Case ID: 5292

Judgment:
ivil Appeal No. 2318 of 1985 From the Judgment and Order dated 1.8.83 of the Gauhati High Court in S.A. No. 19 of 1978. Appellant in person D.N. Mukherjee for the Respondents. By a quirk of fate the appel lant who was holding a permanent post of Auditor in the Office of the Accountant General	 Assam resigned his job and took up appointment as a Lecturer in an aided college in Meghalya only to find his appointment terminated in five months ' time for want of approval for the appointment by the Director 575 of Public Instruction. The backdrop of events for this appeal are as narrated below. The appellant who was a confirmed Auditor in the Office of the Accountant General	 Assam responded to an advertise ment in the Assam Tribune dated 21.2.75 and offered himself as a candidate for appointment as a Lecturer in English in Lady Keane Girls College	 Shillong. Respondents 2 and 3 are respectively the Principal and the President of the Govern ing Body of the said College. After being interviewed along with other candidates on 27.3.75 the appellant was selected for the post and was issued an order of appointment on 7.4.75. The order of appointment	 however	 stated that the appointment was subject to the approval of the Director of Public Instruction	 Meghalya	 the first respondent herein. On the appellant seeking clarification from the Principal about this condition he was assured that the sanction of approval was a formality and there was no jeopardy to his appointment. Acting on this assurance the appellant resigned his post in the Accountant General 's Office and joined the College on 2.5.75. To his shock he received a communication from the Principal on 11.9.75 enclosing a copy of letter of the first respondent dated 28.8.75 informing him that his services would be terminated with effect from 17.9.75. By reason of the appellant 's representations the matter was kept in abeyance till 1.12.75 when he received a further communication stating that his services were being terminat ed with immediate effect for want of prior approval of the first respondent. The appellant filed a suit in the Court of the Assist ant District Judge	 Shillong to challenge the order of termination and sought the reliefs of declaration and perma nent injunction. The trial court granted ad interim injunc tion and later made it absolute and in terms thereof the appellant continued to be in service till 20.4.77 on which date the trial court dismissed the suit and vacated the injunction. The Assistant District Judge held that the appointment of the appellant without prior approval of the Director of Public Instruction was irregular and furthermore the ap pointment contravened the Government 's Resolution regarding the reservation of posts for backward sections of the people of the State and that the policy applied to all Government institutions as well as private institutions aided by the Government. The trial court further held that in any event the appellant will not be entitled to a relief of declara tion regarding his continuance in service and that the remedy for the appellant under law	 if any	 is to file a suit for damages for wrongful dismissal and seek reliefs. 576 The appellant preferred an appeal to the District Judge	 Shillong. The learned Appellate Judge held that except the oral testimony of the Deputy Director of Public Instruction regarding the Government 's reservation policy there was no material on record to show the formation of any such policy and much less that the policy of the Government had been published or even communicated to the aided colleges prior to the appellant being appointed. The learned Judge also held that in the absence of any notification or circular by the Government (of Meghalya) showing that the Assam Aided Colleges Management Rules	 1965	 had been adopted it was not possible to hold that the Government had actually adopted the said rules. The Appellate Judge	 therefore	 held that the Director of Public Instruction had acted wrongly in refusing to give approval to the appellant 's appointment and as such the order of termination of service of the appellant was manifestly wrong. In accordance with such findings the Appellate Judge allowed the appeal and decreed the suit and declared the appellant 's continuance in service as a Lectur er in English in the second respondent 's college. The judgment and decree of the Appellate Judge was challenged in Second Appeal before the Gauhati High Court by the first respondent. A learned Single Judge of the High Court concurred with the findings of the Appellate Judge and held that the State of Meghalya had not adopted the Assam College Management Rules	 1960 at the time of the appel lant 's appointment and as such the termination of the serv ices of the appellant was unlawful. However	 on the question of relief that can be granted to the appellant the learned Judge differed from the view of the Appellate Judge and held that reinstatement of the appellant in service was not possible as the appellant did not belong to one of those categories for which alone reinstatement can be ordered viz. (1) Government servants	 (2) industrial workmen and (3) employees of statutory bodies. The learned Judge	 therefore	 held that the appellant would only be entitled to damages for wrongful termination of service. Even then after taking into consideration the unnviable position of the appellant and his continuance in service for about one and half years during the pendency of the suit	 the learned Judge awarded one year 's salary and allowances as damages and disposed of the appeal with the abovesaid modification. It is against this judgment of the High Court the appellant has preferred this appeal. The appellant appeared in person and argued the appeal before us. He contended that neither in the advertisement made by the college authorities nor at the time of the interview	 nor in the order of 577 appointment was there anything to show that the Government of Meghalya had adopted the Assam Aided College Management Rules	 1965 and the Assam Aided College Employees Rules	 1960 and as such he had reason to believe that when once the Selection Committee found him suitable for the appointment he would be confirmed in the post of Lecturer after his successful completion of probation. He further stated that he verified from 	he Principal as to whether his appointment would be disapproved by the first respondent for any reason and he was assured by the Principal that the sanction of approval was only a formality and	 therefore	 his appoint ment would not be in jeopardy in any manner. Having regard to all these factors he resigned his permanent post in the office of the Accountant General	 Assam and had devoted himself fully to his task as a Lecturer in the college. Therefore	 it was a rude shock to him when he was issued an order of termination of service on the ground that the first respondent had not approved the appointment. It was also urged by him that he had established in the trial of the suit that his was the first case where approval was not given and that there had been no previous instance of denial of approval of appointments made in any of the aided col leges in the State of Meghalya. The appellant laid stress on the fact that the Appellate Court as well as High Court have both sustained his contentions and held that his appointment had not been made in contravention of any of the rules framed by the Government and as such the refusal of the first respondent to approve his appointment was wrong and the termination of his service was illegal. The further submission of the appellant was that since the Appellate Court and the High Court have found the termination of his service to be wrong and illegal	 he should have been granted the relief sought for in the suit viz. a declaration that he continued to be in service all along and that he was enti tled to reinstatement with full back pay and allowances. The appellant also contended that though the Lady Keane Girls College is a private institution it was being provided aid by the Government and Government had full supervisory con trol over it and as such the college is for all practical purposes a Government institution and in such circumstances he is entitled to parity of treatment with a Government servant wrongly removed from service. The prayer of the appellant	 therefore	 was that he should be granted a decla ration regarding his continuance in service so as to entitle him to all the benefits ensuing from such a declaration viz. reinstatement in service together with back pay	 allowance 'and other benefits. Opposing the arguments of the appellant the learned counsel for the first respondent argued that the Lady Keane Girls College is a 578 private institution and not a Government institution	 that merely because it receives aid from the Government and the appointments made by the Management are subject to the approval of the first respondent	 the college would not become a Government institution nor can the appellant claim parity of treatment with Government servants. The learned counsel also stated that in spite of the findings of the Appellate Court and the High Court that the termination of service of the appellant was wrongful	 the only remedy for the appellant is to file a suit and not to seek a declara tion of continuance in service because it would amount to seeking specific performance of a contract of service. We have bestowed our anxious consideration to the argu ments advanced by the appellant because of the misfortune that has overtaken him partly due to his own hasty action in resigning his permanent post and partly on account of the first respondent disapproving the appellant 's appointment on the basis of rules which had not been formulated and commu nicated to the aided colleges. On an examination we find that in spite of the sad plight of the appellant it will not be possible to grant him a relief of declaration as sought for by him. The reasons for our view may now be set out. The legal status of an employee in a privately managed college and whether a contract for personal service can be specifically enforced came up for consideration before this Court in Vaish College vs Lakshmi Narain	 [1976] 2 S.C.R. 1006. The facts in that case were as follows. Vaish Degree College which was registered under the Registration of Cooperative Societies Act was initial affiliated to the Agra University and later to the Meerut University. A Principal of the college who was appointed after obtaining formal approval of the Vice Chancellor was terminated from service about two years later. The Principal challenged the order of termination in a suit filed by him on various grounds and he sought for a declaration regarding his continuous in serv ice. The trial court dismissed the suit but the Appellate Court decreed the same. In the second appeal there was a reference to a Full Bench regarding the jurisdiction of the civil court to entertain the suit and eventually the second appeal filed by the management was dismissed and the manage ment came up in appeal to this Court by special leave. This Court held that the Executive Committee of the college was not a statutory body because it had not been created by or under the statute and did not owe its existence to a stat ute. But on the contrary it was a body which came into existence on its own and was only governed by certain statu tory provisions for the proper mainte 579 nance and administration of the institution. The Court summed up the law in the following words: "It is	 therefore	 clear that there is a well marked distinction between a body which is created by the statute and a body which after having come into existence is governed in accordance with the provisions of the statute. In other words the position seems to be that the institution concerned must owe its very existence to a statute which would be the fountain head of its powers. The question in such cases to be asked is	 if there is no statute would the institution have any legal existence. If the answer is in the negative	 then undoubtedly it is a statutory body	 but if the institution has a separate existence of its own without any reference to the statute concerned but is merely governed by the statu tory provisions it cannot be said to be a statutory body. The High Court	 in our opin ion	 was in error in holding that merely because the Executive Committee followed certain statutory provisions of the University Act or the statutes made thereunder it must be deemed to be a statutory body. " The Court then proceeded to consider the next question regarding a contract of personal service being specifically enforceable. After referring to the decisions in S.R. Tewari vs District Board	 Agra & Anr.	 ; 	 59	 Execu tive Committee of U.P. State Warehousing Corporation Ltd. vs Chandra Kiran Tyagi; 	 	 265; Bank of Baroda vs Jewan Lal Mehrotra	 	 55 and Sirsi Municipality vs Kom Francis	 ; 	 the Court held as follows: "On a consideration of the authorities men tioned above	 it is	 therefore	 clear that a contract of personal service cannot ordinarily be specifically enforced and a Court normally would not give a declaration that the contract subsists and the employee	 even after having been removed from service can be deemed to be in service against the will and consent of the employer. This rule	 however	 is subject to three well recognised exceptions (i) where a public servant is sought to be removed from service in contravention of the provisions of article 3 11 of the Constitution of India; (ii) where a worker is sought to be reinstated on being dismissed under the Industrial Law; and (iii) where a 580 statutory body acts in breach of violation of the mandatory provisions of the statute. " The matter again came to be considered in the case of J. Tewari vs Jwala Devi Vidya Mandir & Others	 In that case the appellant	 Smt. J. Tewari was appointed as the Headmistress of the Jwala Devi Vidya Mandir	 Kanpur which was a Society registered under the Societies Registra tion Act	 1860. J. Tewari who later became the Princi pal of the institution challenged her order of suspension in an earlier suit and her order of termination from service in a later suit. The second suit was partly decreed by the trial judge and he upheld that the termination of service of Mrs. J. Tewari was not legal and awarded her a sum of Rs. 15	250 as arrears of pay for a period of 3 years together with interest and provident fund contribution. The High Court confirmed the decree but held that the sum awarded to her should be by way of damages and not towards arrears of salary since Smt. J. Tewari will not be entitled to a decla ration that she continued to be in the service of the insti tution and to a consequent order of reinstatement. In fur ther appeal to this Court by certificate it was contended that the institution was a statutory body and that Smt. J. Tewari was entitled to a declaration regarding her continu ance in service. This Court repelled the contention and held that the Vidya Mandir	 in spite of being governed by the University regulations and the provisions of the Education Code framed by the State Government and also being aided by educational grants	 still constituted only a private insti tution and as such Smt. J. Tewari would only be entitled to a decree for damages	 if her dismissal was wrongful and not to an order of reinstatement or a declaration that notwith standing the termination of her services she continued to be in service. The law enunciated in these decisions stand fully at tracted to this case also. Even though the Lady Keane Girls College may be governed by the statutes of the University and the Education Code framed by the Government of Meghalya and even though the college may be receiving financial aid from the Government it would not be a statutory body because it has not been created by any statute and its existence is not dependent upon any statutory provision. The appellant	 however	 placed reliance on another decision of this Court in I.R. Gupta vs Inter College	 Thora	 ; In that case Shri I.P. Gupta who was appointed as Principal of the college on probation for one year was placed on further probation for one more year. During the period of the extended probation his services 581 were terminated. Although the order of termination was innocuous in its terms it was accompanied by an enclosure containing the resolution of the Managing Committee with a reference therein to an adverse report given by the Manager against the Principal. It