Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

Mohammad Ali Vs. the State of Uttar Pradesh and ors.

Mohammad Ali vs The State of Uttar Pradesh and ors.

Disposition Appeal dismissed Court Allahabad Decided Dec 11, 1957
~5 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/463840

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Allahabad High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Special Appeal No. 283 of 1957
Subject
Service
Disposition
Appeal dismissed

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

(i) Service - appointment as overseer of petitioner - Article 226 of Constitution of India - held, writ of mandamus directing State Government to approve appointment cannot be issued. (ii) Appointment disapproved - Section 69 of U.P. Municipalities Act, 1916 - appointment is subject to approval of Government - dis...

Key legal issue
Service
Outcome / disposition
Appeal dismissed
Acts & sections
Constitution of India - Article 226; Uttar Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1916 - Sections 68(2) and 69

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Mohammad Ali

Advocate M.H. Beg, Adv.

Respondent

The State of Uttar Pradesh and ors.

Advocate Standing Counsel

Legal References

Acts
Constitution of India - Article 226; Uttar Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1916 - Sections 68(2) and 69
Reported In
AIR1958All681

Excerpt

(i) service - appointment as overseer of petitioner - article 226 of constitution of india - held, writ of mandamus directing state government to approve appointment cannot be issued. (ii) appointment disapproved - section 69 of u.p. municipalities act, 1916 - appointment is subject to approval of government - disapproved by government - writ of certiorari - quashing the order of state government cannot be heard. - - an appointment which is to be made with the permission of a higher authority or the government cannot be made unless the permission is first obtained, but an appointment which can be made subject to the approval of a higher authority or the government may be made and will be rendered invalid only when it is disapproved by the higher authority. ' 2. but as the appointment is subject to the approval of the higher authority or the government the appointment though valid till it is dis-approved is nebulous and cannot be deemed to be perfect and binding. municipalities act do not apply to such nebulous appointment, and, in the present case, the state government having disapproved of the appointment of the appellant, the appellant cannot be heard to say that the order passed by the state government should be quashed by issuing an order in the nature of a writ......by the learned single judge was that since the approval of the state government was not obtained by the board at the time of appointing the appellant and when the matter came to their knowledge they refused to approve the appointment, there was in fact no valid appointment of the appellant and the result was that the appointment was automatically terminated by the refusal of the state government to give its approval. the learned single judge was further of the opinion that what was done by the president and by the secretary under the orders of the president was not to dismiss or punish the appellant so as to bring into picture the operation of section 69 of the u. p. municipalities act, but to inform the appellant that in view of the refusal by the state government to approve of his appointment the appointment had lapsed. in our opinion the view taken by the learned single judge was correct.when a person is employed under a power which is to be exercised subject to the approval of a higher authority or the government, the appointment holds good so long as the higher authority or the government has not disapproved of it. there is a distinction between an appointment with the permission of a higher authority or the government, and an appointment subject to the approval of the higher authority or the government. an appointment which is to be made with the permission of a higher authority or the government cannot be made unless the permission is first obtained, but an appointment which can be made subject to the approval of a higher authority or the government may be made and will be rendered invalid only when it is disapproved by the higher authority. this distinction was pointed out by a full bench of this court in shakir hu-sain v. chandoolal : air1931 all567 . sir shah sulaiman, acting chief justice, as he then was, observed :'ordinarily the difference between the approval and permission is that in the first the act holds good until disapproved, while in the.....

Full Judgment

D.N. Roy, J.

1. This special appeal is directed against an order dated 22-11-1957 passed by a learned Single Judge of this Court by which Civil Miscellaneous Writ Petition No. 3023 of 1957 had been rejected. The appellant was employed by the Municipal Board of Maunath Bhanjari in the district of Azamgarh as an overseer. Under the provisions of Section 68(2) of the U. P. Municipalities Act the appointment and the salary and other conditions attached thereto are required to be subjected to the approval of the State Government. The matter in the present case appears never to have been sent up to the State Government for approval. It came to the notice of the District Magistrate of Azamgarh that the appellant was performing duties as an overseer without the approval of the State Government. Consequently he brought it to the notice of the State Government.

The State Government after carefully considering the matter refused to approve of the appointment and sent a direction to the District Magistrate with a copy to the President of the Municipal Board, Maunath Bhanjan, that the retention of the appellant was wholly unjustified and that his services may be terminated at once. In compliance with the instructions of the Government the President of the Board passed an order on 19-11-1957 terminating the services of the appellant with immediate effect; and that order was communicated to the appellant by the officiating Secretary of the Board on 20-11-1957. In the writ petition two prayers had been made. The first prayer was that a writ in the nature of certiorari be issued quashing the decision of the President of the Board and that of the State Government.

The second prayer was that a writ in the nature of mandamus be issued directing the State Government to accord recognition and approval to the appointment of the appellant as overseer. So far as the second prayer is concerned Mr. M. H. Beg, appearing on behalf of the appellant, has conceded that such a writ in the nature of mandamus cannot be issued to the State Government. We are therefore concerned with the first prayer enunciated above. For the disposal of the matter we have got to look to Section 68 of the U. P. Municipalities Act. That section says that a Board may, and, if so required by the State Government shall by a special resolution appoint the principal officers of its technical departments such as ..... a qualified overseer or sub-Overseer ..... Sub-clause (2) of that section says that each such appointment and the salary and other conditions attached thereto shall be subject to the approval of the State Government.

The view taken by the learned Single Judge was that since the approval of the State Government was not obtained by the Board at the time of appointing the appellant and when the matter came to their knowledge they refused to approve the appointment, there was in fact no valid appointment of the appellant and the result was that the appointment was automatically terminated by the refusal of the State Government to give its approval. The learned Single Judge was further of the opinion that what was done by the President and by the Secretary under the orders of the President was not to dismiss or punish the appellant so as to bring into picture the operation of Section 69 of the U. P. Municipalities Act, but to inform the appellant that in view of the refusal by the State Government to approve of his appointment the appointment had lapsed. In our opinion the view taken by the learned Single Judge was correct.

When a person is employed under a power which is to be exercised subject to the approval of a higher authority or the Government, the appointment holds good so long as the higher authority or the Government has not disapproved of it. There is a distinction between an appointment with the permission of a higher authority or the Government, and an appointment subject to the approval of the higher authority or the Government. An appointment which is to be made with the permission of a higher authority or the Government cannot be made unless the permission is first obtained, but an appointment which can be made subject to the approval of a higher authority or the Government may be made and will be rendered invalid only when it is disapproved by the higher authority. This distinction was pointed out by a Full Bench of this Court in Shakir Hu-sain v. Chandoolal : AIR1931 All567 . Sir Shah Sulaiman, Acting Chief Justice, as he then was, observed :

'Ordinarily the difference between the approval and permission is that in the first the act holds good until disapproved, while in the other case it does not become effective until permission is obtained. But permission subsequently obtained may all the same validate the previous act.'

2. But as the appointment is subject to the approval of the higher authority or the Government the appointment though valid till it is dis-approved is nebulous and cannot be deemed to be perfect and binding. In the case of such appointment the appointing authority must ordinarily have the power of rescinding the appointment before it has been approved by the higher authority. In our judgment the provisions of Section 69 of the U. P. Municipalities Act do not apply to such nebulous appointment, and, in the present case, the State Government having disapproved of the appointment of the appellant, the appellant cannot be heard to say that the order passed by the State Government should be quashed by issuing an order in the nature of a writ.

3. The appeal, in our opinion, has no force and it is dismissed.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial