LawforAll

advocatemmmohan

My photo
since 1985 practicing as advocate in both civil & criminal laws

WELCOME TO LEGAL WORLD

WELCOME TO MY LEGAL WORLD - SHARE THE KNOWLEDGE

Friday, May 25, 2012

Service matter -The appellants, four in number, participated in a selection process conducted by the Second Field Ordnance Depot (2 FOD) in the year 1984 for the post of Lower Division Clerks (LDCs). Despite their selection for the post in question they were not issued appointment letters on the pretext that there was a ban on appointments. In December 1993, pursuant to the order passed in OA No. 29/jk/92 dated 24.8.1993 by the Chandigarh Bench of the Central Administrative tribunal (for short ‘the Tribunal’), respondent No. 4 was issued an appointment letter. The appellant Nos. 1 to 3 were given appointment in May, 1996 on the basis of the directions issued on 24.7.1995 by the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir in SWP No. 1052 of 1991. In Public Service Commission, Uttaranchal v. Mamta Bisht & Ors.[9] this Court while dealing with the concept of necessary parties and the effect of non-impleadment of such a party in the matter when the selection process is assailed observed thus: - “7. ……. In Udit Narain Singh Malpaharia v. Additional Member, Board of Revenue, Bihar & Anr., AIR 1963 SC 786, wherein the Court has explained the distinction between necessary party, proper party and proforma party and further held that if a person who is likely to suffer from the order of the Court and has not been impleaded as a party has a right to ignore the said order as it has been passed in violation of the principles of natural justice. More so, proviso to Order I, Rule IX of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (hereinafter called CPC) provide that non-joinder of necessary party be fatal. Undoubtedly, provisions of CPC are not applicable in writ jurisdiction by virtue of the provision of Section 141, CPC but the principles enshrined therein are applicable. (Vide Gulabchand Chhotalal Parikh v. State of Gujarat; AIR 1965 SC 1153; Babubhai Muljibhai Patel v. Nandlal, Khodidas Barat & Ors., AIR 1974 SC 2105; and Sarguja Transport Service v. State Transport Appellate Tribunal, Gwalior & Ors. AIR 1987 SC 88). 8. In Prabodh Verma & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors. AIR 1985 SC 167; and Tridip Kumar Dingal & Ors. v. State of West Bengal & Ors. (2009) 1 SCC 768 : (AIR 2008 SC (Supp) 824), it has been held that if a person challenges the selection process, successful candidates or at least some of them are necessary parties.”


                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                     CIVIL APPEAL No. 4986-4989 OF 2007



Vijay Kumar Kaul and others                        ….. Appellants

                             Versus

Union of India and others                          … Respondents



                             J U D G M E N T



Dipak  Misra, J.



      The appellants, four in number, participated in  a  selection  process
conducted by the Second Field Ordnance Depot (2 FOD) in the  year  1984  for
the post of Lower Division Clerks (LDCs).  Despite their selection  for  the
post in question they were not issued appointment  letters  on  the  pretext
that there was a ban on appointments.  In December  1993,  pursuant  to  the
order passed in OA No. 29/jk/92 dated 24.8.1993 by the Chandigarh  Bench  of
the Central Administrative tribunal (for short ‘the  Tribunal’),  respondent
No. 4 was issued an appointment letter.  The appellant  Nos.  1  to  3  were
given appointment in May, 1996 on the basis  of  the  directions  issued  on
24.7.1995 by the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir in SWP No. 1052 of 1991.

2.    It is worth noting that Parveen Singh and  others,  whose  names,  had
figured in the select list, being aggrieved  due  to  non  appointment,  had
preferred OA No. 539-HP of 1986 before the Chandigarh Bench of the  tribunal
which allowed the OA vide order dated  25.8.1987  directing  the  respondent
herein to issue appointment letters to them.   The  respondents  instead  of
appointing the said Parveen Singh and others  against  the  vacancies  in  9
FOD, where there were ten vacancies of  LDCs,  appointed  them  against  the
vacancies falling in 2 FOD where there  were  27  vacancies  for  LDCs  with
effect from 1.1.1990.

