M.S. Bindra Vs. Union of India and ors.
( From the Judgment and Order dated 3.12.92 of the Central Admin-istrative Tribunal , New Delhi in O.A.No.588 of 1986 )
( From the Judgment and Order dated 3.12.92 of the Central Admin-istrative Tribunal , New Delhi in O.A.No.588 of 1986 )
N.N.Goswami , Sr. Advocate , Hemant Sharma , V.K.Verma , ( Ms. Sushma Suri ) Advocate (NP)/Advocates with him for the Respondents .
Constitution of India, 1950
Art 226 , 311 (2) read with FR 56- Compulsory retirement – Judi-cial Review – Scope and permissibility – Senior officer of Indian Revenue Service – Order of compulsory retirement based on “doubt-ful integrity” , on the basis of certain cases revived by Screen-ing Committee – Utter dearth of evidence in support of conclusion of the Committee – ” Doubtful integrity” , if can be based on mere hunch – No checking in the allegations – Prompt and strenuous action by officer against defaulters against whom he acted in official capacity . Held that order of compulsory retirement was uncalled for as it does not stand judicial scrutiny even with limited scope .
To dunk an officer into the puddle of “doubtful integri-ty” it is not enough that the doubt fringes on a mere hunch . That doubt should be of such a nature as would reasonably and consciously be entertainable by a reasonable man on the given material . Mere possibility is hardly sufficient to assume that it would have happened . There must be preponderance of probabil-ity for the reasonable man to entertain doubt regarding that possibility . Only then there is justification to ram an officer with the label “doubtful integrity” .( Para 13 )
MAXIMS
Namo Firut Repente Turpissimus” – No one becomes dishonest all of a sudden. ( Para 13 )
2 .Posts and Telegraphs Board and ors. v. C.S.N. Murthy JT 1992 2 SC 357 ( Para 10 )
3 . Union of India v. Col. J.N. Sinha and ors. ( 1970 2 SCC 458 ) ( Para 8 )
1 . Appellant had a steep rise in the hierarchy of Indian Revenue Service and was held in great esteem by his superiors until the dawn of 1985 which marked the beginning of his downfall . He suddenly fell from grace as his integrity was eclipsed by the dark clouds of doubts entertained by his superiors . Consequent-ly at the age of 52 he was asked to quit the department by terming the action as “compulsory retirement” . If appellant’s stand is correct he would have felt the same way as Cardinal Thomas Wolsey had lamented four centuries ago when his master Henry VIII King of England suddenly stripped him of his high office and indicted him to face a trial . ” If I had served God as diligently as I have done the King , He would not have given me over in my grey hairs ” .
2 . On 9-10-1985 , Government of India ( Ministry of Finance ) axed the appellant down by serving an order of compulsory retirement . Though he challenged the order before Central Administrative Tribunal ( New Delhi Bench ) he was unsuccessful . Hence he has filed this appeal by special leave .
3 . A resume of facts which led to the said necking off is the following :
Appellant joined Indian Revenue Service in the year 1958 and was absorbed in the Excise Department . He had a quick rise in the ladder which in 1980 reached him to the level of Director Enforcement and in 1983 as Appellate Collector of Customs and Excise since he earned a high standard of reputation by then as “a very good officer all round” . As he proved to be efficient and trustworthy he was entrusted with the high sensitive post of Director of Anti Evasion Wing in 1984 which post he held till June 1985 . During the said period a series of raids was conduct-ed by Anti Evasion Squad headed by the appellant and a whopping sum of escaped excise duty was unearthed through such raids . This became the subject matter of extensive media coverage and praises were showered on the department for carrying out such daring operation in big business houses and hoarding places . But the above raids became the commencement of a volte face in the official career of the appellant .
4 . A Screening Committee which considered the cases of several officials of the Revenue Department found that in the interest of the department some officials should be weeded out . On 9-4-1985 , the Committee delved into the files relating to such persons including the appellant and in the case of appellant they focussed on three specific instances which are the follow-ing :
(1) Pursuant to search made in the premises of M/s. Orkay Silk Mills Ltd. adjudication proceedings were initiated and in the end a penalty and fine of Rs. 10 crores have been imposed on the said Mills. But certain derelictions were noted as against the appellant in the above operations . They are :
(a) The order of adjudication ran into nearly 100 pages and it was passed on the day following the last day of the hearing . It indicated that the order must have already been got ready even before the hearing was com-plete .
(b) A penalty of Rs. 50 lakhs was imposed on the proprietor of the Mills without issuing a show cause notice on him .
(c) Huge sums of duty have been demanded in respect of unaccounted production in the factory without fully going through the claims of the party that those accounts were wastage claimed by him .
(2) Important cases relating to M/s. Golden Tobacco Co. were lying unattended for a very long time and instructions were issued by the Deputy Director Shri Bhattacharjee to the units under him to keep further investigation in abeyance . The Screen-ing Committee held that Shri Bhattacharjee would have given such instructions at the behest of the Director .
