The
current upheaval in perennially simmering cauldron of clamor for reservation
/quota[1] stands to reason that the quota
based reservation policy, envisaged as a tool of egalitarianism, now has become
a “prized booty” . It is begotten out of an AMALGAMATE of “brute majority
and/or brutal muscle power, blood-shed, vandalism, tacit
political/administrative patronage and above the all, rampant political
opportunism”. Let me clarify, at the very outset, that caste based reservation
to a certain extent is still the indispensable need of hour keeping in view the most
abhorrent & pernicious discriminations & prejudices heaped on a sea of
humanity in the name of castes from time immemorial in our Country. Although,
extant form of reservation policy in practice in our Country is a politically
sponsored, constitutionally enabled and judicially sanctioned FRAUD with the
MASSES of all hues. Hence, it has become imperative to review the entire
policy and efficacy of quotas in the present form. Amidst forbidding clamor for/against reservations all around, I venture
out to put forth certain suggestions to possibly remedy the ills plaguing the
extant system of reservation:
1. Free, assured and quality school education to children of “have-nots”. To ensure maximum enrollments and minimal drop-outs accompanied by emphasis on skill development of such children.
2. To classify various
castes in SC and OBC categories (by and large all states have some
classification wrt OBC category. Central government should also sub-categorize
the 27% central quota. The NCBC had also proposed the same to the central
government in the 2015) and assignment of differential quotas to consequent
sub-classes, and induction of some creamy layer criterion wrt SCs[2].
And to widen the scope of extant quite narrow CREAMY LAYER criteria wrt BC/OBC[3] so
that all castes of these reserved categories, and actually deprived persons of
these castes equitably reap the benefit of reservation.
3.
To gradually move away from sole caste based criterion. To begin with let us
reduce the present caste based quota of 50% to 35% and carve out a new category
based on individual/class/occupation linked income criteria and assign it 15%
quota besides 1%-5% horizontal quota for Sportspersons/Ex-servicemen/PWD/Women
etc. For example, from the standpoint of an individual all persons placed
below poverty line (BPL) or persons forming part of some identifiable tangible
class viz. rickshaw pullers, construction workers, farm laborers, domestic
workers, small farmers, small traders etc may be made eligible for reservation.
In Indra Sawhney 1992 Supp. (3) SCC 217, the Hon’ble SC
held that “it is, of course, permissible for the Government or other authority
to identify a backward class of citizens on the basis of occupation-cum-income,
without reference to caste, if it is so advised.”
PRINCIPLE OF QUEUE
Moreover, the benefits of reservation
should accrue to those who need it most, from the marginalized groups.
Therefore, those who have already availed the benefits of reservation should be
placed at the end of the queue. In this manner, the benefits of reservation
would go to those who are the most needy.
4. TO FOLLOW IN
LETTER AND SPIRIT THE SUPREME COURT’S DECLARED CONSTITUTIONAL IMPERATIVE THAT
“IN EVERY CASE WHERE THE STATE DECIDES TO PROVIDE FOR RESERVATION IT HAS TO
COLLECT QUANTIFIABLE DATA PURSUANT TO A SCIENTIFIC SURVEY SHOWING BACKWARDNESS
OF THE CASTE/CLASS TO SUCH AN EXTENT THAT PEOPLE BELONGING TO SUCH
CASTE/CLASS ARE NOT ABLE TO COMPETE IN OPEN/GENERAL CATEGORY AND
RESULTANT INADEQUACY OF REPRESENTATION OF THAT CASTE/CLASS IN PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT”.
