216 Orissa Administrative Tribunal Bar Association V Union of India 21 Mar 2023 465021
216 Orissa Administrative Tribunal Bar Association V Union of India 21 Mar 2023 465021
216 Orissa Administrative Tribunal Bar Association V Union of India 21 Mar 2023 465021
1
JUDGMENT
Dr. Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud, CJI
Table of Contents
A. Background .............................................................................................................................. 3
i. Factual background ............................................................................................................... 3
ii. The impugned judgment ...................................................................................................... 6
B. Submissions............................................................................................................................. 7
C. Issues ........................................................................................................................................ 9
D. Analysis .................................................................................................................................... 9
i. An overview of the proceedings arising from the abolition of the Madhya Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal and the Tamil Nadu Administrative Tribunal ........................ 9
a. The abolition of the MPAT ................................................................................................. 10
b. The abolition of the TNAT ................................................................................................. 11
ii. The Writ Petitions instituted before the Orissa High Court were maintainable ............ 11
iii. Article 323-A does not preclude the Union Government from abolishing SATs ......... 12
iv. Applicability of Section 21 of the General Clauses Act.................................................. 16
a. There is no bar to the applicability of Section 21 of the General Clauses Act to the
administrative order establishing the OAT .................................................................... 16
b. Section 21 of the General Clauses Act is otherwise applicable to the Administrative
Tribunals Act ................................................................................................................. 18
v. The notification dated 2 August 2019 is not violative of Article 14 of the Constitution 23
a. The notification dated 2 August 2019 is not based on irrelevant or extraneous
considerations ............................................................................................................... 23
b. The principles of natural justice have not been violated .................................................... 27
vi. The Union Government did not become functus officio after establishing the OAT .. 28
vii. The notification dated 2 August 2019 is valid despite not being expressed in the name
of the President of India ................................................................................................. 30
viii. The abolition of the OAT is not violative of the fundamental right of access to justice
.......................................................................................................................................... 33
ix. The State Government did not take advantage of its own wrong ................................. 34
x. The failure of the Union Government to conduct a judicial impact assessment before
abolishing the OAT does not vitiate its decision to abolish the OAT ........................ 35
xi. Miscellaneous contentions ............................................................................................... 36
E. Findings and conclusion ....................................................................................................... 36
1. IA No. 52385 of 2022 (application for intervention by Mr C Ravichandran Iyer) is
allowed.
2
A. Background
i. Factual background
2. This appeal arises from a judgment of the Orissa High Court dated 7 June 2021 in
a batch of writ petitions challenging the abolition of the Odisha Administrative Tribunal.1
Before setting out the facts which gave rise to the issues in this appeal, it is necessary to
understand the context in which they arose.
3. Parliament inserted Part XIV-A of the Constitution of India by the Constitution (Forty-
second Amendment) Act 1976. Part XIV-A consists of two articles, Articles 323A and
323B. Article 323A empowers Parliament to provide for the adjudication of certain disputes
by administrative tribunals. Disputes concerning the recruitment and conditions of service
of persons appointed to public services and posts in connection with the affairs of the
Union or of any State or local or other authority within the territory of India or under the
control of the Government of India or of any corporation owned or controlled by the
Government, may be adjudicated by administrative tribunals. Article 323B empowers the
legislatures of states to provide for the adjudication of certain disputes (enumerated in
clause 2 of Article 323B) by tribunals.
4. In pursuance of the power conferred upon it by Article 323A(1), Parliament enacted
the Administrative Tribunals Act 1985.2 The Statements of Objects and Reasons of this
legislation records that it was enacted in order to give effect to Article 323A, and also
because:
“a large number of cases relating to service matters are pending before the various courts. It is
expected that the setting up of such Administrative Tribunals to deal exclusively with service
matters would go a long way in not only reducing the burden of the various courts and thereby
giving them more time to deal with other cases expeditiously but would also provide to the persons
covered by the Administrative Tribunals speedy relief in respect of their grievances.”
5. Section 4(1) of the Administrative Tribunals Act provides that the Central
Government shall establish an administrative tribunal known as the “Central
Administrative Tribunal”3 to adjudicate disputes concerning the recruitment and conditions
of service of persons in connection with posts under the Union or All-India Service, 4
including disputes with respect to remuneration, pension, tenure, leave, and disciplinary
matters.5
In terms of Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act, the Central Government may
establish an administrative tribunal for a particular state, upon receiving a request in this
regard from the concerned State Government. Once created, the state administrative
tribunal 6 is charged with exercising exclusive jurisdiction over disputes concerning the
recruitment and conditions of service of persons in connection with posts under the
concerned state or any civil service of that state, 7 including disputes with respect to
remuneration, pension, tenure, leave, and disciplinary matters.8
1 “OAT”
2 “Administrative Tribunals Act”
3 “CAT”
4 Section 14 read with Section 3(q), Administrative Tribunals Act
5 Section 3(q), Administrative Tribunals Act
6 “SAT”
7 Section 15 read with Section 3(q), Administrative Tribunals Act
8 Section 3(q), Administrative Tribunals Act
3
6. The SAT is prohibited from exercising jurisdiction, authority, or power over a matter
which the CAT’s jurisdiction extends.9 While Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals
Act governs the establishment of SATs, there is no corresponding provision which
stipulates the procedure to be followed to discontinue or abolish them. In terms of Section
29 of the Administrative Tribunals Act, suits or other proceedings pending before courts
or other authorities which would have been within the jurisdiction of the SAT if the cause
of action in such suit or proceeding had arisen after the establishment of the SAT, stand
transferred to the SAT on the date of its establishment. In other words, cases pending
before other fora (including cases pending before the High Court of the relevant state but
excluding those pending before the Supreme Court) stand transferred to the SAT upon its
establishment.
Following the enactment of the Administrative Tribunals Act, various states including
Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra
requested the Central Government to establish an SAT, and the Central Government
issued notifications establishing them. Odisha was one amongst these states. Upon
receiving a request from the State of Odisha, the Central Government established the
OAT on 4 July 1986 by issuing Notification No. GSR 934(E), which was published in the
Gazette of India. The OAT commenced functioning soon thereafter.
