THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI-W.P.(C) 1523/2016
THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW
DELHI
Reserved on: 5th December, 2019 Decided on: 18th December, 2019
W.P.(C) 1523/2016
ALL INDIA RAILWAY ACCOUNTS
STAFF
ASSOCIATION AND ORS. Petitioners
Through: Ms. Sumita Hazarika and Ms. Ipsja Behura, Advocates.
versus
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
Through:
.... Respondents Mr. Jagjit Singh, Senior Standing Counsel for Railways with Mr.
Preet Singh, Advocates.
CORAM:
JUSTICE
S. MURALIDHAR JUSTICE TALWANT SINGH
JUDGMENT
Dr. S. Muralidhar, J.:
1. The All India Railway
Accounts Staff Association and 23 other individual
employees of the Railways have filed this petition challenging an order dated 15th
September, 2015 passed by the Central Administrative Tribunal
(‘CAT’), Principal Bench in O.A. No. 4419/2014 filed by them against the Union
of India, the Railway Board, the Financial Commissioner (Railways), the Deputy
Director (Pay Commission-V), the FA and CAO, South Eastern Railways, and the FA
and CAO, Metro Railway, Kolkata. The Petitioners also challenge an order dated
11th December, 2015 passed by the
CAT dismissing their R.A. No. 303/2015.
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 1 of 10
2. The
short question before the CAT concerned the date of adoption of the
recommendation of the 5 Pay Commission for upward revision of the pay scales of
the Accounts cadre. Aggrieved by the decision of the Government to grant the
revised pay scale “notionally from 1st January,
1996 and effectively from 19th February,
2003” communicated by a Railway Board order dated 7th
March, 2003, the applications aforementioned were filed
before the CAT.
3.
The case of the Petitioners herein
has been that the revised pay and allowances should be granted from 1st January, 1996 itself. The CAT has by the impugned
order held that even though the 5th CPC
recommendations were made effective from 1st
January 1996, it did not automatically mean that all monetary
benefits pursuant thereto were to be given from that date, and that this was
“purely a matter for the Government to decide based on several factors
including the financial burden to the exchequer, which in this case has been
pointed out to be a huge burden.” In doing so, the Tribunal referred to the decision
of the Supreme Court dated
27th August, 2007 in
C.A. Nos. 2468-69/2005 (Union of India v. Arun Jyoti Kundu).
4. This
Court has heard the submissions of Ms. Sumita Hazarika, learned counsel for the
Petitioner and Mr. Jagjit Singh, learned senior standing counsel for the
Railways.
5.
The Petitioners herein are all
retired Accounts Assistants, Sections Officers and Senior Section Officers of
the Railways. They belonged to the Accounts cadre. When the recommendations of the 5th
CPC were adopted
by
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 2 of 10
2019:DHC:7062-DB
the Railways, the Junior Accounts Assistants (JAAs) were
given the normal replacement scale of Rs. 1320-2040, whereas according to general principles they ought to have been given a
higher replacement scale of Rs. 1400-2300 since the JAAs had to have a minimum
qualification of graduation.
6. The Railway
Ministry accordingly moved a proposal
that with effect from
1st January, 1996, the JAAs
should be given the scale of Rs. 1400-2300, i.e. the date of implementation of the 5 CPC recommendations. However, when the matter travelled up to the Standing Group of
Ministers, it was decided that while the revised
pay scale would be granted
notionally from 1st January, 1996, the effective date
of the grant of the higher pay scale would be
19th February, 2003. This was communicated by the Railway
Board by its circular dated 7th March, 2003. In a tabular column, the impact of the recommendations
of the 5th CPC was set out as under:
Designation |
IV CPC Pay scale (Rs) |
Existing pay scale (Rs) |
Revised
pay scale now allotted (Rs) |
Jr. Accounts Assistants |
1200-2040 |
4000-6000 |
4300-7000 |
Accounts Assistants |
1400-2600 |
5000-8000 |
6500-9000 |
Section Officers/
Inspectors of Accounts/Cost Accountants (20%) |
1040-2900 |
5500-9000 |
6500-10500 |
S. Section Officers/ Sr. Inspectors of Accounts/Sr. Cost Accountants (80%) |
2000-3200 |
6500-10500 |
7450-11500 |
7. This Railway
Board circular dated 7th March, 2003 has been challenged
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 3 of 10
before several CATs. Before the
Emakulam Bench of the CAT, O.A. No.671/2003 was filed claiming that the revised
pay scale should be given effectively from 1st
January, 1996, and not just from 19th February, 2003. The Emakulam Bench of the CAT by an order dated 30th
June, 2006 allowed the application holding that the
applicants therein were entitled to the benefits of the revised pay scales with
effect from 1st January, 1996.
