Research › Search › Judgment

Madras High Court · body

2018 DIGILAW 104 (MAD)

C. Someswaran v. Union of India

2018-01-05

HULUVADI G.RAMESH, TEEKAA RAMAN

body2018
JUDGMENT : Teekaa Raman, J. 1. This writ petition has been filed against the order passed by the eighth respondent Tribunal in O.A.No.310/00237 of 2014 dated 06.07.2016, dismissing the claim of the petitioners herein. 2. Before the Central Administrative Tribunal, the claim of the petitioners herein is that one of their junior by name L. Narahari, the seventh respondent herein, has been promoted and was given the higher pay fixation than that of the petitioners. The petitioners filed an application before the Tribunal in O.A.No.310/00237 of 2014 praying to direct the official respondents to revise and refix the pay of the petitioners on par with the seventh respondent at the stage of Assistant Accounts Officer with effect from 03.07.1995 and for the consequential relief, on the ground that different benches of the Tribunal as well as a Division Bench of this Court had directed grant of stepping up of pay to the seniors who were similarly placed like that of the petitioners herein. 3. The Tribunal relied upon the judgment of the Hon'ble Kerala High Court in OP.(CAT)No.446 of 2012(Z) dated 09.07.2015, and dismissed the application stating that the said benefit could not be extended to the petitioners herein on the ground that there was a delay and that the point of law had not been settled in their favour. 4. The learned counsel for the petitioners has submitted that the Original Application was dismissed by the Tribunal on an erroneous view of law and fact and also without proper appraisal of the settled position on the issue. The learned Central Government Standing Counsel appearing for the respondents has submitted that the order passed by the Tribunal is in accordance with law and the same does not require any interference. 5. Heard the learned counsel on either side and perused the materials available on record. 6. It appears that there was an unexplained delay of 19 years in filing the original application. Further, it is seen that reliefs granted to other persons by various Tribunals, were given considering the facts and circumstances of each and every case and hence the same cannot be applied to the case on hand. Further, no point of law had been decided in their favour. In the decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in State of U.P. v. Arvind Kumar Srivastava, reported in (2015) 1 SCC 347 , it has been held as follows: “22.1. Further, no point of law had been decided in their favour. In the decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in State of U.P. v. Arvind Kumar Srivastava, reported in (2015) 1 SCC 347 , it has been held as follows: “22.1. The normal rule is that when a particular set of employees is given relief by the Court, all other identically situated persons need to be treated alike by extending that benefit. Not doing so would amount to discrimination and would be violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India. This principle needs to be applied in service matters more emphatically as the service jurisprudence evolved by this Court from time to time postulates that all similarly situated persons should be treated similarly. Therefore, the normal rule would be that merely because other similarly situated persons did not approach the Court earlier, they are not to be treated differently. 22.2. However, this principle is subject to well-recognised exceptions in the form of laches and delays as well as acquiescence. Those persons who did not challenge the wrongful action in their cases and acquiesced into the same and woke up after long delay only because of the reason that their counterparts who had approached the Court earlier in time succeeded in their efforts, then such employees cannot claim that the benefit of the judgment rendered in the case of similarly situated persons be extended to them. They would be treated as fence-sitters and laches and delays, and/or the acquiescence, would be a valid ground to dismiss their claim.” Here is the case which falls under this category. 7. In view of the above stated circumstances, we concur with the view expressed by the Hon'ble Kerala High Court in OP.(CAT)No.446 of 2012(Z) dated 09.07.2015, which has been followed by the Tribunal while rejecting the claim of the petitioners herein. 8. In the result, the writ petition stands dismissed. No costs.