Sunil Ambwani, J.@mdashThis writ petition has been filed for quashing the order dated 18.4.2001 passed by Director of Education (Basic), UP.,
Lucknow rejecting petitioner''s representation for grant of regular pay-scale as Class-IV employee in Basic School, and for a writ of mandamus
commanding the respondents to pay to the petitioner regular salary in the pay-scale of Class-IV employee from the date of absorption i.e.
23.3.1982 with arrears till date with interest of 18% per annum.
2. Heard Sri Virendra Kumar appearing for the petitioner, Sri P.K. Sharma for the respondent No. 3 and learned Standing Counsel.
3. Petitioner was appointed in the year 1968 as Part Time Peon in Primary Pathshala, Bhadrekhi, Tahsil-Kalpi. District-Jalaun on consolidated
salary. It was initially fixed at Rs 15 p.m.
UP. Basic Education Act, 1972 came into force on 17.8.1972 providing for constitution of Basic Education Board consisting of an Ex-Officio
Director to be Chairman two persons to be nominated the State Government from amongst the Chairman of the Zila Parishad, one person to be
nominated by the State Government from amongst the Nagar Pramukh, one person to be nominated by the State Government from amongst the
Presidents of the Municipal Board; Secretary to the State Government in the Finance Department (Ex-Officio), Principal State Institute of
Education, (Ex-officio), Secretary Board of High School and Intermediate Education, Allahabad Ex-Offcio. President of Uttar Pradesh, Prathmik
Shiksha Sangh Ex-officio, two educationist nominated by the State Government an officer not below the rank of Deputy Director of Education, to
be nominated by the State Government to be Member Secretary. ''Basic education'' was defined as education up to the eighth class imparted in
schools other than High Schools or Intermediate Colleges. The function of the Board was to prescribe the course of instruction and books for
basic education and teacher''s training therefor, to conduct the Junior High School and basic training certificate examination, to lay down by general
or special orders in that behalf, norms relating to the establishment of institutions by local bodies and to superintend the Shiksha Samiti in respect of
the administration of institutions, to take over management of all basic schools which before the appointed day belonging to any local body etc.
Section 7 provides for functions of the Board and subject to any general or special order of the State Government the Board has power subject to
the provisions of the Act to spend such sum as it may think fit on objects or for purposes authorised by the Act. Section 13 provides that the
Board shall carry out such direction as may be issued to it from time to time by the State Government for efficient administration and in case of any
dispute between the Board and the State Government or between the Board and Local Body the decision of the State Government shall be final
and binding on the Board or Local Body as the case may be. The Board or Local Body is required to furnish to the State Government such
reports, returns and other information as the State Government may from time to time require for the purposes of the Act. The Basic Education
Board as such is an instrumentality of the State Government and is wholly owned and controlled by the State Government to carry out the object
and purpose to impart basic education in the State of Uttar Pradesh.
4. Section 9 which is relevant for the decision of this writ petition is quoted below :
''9. Transfer of employees.-(1) On and from the appointed day every teacher, officer and other employees serving under a local body exclusively
in connection in basic schools (including any supervisory or inspecting staff) immediately before the said day shall be transferred to an become a
teacher, officer or other employee of the Board and shall hold office by the same tenure, at the same remuneration and upon the same other terms
and conditions of service as he would have held the same if the Board had not been constituted and shall continue to do so unless and until such
tenure, remuneration and other terms and conditions are (altered by the rules made by the State Government in that behalf) :
Provided that any service rendered under the local body by any such teacher, officer or other employee before the appointed day shall be deemed
to be service rendered under the Board :
Provided further that the Board may employ and such teacher, officer or other employee in the discharge of such functions under this Act as it may
think proper and every such teacher, officer or other employee shall discharge those functions accordingly.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall apply to any teacher, officer or other employee, who by notice in writing in that behalf to the State Government
within a period of two months from the appointed day intimates his option for not becoming an employee of the Board and where any employee
gives such notice, his service under the local body-shall stand determined with effect from the appointed day and he shall be entitled to
compensation from the local body, which shall be as follows :
(a) in the case of a permanent employee, a sum equivalent to his salary (including all allowances) for a period of three months or for the remaining
period of his service, which ever is less;
(b) in the case of a temporary employee, a sum equivalent to his salary (including all allowances) for one month or for the remaining period of his
service, whichever is less.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in sub-section (1), any person referred to therein, who becomes an employee of the Board shall be liable to be
transferred from the school or from the local area in which he was employed immediately before the appointed day to any other school or
institution belonging to Board of, as the case may be, to any other local area at the same remuneration and on the same other terms and conditions
of service as governed him immediately before such transfer (until such tenure, remuneration and other terms and conditions are altered by the rules
referred to in sub-section (1) :
Provided that no teacher of a basic school (which before the appointed day belonged to a local body) shall be transferred to a basic school
belonging to any other local body except with his consent.
(4) If any question arises whether the services of any person stand transferred to the Board under sub-section (1) or as to the remuneration and
other terms and conditions of service of such employee immediately before the appointed day, it shall be decided by the State Government whose
decision shall be final.
(5) Any provident fund maintained by any local body for the employees referred to in sub-section (1) along with all contributions of such
employees as well as of the local body which ought to have been but have not been deposited therein before the appointed day, shall be
transferred by the local body to the Board, which shall hold it in trust for the employees concerned in accordance with the terms and conditions
governing such fund.
(6) The transfer of services of any employee to the Board under sub-section (1) shall not entitle any such employee to any compensation and no
such claim shall be entertained by any Court, Tribunal or Authority.
5. By order dated 23.3.1982 passed by District Basic Education Officer, Jalaun at Orai, 75 employees, working in Basic Schools were adjusted
in the schools in the same district vide G.O. dated 14.6.1978 on a fixed pay and they were required to take over charge in fixed pay of Rs. 30/-
p.m. These petitioner joined with effect from 30.3.1982 and are being paid presently Rs. 165/-p.m. as fixed salary. In Writ Petition No. 23558 of
2000 this Court by its final order dated 22.5.2000 required the Director of Education (Basic), U.P., Lucknow to pass appropriate orders on the
representation filed by the petitioner for payment of salary in the minimum pay-scale applicable to any Class-IV employee working under State
Government. The said representation has been decided by the Director of Education (Basic), UP., Lucknow by means of order dated 18.4.2001.
6. The basic facts required for decision have been given in the impugned order, and as such with the consent of the parties this writ petition is being
disposed of finally at the admission stage under Rules of the Court.
7. As stated above, the Primary Schools in rural and city area, managed and run by the Local Bodies, Zila Parishad, Nagar Mahapalika, Nagar
Palika came under the control and management of the Basic Education Board under U.P. Basic Education Act, 1972 with effect from the date it
was constituted on 25.7.1972.
The services of all the teachers and other employees were transferred to the Basic Education Board.
8. At the time of transfer of Class-IV employees, the Board received the services of 11,668 employees in regular pay-scale 6,798 employees in
fixed pay-scale and some part time employees whose number has not been given in the impugned order. By the G.O. dated 14.6.1978 a direction
was issued that Class-IV employees in regular pay-scale should be adjusted towards posts in the regular pay-scale but the said benefit was not
given to part time employees. By G.O. dated 20.2.1982, the fixed pay for part time employees were fixed as follows :
(i) For cleaning primary school Rs. 15/-
(ii) For cleaning the up-graded primary school Rs. 30/-
(iii) For bringing children from school and taking
them back to their home 3 Rs. 30/-
9. The impugned order states that these part time employees are not working on full time basis and are liable to work for only one or two hours in
school. Government Order dated 28.2.1992 provided that those part time employees who are not prepared to work on the aforesaid fix pay-scale
may be immediately discharged. Government Order dated 27.1.1997 increased the wages of these part time employees to Rs. 150/- p.m. The
impugned order concludes that since these employees are not working on full time basis and that apart from cleaning the school, and for bringing
children to the schools and takes them back these employees do not perform any other work, confined only to few hours, they cannot be treated
as full time employee. Posts have not been sanctioned to these employees. The representation dated 2.6.2000 was consequently rejected.
10. The preamble of the Constitution of India dedicated the constitution to the people of India to constitute India into a sovereign socialist, secular,
democratic republic and to secure to all its citizens; justice, social, economic and political, liberty of thought, expression belie, faith and worship
equality of status and of opportunity and to promote among them all fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual and the unity and integrity of the
nation. Article 14 removes equality of all kinds and Article 16 provides a guarantee of equality in employment. This equality is not confined only to
the opportunity for being appointed, but also for all conditions of employment including the emoluments received as reward of labour or service
rendered.
