Tejinder Singh Sandhu vs State Of Punjab And Ors on 25 April, 1978

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Supreme Court of India
Tejinder Singh Sandhu vs State Of Punjab And Ors on 25 April, 1978
Equivalent citations: 1978 AIR 1326, 1978 SCR (3) 716
Author: Y Chandrachud
Bench: Chandrachud, Y.V. ((Cj)
           PETITIONER:
TEJINDER SINGH SANDHU

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/04/1978

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
DESAI, D.A.
PATHAK, R.S.

CITATION:
 1978 AIR 1326		  1978 SCR  (3) 716
 1978 SCC  (3)	18


ACT:
Seniority and Promotion, claim to-Whether a junior in  Class
II  service, who by a chancy circumstance joined earlier  in
the  Class I post and completed his probation in  that	post
before	his  seniors, claim seniority in Class	I  post	 for
further	 promotion-Seniority in Class II has to	 prevail  in
ranking when several officers are appointed to Class I on an
ad  hoc	 basis and also completed their probation  and	when
permanent  vacancies  occur  in	 that  cadre  of  Class	 I--
Applicability  of Govt.	 Memo No. 9448-Agr. 1(1)65/1583	 dt.
13-4-66 and Punjab-Agri.  Service Rules, 1947, 10 to 16.



HEADNOTE:
The appellant was junior to Respondents 2 and 3 in the Class
11  Punjab  Agricultural  Service.  On August  2,  1965	 the
appellant  and Respondent No. 3 were promoted on an  ad	 hoc
basis as Deputy Directors of Agriculture a post borne on the
cadre of Class I service.  The appellant took charge of	 the
post  on  August  4,  1965  being  at  headquarters,   while
respondents No. 3 joined on 18-8-65.  Respondent No. 2.	 who
was  senior to Respondent No. 3 and the appellant could	 not
be promoted earlier as he was on deputation with the  Punjab
Agricultural University and he was promoted on 22-2-67	i.e.
after  his  return  to parent  department.   The  appellant,
Respondent No. 2 and Respondent No. 3 therefore	  completed
their	probation  on  3-8-1967,  21-2-1969   and   1-3-1968
respectively.  On     14-10-71,	   the	   Government	  of
Punjab published a tentative seniority	list  in  which	 the
appellant  was	shown as junior to respondents 2 and  3.  On
that  basis  respondents  2 and 3  were	 promoted  as  Joint
Directors  of  Agriculture  w.e.f.  10-7-1973  and   16-7-73
respectively.	As  his representation for  considering	 his
claim  for  seniority and promotion by virtue  of  his	long
continuous  service  in Class 11 post and also	his  earlier
completion  of	probation that the respondents	failed.	 the
appellant  filed a writ petition in the High Court on  16-8-
1973 contending that the promotion of respondents 2 and 3 to
the  post of Joint Director was illegal being  violative  of
Article	 16  of	 the  Constitution  and	 demanding  that  in
recognition  of	 his  superior claim arising  by  virtue  of
seniority,  he should be promoted and confirmed in the	post
of  Joint  Director.   The High	 Court	dismissed  the	Writ
Petition  but granted a certificate of fitness to appeal  to
this Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court
HELD  : 1. The High Court was right in taking the view	that
respondents  2 and 3 were entitled to be appointed as  Joint
Directors  of Agriculture in preference to the appellant  on
the basis of their seniority. [720D]
2.   Since  all of them were appointed to Class I on  an  ad
hoc  basis and since they had all completed their  probation
in  Class I post, when permanent vacancies occurred in	that
cadre,	their seniority in Class If has to prevail in  their
ranking	 in Class I. By that criterion, the  appellant	must
take his place below Respondents 2 and 3. [719B-C]
3.   (a)  What governs the appellant is not  the  Government
Memorandum  dated 13-4-1966, but the rules contained in	 the
Punjab	Agricultural Service Class 1, Rules, 1947.  Rule  16
provides that seniority of members of the service
shall be determined according to the date of confirmation in
the  service.	If regard is had to Rules 10 to	 16  of	 the
Rules,	the  appellant	must rank lower	 in  seniority	than
Respondents 2 and 3. [720B-C]
(b)  The circumstance, that the appellant and respondents  2
and  3	took  charge of their respective posts	in  Class  I
service on divergent dates is purely
717
fortuitous and cannot affect their seniority.  The appellant
was junior to respondents 2 and 3 in Class III as well as in
Class 11 service of the PEPSU State.  He was also junior  to
them  in  class	 11  service  of  the  Punjab  Govt.,  after
reorganisation	of  states.  Having been  appointed  to	 the
higher	post on the same date as respondent 3 and on ad	 hoc
basis,	the appellant cannot be permitted to take  advantage
of a chancy circumstance that being geographically close  to
the headquarters, he was able to take charge of the post  of
promotion  on  the very day on which he	 was  appointed,  an
opportunity  which a quirk of posting denied  to  respondent
No. 3. In fact in Class 1, there were only two vacancies  in
August 1965 and if respondent No. 2 were available for being
posted	as  Deputy Director, it is he and respondent  3	 who
would  have filled the two vacancies.  The  appellant  being
junior	to  them would not have been appointed as  a  Deputy
Director even on an ad hoc basis. [718H, 719D-G]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 713 of 1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 31-5-74 of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in C. W. No. 2675/73.

