JUDGEMENT
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(1.) By the judgment under appeals the High Court partly
allowed the writ petition filed before it by the employees in
the ministerial cadre of the Karnataka Administrative
Tribunal. Writ Petition Nos.16143-1646 of 1997 challenged
the decision of the Administrative Tribunal dismissing an
application filed by them before the Tribunal. Feeling
aggrieved by the decision rendered by the High Court in the
writ petitions both sides are before us with these appeals.
Civil Appeal Nos.7474-7477 of 2003 is filed by those
belonging to the Stenographer Cadre and Civil Appeal
Nos.7478-7481 of 2003 filed by the ministerial cadre.
(2.) For convenience, hereafter, the parties are referred
to as Stenographers and Assistants.
(3.) The Karnataka Administrative Tribunal was
constituted on 6.10.1986. The Government of Karnataka
sanctioned the cadre strength and framed the Cadre and
Recruitment Rules, 1986. The appointments of
stenographers were made in the year 1988. The Government
published on 23.9.1992 a new set of draft rules. The
stenographers filed objections to the draft rules. On
31.5.1993 the Government published the Recruitment Rules.
Though the stenographers made representations to the
Government, their representations were rejected. Thereupon
they filed application Nos.2250-2252 of 1993 and 2253-2258
of 1998 before the Administrative Tribunal challenging the
prescription of degree and test as qualifications for
promotion to the post of Junior Judgment Writer in the
Rules. It is seen that the assistants or any one that would
be affected from that branch by an adjudication, were not
impleaded in the proceeding. The Administrative Tribunal
allowed the applications and quashed the Rules in part.
Essentially, what the Administrative Tribunal did was to
alter the qualifications provided for promotions in the cadre
of stenographers by doing away with the higher
qualifications prescribed. The striking down of the Rules
was done by a Bench presided over by the Vice-Chairman of
the Administrative Tribunal. Thereafter the vice-chairman
proceeded to promote the stenographers on the basis of the
qualification prescribed by him on the judicial side. The
assistants felt aggrieved by the promotions thus given. They,
therefore, moved application Nos.3585-3592 of 1995 and
other connected applications before the Administrative
Tribunal challenging the decision of the Administrative
Tribunal dated 6.7.1994 as also the promotions given to the
respondents in those applications, the promoted
stenographers. The applications were opposed on various
grounds. By order dated 21.4.1997, the Administrative
Tribunal dismissed the applications. It was challenged by
the Assistants before the High Court in the writ petitions
already referred to. The High Court, by the judgment under
appeal, allowed the writ petitions in part holding that the
Administrative Tribunal had no jurisdiction to alter the
qualifications for promotions as it had done and since
promotions were made on the basis of this unauthorized
interference with the Rules prescribing qualifications for
promotions, the promotions were bad. As a logical follow
up, instead of setting aside all the promotions, the High
Court set aside only the promotions of non-graduate
stenographers and declined to interfere with the promotions
of the graduate stenographers. The non-graduate
stenographers are aggrieved by the setting aside of the
judgment of the Administrative Tribunal and the quashing of
the promotions of non-graduates. The Assistants are
aggrieved by what they call the failure of the High Court to
give effect to its own judgment and in not setting aside the
illegal promotions given to all stenographers including the
graduate stenographers. That is how these sets of appeals
are before us.;
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