(3) One Ashok Jain and his brother imported components of Honda cars from abroad and assembled them in India in violation of Central Excise Laws . On 1-12- 1984 , officers of the Anti Evasion Wing raided the premises where those cars were garaged and the Jain Brothers were subjected to interrogation . They were arrest-ed and produced before the court . When they were released on bail the appellant persisted with the steps and moved for cancel-lation of their bail order . In this operation what was viewed against the appellant was that he had demanded Rs. 10 lakhs from Jain Brothers and when it was not paid he invigorated the steps against those two brothers .
5 . The Screening Committee after considering the files relating to the aforesaid three instances ( which were recorded in a document marked by the department as Annexure IV) reached the following conclusion :
” On the basis of the specific cases and other material at Annex-ure IV hereto , he is found to be of unreliable integrity and unfit to be entrusted with any position of responsibility in the Government service as he has widely and systematically indulged in extortion of money from the parties and adopted methods which have the effect of bringing down the esteem of the Government in the public eye . “
6 . The Revenue Committee upheld the said conclusion and there-after Government of India passed the order prematurely retiring the appellant .
7 . Appellant made a scathing attack against the aforesaid order mainly on three premises .
(1) The big business houses whose premises were subjected to series of raids were so influenced as to spread canards about the appellant as part of a retaliatory measure against him .
(2) The Screening Committee was actuated by mala fides as one of its members ( Shri M.L. Wadhawan ) who was a member of Central Board of Excise and Customs had been inimical to him on account of serious differences which can be discerned from a file ( number of which appellant has cited in the Special Leave Petition ) .
(3) The conclusion made against the appellant by the Screening Committee is perverse in the sense that the material on which that conclusion was reached could never have afforded scope to reach such conclusion to any reasonable person . In other words , there was utter dearth of evidence for the Screening Committee to conclude that appellant was a case of doubtful or unreliable integrity .
8 . A two Judge Bench of this Court has held in Union of India v. Col. J.N. Sinha and ors. ( 1970 2 SCC 458 ) that “if the appro-priate authority forms the requisite opinion bona fide its opin-ion cannot be challenged before the courts though it is open to an aggrieved party to contend that the requisite opinion has not been formed or that it is based on collateral grounds or that it is an arbitrary decision .”
9 . Approving the above principle , a three Judge Bench of this Court has laid down in Baikuntha Nath Das and Anr. v. Chief District Medical Officer and Anr. JT 1992 2 SC 1 that five principles should be borne in mind while considering a case of compulsory premature retirement . It is not necessary to extract all the five principles here except No.(iii) which reads thus :
” Principles of natural justice have no place in the context of an order of compulsory retirement . This does not mean that judicial scrutiny is excluded altogether . While the High Court or this Court would not examine the matter as an appellate court , they may interfere if they are satisfied that the order is passed (a) mala fide or (b) that it is based on no evidence or (c) that it is arbitrary – in the sense that no reasonable person would form the requisite opinion on the given material ; in short , if it is found to be a perverse order .”
10 . This was reiterated very soon by another three Judge Bench in Posts and Telegraphs Board and Ors. v. C.S.N. Murthy JT 1992 2 SC 357 in which their Lordships further added thus :
” An order of compulsory retirement is not an order of punishment . F.R. 56(j) authorises the Government to review the working of its employees at the end of their period of service referred to therein and to require the servant to retire from service if , in its opinion , public interest calls for such an order . Whether the conduct of the employee is such as to justify such a conclu-sion is primarily for the departmental authorities to decide . The nature of the delinquency and whether it is of such a degree as to require the compulsory retirement of the employee are primarily for the Government to decide upon . The courts will not interfere with the exercise of this power , if arrived at bona fide and on the basis of material available on the record .”
( emphasis supplied )
11 . Therefore , judicial scrutiny of any order imposing premature compulsory retirement is permissible if the order is either arbitrary or mala fide or if it is based on no evidence . The observation that principles of natural justice have no place in the context of compulsory retirement does not mean that if the version of the delinquent officer is necessary to reach the correct conclusion the same can be obviated on the assumption that other materials alone need be looked into .
12 . In this case , appellant made an endeavour to show that the order is tainted by mala fides as one of the members of the Screening Committee ( M.L. Wadhawan ) had some axe to grind against him . But we are not persuaded to believe that merely because appellant has such a version against either that member or other members of the Screening Committee , the Committee would have gone against the appellant on account of that reason . So we repell the contention based on the allegation of mala fides .
