Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

State’s bifurcatio­n can’t take away quota benefits: SC

- Abraham Thomas

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has held that bifurcatio­n of states will not result in persons already employed under reserved categories to be dislodged of their benefits in the newly formed state.

The top court was dealing with a petition by a man who was appointed as an assistant teacher in December 1999 at Ranchi as a scheduled caste (SC) candidate. Pankaj Kumar also opted to serve in Jharkhand after the new state was carved out of Bihar in 2000.

When Kumar applied as an SC candidate for the state’s combined civil services examinatio­n in 2008, he was not appointed despite his selection on the grounds that he was a migrant in Jharkhand and not entitled to reservatio­n benefits since his service book showed him to be Patna’s permanent resident.

“It will be highly unfair and pernicious if the benefits of reservatio­n with privileges and benefits flowing thereof are not being protected in the State of Jharkhand after he is absorbed by virtue to Section 73 of the 2000 Act that clearly postulates not only to protect the existing service conditions but the benefit of reservatio­n and privileges which he was enjoying on or before the appointed day, i.e. 15 November 2000 in the State of Bihar not to be varied to his disadvanta­ge after he became a member of service in the State of Jharkhand,” a bench of justices UU Lalit and Ajay Rastogi ruled. The court directed the Jharkhand government to appoint Kumar on the post that he was selected for in 2008 and give him the seniority as per his placement in the order of merit with notional pay and allowances but not back wages.

The bench noted that the petitioner was born in Hazaribagh in 1974 which came under Jharkhand after the enactment of the Bihar Reorganiza­tion Act 2000 and belonged to caste recognised as a scheduled caste in both Bihar and Jharkhand.

The court noted that Sections 73 and 74 of the 2000 Act protected the employment of only those reserved candidates from undivided Bihar who opted to remain in the employment of Bihar government while employees of undivided Bihar who opted for service in Jharkhand government were denied recognitio­n by Jharkhand terming them as migrants. At the same time, Bihar introduced a new rule in 2003 under the Bihar Reservatio­n of Vacancies in Posts and Services (for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes) Act, 1991, limiting reservatio­n benefits to only those who are residing in Bihar.

The court said such a matter involving reservatio­n benefits being denied as a result of bifurcatio­n was arising for the first time. “In our considered view, such of the employees who are members of the SC/ST/OBC whose caste/tribe has been notified by an amendment to the Constituti­on(Scheduled Castes)/ (Scheduled Tribes) Order 1950 under Vth and VIth Schedule to Sections 23 and 24 of the Act of 2000 or by the separate notificati­on for members of other backward class (OBC) category, the benefit of reservatio­ns including privileges and benefits flowing thereof, shall remain protected by virtue of Section 73 of the Act 2000 for all practical purposes which can be claimed (including by their wards) for participat­ion in public employment.”

Attorney General KK Venugopal, who was assisting the court, said a February 1985 government order does specify that reserved category candidates will be entitled to claim benefits within their home state and not in the state they have migrated to. But here it was not a case of voluntary or involuntar­y migration but bifurcatio­n, he said.

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