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Ram Saran Tripathi vs Chancellor, Gorakhpur ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|02 December, 1989

JUDGMENT / ORDER

ORDER
1. By this writ petition the petitioner seeks quashing of the orders of the Chancellor and the Vice-Chancellor being Annexures 10 and 8 respectively to the writ petition. The petitioner claims that he was selected aa the Principal of Budha Postgraduate College, Sushinagar District Deoria, affiliated to the Gorakhpur Unversity by a duly constituted Selection Committee and that the Vice-Chancellor illegally refused to accord approval to his selection by the order dated 28-6-1980, Annexure 4 to the writ petition. Thereafter, he made a representation to the Chancellor who turned down the same on 12-12-1980 (see order Annexure 5 to the writ petition). The Vice-Chancellor refused to accord approval on the ground that the petitioner's selection was made by a committee in which no expert participated and as such there was no compliance of S. 31(6) of the U.P. State Universities Act, 1973 (briefly, the Act, 1973). Similar view was taken by the Chancellor in his order dated 12th December, 1980. These orders were challenged by the petitioner in writ petition No. 2032 of 1981 on the ground that Dr. A. C. Banerji had acted as an expert on behalf of the Unviersity and thus there was full compliance of the provisions of S. 31(6) of the Act, 1973. This writ petition was rejected by a Division Bench of this Court by a single word order on 13th March, 1981. After the rejection of the said petition, the petitioner made another representation, Annexure to the writ petition, to the Chancellor. Under Secretary to the Chancellor sent a communication to the petitioner dated 3-11-1981, Annexure 7 to the writ petition that his representation, Annexure 6 had been forwarded to the Vice-Chancellor, Gorakhpur University for necessary action. Then the Vice-Chancellor passed the impugned order dt. 29-1-1982, Annexure 8 to the writ petitioner rejecting the petitioner's second representation. Thereafter the petitioner approached the Chancellor by the representation dated 23-5-1982 challenging the Vice-Chancellor's order dated 29-1-1982. The Secretary to the Chancellor by the order dated 25-3-1983, Annexure 10 to the writ petition informed the petitioner that the Chancellor had been pleased to reject his representation dated 23-5-1982 as "non-maintainable."
2. On these facts, the preliminary objection of Sri Ratnakar Bharti, learned counsel for the respondent No. 3 is that the instant writ petition is barred by the principles analogous to res judicata, inasmuch as, the earlier writ petition No. 2032 of 1981 which was rejected in limine by a Division Bench of this Court on 13-3-1981 and the instant writ petition, both are based on one and the same cause of action. Sri Bharti urges that in the earlier writ petition also, the petitioner sought quashing of the Vice-Chancellor's order on the ground that Dr. A. C. Banerji was Expert in the Selection Committee and the Vice-Chancellor was wrong in holding that the selection was bad for non-compliance of the provisions of S. 31(6) of the Act, 1973. It is further urged by him that in the instant writ petition also, same contention has been raised by the petitioner and there is no change either in the cause of action or in the contention of the petitioner in the earlier and the instant writ petition. Upon perusal of the earlier writ petition No. 2032 of 1981, it clearly appears that the petitioner sought quashing of the order of the Vice-Chancellor and the Chancellor, being Annexures 4 and 5 respectively in the instant writ petition on the ground that Dr. A. C. Banerji was Expert in the Selection Committee and the contrary view, taken by the Vice-Chancellor in the order dated 12-12-1980, Annexure 4, was illegal. In para 12 of that writ petition, the petitioner averred :
"......the Selection Committee was duly constituted and the Vice-Chancellor has erred in law in not treating, Dr. A. C. Banerji, Dean, Faculty of Arts, Gorakhpur University as one of the experts on the Selection Committee under Section 31(6) of the Act........
that Dean Faculty of Arts, Gorakhpur University is a Senior Professor under S. 27(4) and an officer of the University under S. 9 of the Act and as such Shri Banerji should have been treated as an expert member nominated by the Vice-Chancellor..... that in view of the aforesaid facts the Dean Faculty of Arts, who participated in the Selection Committee should have been treated to be expert member and the provisions of Section 31(4) should have been given the meaning that it provides for 3 expert members and since one of the expert members, namely, the Dean Faculty of Arts, Gorakhpur University had participated in the Selection Committee the petitioner's selection was in accordance with law."
Further in para 20 of that writ petition, the petitioner contended:
"That, as stated earlier, Dr. A. C. Banerji had acted as expert member and there was compliance of Section 31(6) of the Act....."
3. Ground No. 3 of that writ petition runs as follows:
"Because Dr. A. C. Banerji acted as an expert on behalf of the University and as such there was compliance of the provisions of Section 31(6) of the Act."
4. Upon perusal of the aforesaid averments made in the earlier writ petition and in the instant writ petition, it is manifest that both the writ petitions are based on one and the same cause of action. The representation, Annexure 6 which was made after the earlier writ petition having been rejected, does not give rise to any new cause of action and, therefore, no order passed thereon either by the Vice-Chancellor or the Chancellor can confer a right on the petitioner to file a fresh writ petition on the same cause of action.
