{"id":231939,"date":"2008-11-04T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2008-11-03T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/official-liquidator-vs-dayananad-ors-on-4-november-2008"},"modified":"2019-03-02T22:38:51","modified_gmt":"2019-03-02T17:08:51","slug":"official-liquidator-vs-dayananad-ors-on-4-november-2008","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/official-liquidator-vs-dayananad-ors-on-4-november-2008","title":{"rendered":"Official Liquidator vs Dayananad &amp; Ors on 4 November, 2008"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"docsource_main\">Supreme Court of India<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_title\">Official Liquidator vs Dayananad &amp; Ors on 4 November, 2008<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_author\">Author: G Singhvi<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_bench\">Bench: B.N. Agrawal, Harjit Singh Bedi, G.S. Singhvi<\/div>\n<pre>                                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA\n\n                              CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION\n\n                                CIVIL APPEAL NO.2985 OF 2007\n\nOfficial Liquidator                                                          ... Appellants\n\n       Vs.\n\nDayanand and Others                                                        ... Respondents\n\n\n                                              WITH\n\nCivil Appeal Nos.2986 to 2990 of 2007\nCivil Appeal No.6455\/2008 @ S.L.P.(C) No.12798 of 2005 and\nCivil Appeal No.6456\/2008 @ S.L.P. No.13838 of 2006\n\n\n\n                                         JUDGMENT\n<\/pre>\n<p>G.S. Singhvi, J.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>1.     Leave granted in S.L.P. (C) Nos.12798\/2005 and 13838\/2006.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>2.     These appeals are directed against the orders of Calcutta and Delhi High Courts, whereby<\/p>\n<p>directions have been issued to the appellants herein to absorb the persons employed by the Official<\/p>\n<p>Liquidators attached to those High Courts under Rule 308 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959<\/p>\n<p>(for short `the 1959 Rules&#8217;) against the posts sanctioned by the Government of India, Department of<\/p>\n<p>Company Affairs.\n<\/p>\n<p>FACTS<\/p>\n<p>3.     For the sake of convenience, we have culled out the facts from the pleadings of Writ Petition<\/p>\n<p>No.1387 of 2001 filed by Tapas Chakraborty and 109 others in Calcutta High Court, Writ Petition<\/p>\n<p>No.2728 of 2001 filed by Smt. Daya Dua and others in Delhi High Court, the record of these appeals<\/p>\n<p>and documents filed\/produced by the learned counsel for the parties during the pendency of the<\/p>\n<p>appeals. These are:\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)     There are two categories of employees in the offices of the Official Liquidators attached to<\/p>\n<p>        different High Courts. The first category comprises of the employees who are appointed<\/p>\n<p>        against the posts sanctioned by the Government of India, Department of Company Affairs.<\/p>\n<p>        They are recruited in accordance with the procedure prescribed in the rules framed under<\/p>\n<p>        proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution and the doctrine of equality enshrined in Articles<\/p>\n<p>        14 and 16 and are paid salaries and allowances from the Consolidated Fund of India. The<\/p>\n<p>        second category comprises of the persons employed\/engaged by the Official Liquidators<\/p>\n<p>        pursuant to the sanction accorded by the concerned Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules.<\/p>\n<p>        The employees falling in this category are described as company paid staff. They are paid<\/p>\n<p>        salaries and allowances from the fund created by disposal of the assets of the companies in<\/p>\n<p>        liquidation.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    For Calcutta High Court, the Central Government had appointed a Court Liquidator under<\/p>\n<p>        Section 38A of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, as amended in 1953. He used to employ<\/p>\n<p>        staff under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules in connection with liquidation of banking companies.<\/p>\n<p>        The salaries of such staff were paid from the assets of the banking companies under<\/p>\n<p>        liquidation.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   In the year 1978, the Government of India, Ministry of Law, Justice and Company Affairs<\/p>\n<p>        vide its letter dated 27.11.1978 circulated a scheme (hereinafter described as `the 1978<\/p>\n<p>        Scheme&#8217;) for absorption of company paid staff against Group C posts in the subordinate<\/p>\n<p>        offices of the Department of Company Affairs. That scheme envisaged consideration of the<\/p>\n<p>        cases of company paid staff, who were in position on 31.3.1978 and who possessed the<\/p>\n<p>        educational qualifications prescribed for the post against which they were to be absorbed. It<\/p>\n<p>        was also provided that absorption of the company paid staff will be limited to 50% vacancies<\/p>\n<p>        in direct recruitment quota of Group C posts.\n<\/p>\n<p>4.     Sixty-three employees working under the Court Liquidator attached to Calcutta High Court<\/p>\n<p>filed writ petition for grant of the status of permanent Central Government employee with effect<\/p>\n<p>from the date of completion of 360 days of service besides regular pay scales with avenues for<\/p>\n<p>promotion apart from pension, provident fund and other service benefits on the basis of their length<\/p>\n<p>of service.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>5.     The learned Single Judge of Calcutta High Court allowed the writ petition in terms of the<\/p>\n<p>prayer made. The appeal preferred by the appellants herein was dismissed by the Division Bench,<\/p>\n<p>which noted that even though the writ petitioners had been working for last 20 to 25 years, neither<\/p>\n<p>their services were regularized nor they were paid at par with similar employees of other<\/p>\n<p>departments\/offices and they were retired at the age of 58 years without any financial benefit. The<\/p>\n<p>Division Bench held that the appellants have failed to substantiate their plea that the employees<\/p>\n<p>appointed by the Court Liquidator were not engaged for doing work of perennial nature and that<\/p>\n<p>there was no reasonable basis for discriminating the Court Liquidator&#8217;s staff vis-`-vis the regular<\/p>\n<p>employees of the office of Official Liquidator.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>6.     The company paid staff (Estate Clerks) engaged by the Official Liquidator attached to the<\/p>\n<p>High Court of Kerala also filed writ petition claiming parity with the government employees<\/p>\n<p>appointed in the office of the Official Liquidator. The Division Bench of that High Court took<\/p>\n<p>cognizance of the fact that there were two sets of employees under the Official Liquidator &#8211; (1)<\/p>\n<p>employees appointed by the Central Government, and (2) employees (14 in number) appointed by<\/p>\n<p>the Official Liquidator between 1980 and 1989 under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules; that all the<\/p>\n<p>employees were doing the same work but were being paid different salaries and held that there was<\/p>\n<p>no rational basis for according unequal treatment to similarly situated employees. The Division<\/p>\n<p>Bench then referred to the 1978 Scheme, judgments of this Court in <a href=\"\/doc\/968709\/\">Narender Chadha vs. Union of<\/p>\n<p>India<\/a> [1986 (2) SCC 157], <a href=\"\/doc\/145498\/\">Dhirendra Chamoli vs. State of U.P.<\/a> [1986 (1) SCC 637], Surinder Singh<\/p>\n<p>and Another vs. Engineer-in-Chief, CPWD and Others [1986 (1) SCC 639], <a href=\"\/doc\/9824\/\">H.C. Puttaswamy vs.<br \/>\nHon&#8217;ble Chief Justice of Karnataka High Court, Bangalore<\/a> [1991 (2) Supp. SCC 421], <a href=\"\/doc\/1592725\/\">Bhagwati<\/p>\n<p>Prasad vs. Delhi State Mineral Development Corporation<\/a> [1990 (1) SCC 361], <a href=\"\/doc\/1385375\/\">Jacob M.<\/p>\n<p>Puthuparambil vs. Kerala Water Authority<\/a> [1991 (1) SCC 28], <a href=\"\/doc\/1577755\/\">Delhi Development Horticulture<\/p>\n<p>Employees&#8217; Union vs. Delhi Administration, Delhi<\/a> [1992 (4) SCC 99], State of Haryana vs. Piara<\/p>\n<p>Singh [1992 (4) SCC 118] and held that the petitioners are entitled to be absorbed as regular Lower<\/p>\n<p>Division Clerks in the office of the Official Liquidator from the date of their initial appointment.<\/p>\n<p>Accordingly, a direction was issued to the respondents in the writ petition to absorb the Estate<\/p>\n<p>Clerks against the regular posts of Lower Division Clerks and pay them salary in the regular pay<\/p>\n<p>scale with consequential benefits.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>7.       The Government of India and Official Liquidators appealed against the orders of Calcutta<\/p>\n<p>and Kerala High Courts by filing petitions for special leave to appeal, which were admitted and<\/p>\n<p>converted into Civil Appeal Nos.5642 of 1994 <a href=\"\/doc\/965090\/\">(Government of India and others vs. The Court<\/p>\n<p>Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association and others<\/a>) and Civil Appeal No.5677 of 1994 <a href=\"\/doc\/1669957\/\">(Union of India<\/p>\n<p>and others vs. P.P. Bridget and others<\/a>).       During the pendency of those appeals, Writ Petition<\/p>\n<p>No.473 of 1998 filed by the company paid staff employed\/engaged by the Official Liquidator of<\/p>\n<p>Delhi High Court claiming parity with the regular employees was also transferred to this Court.<\/p>\n<p>After hearing the arguments, the Court passed an interim order on 14.1.1998, which reads as<\/p>\n<p>under:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>         &#8220;In all these cases, the common question that arises for consideration is whether the<br \/>\n         persons appointed by the Official Liquidator\/Court Liquidator under the orders of<br \/>\n         respective High Courts under Rules 308\/309 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959<br \/>\n         are entitled to equal pay and regularisation as the employees appointed by the<br \/>\n         Central Government in the office of the Official Liquidator. Learned Senior Counsel<br \/>\n         appearing for the appointees brought to our notice the findings of the High Courts<br \/>\n         rendered on the basis of the materials placed before them. They are broadly stated<br \/>\n         that the appointees were discharging identical duties and functions as that of regular<br \/>\n         employees in the office of the Official Liquidator; that they have been continuously<br \/>\n         without break working for a period ranging from 10 to 25 years; that they have been<br \/>\n         paid only a fixed salary without any benefit of pension, gratuity; that such employees<br \/>\n      appointed up to 1-7-1978 had been regularised by the Government; that though the<br \/>\n      Central Government appreciated the human problem involved in these matters and<br \/>\n      came forward before the Kerala High Court to amicably settle the issue ultimately has<br \/>\n      shown an unsympathetic attitude and that in the light of the several judgments of the<br \/>\n      Supreme Court, the appointees are entitled to regularisation and salaries as paid to<br \/>\n      the regular employees in the office of the Official Liquidator at least from three years<br \/>\n      prior to the date of the judgment of the Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court and<br \/>\n      in the Kerala cases from the date of appointment.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>            On the other hand, Mr. Malhotra, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the<br \/>\n      Union of India submitted that the appointees were not appointed by the Government<br \/>\n      and they were not paid salaries from the consolidated fund. On the other hand, they<br \/>\n      were paid salaries from the companies concerned under liquidation. In certain High<br \/>\n      Courts, there are Official Liquidators and Court Liquidators appointed under<br \/>\n      Section 38-A of Banking (Regulation) Act. The banking companies under liquidation<br \/>\n      originally were 75, now only there are 32 banking companies under liquidation. The<br \/>\n      appointment under court orders are not for a permanent department like Official<br \/>\n      Liquidator&#8217;s office and, therefore, the appointees cannot demand regularization and<br \/>\n      payment of equal salary as that of salaries paid to regular employees in the office of<br \/>\n      the Official Liquidator.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>             The hard reality is that the appointees are continued on the basis of fixed<br \/>\n      salary without any retiral benefits such as pension and gratuity for more than 25<br \/>\n      years and the functions they are discharging are similar to those discharged by the<br \/>\n      employees in the Office of the Official Liquidator without getting equal treatment. In<br \/>\n      the circumstances, before rendering a decision on merits by the Court, Mr Malhotra,<br \/>\n      learned Senior Counsel desired that the Government be given an opportunity to<br \/>\n      consider the matter in the light of the findings rendered by the High Courts and to<br \/>\n      come forward with an acceptable solution.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>            The matters are adjourned by four weeks.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>8.    In furtherance of the aforementioned order, the Government of India considered various<\/p>\n<p>proposals. Thereafter an additional affidavit was filed incorporating therein the following three<\/p>\n<p>options:\n<\/p>\n<p>      (i)    one option that was discussed was to repeat scheme for absorption of<br \/>\n              company-paid staff as was done through the 1978 Scheme of Department of<br \/>\n              Company Affairs. There are certain practical problems in following this<br \/>\n              course of action. As per the 1978 Scheme such absorption is possible to the<br \/>\n              extent of 50% only under the direct recruitment quota in the appropriate<br \/>\n              grade. As the position obtains in the Department of Company Affairs, there is<br \/>\n              lack of adequate number of vacancies in the aforesaid category (direct<br \/>\n              recruitment) for the purpose of facilitating absorption of all these company-<br \/>\n              paid staff in the Department of Company Affairs;\n<\/p>\n<p>       (ii)   the second alternative that was discussed was to continue the present<br \/>\n              arrangement without absorption of these company-paid staff. In such a<br \/>\n              situation, their salaries and service conditions could suitably be revised by the<br \/>\n              Hon&#8217;ble Company Judges with reference to funds available with the OLs in<br \/>\n              the various High Courts. According to information gathered, most of the OLs<br \/>\n              attached to various High Courts have annual surpluses. The balances in the<br \/>\n              funds maintained by many OLs are substantial; and\n<\/p>\n<p>      (iii)   the third option that was discussed was to grant them age relaxation and ask<br \/>\n              them to sit in the open competitive examination as a one-time measure. This<br \/>\n              would give them a general opening not restricted to jobs in these two<br \/>\n              departments.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>9.    Although, the Government of India indicated its preference for option Nos.2 and 3, this<\/p>\n<p>Court did not approve either of them and dismissed the appeals. The transferred writ petition was<\/p>\n<p>allowed in similar terms &#8211; <a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association<\/p>\n<p>and others<\/a> [1999 (8) SCC 560]. Paragraphs 21 to 24 of the judgment which have bearing on these<\/p>\n<p>cases read as under:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      21. In view of the peculiar facts of these cases and the positive findings of the High<br \/>\n      Courts with which we concur, we are unable to agree with the contention of the<br \/>\n      learned Senior Counsel for the appellants that the company-paid staff cannot be<br \/>\n      absorbed\/regularised as they were not employed by the Government in accordance<br \/>\n      with the rules; that they knew their appointments were only temporary and that their<br \/>\n      pay was not from the consolidated fund.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>      22. Undoubtedly, counsel on both sides cited numerous authorities of this Court on<br \/>\n      earlier occasions sustaining the orders of absorption and setting aside the orders of<br \/>\n       absorption. We do not consider it necessary to refer to those decisions inasmuch as<br \/>\n       the facts presented before us and the findings rendered by the High Courts speak for<br \/>\n       themselves. As a matter of fact, the Government had considered as one of the options<br \/>\n       to absorb the company-paid staff as was done through the 1978 Scheme of<br \/>\n       Department of Company Affairs.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>       23. In the circumstances, we are satisfied that the orders of the High Court challenged<br \/>\n       in these appeals do not call for any interference having regard to the facts presented<br \/>\n       before the High Courts. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeals with no orders as to<br \/>\n       costs.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>       24. In view of the above, the writ petition is allowed as the relief prayed for is similar<br \/>\n       to the one claimed by the contesting respondents\/company-paid staff in the connected<br \/>\n       civil appeals, without costs.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>10.   Notwithstanding its approval of the reasons and conclusions of Calcutta and Kerala High<\/p>\n<p>Courts, this Court gave an opportunity to the appellants to absorb the company paid staff working<\/p>\n<p>under the Court Liquidator in the Calcutta High Court and Official Liquidators in other High<\/p>\n<p>Courts by framing a scheme modeled on the 1978 Scheme within six months. The Court also stayed<\/p>\n<p>the operation of the orders appealed against and the order passed in Writ Petition (Civil) No.473 of<\/p>\n<p>1998 for a period of six months to enable the appellants to frame new scheme and implement the<\/p>\n<p>same. This is evident from paragraph 25 of the judgment which is reproduced below :<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       25.      However, we want to give an opportunity to the appellants in the interest of<br \/>\n       justice and to balance the equities between the parties to come forward to accept and<br \/>\n       act on the first option given in the additional affidavit, as extracted above, and absorb<br \/>\n       the company-paid staff working both under the Court Liquidator in the Calcutta<br \/>\n       High Court and the Official Liquidator in other High Courts by framing a scheme<br \/>\n       modelled on the 1978 Scheme within six months. In other words, we stay the<br \/>\n       operation of the judgment of the High Courts under appeal and the order in WP (C)<br \/>\n       No. 473 of 1988 for a period of six months to enable the appellants to frame the<br \/>\n       Scheme as suggested above and to give effect to it, failing which the judgments under<br \/>\n       appeal and the order in WP (C) No. 473 of 1988 will stand confirmed.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>11.    Within the time limit of six months fixed by the Court, the Government of India framed and<\/p>\n<p>notified new Scheme (hereinafter referred to as `the 1999 Scheme&#8217;) for absorption of the company<\/p>\n<p>paid staff against 50% vacancies in direct recruitment quota and also issued letter dated 1.10.1999<\/p>\n<p>containing guidelines for implementation of the same. That letter reads as under :-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;To<br \/>\n              The Regional Director<br \/>\n              Department of Company Affairs<br \/>\n              Mumbai\/Calcutta\/Chennai\/Kanpur.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       Sub: Absorption of company paid staff of the offices of Official Liquidators against<br \/>\n             Group C posts in the subordinate offices of the Department of Company<br \/>\n             Affairs on the lines of scheme devised in 1978 &#8211; Supreme Court&#8217;s judgment &#8211;<br \/>\n             regarding.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>              I am directed to refer to the Hon&#8217;ble Supreme Court&#8217;s Judgment dated<br \/>\n       27.08.99 (copy enclosed) on the subject mentioned above and to say that further<br \/>\n       action in the matter of absorption of the Company Paid Staff in regular Government<br \/>\n       service may please be taken on the following lines :-\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       (i)    Only such Company Paid Staff of the offices of the Official Liquidators shall<br \/>\n              be eligible for regular absorption:\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<pre>              (a)     Who were in position as on 27.08.99 and\n              (b)     Who possess the requisite educational qualification laid down in the\n<\/pre>\n<blockquote><p>                      recruitment rules for the post against which they are to be absorbed.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       The Regional Directors, in their capacity as Heads of Departments, may consider the<br \/>\n       relaxation of age limits in deserving cases in accordance with the general instructions<br \/>\n       existing in this regard.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       (ii)   The Company Paid Staff can be absorbed against only 50% of the existing and<br \/>\n              future vacancies in your region in Group `C&#8217; posts which, as per recruitment<br \/>\n              rules fall under direct recruitment quota. For instance, there is hundred per<br \/>\n              cent direct recruitment to the posts of Lower Division Clerks; accordingly,<br \/>\n              50% of the existing and future vacancies of Lower Division Clerks in your<br \/>\n              region can be utilized for absorbing Company Paid Staff. Further, the posts of<br \/>\n              Upper Division Clerks, as per recruitment rules, are to be filled up entirely by<br \/>\n              promotion; therefore, there can be no possibility of absorbing Company Paid<br \/>\n             Staff in the grade of Upper Division Clerks. In the case of Junior Technical<br \/>\n             Assistants 50% of the vacancies, according to the recruitment rules are to be<br \/>\n             filled up by promotion and the remaining 50% by direct recruitment. In this<br \/>\n             case, therefore 25% of the vacancies in the grade of Junior Technical<br \/>\n             Assistants can be utilized for absorbing Company Paid Staff. The proportion<br \/>\n             of vacancies in other Group `C&#8217; grades may similarly be worked out.