3.    As set forth, said Parveen Singh and others filed second OA No.  1476-
pb-1991 before the Chandigarh Bench of the tribunal with a prayer  to  issue
a direction to the respondents to appoint them  as  LDCs  with  effect  from
1.5.1985 with  all  consequential  benefits  including  seniority,  pay  and
allowances, etc. on the foundation that similarly situated persons who  were
selected along with them had been appointed  with  effect  from  1985.   The
tribunal allowed the application vide order dated 13.10.2000 directing  that
their appointment shall be treated with effect from 1.5.1985 and they  shall
be extended  the  benefit  of  fifty  per  cent  of  back  wages  and  other
consequential reliefs.

4.      The aforesaid order  was  called  in  question  by  the  respondents
before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in CWP No. 1158 of  2001  and  a
Division Bench of the High Court, as per order dated  12.7.2001,  set  aside
the order of the tribunal to the extent of grant of back wages but  did  not
interfere with the direction  ante-dating  their  date  of  appointment  and
other consequential reliefs granted by the tribunal.

5.    As has been stated earlier that  the  appellants  had  approached  the
tribunal and were appointed on two different  dates  sometime  in  December,
1993 and May, 1996.  After the High Court of Punjab and Haryana  passed  the
order, the respondents conferred the  benefit  on  said  Parveen  Singh  and
others.   Thereafter,  the  present  appellants  submitted   a   series   of
representations to extend to them the similar benefits on the foundation  of
parity.  The said prayer was negatived by the  respondents  by  order  dated
21.7.2004.

6.    Being dissatisfied  with  the  said  action  of  the  respondents  the
appellants knocked at the doors of the Principal Bench of  the  tribunal  in
OA No. 2082 of 2004.  It  was  contended  before  the  tribunal  that  grave
injustice had been done to them by the respondents  inasmuch  as  they  were
not given the equal treatment that was given to similarly placed  employees;
and that their seniority position  and  prospects  for  promotion  had  been
immensely affected.  The stance and stand put forth by  the  appellants  was
resisted by the respondents contending, inter alia, that as  the  appellants
were not parties to the application before the Chandigarh tribunal and  were
not covered by the judgment of Punjab and Haryana High Court, they were  not
extended the benefit; that only those general category candidates  who  were
placed higher in merit list were appointed prior to them excepting one  Kalu
Ram who belonged to the Scheduled Caste category; that the appellants  could
not have been appointed  as  there  was  a  ban  and  thereafter  they  were
appointed as per the direction of the High Court of Jammu and  Kashmir;  and
that  the  tribunal  in  OA  No.  29/jk/92  preferred  on  the  question  of
appointment of the appellant No. 4 had clearly stated that  the  appointment
shall have prospective effect and he would  not  be  entitled  to  any  back
wages or seniority and the said order has gone unassailed;  and  hence,  the
claim put forth in the petition did not merit consideration.

7.    The tribunal adverted to various orders  passed  by  the  tribunal  at
various junctures and the orders passed  by  the  Punjab  and  Haryana  High
Court and came to hold that as far as the appellant No. 4 is  concerned  his
case had attained finality; that  the  decision  rendered  in  the  case  of
Parveen Singh and others could not be treated  as  judgment  in  rem  but  a
judgment in personam; and that the appellants had been given appointment  as
per their placement in the merit list regard being had  to  availability  of
vacancies and hence, it could not relate  to  an  earlier  date,  especially
when they failed to show that any person  junior  to  them  had  been  given
appointment from a retrospective date or extended benefit.   Being  of  this
view the tribunal dismissed the Original Application.

8.     Aggrieved  by  the  aforesaid  order  the  appellants   invoked   the
jurisdiction of the High Court of Delhi under Articles 226 and  227  of  the
Constitution of India seeking a writ of  certiorari  for  quashment  of  the
order dated 10.3.2005 passed by the tribunal and also for  quashing  of  the
orders by which their representations had been rejected and further  pressed
for issue of a writ of mandamus commanding the  respondents  to  extend  the
similar benefits as had been extended to Parveen Singh and  others  in  view
of the judgment rendered by Punjab and Haryana High Court.

9.    The High Court, upon perusal of the order passed by the tribunal,  the
decision rendered by the Punjab and Haryana High Court, and  on  considering
the factum of the delay and laches on the part of the appellants,  and  that
they had not been superseded as the select list was  prepared  in  order  of
merit, and appreciating  the  fact  that  the  appointments  had  been  made
strictly in accordance with the merit declined to interfere with the order.

10.   We  have  heard  Mr.  Ashok  Bhan,  learned  senior  counsel  for  the
appellants and Mr. R.P. Bhatt, learned senior counsel for  the  respondents.


11.   It is submitted by the learned senior counsel for the appellants  that
the tribunal as well as the High Court have fallen  into  serious  error  by
expressing the view that the appointments were based on the merit list  and,
therefore, there was no supersession of the appellants.  It is urged by  him
that neither the original application nor the writ petition could have  been
dismissed on the ground of delay and laches, in view of the  fact  that  the
appellants  immediately  approached  the  tribunal  after  the  High   Court
rendered its judgment on 12.7.2001.  It is his  further  submission  that  a
serious anomalous situation has cropped up inasmuch as the candidates  whose
names featured in one select list  have been  appointed  at  various  times,
as a consequence of which  their  pay-scale,  seniority  and  prospects  for
promotion, have been put to jeopardy.  The last limb of  submission  of  the
learned senior counsel for the appellants  is  that  both  the  forums  have
failed to appreciate that injustice meted out to the appellants deserved  to
be remedied applying the doctrine since  the  doctrine  of  parity  and  the
orders are vulnerable and deserved to be axed and appropriate direction  are
to be issued considering similar benefits.   The learned senior  counsel  to
bolster his submission has placed reliance on the decisions in  K.C.  Sharma
and others v. Union of India and others[1],  Collector  of  Central  Excise,
Calcutta v. M/s. Alnoori Tobacco Products and anr.[2],  State  of  Karnataka
and others v. C. Lalitha[3] and Maharaj Krishan Bhatt and another  v.  State
of Jammu and Kashmir and others[4].

12.   Mr. Bhatt, learned senior counsel for the  respondents  supported  the
order passed by the tribunal as well as by the  High  Court  on  the  ground
that the decisions which have been rendered by the  tribunal  and  the  High
Court are absolutely impregnable since the appellants had  never  approached
the tribunal at the earliest and only put forth their claims  after  success
of Parveen Singh and others.  It is propounded by him  that  the  appellants
while filing the  various  original  applications  seeking  appointment  had
never claimed the relief of appointment with retrospective  effect  and,  in
fact, in the case of the appellant No.  4  the  tribunal  has  categorically
stated that his appointment could have prospective  effect  which  has  gone
unassailed and, therefore, relying on the  decision  of  Parveen  Singh  and
others is of no assistance to the appellants.

13.    To  appreciate  the  rival  submissions  raised  at  the  Bar  it  is
appropriate to  refer  to  the  various  orders  passed  at  various  times.
Parveen  Singh  and  others  approached  the  tribunal  of   Chandigarh   at
Chandigarh Bench in the year 1986.  The tribunal, by order dated  25.8.1987,
directed  to  issue  appointment  letters  to  the  applicants  against  the
vacancies which had not been filled  up,  regard  being  had  to  the  merit
position in the examination.  Thereafter, the said Parveen Singh and  others
were intimated vide letter dated 15.1.1991  to  report  at  the  office  for
collection of  their  appointment  letters  on  character  verification  and
eventually they got appointments.  Later on Parveen  Singh  and  others  had
approached the tribunal to extend the monetary benefits  from  the  date  of
their appointment.  The tribunal had directed to extend 50%  of  the  actual
monetary  benefits  from  the  date  of   appointment   along   with   other
consequential benefits.  The Union of India and  its  authorities  preferred
writ petition before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana, which passed  the
following order: -

           “For the reasons recorded above, the  writ  petition  is  partly
           allowed and the order of the tribunal is quashed to  the  extent
           it grants 50% back wages.  However, we do not find any infirmity
           in keeping intact the other reliefs  granted  by  the  tribunal,
           namely, ante-dating of appointment of respondent Nos. 1 to 7 and
           fixation  of  their  pay  with  all  consequential  benefits  of
           increments etc. with effect from the date, all other  candidates
           placed on the panel of selected candidates were  appointed.   No
           order as to costs.”

14.   While Parveen  Singh  and  others  were  proceeding  in  this  manner,
appellant No. 4, Ujwal Kachroo,  approached  the  tribunal  at  Jammu.   The
tribunal allowed  OA  and  directed  to  issue  appointment  letter  to  the
applicant for the post for which he was  duly  selected  in  1984  within  a
period of six weeks.  It proceeded to clarify  that  the  appointment  shall
have prospective effect and he would not be entitled to any  back  wages  or
seniority for the simple reason that it was neither his  case  nor  anything
had been brought on record to show that any person  junior  to  him  in  the
panel  had  already  been  appointed.   At  this  juncture,  three  of   the
appellants approached the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir  and  the  learned
single Judge of the  High  Court  of  Jammu  and  Kashmir,  by  order  dated
24.7.1995, had passed the following order: -

           “I have heard learned counsel for the parties.  The  respondents
           have no objection in appointing the petitioners as and when  the
           posts of LDCs become available and also subject to  their  merit
           positions in the select list.  Since the  respondents  have  not
           objected in making appointments of the petitioner, I allow  this
           writ petition and direct the respondents  that  the  petitioners
           shall be  appointed  as  LDCs  as  and  when  the  posts  become
           available, on their own turn, as per their merit position in the
           select list.”

On the basis  of  the  aforesaid  order,  the  said  appellants  were  given
appointment.

15.   After the decision of the Punjab and Haryana High Court was  delivered
the present appellants approached the Principal Bench of  the  tribunal  and
the tribunal did not accept the prayer which has been  given  the  stamp  of
approval by the High Court.

16.   In the course of hearing,  learned  senior  counsel  for  the  parties
fairly stated that the decision rendered by the High  Court  of  Punjab  and
Haryana has not  been  challenged  before  this  Court  and,  therefore,  we
refrain from commenting about the legal defensibility of the said  decision.
 However, it is clear as noon day that  the  appellants,  neither  in  their
initial rounds before the tribunal nor before the High Court,  ever  claimed
any appointment with retrospective effect.  In fact, the  direction  of  the
in respect of appellant No. 4 in the OA preferred by  the  appellant  No.  4
was absolutely crystal clear that it would be prospective.  The  said  order
was accepted by the said appellant.  However,  as  is  manifest,  after  the
decision was rendered by the Punjab and Haryana High Court wisdom dawned  or
at least  they perceived so, and  approached the Principal Bench  for  grant
of similar reliefs.  In the petition before the tribunal,  they  had  stated
in their factual portion which are to the following effect: -

           “(n)    That   since   at   the   time   of   filing   writ   by
           applicant/petitioner  Nos.  1,2   and   3   and   an   O.A.   by
           applicant/petitioner No. 4, the issue of  entitlement  to  anti-
           dating appointment and back wages was under adjudication  before
           the Hon’ble High Court of Punjab and  Haryana  in  the  case  of
           Parveen Singh & Ors., the applicants/petitioners in the  present
           O.A. did not seek such relief in their respective writ and O.A.

           (o)   That when the High Court upheld the orders of the tribunal
           in case of Parveen Singh & Ors., that they are entitled  to  the
           benefit  of  anti-dating  appointment  and   the   consequential
           benefits,    the    applicants/petitioners    made    individual
           representations to the respondents seeking the benefit  of  High
           Court’s judgment dated 12.7.2001 delivered in C.W.P. No. 1156 of
           2001.  A true photocopy of this judgment is already available as
           Annexure A-5 at page 22-32 of the O.A.”