(See Indra Sawhney etc vs UOI, 1992 ; M. Nagaraj and others vs
UOI and others, 2006; Ram Singh & others vs UOI , 2015; Ram
Kumar Gijroya vs Delhi Subordinate Services Selection Board & Anr, 2016. Also
see Division Bench judgment of Bombay High Court in Writ Petition
(L) No. 2053 of 2014 decided on 14/11/2014 titled as Shri Sanjeet Shulka vs
State of Maharashtra & others); Division Bench judgment of
Gujarat High Court in Writ Petition (PIL) No.108 of 2016 decided on 04.08.2016
titled as Dayaram Khemkaran Verma s/o Khemkaran Verma vs. State of Gujarat
& another; Division Bench order of Punjab and Haryana High Court on
23/9/2016 in CWP No.18514 of 2016 in Kalindi Vashishtha vs. State of Haryana
and ors.). The only contemporaneous data of backwardness available in Haryana
is in the form of Justice KC Gupta Report 2012 which was found flawed and
unworthy of being acceptable by the Supreme Court in the case of
Ram Singh & Ors vs Union of India 2015 (quashing the Central OBC Jat
Reservation notification and following which Chandigarh High Court stayed the
Special Backward Classes (SBCs) reservation notification in Haryana in the year
2015).
THUS, IT HAS BECOME
IMPERATIVE TO CONDUCT SUCH SURVEY OF ALL CASTES ALREADY IN BC/OBC POOL, AND
OTHER CASTES SEEKING INCLUSION THEREIN AND THEN RETAIN/INCLUDE ONLY THOSE
CASTES WHICH FULFILL ABOVE SAID TEST LAID DOWN BY SUPREME COURT.
5. Decadal periodic revision of respective OBC lists by Union and state governments as per the Supreme Court's order in Indra Sawhney case in 1992. Such revision of Central OBC list by the Central Government is also warranted by Section 11 of the THE NATIONAL COMMISSION FOR BACKWARD CLASSES ACT, 1993.
5. Decadal periodic revision of respective OBC lists by Union and state governments as per the Supreme Court's order in Indra Sawhney case in 1992. Such revision of Central OBC list by the Central Government is also warranted by Section 11 of the THE NATIONAL COMMISSION FOR BACKWARD CLASSES ACT, 1993.
6. Moreover, Supreme
Court in I.R. Coelho case (2007) unequivocally held that “9th Schedule
does not provide a blanket immunity to a law that abrogates or
abridges Fundamental Rights . Such a violation/infraction shall be open to
challenge on the ground that it destroys or damages the basic structure as
indicated in Article 21 read with Article14, Article 19 of the Constitution and
the principles underlying there under and such law may be invalidated in
exercise of judicial review power of the Court in appropriate cases”.
7. The Supreme Court has
also held that “Reservation in employment in services, and admission in
educational institutes shall not ordinarily exceed 50% of the appointments or
posts or seats barring certain extra-ordinary situations (See Indra Sawhney
1992, M. Nagaraj and others Vs Union of India and others 2006, Ashoka Kumar Thakur 2008).
8. Therefore, the State
is free to exercise its discretion of providing for reservation to certain
caste(s)/class(es) [in addiition to SC/STs] subject to Constitutional and
Supreme Court's laid down limitations, namely, the ceiling-limit of
50% (QUANTITATIVE LIMITATION); the principle of creamy layer (QUALITATIVE EXCLUSION); the compelling reasons, namely,
backwardness, inadequacy of representation, and the overall administrative
efficiency.
9. Moreover, we need to
understand that not only peasantry class is under distress due to continual
shrinkage of agricultural land holdings but even other castes are no
longer comfortably placed in their traditional
occupations/professions since people in significant number from all across the
board have joined those occupations/professions in this age of cut
throat competition. Be that as it may, however, distressed farmers
stuck in the whirlpool of agrarian crisis are at the centre of current reservation
agitation in Haryana. But the existing creamy layer criteria wrt BCs are too
illusory, narrow & ineffective to allow any substantial benefit of
reservation to percolate down to the said most needy segment of society.