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>     (iii)   The Company Paid Staff, who were in position on 27.08.99, will be screened by<br \/>\n             a Selection Committee consisting of the following:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>1)   Regional Director &#8211; Chairman\n<\/p>\n<p>2)   Representative of the Staff Selection Commission -Member\n<\/p>\n<p>3)   Official Liquidator of the office the company paid staff of which is to be screened &#8211;\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>     Member<\/p>\n<p>             The Staff Selection Commission is also being requested to nominate different<br \/>\n             representatives for the different regions. The place, date and time of holding<br \/>\n             meeting(s) of the Selection Committee may be finalized in consultation with<br \/>\n             them.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>     (iv)    As in the scheme of 1978, there will be no test or examination for the purpose<br \/>\n             of assessing the suitability of the Company Paid Staff.        The Selection<br \/>\n             Committee will make its recommendations on the basis of the qualification,<br \/>\n             experience etc. and personal interview of the candidates.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>     2.      Immediate steps may please be taken for selection of eligible members of<br \/>\n     Company Paid Staff for absorption against the existing vacancies in different grades<br \/>\n     and also the anticipated vacancies upto 31.12.2000 next. Applications may be invited<br \/>\n     indicating separately the existing vacancies and the vacancies which may occur by<br \/>\n     31.12.2000 and making it clear that the question of absorbing be persons<br \/>\n     recommended for the anticipated vacancies will arise only if the vacancies actually<br \/>\n     occur by 31.12.2000 and that mere recommendation of the Selection Committee will<br \/>\n     not confer any right on any Company Paid Staff for being appointed in Government<br \/>\n     service.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>     3.      A quarterly report beginning with the quarter ended 31.12.99 may be sent to<br \/>\n       the Headquarters indicating the extent to which the Company Paid Staff has been<br \/>\n       absorbed in regular Government service.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>12.    Thereafter, the concerned authorities undertook exercise for absorption of the company paid<\/p>\n<p>staff in the regular cadres of the Department of Company Affairs. As a result of this, 295 out of 399<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff who were in position on 27.8.1999 were adjudged suitable. Of them 130 have<\/p>\n<p>been absorbed and 141 are awaiting orders. 104 were not recommended for absorption. 23 of the<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff either refused absorption or resigned or retired from service.<\/p>\n<p>13.    In the meanwhile, the company paid staff working under the Official Liquidators of Calcutta<\/p>\n<p>and Delhi High Courts filed writ petitions and prayed for issue of mandamus to the Union of India<\/p>\n<p>and others to absorb them in the regular cadres and to treat them at par with Central Government<\/p>\n<p>employees working in the office of the Official Liquidators.\n<\/p>\n<p>Pleadings of the parties before the High Courts<\/p>\n<p>Calcutta High Court<\/p>\n<p>14.    Tapas Chakraborty and others filed Writ Petition (Civil) No.1387 of 2001 in Calcutta High<\/p>\n<p>Court for issue of a direction to Government of India and Official Liquidator to absorb them in<\/p>\n<p>regular cadres with effect from the date of completion of 240 days&#8217; service and also for grant of<\/p>\n<p>benefits like pension, provident fund, gratuity, etc. calculated on the basis of total length of service.<\/p>\n<p>In the writ affidavit it was pleaded by the petitioners that before appointing them, the Official<\/p>\n<p>Liquidator use to take leave from the Hon&#8217;ble Judge hearing the company matter in the High<\/p>\n<p>Court; that they were appointed as a company paid staff with a stipulation that their services may<\/p>\n<p>be terminated at any time without assigning any reason; that all of them have worked for more than<\/p>\n<p>240 days in each and every year of their service; that although they are entitled to regularization of<\/p>\n<p>service, the respondents have not taken any action in that direction; that their pay has not been<\/p>\n<p>fixed in the regular scale and they are required to retire at the age of 58 year without any financial<br \/>\nbenefit; that on or around 30th November, 1999, the respondents asked them to appear in an<\/p>\n<p>interview for absorption against the post of Lower Division Clerk or Junior Technical Assistant in<\/p>\n<p>terms of letter dated 1.10.1999; that they were not party to the proceedings before the Supreme<\/p>\n<p>Court; that the scheme, if any, prepared by the respondents is arbitrary and implementation<\/p>\n<p>thereof is afflicted by favoritism and that the respondents cannot take recourse to the order passed<\/p>\n<p>by the Supreme Court on 27.8.1999 and deprive them of their legal right to get absorption on<\/p>\n<p>completion of 240 days of continuous service. For better appreciation of the case projected by the<\/p>\n<p>writ petitioners, paragraphs 5, 6, 7, 18 and 26 and Clauses a(ii) and (iii) of the prayer clause are<\/p>\n<p>reproduced below:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;5.    The very common thing amongst the petitioners herein is that all of them are<br \/>\n       continuing their service in the office of the Official Liquidator for more than 240 days<br \/>\n       in each and every year of their service in the office of the Official Liquidator.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       6.     Although your petitioners are entitled to regularization of their service in<br \/>\n       terms of the Central Government employees, but the respondents and each of them<br \/>\n       neglected to give the petitioners all the service benefits as compared to a Central<br \/>\n       Government employee.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       7.     Although your petitioners have all requisite qualifications, experience, your<br \/>\n       petitioners were denied their right to work with utmost dignity and compelled to<br \/>\n       work in the office of respondent No.3 with a temporary status, without any service<br \/>\n       benefits as admissible to a Central Government employee in similarly situated<br \/>\n       conditions. In a society, where unemployment is curse, your petitioners have had no<br \/>\n       other alternative but to accept the terms of service, as dictated by the respondents<br \/>\n       from time to time for running their office through your petitioners.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       18.    Your petitioners state that they were not a party in the said proceedings,<br \/>\n       before the Hon&#8217;ble Supreme Court of India, hence the aforesaid order of the Hon&#8217;ble<br \/>\n       Supreme Court of India, is not applicable to your petitioners.          Your petitioners<br \/>\n       further state that the words `other High Courts&#8217; as referred by the Hon&#8217;ble Apex<br \/>\n       Court is not meant for all the High Courts all over India, but it referred to those two<br \/>\n       High Courts, the staffs of the Official Liquidator of the Kerala High Court and\/or of<br \/>\n       the Delhi High Court only.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       26.     Your petitioners state that purported scheme, if any, prepared by the<br \/>\n       respondent authorities is bad and arbitrary and without publishing the scheme for<br \/>\n       appointment and\/or regularization, the respondent authorities indulged in the<br \/>\n       favouritism at the time of choosing the candidates for absorption in regular post. In<br \/>\n       absence of any scheme or modes of regularization, the respondents are taking<br \/>\n       recourse to pick and choose policy and doing gross discrimination among the<br \/>\n       temporary workers in the office of the respondent no.3.\n<\/p>\n<p>[Emphasis added]<br \/>\n       Prayer Clause<\/p>\n<p>       (a)(ii) absorb the writ petitioners in regular service under the Central Government<br \/>\n               with an effective date i.e. soon after expiry of 240 days in their respective<br \/>\n               services in each continuous period of service;\n<\/p>\n<p>       (iii)   Furnish all the service benefits like pension, provident funds and gratuity and<br \/>\n               pay differences to the petitioners, calculating the service period of the<br \/>\n               petitioners with an effective date i.e. soon after expiry of 240 days in their<br \/>\n               respective services, in each continuous period of service.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>15.    During the pendency of the writ petition, an application was filed on behalf of the petitioners<\/p>\n<p>for deleting the names of some of them and for adding additional grounds to challenge the 1999<\/p>\n<p>Scheme. The respondents in the writ petition objected to the amendment to the writ petition, but<\/p>\n<p>the learned Single Judge overruled their objection and granted the prayer of the writ petitioners.<\/p>\n<p>Delhi High Court<\/p>\n<p>16.    Smt. Daya Dua and others, who belong to the category of company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>employed\/engaged by the Official Liquidator of Delhi High Court filed Writ Petition No.2728 of<\/p>\n<p>2001 for issue of a mandamus to the respondents (appellants herein) to regularize their services<\/p>\n<p>against Group `C&#8217; post from the date of initial appointment. An alternative prayer made by the<\/p>\n<p>writ petitioners was to direct the respondents to frame a scheme for absorption of all of them<\/p>\n<p>against Group `C&#8217; posts and give them other benefits like pay and allowances at par with regular<br \/>\nGroup `C&#8217; employees working in the office of the Official Liquidator. They pleaded that their work<\/p>\n<p>is of perennial nature and their duties and functions are identical to those of regular employees, but<\/p>\n<p>they are not being paid salary in the regular pay scale. They further pleaded that the direction<\/p>\n<p>given by the Supreme Court was not limited to the absorption of any particular category of<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff, but the 1999 Scheme is confined to Group `C&#8217; posts and the employees who are<\/p>\n<p>eligible for absorption against Group `D&#8217; posts are being discriminated. Another plea taken by the<\/p>\n<p>petitioners was that only 11 of company paid staff have been absorbed\/regularized against Group<\/p>\n<p>`C&#8217; posts and others have been left out in lurch. Clauses (a), (b) and (c) of the prayer clause of Writ<\/p>\n<p>Petition No.2728 of 2001 read as under:-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;a)    regularize the service of the petitioners in Group `C&#8217; Central Government<br \/>\n              posts from the date of their initial appointment;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       b)     without prejudice to prayer (a) above, in the alternate, frame Scheme as<br \/>\n              directed by the Hon&#8217;ble Supreme Court for absorption of all the petitioners in<br \/>\n              Group `C&#8217; Central government posts giving therein due regard to their<br \/>\n              seniority as Group `C&#8217; company paid staff and providing therein time bound<br \/>\n              regularization of all the petitioners which is the letter and spirit of the<br \/>\n              directions of the Hon&#8217;ble Supreme Court dated 27.8.1999 in W.P. (C)<br \/>\n              No.473\/1988;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       c)     pay the petitioners salary and allowances at par with the Central Government<br \/>\n              appointed regular group `C&#8217; staff in the office of the Official Liquidator<br \/>\n              attached to the Hon&#8217;ble High Court of Delhi from the date of their initial<br \/>\n              appointment.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>17.    The claim of the writ petitioners (respondents herein) was controverted by the Union of<\/p>\n<p>India and Official Liquidators of the two High Courts. The salient features of the counter affidavits<\/p>\n<p>filed on their behalf were:\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)    Regular appointments against the posts sanctioned by the Government of India, Department<\/p>\n<p>       of Company Affairs are made after following the procedure prescribed in the statutory rules.<\/p>\n<p>       As against this, the company paid staff is engaged\/employed by the Official Liquidators for<\/p>\n<p>       fixed period after obtaining sanction from the Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    The company paid staff are neither the government servants nor their conditions of<\/p>\n<p>        employment are regulated by statutory rules like the Central Civil Services (Conduct) Rules,<\/p>\n<p>        which are applicable to the holders of civil posts under the Central Government.<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   The company paid staff cannot be equated with regular employees because the source and<\/p>\n<p>        mode of recruitment of the two categories and their status are entirely different. Moreover,<\/p>\n<p>        while the regular employees are paid from the budget sanctioned by the Government of<\/p>\n<p>        India, the salaries and allowances of the company paid staff are drawn from the company<\/p>\n<p>        fund in terms of the order passed by the Court under Rule 308 read with Rule 309 of 1959<\/p>\n<p>        Rules.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(iv)    The 1999 Scheme was framed strictly in accordance with the judgment of the Supreme Court<\/p>\n<p>        in <a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association and others<\/a><\/p>\n<p>        (supra). The same was modeled on the 1978 Scheme and 50% of direct recruitment quota<\/p>\n<p>        posts have been filled by absorbing the company paid staff.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>18.     In the counter filed in Delhi High Court, it was also pleaded that members of the company<\/p>\n<p>paid staff cannot claim absorption in Group `D&#8217; post because the 1978 and 1999 Schemes do not<\/p>\n<p>provide for such absorption.\n<\/p>\n<p>Findings of the High Courts<\/p>\n<p>W.P. No.13871\/2001 (Calcutta High Court)<\/p>\n<p>19.     The learned Single Judge briefly referred to the pleadings of the parties and held that relief<\/p>\n<p>deserves to be granted to the petitioners because the findings and conclusions recorded by Calcutta<\/p>\n<p>and Kerala High Courts in the earlier round of litigation were approved by the Supreme Court. in<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association and others<\/a> (supra), the<br \/>\nlearned Single Judge then prepared a comparative table of the two schemes and held that the 1999<\/p>\n<p>Scheme is illusory because all the company paid staff cannot be absorbed against 50% vacancies of<\/p>\n<p>the direct recruitment quota. On the issue of absorption of the company paid staff against Group<\/p>\n<p>`D&#8217; posts, the learned Single Judge observed that there is no rational reason to confine the benefit of<\/p>\n<p>the 1999 Scheme qua Group `C&#8217; posts. He also delved into the legality of the absorption of<\/p>\n<p>respondent Nos.5 to 26 and held that the recommendations made by the Selection Committee de<\/p>\n<p>hors the seniority of the company paid staff has the effect of vitiating the selection. He, however,<\/p>\n<p>declined to nullify the absorption of the private respondents on the ground of delay and laches and<\/p>\n<p>proceeded to direct the respondents to prepare fresh merit list strictly in the order of seniority. The<\/p>\n<p>learned Single Judge also directed respondents to consider the desirability of increasing the quota of<\/p>\n<p>50% by creating supernumerary posts. The operative part of the order passed by the learned<\/p>\n<p>Single Judge reads thus:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;The State respondents shall consider their scheme 1999 after ascertaining whether<br \/>\n       all company paid staff in the office of the Official Liquidator, Calcutta High Court<br \/>\n       can be absorbed as Group-C staff within three years reckoned from the date of<br \/>\n       coming into force of the said Scheme of 1999.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>              The aforesaid exercise shall be completed within a period of three months from<br \/>\n       date hereof. If all the company paid staff cannot be absorbed as Group-C staff within<br \/>\n       the said period stipulated above, State respondents shall consider the increase in the<br \/>\n       quota of 50% or by creating supernumerary posts so that, subject to the reservation<br \/>\n       policy of the State, all the eligible company paid staff could be absorbed as Central<br \/>\n       Government staff in Group-C.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>              The State respondents shall consider de novo the impugned panel with respect<br \/>\n       to eligible company paid staff in Group-C strictly in the order of seniority and upon<br \/>\n       absorption of such company paid staff on the basis of such list which shall be<br \/>\n       prepared within a period of three months from date hereof, the seniority in the cadre<br \/>\n       of Group-C shall be maintained ever with respect to the company paid staff<br \/>\n       respondents 5 to 26 who have already been absorbed.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>              As regards Group-D staff, State respondents shall take steps for regularizing<br \/>\n       such of the petitioners as may be eligible and qualified according to the rules to be<br \/>\n       absorbed as Group D staff within a period of three months from date hereof. Such<br \/>\n       regularization shall be made strictly in the order of seniority (length of service in the<br \/>\n       organization). Upon absorption\/regularization such company paid staff shall be<br \/>\n       placed immediately below the last regularly appointed employees in that category,<br \/>\n       class and service, as the case may be.\n<\/p>\n<p>              Until the above directions as carried out there shall be a direction upon the<br \/>\n       respondents not to fill up any post by direct recruitment.\n<\/p>\n<p>              It is clarified that such of the petitioners who did not participate in the<br \/>\n       interview conducted by the selection committee for the purpose of absorption, their<br \/>\n       cases shall not be considered.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>20.    The Division Bench dismissed the appeal preferred by the appellants herein by recording the<\/p>\n<p>following observations:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;Since the matter regarding the right of the company paid staff of the office of the<br \/>\n       official liquidators has been decided and confirmed upto the Hon&#8217;ble Supreme Court,<br \/>\n       all that needs to be worked out is that manner in which such employees are to be<br \/>\n       absorbed in the offices of the different Official Liquidators of the different High<br \/>\n       Courts.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       We are in agreement with the sentiments expressed by the learned Single Judge that<br \/>\n       no a section but all the company paid staff working in the office of the Official<br \/>\n       Liquidator upto the cut off date as provided in the 1999 Scheme are to be absorbed in<br \/>\n       the office of the Official Liquidator, High Court at Calcutta, even if it means by<br \/>\n       creation of supernumerary post as observed by the learned Single Judge. Needless to<br \/>\n       say, such posts will be personal to those appointed and will cease to be in existence<br \/>\n       upon the incumbent attaining the age of superannuation.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>W.P. No.2728\/2001 (Delhi High Court)<\/p>\n<p>21.    The learned Single Judge referred to the judgment in <a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and Others vs. Court<\/p>\n<p>Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association and Others<\/a> (supra) and negatived the plea of the appellants<\/p>\n<p>herein that the company paid staff can be absorbed in the regular cadre only against Group `C&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>posts to the extent of 50% of direct recruitment quota and held that the writ petitioners are entitled<\/p>\n<p>to be absorbed against Group `C and `D&#8217; posts and their entire service upto the date of absorption<\/p>\n<p>has to be counted for the purpose of fixation of seniority and grant of other benefits including<\/p>\n<p>promotion. The relevant portions of the order of the learned Single Judge are reproduced below:<br \/>\n      &#8220;I do not find any force in the argument of the respondent that 1978 scheme was only<br \/>\n      with regard to Group `C&#8217; employees. The fact of the matter is that Group `D&#8217;<br \/>\n      employees were appointed only in the year 1985. Therefore, there was no question of<br \/>\n      the respondent making a scheme in 1978 for Group `D&#8217; employees. I do not find any<br \/>\n      force in the arguments of counsel for the respondents that the direction of the<br \/>\n      Supreme Court was limited with regard to the absorption of Group `C&#8217; employees.<br \/>\n      The Supreme Court has used the words `company paid employees&#8217;, the words `Group<br \/>\n      `C&#8217; and Group `D&#8217; have not been used in the judgment of Supreme Court. As<br \/>\n      discussed earlier Group `D&#8217; employees were also petitioners before Supreme Court.