17.   Thus, it is demonstrable that they did not approach  the  legal  forum
but awaited for the verdict of the Punjab and Haryana High  Court.   As  far
as appellant No. 4 is concerned, we really see no justifiable reason on  his
part to join the other appellants when he had acceded to the first  judgment
passed in his favour to a limited extent  by  the  tribunal.   This  was  an
ambitious effort but it is to be  borne  in  mind  that  all  ambitions  are
neither praiseworthy nor have the sanction of law.  Be that as it may,  they
approached the tribunal some time only  in  2004.   The  only  justification
given for the delay was that they had been making representations  and  when
the said benefit was declined by communication dated 31.7.2004,  they  moved
the tribunal.    The  learned  senior  counsel  for  the  appellants  fairly
stated that as the doctrine of parity  gets  attracted,  they  may  only  be
conferred the  benefit  of  seniority  so  that  their  promotions  are  not
affected.

18.   It is necessary to keep in mind that claim for the seniority is to  be
put forth within a reasonable period of  time.   In  this  context,  we  may
refer to the decision of this Court in P.S. Sadasivaswamy v. State of  Tamil
Nadu[5], wherein a two-Judge Bench has held thus: -

           “It is not that there is any period of limitation for the Courts
           to exercise their powers under Article 226 nor is it that  there
           can never be a case where  the  Courts  cannot  interfere  in  a
           matter after the passage of a certain length of  time.   But  it
           would be a sound and wise exercise of discretion for the  Courts
           to refuse to exercise their extraordinary powers  under  Article
           226 in the case of persons who do not approach it  expeditiously
           for relief and who stand by and allow things to happen and  then
           approach the courts to put  forward  stale  claims  and  try  to
           unsettle matters.”

19.   In Karnataka Power Corporation Ltd. & Anr. v. K. Thangappan &  Anr.[6]
this Court had held thus that delay or laches is one of  the  factors  which
is to be  borne  in  mind  by  the  High  Court  when  they  exercise  their
discretionary  powers  under  Article  226  of  the  Constitution.   In   an
appropriate case the High Court  may  refuse  to  invoke  its  extraordinary
powers if there is such negligence or omission on the part of the  applicant
to assert his right as taken in conjunction  with  the  lapse  of  time  and
other circumstances, causes prejudice to the  opposite  party.   Even  where
fundamental right is involved the matter is still within the  discretion  of
the Court as pointed out in Durga Prasad v. Chief Controller of Imports  and
Exports (AIR 1970 SC 769).  Of course, the discretion has  to  be  exercised
judicially and reasonably.

20.    In  City  Industrial  Development  Corporation  v.   Dosu   Aardeshir
Bhiwandiwala & Ors.[7] this Court has opined that one  of  the  grounds  for
refusing relief is that the person approaching the High Court is  guilty  of
unexplained delay and the laches.  Inordinate delay in moving the court  for
a Writ is an adequate ground for refusing a Writ.   The  principle  is  that
courts exercising public law jurisdiction  do  not  encourage  agitation  of
stale claims and exhuming matters where the  rights  of  third  parties  may
have accrued in the interregnum.

21.   From the aforesaid  pronouncement  of  law,  it  is  manifest  that  a
litigant who invokes the jurisdiction of a court for claiming seniority,  it
is obligatory on his part to come to the court at the earliest or  at  least
within a reasonable span of time.  The belated approach is impermissible  as
in  the  meantime  interest  of  third  parties  gets  ripened  and  further
interference after enormous delay is likely to usher in a state of  anarchy.


22.   The acts done during the interregnum  are  to  be  kept  in  mind  and
should not be lightly brushed aside.  It becomes an obligation to take  into
consideration the balance  of  justice  or  injustice  in  entertaining  the
petition or declining it on the ground of delay and laches.  It is a  matter
of great significance that at one point  of  time  equity  that  existed  in
favour of one  melts  into  total  insignificance  and  paves  the  path  of
extinction with the passage of time.

