Open iDraf
P.l. Kantha Rao v. State Of A.p.

P.l. Kantha Rao
v.
State Of A.p.

(Supreme Court Of India)

Special Leave Petition No. 23415 Of 1994 | 13-01-1995


K. Ramaswamy and S.C. Sen, JJ.

This petition is filed against the order of Single Judge of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh, dated 15.6.94, made in CRP No. 3708/93. The petitioners filed R.P. No. 986/84 in the A.P. Administrative Tribunal constituted under the Presidential Order 1985, pursuant to the power under Article 371-D. The Tribunal by its order dated March 19, 1986, allowed their petition. For its implementation the petitioners filed a writ petition in the High Court in which by order dated 6.3.87 the High Court directed to approach the Administrative Tribunal to seek an order under para 8(5) of the Presidential Order for its enforcement. On obtaining the certificate from the Tribunal on March 9, 1987, the petitioners filed E.P. No. 6/89 in the court of Chief Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad. When the Chief Judge directed its implementation, the order in the execution came to be challenged in the High Court. The learned Singh Judge in the impugned order held that under section 29 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 (for short, `the Act), the execution is by way of a proceeding and that therefore, Sections 29 and 29-A of the Act get attracted. It was also held that as the present A.P. Administrative Tribunal came to be constituted under the Act, the petitioners are entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of the Tribunal for enforcement of the order passed by the erstwhile administrative tribunal. Feeling aggrieved, this petition has been filed.

2. After perusing the relevant provisions and the order of the High Court, we are of the view that the High Court is right in its conclusion that it is a proceeding under Section 29 and 29-A of the Act and that the petitioners could avail of the remedy of enforcement before the Administrative Tribunal constituted under the Act. The relevant portion of section 29 reads thus :

``....other proceeding pending before any court or other authority immediately before the date of establishment of a Tribunal under this Act, being a .... by proceeding the cause of action whereon it is based is such that it would have been, if it had arisen after such establishment, within the jurisdiction of such Tribunal, shall stand transferred on that date to such Tribunal.

The word `proceeding engrafted in section 29 must be understood in a broader perspective. The word `proceeding would depend upon the scope of the enactment wherein the expression is used with reference to a particular context where it occurs. It may mean a course of action for enforcing a legal right. In the journey of litigation, there are several stages, one of which is the realisation of the judicial adjudication which attained finality. The word `proceeding though has not been defined under Section 29, it is a comprehensive term. We are not concerned with the constitutionality of the Tribunal and conferment of powers in it under the Act. For the purpose of the case, we proceed upon the premise of the Act being valid.

3. The right to adjudicate the dispute arising from the service conditions of the employees of the State has been expressly taken out from the jurisdiction of the civil court and the High Court, except of this court under Article 136 and has been conferred upon the Tribunal constituted under the Act. The right to enforce the order of a Tribunal is incidental to the right to claim the relief relating to the service conditions of the employees. Having divested the jurisdiction of the civil courts to adjudicate these disputes, the Act did not intend to confer jurisdiction in the civil court of the execution of the order of the Tribunal. Therefore, the term `proceeding in section 29 is a very wide term to mean a prescribed course of action to enforce the legal right. It indicates the prescribed mode in which the judicial business is conducted. The execution is a step in the judicial process. It seeks to enforce the final order to realise the result of the adjudication. Therefore, it is an integral part of the order passed by the Tribunal which was abolished and that new Tribunal came to be constituted under the Act. Therefore, the Tribunal constituted under the Act gets jurisdiction and power to enforce the orders passed by the Tribunal and which attained finality.

4. The High Court, therefore, is right in its conclusion though for different reasons that the Execution Petition before the Civil Court would not lie. The S.L.P. is accordingly dismissed. It is open to the petitioners to approach the A.P. Administrative Tribunal to have the order passed by the erstwhile Administrative Tribunal enforced in accordance with the procedure prescribed under the Act and the Rules.

S.L.P. dismissed.

Advocates List

FOR

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

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE K. RAMASWAMY

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE S.C. SEN

Eq Citation

1995 LABIC 1132

1995 (3) SCT 44 (SC)

[1995] 1 SCR 240

(1995) 2 SCC 471

AIR 1995 SC 807

1995 (1) SCALE 217

LQ/SC/1995/70

HeadNote

Service Law — Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 — S. 29 — Meaning of `proceeding' — Execution of order passed by erstwhile Administrative Tribunal — Whether `proceeding' — Held, word `proceeding' must be understood in a broader perspective — It may mean a course of action for enforcing a legal right — In journey of litigation, there are several stages, one of which is realisation of judicial adjudication which attained finality — The word `proceeding' though has not been defined under S. 29, it is a comprehensive term — Civil Procedure Code, 1908 — S. 9 — Execution of order passed by Administrative Tribunal constituted under Presidential Order, 1985 — Whether lies in civil court — Held, it is open to petitioners to approach A.P. Administrative Tribunal to have order passed by erstwhile Administrative Tribunal enforced in accordance with procedure prescribed under 1985 Act and Rules — Words and Phrases — `Proceeding'