<br \/>\n      I do not find any substance in the arguments of counsel for the respondents that the<br \/>\n      Supreme Court has not given a direction for giving seniority to the petitioners after<br \/>\n      their absorption. If I agree with the interpretation of the respondent that would mean<br \/>\n      a person who has worked for twenty or more years in the office of Official Liquidator<br \/>\n      and now he gets absorption his past services of twenty years or more will not be<br \/>\n      counted. The very proposition of the respondent is preposterous. The Supreme Court<br \/>\n      in its judgment has not used the words `new appointment&#8217; but has used the word<br \/>\n      `absorption&#8217;. The Supreme Court had categorically given a mandate to absorb all the<br \/>\n      company paid employees and not to give fresh appointment. Therefore, the incident<br \/>\n      of seniority by implication is implicit in the judgment of the Supreme Court and<br \/>\n      respondents have to absorb the petitioners giving them fitment in the their<br \/>\n      appropriate scales as well as other promotions, if any, which has to be given as per<br \/>\n      law.\n<\/p>\n<p>      I issue a writ of mandamus to the respondents to absorb the petitioners in their<br \/>\n      appropriate scales with all benefits such as fitment and promotions, if any, even if<br \/>\n      posts have to be created for the petitioners. Illegality and discrimination cannot be<br \/>\n      allowed to perpetuate indefinitely. They will also be entitled to pension, provident<br \/>\n      fund, gratuity and all benefits which are to be computed on the basis of their length of<br \/>\n      service. The petitioners shall be entitled to arrears of three years which shall be paid<br \/>\n      by the respondents to the petitioners within a period of six months.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>[Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<p>22.   Letters Patent Appeals preferred by the appellants were dismissed by the different Division<\/p>\n<p>Benches of the High Court. While deciding LPA No.808 &amp; 809\/2003, the Division Bench took<\/p>\n<p>cognizance of the fact that during the pendency of contempt case filed in Calcutta High Court with<br \/>\nthe complaint that order dated 26.3.2001 passed by the Single Judge of that High Court in W.P.<\/p>\n<p>No.211\/2001 has not been complied with, the Central Government created 51 posts of Group `B&#8217;,<\/p>\n<p>`C&#8217; and `D&#8217; and absorbed the staff working in the office of the Court Liquidator with effect from<\/p>\n<p>the date of expiry of 360 days of their joining service and held that the direction given by the<\/p>\n<p>learned Single Judge for absorption of all Group `C&#8217; and `D&#8217; company paid staff does not call for<\/p>\n<p>interference.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nParticulars of the additional documents filed\/produced during the course of hearing<\/p>\n<p>23.     Learned senior counsel appearing for Tapas Chakraborty and others filed I.A. No.10\/2008 in<\/p>\n<p>S.L.P (C) No.12798\/2008 for placing on record the following documents:<\/p>\n<p>(i)     Letter No.OL-CAL\/24\/Staff\/G-Part V\/2600\/G dated 13th June, 2005 sent by the Official<\/p>\n<p>        Liquidator of Calcutta High Court to the Secretary, Government of India, Ministry of<\/p>\n<p>        Company Affairs highlighting the factum of increase in the work load and necessity of<\/p>\n<p>        providing additional manpower.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Letter No.12011\/3\/2003-Admn.II dated 2nd September, 2005 issued by the Government of<\/p>\n<p>        India in the matter of &#8220;Optimization of Direct Recruitment to Civilian Posts&#8221; of Group `C&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>        and `D&#8217; for the years 2001-2002, 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 and abolition of some such posts.<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   Copy of order dated 28.2.2008 passed by the Division Bench of Kerala High Court in Writ<\/p>\n<p>        Petition (C) No.22810\/2004 and 16471\/2007.\n<\/p>\n<p>(iv)    Copy of letter No.RD\/CLA\/1\/717\/1135 dated 3rd June, 2008, sent by Assistant Director<\/p>\n<p>        (Inspection), Government of India, Ministry of Corporate Affairs to the Official Liquidators<\/p>\n<p>        of Calcutta, Cuttack, Guwahati, Patna and Ranchi asking them to send comprehensive<\/p>\n<p>        proposal for requirement of staff along with justification for the same.<\/p>\n<p>(v)     Letter No.OL\/24\/Staff\/Part VII\/1875\/G dated 30th June, 2008 sent by the Official Liquidator<\/p>\n<p>        of Calcutta High Court to the Regional Director, Eastern Region, Kolkata reiterating the<\/p>\n<p>        need for additional staff to meet with the increased workload.\n<\/p>\n<p>24.     Learned senior counsel also produced two charts containing the details of Group `C&#8217; and<\/p>\n<p>Group `D&#8217; posts lying vacant in four regions as on 1.1.2008 and the number of Group `C&#8217; posts<\/p>\n<p>abolished during 2001-2002, 2003-2004. He produced two more charts containing the details of the<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff as on 31.3.2008 in all the regions and particulars of 119 company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>employed\/engaged by the Official Liquidator of Calcutta High Court.<\/p>\n<p>25.     Ms. Jyoti Mendiratta, learned counsel appearing for the respondents in the appeals arising<\/p>\n<p>out of the orders passed by Delhi High Court filed I.A. (unnumbered) in S.L.P. (C) No.12798\/2005<\/p>\n<p>for placing on record the following documents:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)     Copy of the details of posts with office of Official Liquidator of High Court of Bombay filed<\/p>\n<p>        on 18.7.2008 along with tables consisting of names of the company paid staff and the date of<\/p>\n<p>        absorption and table containing names of the 26 company paid staff from Group `C&#8217; and<\/p>\n<p>        Group `D&#8217;.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Letter No.12011\/3\/2003-Admn.II dated 2nd September, 2005 sent by Under Secretary to the<\/p>\n<p>        Government of India, Ministry of Company Affairs to the Regional Directors of Ministry of<\/p>\n<p>        Company Affairs of Noida, Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai in the matter of optimization of<\/p>\n<p>        direct recruitment to civilian posts of Group `C&#8217; and `D&#8217; posts in the Ministry for the years<\/p>\n<p>        2001-2002, 2002-2003 and 2003-2004 and abolition\/filling up of some such posts.<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   Letter No.OL\/24\/Staff\/Part VII\/1875\/G dated 30th June, 2008 sent by the Official Liquidator<\/p>\n<p>        of Calcutta High Court to the Regional Director, Eastern Region, Kolkata reiterating the<\/p>\n<p>        need for increase of manpower.\n<\/p>\n<p>(iv)    Copy of order dated 19.9.2005 passed by the Division Bench of Delhi High Court in LPA<\/p>\n<p>        Nos.808\/2003 and 809\/2003.\n<\/p>\n<p>(v)     Copy of order dated 5.5.2003 passed by learned Single Judge of Delhi High Court in CW<\/p>\n<p>        No.2728\/2001 and CM No.4774\/2001.\n<\/p>\n<p>(vi)    Copy of judgment dated 26.3.2001 passed by the learned Single Judge of Calcutta High<br \/>\n        Court in W.P. No.211\/2001.\n<\/p>\n<p>(vii)   Letter No.A-12013\/1\/99-Ad.II dated 27.12.1999 sent by Shri D.P. Saini, Under Secretary to<\/p>\n<p>        the Govt. of India to all the Regional Directors of Department of Company Affairs of<\/p>\n<p>        Kanpur, Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai regarding clarifications\/suggestions to facilitate the<\/p>\n<p>        implementation of this Court&#8217;s judgment dated 27.8.1999 for absorption of company paid<\/p>\n<p>        staff of the offices of Official Liquidators against Group `C&#8217; posts.<\/p>\n<p>26.     Shri P.P. Malhotra, Additional Solicitor General filed reply to I.A. No.10\/2008 in S.L.P. (C)<\/p>\n<p>No.12798\/2005 along with following documents:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)     Copy of O.M. No.2\/8\/2001-PIC dated 16.5.2001 containing policy decision taken by the<\/p>\n<p>        Government of India on the issue of Optimization of Direct Recruitment to Civilian Posts<\/p>\n<p>        and lapsing of two-third of vacancies every year.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Copy of O.M. No.2\/8\/2001-PIC dated 30th August, 2006, whereby the Government decided to<\/p>\n<p>        continue the scheme of Optimization of Direct Recruitment to Civilian Posts upto 31.3.2009.<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   Copy of O.M. No.A-12011\/3\/2002-Ad.II dated 14.3.2005 for convening meeting of the<\/p>\n<p>        Screening Committee to consider the issue of reducing direct recruitment to civilian posts in<\/p>\n<p>        the Ministry of Company Affairs along with background note.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>27.     During the course of arguments, Shri Malhotra placed before the Court xerox copy of Writ<\/p>\n<p>Petition No.1387\/2001 filed in Calcutta High Court along with annexed papers and the following<\/p>\n<p>documents:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>(i)     Letter No. dated 22nd August, 2008 sent by Official Liquidator, High Court of Bombay to the<\/p>\n<p>        Regional Director, Western Region, Mumbai on the issue of additional requirement of posts,<\/p>\n<p>        and<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Copy of additional affidavit of Shri D.P. Saini, Under Secretary to the Government of India,<br \/>\n       Ministry of Finance, Department of Company Affairs filed in C.A. No.5677\/1994.<\/p>\n<p>Arguments<\/p>\n<p>28.    Shri P.P. Malhotra, learned Addl. Solicitor General placed reliance on paragraph 25 of the<\/p>\n<p>judgment in <a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association and others<\/a><\/p>\n<p>(supra) and submitted that even though this Court approved the reasoning and conclusions of<\/p>\n<p>Calcutta and Kerala High Courts, orders passed by those Courts were rendered ineffective because<\/p>\n<p>operation and implementation thereof was stayed for six months and in terms of opportunity given<\/p>\n<p>to it, the Government of India not only framed the 1999 Scheme for absorption of the company paid<\/p>\n<p>staff, but also implemented the same. Shri Malhotra argued that High Court committed serious<\/p>\n<p>error by issuing direction for absorption of all the company paid staff in the regular cadres ignoring<\/p>\n<p>the fact that the 1999 Scheme was confined to Group C posts and that too upto 50% vacancies in the<\/p>\n<p>direct recruitment quota. Learned counsel emphasized that the 1999 Scheme was modeled on the<\/p>\n<p>1978 Scheme and argued that the same cannot be faulted on the ground that due to abolition of<\/p>\n<p>posts in the Department of Company Affairs, large number of company paid staff may not get<\/p>\n<p>absorbed in the regular cadres till their retirement. Shri Malhotra pointed out that as early as in<\/p>\n<p>2001, the Government of India had taken a policy decision to substantially reduce direct<\/p>\n<p>recruitment to all the cadres and recommendations made by the Screening Committee for abolition<\/p>\n<p>of posts in various cadres were accepted by the Government. Learned counsel emphasized that the<\/p>\n<p>policy decision taken by the Government of India on the issue of Optimization of Direct<\/p>\n<p>Recruitment to Civilian Posts was not challenged by the writ petitioners and argued that in the<\/p>\n<p>absence of such challenge, the High Courts were not justified in mandating creation of<\/p>\n<p>supernumerary posts for absorption of the company paid staff and for grant of monetary benefits to<\/p>\n<p>them by applying the principle of equal pay for equal work with retrospective effect. In the end, he<\/p>\n<p>argued that the directions given by High Courts for wholesale absorption of the company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>are legally unsustainable because that would result in abrogation of the rules framed under proviso<\/p>\n<p>to Article 309 of the Constitution of India in terms of which the appointing authority is obliged to<br \/>\nmake direct recruitment to various cadres.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>29.    Shri Bhaskar P. Gupta, learned counsel appearing for the respondents in the appeal arising<\/p>\n<p>out of S.L.P. No.12798 of 2005 argued that the judgment of this Court in <a href=\"\/doc\/965090\/\">Government of India and<\/p>\n<p>others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees Association &amp; Ors.<\/a> (supra) is conclusive on the issue of<\/p>\n<p>absorption to the company paid staff and the 1999 Scheme is liable to be quashed because the same<\/p>\n<p>is not only contrary to the judgment of this Court but is wholly unrealistic and impractical<\/p>\n<p>inasmuch as it does not provide for absorption of the company paid staff who have completed more<\/p>\n<p>than 10 to 20 years of service. Learned counsel pointed out that after the promulgation of 1978<\/p>\n<p>Scheme, there has been multifold increase in the petitions instituted for liquidation of the companies<\/p>\n<p>and submitted that in order to meet the imperatives of the work relating to the companies in<\/p>\n<p>liquidation, the Official Liquidator was compelled to engage\/employ additional staff and continue<\/p>\n<p>them after obtaining sanction from the Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules. He then submitted<\/p>\n<p>that the respondents joined service as company paid staff with the fond hope that their services will<\/p>\n<p>be regularized and they may get opportunity of career advancement and retrial benefits but on<\/p>\n<p>account of unsympathetic attitude of the Government of India, their legal and constitutional rights<\/p>\n<p>have been violated. Learned counsel referred to letters dated 13.6.2005, 3.6.2008 (Annexures A-D)<\/p>\n<p>and 30.6.2008 written by the Official Liquidator and Assistant Director (Inspection), Kolkata as<\/p>\n<p>also letter dated 2.9.2005 written by the Under Secretary to the Government of India, Ministry of<\/p>\n<p>Company Affairs to the Regional Directors, NOIDA\/Kolkata\/Mumbai\/Chennai on the subject of<\/p>\n<p>Optimization of Direct Recruitment to Civilian Posts in Group C and D and submitted that even<\/p>\n<p>though in the assessment of officers at the ground level, there is a dire need for increasing the<\/p>\n<p>strength of different cadres, the Government of India has in the garb of implementing the policy<\/p>\n<p>decision taken in 2001, abolished large number of posts in the direct recruitment quota, which<\/p>\n<p>became available in 2001-02 to 2003-04 and, in this manner, the 1999 Scheme has been made<\/p>\n<p>redundant. Shri Gupta invited our attention to the charts and details produced by him to show that<\/p>\n<p>even after being recommended by the Selection Committee as many as 141 of the company paid<br \/>\nstaff, who were in position on 27.8.1999, have not been absorbed till this day. He submitted that the<\/p>\n<p>Government of India cannot sit tight over the matter and frustrate the right of the company paid<\/p>\n<p>staff to be absorbed in the regular cadres despite the fact that they were appointed after<\/p>\n<p>advertisement and as on date they have continuously worked for 10 to 20 years and fulfill the<\/p>\n<p>conditions of eligibility prescribed for direct recruitment. Shri Gupta invoked the doctrine of<\/p>\n<p>legitimate expectation and argued that the High Courts did not commit any illegality by recognizing<\/p>\n<p>the validity of the claim made by the company paid staff and issuing direction for their absorption<\/p>\n<p>in regular cadres with consequential monetary benefits by creation of supernumerary posts.<\/p>\n<p>Learned senior counsel lamented that the manner in which the Government of India has acted in<\/p>\n<p>last nine years leave no room for doubt that majority of company paid staff, who were in position<\/p>\n<p>on 27.8.1999 may never get absorbed and may have to retire without any monetary benefits like<\/p>\n<p>pension, gratuity, etc. Lastly, Shri Gupta submitted that the ratio of the Constitution Bench<\/p>\n<p>judgment in Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma Devi [2006 (4) SCC 1] should not be applied to<\/p>\n<p>these cases because the respondents had been employed\/engaged after advertisement and due<\/p>\n<p>selection. He also relied on <a href=\"\/doc\/1230349\/\">Randhir Singh vs. Union of India<\/a> [1982 (1) SCC 618], <a href=\"\/doc\/145498\/\">Dhirendra<\/p>\n<p>Chamoli vs. State of U.P.<\/a> [1986 (1) SCC 637], <a href=\"\/doc\/810158\/\">Surinder Singh vs. Engineer-in-Chief, C.P.W.D.<\/a> [1986<\/p>\n<p>(1) SCC 639 and <a href=\"\/doc\/1569551\/\">UP State Electricity Board vs. Pooran Chandra Pandey<\/a> [2007 (11) SCC 92] and<\/p>\n<p>argued that the respondents cannot be deprived of their constitutional right to equality in the<\/p>\n<p>matter of regularization of service and payment of salary in the regular pay scales on the pretext of<\/p>\n<p>non-availability of posts.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>30.    Ms. Jyoti Mendiratta referred to the pleadings of Writ Petition No.2728\/2001 filed in Delhi<\/p>\n<p>High Court to show that as per the appellants&#8217; own case, the 1999 Scheme was a replica of the 1978<\/p>\n<p>Scheme and argued that the same is liable to be quashed because while framing the new scheme, the<\/p>\n<p>Central Government altogether ignored the factum of employment of a number of persons by the<\/p>\n<p>Official Liquidator from 1985 who are eligible for absorption against Group D posts. She further<\/p>\n<p>argued that the lackadaisical manner in which the Central Government implemented the 1999<br \/>\nScheme shattered the hopes of majority of the company paid staff and, therefore, the High Court<\/p>\n<p>did not commit any error by removing the discrimination practiced by the Central Government<\/p>\n<p>against the company paid staff who have not been absorbed even after 20 years service. She pointed<\/p>\n<p>out that the Official Liquidator of Delhi High Court employed\/engaged company paid staff after<\/p>\n<p>due advertisement and selection and argued that non-availability of sanctioned posts cannot justify<\/p>\n<p>wholesale denial of the right to equality guaranteed to the respondents under Articles 14 and 16 of<\/p>\n<p>the Constitution.   Learned counsel heavily relied on the observations made by the Division Bench<\/p>\n<p>of Kerala High Court in O.P. No.9732 of 1990 decided on 27.8.1993 and vehemently argued that in<\/p>\n<p>view unequivocal approval of that order in <a href=\"\/doc\/965090\/\">Government of India and others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s<\/p>\n<p>Employees Association &amp; Ors.<\/a> (supra), the learned Single Judge of the Delhi High Court had no<\/p>\n<p>choice but to issue mandamus for regularization of the services of the respondents herein with<\/p>\n<p>consequential benefits. Learned counsel invited the Court&#8217;s attention to order dated 26.3.2001<\/p>\n<p>passed by the Calcutta High Court in Writ Petition No.211 of 2001 and submitted that after having<\/p>\n<p>sanctioned 51 posts for absorption of the staff working under the Court Liquidator of Calcutta<\/p>\n<p>High Court, it is not open to the Central Government to challenge the direction given by Calcutta<\/p>\n<p>and Delhi High Courts for regularization of company paid staff employed\/engaged by the Official<\/p>\n<p>Liquidators on the spacious ground of abolition of posts meant to be filled by direct recruitment.<\/p>\n<p>31.    Shri Colin Gonsalves, and Shri Ramesh Kumar, learned counsel for the intervenors, adopted<\/p>\n<p>the theme of the arguments of Shri Bhaskar P. Gupta and Ms. Jyoti Mendiratta and submitted that<\/p>\n<p>in view of abolition of post meant to be filled by direct recruitment, the 1999 Scheme should be<\/p>\n<p>declared as unworkable and redundant and a direction be issued to the appellants to regularize the<\/p>\n<p>services of company paid staff having regard to their length of services.<\/p>\n<p>Consideration by the Court<\/p>\n<p>32.    At the outset, we consider it necessary to remove the misgivings entertained by the<\/p>\n<p>respondents and the High Courts that while dismissing the appeals filed by the appellants in the<br \/>\nearlier round of litigation, this Court had endorsed the directions given by Calcutta and Kerala<\/p>\n<p>High Courts for absorption of company paid staff without any rider.           A careful reading of<\/p>\n<p>paragraphs 20 to 25 of the judgment in <a href=\"\/doc\/156688302\/\">Govt. of India and Others vs. Court Liquidator&#8217;s Employees<\/p>\n<p>Association and Others<\/a> (supra) makes it crystal clear that while approving the reasons and<\/p>\n<p>conclusions recorded by the High Courts and dismissing the appeals, this Court not only gave an<\/p>\n<p>opportunity to the appellants to frame a new scheme modeled on the 1978 Scheme within six months<\/p>\n<p>and implement the same but also stayed the operation of the orders impugned in the appeals and<\/p>\n<p>the one passed in Writ Petition (C) No.473 of 1988. The use of the words &#8220;failing which the<\/p>\n<p>judgments under appeal and the order in WP (C) No.473 of 1988 will stand confirmed&#8221; in<\/p>\n<p>paragraph 25 leaves no manner of doubt that the orders passed by the High Court and the one<\/p>\n<p>passed by this Court in WP (C) No.473 of 1988 were to become effective only if the Government of<\/p>\n<p>India had not framed new scheme modeled on the 1978 Scheme. However, the fact of the matter is<\/p>\n<p>that Government of India not only framed and notified the 1999 Scheme within six months from the<\/p>\n<p>date of judgment, but also issued guidelines for implementation of the same. Therefore, the orders<\/p>\n<p>passed by Calcutta and Kerala High Courts and the direction given by this Court in Writ Petition<\/p>\n<p>(C) No.473 of 1988 will be deemed to have become ineffective and inoperative and the respondents<\/p>\n<p>cannot derive any benefit from those orders and direction.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>33.    Now on merits. Rules 308 and 309 of 1959 Rules, which were framed by this Court under<\/p>\n<p>Section 643 of the Companies Act, 1956 to facilitate employment of special or additional staff in any<\/p>\n<p>liquidation and payment of salaries and allowances to such staff read as under:-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       308.    Employment of additional or special staff &#8211; Where the Official Liquidator is<br \/>\n       of opinion that the employment of any special or additional staff is necessary in any<br \/>\n       liquidation, he shall apply to the Court for sanction, and the Court may sanction such<br \/>\n       staff as it thinks fit on such salaries and allowances as to the Court may seem<br \/>\n       appropriate.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       309.   Apportionment of expenses of common staff &#8211; Where any staff is employed to<br \/>\n       attend to the work of more than one liquidation, or any establishment or other<br \/>\n       charges are incurred for more than one liquidation, the expenses incurred on such<br \/>\n       staff and the common establishment and other charges, shall be apportioned by the<br \/>\n       Official Liquidator between the several liquidations concerned in such proportions as<br \/>\n       he may think fit, subject to the directions of the Judge, if any.