P. Srinivas Vs. M. Radhakrishna Murthy and Ors.
(Arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 2733/2003)
(From the Judgment and Order dated 22.11.2002 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in W. P. No. 25433 of 2001)
(Arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 2733/2003)
(From the Judgment and Order dated 22.11.2002 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in W. P. No. 25433 of 2001)
Mr. R. Venkataramani, Senior Advocate Mr. G. Ramakrishna Prasad, Advocate for the Respondents.
Andhra Pradesh State Subordinate Service Rules, 1962
Rule 33(b) – Service jurisprudence – Determination of seniority – Appointment of Road Transport Officers through Service Commission – In terms of the recommendations made by the Service Commission appointment letters issued to appellant, respondent and others – Joining time of 60 days given to the appointees in terms of which they were to join on or before 12.07.1987 – Appellant being a Section Officer in the Central Secretariat at the relevant time, seeking extension of time for joining -Government accordingly permitting him to join on or before 31.07.1987 – Appellant however joining on 21.07.1987 – Services of appellant regularized in 1991 – In the seniority lists of 1989, 1993 and 1996 appellant shown as senior to respondent though he joined later than the ~4~ Respondent not challenging the seniority list at any time – In 1997 appellant and respondent promoted as Deputy Transport Commissioner and in the promoted list also appellant shown as senior to respondent – At that stage respondent approaching the Administrative Tribunal stating that his representation regarding fixation of seniority was not being disposed of by the Government – Tribunal directing the authorities to dispose of the respondent’s representation – In the combined seniority list of 2000 also appellant shown as senior to respondent – Respondent assailing the said ranking before the Tribunal – During the pendency of the matter Government issuing order showing respondent as senior to appellant – Tribunal however proceeding with the matter and ultimately holding that appellant having been placed on the basis of merit performance in inter-se ranking higher than the respondent, he should be treated as being senior to respondent – On writ challenging the decision of the Tribunal High Court holding the respondent to be senior to appellant – Validity. Allowing the appeal and thereby restoring the order of the Tribunal, held that the appellant having been found to be more meritorious in the selection made by the Service Commission and ranked above respondent in the merit ranking assigned by it, should be placed higher in the seniority list than respondent notwithstanding that he joined subsequent to the respondent. The extension of joining time granted by the Government itself instead of the Service Commission cannot be considered to be without authority of law.
The appellant was granted extension upto 31.7.1987 to join. It was open to the Service Commission or government at that stage to direct removal of his name from the list of selected candidates. Neither the Commission nor the government thought it appropriate to do so. On the other hand, the government extended the joining period and the appellant joined the post. In several periodical seniority lists thereafter the appellant’s name was placed higher than respondent no.1. For more than a decade, respondent no.1 did not question that position. After a very long period it was not open to respondent no.1 to turn around and say that the extension of time to the appellant was not in accordance with law. It is undisputed that both the appellant and respondent no.1 were selected in the same selection and the appellant was more meritorious in terms of marks secured by him in the selection process and ranked above the 1st respondent and the inter se ranking and consequent inter se seniority cannot be disturbed and rights flowing from such ranking cannot be denied merely because there was some delay in joining-all the more so when such delay was only of 8 days and also on account of getting relief from the Central government, for reasons beyond his control, which only seems to have weighed with the State government to accord extension of time also. The High Court seems to have lost sight of the fact that it was not a case where reasons were absent in the order of the government extending the joining time. On the contrary, the order itself indicates the reasons why the appellant had sought for extension. The government taking note of the factual position highlighted therein had granted extension. High Court has erroneously held that no reasons were indicated. (Para 11)
In the above background, the inevitable conclusion is that the appellant was to be placed higher in the seniority list than respondent no.1 in terms of the inter se merit ranking assigned by the Service Commission. The tribunal was right in its view, while the High Court could not be held to be so. We set aside the judgment of the High Court and restore that of the tribunal so far as the appellant is concerned. (Para 12)
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellant questions correctness of the judgment rendered by a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court which by the impugned judgment held that respondent no.1 was to be ranked senior to the appellant in the seniority list. The view taken by the Andhra Pradesh administrative tribunal at Hyderabad (for short ‘the tribunal’) holding that the appellant was senior to respondent no.1 was upset.