7. At this time, Section 28 of the Administrative Tribunals Act was still in force. Section
28 excluded the jurisdiction of all courts except the Supreme Court or the Industrial
Tribunal or Labour Court in relation to matters over which the CAT and the SAT exercised
jurisdiction. Section 28 was enacted pursuant to the enabling provision in Article 323-A of
the Constitution, namely clause 2(d) of Article 323-A. Clause 2(d) provided that Parliament
may exclude the jurisdiction of all courts, except of the Supreme Court under Article 136
of the Constitution with respect to disputes which administrative tribunals were
empowered to adjudicate under clause 1 of Article 323-A. The effect of Section 28 of the
Administrative Tribunals Act, therefore, was that appeals from the OAT lay directly to the
Supreme Court under Article 136 of the Constitution. However, this changed with the
decision of this Court in L. Chandra Kumar v. Union of India (1997) 3 SCC 261. In its
decision in that case, this Court inter alia ruled that:
a. Clause 2(d) of Article 323-A and clause 3(d) of Article 323-B were unconstitutional
to the extent that they excluded the jurisdiction of the High Courts under Articles 226 and
227 and of the Supreme Court under Article 32 of the Constitution;
b. Section 28 of the Administrative Tribunals Act was unconstitutional as were
‘exclusion of jurisdiction’ clauses in all other legislation enacted under Articles 323-A and
323-B;
c. The jurisdiction conferred upon the High Courts under Articles 226 and 227 and
upon the Supreme Court under Article 32 of the Constitution form a part of the basic
structure of the Constitution; and
d. Other courts and Tribunals may perform a supplemental role in discharging the
powers conferred by Articles 226/227 and 32 of the Constitution.
As a consequence of this decision, challenges under Article 226 of the Constitution to the
decisions rendered by the SATs lay to Division Benches of the respective High Courts
5
11. The Union Government took recourse to Section 21 of the General Clauses Act
189710 and abolished the OAT by issuing Notification GSR 552(E) on 2 August 2019. The
relevant portion of this notification is extracted below:
“Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (2) of Section 4 of the
Administrative Tribunals Act 1985, read with Section 21 of the General Clauses Act 1897 (10 of
1897), the Central Government hereby rescinds the said notification number GSR 934(E), dated
the 4th July 1986, except as respects things done or omitted to be done before such rescission,
with effect from the date of publication of this notification in the Gazette of India.”
ii. The impugned judgment
12. In 2019, each of the appellants filed a Writ Petition before the Orissa High Court for
quashing the notification dated 2 August 2019 (as well as the decision of the Cabinet of
the State Government dated 9 September 2015 to abolish the OAT). After considering the
rival submissions, the Orissa High Court dismissed the Writ Petitions by its common
judgment dated 7 June 2021, for the following reasons:
13.
a. Article 323-A is an enabling provision. It does not make it mandatory for the Union
Government to establish administrative tribunals or refrain from abolishing them once they
are established;
b. The decision to abolish the OAT is an administrative decision. There is therefore no
bar to the Union Government invoking Section 21 of the General Clauses Act read with
Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act to rescind the notification establishing the
OAT;
c. The invocation of Section 21 of the General Clauses Act does not result in a denial
of justice because the cases pending before the OAT will be heard by the Orissa High
Court. Hence, litigants are not prejudiced by the invocation of Section 21;
d. The proposition that what cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly is not
applicable because neither Article 323-A of the Constitution nor Section 4(2) of the
Administrative Tribunals Act prohibits the Union or State Government from abolishing an
SAT;
e. The Union Government was not rendered functus-officio after it established the OAT
because it was exercising an administrative
function and not a judicial or quasi-judicial function;
f. The jurisdiction of the Orissa High Court was neither created nor enlarged as a
consequence of the notification dated 2 August 2019. Rather, the High Court’s jurisdiction
was revived;
g. The decision-making process of the Union and State Governments was not
arbitrary, irrational, or unreasonable, and it did not violate Article 14 of the Constitution;
h. There is no factual foundation for the allegation that the decision to abolish the OAT
was motivated by government servants seeking to avoid contempt proceedings before the
OAT. In any event, all cases including contempt proceedings would be heard by the Orissa
High Court; and
7
j. The abolition of the OAT has the effect of enlarging the jurisdiction of the Orissa
High Court but Parliament alone has the power to create or enlarge jurisdiction;
k. The real reason for the abolition of the OAT is that officials in Odisha faced charges
of contempt before the OAT and sought to avoid these proceedings by having the OAT
abolished;
l. A judicial impact assessment ought to have been carried out before abolishing the
OAT;
m. Once the Union Government established the OAT, it became functus officio; and
n. The Union Government ought to have obtained the permission of this Court before
issuing the notification dated 2 August 2019.
16. The submissions urged on behalf of the appellants have been opposed by the Union
of India and the State of Odisha. Mr. Balbir Singh, Additional Solicitor General made the
following submissions for the Union of India:
a. Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act enables the Union Government to
establish an SAT upon receiving a request in this behalf from the State Government.