Hardev Singh and R. S. Sodhi for the Appellant.
O. P. Sharma for Respondent No. 1.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J.-The appellant, Tejinder Singh Sandhu, and
respondents 2 and 3 were serving initially as Class III
Officers but were recruited directly as Class 11 Officers in
the erstwhile. State of Patiala and the East Punjab States’
Union, (‘Pepsu’). After the reorganisation of Punjab and
Pepsu, they were absorbed in the Punjab Agricultural
Service, Class 11. In the seniority list of Class 11
Officers, respondent 2 was shown at serial No. 30,
respondent 3 at serial No. 39 and the appellant at serial
No. 40. On August 2, 1965, appellant and respondent 3 were
promoted on an ad-hoc basis as Deputy Directors of
Agriculture, a post borne on the cadre of Class I Service.
The appellant took charge of that post on August 4, 1965
while respondent 3 took charge fourteen days later on
August,18, 1965. The adhoc promotions were made for a
period of three months or until such time as the
appointments could be made on a regular basis.
Respondent 2 was working at the material time in the Punjab
Agricultural University, Ludhiana. The Government of Punjab
having taken a decision in October, 1966 to allow its
officers who were working on deputation with the Ludhiana
Agricultural University to rejoin the State Service,
respondent 2 returned to the parent Department on October
28, 1966. He was promoted as Deputy Director of Agricul-
ture, Class 1, on February 22, 1967 on the same basis as the
appellant and respondent 3.

The appellant completed his probation on August 3, 1967
while respondents 2 and 3 completed theirs on February 21,
1969 arid March 1, 1968, respectively. On October 14, 1971,
the Government of Punjab published a tentative seniority
list of Class I Officers in which the appellant was shown as
junior to respondents 2 and 3. Acting on the basis of the
seniority list, the State Government promoted respondent 2
to the post of Joint Director of Agriculture on July 10,
718
1973 and respondent 3 on. July 16, 1973. The appellant had
filed a representation on the publication of the seniority
list complaining that since he had officiated continuously
in the Class I post for a longer period than respondents 2
and 3 and had completed his probation before, they had
completed theirs, he should have been treated as senior to
the other two and was entitled to be promoted as Joint
Director in. preference to them. It was implicit in the
promotion of respondents 2 and 3 to the post of Joint
Director that the appellant’s representation was rejected by
the Government.

On August 16, 1973 the appellant filed a Writ Petition in
the High Court of Punjab and Haryana contending that the
promotion of respondents 2 and 3 to the post of Joint
Director was illegal being violative of article 16 of the
Constitution and demanding that in recognition of his
superior claim arising by virtue of seniority he should be
promoted and confirmed in the post of Joint Director. By
its judgment dated May it, 1974, the High Court dismissed
the Writ Petition but granted to the appellant a certificate
of fitness to appeal to this Court under article 133(1) of
the Constitution.

The narrow question for decision is whether the appellant is
entitled to be regarded as senior to respondents 2 and 3 by
virtue of his continuous officiation in the Class I post and
because he had completed his probation in that post before
respondents 2 and 3 completed theirs. Certain facts bearing
on this question are undisputed. Appellant and respondents
2 and 3 originally belonged to Class III Service of the
Pepsu State. They were later appointed by direct
recruitment as Class 11 Officers in the Agriculture
Department of the State with effect from September 24, 1956,
July 13 1956 and ‘May 1, 1956, respectively. It is,
therefore, clear and not disputed that in the cadre of Class
11 Officers in the Pepsu Agriculture Department, appellant
was junior to respondents 2 and 3. After the merger of Pepsu
with Punjab they were all absorbed in Class 11 Service of
the Punjab Agriculture Department. Appellant and respondent
3 were later promoted to Class I Service of the Punjab
Government on the same date that is to say, on August 2,
1965. On the date of promotion, appellant happened to be
working at Chandigarh itself and was therefore able to take
charge of his new post immediately after the date of his
appointment viz., August 4, 1965. Respondent 3, on the
other hand, Was working as an Assistant Horticulturist at
Kulu and therefore, he could not take charge of his post
until he was relieved of the post which he was holding. He
was able to take over as Deputy Director at Hansi on August
18, 1965, which was 14 days after the appellant had taken
charge of his post. Respondent 2 was promoted as a Deputy
Director in 1966 but, that was for the reason that lie was
working on deputation with the Ludhiana Agricultural
University and until the Government permitted its officers
working on deputation with the University to revert to the
State Service, respondent 2, though eligible for being
appointed as a Deputy Director, could not be so appointed.
Thus the circumstance that the appellant and respondents 2
and 3 took charge of their respective posts in Class I
Service on divergent dates is purely fortuitous and cannot
affect their seniority.

719

All the three were appointed as Class I Officers on a purely
ad-hoc basis. The permanent vacancies in that cadre
occurred in 1971 and it is in reference to the State of
affairs obtaining at that point of time that the question of
seniority of the three officers has to be considered. On
the date on which permanent vacancies occurred in the Class
I cadre, the appellant and respondents 2 and 3 had all
completed their probationary period satisfactorily. They
were, therefore, eligible and perhaps entitled to be
confirmed in Class I posts. But that confirmation had to be
made in the order in which they ranked in seniority in their
Class II posts. We have no doubt that since all of them
were appointed to Class I on an ad hoc basis and since they
had all completed their probation in Class I posts when
permanent vacancies occurred in that cadre, their seniority
in Class 11 has to prevail in their ranking in Class I. By
that criterion, there can be no doubt that that the appel-
lant must take his place below respondents 2 and 3.
Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant
contends that seniority of officers promoted to Class I from
the Class 11 cadre must be determined according to the dates
of their continuous officiation in Class I posts and
according to the dates on which they completed their
probationary period. It is urged that by the application of
this dual test, the appellant would rank higher in seniority
over respondents 2 and 3. By reason of the circumstances
which we have earlier mentioned, there is no substance in
this contention. The appellant was junior to respondents 2
and 3 in Class III as well as in Class 11 Service of the
Pepsu State. He was also junior to them in Class 11 Service
of the Punjab Government, after reorganisation of the
States. Having been appointed to the higher post on the
same date as respondent 3 and on an ad-hoc basis, the
appellant cannot be permitted to take advantage of a chancy
circumstance that being geographically close to the
headquarters he was able to take charge of the post of
promotion on the very date on which he was appointed, ,in
opportunity which a quirk of posting denied to respondent 3.
The latter., being at Kulu, had to be relieved of his post
there and the proverbial red-tapism intervened to disable.
him from taking charge of his Class I post until fourteen
days later. In so far as respondent 2 is concerned, he had
to await the decision of the Government that those on
deputation to the Ludhiana Agricultural University may re-
turn to their parent departments. It is not disputed that
if in August 1965, respondent 2 was not working on
deputation, he would have been promoted along with the
appellant and respondent 3 to Class I. In fact it is
important that in Class 1, there were only two vacancies in
August 1965 and if respondent 2 were available for being
posted as a Deputy Director, it is he and respondent 3 who
would have filled the two vacancies. The appellant being
junior to them would not have been appointed as a Deputy
Director even on an ad-hoc basis.

Learned counsel for the appellant placed heavy reliance on
the State Government’s instructions regarding fixation of
seniority contained in Government Memo No. 9448-Agr.
1(1)65/1583 dated April 11, 1966, in support of his argument
that the appellant must rank
720
higher in seniority than respondents 2 and 3. The Memorandum
has no application because it refers to ‘temporary officers’
appointed to the Punjab Agricultural Service, Class I and
Class II. In case of temporary officers promoted to Class I
and Class 11 posts, seniority may have to be determined
under the particular Government Memorandum with reference to
the dates of continuous appointment in the respective
cadres. But the appellant and respondents 2 and 3 were
working in a permanent capacity when they were promoted to
Class 1. What governs the seniority of the appellant is not
the Memorandum on which he relies but the rules contained in
the Punjab Agricultural Service, Class 1, Rules, 1947. If
regard is had to rules 10 and 16 of the aforesaid Rules,
there cannot be any doubt that the appellant must rank lower
in seniority than respondents 2 and 3. Rule 16 provides that
seniority of members of the Service shall be determined
according to the date of confirmation in the Service. The
exact dates of confirmation of the officers concerned are
not on the record but it is clear that by reason of the
circumstances adverted to before, appellant’s confirmation
has to, be postponed to that of respondents 2 and 3.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the High Court is
right in taking the view that respondents 2 and 3 were
entitled to be appointed as Joint Directors of Agriculture
in preference to the appellant on the basis of their
seniority. Accordingly we confirm the judgment of the High
Court and dismiss the appeal. The appellant shall pay the
costs of respondents 2 and 3 in one set. There will be no
order as to costs of respondent 1, the State of Punjab, or
of respondents 4 and 5.

S.R.				    Appeal dismissed
721



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