3. Factual scenario which is also almost undisputed is as follows :
The Andhra Pradesh Service Commission (for short ‘the Commission’) issued an advertisement inviting application from eligible candidates to be appointed to the post of Road Transport Officer (for short ‘the RTO’). Appellant and respondent no.1 and others responded to the advertisement. On 13.5.1987 appointment order was issued to the appellant and other selected candidates including respondent no.1 after they were successful in the selection process conducted by the Commission. In the appointment order 60 days time was granted to the appellant as well as other selected candidates to join the post i.e. the selected candidate was to join the duty on or before 12.7.1987. At the relevant time, the appellant was employed with the Central Secretariat as section officer. Therefore, he made a request to the government of Andhra Pradesh to extend the time as per clause 3 for joining the duty in terms of appointment order. On 25.6.1987, the government vide its memo dated 25.6.1987 extended the joining time and permitted the appellant to join duty on or before 31.7.1987. In reality the appellant joined on 21.7.1987. By government memo no.470 dated 10.10.1991 appellant’s services in the post of RTO were regularized. Seniority lists were periodically prepared and circulated on 28.3.1989, 13.5.1993 and 27.5.1996 where the appellant was shown as senior to respondent no.1. There was no challenge to the same by the 1st respondent, at any of the relevant points of time.
4. In 1997, both the appellant and respondent no.1 were promoted as Deputy Transport Commissioner and in the promoted post also, appellant was shown at Sl.No.14 as against 1st respondent shown as Sl. No.17. In the seniority list prepared on the basis of notional dates given in G.O.M.S. No.153 dated 14.8.1997 was said to have been approved and communicated by Transport Commissioner in his proceedings dated 19.6.1995, also the appellant was shown as senior to respondent no.1. Respondent no.1 approached the tribunal only at this stage making a grievance that his representation regarding fixation of seniority was not being disposed of. By order dated 17.5.2000 in OA No. 2369 of 2000 the tribunal directed the concerned authorities to dispose of the representation said to have been made for relief. On 26.5.2000 a combined list of RTOs was published as noticed above, where the appellant was shown as senior at Sl.No.41 to respondent no.1 shown as Sl.No.44. Subsequently on 31.5.2000 provisional seniority list of DTCs was published as indicated above. Respondent no.1 assailed the seniority lists dated 26.5.2000 and 31.5.2000 before the tribunal in OA No. 3381 of 2000. During pendency of the matter before the tribunal, the government issued GOMs No.14 dated 29.1.2001 showing respondent no.1 as senior to the appellant in the seniority list. In view of this memo, respondent no.1 wanted disposal of his application before the tribunal as infructuous, but the tribunal refused to accept the prayer observing that there was challenge to the correctness of the same in some connected matters.
5. The stand of respondent no.1 before the tribunal was that since the appellant had joined the duties after the prescribed period of 60 days indicated in the appointment order, he had to be ranked junior to respondent no.1 who had joined earlier. It was submitted that government could not have extended the joining report and it was the Commission alone which is competent to do it. In any event, the effect of G.O.Ms. 822 dated 18.9.1967 made the position clear that if a person does not join within the stipulated time not only there was power to withdraw his selection but even if somebody had joined later, the fact that he did not join within the stipulated period of 60 days disentitled him from seniority. Tribunal did not accept this plea. It also found no substance in the plea that the date of joining would govern seniority if the concerned employee had not joined within the time stipulated in the appointment order. It took note of the fact that government had permitted the appellant to join by 31.7.1987, and in fact, he had joined on 21.7.1987. Referring to Rule 33(b) of the Andhra Pradesh State and Subordinate Service Rules 1962 (in short ‘the Rule’), it held that the appointing authority may at the time of passing an order appointing two or more persons simultaneously to a service, fix the order of preference among them and when such order has been fixed, seniority is to be determined in accordance with it. Appellant, indisputably was placed on the basis of merit performance in inter se ranking higher than the respondent no.1. Obviously, he has to be treated necessarily as senior to the respondent no.1.
6. Respondent no.1 questioned correctness of the tribunal’s judgment by filing writ petition before the Andhra Pradesh High Court. It was contended that power of extension was available only to the Commission and not the State government. Further the GO itself merely provided that in case a person does not join within the stipulated time, the effect was that his name is to be removed from the list of selected candidates, except in cases where the Commission considers that there are valid reasons for extending the period.