8. W.P.(C)
22276/2007 filed by the Railways against the above order was dismissed by the Kerala High Court by an order dated 27th March, 2012. The Supreme Court, in turn, dismissed the
S.L.P.(C) 9832/2013 by its order dated
1st August, 2013. The Railways
accepted the order of the CAT, Emakulam and implemented it by the Railway Board
order dated 16th August,
2013. This benefit was confined to only those individuals who had filed the
aforesaid O.A. before the CAT, Emakulam.
9. The
Patna High Court in a similar petition being W.P.(C) 11452/2005 passed the
following order on 9th April, 2010:
"We take this writ petition to be in a
representative category for all employees of the Accounts Establishment of the
Indian Railways, all of whom shall get the benefits of appropriate pay scales
w.e.f. 1.1.1996, with payment of arrears of salary, but without the obligation
of payment of Interest. It gees without saying that the post-retirement
benefits of such employees, who have already superannuated, shall be revised,
apart from payment of arrears of
salary."
10. The
Review Petition filed against the above order was dismissed by the Patna High Court on 3rd April, 2013. S.L.P.(C) 1587-1588/2014 was
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 4 of 10
dismissed by the Supreme Court observing as under:
“We do not find any legal and valid ground for
interference. The special leave
petitions are dismissed. However, the relief granted by the Central
Administrative Tribunal (CAT) as affirmed by the High Court shall be confined
to the parties before the Tribunal as well as before the High Court. This is
without prejudice to the rights of other claimants which will be adjudicated on
its own merit as and when any such claim is raised.”
11. The
case of the present Petitioners is that when two High Courts, viz., the Kerala
High Court and the Patna High Court have declined to interfere with the orders
of the CAT, Emakulam Bench and CAT, Patna Bench respectively granting relief as
prayed herein, and with those orders having been confirmed by the Supreme
Court, confining the relief only to those Petitioners who were parties to the
aforesaid litigations gives rise to an anomalous situation. There is no good
justification for personnel belonging to the Accounts cadres of the same
railway establishment in different zones to be treated differently.
12. While
as a broad proposition, the principles enunciated in Arun
Jyoti Kundu (supra)
by the Supreme Court that the decision by a Government to
give prospective or retrospective effect to a certain benefit should not
normally be interfered with, on the facts of the present cases, the Court is
unable to be persuaded that there can be a discriminatory treatment amongst
employees identically placed and in the same Accounts cadre but working in different zones of the Railways by happenstance.
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 5 of 10
13. The
following passage in Arun Jyoti Kundu (supra) makes
it clear that the context there was different:
"14. Once we find that it was open to the
Government to extend a benefit to a set of its employees with effect from a
particular day on the basis of some anomaly found in the report of the fifth
Pay Commission, there would arise no discrimination because the very
implementation of the Fifth Pay Commission Report would not entitle the
respondents to any benefit. The very right to their benefit arose because of
the decision of the Government to extent to them a particular benefit not
specified in the Fifth Pay Commission Report, It is, therefore, not possible to postulate that the decision of the
Government must be given retrospective effect and if no such effect is given,
the tribunal or court can interfere and direct the giving of such retrospective
effect. Once it is found that paragraph 83.296 is attracted to the case, it has
to be found that the applicants before the Tribunal were not entitled to any
relief'.
