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1970 DIGILAW 199 (DEL)

AWTAR SINGH v. ZONAL MANAGER LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA

1970-09-07

PRAKASH NARAIN

body1970
Parkash Narain,j. ( 1 ) THE petitioner in this case was employed as a Chowkidar in the Divisional Office of the Life Insurance Corporation of India, at Delhi Gate, Delhi. On 26 9-1964, while the petitioner was not on duty, a fire broke out in the building of the Divisional Office. The cause of tire was enquired into by the local police and other experts hut, it is alleged no conclusive evidence could be marshalled in order to prosecute any person holding him responsible for the fire On 20th March, 196^, the Deputy Zonal Manager of the Life Insurance Corporation of India exercising the powers of the Zonal Manner, issued a charge-sheet against the petitioner, preferring the following two charges against him :- " (1) That you. while posted as Chowkidar at the above office building in September, 1964 in otter defiance of the orders to vacate teh office premises and unauthorisedly without the permission of the competent authority occupied and used the space at the bottom of the Airconditioning well in the said office building as your habital. You have thus contravened the provisions of Regulation 21 of the (Staff Regulations 1961) in as much as you have disobeyed and failed to carry oat the orders given to you in the course of your official duties. (2) That you used the said space in anegligent manner which led to the outbreak of the huge fire after 16 hrs On 26th September, 1964 in the said office building. Thus you have displayed gross negligence and irresponsibility resulting in great financial loss to the Corporation". . ( 2 ) ON 15th April, 1965, the petitioner sent a reply to the chargesheet denying the allegations made against him. An Enquiry was held by one Shri T. R. Iyer and a report was submitted. On the basis of. his report the Disciplinary Authority concerned issued show cause notice to the petitioner. After the petitioner had submitted his reply to the show cause notice. On consideration of the reply and the material befora him the Deputy Zonal Manager passed the impugned order dismissing the petitioner from service of the Corporation. The petitioner tried to raise an industrial dispute through his trade union bat the Government did not consider the matter fit for referrence to the Industrial Tribunal for adjadication. Accordingly, the petitioner filed the present writ petition. The petitioner tried to raise an industrial dispute through his trade union bat the Government did not consider the matter fit for referrence to the Industrial Tribunal for adjadication. Accordingly, the petitioner filed the present writ petition. ( 3 ) THE complaint of the petitioner is that he was charge-sheeted by an authority who was not competent to do so, that he was not supplied with a copy of the Police Report which was the basis of initiation the departmetal action against him, that the list of prosecution witnesses was not supplied to him in advance, that he was not permitted to hive inspection of the file pertaining to the charges preferred against him, that he was not allowed the assistance of a lawyer cr any other eduacted person which was necessary in view of the fact that he himself was illiterate, that the procedure that the Enquiry Officer was to adopt in holding the enquiry was not disclosed to the petitioner in spite of his asking the Enquiry Officer to do so and that he was not generally given opportunity to lead his defence or cross-examine prosecution. witnesses. ( 4 ) THE petition has been resisted by the respondent who has denied all the grounds taken up by the petitioner as being incorrect and untenable and has also raised certain preliminary objections, viz. ; that no petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of India is maintainable against the respondent and that the relief asked for cannot be granted to the petitioner by issue of a writ of mandamus inasmuch as that would amount to specifically enforcing a contract of personal service. ( 5 ) THE writ that the petitioner seeks from this Court is to the following effect, as mentioned in paragraph 32 (1) of the petition : " (A) That this Hon ble High Court may be pleased to issue to the opposite party a direction, or order or a writ in the nature of Mandamus or Prohibition for bearing the Respondent from giving effect to or acting in any manner by virtue of, or under the office order No. Personal/dated 21st November, 1966 containing the orders of wrongful dismissal of the Patitioner. " ( 6 ) BEFORE the contentions raised by the petitioner on merits are considered it will be necessary to dispose of the preliminary objections raised on behalf of the respondent. " ( 6 ) BEFORE the contentions raised by the petitioner on merits are considered it will be necessary to dispose of the preliminary objections raised on behalf of the respondent. The first question that arises for consideration is whether the respondent who is an officer appointed by a statutory body in accordance with the provisions of the life Insurance Corporation Act can be made amenable to will furisdiction fo thehigh Court under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. On this aspect it is not necessary to dilate at great length for this mart has held in L. P. A. No. 38 of 1968 amir-I-Jamia and others v. Deshrath Rai Kapila, that even where an authority has a legal personality or existence separate from that of the Government so long as each authority, whether it be statutory or otherwise exercises power in relation to public, it would be regarded as a public authority and so amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Court. The Life Insurance Corporation vuld certainly because covered