A.K. Kraipak and Ors. vs. Union of India (UOI) and Ors.

Topic : Principles of Natural Justice; Nemo judex in causa sua

Citation : MANU/SC/0427/1969, 1969 INSC 129

Court : Supreme Court

Date of Decision : 29.04.1969

Facts

Gazetted Officers serving in the forest department of the State of Jammu and Kashmir, Conservators of Forests, Divisional Forest Officers and Assistant Conservators of Forests aggrieved by the selections made from among the officers serving in the forest department of the State of Jammu and Kashmir to the Indian Forest Service. The Union Public Service Commission has ordered an investigation into the publication of an impugned list of selected officers, with acting Chief Conservator Naquishbund’s name at the top of the list. He was also one of the candidates competing for a position in the All India Forest Service. The Acting Chief Conservator did not sit on the Selection Board at the time his name was considered but participated in the deliberations when the names of his rivals were considered. Hence, petitioners challenged the appointment as violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.

Key Takeaways for Students

Legal Issue

Whether the appointments have been made fairly and justly?

Holding

It is true that ordinarily the Chief Conservator of Forests in a State should be considered as the most appropriate person to be in the selection board. He must be expected to know his officers thoroughly, their weaknesses as well as their strength. His opinion as regards their suitability for selection to the All India Service is entitled to great weight. But then under the circumstances it was improper to have included Naquishbund as a member of the selection board. He was one of the persons to be considered for selection. It is against all canons of justice to make a man judge in his own cause. It is true that he did not participate in the deliberations of the committee when his name was considered. But then the very fact that he was a member of the selection board must have had its own impact on the decision of the selection board. Further admittedly he participated in the deliberations of the selection board when the claims of his rivals particularly that of Basu was considered He was also party to the preparation of the list of selected candidates in order of preference. At every stage of this participation in the deliberations of the selection board there was a conflict between his interest and duty. Under those circumstances it is difficult to believe that he could have been impartial.

The aim of the rules of natural justice is to secure justice or to put it negatively to prevent miscarriage of justice. These rules can operate only in areas not covered by any law validly made. In other words they do not supplant the law of the land but supplement it. The concept of natural justice has undergone a great deal of change in recent years. In the past it was thought that it included just two rules namely (1) no one shall be a judge in his own case (Nemo debet esse judex propria causa) and (2) no decision shall be given against a party without affording him a reasonable hearing (audi alteram partem). Very soon thereafter a third rule was envisaged and that is that quasi-judicial enquiries must be held in good faith, without bias and not arbitrarily or unreasonably. But in the course of years many more subsidiary rules came to be added to the rules of natural justice. Till very recently it was the opinion of the courts that unless the authority concerned was required by the law under which it functioned to act judicially there was no room for the application of the rules of natural justice.

The validity of that limitation is now questioned. If the purpose of the rules of natural justice is to prevent miscarriage of justice one fails to see why those rules should be made inapplicable to administrative enquiries. Often times it is not easy to draw the line that demarcates administrative enquiries from quasi-judicial enquiries. Enquiries which were considered administrative at one time are now being considered as quasi-judicial in character. Arriving at a just decision is the aim of both quasi-judicial enquiries as well as administrative enquiries. An unjust decision in an administrative enquiry may have more far reaching effect than a decision in a quasi-judicial enquiry.

Final Decision Petition Allowed

Ratio

No one can be judge of his case.

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