14. A
careful reading of the passage shows that the question in the above case was
giving retrospective effect to a benefit “not specified in the 5th pay commission report.” That is not the case here. The
Court is, therefore, of the view that the decision in Arun Jyoti Kundu (supra) was in a different context and
cannot come to the assistance of learned counsel for the Railways in the
present case.
15. In
the written submissions, it is sought to be urged that the attempt by the Petitioners to equate themselves with
Artisan Staff, Master Cooks, and Primary School Teachers, for all of whom the revised
pay scale was effectively granted from 1st
January, 1996 is misconceived. While again, the job profile
for the aforesaid categories would be different, the fact here remains that the differential pay scale is sought to be given to members
of
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 6 of 10
the same Accounts cadre. The Railways
have accepted the decision of the Emakulam and Patna Benches of the CAT
granting the benefit from 1st January, 1996 onwards in view
of the fact that both the respective High Courts and the Supreme Court have
confirmed the decision. Once that decision has been taken, there is no purpose
served in denying the same benefit to other staff of the same Accounts cadre.
The comparison drawn with Artisans, Cooks, and Primary School Teachers, all of
whom have been granted the enhanced pay scale from 1st
January, 1996, is not relevant in the context of
the case on hand.
16. Recently,
this Court in its order dated 2nd December,
2019 in W.P. (C) 3945/2017 (Shailendra Singh v.
Union of India) accepted
the plea of the Petitioners therein that once the Government had in principle
accepted the recommendations of the 5th CPC,
the effective date from which the benefits of
such revised pay would accrue
would be from when such benefits became available, and not from the date on
which their applicability was notified by the particular Ministry or
Department.
17. In
the aforementioned case, the Court decided to grant consequential orders from 1st April, 2004, the date from which certain restructuring
orders were ordered to be implemented. The case of the Border Security Force,
however, was that till the relevant Recruitment Rules (‘RRs’) applying the said
restructuring orders were notified, the upgradation in the pay scale could not be granted. In that context it
was observed by this Court as under:
“15. The delay in notifying the changed RRs, including the
eligibility criteria for upgradation on different dates for different
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 7 of 10
cadres of the BSF is entirely due to the internal
administrative exigencies of the Respondents. That cannot result in delaying the date from which the benefit ought to
be given. In other words, notwithstanding that the RRs had been notified on a
later date, or the assessment of the suitability of the incumbent for grant of
upgradation may have been completed at an even later date, the actual benefit
of the upgradation ought to be given from
the date when it was meant to be given i.e. 1st April, 2004.
16. This is somewhat similar to recommendations of a
CPC. Periodically, restructuring is undertaken; pay-scales are introduced and
revised as a result of the recommendations of the CPC. However, the actual
implementation of these recommendations gets postponed because in the
individual Departments and Ministries, the necessary changes to the RRs have to
be made and notifications have to be issued. All of this postpones the actual
grant of the benefit in that particular Ministry or Department. However, when it
is finally given, the benefit is usually
given from the uniform date when such revised
pay-scales were made available, as a result of the recommendations of the CPC.”
18. It
is sought to be urged by Mr. Jagjit Singh in the written submissions that the
claim of the Respondents is barred by delay. This plea was noticed by the CAT
but the petition was not dismissed on that ground. On its part the Railways has not questioned the
failure of the CAT to deal with the said issue. Accordingly, the Court does not permit the Railways to raise this issue
in the present petition filed by the original applicants.
19. It
is sought to be contended that the decision to give the higher pay scale to the
Accounts staff “does not have its genesis in the recommendation of the 5th
CPC” and that the grant of the said upgraded scale is “beyond
the recommendation of the 5th CPC.” The correct
position is that the Railways
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 8 of 10
themselves recommended the grant of the revised pay scales to the Accounts cadre on the basis of the
recommendations made by the 5th CPC, but the notice prepared by the Standing Group of Ministers on
Pay Commission related matters made the following recommendations:
"As regards the pay scales for the staff,
belonging to the accounts department in the Railways, the Group of Ministers
decided to recommend to the Cabinet to grant the grades proposed by the
Ministry of Railways for the staff belonging to the accounts department in the
Railways on notional basis with effect from 01.01.1996 and with actual payment
being made prospectively."