7. Relying on the prescription in GO.Ms. 822 GA (Services-A) Department dated 18.9.1967 the High Court accepted respondent no.1’s stand and directed that he is to be treated as senior. It was held so since appellant did not join within the period of 60 days and thereby he lost also seniority to which he was entitled to on the basis of merit ranking.
8. Learned counsel for the appellant with reference to the order of the government of Andhra Pradesh pointed out that the State government itself, in his case had granted time upto 31.7.1987 and, in fact, the appellant had joined admittedly even before that date. That being so, there was no question of appellant losing his seniority fixed initially based on merit ranking. In the present case the name of the appellant was not removed from the list. He was permitted to join by grant of further time and continued as senior to respondent no.1 as shown in various seniority lists, and there was no challenge to any of them, at the appropriate point of time. Admittedly, the appellant joined in the year 1987 and after more than a decade it was not open to respondent no.1 to question the propriety of the extension of time given by the State government enabling the appellant to join within the extended time. The 1st respondent had no infeasible right to question the extension of time granted by the State government and at any rate to question the same, at any time according to will and pleasure. The long lapse of time and laches on his part disentitles the 1st respondent to claim any such relief at the belated stage almost after a decade.
9. Per contra learned counsel for respondent no.1 submitted that the State government had no authority to extend joining time. It was only the Commission which has power to do so and the High Court rightly observed that the extension given to the appellant was itself bad and, therefore, the benefit of the Rules stipulated in terms of seniority of the candidates who were selected during one selection has to be reckoned in accordance with appointment in the selection was not available to be given (?).
10. We find that the GO.Ms. 822 dated 18.9.1967 issued by the government of Andhra Pradesh was dealing with the question of fixing the time limit for the candidates selected by the Commission to join when they were to be appointed by direct recruitment. Taking the factual position as prevailing then, it was indicated that the time limit to be normally 60 days. It was further stipulated therein that in case they did not join within stipulated time, their names could be removed from list of selected candidates. Service Commission was enabled to extend and give further time for joining before deleting the name of the candidate concerned from the select list for not joining in time. The power of extending time given to the Commission under the G.O. was not in relation to any statutory prescription, and cannot be also said to be in derogation of the powers of the State government as the ultimate repository of all executive power. On the other hand, the government itself provided that the time could be extended if the Commission considered it necessary. This was merely an enabling power conferred by the government only and the G.O. cannot be construed to be self destructive of the power of the government, in the absence of any statutory rules as such, in this regard. The Commission appears to have been enabled to grant time to effectively monitor the operation of the main list as well as the waiting list (in order of merit) without any undue lapse of time, in case the selected candidates did not join within the indicated time period. It was an executive decision of the government. When the government itself extended the time, in case of the petitioner, on the basis of the reasonableness of the request it cannot be said that in the absence of any order passed by the Commission extending the time, the extension granted by the government was without authority in law.
11. It can be also looked at from another angle. The appellant was granted extension upto 31.7.1987 to join. It was open to the Service Commission or government at that stage to direct removal of his name from the list of selected candidates. Neither the Commission nor the government thought it appropriate to do so. On the other hand, the government extended the joining period and the appellant joined the post. In several periodical seniority lists thereafter the appellant’s name was placed higher than respondent no.1. For more than a decade, respondent no.1 did not question that position. After a very long period it was not open to respondent no.1 to turn around and say that the extension of time to the appellant was not in accordance with law. It is undisputed that both the appellant and respondent no.1 were selected in the same selection and the appellant was more meritorious in terms of marks secured by him in the selection process and ranked above the 1st respondent and the inter se ranking and consequent inter se seniority cannot be disturbed and rights flowing from such ranking cannot be denied merely because there was some delay in joining-all the more so when such delay was only of 8 days and also on account of getting relief from the Central government, for reasons beyond his control, which only seems to have weighed with the State government to accord extension of time also. The High Court seems to have lost sight of the fact that it was not a case where reasons were absent in the order of the government extending the joining time. On the contrary, the order itself indicates the reasons why the appellant had sought for extension. The government taking note of the factual position highlighted therein had granted extension. High Court has erroneously held that no reasons were indicated.
12. In the above background, the inevitable conclusion is that the appellant was to be placed higher in the seniority list than respondent no.1 in terms of the inter se merit ranking assigned by the Service Commission. The tribunal was right in its view, while the High Court could not be held to be so. We set aside the judgment of the High Court and restore that of the tribunal so far as the appellant is concerned.
13. The appeal is allowed but in the circumstances without any order as to costs.