Union of India and Ors. Vs. Shri Bhanwar Lal Mundan
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 14007 of 2012)
[From the Judgment and Order dated 09.05.2011 of the High Court of Rajasthan at Jodhpur in CWP No. 11838 of 2010]
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 14007 of 2012)
[From the Judgment and Order dated 09.05.2011 of the High Court of Rajasthan at Jodhpur in CWP No. 11838 of 2010]
Mr. S.P. Singh, Senior Advocate, Mr. N.K. Karhail (for Mr. B. Krishna Prasad), Advocate with him for the Appellants.
Ms. Aishwarya Bhati, Advocate for the Respondent.
Constitution of India, 1950
Articles 14, 16, 226 FR-22C Pay fixation Pension Gangman promoted to post of store-keeper in 1977 Went on deputation in 1977 in construction wing Given post of PW Mistry since 1981 and pay scale of Rs. 380-560 for said post Scale of Rs. 1400-2300 given on completion of training In regular selection of JE-I, he participated and was successful Joined in 1994, where pay fixed, keeping in view the benefit he was drawing in construction organization After superannuation, when pension was being fixed, accounts department noted excess pay being paid due to erroneous fixation of pay Direction for re-fixation of pay and recovery of excess sum vide letter dt. 22-10.2007 If pay of employee was erroneously fixed – If directions for recovery of excess amount allegedly paid, could be given. Held that fixation of pay on basis of salary being drawn on deputation post was erroneous. Hence, authorities were justified in rectifying the mistake. On concession being made, excess payment not to be recovered. Badri Parshad’s case distinguished. Syed Abdul Qadir’s case, held applicable only to question of recovery. Cases of P.N. Natrajan, Dr. Binapani Dei, Om Bharti, Puranjit Singh, Inder Singh, referred and relied upon.
In Badri Prasad (Para 12)
The directions were issued in the special fact- situation and, in any case, it does not pertain to a situation where someone gets repatriated on being selected to a higher post and on that foundation would claim pay protection and consequent fixation of pay in the selection post. (Para 13)
The respondent, being conscious of his position and to have the status, appeared in the selection process, got selected and joined the parent cadre. The respondent was sent on deputation and his lien in the parent department continued and hence, it was obligatory on the part of the authorities in the parent department to intimate him when the selection process for the higher post was undertaken as he had already come within the zone of consideration. (Paras 18 & 19)
In Puranjit Singh v. Union Territory of Chandigarh [1994 Supp (3) SCC 471] it has been held that when a deputationist is repatriated he cannot claim promotions in the parent department on the basis on officiation in a higher post in the borrower organization. The respondent was getting higher scale of pay in the post while he was holding a particular post as a deputationist. After his repatriation to the parent cadre on selection to a higher post he was given higher scale of pay as it was fixed keeping in view the pay scale drawn by him while he was working in the ex-cadre post. Such fixation of pay, needless to say, was erroneous and, therefore, the authorities were within their domain to rectify the same. (Paras 20 & 22)
2. Syed Abdul Qadir and others v. State of Bihar and others [JT 2009 (1) SC 385] (Para 4)
3. Inder Pal Yadav and others v. Union of India and others [(2005) 11 SCC 301] (Para 4)
4. Badri Prasad and others v. Union of India and others [JT 2005 (11) SC 304] (Para 4)
5. State of Punjab and others v. Inder Singh and others [JT 1997 (8) SC 466] (Para 21)
6. Puranjit Singh v. Union Territory of Chandigarh [JT 1994 (6) SC 239] (Para 20)
7. D.M. Bharati v. L.M. Sud and others [JT 1990 (4) SC 622] (Para 19)
8. Sayeedur Rehman v. State of Bihar [(1973) 3 SCC 333] (Para 16)
9. State of Orissa v. Dr. Binapani Dei [AIR 1967 SC 1269] (Para 16)
1. Leave granted,
2. This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment and order dated 9.5.2011 passed by the High Court of Judicature of Rajasthan at Jodhpur in D.B. Civil Writ Petition No. 11838 of 2010 whereby the Division Bench has concurred with the view expressed by the Central Administrative Tribunal, Jodhpur Bench at Jodhpur (for short the tribunal) in O.A. No. 109 of 2008 wherein the tribunal had quashed the order passed by the competent authority re-fixing his pay prior to his retirement and directing recovery of the amount paid from 3.12.1994 to 31.12.2007.