13 . While viewing this case from the next angle for judicial scrutiny i.e. want of evidence or material to reach such a conclusion , we may add that want of any material is almost equiv-alent to the next situation that from the available materials no reasonable man would reach such a conclusion . While evaluating the materials the authority should not altogether ignore the reputation in which the officer was held till recently . The maxim ” Nemo Firut Repente Turpissimus” ( no one becomes dishonest all on a sudden ) is not unexceptional but still it is a salutary guideline to judge human conduct , particularly in the field of Administrative Law . The authorities should not keep the eyes totally closed towards the overall estimation in which the delin-quent officer was held in the recent past by those who were supervising him earlier . To dunk an officer into the puddle of “doubtful integrity” it is not enough that the doubt fringes on a mere hunch . That doubt should be of such a nature as would reasonably and consciously be entertainable by a reasonable man on the given material . Mere possibility is hardly sufficient to assume that it would have happened . There must be preponderance of probability for the reasonable man to entertain doubt regard-ing that possibility . Only then there is justification to ram an officer with the label “doubtful integrity” .
14 . Here , out of the three instances on which the Screening Committee relied to dub the officer as a case of “doubtful inte-grity” the first is his action against M/s. Orkay Silk Mills . The fact is that it was the appellant who headed the operation . A task which unearthed such a huge sum of concealed excise duty would normally evoke appreciation for his work . But what was noted against him in that affair is that he willfully created lacunas in the confiscation proceedings for providing an escape route to the defaulter . One is that the confiscation order contains nearly 100 pages and the period was too short for pre-paring such an order . What is the inference to be drawn ? Nor-mally it is an achievement that an order of 100 pages was made during such a short period . So what is then to be thought of against it ? Is it that he would have taken too much pain to finish his work or is it that he would have caused it to be written by somebody else ? Is there not a clear possibility that the officer hearing the adjudication case for several days would have prepared its prefatory portion as well as statement of summary of evidence during the days when arguments were proceed-ing and before conclusion of the hearing , leaving out the crucial discussion to be dictated after conclusion of the hearing ? That is not an objectionable course . If so , the achievement in pre-paring an order of confiscation within such a short span should not have been frowned at , instead there is scope to pay admira-tion for its promptitude .
15 . Another lacuna is that he imposed a huge penalty and fine without issuing a show cause notice . To say that he did it for helping the defaulter is too far- fetched . The appellate authori-ty which may be persuaded to set aside such an order on that ground could as well direct the authority to pass a fresh order after issuing the show cause notice . So it is unreasonable to conclude that the imposition of penalty was made calculatedly to have it upset by the superior authority .
16 . We feel that the two lacunas ferretted out from the pro-ceedings relating to M/s. Orkay Silk Mills are grossly insuffi-cient to reach a conclusion that the delinquent officer was trying to help the defaulting manufacturer .
17. In the second instance concerning the file of M/s. Indian Tobacco Company the inference made against the defaulter is too tenuous . The minimum thing which should have been done was to ascertain from Shri Bhattacharjee , the Deputy Director , the circumstances under which instructions were issued by him to keep the investigation in abeyance . Attributing a sinister motive to the appellant for what Shri Bhattacharjee had done was seemingly unfair , without adopting such a minimum precaution .
18 . The third is the case relating to import of spare parts which the Jain Brothers assembled for making Honda cars . In that case the ostensible role of the appellant was to detect the offence through investigation and then to follow it up seriously . When the defaulters were granted bail the appellant moved for cancellation of the bail it is prima facie a point in favour of the appellant’s tenacity to pursue the steps adopted . Thus far the role played by the appellant was that of a dutiful and efficient officer of the department . But the reason for the Screening Committee to doubt the integrity of the appellant in the aforesaid case is that the Jain Brothers have alleged that one Mr. Kapoor told them that appellant was to be paid Rs.10 lakhs to save them from the proceedings .
19 . We perused the statement of Jains . They never said that appellant made the above demand to them at any time . The only material before the Screening Committee was that the two accused had stated that Kapoor gave them such an impression . It must be noted that nobody had checked up the truth of it with the person to whom it was attributed . The most unfortunate feature is that nobody has checked it up even with Mr. Kapoor who is alleged to have told like that to the Jain Brothers . If integri-ty of senior officers , who established unblemished reputation and earned encomiums from all concerned till then , is proclaimed as doubtful merely on the strength of statements of persons prose-cuted by such officers , what is the safety of such officers more so when they have to embark on hazardous operations risking their lives against big business houses .
20 . Shri N.N. Goswami , Senior Advocate arguing for Union of India submitted to us that members of the Screening Committee are very reputed persons and hence their conclusion must be given full weight . It is not a question of doubting the caliber of the members of the Screening Committee . While declining to agree with their conclusion no particle of mud is slung on any member of the Screening Committee . Even if such a conclusion was made by a judicial personage the higher court which overrules it does not cast any stigma on the judicial officer concerned .
21 . We have no doubt that there is utter dearth of evidence for the Screening Committee to conclude that appellant had doubtful integrity . Such a conclusion does not stand judicial scrutiny even within the limited permissible scope . We , therefore , allow this appeal and set aside the order under attack including the order by which premature compulsory retirement was imposed on the appellant . The department concerned shall now work out the re-liefs to be granted to the appellant as sequel to this judgment .