Judgment:
[Arising out of SLP) No.26357/2005]
Aftab Alam, J.- Leave granted
This case highlights the highly
insensitive and apathetic attitude harboured by some of us, living a
normal healthy life, towards those unfortunate fellowmen who fell victim
to some incapacitating disability. The facts of the case reveal that
officers of the Punjab State Electricity Board were quite aware of the
statutory rights of appellant No.1 and their corresponding obligation
yet they denied him his lawful dues by means that can only be called
disingenuous.
The facts of the case are brief and
are all taken from the (Reply) Affidavit filed on behalf of the Punjab
State Electricity Board and its officers (the respondents in the
appeal). Appellant No.1 joined the respondent Board on July 19, 1977, on
ad-hoc/work-charged basis. His services were regularized as an Assistant
Lineman on June 16, 1981. While in service he became totally blind on
January 17, 1994 and a certificate to that effect was issued by the
civil surgeon, Faridkot. Here, it may be noted that the rights of an
employee who acquires a disability during his service are protected and
safeguarded by Section 47 of the Persons with Disabilities (Equal
Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995.
Section 47 reads as follows :
47. Non-discrimination in Government
employments
(1) No establishment shall dispense with, or reduce in rank, an employee
who acquires a disability during his service:
Provided that, if an employee, after
acquiring disability is not suitable for the post he was holding, could
be shifted to some other post with the same pay scale and service
benefits:
Provided further that if it is not possible to adjust the employee
against any post, he may be kept on a supernumerary post until a
suitable post is available or he attains the age of superannuation,
whichever is earlier.
(2). No promotion shall be denied to
a person merely on the ground of his disability.
Provided that the appropriate
Government may, having regard to the type of work carried on in any
establishment, by notification and subject to such conditions, if any,
as may be specified in such notification, exempt any establishment from
the provisions of this section.
It may further be noted that the
import of Section 47 of the Act was considered by this court in Kunal
Singh vs. Union of India & Anr. [2003 (4) SCC 524] and in paragraph
9 of the decision it was observed and held as follows :
Chapter VI of the Act deals with employment relating to persons with
disabilities, who are yet to secure employment. Section 47, which falls
in Chapter VIII, deals with an employee, who is already in service and
acquires a disability during his service. It must be borne in mind that
Section 2 of the Act has given distinct and different definitions of
disability and person with disability . It is well settled that in the
same enactment if two distinct definitions are given defining a
word/expression, they must be understood accordingly in terms of the
definition. It must be remembered that a person does not acquire or
suffer disability by choice.
An employee, who acquires disability
during his service, is sought to be protected under Section 47 of the
Act specifically. Such employee, acquiring disability, if not protected,
would not only suffer himself, but possibly all those who depend on him
would also suffer. The very frame and contents of Section 47 clearly
indicate its mandatory nature. The very opening part of the section
reads no establishment shall dispense with, or reduce in rank, an
employee who acquires a disability during his service .
The section further provides that if
an employee after acquiring disability is not suitable for the post he
was holding, could be shifted to some other post with the same pay scale
and service benefits; if it is not possible to adjust the employee
against any post he will be kept on a supernumerary post until a
suitable post is available or he attains the age of superannuation,
whichever is earlier. Added to this no promotion shall be denied to a
person merely on the ground of his disability as is evident from
sub-section (2) of Section 47. Section 47 contains a clear directive
that the employee shall not dispense with or reduce in rank an employee
who acquires a disability during the service. In construing a provision
of a social beneficial enactment that too dealing with disabled persons
intended to give them equal opportunities, protection of rights and full
participation, the view that advances the object of the Act and serves
its purpose must be preferred to the one which obstructs the object and
paralyses the purpose of the Act. Language of Section 47 is plain and
certain casting statutory obligation on the employer to protect an
employee acquiring disability during service. (Emphasis added)
After the Act came into force with
effect from December 7, 1996 (vide S.O.107(E) dated 7th February, 1996),
the Government of Punjab, Department of Personnel and Administrative
Reforms, issued a letter dated September 24, 1996 directing all the
heads of departments to comply with Section 47 of the Act. The Punjab
State Electricity Board too adopted the Government letter under its
Circular No.6/97, dated February 17, 1997.