10. From 1981 onward several anti-reservation stirs took place largely in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi. Pro-reservation agitations are post 2000 phenomena. Interestingly, the very same castes which had opposed tooth and nail the reservations in those States in the past are now vociferously demanding for reservations although they are considered politically and socially highly dominant having made progress leaps and bounds in all spheres over the years by dint of hard work as well as owing to immense political clout.
11. It is no gainsaid to
emphasize that reservation is neither a mercantile goody nor an agricultural
bounty nor a discretionary free-bee by government. It is something which has
serious bearing on fundamental rights of citizens enshrined in Articles 14, 19
and 21 of the Constitution and may be granted only after thoroughly
& strictly complying with the requirements of the law of the land.
12. It would be apt to
say that Reservation is like an elevator. It should be meant for those who
can’t climb the stairs. The Founding Fathers’ idea of reservation policy
was like that of the crutches lent to a physically challenged person until his
limbs grow up and he stands on his own legs. Contemporary developments mark a
paradigmatic shift in the conceptualization of reservation/quota system from a
supporting “crutch” to extortionist “might is right.” The time has come at
such a pass, paradoxically, where we see that the some of the erstwhile
physically challenged persons although now having fully grown-up limbs yet do
not want to let go of the borrowed crutches, and the historically able-bodied
persons (albeit some of them are no longer strong enough and some others are
feigning to have been emasculated) have also started clamoring for the
crutches.
13. The observation of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Ram Singh and Others vs Union of India, 2015 is also worth taken note of which goes thus “It is in Indra Sawhney’s case that this Court held that the terms “backward class in Article 16(4) ” and “socially and educationally backward classes in Articles 15(4) and 340” are not equivalent and further that in Article 16(4) the backwardness contemplated is mainly social. The above interpretation of backwardness in Indra Sawhney would be binding on numerically smaller Benches. We may, therefore, understand a social class as an identifiable section of society which may be internally homogenous (based on caste or occupation) or heterogeneous (based on disability or gender e.g. transgender). BACKWARDNESS IS A MANIFESTATION CAUSED BY THE PRESENCE OF SEVERAL INDEPENDENT CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH MAY BE SOCIAL, CULTURAL, ECONOMIC, EDUCATIONAL OR EVEN POLITICAL. Owing to historical conditions, particularly in Hindu society, recognition of backwardness has been associated with caste. Though caste may be a prominent and distinguishing factor for easy determination of backwardness of a social group, this Court has been routinely discouraging the identification of a group as backward solely on the basis of caste. Article 16(4) as also Article 15(4) lays the foundation for affirmative action by the State to reach out the most deserving. Social groups who would be most deserving must necessarily be a matter of continuous evolution. New practices, methods and yardsticks have to be continuously evolved moving away from caste centric definition of backwardness. This alone can enable recognition of newly emerging groups in society which would require palliative action. The recognition of the third gender as a socially and educationally backward class of citizens entitled to affirmative action of the State under the Constitution in National Legal Services Authority vs. Union of India (2014) 5 SCC 438 is too significant a development to be ignored. In fact it is a path finder, if not a path-breaker. It is an important reminder to the State of the high degree of vigilance it must exercise to discover emerging forms of backwardness. The State, therefore, cannot blind itself to the existence of other forms and instances of backwardness. An affirmative action policy that keeps in mind only historical injustice would certainly result in under-protection of the most deserving backward class of citizens, which is constitutionally mandated. It is the identification of these new emerging groups that must engage the attention of the State and the constitutional power and duty must be concentrated to discover such groups rather than to enable groups of citizens to recover “lost ground” in claiming preference and benefits on the basis of historical prejudice. The perception of a self-proclaimed socially backward class of citizens or even the perception of the “advanced classes” as to the social status of the “less fortunates” cannot continue to be a constitutionally permissible yardstick for determination of backwardness, both in the context of Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution. Neither can any longer backwardness be a matter of determination on the basis of mathematical formulae evolved by taking into account social, economic and educational indicators. Determination of backwardness must also cease to be relative; possible wrong inclusions cannot be the basis for further inclusions but the gates would be opened only to permit entry of the most distressed. Any other inclusion would be a serious abdication of the constitutional duty of the State. Judged by the aforesaid standards we must hold that inclusion of the politically organized classes (such as Jats) in the list of backward classes mainly, if not solely, on the basis that on same parameters other groups who have fared better have been so included cannot be affirmed.”