\n<\/p>\n<p>       The above reproduced rules were framed with a view to ensure that the proceedings of<\/p>\n<p>liquidation are not hampered on account of shortage of staff.              It was felt that if additional<\/p>\n<p>manpower is required for effectively dealing with liquidation cases, the Official Liquidator may<\/p>\n<p>apply to the Court and employ such staff after receipt of the sanction. The additional staff is paid<\/p>\n<p>from the company fund. If the staff employed under Rule 308 is required to attend the work of<\/p>\n<p>more than one liquidation or any establishment or other charges are incurred for more than one<\/p>\n<p>liquidation, then the Official Liquidator is required to apportion the expenses subject to the<\/p>\n<p>direction, if any, of the Judge concerned.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>34.    It is not in dispute that the respondents were engaged\/employed by the Official Liquidators<\/p>\n<p>pursuant to the sanction accorded by the Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules and from the<\/p>\n<p>inception of their employment, they are being paid from the fund created by disposal of the assets of<\/p>\n<p>the companies in liquidation.      They were neither selected in accordance with the procedure<\/p>\n<p>prescribed under the rules framed under proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution nor they were<\/p>\n<p>appointed against the posts sanctioned by the Government of India. It is thus clear that the<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff constitute a separate and distinct class. While deciding the appeals in the<\/p>\n<p>earlier round of litigation, this Court must have been alive to the aforementioned facts and this<\/p>\n<p>appears to be the reason why the directions given by Calcutta and Kerala High Courts for<\/p>\n<p>absorption of all company paid staff were stayed for six months and an opportunity was given to the<\/p>\n<p>Central Government to frame a new scheme within that period.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>35.    Although neither of the parties to the appeals nor the intervenors have placed before the<\/p>\n<p>Court advertisements issued by the Official Liquidators of Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi and Madhya<br \/>\nPradesh or any other High Court for employment of special or additional staff in accordance with<\/p>\n<p>the sanction accorded by the concerned Court and we have not been apprised of the specific terms<\/p>\n<p>and conditions, subject to which the respondents were employed\/engaged by the Official<\/p>\n<p>Liquidators but from the tenor of the pleadings and other records, it can be safely inferred that the<\/p>\n<p>respondents were appointed on purely temporary basis for fixed period with a stipulation that they<\/p>\n<p>shall not be entitled to seek regularization or absorption in the regular cadre against the sanctioned<\/p>\n<p>post. Those who applied in response to the advertisements issued by the Official Liquidators must<\/p>\n<p>have been aware of the fact that they were being engaged\/employed pursuant to the sanction<\/p>\n<p>accorded by the Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules in connection with liquidation proceedings;<\/p>\n<p>that their appointments will not be against the posts sanctioned by the Government; that they will<\/p>\n<p>have no right to claim absorption in the regular cadre and that they will be paid salaries and<\/p>\n<p>allowances   which    may    be   fixed   by   the   Court.     They    must   have    accepted   the<\/p>\n<p>appointment\/engagement knowing fully well that they will have fixed tenure without any right to<\/p>\n<p>continue in service or to seek absorption against the sanctioned posts. It was neither the pleaded<\/p>\n<p>case of the respondents before the High Courts nor Shri Bhaskar P. Gupta and other learned<\/p>\n<p>counsel appearing on their behalf argued before this Court that their clients were lured into<\/p>\n<p>accepting employment as company paid staff by the Official Liquidators by promising absorption in<\/p>\n<p>future against the sanctioned posts or that they were coerced by some authority to accept such<\/p>\n<p>employment. Therefore, they cannot be heard to complain of the violation of Articles 14 and 16 of<\/p>\n<p>the Constitution on the ground that even after having worked for more than one decade, they have<\/p>\n<p>not been absorbed in the regular cadres under the Government. In our opinion, after having<\/p>\n<p>applied for and accepted employment\/engagement as company paid staff with fixed tenure<\/p>\n<p>superimposed by a stipulation that they will have no right to continue in service or to be absorbed in<\/p>\n<p>the regular cadres, the respondents are estopped from seeking a direction for their absorption<\/p>\n<p>against the posts sanctioned by the Government of India and the High Courts committed a serious<\/p>\n<p>error in granting their prayer.\n<\/p>\n<p>36.   The argument of Shri Bhaskar P. Gupta and other learned counsel appearing for the<\/p>\n<p>respondents and intervenors that the 1999 Scheme is arbitrary and unreasonable and the same<\/p>\n<p>should be treated as having become redundant on account of abolition of posts meant for direct<\/p>\n<p>recruitment, which found favour with the High Courts, proceeds on the hypothesis that in the<\/p>\n<p>earlier round of litigation this Court, while endorsing the reasons and conclusions recorded by<\/p>\n<p>Calcutta and Kerala High Courts issued direction for absorption of all members of the company<\/p>\n<p>paid staff and the Government of India was bound to frame a scheme for that purpose. However,<\/p>\n<p>the very premise on which this argument is based is incorrect. Admittedly, appointment to the<\/p>\n<p>service comprising sanctioned posts is regulated by the rules framed under proviso to Article 309 of<\/p>\n<p>the Constitution of India. The mode of recruitment and methodology of selection are prescribed<\/p>\n<p>under the rules. The absorption of the company paid staff employed under Rule 308 of the 1959<\/p>\n<p>Rules is not one of the prescribed modes of recruitment.          Therefore, it is extremely doubtful<\/p>\n<p>whether the Government of India could, without amending the statutory rules, frame the 1978<\/p>\n<p>Scheme for absorption of the company paid staff in the regular cadres. However, as this Court has<\/p>\n<p>not only indirectly approved the 1978 Scheme, but also directed the Government of India to frame<\/p>\n<p>new scheme, we do not consider it necessary to dilate further on the subject.<\/p>\n<p>37.    As mentioned above, while approving the reasons and conclusions recorded by the two High<\/p>\n<p>Courts and dismissing the appeals, this Court not only permitted the Government of India to frame<\/p>\n<p>a scheme modeled on the 1978 Scheme but also stayed implementation of the orders impugned in<\/p>\n<p>the appeal and the one passed by itself in the transferred writ petition. If the Court intended that all<\/p>\n<p>members of the company paid staff working on the date of judgment i.e. 27.8.1999 should be<\/p>\n<p>absorbed in the regular cadres against Group `C&#8217; and `D&#8217; posts, then a simple direction to that<\/p>\n<p>effect would have been sufficient and there was no occasion to stay the implementation of the orders<\/p>\n<p>of the High Courts for six months with liberty to the Government of India to frame a new scheme<\/p>\n<p>within the same period. The absence of such a direction shows that the Court was very much<\/p>\n<p>conscious of the fact that recruitment to the regular cadres is governed by the rules framed under<br \/>\nArticle 309 of the Constitution and it would be highly detrimental to public interest to issue<\/p>\n<p>direction for wholesale absorption\/regularization of the company paid staff and thereby<\/p>\n<p>abrogate\/stultify opportunity of competition to younger generation comprising more meritorious<\/p>\n<p>persons who may be waiting for a chance to apply for direct recruitment. Obviously, the Court did<\/p>\n<p>not want to sacrifice the merit by showing undue sympathy with members of the company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>who joined service with full knowledge about their status, terms and conditions of their employment<\/p>\n<p>and the fact that they were to be paid from the company fund and not Consolidated Fund of India.<\/p>\n<p>In this context, we may also mention that though the Official Liquidators appear to have issued<\/p>\n<p>advertisements for appointing the company paid staff and made some sort of selection, more<\/p>\n<p>qualified and meritorious persons must have shunned from applying because they knew that the<\/p>\n<p>employment will be for a fixed term on fixed salary and their engagement will come to an end with<\/p>\n<p>the conclusion of liquidation proceedings. As a result of this, only mediocres must have responded<\/p>\n<p>to the advertisements and jointed as company paid staff. In this scenario, a direction for absorption<\/p>\n<p>of all the company paid staff has to be treated as violative of the doctrine of equality enshrined in<\/p>\n<p>Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>38.    Since the 1999 Scheme was framed by the Government of India in furtherance of the<\/p>\n<p>opportunity given by this Court and no deviation is shown to have been made from the 1978 Scheme<\/p>\n<p>insofar as Group `C&#8217; posts are concerned, the same cannot be dubbed as arbitrary, irrational and<\/p>\n<p>unreasonable, simply because all the company paid staff who were in position as on 27.8.1999 may<\/p>\n<p>not get absorbed in the regular cadres. Here, it is worth noticing that as per the details of 119<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff furnished by the senior counsel appearing for Tapas Chakraborty and others,<\/p>\n<p>only 54 had completed tenure of 10 years on 27.8.1999 i.e. the date specified in the 1999 Scheme. Of<\/p>\n<p>them, 21 were Lower Division Clerks, 16 were Upper Division Clerks (there is no provision for<\/p>\n<p>appointment to the post of Upper Division Clerk by direct recruitment), 1 was Assistant, 1 was<\/p>\n<p>Superintendent, 1 was Assistant Commander, 1 was Commander, 2 were Technical Assistants and<\/p>\n<p>the rest were Record Arrangers, Peons and Security Guards. Of the remaining 65 employees, 3 were<br \/>\nappointed in the year 2000 and others had worked for periods ranging from 13 months to 8 years<\/p>\n<p>3= months as on 27.8.1999. This means that not even 50% of the writ petitioners had completed 10<\/p>\n<p>years tenure which was considered by the Courts as benchmark for issuing direction for<\/p>\n<p>regularization of the services of temporary\/ad hoc\/daily wagers employed in Government<\/p>\n<p>departments. The position of the company paid staff of Delhi High Court is different. The details<\/p>\n<p>furnished by Ms. Jyoti Mendiratta show that 27 of the company paid staff have been absorbed<\/p>\n<p>under the 1999 Scheme. Of the remaining 26 company paid staff, all except 1 had worked for more<\/p>\n<p>than 10 years as on 27.8.1999. 9 of the company paid staff had worked for 20 years or more.<\/p>\n<p>However, they could not be absorbed due to abolition of posts in furtherance of the policy decision<\/p>\n<p>taken by the Government of India.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>39.    The additional documents produced by Shri Malhotra show that in the year 2001, the<\/p>\n<p>Government of India had taken a policy decision to reduce the strength of civilian staff in all the<\/p>\n<p>cadres. This was reflected in the speech made by the Finance Minister, Government of India, while<\/p>\n<p>presenting the budget for 2001-02. He stated that all requirements of recruitment will be scrutinized<\/p>\n<p>to ensure that fresh recruitment is limited to 1% of total civilian staff strength and there will be<\/p>\n<p>reduction in manpower by 2% per annum, achieving a reduction of 10% in 5 years. Thereafter,<\/p>\n<p>OM No.2\/8\/2001-PIC dated 16.5.2001 was issued by the Government of India. Paragraphs 2.1 and<\/p>\n<p>2.2 of that OM read as under :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;2.1   All Ministries\/Departments are accordingly requested to prepare Annual<br \/>\n       Direct Recruitment Plans covering the requirements of all cadres, whether managed<br \/>\n       by that Ministry\/Department itself, or managed by the Department of Personnel and<br \/>\n       Training, etc. The task of preparing the Annual Recruitment Plan will be undertaken<br \/>\n       in each Ministry\/Department by a Screening Committee headed by the Secretary of<br \/>\n       that Ministry\/Department with the Financial Advisor as a Member and JS (Admn.) of<br \/>\n       the Department as Member Secretary. The Committee would also have one senior<br \/>\n       representative each of the Department of Personnel and Training and the Department<br \/>\n       of Expenditure.   While the Annual Recruitment Plans for vacancies in Groups `B&#8217;,<br \/>\n       `C&#8217; and `D&#8217; could be cleared by this Committee itself, in the case of Group `A&#8217;<br \/>\n       Services, the Annual Recruitment Plan would be cleared by a Committee headed by<br \/>\n      Cabinet Secretary with secretary of the Department concerned, Secretary (DoPT) and<br \/>\n      Secretary (Expenditure) as Members.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      2.2    While preparing the Annual Recruitment Plans, the concerned Screening<br \/>\n      Committees would ensure that direct recruitment does not in any case exceed 1% of<br \/>\n      the total sanctioned strength of the Department. Since about 3% of staff retire every<br \/>\n      years, this would translate into only 1\/3rd of the direct recruitment vacancies<br \/>\n      occurring in each year being filled up.     Accordingly, direct recruitment would be<br \/>\n      limited to 1\/3rd of the direct recruitment vacancies arising in the year subject to a<br \/>\n      further ceiling that this does not exceed 1% of the total sanctioned strength of the<br \/>\n      Department. While examining the vacancies to be filled up, the functional needs of<br \/>\n      the organization would be critically examined so that there is flexibility in filling up<br \/>\n      vacancies in various cadres depending upon their relative functional need.           To<br \/>\n      amplify, in case an organization needs certain posts to be filled up for<br \/>\n      safety\/security\/operational considerations, a corresponding reduction in direct<br \/>\n      recruitment in other cadres of the organization may be done with a view to restricting<br \/>\n      the overall direct recruitment to one-third of vacancies meant for direct recruitment<br \/>\n      subject to the condition that the total vacancies proposed for filling up should be<br \/>\n      within the 1% ceiling. The remaining vacancies meant for direct recruitment which<br \/>\n      are not cleared by the Screening Committee will not be filled up by promotion or<br \/>\n      otherwise and these posts will stand abolished.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>40.   For implementation of the aforementioned decision, the Screening Committee met sometime<\/p>\n<p>in March, 2005 and decided to reduce the number of posts in the regular cadres of the Department<\/p>\n<p>of Company Affairs. The background note circulated to the members of the Screening Committee<\/p>\n<p>vide Office Memo No.A.12011\/3\/2003-Ad.II dated 14.3.2005 made a clear mention of the orders<\/p>\n<p>passed by the Calcutta and Delhi High Courts in favour of the company paid staff, dismissal of the<\/p>\n<p>appeal by the Division Bench of Calcutta High Court, pendency of similar appeals before the<\/p>\n<p>Division Bench of Delhi High Court and the Government&#8217;s decision to process the matter for filing<\/p>\n<p>SLP against the orders of Calcutta High Court. The Screening Committee which met on 16.3.2005<\/p>\n<p>considered and approved abolition of the direct recruitment quota posts for the years 2001-2002,<\/p>\n<p>2002-2003 and 2003-2004. The decision of the Screening Committee was circulated to various<\/p>\n<p>offices of the Ministry of Company Affairs vide letter No.A.12011\/3\/2003-Admn.II dated 2.9.2005.<br \/>\nThis exercise was in consonance with the policy decision taken by the Government of India. The<\/p>\n<p>respondents have neither assailed the decision of the Government to abolish the posts on the ground<\/p>\n<p>of malafides nor the learned counsel could show that the exercise undertaken by the Screening<\/p>\n<p>Committee is vitiated by arbitrariness or non-application of mind or the same is influenced by<\/p>\n<p>extraneous reasons. Therefore, the view expressed by the Calcutta and Delhi High Courts that the<\/p>\n<p>1999 Scheme is unworkable or impractical or has become redundant, cannot be approved.<\/p>\n<p>41.    The creation and abolition of posts, formation and structuring\/ restructuring of cadres,<\/p>\n<p>prescribing the source and mode of recruitment and qualifications and criteria of selection etc. are<\/p>\n<p>matters which fall within the exclusive domain of the employer. Although the decision of the<\/p>\n<p>employer to create or abolish posts or cadres or to prescribe the source or mode of recruitment and<\/p>\n<p>lay down the qualification etc. is not immune from judicial review, the Court will always be<\/p>\n<p>extremely cautious and circumspect in tinkering with the exercise of discretion by the employer.<\/p>\n<p>The Court cannot sit in appeal over the judgment of the employer and ordain that a particular post<\/p>\n<p>or number of posts be created or filled by a particular mode of recruitment. The power of judicial<\/p>\n<p>review can be exercised in such matters only if it is shown that the action of the employer is<\/p>\n<p>contrary to any constitutional or statutory provisions or is patently arbitrary or vitiated by<\/p>\n<p>malafides.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>42.    <a href=\"\/doc\/342034\/\">In State of Haryana vs. Navneet Verma<\/a> [2008 (2) SCC 65], a Division Bench of two-Judges<\/p>\n<p>referred to M. Ramanatha Pillai vs. State of Kerala [1973 (2) SCC 650], Kedar Nath Bahi vs. State<\/p>\n<p>of Punjab [1974 (3) SCC 21], <a href=\"\/doc\/788891\/\">State of Haryana vs. Des Raj Sangar<\/a> [1976 (2) SCC 844], Dr. N.C.<\/p>\n<p>Singhal vs. Union of India [1980 (3) SCC 29) and Avas Vikas Sanghathan vs. Engineers Association<\/p>\n<p>[2006 (4) SCC 132) and culled out the following principles :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;(a) the power to create or abolish a post rests with the Government;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       (b) whether a particular post is necessary is a matter depending upon the exigencies of<br \/>\n       the situation and administrative necessity;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       (c) creation and abolition of posts is a matter of government policy and every<br \/>\n          sovereign government has this power in the interest and necessity of internal<br \/>\n          administration;\n<\/p>\n<p>          (d) creation, continuance and abolition of posts are all decided by the Government in<br \/>\n          the interest of administration and general public;\n<\/p>\n<p>          (e) the court would be the least competent in the face of scanty material to decide<br \/>\n          whether the Government acted honestly in creating a post or refusing to create a post<br \/>\n          or its decision suffers from mala fides, legal or factual;\n<\/p>\n<p>          (f) as long as the decision to abolish the post is taken in good faith in the absence of<br \/>\n          material, interference by the court is not warranted.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>43.       In Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma Devi (supra), the Constitution Bench adverted its<\/p>\n<p>attention to financial implications of creation of extra posts and held that the Courts should not pass<\/p>\n<p>orders which impose unwarranted burden on the State and its instrumentalities by directing<\/p>\n<p>creation of particular number of posts for absorption of employees appointed on ad hoc or<\/p>\n<p>temporary basis or as daily wagers.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>44.       In Divisional Manager, Aravali Golf Club and another vs. Chander Hass and another<\/p>\n<p>[(2008) 1 SCC 683] also, a two-Judges Bench considered the issue relating to creation of post and<\/p>\n<p>held :-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>          &#8220;15. The court cannot direct the creation of posts. Creation and sanction of posts is a<br \/>\n          prerogative of the executive or legislative authorities and the court cannot arrogate to<br \/>\n          itself this purely executive or legislative function, and direct creation of posts in any<br \/>\n          organisation. This Court has time and again pointed out that the creation of a post is<br \/>\n          an executive or legislative function and it involves economic factors. Hence the courts<br \/>\n          cannot take upon themselves the power of creation of a post. Therefore, the directions<br \/>\n          given by the High Court and the first appellate court to create the posts of tractor<br \/>\n          driver and regularise the services of the respondents against the said posts cannot be<br \/>\n          sustained and are hereby set aside.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>45.       Although in paras 20, 26, 27, 28 and 33 of the last mentioned judgment some sweeping<\/p>\n<p>observations have been made suggesting that the orders passed by the High Courts and this Court<\/p>\n<p>in some of the cases amount to an encroachment on the domain of the executive and legislature, we<br \/>\ndo not propose to deal with the same and decide whether those observations were at all called for in<\/p>\n<p>the backdrop of factual matrix of that case and leave the same to be decided in an appropriate case.<\/p>\n<p>46.    In view of the above stated legal position, we hold hat the directions given by the High<\/p>\n<p>Courts for creation of supernumerary posts to facilitate absorption of the company paid staff are<\/p>\n<p>legally unsustainable and are liable to be set aside.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>47.    The next issue which needs to be address is whether the impugned orders can be sustained<\/p>\n<p>on the ground that by having worked continuously for 10 years or more as company paid staff as on<\/p>\n<p>27.8.1999, some of the respondents acquired a right to be absorbed in the regular cadre or<\/p>\n<p>regularized in service and they are entitled to the benefit of the principle of equal pay for equal<\/p>\n<p>work and have their pay fixed in the regular pay scales prescribed for the particular posts.<\/p>\n<p>48.    