20. Thus,
the proposal of the Ministry of Railways itself was for grant of the relief
retrospectively from 1st January,
1996. The proposal was then sent to the Department of Personnel and Training
(‘DoPT’)- It appears that at the stage of consideration of the Ministry of
Finance, Department of Expenditure, it was decided to limit the actual
effective implementation of the revised pay scale by granting it from 19th February, 2003. The Court has perused the minutes of
the meeting of the Cabinet which took the above decision on 19th February, 2003. There is no indication why the
effective date of implementation was postponed except on the ground of
financial burden to the Railways.
21. Between
Accounts cadre employees, to deny
some of them the benefit
of the revised pay scale from 1st
January, 1996, and to grant
the others the same relief would result in discrimination
between equally placed employees. This
is not contemplated or permissible
in law. It cannot possibly be a policy of the Railways that its employees
in the Accounts cadre in different zones
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 9 of 10
get the benefit of the revised
pay scales from different dates.
22. For
all of the aforementioned reasons, the Court finds the impugned orders of the
CAT dated 15th September, 2015 and 11th December, 2015 to be unsustainable in law. They are accordingly
set aside.
23. The
prayers in the present petition are allowed and a direction is issued to the
Respondents to grant them the revised pay scale in question from 1st January,
1996 when the recommendations of the 5 th
CPC became operational. The order dated 7th March, 2003 of the Railway Board, to the extent that
it limits the actual benefit of the revised pay scale by granting the same from
2nd February, 2003, and not from
1st January, 1996, is hereby set
aside.
24. The
arrears now be granted to each of the Petitioners within 12 weeks failing which
the Respondents will be liable to pay simple interest at 6% per annum thereon
till the date of payment. The petition is disposed of in the above terms.
S. MURALIDHAR, J.
TALWANT SINGH, J.
DECEMBER 18, 2019
/mv
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 10 of 10
$~
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW
DELHI
Reserved on: 5th December, 2019 Decided on: 18th December, 2019
W.P.(C) 1523/2016
ALL INDIA RAILWAY ACCOUNTS
STAFF
ASSOCIATION AND ORS. Petitioners
Through: Ms. Sumita Hazarika and Ms. Ipsja Behura, Advocates.
versus
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
Through:
.... Respondents Mr. Jagjit Singh, Senior Standing Counsel for Railways with Mr.
Preet Singh, Advocates.
CORAM:
JUSTICE
S. MURALIDHAR JUSTICE TALWANT SINGH
JUDGMENT
Dr. S. Muralidhar, J.:
1. The All India Railway
Accounts Staff Association and 23 other individual
employees of the Railways have filed this petition challenging an order dated 15th
September, 2015 passed by the Central Administrative Tribunal
(‘CAT’), Principal Bench in O.A. No. 4419/2014 filed by them against the Union
of India, the Railway Board, the Financial Commissioner (Railways), the Deputy
Director (Pay Commission-V), the FA and CAO, South Eastern Railways, and the FA
and CAO, Metro Railway, Kolkata. The Petitioners also challenge an order dated
11th December, 2015 passed by the
CAT dismissing their R.A. No. 303/2015.
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 1 of 10
2. The
short question before the CAT concerned the date of adoption of the
recommendation of the 5 Pay Commission for upward revision of the pay scales of
the Accounts cadre. Aggrieved by the decision of the Government to grant the
revised pay scale “notionally from 1st January,
1996 and effectively from 19th February,
2003” communicated by a Railway Board order dated 7th
March, 2003, the applications aforementioned were filed
before the CAT.
3.
The case of the Petitioners herein
has been that the revised pay and allowances should be granted from 1st January, 1996 itself. The CAT has by the impugned
order held that even though the 5th CPC
recommendations were made effective from 1st
January 1996, it did not automatically mean that all monetary
benefits pursuant thereto were to be given from that date, and that this was
“purely a matter for the Government to decide based on several factors
including the financial burden to the exchequer, which in this case has been
pointed out to be a huge burden.” In doing so, the Tribunal referred to the decision
of the Supreme Court dated
27th August, 2007 in
C.A. Nos. 2468-69/2005 (Union of India v. Arun Jyoti Kundu).