5. Sri S. R. Misra, learned counsel for the petitioner contended that in view of the order of the Chancellor (Annexure 7), the order of the Vice-Chancellor (Annexure 4) did not become final and, therefore, the petitioner is well within his right to file a fresh writ petition. His other confention is that the factum of actual participation of the Expert namely, Dr. A, C. Banerji in the Selection Committee, came to the petitioner's knowledge after his first writ petition having been rejected and, therefore, the second writ petition is maintainable. In my view, both the contentions are bereft of merits. To recapituate, it may be stated that when the representation, Annexure 6 was made by the petitioner after his first writ petition having been rejected, to the Chancellor, then a communication, Annexure 7 on behalf of the Chancellor was sent to the petitioner that his representation had been forwarded to the Vice-Chancellor who disposed of the same by the order Annexure 8 to the writ petition. The communication, Annexure 7 does not give rise to any fresh cause of action and it is wrong to say that the order of the Vice-Chancellor, Annexure 4 did not become final, inasmuch as the subsequent representation of the petitioner was redirected by the Chancellor to the Vice-Chancellor by means of Annexure 7. It is also wrong to say that the petitioner came to know the correct factual position that the Expert had participated in the Selection Committee only after the first writ petition having been rejected. From the aforesaid paragraphs of the earlier writ petition extensively reproduced, it is amply clear that the petitioner in the earlier Writ petition repeatedly contended that the constitution of the Selection Committee could not be said to be bad or violative of S. 31(6) inasmuch as Dr. A. C. Banerji was Expert in the Committee and this cannot be said to be a new fact coming to the former's knowledge.
6. Then, Sri Misra argued with vehemence that an order rejecting the earlier writ petition in limine in any case cannot operate as res judicata in the subsequent writ petition. His submission is that a petitioner will not be debarred from filing a subsequent writ petition if his earlier writ petition was rejected in limine by the Court by a non-speaking order. In support of his submission, he heavily celled on Baldevji Bhathiji Thakora v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1979 SC 1327 : (1979 Cri LJ 1136). Their Lordships in a Division Bench relying on a case of Daryao v. State of U.P., (1962) 1 SCR 574 : (AIR 1961 SC 1457) Held that the second petition by the appellant was not barred by principles analogous to res judicata. In Daryao's case the Supreme Court said that if the petition filed on the High Court under Art, 226 is dismissed not on the merit but because of laches of the party applying for the writ or because it is held that the party had an alternative remedy available to it, then the dismissal of the writ petition would not constitute a bar to the subsequent petition under Art. 32, except in cases where the facts found by the High Court may themselves be relevant even under Art. 32. If a writ petition is dismissed in limine and an order is pronounced in that behalf whether or not the dismissal would constitute a bar, would depend upon the nature of the order. If the order is on the merits it would be a bar, if the order says that the dismissal was for the reason that the petitioner was guilty of laches or that he had an alternative remedy, it would not be a bar except in cases indicated in the judgment.
7. From the dictum of the Supreme Court, it is evidently clear that if the order is on the merits then that would operate as a bar and no subsequent writ petition an be filed. Also the Supreme Court said that whether or not the dismissal in limine would constitute a bar, would depend upon the nature of the order. From the facts of the instant case as stated above, it is plain enough, that the earlier writ petition was rejected in limine on 13-3-1981 on merits and not on the ground of laches or alternative remedy and, therefore, on the facts and circumstances of the earlier writ petition, the order of rejection in limine would be a bar and no subsequent writ petition could be filed by the petitioner on the same cause of action. In the workmen of Cochin Port Trust v. Board of Trustees of the Cochin Port Trust, AIR 1978 SC 1283 their Lordships in the Full Bench referred to Daryao' case in para 10 on page 1288 and having reproduced the observations made in that case observed: (at the end of para 10 on the same page):
"We have thought it proper to elucidate this aspect of the matter a bit further to indicate that dismissal of a writ petition in limine by a non-speaking order could certainly create a bar in the entertainment of another writ petition filed by the same party on the same cause of action." (emphasis mine).
8. The above observation of the Full Bench of the Supreme Court leaves no room for doubt that a dismissal of a writ petition in limine, by a non-speaking order could certainly create a bar for a subsequent writ petition filed by the same party on the same cause of action. Applying this dictum of the Supreme Court to the instant case, it must be held that the instant writ petition is barred by principle analogous to the res judicata, inasmuch as the instant writ petition is based exactly on the same cause of action on which earlier writ petition was filed which was dismissed in limine by a Division Bench of this Court by a non-speaking order. Since the earlier writ petition was rejected on merits though by a non-speaking order and notion the ground of laches or alternative remedy, the order dated 13th March, 1981 rejecting the earlier writ petition in limine will certainly operate as a bar to the instant writ petition. I, therefore, accept the preliminary objection of Sri Bharti, learned counsel for the respondents,
9. For the reasons, the writ petition is dismissed being barred by the principles analogous to res judicata. No order as to costs.
10. Petition dismissed.
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Title

Ram Saran Tripathi vs Chancellor, Gorakhpur ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
02 December, 1989
Judges
  • O Prakash