3. The undisputed facts are that the respondent was appointed as a Gangman on JU Division on 15.1.1966 as a substitute and was regularized in the year 1972. He was promoted to the post of Store Keeper in October, 1977 and thereafter, he went on deputation to Construction Organization in December, 1977. He was given the post of PW Mistry in the Construction Organization with effect from 10.4.1981 in the pay scale of Rs.380-560. On completion of the training he came in the grade of Rs.1400-2300 by the Construction Wing of the railways. Subsequently, when there was a regular selection for the post of JE-I in his parent department, he was called to participate in the selection which he did and being declared successful, he joined in the said promotional post on 3.12.1994. While giving him posting in the year 1994, his pay was fixed keeping in view the benefit he had availed while he was working in the Construction Organization. When the date of superannuation approached and pension was going to be determined, it was noticed by the accounts department that he had been given excess pay due to erroneous fixation of pay scale and, accordingly, a communication was sent on 22.10.2007 refixing his pay and directing recovery of the excess sum.
4. Being dissatisfied with the said action, the respondent approached the tribunal which, placing reliance on the authorities in Inder Pal Yadav and others v. Union of India and others [(2005) 11 SCC 301], Badri Prasad and others v. Union of India and others [JT 2005 (11) SC 304 : (2005) 11 SCC 304] and Sayed Abdul Qadir and others v. State of Bihar and others [JT 2009 (1) SC 385 : (2009) 3 SCC 475], quashed the order of refixation and directed the benefit of pension be extended to him on the basis of pay he was actually drawing before the retirement within three months failing which the employer would be liable to pay interest at the rate of 15% per annum.
5. Grieved by the aforesaid order, the Union of India and its functionaries approached the High Court, which, by the impugned judgment, came to hold as follows: –
In our considered opinion, no flaw can be noticed in the reasoning arid the conclusion of the Tribunal while allowing the Original Application. In the first place, it is based on the Supreme Court decision quoted in the order itself. Secondly, there is no distinction brought about the facts of the case that is subject matter of the case in hand the one before the Supreme Court. Thirdly the impugned directions for fixation of the pension on the basis of last drawn pay cannot be said to be either illegal or arbitrary or against any provision of Act or/and rule made thereunder.
6. On the basis of aforesaid analysis the writ court dismissed the petition.
7. Criticising the orders passed by the tribunal as well as by the High Court Mr. S. P. Singh, learned senior counsel for the appellants has submitted that when the respondent was sent on deputation and came back to the parent department accepting promotion he was to be treated at par with other promotees and could not have been entitled to draw higher pay scale solely on the ground that he was getting a better pay while he was on deputation. It is urged by him when the respondent had no legal right to get a particular pay scale and it was wrongly fixed and could only be noticed prior to his retirement it became obligatory on the part of the authorities to refix the pay and accordingly determine the pension and hence, the action of the authorities could not have been found fault with. It is his further submission that neither the tribunal nor the High Court has addressed the issue pertaining to the entitlement of the respondent but directed the pension to be paid on the basis of the pay drawn by him before the retirement. Learned counsel would further contend that as far as recovery is concerned, the petitioners have no intention to recover the same.
8. Ms. Aishwarya Bhati, learned counsel for the respondent relying on the authorities which have been pressed into service by the tribunal and accepted by the High Court urged that pay protection was given when the respondent came back to the parent cadre on promotion and, therefore, the said protection could not have been withdrawn on the foundation that there was an erroneous fixation of pay. It is argued by her that when a long time has lapsed from the date of repatriation on promotion to the parent cadre, steps for refixation immediately prior to superannuation of the respondent is neither permissible in law nor is it equitable. Learned counsel has canvassed that in any case there cannot be recovery of the same as there had been no misrepresentation by the respondent to avail the said benefit.
9. From the aforesaid rivalised submissions two questions, namely, (i) whether the pay of the respondent was erroneously fixed and (ii) whether there could have been a direction for recovery of the amount alleged to have been excessibly paid to the respondent, emerge for consideration.
