Full Text
HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Date of Decision: 13.03.2024
GOVT OF NCT OF DELHI AND ORS ..... Petitioners
Through: Mrs. Avnish Ahlawat, Standing Counsel, GNCTD (Services)
Through: Mr. Tanvir Ahmad Ansari Advocate.
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE RAJNISH BHATNAGAR REKHA PALLI, J (ORAL)
JUDGMENT
1. The present writ petition under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India seeks to assail the order dated 21.04.2023 passed by the learned Central Administration Tribunal in O.A.3106/2022.
2. Vide the impugned order, the learned Tribunal, while allowing the original application filed by the respondent/applicant by setting aside the penalty order dated 26.02.2018 and the appellate order dated 25.04.2019, has directed the petitioners to reinstate him along with all consequential benefits. The learned Tribunal has, however, granted liberty to the petitioners to initiate departmental proceedings against the respondent in accordance with law.
3. We may at the very outset note that while passing the impugned directions, the learned Tribunal has primarily relied on its decision dated 02.08.2022 in O.A.1570/2019 filed by ASI Intikhab Alam who, we find, was initially dismissed by the petitioners along with the respondent vide the same penalty order dated 26.02.2018 passed under Article 311(2)(b) of the Constitution of India.
4. In support of the petition, Mrs. Ahlawat, learned counsel for the petitioner submits that the learned Tribunal has failed to appreciate that in a case like the present, where the witnesses have already turned hostile, it was a fit case where the power under Article 311 (2) (b) of the Constitution of India was exercised by the petitioners. She submits that the learned Tribunal has wrongly relied on the case of ASI Intikhab Alam without appreciating the fact that the roles attributed to the respondent and ASI Intikhab Alam were very different. The complaint by one Sh. Manoj Kumar Gupta was in fact, directed only against the respondent and not against ASI Intikhab Alam and, therefore, there was no similarity before the two cases.
5. Furthermore, even though the respondent was apprehended at the site of the incident itself, he was released on bail only on account of the complainant turning hostile, and filing an application and affidavit before the Court to urge that the respondent had been wrongly implicated due to a case of mistaken identity. She, however, does not deny that the order passed by the learned Tribunal in the case of ASI Intikhab Alam has been duly implemented by the petitioners and consequently, a departmental enquiry against him is underway. She, therefore, prays that the impugned order be set aside.
6. On the other hand, Mr. Tanveer Ahmad Ansari, who appears on behalf of the respondent, supports the impugned order and contends that once the order passed by the disciplinary authority on 26.02.2018 was a joint order whereunder, both the respondent as also ASI Intikhab Alam were dismissed by resort to Article 311(2) (b) of the Constitution of India, the petitioners cannot now be permitted to urge that the two cases are different. He, therefore, contends that once the petitioners are conducting a departmental enquiry against ASI Intikhab Alam, there is no reason as to why an enquiry cannot be conducted against the respondent. He, therefore, prays that the writ petition be dismissed.
7. Having considered the submissions of learned counsel for the parties and perused the record, we may begin by noting the relevant extracts of the impugned order. We may, therefore, first note para 9 of the impugned order wherein the learned Tribunal has referred to the relevant extracts of the decision dated 10.02.2022 in the case of ASI Intikhab Alam. The same read as under:
8. We may now note hereinbelow the relevant extracts of para 11 of the impugned order wherein the learned Tribunal has given its findings as to why the action of the petitioners dismissing the respondent without holding an enquiry was unsustainable;
9. In the backdrop of the aforesaid findings of the learned Tribunal, we have considered the submission of Mrs. Ahlawat that since the roles attributed to the respondent and to ASI Intikhab Alam in the incident which took place in the night of 24.02.2018 were different, no reliance could be placed on the order passed by the learned Tribunal in the case of ASI Intikhab Alam. We are, however, unable to appreciate this plea as we find that this Court is not dealing with the question regarding the guilt or misconduct of either the respondent or of ASI Intikhab Alam. The only question which arises for consideration of this Court is, as to whether there were sufficient grounds for the petitioners to dispense with the departmental enquiry and pass a dismissal order against the respondent under Article 311 (2)(b) of the Constitution of India.
10. Taking into account that it was the own case of the petitioners that the respondent as also ASI Intikhab Alam were involved in the very same incident, it is evident that the witnesses qua the incident in respect of both, would necessarily be the same. As noted hereinabove, in fact, the petitioners had themselves initially passed a common order on 26.02.2018 dismissing both the respondent and ASI Intikhab Alam on the ground that it would not be reasonably practicable to conduct the regular departmental enquiry against them which conclusion was found to be unsustainable by the learned Tribunal in the case of ASI Intikhab Alam. In these circumstances, we are of the view that once the petitioners themselves had treated the case of the respondent and ASI Intikhab Alam at par for the purposes of determining as to whether it was a fit case for dispensing with the enquiry, they cannot now be permitted to urge that the case of the respondent is not covered by the decision of the learned Tribunal in the case of ASI Intikhab Alam, which decision as noted hereinabove has been duly implemented.
11. We are, therefore, unable to accept the plea of the petitioners that the cases of the respondent and ASI Intikhab Alam are in any manner different insofar as they relate to the question regarding the feasibility of holding a departmental enquiry. Their role in the alleged incident and the misconduct attributed to them may be different but this would not be a material factor to determine as to whether a departmental enquiry against the respondent should be dispensed with. In our considered view, once the petitioners have initiated a departmental enquiry against ASI Intikhab Alam, there is no reason as to why such an enquiry cannot be initiated against the respondent especially when the witnesses to the incident, in which both the employees are alleged to have been involved, is the same. Even though, Mrs. Ahlawat has vehemently urged that the witnesses were being threatened by the respondent and, therefore, it was not reasonably practicable to hold an enquiry against him, however as has also been noted by the learned Tribunal, we find that nothing has been placed on record to substantiate this bald plea. Merely because some witnesses are alleged to have turned hostile, cannot, in our view, be a ground not to hold a departmental enquiry and that too when an enquiry based on the same incident is being held against a codelinquent.
12. We have also considered the decisions in CT. Mukesh Kumar Yadav Vs. Govt. (NCT of Delhi), 2017 SCC OnLine Del 11169; Parveen Kumar Vs. Commissioner of Police, 2007 (98) DRJ 433 (DB) and Manohar Lal Vs. Commissioner of Police being WP(C) 1309/2023 decided on 02.02.2023, relied upon by the petitioners but find that the same turn on their own facts. In none of these cases, the Court was dealing with a situation like the one in the present case where enquiry pertaining to the same incident is being held against a co-delinquent. Even otherwise, merely because the respondent happens to be police personnel, it cannot be said that a departmental enquiry cannot be held against him. Similarly, the nature of cases, where the enquiry can be dispensed with, cannot be put in a straight jacket formula; every case is, therefore, required to be considered on its own facts. In the present case, we have no hesitation in agreeing with the learned Tribunal that no ground was made out for dispensing with a regular departmental enquiry against the respondent.
13. For the aforesaid reasons, we find absolutely no merit in the petition, which is accordingly dismissed along with all accompanying applications.
REKHA PALLI, J RAJNISH BHATNAGAR, J MARCH 13, 2024