Consequently, it is the prerogative of the State Government to establish, continue, or
abolish the relevant SAT;
b. Section 21 of the General Clauses Act may be pressed into service to abolish an
SAT. Neither the Constitution nor the Administrative Tribunals Act is required to be
amended to give the Union Government the power to abolish an SAT;
c. The fundamental right to justice has not been violated because the cases pending
before the OAT were transferred to the Orissa High Court;
17. Mr. Ashok Kr Parija, learned Advocate General for the State of Odisha
supplemented the arguments put forward by the Union of India. He urged that:
a. The Writ Petitions before the Orissa High Court which led to the impugned judgment
were not maintainable because the rights of the petitioners were not affected by the
abolition of the OAT. Litigants cannot claim a fundamental right to access the OAT;
b. The State Government took a policy decision to abolish the OAT, in light of the low
rate of disposal of cases by the OAT. The State Government is also of the view that the
purpose of the OAT (to ensure speedy disposal of cases) is not served subsequent to the
decision of this Court in L. Chandra Kumar (supra);
c. The word “may” in Section 4 of the Administrative Tribunals Act is unambiguous
and must be interpreted strictly.
d. An intra-court appeal is different from an appeal to a separate forum and the former
streamlines the process of adjudication. It cannot be said that there is no advantage to be
had by abolishing the OAT;
e. The principles of natural justice were not violated;
The abolition of the OAT does not make the court system less accessible to litigants
because they would have been required to travel to Cuttack in any event in order to
participate in the writ proceedings before the Orissa High Court. The number of cases
transferred from the Circuit Benches of the OAT at Berhampur and Sambalpur to the
Orissa High Court are 275 and 235 respectively. The Principal Bench at Bhubaneswar
and the regular Bench at Cuttack, on the other hand, had 11,483 and 32,911 cases
respectively, which were transferred to the Orissa High Court. Financial hardships faced
8
by litigants can be alleviated through compensation schemes which exist for this purpose;
and
f. It was not mandatory for the government to conduct a judicial impact assessment
test before abolishing the OAT.
18. In its counter affidavit, the Orissa High Court detailed the action taken to transfer
the cases pending before the OAT to the High Court – nodal officers were appointed to
monitor the transfer, a committee was constituted to oversee the transfer, the committee
devised a methodology for shifting pending cases, and a dedicated branch called the ‘OA
Branch’ was created to deal exclusively with transferred matters.
C. Issues
19. Based on the submissions which have been canvassed by the parties, the issues
which arise for determination are:
a. Whether the Writ Petitions instituted by the appellants before the Orissa High Court
were maintainable;
b. Whether Article 323-A of the Constitution makes it mandatory for the Union
Government to establish SATs;
c. Whether Section 21 of the General Clauses Act can be invoked to rescind the
notification establishing the OAT, thereby abolishing the OAT;
d. Whether the abolition of the OAT is arbitrary and therefore violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution;
e. Whether the abolition of the OAT is violative of the fundamental right of access to
justice;
f. Whether the Union and State Governments have violated the principles of natural
justice by failing to provide the OAT Bar Association and the litigants before the OAT with
an opportunity to be heard before arriving at a decision to abolish the OAT;
g. Whether the notification dated 2 August 2019 is invalid because it is not expressed
in the name of the President of India;
h. Whether the transfer of cases from the OAT to the Orissa High Court has the effect
of enlarging the jurisdiction of the latter;
i. Whether the State Government took advantage of its own wrong by ceasing to fill
the vacancies in the OAT;
j. Whether the failure of the Union Government to conduct a judicial impact
assessment before abolishing the OAT vitiates its decision to abolish the OAT; and
k. Whether the Union Government became functus officio after establishing the OAT.
D. Analysis
i. An overview of the proceedings arising from the abolition of the Madhya Pradesh
Administrative Tribunal11 and the Tamil Nadu Administrative Tribunal12
20. The parties to this appeal have advanced some arguments in relation to decisions
arising from the abolition of certain other SATs. It is therefore necessary to understand
11 “MPAT”
12 “TNAT”
9
the decisions of this Court in relation to the abolition of those SATs. To this end, the
abolition of the MPAT and the TNAT as well as the legal proceedings arising from those
decisions are briefly discussed.
The effect of these proceedings on the decision in this case is also examined.
a. The abolition of the MPAT
21. The State of Madhya Pradesh was reorganized into the State of Madhya Pradesh
and the State of Chhattisgarh with the enactment of the Madhya Pradesh Reorganization
Act 2000. Section 74(1)(ii) of this legislation vested the State Governments of these two
states with the power to abolish “every Commission, Authority, Tribunal, University, Board
or any other body constituted under a Central Act, State Act or Provincial Act and having
jurisdiction over the existing State of Madhya Pradesh.”
22. The State of Madhya Pradesh issued a notification abolishing the MPAT pursuant
to a decision taken by it along with the State of Chhattisgarh. This notification was
challenged before the Madhya Pradesh High Court. The petitioners in that case also
challenged the constitutionality of Section 74 of the Madhya Pradesh Reorganization Act
2000.
23. The High Court upheld the constitutional validity of sub-clause (1) of Section 74. It
held that sub-clauses (2) and (3) of Section 71 (concerning the termination of employees
and the compensation for the unexpired period of their tenure respectively) were ultra vires
the Constitution. The High Court also held that the State Government could not have
abolished the MPAT by issuing a notification. Rather, it was required to request the Union
Government to issue a notification abolishing the MPAT because the MPAT was
established by the Union Government. It held that the Union Government would have no
choice but to accept such a request and issue a notification to this effect. The High Court
accordingly quashed the notification issued by the State of Madhya Pradesh by which the
MPAT was abolished.
24. On appeal, this Court upheld the interpretation accorded to the Madhya Pradesh
Reorganization Act 2000 by the Madhya Pradesh High Court. The decision of this Court
was reported as M.P. High Court Bar Assn. v. Union of India (2004) 11 SCC 766.13
As seen from a discussion of the facts, the MPAT Abolition Case (supra) concerned the
powers of the State of Madhya Pradesh under the Madhya Pradesh Reorganization Act
2000 as well as the constitutional validity of certain provisions of that enactment. This
Court was not called upon to adjudicate whether Section 21 of the General Clauses Act
would be applicable to Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act. A decision on the
abolition of an SAT by the exercise of special powers under a legislation enacted for the
reorganization of a state does not have any bearing on whether an SAT may be abolished
in exercise of powers under the Administrative Tribunals Act. The MPAT Abolition Case
(supra) is therefore not germane to the issue of whether Section 21 of the General Clauses
Act would be applicable to Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act. However, the
issue whether the decision to abolish the MPAT was arbitrary, unreasonable and therefore
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution was decided in that case. A similar issue is before
us in the present case and this aspect of the decision in the MPAT Abolition Case (supra)
may be instructive.
12
(b) specify the jurisdiction, powers (including the power to punish for contempt) and authority
which may be exercised by each of the said tribunals;
(c) provide for the procedure (including provisions as to limitation and rules of evidence) to be
followed by the said tribunals;
(d) exclude the jurisdiction of all courts, except the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court under
article 136, with respect to the disputes or complaints referred to in clause (1);
(e) provide for the transfer to each such administrative tribunal of any cases pending before
any court or other authority immediately before the establishment of such tribunal as would have
been within the jurisdiction of such tribunal if the causes of action on which such suits or
proceedings are based had arisen after such establishment;
(f) repeal or amend any order made by the President under clause (3) of article 371D;
(g) contain such supplemental, incidental and consequential provisions (including provisions
as to fees) as Parliament may deem necessary for the effective functioning of, and for the speedy
disposal of cases by, and the enforcement of the orders of, such tribunals.
(3) The provisions of this article shall have effect notwithstanding anything in any other
provision of this Constitution or in any other law for the time being in force.”
(emphasis supplied)
33. Clauses (1) and (2) of Article 323-A use the expression “may,” indicating that Article
323-A does not compel Parliament to enact a law to give effect to it. Parliament is
entrusted with the discretion to enact a law which provides for the adjudication of certain
disputes by administrative tribunals. It is a permissive provision. The provision is facilitative
and enabling.
34. However, in certain cases, the power to do something may be coupled with a duty
to exercise that power. In Official Liquidator v. Dharti Dhan (P) Ltd. (1977) 2 SCC 166,
this Court expounded on when the word “may” carries with it an obligation to exercise the
power conferred by that word in a particular manner:
“8. Thus, the question to be determined in such cases always is whether the power conferred by
the use of the word “may” has, annexed to it, an obligation that, on the fulfilment of certain legally
prescribed conditions, to be shown by evidence, a particular kind of order must be made. If the
statute leaves no room for discretion the power has to be exercised in the manner indicated by
the other legal provisions which provide the legal context. Even then the facts must establish that
the legal conditions are fulfilled … It is not the conferment of a power which the word “may”
indicates that annexes any obligation to its exercise but the legal and factual context of it.
…
10. The principle laid down above has been followed consistently by this Court whenever it has
been contended that the word “may” carries with it the obligation to exercise a power in a particular
manner or direction. In such a case, it is always the purpose of the power which has to be
examined in order to determine the scope of the discretion conferred upon the donee of
the power. If the conditions in which the power is to be exercised in particular cases are
also specified by a statute then, on the fulfilment of those conditions, the power conferred
becomes annexed with a duty to exercise it in that manner.”
(emphasis supplied)
13
35. In Dhampur Sugar Mills Ltd. v. State of U.P.15, this Court held that the intention
of the legislature must be discerned while determining whether a provision is directory or
mandatory:
“36. … In our judgment, mere use of word “may” or “shall” is not conclusive. The question whether
a particular provision of a statute is directory or mandatory cannot be resolved by laying down
any general rule of universal application. Such controversy has to be decided by ascertaining the
intention of the legislature and not by looking at the language in which the provision is clothed.
And for finding out the legislative intent, the court must examine the scheme of the Act, purpose
and object underlying the provision, consequences likely to ensue or inconvenience likely to result
if the provision is read one way or the other and many more considerations relevant to the issue.”
36. In order for the word “may” to acquire the character of the word “shall”, the following
aspects of the provision or legislation (or in this case, the Constitution) must be analysed:
a. The legal and factual context of the conferment of the power;
b. The purpose of the power;
c. Whether the statute (or the Constitution) specifies the conditions in which the power
is to be exercised; and
d. The intention of the legislature discerned inter alia from the scheme of the
enactment, the purpose and object of the provision, the consequences of reading the
provision one way or another, and other relevant considerations.
This is not an exhaustive list of factors which will aid courts in interpreting whether a
provision is directory or mandatory.
37. Article 323-A does not specify the conditions in which the power to enact laws
providing for the adjudication of certain disputes by administrative tribunals must be
exercised. It therefore cannot be said that Parliament was obligated to exercise this power
upon the fulfilment of certain conditions.
38. The legal and factual context of the power to enact laws providing for administrative
tribunals may be understood from the Statement of Objects and Reasons appended to
the Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment) Bill 1976. The Statement of Objects indicates
that the object was “To reduce the mounting arrears in High Courts and to secure the
speedy disposal of service matters, revenue matters and certain other matters of special
importance in the context of the socioeconomic development and progress, it is
considered expedient to provide for administrative and other tribunals for dealing with such
matters while preserving the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in regard to such matters
under Article 136 of the Constitution. It is also necessary to make certain modifications in
the writ jurisdiction of the High Courts under article 226.”
The Statement of Objects and Reasons also sheds light on the purpose of the power to
provide for administrative tribunals i.e., to reduce mounting arrears in the High Courts and
to secure the speedy disposal of service matters. The purpose and the legal and factual
context of the power conferred by Article 323-A do not have the effect of narrowing the
scope of the discretion afforded to Parliament by the word “may.” The purpose of reducing
arrears in the High Courts or securing the speedy disposal of service cases is not of a
nature as to cast an obligation upon Parliament to enact laws providing for administrative
tribunals. This is because the same purpose can be achieved through other routes. Article
323-A merely provides for the enactment of legislation as of one of many routes. It is open
26 (1974) 4 SCC 3
27 [1948] 1 K.B. 223
28 (1991) 3 SCC 91
29 (1994) 6 SCC 651
30 (1999) 4 SCC 727
31 (2003) 5 SCC 437
23
Administrative Tribunal.’ This note was prepared by the General Administration
Department, Government of Odisha and is dated 16 September 2015. The relevant parts
of the note are extracted below:
“1. Background
Odisha Administrative Tribunal (OAT) was established on 14th July, 1986 under the
Administrative Tribunal Act, 1985 by Government of India on the request of Government of
Odisha. The Tribunal under the Act was to have similar jurisdiction as the High Court. The
applicants were supposed to be freed from the requirement of having to approach the High
Court for disposal of their grievances. In lieu of the High Court the aggrieved government
employees could go to the Tribunal and from there on to the Supreme Court directly …
2. Supreme Court Landmark Judgment (18th March, 1997)
However, with the decision of the Supreme Court in L Chandra Kumar (1997) the provision of the
Act that aggrieved parties could appeal before the Supreme Court against the orders of the
Tribunal was held unconstitutional … it was held that the parties aggrieved with the orders of
the Tribunal may approach the High Court first before going to the Supreme Court …
3. Impact of the Supreme Court Judgment
As a consequence of the landmark judgment of the Supreme Court, the objective of the
establishment of the Tribunal to give quick justice to the government employees was defeated
and several States felt that the existence of the Tribunal was rendered futile.”
