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since 1985 practicing as advocate in both civil & criminal laws. This blog is only for information but not for legal opinions

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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Service Law — Promotion — Relaxation of Rules — Validity Paras 19–20, 27 Government may relax service rules in appropriate cases. Promotion granted pursuant to judicial directions and policy decision is valid. G.O. granting notional promotion upheld.

 APEX COURT HELD THAT

Service Law — Promotion — Relaxation of Rules — Validity

Paras 19–20, 27

  • Government may relax service rules in appropriate cases.
  • Promotion granted pursuant to judicial directions and policy decision is valid.
  • G.O. granting notional promotion upheld.

Service Rules — Policy decision — Merger of departments — Effect on seniority

Paras 16–17

  • On merger of departments, employees of one department may be placed below existing employees of another.
  • Placement based on departmental hierarchy and policy instructions is valid.
  • Government Order governing merger not challenged — binds parties.

Seniority — Inter se seniority — Determination

Paras 17, 20

  • Seniority determined in accordance with:
    • applicable service rules,
    • Government policy,
    • cadre classification.
  • Employees from Town Planning Department placed below Engineering Department employees.

Promotion — Notional promotion — Legality

Paras 19, 27

  • Notional promotion with retrospective effect permissible where:
    • employee was otherwise entitled,
    • delay attributable to administration.
  • Such promotion does not violate service jurisprudence.

Judicial Review — High Court interference — Scope

Paras 22–24

  • Division Bench erred by:
    • ignoring material facts,
    • overlooking subsequent developments,
    • interfering with long-settled service matters.
  • Courts should avoid unsettling settled promotions after long lapse of time.

Subsequent events — Relevance

Paras 21–23

  • Subsequent promotions of parties and retirement are relevant.
  • Where no live dispute survives, interference unwarranted.

Finality — Long-standing promotions — Protection

Paras 23–24

  • Promotions already scrutinised and upheld earlier cannot be reopened.
  • Reopening settled service matters causes administrative instability.

Fence-sitter doctrine — Delay and laches

Para 25

  • Persons who do not challenge in time cannot later seek relief.
  • Fence-sitters not entitled to:
    • seniority benefits,
    • promotion claims.

Delay and laches — Public service matters

Para 25

  • Courts discourage stale claims in service matters.
  • Relief denied where rights of third parties have crystallised.

Impleadment — Stranger to proceedings — No relief

Paras 25–26

  • Third parties not part of original proceedings cannot seek relief at final stage.
  • No enforceable right shown — relief denied.

RATIO DECIDENDI

Paras 17, 20, 27

Promotions granted pursuant to valid policy decisions, rule relaxations, and judicial directions cannot be interfered with after a long lapse of time, particularly when seniority and service benefits have already crystallised; stale claims and challenges by fence-sitters are liable to be rejected.

Companies Act, 1956 — Sections 397, 398, 399 — Locus standi — “Member” — Scope and interpretation Paras 17, 22–23 Right to invoke oppression and mismanagement jurisdiction depends on status as “member”. Expression “member” cannot be construed narrowly or technically. Must be interpreted in light of equitable jurisdiction under Sections 397–398.

 APEX COURT HELD THAT 


Companies Act, 1956 — Sections 397, 398, 399 — Locus standi — “Member” — Scope and interpretation

Paras 17, 22–23

  • Right to invoke oppression and mismanagement jurisdiction depends on status as “member”.
  • Expression “member” cannot be construed narrowly or technically.
  • Must be interpreted in light of equitable jurisdiction under Sections 397–398.

Companies Act, 1956 — Section 2(27) vis-à-vis Section 41 — Meaning of “member”

Paras 18–21, 23

  • Section 2(27) provides broad, inclusive definition.
  • Section 41 prescribes modes of acquiring membership, not exhaustive definition.
  • Entry in register is not the sole test of membership.

Membership — Absence of entry in register — Whether decisive

Paras 21, 25, 28–29

  • Entry in register ordinarily evidences membership but is not conclusive in all cases.
  • Where:
    • investment is accepted,
    • proprietary interest recognised,
    • conduct of company treats person as stakeholder,
      such person may be treated as deemed member.

Equitable jurisdiction — Oppression and mismanagement — Liberal construction

Paras 22, 27–28

  • Sections 397–398 confer equitable and remedial jurisdiction.
  • Interpretation must advance object of protecting minority shareholders.
  • Technicalities should not defeat substantive rights.

Membership — Agreement in writing — Requirement — Nature

Para 21

  • Requirement of “agreement in writing” under Section 41(2) is evidentiary.
  • Introduced to prevent fraudulent inclusion, not to restrict genuine claims.

Deemed membership — Recognition through conduct

Paras 29–30

  • Membership may arise from:
    • allotment (even if imperfectly documented),
    • acceptance and utilisation of investment,
    • participation in management,
    • consistent treatment as stakeholder.

Company conduct — Estoppel — Taking advantage of own wrong

Paras 29–31

  • Company cannot deny membership when:
    • it accepted funds,
    • utilised investment,
    • treated investor as co-owner/Managing Director.

Precedents — Applicability

Paras 24–28

  • World Wide Agencies Pvt. Ltd. — legal representatives can maintain petition without entry.
  • Shri Balaji Textile Mills — Section 41 procedural, not restrictive.
  • Umesh Kumar Baveja — conduct-based recognition of membership.

Test — Membership for purposes of Sections 397 & 398

Paras 22–23, 31

  • Determination depends on:
    • substantive rights,
    • equitable considerations,
    • factual recognition of shareholding interest.

RATIO DECIDENDI

Paras 21–23, 31

For purposes of proceedings under Sections 397 and 398 of the Companies Act, 1956, the expression “member” must be construed broadly; absence of formal entry in the register of members is not decisive where the person’s proprietary interest is recognised by the company and supported by its conduct.


