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Laxman S/O Bhagwan C... v. 1. The State Of Maha...
Judgment Summary (Per S.V. Gangapurwala, J.)
Factual and Procedural Background
The petitioner is an unsuccessful candidate in a selection process conducted by Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 for four vacancies of Chief Engineer. The selection resulted in the appointment of Respondent No. 5 to one of the Chief Engineer posts. The petitioner challenged the selection and appointment before this Court primarily on the ground that Respondent No. 5 did not possess the advertised essential experience—15 years in the power sector as on 20.05.2013—and that experience claimed by Respondent No. 5 with L & T (now Ultratech Cement) and Ballarpur Industries related to captive thermal power plants and therefore did not qualify as experience in the "power sector" as required by the advertisement.
The petition raised a territorial jurisdiction objection by Respondent No. 5, who argued that the selection was conducted at Nagpur and no part of the cause of action arose within this Court's territorial limits. The petition and counter-arguments were heard and disposed of by the High Court, which dismissed the writ petition.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether Respondent No. 5 possessed the requisite 15 years' experience in the "power sector" as required by the advertisement for the post of Chief Engineer (as on 20.05.2013).
- Whether service in captive thermal power plants operated by industrial concerns (specifically L & T and Ballarpur Industries) qualifies as "experience in power sector" for the purposes of the advertised essential qualification.
- Whether this High Court has territorial jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition given that the selection process was conducted at Nagpur.
Arguments of the Parties
Petitioner's Arguments
- The advertisement required 15 years' experience in the power sector, including specified years in power generation at prescribed posts; Respondent No. 5 did not possess 15 years' experience in the power sector as he worked with L & T and Ballarpur Industries only after 2003.
- Experience with L & T and Ballarpur Industries—companies engaged in cement and paper production—was not experience in the power sector because those plants were captive and meant for in-house consumption, not commercial power generation, transmission or distribution.
- Captive plants and industrial captive generation do not equate to the "power sector" for the purposes of the advertisement; therefore Respondent No. 5's selection was illegal and the Selection Committee could not relax essential qualifications.
- The petitioner relied on Md. Ashif v. State of Bihar (2010) 5 SCC 475 and P.K. Ramachandra Iyer v. Union of India (1984) 2 SCC 141 to submit that the Selection Committee could not relax the essential qualifications and the Court should interfere.
- The petitioner contended that this Court had territorial jurisdiction because the advertisement was issued in newspapers of the region, communications occurred within this Court's territorial jurisdiction, and appointments could be made anywhere in Maharashtra.
Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 (Selection Authorities) — Arguments
- No illegality occurred in the selection process; the petitioner scored 203 marks while Respondent No. 5 scored 224 marks (other candidate 223) and the vacancy was reserved for OBC.
- Respondent No. 5 had 17 years 10 months' total experience as on 20.05.2013; his experience with L & T and Ballarpur Industries related to commissioning and O&M of thermal power plants and was rightly treated as power sector experience for earlier selections (Executive Engineer in 2003, Deputy Chief Engineer in 2010).
- The Head General Manager had considered and accepted that Respondent No. 5 held necessary qualification and experience.
- Reliance was placed on the Government of India, Ministry of Power report (working group on power for 12th plan) for the concept of power sector and on the definition of "captive power" in Section 2(8) of the Electricity Act.
Respondent No. 5 — Arguments
- Territorial jurisdiction: the entire selection process was conducted at Nagpur and therefore, this Court lacked territorial jurisdiction since no part of the cause of action arose within its limits. Reliance was placed on the Division Bench decision in VSP Acqua Mist Fire Pvt. Ltd., Nagpur v. Maharashtra State Electricity Transmission Company Ltd., Mumbai (2010 (2) Mh.L.J 575) and Oil and Natural Gas Commission v. Utpal Kumar Basu (1994) 4 SCC 711.
- Substantively, Respondent No. 5's counsel argued that the captive power plant experience qualified as power sector experience; selection committees and experts are best placed to assess suitability and experience, and courts should not normally interfere with a fair selection process. Several Supreme Court authorities were cited in support of that principle.