The questions whether in exercise of the power vested in it under Article 226 of the<\/p>\n<p>Constitution of India, the High Court can issue a mandamus and compel the State and its<\/p>\n<p>instrumentalities\/agencies       to   regularize        the   services   of   temporary\/ad-hoc\/daily<\/p>\n<p>wager\/casual\/contract employees and whether direction can be issued to the public employer to<\/p>\n<p>prescribe or give similar pay scales to employees appointed through different modes, with different<\/p>\n<p>condition of service and different sources of payment have become subject matter of debate and<\/p>\n<p>adjudication in several cases.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>49.    The judgments of 1980s and early 1990s &#8211; <a href=\"\/doc\/145498\/\">Dhirendra Chamoli vs. State of U.P.<\/a> [1986 (1) SCC<\/p>\n<p>637], Surinder Singh and Another vs. Engineer-in-Chief, CPWD and Others [1986 (1) SCC 639],<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/176622\/\">Daily Rated Casual Labour vs. Union of India<\/a> [1988 (1) SCC 122], Dharwad District P.W.D.<\/p>\n<p>Literate Daily Wage Employees&#8217; Association vs. State of Karnataka [1990 (2) SCC 396], <a href=\"\/doc\/1592725\/\">Bhagwati<\/p>\n<p>Prasad vs. Delhi State Mineral Development Corporation<\/a> (supra), State of Haryana vs. Piara Singh<\/p>\n<p>(supra) are representative of an era when this Court enthusiastically endeavored to expand the<br \/>\nmeaning of equality clause enshrined in the Constitution and ordained that employees appointed on<\/p>\n<p>temporary\/ad hoc\/daily wage basis should be treated at par with regular employees in the matter of<\/p>\n<p>payment of salaries and allowances and that their services be regularized. In several cases, the<\/p>\n<p>schemes framed by the governments and public employer for regularization of temporary\/ad-<\/p>\n<p>hoc\/daily wag\/casual employees irrespective of the source and mode of their appointment\/<\/p>\n<p>engagement were also approved.        In some cases, the courts also directed the State and its<\/p>\n<p>instrumentalities\/agencies to frame schemes for regularization of the services of such employees. In<\/p>\n<p>State of Haryana vs. Piara Singh (supra), this Court while reiterating that appointment to the<\/p>\n<p>public posts should ordinarily be made by regular recruitment through the prescribed agency and<\/p>\n<p>that even where ad-hoc or temporary employment is necessitated on account of the exigencies of<\/p>\n<p>administration, the candidate should be drawn from the employment exchange and that if no<\/p>\n<p>candidate is available or sponsored with the employment exchange, some method consistent with the<\/p>\n<p>requirements of Article 14 of the Constitution should be followed by publishing notice in<\/p>\n<p>appropriate manner for calling for applications and all those who apply in response thereto should<\/p>\n<p>be considered fairly, proceeded to observe that if an ad-hoc or temporary employee is continued for<\/p>\n<p>a fairly long spell, the authorities are duty bound to consider his case for regularization subject to<\/p>\n<p>his fulfilling the conditions of eligibility and the requirement of satisfactory service.         The<\/p>\n<p>propositions laid down in Piara Singh&#8217;s case were followed by almost all High Courts for directing<\/p>\n<p>the concerned State Governments and public authorities to regularize the services of ad-<\/p>\n<p>hoc\/temporary\/daily wage employees only on the ground that they have continued for a particular<\/p>\n<p>length of time. In some cases, the schemes framed for regularization of the services of the backdoor<\/p>\n<p>entrants were also approved.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>50.    The above noted judgments and orders encouraged the political set up and bureaucracy to<\/p>\n<p>violate the soul of Article 14 and 16 as also the provisions contained in the Employment Exchanges<\/p>\n<p>(Compulsory Notification of Vacancies) Act, 1959 with impunity and the spoil system which<\/p>\n<p>prevailed in the United Stats of America in sixteenth and seventeenth century got firm foothold in<br \/>\nthis country. Thousands of persons were employed\/engaged throughout the length and breadth of<\/p>\n<p>the country by backdoor methods. Those who could pull strings in the power corridors at the<\/p>\n<p>higher and lower levels managed to get the cake of public employment by trampling over the rights<\/p>\n<p>of other eligible and more meritorious persons registered with the employment exchanges. A huge<\/p>\n<p>illegal employment market developed in different parts of the country and rampant corruption<\/p>\n<p>afflicted the whole system. This was recognized by the Court in <a href=\"\/doc\/1577755\/\">Delhi Development Horticulture<\/p>\n<p>Employees Union vs. Delhi Administration, Delhi and others<\/a> [1992 (4) SCC 99] in the following<\/p>\n<p>words:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>         &#8220;23. Apart from the fact that the petitioners cannot be directed to be regularised for<br \/>\n         the reasons given above, we may take note of the pernicious consequences to which<br \/>\n         the direction for regularisation of workmen on the only ground that they have put in<br \/>\n         work for 240 or more days, has been leading. Although there is an Employment<br \/>\n         Exchange Act which requires recruitment on the basis of registration in the<br \/>\n         Employment Exchange, it has become a common practice to ignore the Employment<br \/>\n         Exchange and the persons registered in the Employment Exchanges, and to employ<br \/>\n         and get employed directly those who are either not registered with the Employment<br \/>\n         Exchange or who though registered are lower in the long waiting list in the<br \/>\n         Employment Register. The courts can take judicial notice of the fact that such<br \/>\n         employment is sought and given directly for various illegal considerations including<br \/>\n         money. The employment is given first for temporary periods with technical breaks to<br \/>\n         circumvent the relevant rules, and is continued for 240 or more days with a view to<br \/>\n         give the benefit of regularization knowing the judicial trend that those who have<br \/>\n         completed 240 or more days are directed to be automatically regularized. A good deal<br \/>\n         of illegal employment market has developed resulting in a new source of corruption<br \/>\n         and frustration of those who are waiting at the Employment Exchanges for years. Not<br \/>\n         all those who gain such backdoor entry in the employment are in need of the<br \/>\n         particular jobs. Though already employed elsewhere, they join the jobs for better and<br \/>\n         secured prospects. That is why most of the cases which come to the courts are of<br \/>\n         employment in government departments, public undertakings or agencies. Ultimately<br \/>\n         it is the people who bear the heavy burden of the surplus labour. The other equally<br \/>\n         injurious effect of indiscriminate regularization has been that many of the agencies<br \/>\n         have stopped undertaking casual or temporary works though they are urgent and<br \/>\n         essential for fear that if those who are employed on such works are required to be<br \/>\n         continued for 240 or more days they have to be absorbed as regular employees<br \/>\n       although the works are time-bound and there is no need of the workmen beyond the<br \/>\n       completion of the works undertaken. The public interests are thus jeopardised on<br \/>\n       both counts.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>51.    The menace of illegal and backdoor appointments compelled the Courts to have rethinking<\/p>\n<p>and in large number of subsequent judgments this Court declined to entertain the claims of ad-hoc<\/p>\n<p>and temporary employees for regularization of services and even reversed the orders passed by the<\/p>\n<p>High Courts and Administrative Tribunals &#8211; <a href=\"\/doc\/1671318\/\">Director, Institute of Management Development, U.P.<\/p>\n<p>vs. Pushpa Srivastava<\/a> [1992 (4) SCC 33], <a href=\"\/doc\/786046\/\">Dr. M.A. Haque and Others vs. Union of India and<\/p>\n<p>Others<\/a> [1993 (2) SCC 213], <a href=\"\/doc\/683965\/\">J &amp; K Public Service Commission vs. Dr. Narinder Mohan<\/a> [1994 (2)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 630], <a href=\"\/doc\/191623037\/\">Dr. Arundhati Ajit Pargaonkar vs. State of Maharashtra<\/a> [1994 Suppl. (3) SCC 380],<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/37407\/\">Union of India vs. Kishan Gopal Vyas<\/a> [1996 (7) SCC 134], <a href=\"\/doc\/1540477\/\">Union of India vs. Moti Lal<\/a> [1996 (7)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 481], <a href=\"\/doc\/749976\/\">Hindustan Shipyard Ltd. vs. Dr. P. Sambasiva Rao<\/a> [1996 (7) SCC 499], <a href=\"\/doc\/1037935\/\">State of H.P. vs.<\/p>\n<p>Suresh Kumar Verma<\/a> [1996 (7) SCC 562], Dr. Surinder Singh Jamwal vs. State of J&amp;K [1996 (9)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 619], <a href=\"\/doc\/839391\/\">E. Ramakrishnan vs. State of Kerala<\/a> [1996 (10) SCC 565], <a href=\"\/doc\/1618507\/\">Union of India and Others vs.<\/p>\n<p>Bishambar Dutt<\/a> [1996 (11) SCC 341], <a href=\"\/doc\/1426277\/\">Union of India vs. Mahender Singh<\/a> [1997 (1) SCC 247], <a href=\"\/doc\/1301237\/\">P.<\/p>\n<p>Ravindran and Others vs. Union Territory of Pondicherry and Others<\/a> [1997 (1) SCC 350], Ashwani<\/p>\n<p>Kumar and Others vs. State of Bihar and Others [1997 (2) SCC 1], Santosh Kumar Verma and<\/p>\n<p>Others vs. State of Bihar and Others [1997 (2) SCC 713], <a href=\"\/doc\/1288672\/\">State of U.P. and Others vs. Ajay<\/a> [1997 (4)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 88], <a href=\"\/doc\/281360\/\">Patna University vs. Dr. Amita Tiwari<\/a> [1997 (7) SCC 198] and <a href=\"\/doc\/33580\/\">Madhyamik Shiksha<\/p>\n<p>Parishad vs. Anil Kumar Mishra<\/a> [2005 (5) SCC 122].\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>52.    The shift in the Court&#8217;s approach became more prominent in <a href=\"\/doc\/13482\/\">A. Umarani vs. Registrar,<\/p>\n<p>Cooperative Societies<\/a> [2004 (7) SCC 112], decided by a three-Judges Bench, wherein it was held<\/p>\n<p>that the State cannot invoke Article 162 of the Constitution for regularization of the appointments<\/p>\n<p>made in violation of the mandatory statutory provisions. In Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma<\/p>\n<p>Devi (supra), the Constitution Bench again considered the question whether the State can frame<\/p>\n<p>scheme for regularization of the services of ad-hoc\/temporary\/daily wager appointed in violation of<br \/>\nthe doctrine of equality or the one appointed with a clear stipulation that such appointment will not<\/p>\n<p>confer any right on the appointee to seek regularization or absorption in the regular cadre and<\/p>\n<p>whether the Court can issue mandamus for regularization or absorption of such appointee and<\/p>\n<p>answered the same in negative. The Court adverted to the theme of constitutionalism in a system<\/p>\n<p>established in rule of law, expanded meaning given to the doctrine of equality in general and<\/p>\n<p>equality in the matter of employment in particular, multi-facet problems including the one relating<\/p>\n<p>to unwarranted fiscal burden on the public exchequer created on account of the directions given by<\/p>\n<p>the High Courts and this Court for regularization of the services of persons appointed on purely<\/p>\n<p>temporary or ad hoc basis or engaged on daily wages or as casual labourers, referred to about three<\/p>\n<p>dozen judgments including <a href=\"\/doc\/26873\/\">R.N. Nanjundappa vs. T. Thimmiah<\/a> [1972 (1) SCC 409], <a href=\"\/doc\/176622\/\">Daily Rate<\/p>\n<p>Casual Labour vs. Union of India<\/a> [1988 (1) SCC 122], <a href=\"\/doc\/1592725\/\">Bhagwati Prasad vs. Delhi State Mineral<\/p>\n<p>Development Corporation<\/a> [1990 (1) SCC 361], Dharwad District P.W.D. Literate Daily Wage<\/p>\n<p>Employees Association and others vs. State of Karnataka and others [1990 (2) SCC 396], State of<\/p>\n<p>Haryana vs. Piara Singh [1992 (4) SCC 118] and <a href=\"\/doc\/1053139\/\">State of Punjab vs. Surinder Kumar<\/a> [1992 (1) SCC<\/p>\n<p>489] and held:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;47. When a person enters a temporary employment or gets engagement as a<br \/>\n       contractual or casual worker and the engagement is not based on a proper selection as<br \/>\n       recognised by the relevant rules or procedure, he is aware of the consequences of the<br \/>\n       appointment being temporary, casual or contractual in nature. Such a person cannot<br \/>\n       invoke the theory of legitimate expectation for being confirmed in the post when an<br \/>\n       appointment to the post could be made only by following a proper procedure for<br \/>\n       selection and in cases concerned, in consultation with the Public Service Commission.<br \/>\n       Therefore, the theory of legitimate expectation cannot be successfully advanced by<br \/>\n       temporary, contractual or casual employees. It cannot also be held that the State has<br \/>\n       held out any promise while engaging these persons either to continue them where they<br \/>\n       are or to make them permanent. The State cannot constitutionally make such a<br \/>\n       promise. It is also obvious that the theory cannot be invoked to seek a positive relief of<br \/>\n       being made permanent in the post.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       48. It was then contended that the rights of the employees thus appointed, under<br \/>\n       Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution, are violated. It is stated that the State has<br \/>\ntreated the employees unfairly by employing them on less than minimum wages and<br \/>\nextracting work from them for a pretty long period in comparison with those directly<br \/>\nrecruited who are getting more wages or salaries for doing similar work. The<br \/>\nemployees before us were engaged on daily wages in the department concerned on a<br \/>\nwage that was made known to them. There is no case that the wage agreed upon was<br \/>\nnot being paid. Those who are working on daily wages formed a class by themselves,<br \/>\nthey cannot claim that they are discriminated as against those who have been<br \/>\nregularly recruited on the basis of the relevant rules. No right can be founded on an<br \/>\nemployment on daily wages to claim that such employee should be treated on a par<br \/>\nwith a regularly recruited candidate, and made permanent in employment, even<br \/>\nassuming that the principle could be invoked for claiming equal wages for equal<br \/>\nwork. There is no fundamental right in those who have been employed on daily wages<br \/>\nor temporarily or on contractual basis, to claim that they have a right to be absorbed<br \/>\nin service. As has been held by this Court, they cannot be said to be holders of a post,<br \/>\nsince, a regular appointment could be made only by making appointments consistent<br \/>\nwith the requirements of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The right to be<br \/>\ntreated equally with the other employees employed on daily wages, cannot be<br \/>\nextended to a claim for equal treatment with those who were regularly employed.<br \/>\nThat would be treating unequals as equals. It cannot also be relied on to claim a right<br \/>\nto be absorbed in service even though they have never been selected in terms of the<br \/>\nrelevant recruitment rules. The arguments based on Articles 14 and 16 of the<br \/>\nConstitution are therefore overruled.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>49. It is contended that the State action in not regularising the employees was not fair<br \/>\nwithin the framework of the rule of law. The rule of law compels the State to make<br \/>\nappointments as envisaged by the Constitution and in the manner we have indicated<br \/>\nearlier. In most of these cases, no doubt, the employees had worked for some length of<br \/>\ntime but this has also been brought about by the pendency of proceedings in tribunals<br \/>\nand courts initiated at the instance of the employees. Moreover, accepting an<br \/>\nargument of this nature would mean that the State would be permitted to perpetuate<br \/>\nan illegality in the matter of public employment and that would be a negation of the<br \/>\nconstitutional scheme adopted by us, the people of India. It is therefore not possible to<br \/>\naccept the argument that there must be a direction to make permanent all the persons<br \/>\nemployed on daily wages. When the court is approached for relief by way of a writ,<br \/>\nthe court has necessarily to ask itself whether the person before it had any legal right<br \/>\nto be enforced. Considered in the light of the very clear constitutional scheme, it<br \/>\n       cannot be said that the employees have been able to establish a legal right to be made<br \/>\n       permanent even though they have never been appointed in terms of the relevant rules<br \/>\n       or in adherence of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>53.    In paragraph 25, the Constitution Bench specifically referred to the conclusions recorded in<\/p>\n<p>paragraphs 45 to 50 of the judgment in State of Haryana vs. Piara Singh (supra) and observed:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;26. With respect, why should the State be allowed to depart from the normal rule and<br \/>\n      indulge in temporary employment in permanent posts? This Court, in our view, is<br \/>\n      bound to insist on the State making regular and proper recruitments and is bound not<br \/>\n      to encourage or shut its eyes to the persistent transgression of the rules of regular<br \/>\n      recruitment. The direction to make permanent&#8211;the distinction between regularisation<br \/>\n      and making permanent, was not emphasized here&#8211;can only encourage the State, the<br \/>\n      model employer, to flout its own rules and would confer undue benefits on a few at the<br \/>\n      cost of many waiting to compete. With respect, the direction made in para 50 (of SCC)<br \/>\n      of Piara Singh is to some extent inconsistent with the conclusion in para 45 (of SCC)<br \/>\n      therein. With great respect, it appears to us that the last of the directions clearly runs<br \/>\n      counter to the constitutional scheme of employment recognised in the earlier part of the<br \/>\n      decision. Really, it cannot be said that this decision has laid down the law that all ad<br \/>\n      hoc, temporary or casual employees engaged without following the regular recruitment<br \/>\n      procedure should be made permanent.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>54.    In paragraph 54, the Constitution Bench clarified that the earlier decisions which run<\/p>\n<p>counter to the principles settled by it will stand denuded of their status as precedents.<\/p>\n<p>55.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1145604\/\">In Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University vs. T. Sumalatha (Smt.) and others<\/a> [2003 (10)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 405], a two-Judges Bench considered an issue somewhat similar to the one being considered in<\/p>\n<p>these appeals. The facts of that case show that the respondents, who were graduates, were appointed<\/p>\n<p>as investigators on consolidated pay between 1985 and 1991 in the Nodal Centre set up in the<\/p>\n<p>University under the scheme known as the National Technical Manpower Information System<\/p>\n<p>sponsored by the then Ministry of Education and Culture, Government of India. The Nodal Centre<\/p>\n<p>was financed entirely by the Ministry of Education and Culture, Government of India. Initially, the<br \/>\nterm of the Nodal Centre was 1 year and 9 months, but it was continued thereafter.                The<\/p>\n<p>respondents were appointed for 89 days but their services were extended from time to time on<\/p>\n<p>similar terms. Their consolidated pay was also revised twice. They filed writ petition claiming<\/p>\n<p>regularization of service in the University. Some directions were issued by the High Court for<\/p>\n<p>consideration of the cases of the respondents for absorption. The University declined their prayer.<\/p>\n<p>In the second round of litigation, the High Court directed the University to absorb the respondents<\/p>\n<p>by applying GO No.212 dated 22.4.1994 issued by the State Government for regularization of the<\/p>\n<p>services of temporary\/ad hoc\/daily wage employees of the Government departments.                 While<\/p>\n<p>reversing the order of the High Court, this Court referred to GO No.212 and held :<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;7. Can it be said that by virtue of this provision, the State Government assumes the<br \/>\n       responsibility of absorbing the staff employed in the organizations or establishments<br \/>\n       with which it has no administrative or financial nexus, merely because an<br \/>\n       instrumentality of the State is involved in managing it, that too, in a limited sense?<br \/>\n       The answer could only be in the negative. When the State Government or its<br \/>\n       instrumentalities have not created the posts on their own and do not bear any part of<br \/>\n       the financial burden, the question of getting the clearance from the Finance and<br \/>\n       Planning Department of the Government for the purpose of regularization or<br \/>\n       absorption does not arise. Viewed from any angle, GO No. 212 would be wholly out of<br \/>\n       place for those working in the nodal centre which is created and nurtured by the<br \/>\n       Central Government. It is not within the domain of the State Government or even the<br \/>\n       University to regulate the staff pattern or the monetary benefits of the staff working<br \/>\n       therein, without the approval of the Central Government. Therefore, no directions<br \/>\n       should have been issued to the State Government or to the University to regularize the<br \/>\n       services of Respondents 1 to 5, if necessary, by creating additional posts.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>56.    