SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Narinder Singh
Vs
State of Haryana and Others
Appeal (Civil) 4282 of 2006 (Arising Out of S.L.P. (C) No.18642 of 2005) With Civil Appeal No.4283 of 2006 (Arising Out of Slp (C) No.22044 of 2005)
(Arijit Pasayat and L. S. Panta, JJ)
27.09.2006
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Leave granted.
Challenge in these appeals is to the judgment rendered by a Division Bench of
the Punjab and Haryana High Court dismissing the writ petition so far as it
related to the present appellants while issuing notice to the other two writ
petitioners.
The High Court held that the present appellants are not entitled to the benefit
in terms of Rule 3.8 of Police Training College Manual (in short the 'Manual')
and thus not entitled to grant of grace marks. As noted supra, in the case of
co-writ petitioners notice was issued by the High Court. According to learned
counsel for the appellants various submissions were made before the High Court
which it did not notice and only on the ground that no benefit was available
under Rule 3.8 of the Manual the writ petition was dismissed.
Learned counsel for the respondent-State, however, supported the order of the
High Court.
So far as claim of different submissions made by the appellants as is clear from
a bare reading of the writ petition they were essentially as follows:
"(i) That action of the respondents is contrary to the Police Training
College Manual wherein four chances have been provided and services of the
petitioners are being terminated only after granting two chances.
(ii) That the petitioners were not even allowed to complete their one year
training as per Rules. Rather first examination was conducted when they have
only completed 9 months training.
(iii) That even sufficient time was not granted to the petitioners when 2nd
time examination was conducted.
(iv) That earlier also many chances have been given to pass the examination.
Even opportunity was granted to pass the training fresh to many candidates.
(v) That to discharge the petitioners only after granting two opportunities is
on the face of it arbitrary and illegal.
(vi) That the course was very lengthy and there was no proper instructors to
teach the law subjects and even the examinations were conducted without
completing the full, one year training."
The writ petition was dismissed so far as the present appellants are concerned
at the admission stage. No notice had been issued and no counter affidavit had
been filed. The stand of learned counsel for the State is that various stands
highlighted by the appellant in the writ petition are clearly unsustainable in
law.
A bare reading of the High Court's order shows that it did not consider the
various stands of the appellants. It also did not mention that no other point
except that relating to Rule 3.8 of the Manual was pressed into service. Had it
been so, the grievance of the appellants would have been without any basis. But
the High Court did not even refer to the various stands taken by the
appellants. It was open to the High Court to discard the plea but to restrict
consideration to one point and not to others was certainly not a permissible
course. It may be, as contended by learned counsel for the State, that
different pleas as raised are without any substance. But that should have been
clearly indicated in the impugned order. That having not done so, we set
aside the order of the High Court and remand the case to it for a fresh
disposal in accordance with law. Since the counter affidavit has not been filed
by the respondents before the High Court, let them do so within a period of
four weeks. Since the matter is of some urgency the High Court is requested to
decide the writ application as early as possible preferably by the end of
December, 2006. We make it clear that we have not expressed any opinion so far
as acceptability or otherwise of the stands taken by the writ petitioner nos.1
and 2 and/or the acceptability of various stands as noted above taken by
present appellants.
The appeals are allowed. There will be no order as to costs.