11. Article 23 prohibits traffic in human beings and Begar, is quoted as below :
(1) Traffic in human beings and Begar and other similar forms of forced labour are prohibited and any contravention of this provision shall be an
offence punishable in accordance with law.
(2) Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from imposing compulsory service for public purposes, and in imposing such service the State shall
not make any discrimination on grounds only of religion, race, caste or class or any of them.
12. Begar means Labour or service exacted by Government or a person in power without giving remuneration for it.
Article 23 has to be read with directives in Articles 39(c), 41, 42 providing that the health and strength of workers, men and women, and the
tender age of children arc not to be abused and that citizens shall not be forced by economic necessity to enter avocations unsuited to their age or
strength. Article 41 mandates the State within the limits of its economic capacity and development to make effective provisions for securing the
right to work to education and to public assistance in cases of unemployment, old age, sickness and disablement, and in other cases of undeserved
want. Article 42 mandates, that the State shall make provisions for securing just and humane conditions of work and for maternity relief.
In case of Private employment The Minimum Wages Act, 1948, provides for fixation of statutory minimum wages for employment covered by
schedule to the Act. Minimum wage is to be fixed with reference to the cost of living index number and the Wages has been defined under the Act
as all remuneration, capable of being expressed in terms of money, which would, if the terms of the contract of employment, expressed or implied,
were fulfilled, be payable to a person employed in respect of his employment or of work done in such employment. These minimum wages have
also been made applicable to employment in primary educational institutions provided in Item 58 to Schedule I by U.P. Gazette dated 18.8.1983
(para 4) (gha) Est P-2 (17). The State Government is obliged by the aforesaid provisions of the Constitution of India and Minimum Wages Act,
1948 to provide remuneration to its employees, having regard to the nature of work, a minimum pay, which is commensurate with cost of living
index number. The Pay Commissions constituted by Governments from time to time to equate the wages with the cost of living index number and
for this purpose a present emolument and wages recommended by Fifth Pay Commission have been implemented to the State Government
Employees in the State of U.P. So far as the Primary Schools are concerned, recommendations of Fourth Pay Commission are applicable and that
looking into the burden on the State Exchequer, recommendation of Fifth Pay Commission are still to be implemented in primary and secondary
schools.
13. In employment under State a concept of part time employee is not known. The respondents have not been above to point out any rule or
service condition which provide for part time employment under the State. Taking into consideration the present case on the basis of the fact
enumerated in the impugned order, the Court finds that the nature of the employment of the petitioner is to look after small children in primary
schools. The petitioner is required to bring the children from their respective homes to the school and to take them back after the school hours.
Small and tender children are put under the care of the petitioner named as ''School Mata''. The nature of these duties by themselves suggest that
working hours of the petitioner starts much before schools opens, and long after the school closes. The petitioner is not only required to lookafter
the children but also to maintaining cleanliness in the school. It is rather surprising that all other employees who may devote less hours, are being
termed as full time employees and that the petitioner is being treated as a part time employee. The nature of duties performed by the petitioner
cannot be treated as part time employment. The work involves regularity, responsibility and same, if not more working hours as regular employees.
14. The U.P. Recognised Basic Sohools (Junior High Schools) (Recruitment and Conditions of Service of Ministerial Staff and Group D
Employees) Rules, 1984, made in exercise of powers under sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the U.P. Education Act, 1972, provide for
appointment, minimum qualification, eligibility, age, nationality, reservation, character and martial status etc. for employment in Basic Schools. For
the purpose of Payment of Salary Rule 18 provides that the scale of pay admissible to person appointed to any post under these rules whether on
substantive or officiating capacity or on temporary in nature shall be such as were determined by the State Government. Rule 19 provides for
increment, confirmation or deemed to have been confirmed employee at the expiration of the period of probation. Rule 20 provides superannuation
at the age of 58 years for clerks and 60 years for Group-D employees. Rules 21 to 24 provide for termination of service, leave, disciplinary
proceedings and temporary appointment.