23.    In the case at hand, as the factual matrix  reveals,  the  appellants
knew about the approach by Parveen Singh and others before the tribunal  and
the directions given by the tribunal but they chose to wait and to reap  the
benefit  only  after  the  verdict.   This  kind  of  waiting   is   totally
unwarranted.

24.   Presently we shall refer to the authorities commended by  the  learned
senior counsel for the appellants.   In  K.C.  Sharma  (supra)  the  factual
scenario was absolutely different and thus, distinguishable.  In C.  Lalitha
(supra) it has been held that justice demands that a person  should  not  be
allowed to derive any undue advantage over other employees.  The concept  of
justice is that one should get what is due  to  him  or  her  in  law.   The
concept of justice cannot be stretched so as to cause heart-burning to  more
meritorious candidates.  In our considered opinion, the said  decision  does
not buttress the case of the appellants.

25.    In  Maharaj  Krishan  Bhat  (supra),  the  appellants  had   made   a
representation on 8.1.1987.  A similar representation was sent by one  Abdul
Rashid on that date to the Hon’ble Chief Minister  of  State  of  Jammu  and
Kashmir with a request to consider the case for appointment to the  post  of
PSI  by  granting  necessary  relaxation  in  rules   against   50%   direct
recruitment quota.  The Director General of Police  vide  his  letter  dated
23.1.1987 recommended the name of Hamidullah Dar,  one  of  the  applicants,
for appointment and he was appointed as PSI vide order dated 1.4.1987.   The
other appellants were not extended the benefit of appointment.  Under  those
circumstances the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir in SWP  No.  351  of  1987
directed the Director  General  of  Police  to  consider  the  case  of  the
appellants.  Thereafter Abdul Rashid filed  a  similar  petition  which  was
admitted.  Pursuant to the direction of the High Court the Director  General
of Police considered the applications of Mohd.  Abbas  and  Mohd.  Amim  but
rejected the prayer on 13.12.1991.  When the matter  of  Abdul  Rashid,  the
appellant, came up the  learned  single  Judge  allowed  the  writ  petition
relying on the earlier judgment.  The Government of Jammu and Kashmir  filed
Letters Patent Appeal which was  dismissed.   In  the  context,  this  Court
opined that the Division  Bench  should  not  have  refused  to  follow  the
judgment by another Division  Bench.   Attention  was  raised  that  initial
violation was committed by the State Government and which was  violative  of
Articles of 14 and 16 of the Constitution and the said mistake could not  be
perpetuated.  In that context it was held as follows: -

           “21.  It was no doubt contended by the learned counsel  for  the
           respondent State that Article  14  or  16  of  the  Constitution
           cannot  be  invoked  and  pressed  into  service  to  perpetuate
           illegality.  It was submitted that  if  one  illegal  action  is
           taken, a person whose case is similar, cannot invoke Article  14
           or 16 and demand similar relief illegally or against a statute.”

Thereafter the Bench proceeded to state as follows: -

           “23.  In fairness and in view of the fact that the  decision  in
           Abdul Rashid Rather had attained finality, the State authorities
           ought to have  gracefully  accepted  the  decision  by  granting
           similar benefits to the present writ petitioners.  It,  however,
           challenged the order passed by the Single Judge.   The  Division
           Bench of the High Court ought  to  have  dismissed  the  letters
           patent appeal by affirming the order of the Single  Judge.   The
           letters patent appeal, however,  was  allowed  by  the  Division
           Bench and the judgment and order of the learned Single Judge was
           set aside.  In our considered view,  the  order  passed  by  the
           learned Single Judge was legal, proper  and  in  furtherance  of
           justice,  equity  and  fairness  in  action.   The  said  order,
           therefore, deserves to be restored.”




26.   We respectfully concur with the said observations  but  we  cannot  be
oblivious of the fact that the fact  situation  in  that  case  was  totally
different.  Hence, the said decision is not applicable to the case at hand.



27.   In the case at hand it is evident that the appellants had  slept  over
their rights as they perceived waiting for the judgment of  the  Punjab  and
Haryana High Court would arrest time and thereafter  further  consumed  time
submitting representations and  eventually  approached  the  tribunal  after
quite a span of time.  In the meantime,  the  beneficiaries  of  Punjab  and
Haryana High Court, as we have been apprised,  have  been  promoted  to  the
higher posts.  To  put  the  clock  back  at  this  stage  and  disturb  the
seniority position would be extremely inequitable and  hence,  the  tribunal
and the High Court have correctly declined to exercise their jurisdiction.

28.   Another aspect needs to be highlighted.  Neither before  the  tribunal
nor before the  High  Court,  Parveen  Singh  and  others  were  arrayed  as
parties.  There is no dispute over the factum that they are  senior  to  the
appellants and have been conferred the benefit of promotion  to  the  higher
posts.  In their absence,  if  any  direction  is  issued  for  fixation  of
seniority, that is likely to jeopardise their interest.  When they have  not
been impleaded as parties such a relief is  difficult  to  grant.   In  this
context we may refer with profit to the decision in  Indu  Shekhar  Singh  &
Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors.[8] wherein it has been held thus: -

           “There is another aspect of the matter.  The  appellants  herein
           were not joined as parties in the writ  petition  filed  by  the
           respondents.  In their absence, the High Court  could  not  have
           determined the question of inter se seniority.”

29.   In Public Service Commission, Uttaranchal v.  Mamta  Bisht  &  Ors.[9]
this Court while dealing with the  concept  of  necessary  parties  and  the
effect of non-impleadment of such a party in the matter when  the  selection
process is assailed observed thus: -

           “7.   ……. In Udit Narain Singh Malpaharia v. Additional  Member,
           Board of Revenue, Bihar & Anr., AIR 1963  SC  786,  wherein  the
           Court has explained the  distinction  between  necessary  party,
           proper party and proforma party  and  further  held  that  if  a
           person who is likely to suffer from the order of the  Court  and
           has not been impleaded as a party has a right to ignore the said
           order as it has been passed in violation of  the  principles  of
           natural justice.  More so, proviso to Order I, Rule IX  of  Code
           of Civil Procedure, 1908 (hereinafter called CPC)  provide  that
           non-joinder  of  necessary   party   be   fatal.    Undoubtedly,
           provisions of CPC are not applicable  in  writ  jurisdiction  by
           virtue of the provision of Section 141, CPC but  the  principles
           enshrined therein are  applicable.  (Vide  Gulabchand  Chhotalal
           Parikh v. State of Gujarat; AIR 1965 SC 1153; Babubhai Muljibhai
           Patel v. Nandlal, Khodidas Barat & Ors., AIR 1974 SC  2105;  and
           Sarguja Transport Service v. State Transport Appellate Tribunal,
           Gwalior & Ors. AIR 1987 SC 88).

           8.    In Prabodh Verma & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors.  AIR  1985
           SC 167; and Tridip Kumar Dingal & Ors. v. State of West Bengal &
           Ors. (2009) 1 SCC 768 : (AIR 2008 SC (Supp) 824),  it  has  been
           held  that  if  a  person  challenges  the  selection   process,
           successful candidates or at least some  of  them  are  necessary
           parties.”




30.   From the aforesaid enunciation of law there cannot  be  any  trace  of
doubt that an affected party has to be impleaded so  that  the  doctrine  of
audi alteram partem is not put into any hazard.



31.   Analysed on the aforesaid premised reasons, we do not  see  any  merit
in these appeals and, accordingly, they are dismissed with no  order  as  to
costs.


                              ............................................J.
                                                                  [Dr. B. S.
                                                                    Chauhan]


                              ............................................J.

                                                               [Dipak Misra]

New Delhi;
May 25, 2012

-----------------------
[1]    (1997) 6 SCC 721
[2]    2004 (6) SCALE 232
[3]    (2006) 2 SCC 747
[4]    (2008) 9 SCC 24
[5]    AIR 1974 SC 2271
[6]    AIR 2006 SC 1581
[7]    AIR 2009 SC 571
[8]    AIR 2006 SC 2432
[9]    AIR 2010 SC 2613