4.
This Court has heard the
submissions of Ms. Sumita Hazarika, learned counsel for the Petitioner and Mr.
Jagjit Singh, learned senior standing counsel for the Railways.
5.
The Petitioners herein are all
retired Accounts Assistants, Sections Officers and Senior Section Officers of
the Railways. They belonged to the Accounts cadre. When the recommendations of the 5th
CPC were adopted
by
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 2 of 10
2019:DHC:7062-DB
the Railways, the Junior Accounts Assistants (JAAs) were
given the normal replacement scale of Rs. 1320-2040, whereas according to general principles they ought to have been given a
higher replacement scale of Rs. 1400-2300 since the JAAs had to have a minimum
qualification of graduation.
6. The Railway
Ministry accordingly moved a proposal
that with effect from
1st January, 1996, the JAAs
should be given the scale of Rs. 1400-2300, i.e. the date of implementation of the 5 CPC recommendations. However, when the matter travelled up to the Standing Group of
Ministers, it was decided that while the revised
pay scale would be granted
notionally from 1st January, 1996, the effective date
of the grant of the higher pay scale would be
19th February, 2003. This was communicated by the Railway
Board by its circular dated 7th March, 2003. In a tabular column, the impact of the
recommendations of the 5th CPC
was set out as under:
Designation |
IV CPC Pay scale (Rs) |
Existing pay scale (Rs) |
Revised
pay scale now allotted (Rs) |
Jr. Accounts Assistants |
1200-2040 |
4000-6000 |
4300-7000 |
Accounts Assistants |
1400-2600 |
5000-8000 |
6500-9000 |
Section Officers/
Inspectors of Accounts/Cost Accountants (20%) |
1040-2900 |
5500-9000 |
6500-10500 |
S. Section Officers/ Sr. Inspectors of Accounts/Sr. Cost Accountants (80%) |
2000-3200 |
6500-10500 |
7450-11500 |
7. This Railway
Board circular dated 7th March, 2003 has been challenged
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 3 of 10
before several CATs. Before the
Emakulam Bench of the CAT, O.A. No.671/2003 was filed claiming that the revised
pay scale should be given effectively from 1st
January, 1996, and not just from 19th February, 2003. The Emakulam Bench of the CAT by an order dated 30th
June, 2006 allowed the application holding that the
applicants therein were entitled to the benefits of the revised pay scales with
effect from 1st January, 1996.
8. W.P.(C)
22276/2007 filed by the Railways against the above order was dismissed by the Kerala High Court by an order dated 27th March, 2012. The Supreme Court, in turn, dismissed the
S.L.P.(C) 9832/2013 by its order dated
1st August, 2013. The Railways
accepted the order of the CAT, Emakulam and implemented it by the Railway Board
order dated 16th August,
2013. This benefit was confined to only those individuals who had filed the
aforesaid O.A. before the CAT, Emakulam.
9. The
Patna High Court in a similar petition being W.P.(C) 11452/2005 passed the
following order on 9th April, 2010:
"We take this writ petition to be in a
representative category for all employees of the Accounts Establishment of the
Indian Railways, all of whom shall get the benefits of appropriate pay scales
w.e.f. 1.1.1996, with payment of arrears of salary, but without the obligation
of payment of Interest. It gees without saying that the post-retirement
benefits of such employees, who have already superannuated, shall be revised,
apart from payment of arrears of
salary."
10. The
Review Petition filed against the above order was dismissed by the Patna High Court on 3rd April, 2013. S.L.P.(C) 1587-1588/2014 was
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 4 of 10
dismissed by the Supreme Court observing as under:
“We do not find any legal and valid ground for
interference. The special leave
petitions are dismissed. However, the relief granted by the Central
Administrative Tribunal (CAT) as affirmed by the High Court shall be confined
to the parties before the Tribunal as well as before the High Court. This is
without prejudice to the rights of other claimants which will be adjudicated on
its own merit as and when any such claim is raised.”