15. The petitioner along with other employees have been absorbed as employees of the Basic Education Board under the provisions of Section 9
of the Act, in 1982, and services rendered by her under the local body shall be deemed to service rendered by her with the Board. The question of
remuneration was to be decided by the State Government. From the nature of the duties and responsibilities performed by the petitioner, her
employment can neither be termed as part time or temporary. The petitioner and similarly situate employees, were working with the Zila Parishad,
Municipal Corporation and other local bodies and after the establishment of Basic Education Board, as the nature of duties and responsibilities of
the petitioner and other similarly situated employees arc not inferior to the nature of duties and responsibilities to all other employees who have
been described as employees on regular pay-scale arc not different, it is declared that the petitioners are also regular Class IV employees working
under the Basic Education Board and that the payment of a fixed pay-scale at Rs. 165/- to these employees is arbitrary, discriminatory'' and
violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution of India. Since these employees belongs to poor section of the society who could not have been
in a position to ask for high wages and were under threat to loose the employment, the work taken from them @ Rs. 30/- p.m. from 1982 to
1997, and thereafter @ Rs. 150/- p.m.amounts to ''Begar'' which is prohibited under Article 23 of the Constitution of India. The State Government
cannot be permitted to exact work from its employees for wages which are less than minimum wages, and in case the State Government forces
labour at such ridiculously low rate, on which no humane being can maintain himself or even exist, the exaction of work cannot be treated other
than a exploitation of humane labour, violating basic human rights and right to work with dignity violating Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
16. In People''s Union for Democratic Rights and Others Vs. Union of India (UOI) and Others, , the Supreme Court explained and expanded the
meaning of the term ''Begar'' and held in the context of deduction of Minimum Wages from the Labourers employed by private employers in Asiad
Projects as ''forced labour'' relying upon universal declaration of human rights, 1930 and opted convention No. 29 on International Labour
Organisation laying down that every member of the ILO which ratifies this convention shall suppress the use of forced or compulsory labour in all
its form and further elaboration in convention No. 105 by International Labour Organization in 1957, expanding the definition of forced labour and
further upon Article 4 of European Convention of Human Rights and Article 8 of International Covenant on civil and political rights. The Apex
Court treated Article 23 to be in the same strain and a prohibition against forced labour in whatsoever form it may found. The Court depricated the
practice of economically powerful section of community to exploit the poor and weaker sections by resorting to other forms of forced labour and
regarded as a pernicious practice sufficient to attract the condemnation of Article 21. It found that Begar does not only mean labour without
remuneration but also includes other similar forms, namely. where a workman is paid a lessor amount than minimum wages. Ordinarily no one
would willing to supply labour or service to any other for less than minimum wages, when he known that under the law he is entitled to get minimum
wages for the labour or service provided by him. It may, therefore, be legitimately presumed that when the persons provides labour or service to
another against receipt of remuneration which is less than the minimum wages, he is acting under the force of some compulsion which drives him to
work though he is paid less than what he is entitled to receive and thus processed the forced labour which is prohibited under Article 23 of the
Constitution of India. In Sanjit Roy Vs. State of Rajasthan, , the Supreme Court declared the payment of lessor wages than the prescribed
Minimum Wages Act, to workers employed on relief work undertaken in drought and famine affected areas to operate against Article 14 of the
Constiution of India and held that the rights of all the workers will be the same, whether they are drawn from an area affected by drought and
scarcity conditions or come from elsewhere. In Bandhua Mukti Morcha Vs. Union of India (UOI) and Others, , the Apex Court directed its
attention on the bonded labour and held that whenever it is shown that a labour is made to provide forced labour, the Court would raise a
presumption that he is required to do so in consideration of an advance or other economic consideration received by him and he is, therefore, a
bonded labour. The employment in Twenty-First Century under the State Government for a sum of Rs. 165/- p.m., amount to force labour which
is not permissible in law.
17. In the aforesaid circumstances, the writ petition is allowed. The impugned order dated 18.4.2001 passed by the Director of Education (Basic),
UP, Allahabad is quashed, and that it is provided that the petitioner shall be treated as a regular Class-IV employee, and shall be put in the time
scale of pay payable to the regular Class-IV employees working in primary schools under Basic Education Board. She shall be paid difference of
pay between the fixed pay drawn by her and the regular pay-scales along with interest at bank rates since her absorption w.e.f 23.3.1982 and shall
be continued to be paid regular pay-scale in the time scale payable to a Class-IV employees. The mandamus will be carried out within a period of
four months. In the facts and circumstances of the case the costs of the petition are quantified at Rs.5.000/-.