Table of Precedents Cited
| Precedent | Rule or Principle Cited For | Application by the Court |
|---|---|---|
| Md. Ashif v. State of Bihar, (2010) 5 SCC 475 | Cited by petitioner to support the proposition that a Selection Committee cannot relax essential qualifications and the Court may interfere where essential qualifications are not met. | Cited by the petitioner; the Court noted the reliance but decided the matter on statutory interpretation of "power sector" and facts rather than resting exclusively on this precedent. |
| P.K. Ramachandra Iyer v. Union of India, (1984) 2 SCC 141 | Cited by petitioner for the proposition that the Selection Committee has no power to relax essential qualification and Court can intervene. | Cited by the petitioner; the Court considered the submission but addressed the issue by examining the advertisement, statutory definitions and the factual matrix. |
| VSP Acqua Mist Fire Pvt. Ltd., Nagpur v. Maharashtra State Electricity Transmission Company Ltd., Mumbai, 2010 (2) Mh.L.J 575 (Division Bench) | Cited by Respondent No. 5 to argue lack of territorial jurisdiction where selection was conducted at Nagpur. | Cited by Respondent No. 5; the Court considered the jurisdictional objection but held that a part of the cause of action arose within this Court's territory because the advertisement was statewide and postings could be anywhere in Maharashtra. |
| Oil and Natural Gas Commission v. Utpal Kumar Basu, (1994) 4 SCC 711 | Cited by Respondent No. 5 on the question of territorial jurisdiction. | Cited by Respondent No. 5; the Court addressed the jurisdictional point on the facts and Article 226(2), finding jurisdiction present. |
| Union of India v. Lt. Gen. Rajendra Singh Kadyan, (2000) 6 SCC 698 | Cited by Respondents to support the principle that courts should not interfere with a selection process which is fair and conducted according to law. | Cited by Respondents; the Court observed the general principle but disposed of the writ petition based on statutory interpretation and assessment of facts, giving deference to the Selection Committee's expertise. |
| Joginder Singh v. Roshan Lal, (2002) 9 SCC 765 | Cited by Respondents for the proposition that courts should not reappraise merits of selections where selection procedures are lawful and fair. | Cited by Respondents; the Court accepted the argument in principle and declined to substitute its view for that of the Selection Committee absent arbitrariness. |
| M. Rathinaswami v. State of Tamil Nadu, (2009) 5 SCC 625 | Cited by Respondents to assert that educational/qualification sufficiency is ordinarily a matter for the authorities, not the Court. | Cited by Respondents; the Court recognized the expertise of authorities and declined to interfere except in cases of arbitrariness or unreasonableness. |
| Jagat Bandhu Chakraborti v. G.C. Roy, (2000) 9 SCC 739 | Cited by Respondents to emphasise that experts should determine whether requisite experience exists; courts should be cautious in overruling expert assessments. | Cited by Respondents; the Court applied this principle in deferring to the Selection Committee's assessment of experience on the facts before it. |
| Sanjay Kumar Manjul v. Chairman, UPSC, (2006) 8 SCC 42 | Cited by Respondents to support the proposition that it is not proper for courts to direct or prescribe qualifications for posts and to interfere lightly in selection matters. | Cited by Respondents; the Court considered this line of authority and concluded that the Selection Committee's assessment in the present case did not merit interference. |
Court's Reasoning and Analysis
The Court considered submissions, pleadings and documents and proceeded in the following steps:
- Jurisdiction: The Court rejected the contention that it lacked territorial jurisdiction. The advertisement was issued for filling posts throughout the State of Maharashtra, candidates (including petitioner) applied from within the Court's territorial jurisdiction, and selected candidates could be posted anywhere in the State. Thus, a part of the cause of action arose within this Court's jurisdiction and Article 226(2) enabled the Court to entertain the petition.
- Statutory definitions: The Court examined statutory provisions, notably Section 2(8) of the Electricity Act, 2003 (definition of "captive generating plant") and Section 9 (captivity generation), which recognise captive plants as power plants set up primarily for a person's own use and provide that supply from such plants through the grid is regulated like a generating station of a generating company.
- Scope of "power sector": The Court held that the "power sector" is not to be construed narrowly. It observed that the power sector comprises generation, transmission and distribution utilities and that numerous captive plants and co-generation plants exist which supply in-house power and may feed surplus to the grid under open access provisions. Therefore, captive power plants are not alien to the power sector and fall within its ambit; the concept of power sector is wide enough to include such plants.
- Deference to expert selection committee: The Court noted that members of the Selection Committee are persons from the power sector and are best placed to judge whether a candidate possesses sufficient power-sector experience. The Court reiterated the established principle that it is ordinarily inappropriate for a court to substitute its own assessment for that of experts unless the selection process or decision is arbitrary, unreasonable or shocking.