10. It is perceptible from the orders passed by the tribunal as well as by the High Court that they have set aside the order dated 22.10.2007 placing reliance on three authorities. In Inder Pal Yadav (supra), a two-Judge Bench dealt with regularization and permanent absorption. It also dealt with the entitlement of the right of the employees to continue in the concerned project or to resist reversion back to the cadre or to enjoy a higher promotion merely on the basis of locally provisional promotion granted to them in the project in which they had been employed at a particular point of time. The Court has observed that if the stand of the petitioners therein was to be accepted, it would operate inequitably so far as the regular employees in the open line department are concerned. Thereafter, the learned Judges proceeded to state as follows: –
……while the petitioners cannot be granted the reliefs as prayed for in the writ petition, namely, that they should not be reverted to a lower post or that they should be treated as having been promoted by reason of their promotion in the projects, nevertheless, we wish to protect the petitioners against some of the anomalies which may arise, if the petitioners are directed to join their parent cadre or other project, in future. It cannot be lost sight of that the petitioners have passed trade tests to achieve the promotional level in a particular project. Therefore, if the petitioners are posted back to the same project they shall be entitled to the same pay as their contemporaries unless the posts held by such contemporary employees at the time of such reposting of the petitioners is based on selection.
11. The learned counsel for the respondent would place reliance on the last part of above quoted paragraph but the same, we are inclined to think, does not in any way buttress the submission put forth by the learned counsel for the respondent.
12. In Badri Prasad (supra) the issue was whether an employee substantially holding Group D post can claim regular promotional post, i.e., Group C. The Court in that context observed that the practice adopted by the Railways of taking work from employees in Group D post on higher Group C post for unduly long period legitimately raises hopes and claims for higher posts by those working in such higher posts. As the Railways is utilising for long periods the services of employees in Group D post for higher post in Group C carrying higher responsibilities, benefit of pay protection, age relaxation and counting of their service on the higher post towards requisite minimum prescribed period of service, if any, for promotion to the higher post must be granted to them as their legitimate claim. But they cannot be granted relief of regularising their services on the post of Storeman/Clerk merely on the basis of their ad hoc promotion from open line to higher post in the project or construction side. After so stating the Court opined thus:-
Without disturbing, therefore, orders of the Tribunal and the High Court the appellants are held entitled to the following additional reliefs. The pay last drawn by them in Group C post shall be protected even after their repatriation to Group D post in their parent department. They shall be considered in their turn for promotion to Group C post. The period of service spent by them on ad hoc basis in Group C post shall be given due weightage and counted towards length of requisite service, if any, prescribed for higher post in Group C. If there is any bar of age that shall be relaxed in the case of the appellants.
13. Reading the decision in entirety we are persuaded to think that the directions were issued in the special fact- situation and, in any case, it does not pertain to a situation where someone gets repatriated on being selected to a higher post and on that foundation would claim pay protection and consequent fixation of pay in the selection post.
14. In Syed Abdul Quadir (supra) the Court was dealing with fixation of pay under FR 22-C and as there was a wrong fixation, the question of recovery arose. The Court, relying on earlier decisions, opined thus:-
The relief against recovery is granted by courts not because of any right in the employees, but in equity, exercising judicial discretion to relieve the employees from the hardship that will be caused if recovery is ordered. But, if in a given case, it is proved that the employee had knowledge that the payment received was in excess of what was due or wrongly paid, or in cases where the error is detected or corrected within a short time of wrong payment, the matter being in the realm of judicial discretion, courts may, on the facts and circumstances of any particular case, order for recovery of the amount paid in excess. See Sahib Ram v. State of Haryana [JT 1995 (1) SC 24 : 1995 Supp (1) SCC 18], Shyam Babu Verma v. Union of India [JT 1994 (1) SC 574], Union of India v. M. Bhaskar [JT 1996 (5) SC 500], V. Gangaram v. Director [JT 1997 (5) SC 385], Col. B.J. Akkara (Retd.) v. Govt of India [JT 2006 (9) SC 125], Purshottam Lal Das v. State of Bihar [JT 2006 (12) SC 581], Punjab National Bank v. Manjeet Singh [JT 2006 (9) SC 247] and Bihar SEB v. Bijay Bhadur [(2000) 10 SCC 99].
15. From the aforesaid decision it is clear as day that it has been relied upon to by the tribunal as well as by the High Court for the purpose that there should be no recovery. Mr. Singh has conceded that steps shall not be taken for any recovery, and we think that the concession has been justly given. Be it noted, the aforesaid decision does not assist the respond to pyramid the submission of pay fixation and grant of pension.
16. In Union of India and another v. P.N. Natarajan and others [(2010) 12 SCC 405] the Court was dealing with a fact-situation where there was withdrawal of pensionary benefits. Adverting to the concept of natural justice and, relying on the decisions in State of Orissa v. Dr. Binapani Dei [AIR 1967 SC 1269] and Sayeedur Rehman v. State of Bihar [(1973) 3 SCC 333], the Court ruled thus: –
16. It is not in dispute that before directing revision of the pension, etc. payable to the private respondents, the Central Government did not give them action-oriented notice and opportunity of showing cause against the proposed action. Therefore, it must be held that the direction given by the Central Government to revise the retiral benefits including the pension payable to the respondents was nullity.