13. The observation of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Ram Singh and Others vs Union of India, 2015 is also worth taken note of which goes thus “It is in Indra Sawhney’s case that this Court held that the terms “backward class in Article 16(4) ” and “socially and educationally backward classes in Articles 15(4) and 340” are not equivalent and further that in Article 16(4) the backwardness contemplated is mainly social. The above interpretation of backwardness in Indra Sawhney would be binding on numerically smaller Benches. We may, therefore, understand a social class as an identifiable section of society which may be internally homogenous (based on caste or occupation) or heterogeneous (based on disability or gender e.g. transgender). BACKWARDNESS IS A MANIFESTATION CAUSED BY THE PRESENCE OF SEVERAL INDEPENDENT CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH MAY BE SOCIAL, CULTURAL, ECONOMIC, EDUCATIONAL OR EVEN POLITICAL. Owing to historical conditions, particularly in Hindu society, recognition of backwardness has been associated with caste. Though caste may be a prominent and distinguishing factor for easy determination of backwardness of a social group, this Court has been routinely discouraging the identification of a group as backward solely on the basis of caste. Article 16(4) as also Article 15(4) lays the foundation for affirmative action by the State to reach out the most deserving. Social groups who would be most deserving must necessarily be a matter of continuous evolution. New practices, methods and yardsticks have to be continuously evolved moving away from caste centric definition of backwardness. This alone can enable recognition of newly emerging groups in society which would require palliative action. The recognition of the third gender as a socially and educationally backward class of citizens entitled to affirmative action of the State under the Constitution in National Legal Services Authority vs. Union of India (2014) 5 SCC 438 is too significant a development to be ignored. In fact it is a path finder, if not a path-breaker. It is an important reminder to the State of the high degree of vigilance it must exercise to discover emerging forms of backwardness. The State, therefore, cannot blind itself to the existence of other forms and instances of backwardness. An affirmative action policy that keeps in mind only historical injustice would certainly result in under-protection of the most deserving backward class of citizens, which is constitutionally mandated. It is the identification of these new emerging groups that must engage the attention of the State and the constitutional power and duty must be concentrated to discover such groups rather than to enable groups of citizens to recover “lost ground” in claiming preference and benefits on the basis of historical prejudice. The perception of a self-proclaimed socially backward class of citizens or even the perception of the “advanced classes” as to the social status of the “less fortunates” cannot continue to be a constitutionally permissible yardstick for determination of backwardness, both in the context of Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution. Neither can any longer backwardness be a matter of determination on the basis of mathematical formulae evolved by taking into account social, economic and educational indicators. Determination of backwardness must also cease to be relative; possible wrong inclusions cannot be the basis for further inclusions but the gates would be opened only to permit entry of the most distressed. Any other inclusion would be a serious abdication of the constitutional duty of the State. Judged by the aforesaid standards we must hold that inclusion of the politically organized classes (such as Jats) in the list of backward classes mainly, if not solely, on the basis that on same parameters other groups who have fared better have been so included cannot be affirmed.”
14. Moreover, we must be
alive to the hard fact that reservation is a State's indulgence and one should not seek indulgence of other unless
it is not at all possible to stand on one’s own legs due to some insurmountable
present compulsions (like victims of calamities, genocides, war, disabilities,
acute economic constraints) or historical
discriminations/deprivations/injustice.
ENDNOTES
[1] Known as affirmative action in the USA. Reservation in India and Nepal.Positive
discrimination in the UK. Also known in a narrower
context as employment equity in Canada and South Africa.