- Factual continuity and consistency: The Court observed that Respondent No. 5's experience with captive plants had been treated as power sector experience consistently in prior selections (for Executive Engineer in 2003 and later for Deputy Chief Engineer and General Manager). The certificates on record showed Respondent No. 5's involvement with power plants at L & T and Ballarpur Industries, and the Selection Committee had assessed and accepted that experience.
- Conclusion from combined legal and factual matrix: On the combined statutory interpretation (including the definitions in the Electricity Act) and the factual record (previous similar acceptances and certificates), the Court found no merit in the petitioner's challenge and concluded that interference with the Selection Committee's decision was not warranted.
Holding and Implications
Holding:
The Writ Petition is dismissed.
Direct consequences and implications:
- The appointment of Respondent No. 5 in the selection for the post of Chief Engineer stands; the Court found no basis to invalidate the selection on the ground that captive power experience was excluded from the "power sector" for the purposes of the advertisement.
- No costs were awarded by the Court ("No costs").
- The Court's decision turned on statutory interpretation and the facts of the case as well as deference to the Selection Committee's expertise; the opinion does not purport to lay down any broad new legal precedent beyond these determinations.
This summary is based exclusively on the content of the provided opinion and does not add information beyond what appears in that opinion.
JUDGMENT (Per S.V Gangapurwala, J.)
1. Heard.
2. The unsuccessful candidate in the selection process conducted by Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 for the post of Chief Engineer is before the Court.
3. Mr. Patil, learned counsel for the petitioner strenuously contends that the necessary experience and qualification for the post of Chief Engineer which is to be filled in by direct recruitment is laid down in the advertisement itself. As per the advertisement the candidate shall possess 15 years experience in power sector, out of which at least five years in the area of power generation in selection post like Executive Engineer and above out of which one year in the position of Superintending Engineer and above or three years in the position of Superintending Engineer and above.
4. The Respondent No. 5 who is selected in the said selection process pursuant to the advertisement does not possess 15 years experience in power sector. The learned counsel submits that Respondent No. 5 was appointed with Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 in the year 2003. 15 years experience as laid down was required to be possessed by the candidate as on 20.5.2013 It can only be stated that Respondent No. 5 is having experience with power sector only after 2003, as such he does not fulfill 15 years experience in power sector. The service rendered with the public limited Companies, such as L & T (now known as Ultratech Cement) and Ballarpur Industries can not be said to be an experience in power sector. These industries deal in production of cement and paper. There is no concern of these two companies in power generation, transmission and distribution for commercial use in power sector. Even brochure of these two Companies obtained from Wikipedia through internet and Collector Office would show that their aim and object is production of cement and paper.
5. The learned counsel further submits that electric power sector would mean an energy consuming sector that consist of electricity only and combined heat and power plants whose primary business is to sell electricity and heat to the public. Combined heat and power plants that identify themselves as primarily in the commercial or industrial sectors are reported in these sectors. The learned counsel further submits that even in the list of Industries engaged in power sector which is published the name of these two Companies i.e L & T now Ultratech Cement and Ballarpur Industries do not appear. The learned counsel submits that the contention of the Respondents that the experience rendered by Respondent No. 5 with these two Industries can be considered to be an experience in power sector is absolutely erroneous. These two industries are having their plants only for captive power which can not be said to be a power sector. If the candidate does not possess the necessary qualification then he can not be selected. The illegality can not be allowed to be continued. The learned counsel relies on the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “Md. Ashif v. State of Bihar” reported in (2010) 5 SCC 475. According to learned counsel, even applying the amplified essential qualification, the Respondent No. 5 did not possess the same. The Selection Committee did not have power to relax essential qualification pertaining to experience and in such a case this Court shall interfere. The learned counsel relies on judgment of Apex Court in a case of “P.K Ramachandra Iyer v. Union of India” reported in (1984) 2 SCC 141. The learned counsel further submits that this Court has jurisdiction to entertain the present Writ Petition as the advertisement was issued in the newspapers of this region. Even the communication was made by the petitioner with the Respondents and vice-versa within the territorial jurisdiction of this Court and the appointments could be made anywhere in the State of Maharashtra.