was	 therefore	 contended that the order of termination cast a stigma on the Principal and hence his services ought not to have been terminated without due notice and enquiry. It was this contention which was the principal issue in that case. Dealing with that contention this Court found that the college was an institution recog nised under the Intermediate Education Act and was governed by the provisions of the Act and the regulations made there under and that Regulations 35 to 38 prescribed the procedure to be followed before the services of an employee can be terminated by way of punishment. The management	 however	 did not follow the procedure prescribed by the regulations which were virtually the same as provided by Article 311(2) of the Constitution. This Court	 therefore	 held that the principles which should govern the case should be the same as those underlying Article 311(2). It was in that view of the matter this Court allowed the appeal and restored the judgment of the Single Judge of the High Court declaring that the appellant contained to be in the service of the college and that he was entitled to all the benefits flowing from the declaration including the salary and allowances as if there was no break in his service. The facts of the abovesaid case are clearly distinguishable because the case pertained to termination of service by way of disciplinary action. In the instant case there is no such violation of the provisions of any Act or any Regulations made thereun der. This is a case where the first respondent had proceeded on the erroneous assumption that the Assam Aided College Employees Rules	 1960 and the Assam Aided College Management Rules	 1965 had been adopted by the State of Meghalya and therefore	 the appellant 's appointment was in contravention of the rules and consequently he should decline to approve the appointment of the appellant. No doubt his action has been held to be wrongful but even so it is not in contraven tion of any statutory provisions or regulations or procedur al rules. We are	 therefore	 unable to accept the appel lant 's contention that he should be granted a declaration that he continues to be in the service of the college and that he is entitled to all the benefits flowing from the declaration. Notwithstanding this conclusion we feel that the pecul iar facts of the case which are indeed distressing	 call for some relief being given to the appellant instead of a brusque dismissal of the appeal on account of the legal impediments for granting the relief of declaration of his continuance in service. We have already set out the tragic situa 582 tion that has resulted on account of the appellant 's serv ices being terminated after he had closed his options to revert back to his service in the Accountant General 's Office. The trial court which dismissed the suit and the High Court which has modified the decree of the Appellate Court have also noticed this position and expressed their compassion for the appellant. It was on account of that the High Court has granted monetary compensation of one year 's salary to the appellant as damages. We think that in the fact and circumstances of the case and in exercise of our powers under Article 136 of the Constitution we should enlarge the relief granted to the appellant by the High Court by directing the State of Meghalya represented by the first respondent to grant 3 years ' salary and allowances to the appellant at the rates prevalent when his services were terminated on 1.12.75. Though the appellant had remained in service till 20.4.77 in spite of the termination order	 the salary payable for that period is towards the services actually rendered by him in the college. Hence no portion of that amount can be treated as damages. If the appellant has not been paid the salary and allowances for any portion of the period between 1.12.75 to 20.4.77	 the first respondent is further directed to release such sums of money as would be required to make good the unpaid salary and allowances. We give this direction because we find a letter in the paper book written by the second respondent stating that they are unable to pay the salary and allowances due to the appellant on account of non release of funds by the first respondent. The first respondent will make the payments indicated above on or before 30th June	 1987. The grant of this relief will be in consonance with the reliefs granted by this Court to the affected parties in Vaish College case (supra) and Smt. J. Tewari 's case (supra). In the former case the Principal whose services were terminated was allowed to retain a total sum of Rs.21	100 deposited by the Educational Institution under orders of court during the pendency of the proceed ings. In the latter case Smt. J. Tewari had been granted 3 years ' salary by way of damages. In addition to the payment of the abovesaid sums we also direct that in the event of there being a vacancy in the Lady Keane Girls College for the post of Lecturer in English and in the event of the Management willing to appoint the appellant as a Lecturer once again the Management should be permitted to do so by the first respondent by granting relaxation of rules and regulations currently in force governing the filling up of posts of Lecturers in aided colleges in the State of Megha lya. To the extent	 additional reliefs are given to the appellant the appeal will stand allowed. The appellant will be entitled to costs in the appeal payable by the first respondent. P.S.S. Appeal allowed.