Apart from this mere reading of Article 239 of the Constitution of India would show that the powers of the High Court under Article 226 extend not only In any autharity but also to any person and that Goverment is includedd in tha anthotrities which at amenable to such jurisdiction. In this view of the matter it must he- held that the respondent would be amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the High Comt in the present case. ( 7 ) THE second question as to whether a writ of the type asked for be the petitioner can be issued by the High Court in excrcise of its v; lit juriuridiction is also one which no longer admits of :any doubt. The petitioner is not a Goverment servant and so the protection of article 311 of the Constitution is not available to him. He was the servant of a statutory body and so the ordinary law of Master and Servant would be attracted in this case. It is settled law that a extract for personal service will not be enforced by an order for specific perfor mance nor is it open to a servant to refuse to accept the rependintion of a contract of service by his master and say thai. the contract has never been terminated. It is settled law that a extract for personal service will not be enforced by an order for specific perfor mance nor is it open to a servant to refuse to accept the rependintion of a contract of service by his master and say thai. the contract has never been terminated. The remedy of a servant whose services are terminated in violation of the contract of service is claim for damages for wrongful dismissal. Mr. Sikri, the learned counsel for the petitioner has strongly urged that the respondent is a statutory authority and acts urder rules framedby virtue of the provisions of the Life Insurance Corporation Act which would thus become statutory rules violation of which was justifiable. In this connection he REFERRED TO the decision of this Court in the above noticed case, L. P A. No. 33 of 1968, and urged that inasmuch as there has been a violation of the regulations framed by the Life Insurance Corporation of India, the impugned order being violative of those regulations has to be struck down, as was done in the case of Amir-l-Jamia. The reliance on this decision in my opinion, is misplaced. The facts in the L. P. A. were these. Jamia Millia Islamia is an educational institution deemed to be a University under the Unversity Grants Commssion Act, 1957. The respondent Kapila was expelled from this institation and was debarred from entering the campus of Jamia Millia for certain reasons without affording to that person an opportunity to show cause as to why the order of expulsion be not made against him. The first question that arose for consideration in that case was whether the institution was amenable to writ jurisdiction of the High Court, and it was held, as already noticed by me earlier, that it was amenable to that j urisdiction. The next question that came up for consideration was whether the expulsion of the student in the circumstances mentioned above affected the right of the student to educate himself. This right emanated from two sources. The next question that came up for consideration was whether the expulsion of the student in the circumstances mentioned above affected the right of the student to educate himself. This right emanated from two sources. One was contractual and the other was Constitutional The Bench of this Court did not consider the question of what would be the effect it the contractual right was enforced but treating the action of the institution as an executive action it held that the Jamia Millia being a public authority was under a duty to act judicially or quasi-judicially and the principles of natural justice demanded that the student should have been given an opportunity to be heard or atle- ast make a representation before such drastic action of expulsion against him could be taken. So, the decision in Amir-l-Jamia s case would be no authority for the proposition advanced by Mr. Sikri. ( 8 ) THE other case on which reliance was placed by Mr. Sikri was that of a Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Dukhooram Gupta Hari Prashad Gupta v. Co operative Agricultural Association, Ltd. , Kuwardha and others . In that case a suspension order had been passed against the petitoner. The suspension was unauthorised inasmuch as there was no bye-law of the society under which the ernpioyee could be suspended and in case the suspension could not be given retrospective effect. It was further held that the employee was dismissed by the society without first taking the sanction of the registrar and since that was contrary to the statutory provision in this behalf the order of dismissal had to be set aside for a technical defect but that the society could pass a fresh order of dismissal after obtaining due sanction from the Registrar. How this case helps the petitioner is not understood. Mr. Sikri s contention is that inasmuch as there has been a violation of some oi the regulation framed under the provisions of the Life Insurance Corporation Act there is violation of statutory provisions. According to him the regilations must be regarded as part of the statute on the ratio of the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of tha State of Uttar Pradesh v. Babu Ram Upadhya. According to him the regilations must be regarded as part of the statute on the ratio of the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of tha State of Uttar Pradesh v. Babu Ram Upadhya. In my opinion the rule laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Babu Ram Upadhya is not attracted in the circumstances of the preseat case at all. That is a decision which deals with a member ot public service who had been given protection under the Constitution and falls