appointment is made without considering the claims of seniors in the cadre, the service rendered in such appointment should not be counted for seniority in the cadre. The length of service in ad hoc appointment or stop-gap arrangement made in the exigencies of service without considering the claims of all the eligible and suitable persons in the cadre ought not be reckoned for the purpose of determining the seniority in the promotional cadre. To give the benefit of such service to a favoured few would be contrary to the equality of opportunity enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. But if the claims of all eligible candidates were considered at the time of ad has appointments and such appointments continued uninterruptedly till the regularisation of services by the Departmental Promotion Committee or the Public Service Commission there is no reason to exclude such service for determining the seniority. Of course, if any statutory rule or executive order provides to the contrary, the rule or order will have supremacy. In the absence of any rule or order the length of service should be the basis to determine the seniority.

27. This takes us to the last contention urged for the appellants in Appeal No. 528/1986. The learned Counsel tried to impeach the method by which the ad hoc appointments were made and in particular the ad hoe appointment of R.K. Kashyap––Respondent No. 3. It was urged that on the date on which he was posted as Executive Engineer he did not have the required experience of five years in the Undertaking. It was made good by taking into consideration his past service in other establishment before he joined the Undertaking. The Undertaking then had no cadre rules of its own providing for such requirements. It was, therefore, argued that it was wrong on the part of the Undertaking to have counted his past service before he joined the Undertaking to make good the deficiency in his service. It is true that on the date on which respondent 3, and some others were initially considered and appointed as Executive Engineers, the Undertaking had no cadre rules of its own. It however, followed the cadre rules of the general wing of the Corporation. That cadre rule provided for counting such past service. In our judgment, there was nothing wrong in following that cadre rules pending approval of its own cadre rules. Those cadre rules were uniformly applied to all the then avail­able candidates for considering them for ad hoc appointment. The Under­taking made no discrimination. There is indeed no dispute on this aspect. Before the High Court, it was a common case of parties that ad hoc appointment was necessary pending finalisation of the cadre rules and approval by the Commission. It was also a common case of parties that for the purpose of making ad hoc arrangements, the suitability of all the eligible officers was considered. Moreover, the Undertaking was repeatedly requesting the Commission to regularise the appointments by convening meeting of the Departmental Promotion Committee. It is, therefore, not proper to find fault with those ad hoc appointments at this stage.

28. From the foregoing discussions and in the light of the decisions to which we have called attention, we have no hesitation in holding that the conclusion reached by learned judges of the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court is correct and does not call for any interference.

29. In the result, these appeals fail and are dismissed, but no order as to costs.

Advocates List

For the Appearing Parties ------

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE OZA

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE JAGANNATHA SHETTY

Eq Citation

(1989) SUPPL. 1 SCC 194

AIR 1989 SC 278

[1988] (SUPPL.) 3 SCR 633

JT 1988 (4) SC 421

1988 (2) SCALE 1390

LQ/SC/1988/547

HeadNote

? In these appeals, the question arises as to whether the services rendered by officers in ad hoc appointments should be excluded while determining their seniority in the absence of any rule or order providing for any procedure. ? The Delhi Municipal Corporation Service Regulation 1959 is held to be not applicable to employees of the Delhi Water Supply and Sewage Disposal Undertaking (the Undertaking) as their salary is paid out of a separate account, and not from the “General Account” of the Municipal Fund to which the Regulation applies. ? The office memorandum of the Home Ministry dated 22nd December 1959 cannot be applied to employees of the Undertaking as the Service Regulation 1959 itself is not attracted to them. ? In the absence of any rule or order prescribing a method for determining seniority, the normal rule is that continuous officiation in the post should be the guiding factor. ? The appointment of Executive Engineers in the Undertaking on an ad hoc basis was necessitated by the delay in making regular appointments in accordance with the procedure envisaged by the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act and was not intended as a stop-gap arrangement. ? The continuous officiation in the ad hoc appointments, which were made after considering the suitability of all eligible officers and were followed by regularisation of services by the Union Public Service Commission, should be taken into account for determining the seniority of the Executive Engineers. ? The inter-se seniority of Executive Engineers should reflect their respective rankings in the feeding cadre of Assistant Engineers, as their promotions were made from that cadre. ? The appeals are dismissed with no order as to costs.