Summary:
The appellant	 who was holding a permanent post in a Central Government department	 was selected for the post of Lecturer in a private aided college in Meghalya. The order of appointment stated that it was subject to the approval of the first respondent. On his seeking clarification from the Principal he was assured that the approval was a mere for mality. Acting on the said assurance the appellant resigned his permanent post in the Government department and joined the college. However	 he found his services terminated just within five months for want of prior approval of the first respondent. A suit filed by the appellant challenging the order of termination and for a declaration and permanent injunction was dismissed by the trial court. The first Appellate Court found that the Assam Aided Colleges Management Rules	 1965 had not been adopted by the State Government at the time of the appellant 's appointment and that the Director of Public Instruction had acted wrongly in refusing to give approval to the appellant 's appointment	 and as such the order of termination of service of the appellant was manifestly wrong. It	 therefore	 declared appellant 's continuance in service. The High Court while concurring with the view of the first Appellate Court that the termination of services of the appellant was unlawful	 awarded one year 's salary and allowances as damages since the 573 appellant did not belong to the category of either Govern ment servants	 industrial workmen or employees of statutory bodies	 for which alone reinstatement could be ordered. In this appeal by special leave it was contended for the appellant that the Appellate Court and the High Court having found the termination of service to be wrong and illegal	 he should have been granted the relief sought for in the suit	 that is	 a declaration of continuance in service and rein statement with full back wages and allowances. It was fur ther submitted that since the college was a private institu tion provided and by the Government and Government had full supervisory control over it	 it was for all practical pur poses a Government institution. As such	 he was entitled to parity of treatment with a Government servant wrongly re moved from service. For the respondent it was contended that the only remedy for the appellant was to file a suit for damages and not to seek a declaration of continuance in service	 because it would amount to seeking specific per formance of a contract of service. Allowing the Appeal in part	 the Court	 HELD: The appellant was not entitled to a declaration that he continued to be in the service of the college and that he was entitled to all the benefits flowing from the declaration. [581G] Even though the College in question may be governed by the statutes of the University and the Education Code framed by the Government of Meghalaya and even though the college may be receiving financial aid from the Government	 it would not be a statutory body because it haS not been created by any statute and its existence is not dependent upon any statutory provision. [580F G] Vaish College vs Lakshmi Narain	 ; and J. Tewari vs Jwala Devi Vidya Mandir & Others	 	 referred to. There was no violation of the provisions of any Act or any Regulations made thereunder in the instant case. The first respondent in declining to approve the appointment of the appellant had proceeded on the erroneous assumption that the Assam Aided College Employees Rules	 1960 and the Assam Aided College Management Rules	 1965 had been adopted by the State of Meghalya. No doubt such action has been held to be wrongful but even so it was not in contravention of any 574 statutory provisions or regulations or procedural rules. [581E G] I.P. Gupta vs Inter College	 Thora	 ; 	 distinguished. The misfortune that has overtaken the appellant was partly due to his own hasty action in resigning his perma nent post and partly on account of the first respondent disapproving the appellant 's appointment on the basis of rules which had not been formulated and communicated to the aided colleges. In spite of the sad plight of the appellant	 therefore	 it will not be possible to grant the relief of declaration as sought for by him.[578C D] [In the facts and circumstances of the case and in exercise of its powers under Article 136 of the Constitu tion	 the Court enlarged the relief grunted to the appellant by the High Court by directing the State of Meghalaya to grant three years salary and allowances to the appellant at the rates prevalent when his services were terminated. It further directed that in the event of there being a vacancy in the College in question for the post of Lecturer in English	 and in the event of the Management willing to appoint him as Lecturer once again	 the Management should be permitted to do so by granting relaxation of rules and regulations. ]