17. Dehors the above conclusion, we are convinced that the action taken by the appellants to revise and reduce the retiral benefits payable to the respondents was ex facie arbitrary, unreasonable and unjustified and the learned Single Judge did not commit any error by declaring that the Central Government did not have the jurisdiction to unilaterally alter/change the option exercised by the writ petitioners under Section 12-A(4)(b) read with Section 12-A(4-C).
17. The aforesaid conclusion was arrived at as the Union of India as such could not have invoked the terms of the memorandum of settlement to justify the directives and retiral benefits payable to the respondents. The aforesaid decision has to be read in the context of its facts and not to be construed as a precedent for the proposition that if the pay has been erroneously fixed that cannot be revised even if the facts are absolutely clear and undisputed.
18. We may note with profit that Mr. Singh, learned senior counsel, has submitted that the respondent was holding an ex-cadre post and it was the duty of the employer to ask him to participate in the selection in the promotional post, in the parent cadre. The respondent, being conscious of his position and to have the status, appeared in the selection process, got selected and joined the parent cadre. The learned senior counsel would submit that under a mistaken impression his pay was fixed in the promotional post in the parent cadre as a consequence of which he got more than the promotees in his batch and, hence, the same was required to be rectified and the employer was within its right to do so.
19. It is not in dispute that the respondent was sent on deputation and his lien in the parent department continued and hence, it was obligatory on the part of the authorities in the parent department to intimate him when the selection process for the higher post was undertaken as he had already come within the zone of consideration. In this context, we may refer with profit to the authority in D.M. Bharati v. L.M. Sud and others [JT 1990 (4) SC 622 : 1991 Supp (2) SCC 162] wherein the Court was dealing with a case whether the employee had got a promotion in the department to which he was sent on deputation. While considering the effect of the said promotion after repatriation the Court observed thus:-
that the appellants promotion as junior draftsman and proposed promotion as Surveyor-cum-Draftsman in the Town Planning Establishment cannot confer any rights on him in his parent department. When he left the Municipal Corporation and joined the Town Planning Establishment he was a tracer and he can go back to the Estate Department or any other department of the Municipal Corporation only to his original post i.e. as tracer, subject to the modification that, if in the meantime he had qualified for promotion to a higher post, that benefit cannot be denied to him.
19.1 Thus, the repatriation has to be to the original post and benefit of promotion in the department to which an employee is deputed is of no consequence subject to his entitlement of status otherwise available in the parent department.
20. In Puranjit Singh v. Union Territory of Chandigarh [JT 1994 (6) SC 239 : 1994 Supp (3) SCC 471] it has been held that when a deputationist is repatriated he cannot claim promotions in the parent department on the basis on officiation in a higher post in the borrower organization.
21. In State of Punjab and others v. Inder Singh and others [JT 1997 (8) SC 466 : (1997) 8 SCC 372], the learned Judges elaborately adverted to the concept of deputation and the right of a deputationist and in that context opined thus:-
The concept of deputation is well understood in service law and has a recognised meaning. Deputation has a different connotation in service law and the dictionary meaning of the word deputation is of no help. In simple words deputation means service outside the cadre or outside the parent department. Deputation is deputing or transferring an employee to a post outside his cadre, that is to say, to another department on a temporary basis. After the expiry period of deputation the employee has to come back to his parent department to occupy the same position unless in the meanwhile he has earned promotion in his parent department as per the Recruitment Rules.
22. In the case at hand, as stated earlier, the respondent was getting higher scale of pay in the post while he was holding a particular post as a deputationist. After his repatriation to the parent cadre on selection to a higher post he was given higher scale of pay as it was fixed keeping in view the pay scale drawn by him while he was working in the ex-cadre post. Such fixation of pay, needless to say, was erroneous and, therefore, the authorities were within their domain to rectify the same. Thus analysed, the irresistible conclusion is that the tribunal and the High Court have fallen into error by opining that the respondent would be entitled to get the pension on the basis of the pay drawn by him before his retirement.
23. Consequently, the appeal is allowed in part and the orders passed by the tribunal as well as by the High Court are set aside directing fixation of pension on the base of pay drawn by the respondent. However, as conceded to by Mr. Singh, there shall be no recovery from the excess amount paid to the respondent. There shall be no order as to costs.
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