(1.) THE petitioner was appointed as Ticket Verifier on daily wage-basis on 11. 3. 1966. The appointment continued up to 6. 7. 1976 when it was terminated. The petitioner was re-appointed as a Ticket Verifier on 24th October, 1979, and he continued to work as such till 13. 7. 81 when his services were dispensed with once again only to be re-employed on 18. 7. 1981. The petitioner thereafter continued to be in service till his superannuation on 31. 5. 1993. It is also the admitted case that the services of the petitioner were regularised w. &. f. 1. 4. 1987 as a consequence of the directions issued by this Court in CWP 4743 of 1986 (copy appended as Annexure P1 to the writ petition ). The petitioner after superannuation applied for the payment of his retirement benefits and his case was submitted to the Accountant General Haryana vide Annexure P3 to the writ petition. The Accountant General, however, rejected the petitioner's claim on the ground that the petitioner while being paid as a daily wage worker was receiving his salary from the Contingency Funds and, as such, only half of the period of service put in from 59. 7. 81 to 31. 3. 1987 was to be treated as qualifying service for the purposes of pension and the petitioner not having put in ten years' service in all up to 31. 5. 1993 was not entitled to the payment of any pension. The decision of the Accountant General has been appended as Annexure P4 to this petition and has been impugned before me.
(2.) A written statement has been filed by the respondents and the petitioner's claim has been denied for the reasons already mentioned above, and relying on Rule 3. 17-A (F) of the Punjab Civil Service Rules Volumes II (hereinafter referred to as the Rules) it has been urged that the petitioner was not entitled to the payment of pension as he did not have the requisite period of qualifying service.
(3.) I have heard the learned counsel for the parties and gone through the record. Rule 3. 17-A (d) and (g) of the Rules are reproduced below:" 3. 17-A (a) All service interrupted or continuous followed by confirmation shall be treated as qualifying service; the period of break shall be omitted while working out aggregate service. (b) to (e) x x x X X X x X X X x (f) Employees retiring from Government service without confirmation (as temporary employees) in any post on or after 5th February, 1969, will be entitled to invalid/retiring/superannuation pension and death-cum-retirement gratuity on the same basis as admissible to permanent employees. In case of death of temporary employees in service, his family will also be entitled to similar benefits as are admissible to the families of permanent employees. This concession will, however, not apply to: (i) persons paid from contingencies; Provided that half of the period of service of such persons paid from contingencies rendered from 1st January, 1973 onwards for which authentic records of service is available will count as qualifying service subject to the following conditions: (a) Service paid from contingencies should have been in a job involving whole time employment and hot part time for a portion of day, (b) Service paid from contingencies should be in a type of work or, job for which regular post should have been sanctioned, e. g. , malts, chowkidars, Khalasis etc. , (c) The service should have been such for which the payment is made either on monthly or daily rates computed and paid on a monthly basis and which though not analogous to the regular scale of pay should bear some relation in the matter of pay to those being paid for similar jobs being performed by staff in regular establishments; and (d) The service paid from contingencies should have been continuous and followed by absorption in regular employment without a break. Note: x x x x X X x (g) The entire service rendered by an employee as work charged shall be reckoned towards retirement benefits provided : (i) such service is followed by regular employment; (ii) there is no interruption in the two or more spells of service or the interruptions fall within condonable limits; and (iii) such service is a whole tune employment and not part-time or portion of day ). It will be evident from the aforesaid rule that it provides for the method by which the qualifying service is to be determined. Sub clause (i) of Clause (f) of Rule 3. 7-A of the said Rules provides that even persons paid from contingencies are entitled to count half of their service as qualifying service provided the four conditions laid down in Sub clause (i) are fulfilled. It is the admitted position that the petitioner had worked for about 23 years in the respondent department but for two breaks that were not due to any default on his part. It will also be seen that the stipulation in Sub-clause (i) that half the period of service is to be counted towards qualifying service is to be read along with the subsequent four conditions in the same rule. These conditions read together clearly show that a person claiming qualifying service should have been working as a whole-time employee against a job for which a regular post should have been sanctioned with the payment of salary being made on a monthly or daily basis and that the service paid from contingency should have been continuous and without any break. To my mind, the facts of the case clearly spell out that the petitioner fulfilled these four conditions. I am also of the opinion that the stipulation in Sub-clause (i) of clause (f) of Rule 3. 17-A that only half the period of service is to be counted as qualifying service is arbitrary and no logic or reason can be spelt out in it. In Kesar Chand v. State of Punjab and Ors. s, 1988 (5) S. L. R. 27, this Court while considering Rule 3. 17 of the Punjab Civil Service Rules, Vol. II which provided that if work charged service was followed by regular employment, the period of work charge service could not be taken into account for the purpose of determining the qualifying service was quashed being arbitrary and unjust. It was observed as under : "once the services of a work-charged employee have been regularised, there appears to be hardly any logic to deprive him of the pensionary benefits as are available to other public servants under Rule 3. 17 of the Rules. Equal protection of laws must mean the protection of equal laws for all persons similarly situated. Article 14 strikes at arbitrariness because a provision which is arbitrary involves the negation of equality Even the temporary or officiating service under the State Government has to be reckoned for determining the qualifying service. It looks to be illogical that the period of service spent by an employee in a work-charged establishment before his regularisation has not been taken into consideration for determining his qualifying service. The classification which is sought to be made among Government servants who are eligible for pension and those who started as work-charged employees and their service regularised subsequently, and the others is not based on any intelligible criteria and, therefore, is not sustainable at law. After the services of a work-charged employee have been regularised, he is a public servant like any other servant. To deprive him of the pension is not only unjust and inequitable but is hit by the vice of arbitrariness, and for these reasons the provisions of Sub-rule (ii) of Rule 3. 17 of the Rules have to be struck down being violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. " I am, therefore, of the opinion that the words "half the period of service of such persons paid from contingency" occurring in Sub-clause (i) of clause (f) of Rule 3. 17a are bad in law and are accordingly struck down.