Service Law — Recruitment — Essential qualification — Relevant date for eligibility Paras 3, 18, 25 Issue: Whether eligibility is to be determined on date of application or prior to interview. Held: Relevant date is date of submission of application. Eligibility must be assessed on particulars furnished at that stage; no subsequent acquisition permissible.

 

APEX COURT HELD THAT

Service Law — Recruitment — Essential qualification — Relevant date for eligibility

Paras 3, 18, 25

  • Issue: Whether eligibility is to be determined on date of application or prior to interview.
  • Held: Relevant date is date of submission of application.
  • Eligibility must be assessed on particulars furnished at that stage; no subsequent acquisition permissible.

Recruitment Rules — Advertisement — Interpretation — “Possession” of qualification

Paras 17, 21

  • Requirement to “possess” qualification means actual acquisition on relevant date.
  • Candidates not holding qualification on last date of application are ineligible.
  • Future acquisition of qualification does not cure initial ineligibility.

Recruitment Process — Mid-process clarification — Validity

Paras 22, 25

  • Press note clarifying eligibility does not alter conditions but reiterates statutory position.
  • Clarification consistent with rules and advertisement is valid.

Rajasthan Prosecution Subordinate Service Rules, 1978 — Deletion of proviso — Effect

Para 20

  • Earlier proviso permitting final-year candidates deleted (10.10.2002).
  • Legislative intent: Only candidates already qualified on relevant date are eligible.

Doctrine — What cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly

Para 21

  • Maxim aliquid prohibetur ex directo, prohibetur et per obliquum applied.
  • Candidates cannot indirectly claim eligibility by acquiring qualification later.

Interpretation — Beneficial construction in recruitment — Limits

Para 23

  • Principle of adopting interpretation favourable to candidates inapplicable where language is clear.
  • No scope for liberal interpretation when eligibility criteria is unambiguous.

Administrative Law — Certainty in selection process

Para 24

  • Allowing later acquisition of qualification would:
    • introduce uncertainty,
    • create administrative burden,
    • undermine structured recruitment process.

Judicial Review — High Court error — Interference by Supreme Court

Paras 16, 26

  • High Court erred in permitting candidates lacking qualification on relevant date.
  • Supreme Court set aside impugned judgment.

RATIO DECIDENDI

Paras 18, 25

Eligibility for recruitment must be determined strictly with reference to the last date of application, and candidates must possess the prescribed qualification on that date; subsequent acquisition is irrelevant.

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Tort — Medical negligence — Death of doctor during...

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Tort — Medical negligence — Death of doctor during...: advocatemmmohan Consumer Protection Act, 1986 — Section 13(7) — Order XXII CPC — Death of opposite party — Substitution of legal representat...

APEX COURT HELD THAT

Consumer Protection Act, 1986 — Section 13(7) — Order XXII CPC — Death of opposite party — Substitution of legal representatives — Scope

Paras 34–40, 55–56

  • Section 13(7) of the 1986 Act mandates application of Order XXII CPC upon death of either complainant or opposite party.
  • Continuation of proceedings depends on whether the right to sue survives.
  • Order XXII Rules 2 & 4 CPC are procedural; survivability is governed by substantive law.
  • Substitution of legal representatives is permissible where cause of action survives.

Indian Succession Act, 1925 — Section 306 — Survival of cause of action — Exception relating to “personal injuries” — Interpretation

Paras 48–52, 55

  • Section 306 provides that all causes of action survive except:
    • defamation,
    • assault,
    • other personal injuries not causing death,
    • cases where relief becomes nugatory.
  • The expression “other personal injuries” must be read ejusdem generis with defamation and assault.
  • Exception must be strictly construed and cannot override the main rule of survivability.

Tort — Medical negligence — Death of doctor during pendency of proceedings — Whether action survives against estate

Paras 23, 55–56

  • Core issue: whether proceedings for medical negligence survive against legal heirs of deceased doctor.
  • Distinction drawn between:
    • purely personal claims, and
    • claims affecting estate / pecuniary liability.
  • Claims impacting estate can survive and be enforced against legal representatives.

Maxim — Actio personalis moritur cum persona — Applicability — Modern interpretation

Paras 25–29, 54–55

  • Maxim implies personal actions die with the person.
  • Not of universal application; subject to statutory modifications.
  • In modern jurisprudence, rigid application is diluted.
  • Not applicable where:
    • estate is affected, or
    • liability can be quantified against estate.

Cause of action / Right to sue — Meaning and relevance for survivability

Paras 41–42, 56

  • “Right to sue” is synonymous with “cause of action”.
  • It comprises bundle of material facts entitling relief.
  • Survival depends on nature of claim and relief sought.

Legal Representatives — Liability — Extent

Paras 12, 55–56

  • Legal representatives step into shoes of deceased only to the extent of estate inherited.
  • Liability, if established, is recoverable from estate, not personally.

Distinction — Personal injury vs. Loss to estate

Paras 55–56

  • Personal injury claims (purely personal) may abate.
  • Claims involving:
    • pecuniary loss,
    • enrichment of estate,
      survive against legal representatives.

Precedents — Applicability

Paras 53–54

  • Melepurath Sankunni Ezhuthassan — applies to purely personal actions like defamation.
  • M. Veerappa v. Evelyn Sequeira — survivability depends on impact on estate.
  • These precedents reaffirm distinction between personal claims and estate-based claims.

 (RATIO)

Paras 55–56

Survival of proceedings upon death of a party depends on the nature of the cause of action; claims affecting estate survive against legal representatives, whereas purely personal claims abate.


Monday, May 4, 2026