1970 INSC 0069 G. R. Baqual Vs State of Jammu and Kashmir Civil Appeal No. 1584 of 1968 (CJI M. Hidayatullah, A. N. Ray, I. D. Dua, K. S. Hegde, A. N. Grover, J. C. Shah JJ) 04.03.1970 JUDGMENT HIDAYATULLAH, C.J. - 1. This appeal arises from the judgment and order of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court, December 21, 1966, dismissing a petition under Article 32 (2-A) of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution filed by the petitioner/appellant G. R. Baqual for certain reliefs on the ground that he has been discriminated against and punished without recourse to statutory provisions and procedure. The facts of the case are as follows : 2. The appellant who is a Graduate of the Punjab University entered the Secretariat service of the Jammu and Kashmir State on November 8, 1946 as a clerk. Later he was promoted as Superintendent on September 26, 1957 and was holding a grade of Rs. 150-15-300 (revised Rs. 200- 20-300-25-400). He was then appointed as Personal Assistant in gazetted rank in the grade of Rs. 200-400 (revised Rs. 250-25-350-30-500) and became P.A. to the Chairman of the Legislative Council by his order, dated October 23, 1959. The appellant was then transferred to the Civil Secretariat as an Under-Secretary on September 30, 1963 under Government orders in the same grade of Rs. 250-500. He claimed seniority against other Under-Secretaries when on April 14, 1964, the Government promoted four Under-Secretaries to the post of Deputy Secretaries in the pay scale of Rs. 450-800 which included three of the respondents in this appeal. He was not promoted and he claimed that he was so entitled both on his seniority and under the statutory rules. 3. The case of the appellant is almost entirely based upon his appointment as Personal Assistant to the Chairman of the Legislative Council which is equated with an Under-Secretary under the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Council Secretariat (Regulation and Conditions of Service) Rules, 1959. Under these rules, a P.A. to a Minister and he is in his turn equated with an Under-Secretary and enjoys the same scale of pay. This scale of pay is certainly higher than the scale of pay which the Superintendent gets. 4. It was admitted before us that the appellant was not senior to the other Superintendents in the substantive post of Superintendent. In other words, if everything had been equal, he would be junior to respondents Nos. 2, 3 and 4 and would take his turn for promotion after them. He claims seniority on the basis of his deputation as P.A. to the Chairman of the Legislative Council and his supposed equation to an Under-Secretary. As a matter of fact, he was not promoted as Under-Secretary. He was only selected to serve as P.A. and that carried the pay and the gazetted rank. It happens frequently in Service that such selections are made particularly in Secretarial line by Ministers, Chairman of Legislative Council or Speaker. Even in this Court such selections are made of persons to serve as Secretaries to the Hon'ble Judges. This selection carries more pay while it lasts and gives a rank which the holder enjoys as a gazetted officer, but it does not confer any more privilege. In matters of promotion and ranking, the substantive posts matter, and here, the appellant admits that he was junior to the others. His appointment to a post which in emoluments was equal to that of an Under-Secretary was not in the regular line. It was by selection and could not therefore confer on him any privilege beyond holding that post as long as the Chairman of the Legislative Council Would have him as his Personal Assistant. The appellant tried to prove his case by reference to Rule 24 of the Jammu and Kashmir Civil Services (Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules, 1956. But that rule also says that the seniority of a person has reference to the service, class, category or grand with reference to which the question had arisen and that such seniority shall be determined by the date of his first appointment in such class, service, category or grade as the case may be. Here the service on which emphasis should be placed is the post of Superintendent and there, the appellant admits that he is junior to Respondents 2, 3 and 4. Therefore, neither on the basis of the statutory rule nor on the basis of any practice or convention is he entitled to seniority from the post of Superintendent to the next grade. He must take his turn in accordance with his seniority as Superintendent which was his substantive post when his deputation began. We see no force in this appeal which shall be dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs.