Lakshmana Rao Yadavalli & Anr. Vs. The State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 23807-23808 of 2012)
With
Civil Appeal Nos. 10888-10889 of 2013
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 25219-25220 of 2012)
[From the Judgment and Order dated 17.07.2012 of the High Court of Judicature of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad in Writ Petition Nos. 34683 of 2011 and 894 of 2012]
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 23807-23808 of 2012)
With
Civil Appeal Nos. 10888-10889 of 2013
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 25219-25220 of 2012)
[From the Judgment and Order dated 17.07.2012 of the High Court of Judicature of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad in Writ Petition Nos. 34683 of 2011 and 894 of 2012]
Mr. R. Basant, Mr. P.P. Rao, Senior Advocates, Mr. Y. Raja Gopala Rao, Mr. K. Parmeshwar, Mrs. Sudha Gupta, Mr. G. Ramakrishna Prasad, Mr. Suyodhan Byrapaneni, Mr. Mohd. Wasay Khan, Ms. Filza Moonis, M/s. Lawyers Knit & Co., Mr. K. Swami, Mr. Nikhil Swami, Mrs. Prabha Swami, Ms. Mahalakshmi Pavani, Mr. G. Balaji, Mr. Akshat Kulshrestha, Mr. S. Manish, Ms. Meghna, Advocates with them, for the Appellants.
Mr. Mohan Parasaran, ASG, Mr. L. Nageswara Rao, Mr. R. Basant, Mr. B. Adinarayana Rao, Mr. Basava Prabhu S. Patil, Senior Advocates, Mr. Anshuman Ashok, Mr. P.S. Tripathi, Mr. Sridhar Potaraju, Mr. G. Gangmei, Ms. Nisha Pandey, M/s. Mahalakshmi Balaji & Co., Mr. P. Vinay Kumar, Mr. Gannam Venkateswara Rao, Mr. G.N. Reddy, Mr. Debojit Borkakati, Mr. Bala Shivudu M., Mr. G. Ramakrishna Prasad, Mr. Suyodhan Byrapaneni, Mr. Mohd. Wasay Khan, Ms. Filza Moonis, Ms. Tatini Basu, Mr. B. Subrahmanya Prasad, Mr. Anirudh Sanganeria, Mr. Venkatakrishna Kunduru, Mr. Debjyoti Basu, Mr. S. Udaya Kumar Sagar, Ms. Bina Madhavan, Ms. Praseena E. Joseph, Mr. Shivendra Singh, Mr. Sinha Shrey Nikhilesh, Mr. Santosh Mishra, Mr. K. Parmeshwar, Mr. Vinay Kumar, Mr. C.S.N. Mohan Rao, Mr. Y. Raja Gopala Rao, M/s. Lawyers Knit & Co., Advocates, with them, for the Respondents.
Constitution of India, 1950
Article 233(2) – Selection in A.P. Higher Judicial Service – Challenge laid on the ground that selectee was working as assistant public prosecutor and could not be considered as advocate practicing at bar for seven years – High Court allowed the petition – Justification. Relying upon the cases of Sasidhar Reddy and Deepak Aggarwal, held that assistant public prosecutor is also an advocate and his selection cannot be set aside on the ground that he is working with Govt.
Article 233(2) – Selection in A.P. Higher Judicial Service – Challenge laid on the ground that at the time when advertisement was published for the post, he had not completed 35 years of age – Petition allowed – Justification. Held recruitment rules framed for appointment to the post by the High Court of A.P. do not provide any minimum age. Shetty Commission had recommended 35 years but that cannot be a ground for not appointing a person who is less than 35 years of age. Same decision given in SLP (C) Nos. 25219-25220/2012.
In the case of Deepak Aggarwal (supra) this Court has held that simply because a person has been appointed as an Assistant Public Prosecutor and as such he is in employment of the Government, cannot be a ground for not selecting him to a judicial post on the ground that he was not an advocate practicing at the Bar. The ratio of the said judgment is that an Assistant Public Prosecutor is also an advocate who is practicing at the Bar. (Para 9)
So far as appellant No. 1 herein is concerned, the additional ground which had been raised against him before the High Court was that he had not completed 35 years of age at the time when the advertisement inviting applications for appointment to the post in question had been published. This Court has taken a view in Sasidhar Reddy Sura v. The State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. [JT 2014 (1) SC 215], that it is not necessary that a candidate should have completed 35 years of age for being appointed to the post of a District and Session Judge (Entry Level) in the A.P. Higher Judicial Service. The reason given by this Court is that the recruitment rules framed for appointment to the post in question by the Andhra Pradesh High Court do not provide for any minimum age and simply because the Shetty Commission had recommended that only a person who had completed 35 years of age should be appointed to the post of a District and Sessions Judge (Entry Level) could not have been the reason for not appointing the present appellant no. 1. (Para 11)
2. Deepak Aggarwal v. Keshav Kaushik and others [JT 2013 (2) SC 139] (Para 7)
1. Leave granted.
2. Being aggrieved by the Judgment delivered by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in W.P. No. 34683 of 2011 and 894 of 2012 dated 17th July, 2012, the appellants have filed these appeals.
