Judgment:
(Arising out of SLP (c) No.5863/2006)WITH CIVIL APPEALS
NOS.1043,1042,1041,1040,1039 and 1038/07(Arising out of SLP (c)
Nos.3538, 3540, 3580, 3647,3818 and 5766/2006)
Altamas Kabir, J.
- Leave granted.
Leave granted in all the Special
Leave Petitions.As the appellants in all these appeals are similarly
placed, all the appeals will stand disposed of by this common judgment.
The appellants are employed on a
daily wage basis in the Irrigation and Public Health Wings of the
Himachal Pradesh Public Works Department. They are classified as Class
III and Class IV employees who are being paid their daily wages in
keeping with the minimum wages prescribed by the Government of Himachal
Pradesh from time to time. A number of the appellants have been employed
in the aforesaid manner for more than ten years.
A scheme for Betterment
(Appointment) Regularisation of Muster Roll/Daily Wage Workers in
Himachal Pradesh was prepared by the Government of Himachal Pradesh, the
salient features whereof are reproduced hereinbelow:-
"1. Daily wage Muster Roll workers,
whether skilled or unskilled, who have completed 10 years or more of
continuous service with a minimum of 240 days in a calendar year as on
31.12.1991, will be treated as monthly rated employees, on a
consolidated fixed pay without any allowances, and an annual increment,
as para-1 Annexure-A. They shall be entitled to annual increment for
those months, in which they work for a minimum of 15 working days, per
calendar month. They shall continue to be monthly rated employees, till
they are appointed as work-charged employees.
2. All those daily rated employees
whether skilled or unskilled who had completed 10 years of continuous
service with a minimum of 240 working days in a calendar year as on
31.12.1987, shall be appointed as work charged employees in a phased
manner as soon as the stay orders of the Hon'ble High Court of Himachal
Pradesh is vacated. On appointment as work-charged employees, they shall
be put in the time-scale of pay applicable to the corresponding lowest
grade in the Government.
3. The daily rated workers, who
would have completed 20 years of service as on 31.12.1992 shall be
regularised w.e.f. 1.4.1993 on the basis of seniority cum suitability
including physical fitness. On regularisation, they shall be put in the
minimum of the time scale of pay applicable to the lowest corresponding
post concerned under the Govt. and would be entitled to all other
benefits available to regular Govt. servants of the corresponding grade.
4. In the event of any anomaly
between the wages prescribed for the Monthly Rated Employees and that
prescribed by the Govt. from time to time under the Minimum Wages Act,
1948, the Monthly Rated Employees are entitled to wages, which are
higher, at any point of time, in future."
The aforesaid Scheme fell for the
consideration of this Court in the Writ Petition filed by Shri Mool Raj
Upadhyaya which was heard along with several other writ petitions where
the relief prayed for was similar. In all the said writ petitions filed
under Article 32 of the Constitution, the employees had claimed
regularisation of their services as well as for payment of salary,
allowances and other benefits as were being given to the regular
employees on the principle of "equal pay for equal work". While
considering the said betterment scheme, this Court modified the same by
substituting the aforesaid paragraphs numbers 1 to 4 with the following
paragraphs:-
"1) Daily-wage/Muster Roll Workers,
whether skilled or unskilled, who have completed 10 years or more of
continuous service with a minimum of 240 days in a calendar year on
December 31, 1993, shall be appointed as work-charged employees with
effect from January 1, 1994 and shall be put in the time scale of pay
applicable to the corresponding lowest grade in the Government;
2) Daily-wage/Muster Roll Workers,
whether skilled or unskilled, who have not completed 10 years of
continuous service with a minimum of 240 days in a calendar year on
December 31, 1993, shall be appointed as work-charged employees with
effect from the date they complete the said period of 10 years of
service and on such appointed they shall be put in the time scale of pay
applicable to the lowest grade in the Government.
3 ) Daily-wage/Muster Roll Workers,
whether skilled or unskilled, who have not completed 10 years of
continuous service with a minimum of 240 days in a calendar year on
December 31, 1993, shall be paid daily wages at the rates prescribed by
the Government of Himachal Pradesh from time to time for daily-wage
employees falling in Class III and Class IV till they are appointed as
work-charged employees in accordance with paragraph 2;
4 ) Daily-wage/Muster Roll Workers
shall be regularised in a phased manner on the basis of
seniority-cum-suitability including physical fitness. On regularization
they shall be put in the minimum of the time scale payable to the
corresponding lowest grade applicable to the Government and would be
entitled to all other benefits available to regular Government servants
of the corresponding grade."
It was directed that the Scheme, as
modified, was to be implemented with effect from 1st January, 1994 and
if any excess amount had been received by the employees on the basis of
interim orders passed by this Court, the same would not be required to
be refunded by them.
On 6th May, 2000, the State
Government circulated a fresh policy on the regularisation of Daily
Wage/Contingent Paid workers which provided that eligible daily wage
workers/contingent paid workers would be considered for regularisation
against vacant posts or by creation of fresh posts with the prior
approval of the Finance Department and that such regularisation in all
cases would be with prospective effect. It was also stipulated that in
future even in the Public Works Department and Irrigation and Public
Health Department, regularisation/bringing daily wagers on work charged
category would also be with prospective effect as in other departments.
In December 2001, the respondents in
these appeals filed applications before the Himachal Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal praying that the appellants herein be directed
to give work charged status to the said respondents with effect from 1st
April 1998 with all the benefits incidental thereto, such as back wages
and seniority. The appellants herein filed reply to the said
applications contending that the Government of Himachal Pradesh had
formulated a policy for regularisation of daily wage workers in a phased
manner subject to the availability of posts with prospective effect as
envisaged in the policy published on 6th May, 2000. By its order dated
23rd October, 2003, the Tribunal allowed the applications filed by the
respondents herein on the basis of the judgment of this Court in the
case of Mool Raj Upadhyaya and directed the appellants herein to grant
work-charged status to the respondents with effect from 1st January,
2000, with all consequential benefits, without any further delay.
