FACTS:
The petitioner had a degree of B.A.M.S.(Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery). She filed a writ petition in the High Court contending that she had all the requisite qualifications to be appointed as Medical Officer in the U.P. State Services. She was appointed under the Anshkalik (temporary) Scheme of the State Government and was posted at a Government Female Hospital in Bulandshahar district.
The writ petitioner (respondent in the present appeal) has alleged that she is entitled to the benefit of the High Court decision, although she had not filed any individual writ petition.
ARGUMENTS OF THE PETITIONER:
The petitioner alleged in her writ petition that to avoid her claim of regular service the State Government acted against the spirit of law laid down in Rattanlal and others v State of Haryana and others, AIR 1987 SC 478 and in Rabinarayan Mohapatra v State of Orissa and others, AIR 1991 SC 1286, wherein it was declared that the policy of making ad hoc appointment having time bound period and thereafter terminating the services of the appointee and after a short interval giving re-appointment as illegal.
JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT:
The High Court held that there was violation of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India, and that the claim of the petitioner for regularization shall be considered within six months from the date of production of copy of the said judgment before the respondent (the State Government).
JUDGMENT OF THE SUPREME COURT:
It was held by the Court that a regular appointment can only be made after selection by the U.P. Public Service Commission. Also, it was observed, the respondent was only a temporary employee. It was added by the Court that the Constitution Bench decision of this Court in State of Karnataka v Umadevi, (2006) 4 SCC 1, that the High Court in exercise of its power under Article 226 cannot regularize an employee and thus merely because some others had been regularized does not give any right to the respondent.
Moreover, it is well-settled that a temporary employee has no right to the post vide State of U.P. v Kaushal Kishore Shukla, (1991) 1 SCC 691. The direction for respondent’s reinstatement was, therefore, not sustainable as she was only a temporary employee and hence had no right to the post.
The appeal was thus allowed setting the impugned judgment and order of the High Court aside.
