PAWAN KUMAR Vs. SAINIK SCHOOL KUNJPURA AND ORS.
LAWS(P&H)-2016-4-45
HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB AND HARYANA
Decided on April 27,2016

PAWAN KUMAR Appellant
VERSUS
Sainik School Kunjpura And Ors. Respondents

JUDGEMENT

P.B. Bajanthri, J. - (1.) The petitioner was appointed as Assistant Master (Hindi) on contractual/temporary basis w.e.f. 01.11.2014, vide letter No. SSK/1401/Estt, dated 22.10.2014 for a limited period. Thereafter, from time to time after a gap of service of one or two months he was re -appointed on contract basis. The last order was issued w.e.f. 15.01.2016 till 31.03.2016. The respondents issued advertisement for regular recruitment to the post of Assistant Master (Hindi) in the month of July, 2015. For some reasons the recruitment was not completed. Once again in the month of December, 2015, the post of Assistant Master (Hindi) was advertised in which the petitioner also participated by attending interview on 19.02.2016. Before completion of the regular recruitment notified on December, 2015, the respondents issued one more advertisement for appointing Assistant Master (Hindi) on contractual basis on 09.03.2016 and the same was withdrawn on 01.04.2016.
(2.) Learned counsel for the respondents submitted that on 02.04.2016 as per the regular recruitment, advertised in the month of December, 2015 one Sh. Abhinav Pandey was selected and appointed.
(3.) Learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that in order to deny extension of contractual appointment, the respondents have resorted to contractual appointment as well as regular recruitment from July, 2015 to 9th March, 2016. The petitioner was made known that his initial appointment is only for a particular period and it was ad hoc and contractual, therefore, he has no right to question the communication dated 29.02.2016. In judgment rendered in State of Karnataka and others v/s. Umadevi and others, : 2006(4) SCC 1, the Hon'ble Supreme Court has held as under (Para 43 & 45): - - "43. Thus, it is clear that adherence to the rule of equality in public employment is a basic feature of our Constitution and since the rule of law is the core of our Constitution, a Court would certainly be disabled from passing an order upholding a violation of Article 14 or in ordering the overlooking of the need to comply with the requirements of Article 14 read with Article 16 of the Constitution. Therefore, consistent with the scheme for public employment, this Court while laying down the law, has necessarily to hold that unless the appointment is in terms of the relevant rules and after a proper competition among qualified persons, the same would not confer any right on the appointee. If it is a contractual appointment, the appointment comes to an end at the end of the contract, if it were an engagement or appointment on daily wages or casual basis, the same would come to an end when it is discontinued. Similarly, a temporary employee could not claim to be made permanent on the expiry of his term of appointment. It has also to be clarified that merely because a temporary employee or a casual wage worker is continued for a time beyond the term of his appointment, he would not be entitled to be absorbed in regular service or made permanent, merely on the strength of such continuance, if the original appointment was not made by following a due process of selection as envisaged by the relevant rules. It is not open to the court to prevent regular recruitment at the instance of temporary employees whose period of employment has come to an end or of ad hoc employees who by the very nature of their appointment, do not acquire any right. The High Courts acting under Article 226 of the Constitution, should not ordinarily issue directions for absorption, regularization, or permanent continuance unless the recruitment itself was made regularly and in terms of the constitutional scheme. Merely because, an employee had continued under cover of an order of the Court, which we have described as 'litigious employment' in the earlier part of the judgment, he would not be entitled to any right to be absorbed or made permanent in the service. In fact, in such cases, the High Court may not be justified in issuing interim directions, since, after all, if ultimately the employee approaching it is found entitled to relief, it may be possible for it to mould the relief in such a manner that ultimately no prejudice will be caused to him, whereas an interim direction to continue his employment would hold up the regular procedure for selection or impose on the State the burden of paying an employee who is really not required. The courts must be careful in ensuring that they do not interfere unduly with the economic arrangement of its affairs by the State or its instrumentalities or lend themselves the instruments to facilitate the bypassing of the constitutional and statutory mandates. 45. While directing that appointments, temporary or casual, be regularized or made permanent, the courts are swayed by the fact that the person concerned has worked for some time and in some cases for a considerable length of time. It is not as if the person who accepts an engagement either temporary or casual in nature, is not aware of the nature of his employment. He accepts the employment with open eyes. It may be true that he is not in a position to bargain - not at arm's length - since he might have been searching for some employment so as to eke out his livelihood and accepts whatever he gets. But on that ground alone, it would not be appropriate to jettison the constitutional scheme of appointment and to take the view that a person who has temporarily or casually got employed should be directed to be continued permanently. By doing so, it will be creating another mode of public appointment which is not permissible. If the court were to void a contractual employment of this nature on the ground that the parties were not having equal bargaining power, that too would not enable the court to grant any relief to that employee. A total embargo on such casual or temporary employment is not possible, given the exigencies of administration and if imposed, would only mean that some people who at least get employment temporarily, contractually or casually, would not be getting even that employment when securing of such employment brings at least some succor to them. After all, innumerable citizens of our vast country are in search of employment and one is not compelled to accept a casual or temporary employment if one is not inclined to go in for such an employment. It is in that context that one has to proceed on the basis that the employment was accepted fully knowing the nature of it and the consequences flowing from it. In other words, even while accepting the employment, the person concerned knows the nature of his employment. It is not an appointment to a post in the real sense of the term. The claim acquired by him in the post in which he is temporarily employed or the interest in that post cannot be considered to be of such a magnitude as to enable the giving up of the procedure established, for making regular appointments to available posts in the services of the State. The argument that since one has been working for some time in the post, it will not be just to discontinue him, even though he was aware of the nature of the employment when he first took it up, is not (sic) one that would enable the jettisoning of the procedure established by law for public employment and would have to fail when tested on the touchstone of constitutionality and equality of opportunity enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution.";


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