11. The
case of the present Petitioners is that when two High Courts, viz., the Kerala
High Court and the Patna High Court have declined to interfere with the orders
of the CAT, Emakulam Bench and CAT, Patna Bench respectively granting relief as
prayed herein, and with those orders having been confirmed by the Supreme
Court, confining the relief only to those Petitioners who were parties to the
aforesaid litigations gives rise to an anomalous situation. There is no good
justification for personnel belonging to the Accounts cadres of the same
railway establishment in different zones to be treated differently.
12.
While as a broad proposition, the
principles enunciated in Arun Jyoti Kundu (supra) by
the Supreme Court that the decision by a Government to give prospective or
retrospective effect to a certain benefit should not normally be interfered
with, on the facts of the present cases, the Court is unable to be persuaded
that there can be a discriminatory treatment amongst employees identically
placed and in the same Accounts cadre but working in different zones of the Railways by happenstance.
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 5 of 10
13. The
following passage in Arun Jyoti Kundu (supra) makes
it clear that the context there was different:
"14. Once we find that it was open to the
Government to extend a benefit to a set of its employees with effect from a
particular day on the basis of some anomaly found in the report of the fifth
Pay Commission, there would arise no discrimination because the very
implementation of the Fifth Pay Commission Report would not entitle the
respondents to any benefit. The very right to their benefit arose because of
the decision of the Government to extent to them a particular benefit not
specified in the Fifth Pay Commission Report, It is, therefore, not possible to postulate that the decision of the
Government must be given retrospective effect and if no such effect is given,
the tribunal or court can interfere and direct the giving of such retrospective
effect. Once it is found that paragraph 83.296 is attracted to the case, it has
to be found that the applicants before the Tribunal were not entitled to any
relief'.
14. A
careful reading of the passage shows that the question in the above case was
giving retrospective effect to a benefit “not specified in the 5th pay commission report.” That is not the case here. The
Court is, therefore, of the view that the decision in Arun Jyoti Kundu (supra) was in a different context and
cannot come to the assistance of learned counsel for the Railways in the
present case.
15. In
the written submissions, it is sought to be urged that the attempt by the Petitioners to equate themselves with
Artisan Staff, Master Cooks, and Primary School Teachers, for all of whom the
revised pay scale was effectively granted from 1st
January, 1996 is misconceived. While again, the job profile
for the aforesaid categories would be different, the fact here remains that the differential pay scale is sought to be given to members
of
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 6 of 10
the same Accounts cadre. The Railways
have accepted the decision of the Emakulam and Patna Benches of the CAT
granting the benefit from 1st January, 1996 onwards in view
of the fact that both the respective High Courts and the Supreme Court have
confirmed the decision. Once that decision has been taken, there is no purpose
served in denying the same benefit to other staff of the same Accounts cadre.
The comparison drawn with Artisans, Cooks, and Primary School Teachers, all of
whom have been granted the enhanced pay scale from 1st
January, 1996, is not relevant in the context of
the case on hand.
16. Recently,
this Court in its order dated 2nd December,
2019 in W.P. (C) 3945/2017 (Shailendra Singh v.
Union of India) accepted
the plea of the Petitioners therein that once the Government had in principle
accepted the recommendations of the 5th CPC,
the effective date from which the benefits of
such revised pay would accrue
would be from when such benefits became available, and not from the date on
which their applicability was notified by the particular Ministry or
Department.
17.
In the aforementioned case, the
Court decided to grant consequential orders from 1st
April, 2004, the date from which certain restructuring orders
were ordered to be implemented. The case of the Border Security Force, however,
was that till the relevant Recruitment Rules (‘RRs’) applying the said
restructuring orders were notified, the upgradation in the pay scale could not be granted. In that context it
was observed by this Court as under:
“15. The delay in notifying the changed RRs, including the
eligibility criteria for upgradation on different dates for different
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 7 of 10
cadres of the BSF is entirely due to the internal
administrative exigencies of the Respondents. That cannot result in delaying the date from which the benefit ought to
be given. In other words, notwithstanding that the RRs had been notified on a
later date, or the assessment of the suitability of the incumbent for grant of
upgradation may have been completed at an even later date, the actual benefit
of the upgradation ought to be given from
the date when it was meant to be given i.e. 1st April, 2004.
