THE HON'BLE SMT. JUSTICE T.MEENA KUMARI and THE HON'BLE SRI JUSTICE G.V. SEETHAPATHY WRIT APPEAL NO :683 of 2010 ORAL JUDGMENT: (Per Smt. T. Meena Kumari,J) This writ appeal is filed against the order of the leaned single judge in W.P.M.P. No. 2188 of 2008 in Review W.P.M.P. No. 11276 of 2010 in Writ Petition No. 12568 of 2006. The appellants herein are the respondents in the writ petition and the respondents are the writ petitioners. The writ petitioners filed W.P. No. 12568 of 2006 before the learned single judge seeking a direction to the appellants herein to extend the benefit of Regulation 30-A of the A.P.S.E.Board Service Regulations (for short ‘the Regulations’) Part-I to them. When the writ petition came up for hearing before the learned single judge, a submission was made by the learned counsel for both the parties that the issue raised in the writ petition is similar to the one decided in Writ Petition No. 1085 of 2006, dated 28.3.2006 and the writ petition can be disposed of in terms of the said order. By order dated 23.6.2006, the learned single Judge while following the judgment rendered in Writ Petition No. 1085 of 2006, dated 28.3.2006, disposed of the said writ petition with a direction to the appellants to fix the pay of the respondents in terms of Regulation 30-A of the Regulations within six weeks. Subsequently, the appellants herein filed the review application, being Review WPMP No. 11276 of 2010 before the learned single judge seeking review of the said order. However, as there is a delay of 729 days in filing the review application, the respondents filed W.P.M.P. No. 1276 of 2010 seeking to condone the said delay. The learned single judge, by the impugned order, dismissed the said application. Hence the present appeal. Learned Special Government Pleader appearing on behalf of the appellants has contended that the provisions of the Limitation Act would not apply to a petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution and the learned single judge without taking note of the same, has dismissed the condone delay petition. In support of this contention, he relied on an un-unmbered paragraph in page 5 of an unreported judgment of a Division Bench of this Court rendered in Writ Appeal No.881 of 2006, which reads thus:. “In view of the above legal position, it deserves to be reiterated that the provisions of the Limitation Act are not applicable to a petition filed for review of an order passed by the High Court in exercise of power under Article 226 of the Constitution. We are not suggesting that in each and every case, the High Court is bound to entertain the application for review ignoring unexplained delay of any length, but are of the considered view that the application filed for review of order passed under Article 226 of the Constitution of India cannot be decided by invoking the provisions of Section 5 of the Act.” He, therefore, contended that the provisions of the Limitation Act are not applicable to a review petition filed for reviewing an order under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. Heard the learned counsel for the parties and perused the order under appeal. In the affidavit filed in support of the condone delay petition, the appellants have stated that the delay occurred on account of not noticing the order thoroughly and on receipt of the judgment in Writ Petition No. 12568 of 2006, they came to know that the facts in Writ Petition No. 1085 of 2006 and the present case are different. They further stated that they came to know about the same only when contempt case was filed against the said order. Having gone through the petition filed in support of the condone delay petition, we are of the view that the reasons offered by the appellants are not sufficient to condone such an abnormal delay. In so far as the contention of the learned Special Government Pleader that the provisions of the Limitation Act are not applicable to a petition filed for review of an order passed by the High Court in exercise of power under Article 226 of the Constitution is concerned, on a perusal of the aforesaid judgment of the Division Bench of this Court, relied upon by the Special Government Pleader, we are of the view that this Court “cannot entertain each and every application for review ignoring the unexplained delay,” as rightly observed by the division bench in the said judgment. In the instant case, since the reasons assigned by the appellants are not sufficient and as there is an unexplained delay, we are of the view that such an inordinate and unexplained delay cannot be condoned. In the circumstances, we do not find any reason to interfere with the order under appeal. The writ appeal fails and it is accordingly dismissed. ___________________ T.MEENA KUMARI,J Date: 6th September, 2010 _______________________ G.V. SEETHAPATHY,J pnb