6. The learned counsel for Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 submits that no illegality has been committed while conducting selection process. In the test which have been taken, the petitioner secured 203 marks. The Respondent No. 5 secured 224 marks and one other candidate Mr. Sanjay Manoharrao Marudkar secured 223 marks. All these three candidates were from OBC category. One post was reserved for OBC category of Chief Engineer. The learned counsel submits that Respondent No. 5 holds total experience of 17 years 10 months as on 20.5.2013 The experience of Respondent No. 5 in L & T and Ballarpur Industries (Commissioning & O & M. of Thermal Power Plant) was considered as power sector experience at the time of selection for the post of Executive Engineer in the year 2003. The qualification was 7 years experience in power sector. Later on Respondent No. 5 applied for the post of Deputy Chief Engineer under direct recruitment in the year 2010. His experience was considered on the same grounds. The learned counsel submits that the Head General Manager also considered the aspect about the experience of the petitioner in the thermal power plant with L & T and Ballapur Industries and observed that the Respondent No. 5 holds necessary qualification and experience. The learned counsel relies on the concept of power sector as published in the report of the working group on power for 12th plan by the Government of India, Ministry of Power.
7. Learned counsel also relies on Section 2(8) of the Electricity Act, which defines captive power.
8. The learned counsel for Respondent No. 5 submits that as the whole selection process was conducted at Nagpur, this Court would not get territorial jurisdiction. No part of cause of action has arisen within the territorial limits of this Court. The learned counsel relies on the judgment of the Division Bench of this Court in the case of “VSP Acqua Mist Fire Pvt. Ltd., Nagpur v. Maharashtra State Electricity Transmission Company Ltd., Mumbai” reported in 2010 (2) Mh.L.J 575, so also the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “Oil and Natural Gas Commission v. Utpal Kumar Basu” reported in (1994) 4 SCC 711.
9. The learned counsel further submits that petitioner is having necessary experience. The certificates of having worked in power sector are filed on record. The petitioner has worked in Captive Thermal Power Plant of 46 MW at Awarpur while working with L & T. The petitioner worked with L & T from lst October 1997. The power sector consist of:
“[a] Power Generation.
[b] Power Transmission.
[c] Power Distribution.
[d] Power Generation, Transmission and Distribution Equipments Manufacturers.
[e] Power Project Construction.
[f] Power Sector Financers.
[g] Power Traders and Power Exchangers
[h] Govt., and Regulatory Bodies.
[I] Power Sector Researchers Academician.
[j] Training & Energy Auditors.”
The learned counsel submits that the captive power plant is set up to generate electricity primarily for its own use. The experience has been rightly considered. The learned counsel submits that it is for the authorities to consider the experience. The entire service profile has been taken into consideration and this Court may not substitute the views of the authorities. The learned counsel relies on the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “Union of India v. Lt. Gen. Rajendra Singh Kadyan” reported in (2000) 6 SCC 698, so also judgment in a case of “Joginder Singh v. Roshan Lal” reported in (2002) 9 SCC 765, to contend that if the selection process known to law is fair to all then the High Court would have no jurisdiction to go into a question whether Selection Committee conducted the test properly or not. Relying on the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “M. Rathinaswami v. State of Tamil Nadu” reported in (2009) 5 SCC 625, it is submitted that the question whether the educational qualification is sufficient or not has to be left to the authorities to decide. They have expertise in the same and it is ordinarily not proper for this Court to sit in appeal over their decision. The learned counsel laid emphasis on the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “Jagat Bandhu Chakraborti v. G.C Roy” reported in (2000) 9 SCC 739, to contend that it is basically for the experts to determine whether the requisite experience was possessed by the candidate or not. The learned counsel submits that it is only the authority who can take ultimate decision about the candidate possessing proper experience. It is not for the Court to direct or prescribe qualification for a particular post. The learned counsel relies on the judgment of the Apex Court in a case of “Sanjay Kumar Manjul v. Chairman, UPSC” reported in (2006) 8 SCC 42.
10. We have considered the arguments canvassed by the learned counsel for respective parties, so also the pleadings and the documents. As far as objection of jurisdiction raised by Respondent No. 5 is concerned, the same need not detain us. The advertisement was issued for filling in the posts through out the State of Maharashtra. The petitioner had applied from Bhusawal, Jalgaon. Upon a question being asked to the learned counsel for Respondents that in case a candidate was selected, whether he would have been posted at Nagpur only or anywhere in the State of Maharashtra. The learned counsel replied that the selected candidate could be posted anywhere in the State of Maharashtra, even he could have been posted at Jalgaon. In view of this aspect of the matter we do not think that the question of jurisdiction would arise. A part of cause of action has arisen within the territorial jurisdiction of this Court. The advertisement was for filling up various posts. There were four (4) posts of Chief Engineer vacant. The petitioner and Respondent No. 5 had applied for the post of Chief Engineer. The same was for a vacancy which could be filled in at any place in State of Maharashtra. As such it can not be said that no part of cause of action has arisen within the territorial jurisdiction of this Court. Even as per Article 226(2) of the Constitution of India, this Court would possess the jurisdiction to try and entertain the present Writ Petition.