After rejecting the plea of the respondents for regularization of service, this Court adverted<\/p>\n<p>to the issue of increase in their salary and held :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;9. Though the plea of regularization in respect of any of the fifth respondents cannot<br \/>\n       be countenanced, the respondent employees should have a fair deal consistent with<br \/>\n       the guarantee enshrined in Articles 21 and 14 of the Constitution. They should not be<br \/>\n       made to work on a meager salary for years together. It would be unfair and<br \/>\n       unreasonable to extract work from the employees who have been associated with the<br \/>\n       nodal centre almost from its inception by paying them remuneration which, by any<br \/>\n       objective standards, is grossly low. The Central Government itself has rightly realized<br \/>\n       the need to revise the consolidated salary and accordingly enhanced the grant on that<br \/>\n       account on two occasions. That revision was made more than six years back. It is high<br \/>\n       time that another revision is made. It is therefore imperative that the Ministry<br \/>\n       concerned of the Union of India should take expeditious steps to increase the salary of<br \/>\n       the investigators viz. Respondents 1 to 4 working in the nodal centre in Hyderabad. In<br \/>\n       the absence of details regarding the nature of work done by the said respondents and<br \/>\n       the equivalence of the job done by them to the other posts prevailing in the University<br \/>\n       or the Central Government institutions, we are not in a position to give any direction<br \/>\n       based on the principle of &#8220;equal pay for equal work&#8221;. However, we consider it just<br \/>\n       and expedient to direct Respondent 7 or 8, as the case may be, to take an expeditious<br \/>\n       decision to increase the consolidated salary that is being paid to Respondents 1 to 4 to<br \/>\n       a reasonable level commensurate with the work done by them and keeping in view the<br \/>\n       minimum salary that is being paid to the personnel doing a more or less similar job.<br \/>\n       As far as the fifth respondent is concerned, though we refrain from giving similar<br \/>\n       directions in view of the fact that the post is not specifically sanctioned under the<br \/>\n       Scheme, we would like to observe that the Central Government may consider<br \/>\n       increasing the quantum of office expenditure suitably so that the University will be<br \/>\n       able to disburse higher salary to the fifth respondent.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<p>57.    By virtue of Article 141 of the Constitution, the judgment of the Constitution Bench in<\/p>\n<p>Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma Devi (supra) is binding on all the courts including this Court<\/p>\n<p>till the same is overruled by a larger Bench. The ratio of the Constitution Bench judgment has been<\/p>\n<p>followed by different two-Judges Benches for declining to entertain the claim of regularization of<\/p>\n<p>service made by ad hoc\/temporary\/ daily wage\/casual employees or for reversing the orders of the<\/p>\n<p>High Court granting relief to such employees &#8211; Indian Drugs and Pharamaceuticals Ltd. vs.<\/p>\n<p>Workmen [2007 (1) SCC 408], <a href=\"\/doc\/885748\/\">Gangadhar Pillai vs. Siemens Ltd.<\/a> [2007 (1) SCC 533], <a href=\"\/doc\/1028495\/\">Kendriya<\/p>\n<p>Vidyalaya Sangathan vs. L.V. Subramanyeswara<\/a> [2007 (5) SCC 326], <a href=\"\/doc\/1357219\/\">Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd.<\/p>\n<p>vs. Dan Bahadur Singh<\/a> [2007 (6) SCC 207]. However, in <a href=\"\/doc\/1569551\/\">U.P. SEB vs. Pooran Chand Pandey<\/a> [2007<br \/>\n(11) SCC 92] on which reliance has been placed by Shri Gupta, a two-Judges Bench has attempted<\/p>\n<p>to dilute the Constitution Bench judgment by suggesting that the said decision cannot be applied to<\/p>\n<p>a case where regularization has been sought for in pursuance of Article 14 of the Constitution and<\/p>\n<p>that the same is in conflict with the judgment of the seven-Judges Bench in <a href=\"\/doc\/1766147\/\">Maneka Gandhi vs.<\/p>\n<p>Union of India<\/a> [1978 (1) SCC 248].\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>58.   The facts of <a href=\"\/doc\/1569551\/\">U.P. SEB vs. Pooran Chand Pandey<\/a> (supra) were that the respondents (34 in<\/p>\n<p>number) were employed as daily wage employees by the Cooperative Electricity Supply Society in<\/p>\n<p>1985. The Society was taken over by Uttar Pradesh Electricity Supply Board in 1997 along with<\/p>\n<p>daily wage employees.     Earlier to this, the Electricity Board had taken a policy decision on<\/p>\n<p>28.11.1996 to regularize the services of its employees working on daily wages from before 4.5.1990,<\/p>\n<p>subject to their passing the examination. The respondents moved the High Court claiming benefit<\/p>\n<p>of the policy decision dated 28.11.1996. The learned Single Judge of the High Court held that once<\/p>\n<p>the employees of the society became employees of the Electricity Board, there was no valid ground<\/p>\n<p>to discriminate them in the matter of regularization of service. The Division Bench approved the<\/p>\n<p>order of the Single Bench. A two-Judges Bench of this Court dismissed the appeal of the Electricity<\/p>\n<p>Board. In para 11 of its judgment, the two-Judges Bench distinguished Secretary, State of<\/p>\n<p>Karnataka vs. Uma Devi (supra) by observing that the ratio of that judgment cannot be applied to a<\/p>\n<p>case where regularization has been sought for in pursuance of Article 14 of the Constitution. The<\/p>\n<p>two-Judges Bench then referred to <a href=\"\/doc\/1656601\/\">State of Orissa vs. Sudhanshu Sekhar Misra<\/a> [AIR 1968 SC 647],<\/p>\n<p>State of Gujarat vs. Ambica Quarry Works [1987 (1) SCC 213], <a href=\"\/doc\/623061\/\">Bhavnagar University vs. Palitana<\/p>\n<p>Sugar Mill Pvt. Ltd.<\/a> [2003 (2) SCC 111], Bharat Petroleum Ltd. vs. N.R. Viramani [2004 (8) SCC<\/p>\n<p>579] and observed:\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;We are constrained to refer to the above decisions and principles contained therein<br \/>\n      because we find that often Umadevi (3) case is being applied by courts mechanically as<br \/>\n      if it were a Euclid&#8217;s formula without seeing the facts of a particular case. As observed<br \/>\n      by this Court in Bhavnagar University and Bharat Petroleum Corpn. Ltd. a little<br \/>\n      difference in facts or even one additional fact may make a lot of difference in the<br \/>\n       precedential value of a decision. Hence, in our opinion, Umadevi (3) case cannot be<br \/>\n       applied mechanically without seeing the facts of a particular case, as a little difference<br \/>\n       in facts can make Umadevi (3) case inapplicable to the facts of that case.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;We may further point out that a seven-Judge Bench decision of this Court in<br \/>\n       <a href=\"\/doc\/1766147\/\">Maneka Gandhi vs. Union of India<\/a> has held that reasonableness and non-arbitrariness<br \/>\n       is part of Article 14 of the Constitution. It follows that the Government must act in a<br \/>\n       reasonable and non-arbitrary manner otherwise Article 14 of the Constitution would<br \/>\n       be violated. Maneka Gandhi case is a decision of a seven-Judge Bench, whereas<br \/>\n       Umadevi (3) case is a decision of a five-Judge Bench of this Court. It is well settled<br \/>\n       that a smaller Bench decision cannot override a larger Bench decision of the Court.<br \/>\n       No doubt, Maneka Gandhi case does not specifically deal with the question of<br \/>\n       regularisation of government employees, but the principle of reasonableness in<br \/>\n       executive action and the law which it has laid down, in our opinion, is of general<br \/>\n       application.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                                                                         [ Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>59.    We have carefully analyzed the judgment of the two-Judges Bench and are of the considered<\/p>\n<p>view that the above reproduced observations were not called for. The only issue which fell for<\/p>\n<p>consideration by two-Judges Bench was whether the daily wage employees of the society, the<\/p>\n<p>establishment of which was taken over by the Electricity Board along with the employees, were<\/p>\n<p>entitled to be regularized in terms of the policy decision taken by the Board and whether the High<\/p>\n<p>Court committed an error by invoking Article 14 of the Constitution for granting relief to the writ<\/p>\n<p>petitioners. The question whether the Electricity Board could frame such a policy was neither<\/p>\n<p>raised nor considered by the High Court and this Court. The High Court simply adverted to the<\/p>\n<p>facts of the case and held that once the daily wage employees of the society became employees of the<\/p>\n<p>Electricity Board, they could not be discriminated in the matter of implementation of the policy of<\/p>\n<p>regularization. Therefore, the two-Judges Bench had no occasion to make any adverse comment on<\/p>\n<p>the binding character of the Constitution Bench judgment in Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma<\/p>\n<p>Devi (supra).\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>60.    There have been several instances of different Benches of the High Courts not following the<\/p>\n<p>judgments\/orders of coordinate and even larger Benches.        In some cases, the High Courts have<\/p>\n<p>gone to the extent of ignoring the law laid down by this Court without any tangible reason.<\/p>\n<p>Likewise, there have been instances in which smaller Benches of this Court have either ignored or<\/p>\n<p>bypassed the ratio of the judgments of the larger Benches including the Constitution Benches.<\/p>\n<p>These cases are illustrative of non-adherence to the rule of judicial discipline which is sine qua non<\/p>\n<p>for sustaining the system. <a href=\"\/doc\/1999403\/\">In Mahadeolal Kanodia vs. Administrator General of W.B.<\/a> [1960 (3)<\/p>\n<p>SCR 578], this Court observed:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;If one thing is more necessary in law than any other thing, it is the quality of<br \/>\n       certainty. That quality would totally disappear if Judges of coordinate jurisdiction in<br \/>\n       a High Court start overruling one another&#8217;s decisions. If one Division Bench of a High<br \/>\n       Court is unable to distinguish a previous decision of another Division Bench, and<br \/>\n       holding the view that the earlier decision is wrong, itself gives effect to that view the<br \/>\n       result would be utter confusion. The position would be equally bad where a Judge<br \/>\n       sitting singly in the High Court is of opinion that the previous decision of another<br \/>\n       Single Judge on a question of law is wrong and gives effect to that view instead of<br \/>\n       referring the matter to a larger Bench. In such a case lawyers would not know how to<br \/>\n       advise their clients and all courts subordinate to the High Court would find<br \/>\n       themselves in an embarrassing position of having to choose between dissentient<br \/>\n       judgments of their own High Court.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                                                [Emphasis added]<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>61.    In Lala Shri Bhagwan vs. Ram Chandra [AIR 1965 SC 1767], Gajendragadkar, C.J.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>observed :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;It is hardly necessary to emphasize that considerations of judicial propriety and<br \/>\n       decorum require that if a learned Single Judge hearing a matter is inclined to take the<br \/>\n       view that the earlier decisions of the High Court, whether of a Division Bench or of a<br \/>\n       Single Judge, need to be reconsidered, he should not embark upon that enquiry<br \/>\n       sitting as a Single Judge, but should refer the matter to a Division Bench or, in a<br \/>\n       proper case, place the relevant papers before the Chief Justice to enable him to<br \/>\n       constitute a larger bench to examine the question. That is the proper and traditional<br \/>\n       way to deal with such mattes and it is founded on healthy principles of judicial<br \/>\n       decorum and propriety. It is to be regretted that the learned Single Judge departed<br \/>\n       from this traditional way in the present case and chose to examine the question<br \/>\n       himself.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>62.    <a href=\"\/doc\/24214\/\">In Union of India vs. Raghubir Singh<\/a> [1989 (2) SCC 754], R.S. Pathak, C.J. while<\/p>\n<p>recognizing need for constant development of law and jurisprudence emphasized the necessity of<\/p>\n<p>abiding by the earlier precedents in following words :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;The doctrine of binding precedent has the merit of promoting a certainty and<br \/>\n       consistency in judicial decisions, and enables an organic development of law, besides<br \/>\n       providing assurance to the individual as to the consequence of transaction forming<br \/>\n       part of his daily affairs.     And, therefore, the need for a clear and consistent<br \/>\n       enunciation of legal principle in the decisions of a court.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>63.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1931795\/\">In Sundarjas Kanyalal Bhatija and others vs. Collector, Thane<\/a> [1989 (3) SCC 396], a two-<\/p>\n<p>Judges Bench observed as under :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;In our system of judicial review which is a part of our constitutional scheme, we hold<br \/>\n       it to be the duty of judges of superior courts and tribunals to make the law more<br \/>\n       predictable. The question of law directly arising in the case should not be dealt with<br \/>\n       apologetic approaches. The law must be made more effective as a guide to behaviour.<br \/>\n       It must be determined with reasons which carry convictions within the courts,<br \/>\n       profession and public. Otherwise, the lawyers would be in a predicament and would<br \/>\n       not know how to advise their clients. Sub-ordinate courts would find themselves in<br \/>\n       an embarrassing position to choose between the conflicting opinion. The general<br \/>\n       public would be in dilemma to obey or not to obey such law and it ultimately falls into<br \/>\n       disrepute.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>64.    <a href=\"\/doc\/339039\/\">In Dr. Vijay Laxmi Sadho vs. Jagdish<\/a> [2001 (2) SCC 247], this Court considered whether the<br \/>\nlearned Single Judge of Madhya Pradesh High Court could ignore the judgment of a coordinate<\/p>\n<p>Bench on the same issue and held :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;33. As the learned Single Judge was not in agreement with the view expressed in<br \/>\n       Devilal case it would have been proper, to maintain judicial discipline, to refer the<br \/>\n       matter to a larger Bench rather than to take a different view. We note it with regret<br \/>\n       and distress that the said course was not followed. It is well-settled that if a Bench of<br \/>\n       coordinate jurisdiction disagrees with another Bench of coordinate jurisdiction<br \/>\n       whether on the basis of &#8220;different arguments&#8221; or otherwise, on a question of law, it is<br \/>\n       appropriate that the matter be referred to a larger Bench for resolution of the issue<br \/>\n       rather than to leave two conflicting judgments to operate, creating confusion. It is not<br \/>\n       proper to sacrifice certainty of law. Judicial decorum, no less than legal propriety<br \/>\n       forms the basis of judicial procedure and it must be respected at all costs.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>65.    <a href=\"\/doc\/673494\/\">In Pradip Chandra Parija and others vs. Pramod Chandra Patnaik and others<\/a> [2002 (1) SCC<\/p>\n<p>1], the Constitution Bench noted that the two learned Judges denuded the correctness of an earlier<\/p>\n<p>Constitution Bench judgment in <a href=\"\/doc\/1843028\/\">Bharat Petroleum Corpn. Ltd. vs. Mumbai Shramik Sangha<\/a> [2001<\/p>\n<p>(4) SCC 448] and reiterated the same despite the fact that the second Constitution Bench refused to<\/p>\n<p>reconsider the earlier verdict and observed :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;3. We may point out, at the outset, that in <a href=\"\/doc\/1843028\/\">Bharat Petroleum Corpn. Ltd. v. Mumbai<br \/>\n       Shramik Sangha<\/a>(2001 (4) SCC 448) a Bench of five Judges considered a somewhat<br \/>\n       similar question. Two learned Judges in that case doubted the correctness of the scope<br \/>\n       attributed to a certain provision in an earlier Constitution Bench judgment and,<br \/>\n       accordingly, referred the matter before them directly to a Constitution Bench. The<br \/>\n       Constitution Bench that then heard the matter took the view that the decision of a<br \/>\n       Constitution Bench binds a Bench of two learned Judges and that judicial discipline<br \/>\n       obliges them to follow it, regardless of their doubts about its correctness. At the most,<br \/>\n       the Bench of two learned Judges could have ordered that the matter be heard by a<br \/>\n       Bench of three learned Judges.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       5. The learned Attorney-General submitted that a Constitution Bench judgment of<br \/>\n       this Court was binding on smaller Benches and a judgment of three learned Judges<br \/>\n       was binding on Benches of two learned Judges &#8212; a proposition that learned counsel<br \/>\n       for the appellants did not dispute. The learned Attorney-General drew our attention<br \/>\n       to the judgment of a Constitution Bench in <a href=\"\/doc\/577348\/\">Sub-Committee of Judicial Accountability<br \/>\n      v. Union of India<\/a> (1992 (4) SCC 97) where it has been said that &#8220;no coordinate Bench<br \/>\n      of this Court can even comment upon, let alone sit in judgment over, the discretion<br \/>\n      exercised or judgment rendered in a cause or matter before another coordinate<br \/>\n      Bench&#8221; (SCC p. 98, para 5). The learned Attorney-General submitted that the<br \/>\n      appropriate course for the Bench of two learned Judges to have adopted, if it felt so<br \/>\n      strongly that the judgment in Nityananda Kar (1991 Supp. (2) SCC 506) was incorrect,<br \/>\n      was to make a reference to a Bench of three learned Judges. That Bench of three<br \/>\n      learned Judges, if it also took the same view of Nityananda Kar, could have referred<br \/>\n      the case to a Bench of five learned Judges.\n<\/p>\n<p>      6. In the present case the Bench of two learned Judges has, in terms, doubted the<br \/>\n      correctness of a decision of a Bench of three learned Judges. They have, therefore,<br \/>\n      referred the matter directly to a Bench of five Judges. In our view, judicial discipline<br \/>\n      and propriety demands that a Bench of two learned Judges should follow a decision<br \/>\n      of a Bench of three learned Judges. But if a Bench of two learned Judges concludes<br \/>\n      that an earlier judgment of three learned Judges is so very incorrect that in no<br \/>\n      circumstances can it be followed, the proper course for it to adopt is to refer the<br \/>\n      matter before it to a Bench of three learned Judges setting out, as has been done here,<br \/>\n      the reasons why it could not agree with the earlier judgment. If, then, the Bench of<br \/>\n      three learned Judges also comes to the conclusion that the earlier judgment of a<br \/>\n      Bench of three learned Judges is incorrect, reference to a Bench of five learned<br \/>\n      Judges is justified.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                    [Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<p>66.   <a href=\"\/doc\/1326049\/\">In State of Bihar vs. Kalika Kuer and others<\/a> [2003 (5) SCC 448], the Court elaborately<\/p>\n<p>considered the principle of per incuriam and held that the earlier judgment by a larger Bench<\/p>\n<p>cannot be ignored by invoking the principle of per incuriam and the only course open to the<\/p>\n<p>coordinate or smaller Bench is to make a request for reference to the larger <a href=\"\/doc\/266212\/\">Bench.      In State of<\/p>\n<p>Punjab vs. Devans Modern Breweries Ltd.<\/a> [2004 (11) SCC 26], the Court reiterated that if a<\/p>\n<p>coordinate Bench does not agree with the principles of law enunciated by another Bench, the matter<\/p>\n<p>has to be referred to a larger <a href=\"\/doc\/934139\/\">Bench. In Central Board of Dwaoodi Bohra Community vs. State of<\/p>\n<p>Maharashtra<\/a> [2005 (2) SCC 673], the Constitution Bench interpreted Article 141, referred to<\/p>\n<p>various earlier judgments including <a href=\"\/doc\/1843028\/\">Bharat Petroleum Corpn. Ltd. vs. Mumbai Shramik Sangha<\/a><br \/>\n(supra), <a href=\"\/doc\/673494\/\">Pradip Chandra Parija and others vs. Pramod Chandra Patnaik and others<\/a> (supra) and<\/p>\n<p>held that &#8220;the law laid down in a decision delivered by a Bench of larger strength is binding on any<\/p>\n<p>subsequent Bench of lesser or co-equal strength and it would be inappropriate if a Division Bench<\/p>\n<p>of two Judges starts overruling the decisions of Division Benches of three Judges. The Court further<\/p>\n<p>held that such a practice would be detrimental not only to the rule of discipline and the doctrine of<\/p>\n<p>binding precedents but it will also lead to inconsistency in decisions on the point of law; consistency<\/p>\n<p>and certainty in the development of law and its contemporary status &#8211; both would be immediate<\/p>\n<p>casualty&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>67.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1627400\/\">In State of U.P. and others vs. Jeet S. Bisht and<\/a> another [2007 (6) SCC 586], when one of the<\/p>\n<p>Hon&#8217;ble Judges (Katju, J.) constituting the Bench criticized the orders passed by various Benches in<\/p>\n<p>the same case, the other Hon&#8217;ble Judge (Sinha, J.) expressed himself in the following words :<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;100.   For the views been taken herein, I regret to express my inability to agree with<br \/>\n       Brother Katju, J. in regard to the criticisms of various orders passed in this case itself<br \/>\n       by other Benches. I am of the opinion that it is wholly inappropriate to do so. One<br \/>\n       Bench of this Court, it is trite, does not sit in appeal over the other Bench particularly<br \/>\n       when it is a coordinate Bench. It is equally inappropriate for us to express total<br \/>\n       disagreement in the same matter as also in similar matters with the directions and<br \/>\n       observations made by the larger Bench. Doctrine of judicial restraint, in my opinion,<br \/>\n       applies even in this realm. We should not forget other doctrines which are equally<br \/>\n       developed viz. Judicial Discipline and respect for the Brother Judges.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>68.