(emphasis supplied)
The State Government enclosed this note with its letter dated 16 September 2015 to the
Union Government, requesting it to abolish the OAT. The relevant portion of the letter is
extracted below:
“This is to state that the State Administrative Tribunal has been functioning in Odisha since
14.07.1986. Government of Odisha is of the view that the Tribunal is not able to serve its original
objectives, particularly after the Hon'ble Apex Court gave the Judgment in L. Chandra Kumar
case of 1997. As a result of this judgment, very purpose of having a State Administrative
Tribunal (SAT) for speedy redressal of the grievances of the State Government employees
is not fulfilled as any way the aggrieved parties have to approach the Hon'ble High Court
before approaching the Apex Court for a final verdict.
Government of Odisha, after taking into account this, have decided to recommend to the
Government of India to abolish the Odisha Administrative Tribunal. A note indicating the rationale
adopted by the State Government in arriving at this decision is enclosed herewith for your ready
reference.”
(emphasis supplied)
77. Similar reasons have been recorded in various other documents of the State
Government which relate to the abolition of the OAT. The State Government requested
the Union Government to establish the OAT with a view to creating an alternate forum to
the Orissa High Court. The State Government envisioned a structure of litigation whereby
appeals from the OAT would lie directly to the Supreme Court, and would exclude the
High Court both as the court of first instance as well as a forum of appeal. In the State
Government’s view, the structure of litigation under the Administrative Tribunals Act would
ensure that the dispute achieved quietus in a maximum of two tiers of litigation. However,
the decision of this Court in L. Chandra Kumar (supra) held that the jurisdiction of High
Courts could not be ousted. This resulted in the creation of three tiers of litigation under
the Administrative Tribunals Act – first, before the OAT, followed by the High Court, and
culminating with the Supreme Court. The State Government was consequently of the
24
opinion that the “speedy redressal of grievances” was no longer possible in view of the
additional rung of litigation. It was of the opinion that its reason for establishing the OAT
no longer survived.
78. The appellants contend that the State Government has misinterpreted the decision
in L. Chandra Kumar (supra). It is their submission that the number of tiers of litigation
remains the same even if the OAT is abolished and that there is therefore no advantage
to be obtained by abolishing the OAT. Instead of parties instituting a case before the OAT
at the first instance and preferring a petition under Article 226 before a Division Bench of
the High Court and a Special Leave Petition under Article 136 before the Supreme Court,
they will institute a case directly before the High Court. This will be heard by a single judge
and parties have the remedy of a writ appeal before a Division Bench of the High Court
and a further challenge before this Court. There are hence, three tiers of litigation,
regardless of the forum in which the proceedings are conducted. The appellants also
contend that the Orissa High Court is itself burdened with a large number of pending cases
and that an increase in its workload would not result in efficiency in the disposal of cases.
79. It was not the State Government’s case that it was obliged to abolish the OAT as a
result of the decision in L. Chandra Kumar (supra) or that the abolition of the OAT would
result in fewer tiers of litigation. Rather, the State Government evaluated the effect of the
decision in L. Chandra Kumar (supra) on the purpose that it intended to achieve with the
establishment of the OAT. Tribunals, including administrative tribunals, may be set up for
any number of reasons. All the reasons which could possibly or theoretically have had a
bearing on the State Government’s decision to establish the OAT are not relevant. Only
the State Government’s actual reason for establishing the OAT is relevant in considering
whether it misinterpreted L. Chandra Kumar’s case (supra). The State Government’s
reason for setting up the OAT was to achieve speedy justice. A crucial factor (to its mind)
was the elimination of a tier of litigation. The State Government was of the opinion that
the creation of the OAT would not fulfil the purpose of a speedy redressal of grievances
because there was no improvement to the justice delivery system through the elimination
of a tier of litigation.
80. As for the submission that the Orissa High Court’s pendency will increase if the
cases pending before the OAT are transferred to it, the State Government is entitled to
structure its justice delivery systems within the parameters defined by law. Its decision
may be set aside only if it is unconstitutional or without the authority of law.
81. In addition to the impact of the decision in L. Chandra Kumar (supra), the State
Government considered other factors related to the functioning of the OAT. In the note
dated 16 September 2015, the State Government furnished other reasons for its decision
to abolish the OAT:
“Government is incurring a significant sum of expenditure on the OAT as is exhibited in the table
given below:
Table 1: Plan and Non-Plan Provision for OAT (Rs in Lakhs)
Head of Expenditure 2014-15 2015-16
Plan 205.59 200
Non-Plan 616.24 697.69
Total 821.83 897.69
The following table represents the institution and disposal of OA and MP cases in OAT month
wise from January 2014 to December 2014:-
25
Table 2 shows that there were 47,619 cases pending at the beginning of 2014. During the
calendar year 2014, 7417 cases were disposed whereas 13,823 fresh cases were instituted. At
the end of the year 2014, the number of pending cases went up to 54,334 … As an institutional
mechanism it seems the Tribunal has not been able to provide speedy decisions …”
(emphasis in original)
The State Government was therefore concerned not only with the additional tier of
litigation at the Orissa High Court but also with the expenditure incurred to operate the
OAT as well as the rate at which the OAT disposed of cases. It was persuaded to abolish
the OAT due to a combination of all these factors.
82. From the above discussion, the following conclusions emerge:
a. While arriving at the decision to abolish the OAT, the State Government considered
relevant reasons. It considered whether the OAT was capable of fulfilling the purpose for
which it was established after the decision in L. Chandra Kumar (supra). It placed in the
balance the expenditure incurred to operate the OAT as well as the rate of disposal of
cases. These reasons were not irrelevant to the decision as to whether a tribunal ought to
be continued;
b. The State Government’s act of consulting the Orissa High Court (upon receiving a
request to this effect from the Union Government) before deciding to abolish the OAT was
not irrelevant or extraneous. The cases before the OAT were to be transferred to the
Orissa High Court and the opinion of the latter was relevant to State Government’s
decision;
c. The State Government did not consider factors which were irrelevant or extraneous
to its decision; and
d. The decision to abolish the OAT was not one which was so absurd that no
reasonable person or authority would ever have taken it. The decision to abolish a tribunal
26
which it had established, based on an analysis of relevant factors is, by no stretch of
imagination, an absurd or unreasonable decision.
83. This Court reached a similar conclusion in the MPAT Abolition Case (supra). The
appellants in that case argued that the decision to abolish the MPAT was arbitrary,
unreasonable, and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. This Court rejected their
argument in the following terms:
“57. … The notification was issued by the Central Government in 1988 and the State
Administrative Tribunal was established for the State of Madhya Pradesh. At that time, as per
well-settled legal position, decisions rendered by the Administrative Tribunals constituted under
the Act of 1985 were “final” subject to jurisdiction of this Court under Article 136 of the Constitution.
… If, in view of subsequent development of law in L. Chandra Kumar [(1997) 3 SCC 261 : 1997
SCC (L&S) 577 : AIR 1997 SC 1125] the State of Madhya Pradesh felt that continuation of State
Administrative Tribunal would be “one more tier” in the administration of justice inasmuch as after
a decision is rendered by the State Administrative Tribunal, an aggrieved party could approach
the High Court under Articles 226/227 of the Constitution and, hence, it felt that such Tribunal
should not be continued further, in our opinion, it cannot be said that such a decision is arbitrary,
irrational or unreasonable. From the correspondence between the State of Madhya Pradesh and
the Central Government as well as from the affidavit-in-reply, it is clear that the decision of this
Court in L. Chandra Kumar [(1997) 3 SCC 261 : 1997 SCC (L&S) 577 : AIR 1997 SC 1125] had
been considered by the State of Madhya Pradesh in arriving at a decision to abolish State
Administrative Tribunal. Such a consideration, in our opinion, was relevant, germane and valid.”
The decision to abolish the MPAT was based on similar considerations as the decision to
abolish the OAT. For these reasons, the abolition of the OAT is not arbitrary or
unreasonable. It does not violate Article 14 of the Constitution.
84. Our choice of the test articulated in Wednesbury Corporation (supra) must not be
understood to mean that no other yardstick may be utilized to test the constitutional
legitimacy of executive action, under Article 14. This Court has previously approved of the
use of the proportionality test to evaluate the validity of certain kinds of executive action,
including in Om Kumar v. Union of India 32 and Teri Oat Estates (P) Ltd. v. UT,
Chandigarh 33 . The proportionality test may well be applicable to other cases where
executive overreach is alleged.
b. The principles of natural justice have not been violated
85. The appellants submit that the Union and State Governments have violated the
principles of natural justice by failing to provide the OAT Bar Association and the litigants
before the OAT with an opportunity to be heard before abolishing the OAT. They argue
that this violates Article 14 of the Constitution.
86. The decision to establish, continue or abolish the OAT is in the nature of a policy
formulated and implemented by the State Government (acting with the Union Government
under the Administrative Tribunals Act). The public at large does not have a right to be
heard before a policy is formulated and implemented. The process of consultation with the
public, with experts, and with other stakeholders may be desirable and would facilitate a
participatory democracy. However, each member of the class that would be impacted by
a policy decision cannot be afforded an opportunity of hearing. This would not only be time
consuming and expensive, but deeply impractical.
31
105. The appellants place reliance on the decision of a Constitution Bench of this Court
in Dattatraya Moreshwar Pangarkar v. State of Bombay 37 and specifically on the
sentence in paragraph 24, which states:
“24. …when the executive decision affects an outsider or is required to be officially notified or to
be communicated it should normally be expressed in the form mentioned in Article 166(1) i.e. in
the name of the Governor.”
106. The appellants have failed to notice the very next sentence in paragraph 24, by
which this Court accepts the argument that Article 166 is a directory provision:
“24. … The learned Attorney General then falls back upon the plea that an omission to make and
authenticate an executive decision in the form mentioned in Article 166 does not make the
decision itself illegal, for the provisions of that article, like their counterpart in the Government of
India Act, are merely directory and not mandatory … In my opinion, this contention of the learned
Attorney General must prevail.
25. It is well settled that generally speaking the provisions of a statute creating public duties are
directory and those conferring private rights are imperative. When the provisions of a statute relate
to the performance of a public duty and the case is such that to hold null and void acts done in
neglect of this duty would work serious general inconvenience or injustice to persons who have
no control over those entrusted with the duty and at the same time would not promote the main
object of the legislature, it has been the practice of the courts to hold such provisions to be
directory only, the neglect of them not affecting the validity of the acts done.”
107. Article 77 is a directory provision. Article 77(1) refers to the form in which the
decision taken by the executive is to be expressed. This is evident from the phrase
“expressed to be taken” in clause (1) of Article 77. It does not have any bearing on the
process of decision-making itself. The public or the citizenry would stand to suffer most
from the consequences of declaring an order that is not expressed in the name of the
President null and void. Hence, the appellants’ reliance on Dattatraya Moreshwar
Pangarkar (supra) is misplaced.
108. The appellants also seek to rely on State of Uttaranchal v. Sunil Kumar Vaish38,
where a two-judge bench of this Court observed:
“23. … unless an order is expressed in the name of the President or the Governor and is
authenticated in the manner prescribed by the rules, the same cannot be treated as an order on
behalf of the Government.”