3. The facts giving rise to the present litigation in a nut-shell are as under:
The appellants, Shri Lakshmana Rao Yadavalli and Shri Dunna Ramulu were desirous of being appointed as District and Sessions Judges (Entry Level) in the A.P. Higher Judicial Service and therefore, had applied for the post and they also found their names in the select list at serial nos. 9 and 12 respectively.
4. Before they could be appointed to the post in question, Writ Petition Nos. 34683 of 2011 and 894 of 2012 had been filed in the High Court wherein their selection had been challenged on the ground that the appellants had been working as Assistant Public Prosecutors and as such, they should not have been considered as advocates having standing of seven years at the Bar and according to the submission made in the petitions, challenging their selection, a person working as a Public Prosecutor cannot be said to be an advocate practicing at Bar because of his being in employment of the State of Andhra Pradesh. Moreover, Lakshmana Rao Yadavalli, the first appellants selection had also been challenged on an additional ground that he had not completed 35 years of age at the time when the post in question had been advertised. According to the submissions made before the High Court, a person cannot be appointed to the post in question till he completes the age of 35 years.
5. After hearing the concerned parties, the afore-stated petitions had been allowed and therefore, the present appellants who were respondents in the afore-stated petitions have not been appointed to the post in question.
6. In the afore-stated circumstances, the appellants have challenged the validity of the afore-stated Judgment delivered by the Andhra Pradesh High Court.
7. The learned counsel appearing for the appellants has submitted that the issue involved in the present appeals had also arisen in Civil Appeal No. 10836 of 2013 titled Sasidhar Reddy Sura v. The State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. [JT 2014 (1) SC 215] as well as in the Judgment delivered by this Court in the case of Deepak Aggarwal v. Keshav Kaushik and others [JT 2013 (2) SC 139]. In the above referred case a question that had been raised before the court was whether a Public Prosecutor/Assistant Public Prosecutor/ District Attorney/Assistant District Attorney/Deputy Advocate General, who is in full time employ of the Government, ceases to be an advocate or pleader within the meaning of Article 233(2) of the Constitution of India.
8. Ultimately, this Court came to the conclusion that the appellant in the said case had been practicing as an advocate, therefore, he was eligible for the judicial post. Similarly, in the case on hand the appellants were practicing advocates though they were full time employees and therefore, they are eligible to be appointed as Judges.
9. In the case of Deepak Aggarwal (supra) this Court has held that simply because a person has been appointed as an Assistant Public Prosecutor and as such he is in employment of the Government, cannot be a ground for not selecting him to a judicial post on the ground that he was not an advocate practicing at the Bar. The ratio of the said judgment is that an Assistant Public Prosecutor is also an advocate who is practicing at the Bar.
10. In view of the afore-stated legal position, in our opinion, the High Court was not right in considering the appellants as disqualified candidates as they were in full time employment of the Government.
11. So far as appellant No. 1 herein is concerned, the additional ground which had been raised against him before the High Court was that he had not completed 35 years of age at the time when the advertisement inviting applications for appointment to the post in question had been published. This Court has taken a view in Sasidhar Reddy Sura v. The State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. [JT 2014 (1) SC 215], that it is not necessary that a candidate should have completed 35 years of age for being appointed to the post of a District and Session Judge (Entry Level) in the A.P. Higher Judicial Service. The reason given by this Court is that the recruitment rules framed for appointment to the post in question by the Andhra Pradesh High Court do not provide for any minimum age and simply because the Shetty Commission had recommended that only a person who had completed 35 years of age should be appointed to the post of a District and Sessions Judge (Entry Level) could not have been the reason for not appointing the present appellant no. 1.
12. For the afore-stated reasons, in our opinion, the reasons assigned by the High Court for not appointing the appellants to the post in question, are not correct and therefore, we quash and set aside the impugned judgment so far as it pertains to the present two appellants. The appeals are allowed with no order as to costs.
13. We direct the High Court and the respondent-State to give appointment to the appellants to the post in question with effect from the date on which they ought to have been appointed, however, we clarify that they shall not be paid salary for the period during which they have not worked as District and Sessions Judges. The appellants shall also be placed at the appropriate place in the seniority list of the District and Sessions Judges after considering their position in the merit list. We are sure that the respondent-High Court as well as the respondent-State shall do the needful for giving the appointment to the appellants at an early date.
C.A. Nos. /2013
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 25219-25220/2012)
14. Leave granted.
15. The facts giving rise to the present appeals are not much different than the one which have been decided and discussed above in Civil Appeals arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 23807-23808 of 2012.
16. In the instant case, the present appellant was working as a full time employee of the Andhra Pradesh Court as Assistant Public Prosecutor as well as that she had not completed minimum age of 35 years at the time of publication of advertisement and therefore, the High Court was of the view that she could not have been appointed as a District and Sessions Judge (Entry Level) in the A.P. Higher Judicial Service for the reasons given in the afore-stated judgment. Thus, the appellant though had been selected as she found her name in the select list at serial no. 10, but had not been appointed.
17. For the reasons recorded in Civil Appeals arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 23807-23808 of 2012, the present appeals are allowed and it is directed that the High Court as well as the respondent-State will do the needful for giving appointment to the appellant with retrospective effect i.e. from the date on which she ought to have been appointed, however, she shall not be paid salary for the period during which she has not worked as a District and Sessions Judge. We are sure that the respondents will do the needful for the appointment of the appellant at an early date.
18. The appeals are allowed with no order as to costs.