16. This is somewhat similar to recommendations of a
CPC. Periodically, restructuring is undertaken; pay-scales are introduced and
revised as a result of the recommendations of the CPC. However, the actual
implementation of these recommendations gets postponed because in the
individual Departments and Ministries, the necessary changes to the RRs have to
be made and notifications have to be issued. All of this postpones the actual
grant of the benefit in that particular Ministry or Department. However, when it
is finally given, the benefit is usually
given from the uniform date when such revised
pay-scales were made available, as a result of the recommendations of the CPC.”
18. It
is sought to be urged by Mr. Jagjit Singh in the written submissions that the
claim of the Respondents is barred by delay. This plea was noticed by the CAT
but the petition was not dismissed on that ground. On its part the Railways has not questioned the
failure of the CAT to deal with the said issue. Accordingly, the Court does not permit the Railways to raise this issue
in the present petition filed by the original applicants.
19. It
is sought to be contended that the decision to give the higher pay scale to the
Accounts staff “does not have its genesis in the recommendation of the 5th
CPC” and that the grant of the said upgraded scale is “beyond
the recommendation of the 5th CPC.” The correct
position is that the Railways
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 8 of 10
themselves recommended the grant of the revised pay scales to the Accounts cadre on the basis of the
recommendations made by the 5th CPC, but the notice prepared by the Standing Group of Ministers on
Pay Commission related matters made the following recommendations:
"As regards the pay scales for the staff,
belonging to the accounts department in the Railways, the Group of Ministers
decided to recommend to the Cabinet to grant the grades proposed by the
Ministry of Railways for the staff belonging to the accounts department in the
Railways on notional basis with effect from 01.01.1996 and with actual payment
being made prospectively."
20. Thus,
the proposal of the Ministry of Railways itself was for grant of the relief
retrospectively from 1st January,
1996. The proposal was then sent to the Department of Personnel and Training
(‘DoPT’)- It appears that at the stage of consideration of the Ministry of
Finance, Department of Expenditure, it was decided to limit the actual
effective implementation of the revised pay scale by granting it from 19th February, 2003. The Court has perused the minutes of
the meeting of the Cabinet which took the above decision on 19th February, 2003. There is no indication why the
effective date of implementation was postponed except on the ground of
financial burden to the Railways.
21. Between
Accounts cadre employees, to deny
some of them the benefit
of the revised pay scale from 1st
January, 1996, and to grant
the others the same relief would result in
discrimination between equally placed employees. This is not contemplated or permissible
in law. It cannot possibly be a policy of the Railways that its employees
in the Accounts cadre in different zones
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 9 of 10
get the benefit of the revised
pay scales from different dates.
22.
For all of the aforementioned
reasons, the Court finds the impugned orders of the CAT dated 15th September, 2015 and 11th
December, 2015 to be unsustainable in law. They are
accordingly set aside.
23. The
prayers in the present petition are allowed and a direction is issued to the
Respondents to grant them the revised pay scale in question from 1st January,
1996 when the recommendations of the 5 th
CPC became operational. The order dated 7th March, 2003 of the Railway Board, to the extent that
it limits the actual benefit of the revised pay scale by granting the same from
2nd February, 2003, and not from
1st January, 1996, is hereby set
aside.
24. The
arrears now be granted to each of the Petitioners within 12 weeks failing which
the Respondents will be liable to pay simple interest at 6% per annum thereon
till the date of payment. The petition is disposed of in the above terms.
S. MURALIDHAR, J.
TALWANT SINGH, J.
DECEMBER 18, 2019
/mv
WP(C) No.1523/2016 Page 10 of 10
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