LAWS(ALL)-1996-4-30

SANTOSH SINGH Vs. STATE OF U P

Decided On April 16, 1996
SANTOSH SINGH Appellant
V/S
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) OM Prakash, J. By order dated 3-1-1986 (Annexure "5" to the writ petition) the petitioner was compulsorily retired by Sri Shiv Kumar Sharma, the then Managing Director, U. P. Jal Nigam, which is sought to be quashed by the petitioner on the ground, as stated in paragraph 17 of the writ petition, that ". . . . that there is absolutely no material on which the appointing authority could have reasonably come to the conclusion that the petitioner can be retired in public interest. "

(2.) THE facts in brief, are that the petitioner was appointed as Assis tant Engineer in the U. P. Jal Nigam on 29-1-1965 in the then Local Self Government Engineering Department of Uttar Pradesh by an order dated 29-1-1965 (Annexure "1" to the writ petition ). In 1975 the Uttar Pradesh Water Supply and Sewerage Act came to be passed (briefly, 'the Act' ). Section 3 of the Act provides for establishment of the Jal Nigam and so the Jal Nigam was created under the Act. Section 3 (3) of the Act declared that the Nigam shall for all purposes be deemed to be a local authority. Section 37 of the Act provides that all the employees of the erstwhile Local Self-Government Engineering Department of the State Government shall become employees of the Nigam from the appointed date and they shall hold their office in the Nigam on the same terms and conditions and with the same rights and privileges. This is how the petitioner ceased to be the employee of the erstwhile Local Self-Government Engineering Department and became the employee of the Nigam with effect from 18-6-1975. THE petitioner was temporarily promoted as Executive Engineer in the Jal Nigam by an order dated 23-10-1977 (Annexure "3" to the writ petition ). He was allowed to cross the efficiency bar in the scale of Executive Engineer with effect from 1-10-1978 (see paragraph 11 of the petition ). In paragraph 15 of the writ petition, it is stated that no adverse character roll entry was ever communicated to the petitioner and that as Executive Engineer his service record remained unblamished. This is how the petitioner contended that there was no material on record to enable the authority to come to the conclusion that his compulsory retirement was necessary in the public interest.

(3.) CLOSE to the heels of the case of Baikuntha Nath Das (supra), the Supreme Court in S, Ramachandra Raju v. State of Orissa, JT 1994 (5) SC 459 reiterated : "the whole purpose of the rule is to weed out the worthless without the punitive extremes covered by Article 311 of the Constitu tion, after all, Administration, to be efficient, must not be manned by drones, do nothings, incompetents and unworthiers. They may not be delinquent who must be punished but may be a burden on the Administration if by insensitive, insouciant, unintelligent or dubious conduct impede the flow or promote stagnation. In a country where speed, sensitivity, probity, and non-irritative public relations and enthusiastic creativity are urgently needed, paper logged processes and callous cadres are the besetting sin of the Administration. It is in public interest to retire a never do well, but to juggle with confidential reports when a man's career is at stake is a confidence trick contrary to public interest. Moreover, confidential reports are often subjec tive, impressionistic and must receive sedulous checking as basis for decision making. The appropriate authority, not the court, makes the decision, but even so, a caveat is necessary to avoid misuse. "