In view of Section 47 of the Act and
the Circulars issued by the State Government and the Board it is clear
that notwithstanding the disability acquired by the appellant the Board
was legally bound to continue him in service. But on behalf of the
respondent it is stated that the disabled employee himself wanted to
retire from service and, therefore, the provisions of Section 47 had no
application to his case. Here it needs to be made clear that at no stage
any plea was raised that since the appellant was declared completely
blind on January 17, 1994 he was not covered by the provisions of the
Act that come into force on February 7, 1996. Such plea can not be
raised because on February 7, 1996 when the Act came into force the
appellant was undeniably in service and his contract of employment with
the Board was subsisting.
His case was, therefore, squarely
covered by the provisions of the Act.Coming now to the reason assigned
by the Board to deny him the protection of Section 47 of the Act, it is
stated on behalf of the respondents that he remained absent from duty
without any sanctioned leave from January 18, 1994 to March 21, 1997. He
was directed by the Executive Engineer to resume duties vide Memo
No.412, dated March 16, 1994 and Memo No.6411, dated August 4, 1994. He,
however, failed to report for duty and on September 13, 1994, a charge
sheet was issued initiating disciplinary proceedings against him for
gross misconduct under regulation 8 of the Punjab State Electricity
Board Employees Punishment & Appeal Regulation 1971.The matter appears
to have lain dormant for sometime and then it is stated that the
appellant by his letter dated July 17, 1996 requested the Board to
retire him from service. As a matter of fact by this letter the
appellant sought to explain his absence from duty and requested that his
wife might be employed in his place. But it was made the basis for
denying the appellant his lawful dues. Since the whole case of the
respondents is based on this letter it would be appropriate to reproduce
it in full :
Sir,
I explain as under the subject cited unnatural happening which I met,
When I was returning home after
performing my duty on 17-1-94 then vision of my eyes lessened suddenly.
I got treatment from far and near for eye-sight/lessening of vision of
my eyes. But I became completely blind. Now I cannot perform my hard
work duty. I want to retire from service. I may be retired and my wife
may be provided with suitable job against me. Yourself will be genesis
to me. (Emphasis added)
At this stage some internal
correspondences took place between the officers of the Board over the
question how to deal with the appellant. On July 10, 1997, the Senior
Executive Engineer (OP) Division, Malout wrote to the Deputy Chief
Engineer, Operation Circle, Muktsar, asking for instructions in the
matter. Paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of the letter are relevant and are
reproduced below :
2) As per report of Medical Board the official is unfit for duty, he
cannot perform any duty.
3) But as per instructions contained
in Punjab Government Memo No.17/16/94-5 PP-1/6546 adopted by PSEB vide
its Circular No.6/97 the official/officer it (sic is) not to be retired
from service who become disable during service.
4) The official has represented that he may be retired from duty and his
wife be provided with suitable job.
The Senior Executive Engineer
received the reply from the Secretary of the Board vide letter dated
February 17, 1998 in which he was advised as follows :
It is advisable to retire the official as per rules and regulations of
the Board if the employee is not otherwise interested in taking the
benefit of Board s Circular No.6/97.
For the purpose of clarification as
to whether employee is entitled to the benefits, otherwise admissible
under rules/regulations of the Board in preference to Benefits
admissible under Circular No.6/97, if he so desires, can be obtained
from the Office concerned which issued said circular.
Later on, the charge-sheet issued
against the appellant was withdrawn by the Senior Executive Engineer
vide Office Order No.14, dated January 13, 1999 and the appellant was
asked to submit leave application for the period of absence. Next in
series is a letter, dated November 15, 1999, from the Director/IR, PSEB,
Patiala to the Senior Executive Engineer, (OP) Division, Malout. In this
letter it was stated as
follows :
As per cited subject it is made
clear that employee who is blind shall not be retired as per
instructions of the Board. But is (sic. if) such employee himself make
request for retirement then he can be given retirement on medical
ground.
Finally, the Senior Executive
Engineer, issued Office Order No.559, dated December 14, 1999, by which
the appellant was relieved from service with effect from March 21, 1997
(the date of issuance of Medical Certificate) as per Rule 5.11 of Civil
Services Rules-Vol.II.
It appears that the appellant
protested against the action of the Board in relieving him from service
and made representations. The representations, it seems, were forwarded
to the superior authorities and the Board s decision was communicated to
the Senior Executive Engineer vide letter dated February 18, 2000 from
the Director/IR, PSEB, Patiala.