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1097333\/\">In U.P. Gram Panchayat Adhikari Sangh vs. Daya Ram Saroj<\/a> [2007 (2) SCC 138], the Court<\/p>\n<p>noted that by ignoring the earlier decision of a coordinate Bench, a Division Bench of the High<\/p>\n<p>Court directed that part-time tube-well operators should be treated as permanent employees with<\/p>\n<p>same service conditions as far as possible and observed :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;26.    Judicial discipline is self-discipline. It is an inbuilt mechanism in the system<br \/>\n       itself. Judicial discipline demands that when the decision of a coordinate Bench of the<br \/>\n       same High Court is brought to the notice of the Bench, it is to be respected and is<br \/>\n       binding, subject of course, to the right to take a different view or to doubt the<br \/>\n       correctness of the decision and the permissible course then open is to refer the<br \/>\n       question or the case to a larger Bench. This is the minimum discipline and decorum<br \/>\n       to be maintained by judicial fraternity.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>69.    It is interesting to note that in <a href=\"\/doc\/28427\/\">Coir Board, Ernakulam vs. Indira Devi P.S.<\/a> [1998 (3) SCC<\/p>\n<p>259], a two-Judges Bench doubted the correctness of the seven-Judges Bench judgment in<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/1149369\/\">Bangalore Water Supply &amp; Sewerage Board vs. A. Rajappa<\/a> [1978 (2) SCC 213] and directed the<\/p>\n<p>matter to be placed before Hon&#8217;ble the Chief Justice of India for constituting a larger Bench.<\/p>\n<p>However, a three-Judges Bench headed by Dr. A.S. Anand, C.J., refused to entertain the reference<\/p>\n<p>and observed that the two-Judges Bench is bound by the judgment of the larger Bench &#8211; <a href=\"\/doc\/276102\/\">Coir<\/p>\n<p>Board, Ernakulam, Kerala State vs. Indira Devai P.S.<\/a> [2000 (1) SCC 224].<\/p>\n<p>70.    We are distressed to note that despite several pronouncements on the subject, there is<\/p>\n<p>substantial increase in the number of cases involving violation of the basics of judicial discipline.<\/p>\n<p>The learned Single Judges and Benches of the High Courts refuse to follow and accept the verdict<\/p>\n<p>and law laid down by coordinate and even larger Benches by citing minor difference in the facts as<\/p>\n<p>the ground for doing so.       Therefore, it has become necessary to reiterate that disrespect to<\/p>\n<p>constitutional ethos and breach of discipline have grave impact on the credibility of judicial<\/p>\n<p>institution and encourages chance litigation.      It must be remembered that predictability and<\/p>\n<p>certainty is an important hallmark of judicial jurisprudence developed in this country in last six<\/p>\n<p>decades and increase in the frequency of conflicting judgments of the superior judiciary will do<\/p>\n<p>incalculable harm to the system inasmuch as the courts at the grass root will not be able to decide as<\/p>\n<p>to which of the judgment lay down the correct law and which one should be followed. We may add<\/p>\n<p>that in our constitutional set up every citizen is under a duty to abide by the Constitution and<\/p>\n<p>respect its ideals and institutions.   Those who have been entrusted with the task of administering<\/p>\n<p>the system and operating various constituents of the State and who take oath to act in accordance<\/p>\n<p>with the Constitution and uphold the same, have to set an example by exhibiting total commitment<\/p>\n<p>to the Constitutional ideals. This principle is required to be observed with greater rigour by the<br \/>\nmembers of judicial fraternity who have been bestowed with the power to adjudicate upon<\/p>\n<p>important constitutional and legal issues and protect and preserve rights of the individuals and<\/p>\n<p>society as a whole. Discipline is sine qua non for effective and efficient functioning of the judicial<\/p>\n<p>system. If the Courts command others to act in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution<\/p>\n<p>and rule of law, it is not possible to countenance violation of the constitutional principle by those<\/p>\n<p>who are required to lay down the law.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>71.    In the light of what has been stated above, we deem it proper to clarify that the comments<\/p>\n<p>and observations made by the two-Judges Bench in <a href=\"\/doc\/1569551\/\">UP State Electricity Board vs. Pooran Chandra<\/p>\n<p>Pandey<\/a> (supra) should be read as obiter and the same should neither be treated as binding by the<\/p>\n<p>High Courts, Tribunals and other judicial foras nor they should be relied upon or made basis for<\/p>\n<p>bypassing the principles laid down by the Constitution Bench.\n<\/p>\n<p>Equal Pay for Equal Work<\/p>\n<p>72.    The respondents&#8217; claim for fixation of pay in the regular scale and grant of other monetary<\/p>\n<p>benefits at par with those appointed against the sanctioned posts has been accepted by the High<\/p>\n<p>Courts on the premise that their duties and functions are similar to those performed by regular<\/p>\n<p>employees. In the opinion of the High Courts, similarity in the nature of work of the company paid<\/p>\n<p>staff on the one hand and regular employees on the other hand, is by itself sufficient for invoking<\/p>\n<p>the principle of equal pay for equal work, In our view, the approach adopted by the High Courts is<\/p>\n<p>clearly erroneous and directions given for bringing about parity between the company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>and regular employees in the matter of pay, allowances etc. are liable to be upset.<\/p>\n<p>73.    The principle of equal pay for equal work for men and women embodied in Article 39(d) was<\/p>\n<p>first considered in <a href=\"\/doc\/1303915\/\">Kishori Mohanlal Bakshi vs. Union of India<\/a> [AIR 1962 SC 1139] and it was held<\/p>\n<p>that the said principle is not capable of being enforced in a Court of law. After 36 years, the issue<\/p>\n<p>was again considered in Randhir Singh Vs. Union of India (supra), and it was unequivocally ruled<br \/>\nthat the principle of equal pay for equal work is not an abstract doctrine and can be enforced by<\/p>\n<p>reading it into the doctrine of equality enshrined in Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India.<\/p>\n<p>The ratio of Randhir Singh Vs. Union of India (supra) was reiterated and applied in several cases &#8211;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/145498\/\">Dhirendra Chamoli vs. State of U.P.<\/a> (supra), Surinder Singh and Another vs. Engineer-in-Chief,<\/p>\n<p>CPWD and Others (supra), <a href=\"\/doc\/176622\/\">Daily Rated Casual Labour vs. Union of India<\/a> (supra), Dharwad<\/p>\n<p>District P.W.D. Literate Daily Wage Employees&#8217; Association vs. State of Karnataka (supra) and<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/146663\/\">Jaipal vs. State of Haryana<\/a> [1988 (3) SCC 354] and it was held that even a daily wage employee who<\/p>\n<p>is performing duties similar to regular employees is entitled to the same pay.           However, in<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/1374340\/\">Federation of All India Customs and Central Excise Stenographers (Recognized) Union vs. Union of<\/p>\n<p>India<\/a> [1988 (3) SCC 91], Mewa Ram Kanojia vs. A.I.I.M.S. [1989 (2) SCC 235], V. Markandeya vs.<\/p>\n<p>State of A.P. [1989 (3) SCC 191], <a href=\"\/doc\/1199285\/\">Harbans Lal and others vs. State of Himachal Pradesh and others<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[1989 (4) SCC 459], <a href=\"\/doc\/1877922\/\">State of U.P. and others vs. J.P. Chaurasia and others<\/a> [1989 (1) SCC 121],<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"\/doc\/1844357\/\">Griha Kalyan Workers&#8217; Union vs. Union of India<\/a> [1991 (1) SCC 619], <a href=\"\/doc\/826949\/\">Ghaziabad Development<\/p>\n<p>Authority vs. Vikram Chaudhary<\/a> [1995 (5) SCC 210], <a href=\"\/doc\/311082\/\">State of Haryana and others vs. Jasmer Singh<\/p>\n<p>and others<\/a> [1996 (11) SCC 77], <a href=\"\/doc\/321918\/\">State of Haryana vs. Surinder Kumar<\/a> [1997 (3) SCC 633], <a href=\"\/doc\/1010619\/\">Union of<\/p>\n<p>India vs. K.V. Baby<\/a> [1998 (9) SCC 252], <a href=\"\/doc\/1726804\/\">State of Orissa vs. Balram Sahu<\/a> [2003 (1) SCC 250], <a href=\"\/doc\/909012\/\">Utkal<\/p>\n<p>University vs. Jyotirmayee Nayak<\/a> [2003 (4) SCC 760], State of Haryana and another vs. Tilak Raj<\/p>\n<p>and others [2003 (6) SCC 123], <a href=\"\/doc\/734107\/\">Union of India vs. Tarit Ranjan Das<\/a> [2003 (11) SCC 658], <a href=\"\/doc\/1153570\/\">Apangshu<\/p>\n<p>Mohan Lodh vs. State of Tripura<\/a> [2004 (1) SCC 119], <a href=\"\/doc\/1024080\/\">State of Haryana vs. Charanjit Singh<\/a> [2006<\/p>\n<p>(9) SCC 321], <a href=\"\/doc\/1357219\/\">Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. vs. Dan Bahadur Singh<\/a> (supra), <a href=\"\/doc\/1028495\/\">Kendriya Vidyalaya<\/p>\n<p>Sangathan vs. L.V. Subramanyeswara<\/a> (supra) and <a href=\"\/doc\/1805812\/\">Canteen Mazdoor Sabha vs. Metallurgical &amp;<\/p>\n<p>Engineering Consultants (India) Ltd.<\/a> [2007 (7) SCC 710], the Court consciously and repeatedly<\/p>\n<p>deviated from the ruling of Randhir Singh Vs. Union of India (supra) and held that similarity in the<\/p>\n<p>designation or quantum of work are not determinative of equality in the matter of pay scales and<\/p>\n<p>that before entertaining and accepting the claim based on the principle of equal pay for equal work,<\/p>\n<p>the Court must consider the factors like the source and mode of recruitment\/appointment, the<\/p>\n<p>qualifications, the nature of work, the value judgment, responsibilities, reliability, experience,<br \/>\nconfidentiality, functional need etc. <a href=\"\/doc\/311082\/\">In State of Haryana and others vs. Jasmer Singh and others<\/a><\/p>\n<p>(supra), the two-Judges Bench laid down the following principle :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;8. It is, therefore, clear that the quality of work performed by different sets of<br \/>\n       persons holding different jobs will have to be evaluated. There may be differences in<br \/>\n       educational or technical qualifications which may have a bearing on the skills which<br \/>\n       the holders bring to their job although the designation of the job may be the same.<br \/>\n       There may also be other considerations which have relevance to efficiency in service<br \/>\n       which may justify differences in pay scales on the basis of criteria such as experience<br \/>\n       and seniority, or a need to prevent stagnation in the cadre, so that good performance<br \/>\n       can be elicited from persons who have reached the top of the pay scale. There may be<br \/>\n       various other similar considerations which may have a bearing on efficient<br \/>\n       performance in a job. This Court has repeatedly observed that evaluation of such jobs<br \/>\n       for the purposes of pay scale must be left to expert bodies and, unless there are any<br \/>\n       mala fides, its evaluation should be accepted.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>74.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1199285\/\">In Harbans Lal and others vs. State of Himachal Pradesh and others<\/a> (supra), the Court held<\/p>\n<p>that the claim of carpenters employed by an incorporated company for party in wages payable to<\/p>\n<p>their counterparts in Government service is unsustainable. <a href=\"\/doc\/1145604\/\">In Jawaharlal Nehru Technological<\/p>\n<p>University vs. T. Sumalatha (Smt.) and others<\/a> (supra), it was held that the respondents who were<\/p>\n<p>employed under a scheme known as National Technical Manpower Information System, which was<\/p>\n<p>sponsored by the then Ministry of Education and Culture, cannot claim parity with the regular<\/p>\n<p>Government employees in the matter of pay scale.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>75.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1805812\/\">In Canteen Mazdoor Sabha vs. Metallurgical &amp; Engineering Consultants (India) Ltd.<\/a><\/p>\n<p>(supra), another two-Judges Bench held that simply because some employees of a contractor of the<\/p>\n<p>alleged head employer are performing the task or duties similar to the employees of the head<\/p>\n<p>employer, it will not entitle such employees to claim parity.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>76.    As mentioned earlier, the respondents were employed\/engaged by the Official Liquidators<\/p>\n<p>pursuant to the sanction accorded by the Court under Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules and they are paid<br \/>\nsalaries and allowances from the company fund. They were neither appointed against sanctioned<\/p>\n<p>posts nor they were paid out from the Consolidated Fund of India. Therefore, the mere fact that<\/p>\n<p>they were doing work similar to the regular employees of the office of the Official Liquidators<\/p>\n<p>cannot be treated as sufficient for applying the principle of equal pay for equal work.      Any such<\/p>\n<p>direction will compel the Government to sanction additional posts in the offices of the Official<\/p>\n<p>Liquidators so as to facilitate payment of salaries and allowances to the company paid staff in the<\/p>\n<p>regular pay scale from the Consolidate Fund of India and in view of our finding that the policy<\/p>\n<p>decision taken by the Government of India to reduce the number of posts meant for direct<\/p>\n<p>recruitment does not suffer from any legal or constitutional infirmity, it is not possible to entertain<\/p>\n<p>the plea of the respondents for payment of salaries and allowances in the regular pay scales and<\/p>\n<p>other monetary benefits at par with regular employees by applying the principle of equal pay for<\/p>\n<p>equal work.\n<\/p>\n<p>Legitimate Expectation<\/p>\n<p>77.    We shall now advert to the question whether the respondents can invoke the doctrine of<\/p>\n<p>legitimate expectation for supporting the impugned orders. This part of the respondent&#8217;s claim is<\/p>\n<p>founded on their assertion that notwithstanding the contrary stipulation contained in the orders of<\/p>\n<p>appointment, they had expected that in view of the 1978 Scheme the Government will absorb them<\/p>\n<p>in the regular cadres on some future date and give benefit of the principle of equal pay for equal<\/p>\n<p>work. The argument of Shri Bhaskar P. Gupta and Ms. Jyoti Mendiratta is that the respondents<\/p>\n<p>had joined as company paid staff with the hope that they will be absorbed in the Government<\/p>\n<p>service, but their hopes have been totally belied because instead of creating adequate number of<\/p>\n<p>posts for absorption of company paid staff in accordance with the 1999 Scheme, the Government<\/p>\n<p>has arbitrarily abolished large number of posts in direct recruitment quota and on that account,<\/p>\n<p>even those who have been adjudged suitable will never get absorbed in the regular cadres. In our<\/p>\n<p>opinion, there is no merit in this argument. The pleadings of the parties and records produced<\/p>\n<p>before the High Courts and this Court do not show that any competent authority of the Government<br \/>\nof India had ever given any assurance much less made a promise to the respondents that they will<\/p>\n<p>get absorbed against the sanctioned posts or that there will be no abolition of posts meant to be<\/p>\n<p>filled by direct recruitment. As a matter of fact, the respondents joined as company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>knowing fully well that they were being employed as additional staff in connection with the<\/p>\n<p>liquidation proceedings and on the basis of sanction accorded by the concerned Court and further<\/p>\n<p>that they will have no right to seek absorption. They also knew that their employment will come to<\/p>\n<p>an end on the expiry of the tenure specified in the letter\/order of appointment or on cessation of the<\/p>\n<p>liquidation proceedings. In this scenario, the doctrine of legitimate expectation cannot be invoked<\/p>\n<p>for sustaining the directions given by the High Courts for absorption of all company paid staff with<\/p>\n<p>consequential benefits or for nullifying the policy decision taken by the Government to gradually<\/p>\n<p>reduce the direct recruitment quota.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>78.    The concept of &#8220;due process of law&#8221; has played a major role in the development of<\/p>\n<p>administrative law. It ensures fairness in public administration. The administrative authorities who<\/p>\n<p>are entrusted with the task of deciding lis between the parties or adjudicating upon the rights of the<\/p>\n<p>individuals are duty bound to comply with the rules of natural justice, which are multifaceted. The<\/p>\n<p>absence of bias in the decision making process and compliance of audi alteram partem are two of<\/p>\n<p>these facets.   The doctrine of legitimate expectation is a nacent addition to the rules of natural<\/p>\n<p>justice. It goes beyond statutory rights by serving as another device for rendering justice. At the<\/p>\n<p>root of the principle of legitimate expectation is the constitutional principle of rule of law, which<\/p>\n<p>requires regularity, predictability and certainty in government&#8217;s dealings with the public &#8211; J. Raz,<\/p>\n<p>The Authority of Law [(1979) Ch. 11]. The `legal certainty&#8217; is also a basic principle of European<\/p>\n<p>Community. European law is based upon the concept of &#8220;vertrauensschutz&#8221; (the honouring of a<\/p>\n<p>trust or confidence). It is for these reasons that the existence of a legitimate expectation may even in<\/p>\n<p>the absence of a right of private law, justify its recognition in public law.<\/p>\n<p>79.    In Halsbury&#8217;s laws of England (Fourth Edition), the doctrine of legitimate expectation has<br \/>\nbeen described in the following words :\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;A person may have a legitimate expectation of being treated in a certain way by an<br \/>\n       administrative authority even though he has no legal right in private law to receive<br \/>\n       such treatment. The expectation may arise either from a representation or promise<br \/>\n       made by the authority, including an implied representation, or from consistent past<br \/>\n       practice.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>80.    A formal statement on the doctrine of legitimate expectation can be found in the judgment of<\/p>\n<p>House of Lords in Council of Civil Services Union vs. Minister of the Civil Service [1985 AC 374<\/p>\n<p>(HL]. In that case the Government tried to forbid trade unionism among civil service.        For this,<\/p>\n<p>Civil Service Order-in-1982 Council was issued.     The Court of appeal declared that the Minister<\/p>\n<p>had acted unlawfully in abridging the fundamental right of a citizen to become a member of the<\/p>\n<p>trade union. The House of Lords approved the judgment of the Court of appeal and held that such<\/p>\n<p>a right could not be taken away without consulting the concerned civil servant.<\/p>\n<p>81.    In India, the Courts have gradually recognized that while administering the affairs of the<\/p>\n<p>State, the Government and its departments are expected to honour the policy statements and treat<\/p>\n<p>the citizens without any discrimination. The theory of legitimate expectation first found its mention<\/p>\n<p>in <a href=\"\/doc\/813925\/\">Navjyoti Coop. Group Housing Society vs. Union of India<\/a> [1992 (4) SCC 477]. In that case the<\/p>\n<p>right of a housing society for right to priority in the matter of registration was recognized in the<\/p>\n<p>following words :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;&#8230; In the aforesaid facts, the Group Housing Societies were entitled to `legitimate<br \/>\n       expectation&#8217; of following consistent past practice in the matter of allotment, even<br \/>\n       though they may not have any legal right in private law to receive such treatment.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       The existence of `legitimate expectation&#8217; may have a number of different<br \/>\n       consequences and one of such consequences is that the authority ought not to act to<br \/>\n       defeat the `legitimate expectation&#8217; without some overriding reason of public policy to<br \/>\n       justify its doing so. In a case of `legitimate expectation&#8217; if the authority proposes to<br \/>\n       defeat a person&#8217;s `legitimate expectation&#8217; it should afford him an opportunity to make<br \/>\n       representations in the matter. In this connection reference may be made to the<br \/>\n      discussions on `legitimate expectation&#8217; at page 151 of Volume 1(1) of Halsbury&#8217;s Laws<br \/>\n      of England &#8212; Fourth Edition (re-issue). We may also refer to a decision of the House<br \/>\n      of Lords in Council of Civil Service Unions v. Minister for the Civil Service. It has<br \/>\n      been held in the said decision that an aggrieved person was entitled to judicial review<br \/>\n      if he could show that a decision of the public authority affected him of some benefit or<br \/>\n      advantage which in the past he had been permitted to enjoy and which he legitimately<br \/>\n      expected to be permitted to continue to enjoy either until he was given reasons for<br \/>\n      withdrawal and the opportunity to comment on such reasons.\n<\/p>\n<p>      It may be indicated here that the doctrine of `legitimate expectation&#8217; imposes in<br \/>\n      essence a duty on public authority to act fairly by taking into consideration all<br \/>\n      relevant factors relating to such `legitimate expectation&#8217;. Within the conspectus of fair<br \/>\n      dealing in case of `legitimate expectation&#8217;, the reasonable opportunities to make<br \/>\n      representation by the parties likely to be affected by any change of consistent past<br \/>\n      policy, come in. We have not been shown any compelling reasons taken into<br \/>\n      consideration by the Central Government to make a departure from the existing<br \/>\n      policy of allotment with reference to seniority in Registration by introducing a new<br \/>\n      guideline.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                                              (emphasis supplied)<\/p>\n<p>82.   <a href=\"\/doc\/298443\/\">In Food Corporation of India vs. Kamdhenu Cattle Feed Industries<\/a> [1993 (1) SCC 71], this<\/p>\n<p>Court considered whether rejection of the tender of the respondent was vitiated by arbitrariness.<\/p>\n<p>The claim of the respondents was negated in the following words :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      &#8220;In the contractual sphere as in all other State actions, the State and all its<br \/>\n      instrumentalities have to conform to article 14 of the Constitution of which non-<br \/>\n      arbitrariness is a significant facet. There is no unfettered discretion in public law : A<br \/>\n      public authority possesses powers only to use them for public good. This imposes the<br \/>\n      duty to act fairly and to adopt a procedure which is `fairplay in action&#8217;.          