(1.) THE petitioners after having obtaining diplomas either in Civil, Mechanical or Electrical Engineering were selected and appointed as Drawing Instructors/demonstrators in the Department of Technical Education between the years 1962 and 1965. In order to meet the requirement of proper technical education, the Ministry of Education, Government of India, established four Regional Institutes for the training of technical teachers. The Technical Teachers Training Institute, Chandigarh, was one of the four designed to meet this requirement in the Northern Region covering the area from Jammu and Kashmir to the State of Uttar Pradesh. This institute was established in the year 1967 and the first batch of trainees was admitted to the course on September 11, 1967. The petitioners being duly qualified were selected and sponsored by the State of Punjab for the said diploma course and they were deputed to undergo training for various courses for the years 1967 to 1970. A copy of one of the letters dated October 4, 1967 issued by the State Government with regard to the selection of the persons mentioned therein has been appended as Annexure P. 1 to the petition. Vide Annexure P. 1 it was provided that the selected candidates would be paid subsistence allowance of 50 per cent of their total emoluments whereas the remaining 50 per cent was to be paid as a stipend to the trainees subject to a limit of Rs. 400.00 in the case of decree holders and Rs. 250.00 in the case of diploma holders during the course of the training. As this condition entailed a considerable financial burden on the petitioners, they represented to the Department against the reduction in their emoluments. The matter was examined by the State Government and ultimately vide orders dated June 12, 1970 (Annexure P. 2) the government accorded sanction directing that the petitioners and others similarly situated trainees would be treated as on duty for the duration of the training period a subsequent order dated July 16, 1971 (Annexure P. 3) pertaining to the sponsored teachers undergoing training at Technical Teachers Training Institute, Chandigarh was also issued. It appears, however, that despite a clear stipulation in Annexure P. 2 there were yet various administrative difficulties in the payment of emoluments to the petitioners with die result that there was a substantial delay in the payments. The order Annexure P. 2 was, however, withdrawn without any notice vide Annexure P. 5 dated 21. 2. 1978 and it was further directed by this order that the recovery of the excess payments made to the technical teachers who had undergone training prior to 1970 on account of treating the training period as on duty, be made. The petitioners, however, represented against this order vide Annexure P. 6 but vide Annexure P. 7 dated 29th December, 1981, the representation was rejected and it was reiterated that the recovery be made from the trachers covered by Annexure P. 5. Annexures P. 5 and P. 7 have been impugned in the present petition.
(2.) NOTICE of motion was issued on March 1, 1982 and it was ordered that the recovery be stayed till further orders. The petition was ultimately admitted on 30th April, 1982 and the stay was directed to continue, with the result that no recovery has so far been effected from the petitioners.
(3.) MR . Ashish Grover, the learned counsel for the petitioners, has' argued that although the matter was not governed by the Rules quoted by the respondents in then-reply yet without going into the merits of the controversy it would be clear that the order Annexure P. 5 which had taken away a valuable right conferred on the petitioners by Annexure P. 2 had been passed without any opportunity having been granted to them and as admittedly the trainees after 1971 had been getting the full emoluments during the period of their study leave, there was no justifiable reason as to why the petitioners should be prejudicially placed.