The contents of the letter are as
follows :
With regard to cited subject it is made clear that there are
instructions of the Board on which blind employee is not liable to be
retired. But in the case of Shri Bhagwan Dass ALM advice of retirement
was given as he himself made request for his retirement on Medical
Ground. So the case of this employee is not likely considered for his
rejoining of duty.
The appellant then filed an
affidavit before the concerned officers. A copy of the affidavit is at
Annexure R-12 to the respondents affidavit. In the affidavit he
pathetically pleaded that he had no knowledge about the Rules of the
Electricity Board and represented for retirement unknowingly. He further
stated that when he came to know that there was no need for retirement
for those who were disabled during service he again represented that he
might not be retired and might be retained in service as per the
instructions of the department. The affidavit did not evoke any response
but the severance was completed by making payment of his terminal dues.
The disabled employee then
approached the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Petition
No.12534 of 2004 seeking relief in terms of section 47 of the Act and
the Circulars issued by the State Government and the Board in its
furtherance. In the writ petition he was joined by his son, appellant
No.2, and an alternative relief was sought for employment of his son in
his place. Unfortunately, before the High Court it was the second relief
that came into focus and the High Court dismissed the writ petition by a
brief order referring to the decision of this Court in Umesh Nagpal vs.
State of Haryana [1994 (3) SCT 174]. In the High Court order there is no
mention of Section 47 of the Act and the disabled employees claim/right
on that basis. Against that order this appeal is preferred in which the
disabled employee agitates his rights on the basis of Section 47 of the
Act.
From the materials brought before
the court by none other than the respondent-Board it is manifest that
notwithstanding the clear and definite legislative mandate some officers
of the Board took the view that it was not right to continue a blind,
useless man on the Board s rolls and to pay him monthly salary in return
of no service. They accordingly persuaded each other that the appellant
had himself asked for retirement from service and, therefore, he was not
entitled to the protection of the Act. The only material on the basis of
which the officers of the Board took the stand that the appellant had
himself made a request for retirement on medical grounds was his letter
dated July 17, 1996. The letter was written when a charge sheet was
issued to him and in the letter he was trying to explain his absence
from duty. In this letter he requested to be retired but at the same
time asked that his wife should be given a suitable job in his place. In
our view it is impossible to read that letter as a voluntary offer for
retirement.
Appellant No.1 was a Class IV
employee, a Lineman. He completely lost his vision. He was not aware of
any protection that the law afforded him and apparently believed that
the blindness would cause him to lose his job, the source of livelihood
of his family. The enormous mental pressure under which he would have
been at that time is not difficult to imagine. In those circumstances it
was the duty of the superior officers to explain to him the correct
legal position and to tell him about his legal rights. Instead of doing
that they threw him out of service by picking up a sentence from his
letter, completely out of context. The action of the concerned officers
of the Board, to our mind, was deprecatable.
We understand that the concerned
officers were acting in what they believed to be the best interests of
the Board. Still under the old mind-set it would appear to them just not
right that the Board should spend good money on someone who was no
longer of any use. But they were quite wrong, seen from any angle. From
the narrow point of view the officers were duty bound to follow the law
and it was not open to them to allow their bias to defeat the lawful
rights of the disabled employee. From the larger point of view the
officers failed to realise that the disabled too are equal citizens of
the country and have as much share in its resources as any other
citizen. The denial of their rights would not only be unjust and unfair
to them and their families but would create larger and graver problems
for the society at large. What the law permits to them is no charity or
largess but their right as equal citizens of the country.
In light of the discussions made
above, the action of the Board in terminating the service of the
disabled employee (appellant No.1) with effect from March 21, 1997 must
be held to be bad and illegal. In view of the provisions of Section 47
of the Act, the appellant must be deemed to be in service and he would
be entitled to all service benefits including annual increments and
promotions etc. till the date of his retirement. The amount of terminal
benefits paid to him should be adjusted against the amount of his salary
from March 22, 1997 till date.
If any balance remains, that should
be adjusted in easy monthly installments from his future salary. The
appellant shall continue in service till his date of superannuation
according to the service records. He should be reinstated and all due
payments, after adjustments as directed, should be made to him within
six weeks from the date of presentation of a copy of the judgment before
the Secretary of the Board. In the result the appeal is allowed with
costs quantified at Rs.5,000/-.
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