LAWS(ALL)-1986-8-1

GANGA RAM NAGAR Vs. STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH

Decided On August 23, 1986
GANGA RAM NAGAR Appellant
V/S
UTTAR PRADESH Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) ON the question of alternative remedy of filing a claim petition before U. P. Public Services Tribunal, the petitioner submitted through his counsel that the U. P. Public Service Commission was not amenable to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal and since the Commission is a party to this petition, this petition cannot be entertained by the Tribunal. We do not agree.

(2.) THE jurisdiction of the Commission under the Constitution is advisory and it is open to the State Government to accept or not to accept the recommendations of the Commission. If the recommendations of the Commission are accepted by the State Government, then it is the act of the State Government which ultimately has to be challenged or assailed before the appropriate forum including the Tribunal which not only can judicially scrutinise the act of the State Government, it can also scrutinise the recommendations of the Commission atleast on the principle that if a Court, Tribunal or judicial body has jurisdiction to consider the main question, it has the power to consider all the incidental questions arising colaterally. We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that in all cases where the recommendation of the Commission has been accepted or acted upon by the State Government, the Tribunal will have jurisdiction to scrutinise the recommendation of the Commission as also the act of the State Government and both can be set aside or quashed in case the claim petition is allowed.

(3.) IN the instant case, the petitioner who was originally appointed as a Mechanic and was promoted on adhoc basis to the post of Junior Engineer (Mechanical) had challenged the order of reversion on two principal grounds, namely, that there are 69 other ad hoc promotees who were not approved by the Commission for regular appointment, but they have been retained on the posts of Junior Engineer (Mechanical) while the petitioner alone is being reverted which is discriminatory and secondly, the selection held by the Commission was not proper as it also ought to have interviewed the candidates. These questions in our opinion can well be agitated before the Tribunal which can quash the order of reversion in the instant case on the ground that the petitioner was the victim of discriminatory treatment and that the equality before law was denied to him and he was also denied the equal opportunity in the matter of service which are guaranteed to him under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The Tribunal shall also have the jurisdiction to scrutinise the process of selection adopted by the Commission to find out whether the selection was held according to law. If ultimately it is found by the Tribunal that the selection was not held according to law and that the appointing authority or any other authority competent in that regard had erroneously adopted the said selection illegally held by the Commission, it will have the further jurisdiction of granting appropriate relief by declaring the selection as also the consequential order passed in pursuance thereof to be void.