into separate class. Reliance was also placed on the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Life Insurance Corporation of India v. Sunil Kumar Mukerjee-, but the rule laid down in that Case also will not be attracted. In that case it was a violation of a statutory provision of the Insurance Act that was involved and the court had held that the provisions of section 11 (2) of the Insurance Act were paramount and override any contrary provision contained in any order issued by the Central Government or the regulations trained under the Life Insurance Act. Further more the rules fra:ned by the Central Govarnment under the Life Insurance Act ware to prevail over any regulations or office order issued. If any regulations were framed by the Life Insurance Corporation which were inconsistent with the provisions of Insurance Act or the rules framed under the Insurance Act the slid regulations could not prevail, ( 9 ) ASSUMING that there has been a violation of any regulation as alleged by the petitioner, the case is really covered by the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Executive Committee of (U. P. State Warehousing Corporation v. Chandra Kitan Tyagi. The regulations framed by the Life Insurauce Corporation of India are really terms and conditions of service laid down by the Corporation which would be in the nature of contractual obligations undertaken by the employer and the employee. If an order is made in breach of the regulations it would amount to the same being contrary to such terms and conditions of service but would not be in breach of statutory obligation. No statutory provision has been pointed out by a reading of which it can be urged that the Corporation could not terminate the services of an employee except In accordance with the regulations that it may frame. No statutory provision has been pointed out by a reading of which it can be urged that the Corporation could not terminate the services of an employee except In accordance with the regulations that it may frame. As was held in the Executive Committee of U. P. State Warehousing Corporation s case by Vaidialingam, J. , who spoke for the Court". . . . . . the regulations are made under the power reserved to the Corporation under S. 04 of the Act No double they lay down the terms and conditions of relationship between the Corporation and its employees- An order made-in breach of the regulations would be contrary to such terms aud conditions, but would not be in breach of any statutory obligation. . . . . "in the instant case a breach has been committed by the appellant of regulation 16 (3) when passing the said order of dismissal inasmuch as the procedure indicated therein has not been followed. The act does not guarantee any statutory status to the respondent, nor does it impose any obligation on the appellant in such matters. As to whether the rules framed under S 5 deal with any such matters does not arise for consideration in this case as the respondent has not laced any reliance on the rules and he has rested his case only on regulation 16 (3) It is not in dispute that, in this case, the authority who can pase order of dismissal has passed the same. Under those circumstances a violation of regulation s (3), as alleged and established in this case, can only result in the order of dismissal being held to be wrongful and. in consequence, making the appellant liable for damages. But the said order cannot be held to be one which has not terminated the service, albeit wrongfully,, or which entitles the respondent to ignore it and ask for being treated as still in service. We are not concernedwith the question of damages, because no such darn his been made by the respondent in these proceedings In the present case also though originally it was pleaded that the Deputy Zonal Manager who had issued the charge-sheet had no power to do so, it was ultimately conceded that at the relevant time that Deputy Zonal Manager was exercising the powers of the Zonal Manager and so did have power to issue the chargesheet. Further more, it is only the violation of the regulations regarding the conduct of the enquiry that have been challenged and not breach of any statutory provision or breach of any rule. In this view of the matter the decision of the Supreme Court noticed above applies with fall force and It must be held that the petitioner is not entitled to the relief claimed. Granting the relief as claimed by him would amount to specifically enforcing a contract of personal service which, as observed by the Supreme Court, will not normally be ordered. There are only certain well recognised exceptions to this rule and those are to grant a declaration to enforce a contract of personal service in appropriate cases regarding a pablicservant who has been dismissed from service in contravention of Article 811 of the Constitution, or order reinstatement of a dismissed worker under industrial law by industrial or labour tribunals or where a statutory body has acted in breach of a mandatory obligation imposed by the statute. None of these condition exist in the present case. ( 10 ) IN the Bank of Baroda Ltd. v. Jiwan Mohtra, Civil Appeal No. 176 of 1967, decider by the Sipreme Court on 9 -8 1970 the same View, as was taken in the Executive commitee of the U. P. State Ware housing Corporation casre has been reitera. It is thus settled law that unless the case of a dismissed employee falls within the three excepted categories mentionded-a bove, a declaration of the type or a writ of Mandamus or prohtbition as aimed by the petttioner cannot be issied. the view that I have taken in the make it unecessary to deal with the case on merits or to cosider the other authorities cited by the learned counsel for the petitioner. Thepetition dismissed There will be no order as to costs.