Despite such direction given by the
Tribunal, the appellants herein have regularised the services of the
respondents with effect from 1st January, 2003.On 25th May, 2004, the
State of Himachal Pradesh filed a Writ Petition contending that the
regularisation policy dated 6th May, 2000, barred retrospective
regularisation and accordingly prayed for quashing of the order passed
by the Tribunal. The High Court however, relying on the judgment of this
Court in the case of Mool Raj Upadhyaya (supra), dismissed the writ
petition on the ground that there was no distinction between the facts
canvassed in the writ petition and the factual position in Mool Raj
Upadhyaya's case. It is against the said order of the High Court that
these appeals by special leave have been filed.
At the time when the Special Leave
Petitions were listed for admission, it was brought to the notice of
this Court that the questions involved in these appeals were similar to
those being considered by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Civil
Appeal Nos. 3595-3612/1999 ( Secretary, State of Karnataka & Ors. vs.
Umadevi & Ors.) Consequently, this Court by order dated 10th April, 2006
directed that all these matters be listed after judgment was pronounced
in the said civil appeals.
It may be indicated that judgment in
the said appeals Nos. 3595-3612/1999 was pronounced by the Constitution
Bench on 10th April, 2006. These matters have been taken up for hearing
after the decision in Umadevi's case.
Mr J.S. Attri, learned advocate,
appearing for the Appellant-State of Himachal Pradesh, submitted that
since the respondents had prayed for regularisation of their services,
the State Government formulated a fresh scheme for regularisation of the
daily wage workers in a phased manner so that they could all be absorbed
in due course of time. He urged that the respondents were given the
benefit of such policy in 2003 and consequently their claim that such
benefit should be given to them from 1st January, 2000, was untenable
and would involve the State Government into making huge financial
commitments.
Mr. Attri submitted that since the
services of the respondents have been regularised, there was no further
cause for grievance available to the respondents. He urged that the
State Government had formulated a fresh policy for regularisation of all
Daily Wage/Muster Roll workers in accordance with paragraph 4 of the
Scheme as substituted by the Supreme Court in its judgment in the case
of Shri Mool Raj Upadhyaya. He urged that the services of the
respondents had been regularised in pursuance of the said policy with
prospective effect from the date of such regularisation.Opposing the
stand taken on behalf of the appellants, Mr. M.C. Dhingra, learned
advocate, submitted that the very basis of the arguments advanced on
behalf of the appellant-State of Himachal Pradesh was on an erroneous
understanding of the relief sought for by the respondents who had at no
point of time claimed regularisation of their services. Mr. Dhingra
urged that in the application under Section 19 of the Administrative
Tribunals Act, 1985, the respondents had merely prayed for a direction
upon the appellants herein to grant them Work Charged status with effect
from 1st January, 2000 with all the consequential benefits, in keeping
with paragraph 1 of the Scheme as substituted by this Court in the case
of Mool Raj Upadhyaya. Since the Tribunal had understood the case of the
respondents herein in its true perspective, it had directed the
appellants to grant Work Charged status to the respondents herein. The
High Court also found that the matter was squarely covered by the
judgment of this Court in the case of Mool Raj Upadhyaya and accordingly
dismissed the writ petitions filed by the appellant-State of Himachal
Pradesh. On a careful consideration of the submissions made on behalf of
the respective parties, we are of the view that the High Court did not
commit any error in dismissing the writ petitions filed by the State of
Himachal Pradesh. The Scheme as referred to in the case of Mool Raj
Upadhyaya envisages two stages in regularising the services of the Daily
Wage/Muster Roll workers. In the first stage, after completion of 10
years or more continuous service with a minimum of 240 days in a
calendar year on 31st December, 1993, Daily Wage/Muster Roll workers
were to be appointed as work-charged employees with effect from 1st
January, 1994. Thereafter, they were to be regularised in the second
stage in a phased manner on the basis of seniority cum suitability
including physically fitness. Even while challenging the direction given
by the Himachal Pradesh Administrative Tribunal on 23rd October, 2003,
the State of Himachal Pradesh made out a case that the respondents were
claiming regularisation of their services with effect from 1st April,
1998. It was also urged that it had been brought to the notice of the
Tribunal that the respondents were daily waged workers and as per the
instructions dated 6th May, 2000, they were entitled for work charged
status only as and when the posts were sanctioned by the State
Government in a phased manner strictly on the basis of seniority.
The aforesaid case made out by the
State of Himachal Pradesh before the High Court was a clear departure
from the directions given in Mool Raj Upadhyaya's case. The respondents
had only claimed the benefit of the Betterment Scheme which was placed
before this Court in Mool Raj Upadhyaya's case and had prayed for work
charged status from 1st January, 2000, before the Tribunal whereas the
change in policy was brought about on 6th May, 2000. It is on that basis
that the Tribunal directed that the respondents be given work charged
status with effect from 1st January, 2000. Notwithstanding the fact that
the services of the respondents have been regularised with effect from
1st January, 2003 and they have joined their posts from that date
without protest, they cannot, in our view, be denied the benefits as
directed to be given to them by the Tribunal and affirmed by the High
Court which had already accrued to them under the Scheme which was
approved in Mool Raj Upadhyaya's case.
We, therefore, see no reason to
interfere with the judgment of the High Court impugned in these appeals.
All the appeals are accordingly dismissed without any order as to costs.
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