In this case, no reference is made to the decision of the Constitution Bench in Dattatraya
Moreshwar Pangarkar (supra), which would be binding on the two-judge bench in Sunil
Kumar Vaish (supra). As noted above, Dattatraya Moreshwar Pangarkar (supra) held
that the provisions of Article 166 were directory and not mandatory. This would apply
squarely to the provisions of Article 77 as well. The decision in Sunil Kumar Vaish (supra)
is of no assistance to the appellants’ case.
109. Finally, the appellants have relied on Gulf Goans Hotel Co. Ltd. v. Union of India39
to support their case. However, the decision in this case does not support the position
urged by the appellants because it, too, holds that the consequence of non-compliance
with Article 77(1) is that it deprives the Union Government of the immunity conferred by
Article 77(2). It also notices that executive action exercised pursuant to powers conferred
32
under a statute stands on a different footing from executive action taken independent of a
statute:
“19. Article 77 of the Constitution provides the form in which the Executive must make and
authenticate its orders and decisions. Clause (1) of Article 77 provides that all executive action of
the Government must be expressed to be taken in the name of the President. The celebrated
author H.M. Seervai in Constitutional Law of India, 4th Edn., Vol. 2, 1999 describes the
consequences of government orders or instructions not being in accordance with clauses
(1) or (2) of Article 77 by opining that the same would deprive the orders of the immunity
conferred by the aforesaid clauses and they may be open to challenge on the ground that
they have not been made by or under the authority of the President in which case the
burden would be on the Government to show that they were, in fact, so made. In the present
case, the said burden has not been discharged in any manner whatsoever. The decision in Air
India Cabin Crew Assn. v. Yeshaswinee Merchant [(2003) 6 SCC 277, p. 311, para 72 : 2003
SCC (L&S) 840] , taking a somewhat different view can, perhaps, be explained by the fact
that in the said case the impugned directions contained in the government letter (not
expressed in the name of the President) was in exercise of the statutory power under
Section 34 of the Air Corporations Act, 1953. In the present case, the impugned guidelines
have not been issued under any existing statute.”
(emphasis supplied)
In the present case, the notification dated 2 August 2019 was issued in exercise of the
statutory powers under the Administrative Tribunals Act.
110. For the reasons discussed in this segment, the notification dated 2 August 2019 is
valid despite not being expressed in the name of the President of India.
viii. The abolition of the OAT is not violative of the fundamental right of access to justice
111. The appellants have urged that the abolition of the OAT has made the court system
less accessible to litigants and that it is therefore violative of the fundamental right of
access to justice. They have relied on the decision in Anita Kushwaha v. Pushap
Sudan40, where a Constitution Bench of this Court discussed the components of access
to justice:
“33. Four main facets that, in our opinion, constitute the essence of access to justice are:
(i) the State must provide an effective adjudicatory mechanism;
(ii) the mechanism so provided must be reasonably accessible in terms of distance;
(iii) the process of adjudication must be speedy; and
(iv) the litigant's access to the adjudicatory process must be affordable.”
The appellants contend that the abolition of the OAT breaches the second and fourth
facets of the right of access to justice. They argue that the OAT has two regular benches
and two circuit benches but the Orissa High Court has one seat in Cuttack, thereby making
the adjudicatory mechanism less accessible in terms of distance. They urge that the
distance also makes the adjudicatory process less affordable because of the cost of
travelling to Cuttack from different parts of the state.
112. The fundamental right of access to justice is no doubt a crucial and indispensable
right under the Constitution of India. However, it cannot be interpreted to mean that every
village, town, or city must house every forum of adjudication created by statute or the
Constitution. It is an undeniable fact that some courts and forums will be located in some
34
Therefore, the State Government discontinued appointments to the OAT as a result of its
decision to abolish the OAT and not vice versa. The appellants’ averment confuses the
sequence of events on which their argument is based. The State Government based its
decision on an evaluation of the OAT’s functioning in the year 2014, which was prior to its
decision to abolish the OAT. Hence, there is no “wrong” which the State Government took
advantage of. Similarly, we do not agree with the argument of the appellants that the Union
of India had systematically made the OAT non-functional.
119. A related argument put forth by the appellants is that the State Government’s failure
to fill the vacancies in the OAT is a breach of Article 256 of the Constitution. Article 256
inter alia stipulates that the executive power of every State shall be so exercised as to
ensure compliance with the laws made by Parliament. It is not necessary for us to address
ourselves to this argument because the prayers in the Writ Petitions which resulted in the
impugned judgment did not seek an adjudication as to the violation of Article 256. The lis
before the Orissa High Court was limited to the validity of the decision to abolish the OAT.
We therefore confine our judgment on appeal to the same issue.
x. The failure of the Union Government to conduct a judicial impact assessment before
abolishing the OAT does not vitiate its decision to abolish the OAT
120. The appellants contend that the Union Government ought to have mandatorily
complied with the directions of a Constitution Bench of this Court (of which one of us, Dr,
DY Chandrachud, J was a part) in Rojer Mathew v. South Indian Bank Ltd.41 prior to
abolishing the OAT. The intervenor in this matter has also advanced the argument that
the Union Government ought to have taken the permission of this Court before abolishing
the OAT.
121. In Rojer Mathew (supra), this Court directed the Union Government to conduct a
judicial impact assessment of certain tribunals. The operative part of this judgment (from
the majority opinion of Ranjan Gogoi, CJI) in relation to judicial impact assessments is
extracted below:
“223.7. There is a need-based requirement to conduct “judicial impact assessment” of all the
Tribunals referable to the Finance Act, 2017 so as to analyse the ramifications of the changes in
the framework of tribunals as provided under the Finance Act, 2017. Thus, we find it appropriate
to issue a writ of mandamus to the Ministry of Law and Justice to carry out such “judicial impact
assessment” and submit the result of the findings before the competent legislative authority.”