Due<br \/>\n      observance of this obligation as a part of good administration raises a reasonable or<br \/>\n      legitimate expectation in every citizen to be treated fairly in his interaction with the<br \/>\n      State and its instrumentalities, with this element forming a necessary component of<br \/>\n      the decision making process in all State actions. To satisfy this requirement of non-<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>      arbitrariness in a State action, it is, therefore, necessary to consider and give due<br \/>\n      weight to the reasonable or legitimate expectations of the persons likely to be affected<br \/>\n      by the decision or else that unfairness in the exercise of the power may amount to an<br \/>\n       abuse or excess of power apart from affecting the bona fides of the decision in a given<br \/>\n       case.     The decision so made would be exposed to challenge on the ground of<br \/>\n       arbitrariness. The rule of law does not completely eliminate discretion in the exercise<br \/>\n       of power, as it is unrealistic, but provides for control of its exercise of by judicial<br \/>\n       review.\n<\/p>\n<p>               The mere reasonable or legitimate expectation of a citizen, in such a situation,<br \/>\n       may not by itself be a distinct enforceable right, but failure to consider and give due<br \/>\n       weight to it may render the decision arbitrary, and this is how the requirement of due<br \/>\n       consideration of a legitimate expectation forms part of the principle of non-<br \/>\n       arbitrariness, a necessary concomitant of the rule of law.            Every legitimate<br \/>\n       expectation is a relevant factor requiring due consideration in a fair decision-making<br \/>\n       process. Whether the expectation of the claimant is reasonable or legitimate in the<br \/>\n       context is a question of fact in each case. Whenever the question arises, it is to be<br \/>\n       determined not according to the claimant&#8217;s perception but in larger public interest<br \/>\n       wherein other more important considerations may outweigh what would otherwise<br \/>\n       have been the legitimate expectation of the claimant.      A bona fide decision of the<br \/>\n       public authority reached in this manner would satisfy the requirement of non-<br \/>\n       arbitrariness and withstand judicial scrutiny. The doctrine of legitimate expectation<br \/>\n       gets assimilated in the rule of law and operates in our legal system in this manner<br \/>\n       and to this context.&#8221;\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                                          [Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<p>83.    <a href=\"\/doc\/1964881\/\">In Union of India and others vs. Hindustan Development Corporation and others<\/a> [1993 (3)<\/p>\n<p>SCC 499] this Court considered the doctrine of legitimate expectation and held :<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;For legal purposes, the expectation cannot be the same as anticipation. It is different<br \/>\n       from a wish, a desire or a hope nor can it amount to a claim or demand on the ground<br \/>\n       of a right. However earnest and sincere a wish, a desire or a hope may be and<br \/>\n       however confidently one may look to them to be fulfilled, they by themselves cannot<br \/>\n       amount to an assertable expectation and a mere disappointment does not attract legal<br \/>\n       consequences. A pious hope even leading to a moral obligation cannot amount to a<br \/>\n       legitimate expectation. The legitimacy of an expectation can be inferred only if it is<br \/>\n       founded on the sanction of law or custom or an established procedure followed in<br \/>\n       regular and natural sequence. Again it is distinguishable from a genuine expectation.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       Such expectation should be justifiably legitimate and protectable. Every such<br \/>\n      legitimate expectation does not by itself fructify into a right and therefore it does not<br \/>\n      amount to a right in the conventional sense.&#8221;` [Emphasis supplied]<\/p>\n<p>84.   <a href=\"\/doc\/349643\/\">In Punjab Communications Ltd. vs. Union of India<\/a> [1999 (4) SCC 727], the Court<\/p>\n<p>observed as under :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;The principle of `legitimate expectation&#8217; is still at a stage of evolution. The principle<br \/>\n      is at the root of the rule of law and requires regularity, predictability and certainty in<br \/>\n      the Government&#8217;s dealings with the public. The procedural part of it relates to a<br \/>\n      representation that a hearing or other appropriate procedure will be afforded before<br \/>\n      the decision is made. &#8230;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>             However, the more important aspect is whether the decision-maker can sustain<br \/>\n      the change in policy by resort to Wednesbury principles of rationality or whether the<br \/>\n      court can go into the question whether the decision-maker has properly balanced the<br \/>\n      legitimate expectation as against the need for a change. &#8230; In sum, this means that the<br \/>\n      judgment whether public interest overrides the substantive legitimate expectation of<br \/>\n      individuals will be for the decision-maker who has made the change in the policy. The<br \/>\n      choice of the policy is for the decision-maker and not for the court. The legitimate<br \/>\n      substantive expectation merely permits the court to find out if the change in policy<br \/>\n      which is the cause for defeating the legitimate expectation is irrational or perverse or<br \/>\n      one which no reasonable person could have made.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>               (emphasis in original)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>85.   In J.P. Bansal Vs. State of Rajasthan [2003 (5) SCC 134], this Court refused to invoke the<\/p>\n<p>doctrine of legitimate expectation in favour of the appellant who claimed compensation of pre-\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>mature termination of the contractual appointment as Judicial Member of the Rajasthan Taxation<\/p>\n<p>Appellate Tribunal.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>86.   <a href=\"\/doc\/1926455\/\">In Dr. Chanchal Goyal (Mrs.) vs. State of Rajasthan<\/a> [2003 (3) SCC 485], the appellants<\/p>\n<p>claim for absorption in the regular cadre\/regularization of service was rejected by the High Court.<\/p>\n<p>While approving the orders of the Single and Division Benches of the High Court, this Court<br \/>\nobserved :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;23. On the facts of the case delineated above, the principle of legitimate expectation<br \/>\n       has no application. It has not been shown as to how any act was done by the<br \/>\n       authorities which created an impression that the conditions attached in the original<br \/>\n       appointment order were waived. Mere continuance does not imply such waiver. No<br \/>\n       legitimate expectation can be founded on such unfounded impressions. It was not<br \/>\n       even indicated as to who, if any, and with what authority created such impression. No<br \/>\n       waiver which would be against requisite compliances can be countenanced. Whether<br \/>\n       an expectation exists is, self-evidently, a question of fact. Clear statutory words<br \/>\n       override any expectation, however founded.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>87.    In Secretary, State of Karnataka vs. Uma Devi (supra), the Constitution Bench referred to<\/p>\n<p>the claim of the employees based on the doctrine of legitimate expectation and observed as under :<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>        &#8220;The doctrine can be invoked if the decisions of the administrative authority affect<br \/>\n       the person by depriving him of some benefit or advantage which either (i) he had in<br \/>\n       the past been permitted by the decision-maker to enjoy and which he can legitimately<br \/>\n       expect to be permitted to continue to do until there have been communicated to him<br \/>\n       some rational grounds for withdrawing it on which he has been given an opportunity<br \/>\n       to comment; or (ii) he has received assurance from the decision-maker that they will<br \/>\n       not be withdrawn without giving him first an opportunity of advancing reasons for<br \/>\n       contending that they should not be withdrawn.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>88.    <a href=\"\/doc\/771183\/\">In Kuldeep Singh vs. Govt. of NCT of Delhi<\/a> [2006 (5) SCC 702], the Court refused to invoke<\/p>\n<p>the doctrine of legitimate expectation to nullify the revised policy decision taken by the Government<\/p>\n<p>not to grant fresh liquor licenses.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>89.    In Ram Pravesh Singh vs. State of Bihar [2006 (8) SCC 381], a two-Judges Bench considered<\/p>\n<p>the question whether the employees of Futwah Phulwarisharif Gramya Vidyut Sahakari Samiti<\/p>\n<p>Ltd., which was a cooperative society, could claim absorption in the services of Bihar State<\/p>\n<p>Electricity Board by invoking the doctrine of legitimate expectation. The facts of that case show<br \/>\nthat the society was brought into existence by the State Government, the Electricity Board and the<\/p>\n<p>Rural Electrification Corporation for effective implementation of Rural Electrification Scheme<\/p>\n<p>meant for better distribution of electricity to rural areas, but the license of the society was revoked<\/p>\n<p>in the year 1995 and the Board refused to absorb the employees of the society. The learned Single<\/p>\n<p>Judge and Division Bench of the High Court declined to interfere with the decision of the Board.<\/p>\n<p>This Court dismissed the appeal of the employees and observed :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>       &#8220;What is legitimate expectation? Obviously, it is not a legal right. It is an expectation<br \/>\n       of a benefit, relief or remedy, that may ordinarily flow from a promise or established<br \/>\n       practice. The term &#8220;established practice&#8221; refers to a regular, consistent, predictable<br \/>\n       and certain conduct, process or activity of the decision-making authority. The<br \/>\n       expectation should be legitimate, that is, reasonable, logical and valid. Any<br \/>\n       expectation which is based on sporadic or casual or random acts, or which is<br \/>\n       unreasonable, illogical or invalid cannot be a legitimate expectation. Not being a right,<br \/>\n       it is not enforceable as such. It is a concept fashioned by the courts, for judicial review<br \/>\n       of administrative action. It is procedural in character based on the requirement of a<br \/>\n       higher degree of fairness in administrative action, as a consequence of the promise<br \/>\n       made, or practice established. In short, a person can be said to have a &#8220;legitimate<br \/>\n       expectation&#8221; of a particular treatment, if any representation or promise is made by an<br \/>\n       authority, either expressly or impliedly, or if the regular and consistent past practice<br \/>\n       of the authority gives room for such expectation in the normal course. As a ground for<br \/>\n       relief, the efficacy of the doctrine is rather weak as its slot is just above &#8220;fairness in<br \/>\n       action&#8221; but far below &#8220;promissory estoppel&#8221;. It may only entitle an expectant: (a) to<br \/>\n       an opportunity to show cause before the expectation is dashed; or (b) to an<br \/>\n       explanation as to the cause for denial. In appropriate cases, the courts may grant a<br \/>\n       direction requiring the authority to follow the promised procedure or established<br \/>\n       practice. A legitimate expectation, even when made out, does not always entitle the<br \/>\n       expectant to a relief. Public interest, change in policy, conduct of the expectant or any<br \/>\n       other valid or bona fide reason given by the decision-maker, may be sufficient to<br \/>\n       negative the &#8220;legitimate expectation&#8221;. The doctrine of legitimate expectation based on<br \/>\n       established practice (as contrasted from legitimate expectation based on a promise),<br \/>\n       can be invoked only by someone who has dealings or transactions or negotiations with<br \/>\n       an authority, on which such established practice has a bearing, or by someone who<br \/>\n       has a recognised legal relationship with the authority.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>       After noticing the judicial precedents on the subject, the Court held that employees of the<\/p>\n<p>erstwhile society cannot invoke the theory of legitimate expectation for compelling the Board to<\/p>\n<p>absorb them despite its precarious financial condition.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>90.    By applying the ratio of the aforementioned judgment to the facts of this case, we reiterate<\/p>\n<p>that the respondents cannot invoke the doctrine of legitimate expectation. At the cost of repetition,<\/p>\n<p>it needs to be emphasized that the respondents were employed by the Official Liquidators as<\/p>\n<p>additional staff pursuant to the sanction accorded by the concerned Courts. The conditions of their<\/p>\n<p>appointment clearly envisaged cessation of employment at the end of fixed tenure or on completion<\/p>\n<p>of liquidation proceedings. Of course, as it later turned out, the respondents were made to work in<\/p>\n<p>relation to different liquidation proceedings and for that purpose, the term of their<\/p>\n<p>employment\/engagement was extended from time to time and they continued in service for many<\/p>\n<p>years in the same capacity. However, no material has been placed before this Court to show that<\/p>\n<p>any promise was made or any assurance was held out to the respondents by any competent<\/p>\n<p>authori9ty of the Government of India for their absorption in the regular cadres. There is nothing<\/p>\n<p>in the language of Rule 308 of the 1959 Rules from which it can be inferred that those employed as<\/p>\n<p>additional staff in connection with the liquidation proceedings will, in future, be absorbed in the<\/p>\n<p>regular cadres. The 1978 as also the 1999 Schemes are merely illustrative of compassionate<\/p>\n<p>approach adopted by the Government of India for facilitating absorption of the company paid staff<\/p>\n<p>against the sanctioned posts to the extent of 50% vacancies in the direct recruitment quota. These<\/p>\n<p>schemes cannot be read as a charter for legitimating the claim of company paid staff to be absorbed<\/p>\n<p>in the Government service de hors availability of vacancies, more so when the Government has<\/p>\n<p>taken a rational policy decision to reduce direct recruitment to various services in a phased manner.<\/p>\n<p>In our opinion, any direction by the Court for absorption of all company paid staff would be<\/p>\n<p>detrimental to public interest in more than one ways. Firstly, it will compel the Government to<\/p>\n<p>abandon the policy decision of reducing the direct recruitment to various services. Secondly, this<\/p>\n<p>will be virtual abrogation of the statutory rules which envisages appointment to different cadres by<br \/>\ndirect recruitment.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>91.           Before parting, we consider it necessary to take cognizance of the fact that in compliance of<\/p>\n<p>order passed by Calcutta High Court in Writ Petition No.211 of 2001, the Government of India<\/p>\n<p>created 51 posts for absorption of staff employed by the Court Liquidator. However, that cannot<\/p>\n<p>be made basis for granting relief to the respondents because creation of those posts was clouded by<\/p>\n<p>the threat of contempt, for which proceedings had been initiated by the aggrieved employees.<\/p>\n<p>92.           On the basis of above discussion, we hold that &#8211;\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      (i)        the respondents are not entitled to absorption against the sanctioned posts in Group C of<\/p>\n<p>                 the Department of Company Affairs, Government of India, as of right.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (ii)       The 1999 Scheme does not suffer from any legal or constitutional infirmity insofar as it<\/p>\n<p>                 provides for absorption of the company paid staff only to the extent of 50% vacancies in<\/p>\n<p>                 direct recruitment quota of Group C posts.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (iii)      The decision taken by the Government of India to reduce the number of posts in direct<\/p>\n<p>                 recruitment quota and consequential abolition of posts in the Department of Company<\/p>\n<p>                 Affairs is not vitiated by arbitrariness or violation of the doctrine of equality or<\/p>\n<p>                 malafides.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (iv)       The doctrine of legitimate expectation cannot be invoked for sustaining the directions<\/p>\n<p>                 given by the High Courts of Calcutta and Delhi for creation of supernumerary posts to<\/p>\n<p>                 facilitate absorption of all company paid staff in the regular cadres.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (v)        The respondents are not entitled to have their pay fixed in the regular scales and other<\/p>\n<p>                 monetary benefits at par with regular employees working under the Official Liquidators.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>93.           Notwithstanding our conclusion that the directions given by the Calcutta and Delhi High<\/p>\n<p>Courts for absorption of company paid staff against Group C posts and grant of monetary benefits<\/p>\n<p>to them at par with regular employees of the Department of Company Affairs are legally<br \/>\nunsustainable, we are inclined to accept the contention of the respondents that failure of the<\/p>\n<p>Government of India to frame scheme for absorption of Group D posts has resulted in invidious<\/p>\n<p>discrimination qua one      section of the company paid staff. The appellants have not placed any<\/p>\n<p>material before this Court to show that the finding recorded by the learned Single Judge of Delhi<\/p>\n<p>High Curt that a number of persons were employed by the Official Liquidator in 1985 and<\/p>\n<p>thereafter who could be considered for absorption against Group D posts. This means that at the<\/p>\n<p>time of framing of the 1978 Scheme the existing company paid staff did not include the employees<\/p>\n<p>who could be absorbed on Group D posts and this appears to be the reason why the said scheme<\/p>\n<p>was confined to absorption of company paid staff against Group C posts. Since the employees who<\/p>\n<p>could be eligible for absorption on Group D posts were appointed in 1985 and thereafter, the<\/p>\n<p>Government of India should have, while framing the 1999 Scheme, taken cognizance of their<\/p>\n<p>presence and made appropriate provision for their absorption.        Its failure to do so has certainly<\/p>\n<p>resulted in unintended discrimination qua one section of the company paid staff. It is, therefore,<\/p>\n<p>appropriate to direct that the Government of India should frame a scheme for absorption of eligible<\/p>\n<p>and suitable employees against Group D posts.         The scheme should be modeled on the 1999<\/p>\n<p>Scheme. The needful be done within six moths. Thereafter, eligible and suitable members of the<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff should be absorbed against Group D posts.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>94.    We also feel that the salaries and allowances payable to the company paid staff should be<\/p>\n<p>suitably increased in the wake of huge escalation of living cost. <a href=\"\/doc\/1145604\/\">In Jawaharlal Nehru Technological<\/p>\n<p>University vs. T. Sumalatha (Smt.) and others<\/a> (supra), a two-Judges Bench, after taking note of the<\/p>\n<p>fact that emoluments payable to the Investigators appointed in the Nodal Centre at Hyderabad had<\/p>\n<p>not been revised for six years directed the Union of India to take expeditious steps in that direction.<\/p>\n<p>Keeping that judgment in mind, we direct the Official Liquidators attached to various High Courts<\/p>\n<p>to move the concerned Court for increasing the emoluments of the company paid staff. Such a<\/p>\n<p>request should be sympathetically considered by the concerned Courts and the emoluments of the<\/p>\n<p>company paid staff be suitably enhanced and paid subject to availability of funds.\n<\/p>\n<p>95.   In the result, the appeals are allowed. The impugned judgments and orders are set aside<\/p>\n<p>subject to the direction for framing of scheme for absorption of eligible and suitable employees<\/p>\n<p>against Group D posts and implementation thereof and increase in the salaries and emoluments<\/p>\n<p>payable to the company paid staff.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                      &#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.J.\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                      [ B.N. Agrawal ]<\/p>\n<p>                                                      &#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.J.\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                      [ Harjit Singh Bedi ]<\/p>\n<p>                                                      &#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.J.\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                      [ G.S. Singhvi ]<br \/>\nNew Delhi<br \/>\nNovember 4, 2008.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Supreme Court of India Official Liquidator vs Dayananad &amp; Ors on 4 November, 2008 Author: G Singhvi Bench: B.N. Agrawal, Harjit Singh Bedi, G.S. Singhvi IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION CIVIL APPEAL NO.2985 OF 2007 Official Liquidator &#8230; Appellants Vs. Dayanand and Others &#8230; Respondents WITH Civil Appeal Nos.2986 to 2990 [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[30],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-231939","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-supreme-court-of-india"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Official Liquidator vs Dayananad &amp; Ors on 4 November, 2008 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; High Court | Legal India<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/official-liquidator-vs-dayananad-ors-on-4-november-2008\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Official Liquidator vs Dayananad &amp; 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