11. The major emphasis of the petitioner in challenging the selection and appointment of Respondent No. 5 as a Chief Engineer is on the premise that Respondent No. 5 does not possess 15 years experience in power sector. As his earlier service with L & T and Ballapur Industries was in thermal power plant meant for captive use.
12. Section 2(8) of the Electricity Act, 2003 defines captive generating plant which reads as under:
2(8) “Captive generating plant” means a power plant set up by any person to generate electricity primarily for his own use and includes a power plant set up by any cooperative society or association of persons for generating electricity primarily for use of members of such co-operative society or association;
13. The advertisement laid down experience for the post of Chief Engineer thus:
Qualification and Experience as on 20 May 2013:
Post Code Post Name Qualification Experience Tech 1 Chief Engineer Bachelor's Degree in Electrical/Mechanical/Instrumentation Engineering/Technology or its equivalent 15 years experience in Power sector out of which at least 5 years in the area of Power Generation in selection posts like Executive Engineer and above, out of which l year in the position of Suptdg. Engineer and above or 3 years in the position of Supdtg. Engineer and above.
The experience acquired by the petitioner since the year 2003 with Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 is not disputed. The petitioner had 5 years experience in area of power generation is not disputed. The dispute is on the ground that petitioner has worked in the power plant meant for captive use, the said experience ought not to have been counted. The experience as laid down in the advertisement is that a candidate should have 15 years experience in power sector and out of those 15 years, 5 years in area of power generation in selection post. The Captive generation is defined in Section 9 of the Electricity Act, 2003 which reads as under:
“9. Captive generation. - (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, a person may construct, maintain or operate a captive generating plant and dedicated transmission lines:
Provided that the supply of electricity from the captive generating plant through the grid shall be regulated in the same manner as the generating station of a generating company.”
Perusal of the aforesaid provisions, it is abundantly clear that, the Statute authorises a person for constructing, maintaining or operating a captive generating plant and dedicated transmission lines. The supply of electricity from the captive generating plant through grid is regulated in the same manner as the generating station of a generating Company.
14. The power sector consist of generation, transmission and distribution utilities. The large number of captive plants including co-generation power plants of varied type and sizes exist in the country, which are utilised in process industry and in-house power consumption. A number of industries set up their captive plants to ensure reliable and quality power. Surplus power, if any, from captive power plants could be fed into the grid as the Electricity Act, 2003 provides for non-discriminatory open access. The captive power plants can not be said to be alien to the power sector. Captive power plants also are meant for generation and transmission of electricity may be for its own consumption. However, the same would come within the ambit and purview of power sector. The concept of power sector can not be viewed in a microscopic manner. The concept of power sector is wide enough to include all sorts of power generating and transmitting plants.
15. Moreover, the members of the Selection Committee are the persons from the power sector. They are the best judge as to whether the person has got sufficient experience in power sector as is required. It is the expert who would basically determine whether the requisite experience was possessed by the Respondent No. 5 or not. It is ordinarily not proper for the Court to sit in appeal over their decision, unless it is arbitrary, unreasonable or shocking. The certificates produced on record do show that the Respondent No. 5 was involved and associated with power plants with L & T and Ballapur Industries. The same have been assessed by the Selection Committee.
16. This is not the first time, this experience was being considered. In the year 2010 the advertisement was issued for the post of General Manager. For the post of General Manager, the qualification and experience acquired on account of his services with L & T and Ballapur Industries were counted. Respondent No. 5 was selected as General Manager and appointed as such. The said selection was also challenged by the petitioner. However, subsequently, the said Writ Petition was disposed of as the petitioner sought leave to withdraw the Writ Petition with liberty to file fresh comprehensive representation with the Respondent No. 1 therein. The Respondent No. 5's appointment as General Manager was intact. Even when the petitioner was appointed in the year 2003 as Executive Engineer, wherein minimum 7 years experience was required in power sector. At that time also earlier experience of the petitioner with L & T and Ballapur Industries captive power plants was considered. As such since 2003 consistently the experience of the petitioner with the captive power project of L & T and Ballapur Industries was considered as a requisite experience in power sector.
17. Considering all the aforesaid aspects of the matter, we do not find any merit in the Writ Petition. The Writ Petition as such is dismissed. No costs.
Electricity Act, 2003Alert