122. The direction to conduct a judicial impact assessment, therefore, was of a general
nature. It was not geared towards proposals to abolish specific tribunals such as the OAT.
Rather, a need was felt to analyse the consequences of the restructuring of tribunals by
the Finance Act 2017 and a writ of mandamus was issued in this regard to the Ministry of
Law and Justice. The judicial impact assessment was also directed to be conducted in
order to better understand the case load, efficacy, financial impact, and accessibility of
tribunals at large, in addition to the filling of vacancies.42 We note that neither the majority
opinion authored by Ranjan Gogoi, CJI nor the opinions of Dr. DY Chandrachud, J. or
Deepak Gupta, J. contain a direction to the effect that a tribunal shall not be abolished in
the absence of a judicial impact assessment. In the present case, the Union Government
issued the notification dated 2 August 2019 in a valid exercise of its powers under Section
21 of the General Clauses Act. The failure to conduct a judicial impact assessment does
not vitiate its decision to abolish the OAT. Nothing in the judgment in Rojer Mathew
41 (2020) 6 SCC 1
42 See paragraphs 185, 222, 223.7, 234, 387 – 390.
35
(supra) also indicates the need for the Union Government to obtain the permission of this
Court before abolishing the OAT.
123. However, this is not to say that the Union Government and more specifically, the
Ministry of Law and Justice may dispense with the directions of this Court in Rojer Mathew
(supra). The judgment was delivered on 13 November 2019. More than three years have
since passed and the Ministry of Law and Justice is yet to conduct a judicial impact
assessment.
124. An assessment such as the one directed to be conducted would only shed light on
the impediments faced in the delivery of justice. The lack of an assessment precludes any
well-informed, intelligent action concerning tribunals in the country (as a whole). This, in
turn, has cascading effects for the citizenry, which is deprived of a well-oiled machinery
by which it can access justice. We therefore reiterate the directions of this Court in Rojer
Mathew (supra) and direct the Ministry of Law and Justice to conduct a judicial impact
assessment at the earliest.
xi. Miscellaneous contentions
125. A miscellaneous contention remains to be considered.
126. The appellants have submitted that the so-called real reason for the abolition of the
OAT is that many top-ranking officials faced charges of contempt before the OAT, for the
reason that they had failed to implement its orders. It is averred that these officials
influenced the State Government to abolish the OAT. The appellants argue that the State
and Union Governments did not deny this allegation in their counter affidavits before the
Orissa High Court and that this allegation is true because of ‘non-traverse.’
127. There is nothing on record which indicates the truth of the appellants’ allegations or
even points to a possibility of the truth of such an allegation. It is entirely unsubstantiated
and appears to be a last-ditch attempt to sustain their challenge to the abolition of the
OAT. In any event, the averment belies logic. All cases pending before the OAT would be
transferred to the Orissa High Court, without exception. This includes contempt petitions.
Hence, it would not be possible for officials or others to avoid contempt proceedings as a
result of the abolition of the OAT.
E. Findings and conclusion
128. In view of the discussion above, we hold that the abolition of the OAT was
constitutionally valid for the following reasons:
a. The Writ Petitions instituted before the Orissa High Court were maintainable
because the appellants claimed that their constitutional rights had been violated. They
were therefore entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution;
b. Article 323-A does not preclude the Union Government from abolishing SATs
because it is an enabling provision which confers the Union Government with the power
to establish an administrative tribunal at its discretion (upon receiving a request from the
relevant State Government in terms of the Administrative Tribunals Act). The legal and
factual context of the power to establish administrative tribunals, the purpose of this power
and the intention of the legislature establish that there is no duty to exercise the power
conferred by the Administrative Tribunals Act, such that the enabling provision becomes
a mandatory provision;
c. The Union Government acted in valid exercise of its powers when it invoked Section
21 of the General Clauses Act read with Section 4(2) of the Administrative Tribunals Act
36
to rescind the notification establishing the OAT because the decision to establish the OAT
was an administrative decision and not a quasi-judicial decision. Moreover, Section 21 of
the General Clauses Act is not repugnant to the subjectmatter, context and effect of the
Administrative Tribunals Act and is in harmony with its scheme and object;
d. The notification dated 2 August 2019 by which the OAT was abolished is not
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. The State Government did not consider any
irrelevant or extraneous factors while arriving at the decision to request the Union
Government to abolish the OAT. The decision to abolish the OAT is itself not absurd or so
unreasonable that no reasonable person would have taken it;
e. The principles of natural justice were not violated because the class of people who
were affected by the decision to abolish the OAT did not have a right to be heard. The
public at large (or some sections of it) did not have a right to be heard before the policy
decision was taken;
f. The Union Government did not become functus officio after establishing the OAT
because the doctrine cannot ordinarily be applied in cases where the government is
formulating and implementing a policy;
g. The notification dated 2 August 2019 is valid though it is not expressed in the name
of the President of India because non-compliance with Article 77 of the Constitution does
not invalidate a notification or render it unconstitutional;
h. The abolition of the OAT is not violative of the fundamental right of access to justice
because the Orissa High Court will hear cases which were pending before the OAT prior
to its abolition;
i. The State Government did not take advantage of its own wrong because it stopped
filling the vacancies of the OAT only after deciding to abolish it. It did not rely on the
vacancies (and the consequent increase in pendency) created by its inaction to abolish
the OAT; and
j. The failure of the Union Government to conduct a judicial impact assessment before
abolishing the OAT does not vitiate its decision to abolish the OAT because the directions
in Rojer Mathew (supra) were of a general nature and did not prohibit the abolition of
specific tribunals such as the OAT in the absence of a judicial impact assessment.
However, the Ministry of Law and Justice is directed to conduct a judicial impact
assessment as directed by this Court in Rojer Mathew (supra).
129. The challenge to the constitutional validity of the impugned notification dated 2
August 2019 by which the OAT was abolished is rejected. The judgment of the High Court
shall stand affirmed in terms of the conclusions recorded above. The appeals are
dismissed.
130. Pending applications, if any, stand disposed of.
37