[2] In Indra Sawhney 1992 Supp. (3) SCC 217, the Hon’ble SC held that “there is
no constitutional bar to classify the backward classes of citizens into
backward and more backward categories.” In E.V. Chinnaiah Vs. State of Andhra
Pradesh and Ors (2004) , the Supreme Court while relying on the judgment
in State of Kerala Vs N.M.Thomas
and Ors (1976) held that by virtue of Article 341
and Presidential notification, the Scheduled Castes constitute a homogenous
class by themselves and, therefore, ‘ any executive action or legislative
enactment which interferes, re-groups or re- classifies the various caste found
in the Presidential List will be violative of scheme of the Constitution and of
Article 341 of
the Constitution. However, the Hon’ble Supreme Court in HARYANA DHANAK
SEWA SAMITI VERSUS STATE OF HARYANA & ORS. (CIVIL APPEAL
NO. 5586 OF 2010) and STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS. VERSUS DAVINDER SINGH &
ORS. (CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2317 OF 2011) has expressed doubts on the correctness of
view taken in the case of E.V. Chinaiah and hence referred the
matter to a larger Bench. The Referral order reads thus “we are of the view
that E.V. Chinnaiah needs to be
revisited in light of Article 338 of the
Constitution of India, and exposition of of law in Indra Sawhney case. Moreover, the matter also involves interpretation and interplay between Article
16(1), Article 16(4), Article 338 and Article 341 of the Constitution of India
as well.
In this view of the matter, we refer the
matter for consideration of the above aspects by the larger Bench. Let the
matter be placed before the Chief
Justice on administrative side for appropriate
order."
See “Plea to exclude SC/ST creamy layer from quota”, The
Hindu, January 29, 2018. (http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/plea-to-exclude-scst-creamy-layer-from-quota/article22544974.ece)
[3] As per the
creamy-layer criteria issued by Government of India DOPT O.M.
No.36012/22/93-Est. (SCT) dated 8.9.1993 (also adopted by Supreme Court in
judgment in Ashoka Kumar
Thakur Vs. Union of India and Ors (Civil writ petition no.
265/2006) on 27% OBC reservation in Central
higher educational institutions) actually the creamy-layer income limit
of Rs. 6 lakhs is not applicable to "salary income" of
“government servants and those employed in private sector" and
“farmer’s agricultural income”. Further, Only those candidates/applicants
will be treated in creamy-layer whose farmer parents are having irrigated land
which is equal to or more than 85% of the statuary ceiling area and the rule of
exclusion will not apply if the land holding of a family is exclusively
un- irrigated. In Haryana, there is no qualifying limit of 85%. (Note:
Ceiling on land holding varies in different States.) Only
“business income” is reckoned into creamy layer limit. The
Applicants are to be checked by income/posts/landholding made/held by their
parents. In rule- (6) showing creamy-layer limit of Rs.4.50 lakhs (now
spiked to 6 lakhs) following explanation is already given: “Income from
salaries or agricultural land shall not be clubbed with income” . In terms
of creamy-layer criteria issued by Government of India DOPT O.M.
No.36012/22/93-Est. (SCT) dated 8.9.1993, Government of India clarification dt
14 October 2004 and NCBC Letter to Government of India in July 2016, income
from salaries [Government as well as PSU, Banks Autonomous bodies,
private where no equivalence or comparability of posts vis-a-vis posts in
government has been evaluated (in fact no such evaluation at
all took place yet as clear from said NCBC letter to Government of India)]
and agricultural land both shall not be clubbed with the annual
income of parents because there is a separate rule number (2) & (3)
provided on the basis of “post held” for salaried persons & rule
number (5) is provided on the basis of “land holdings” for persons holding
agricultural land. Government of India DOPT O.M. No
36033/1/2013-Estt. (Res)dated 27-5-2013 has further raised the income limit
from Rs. 4.5 lakh to Rs. 6 lakh per annum for determining the creamy layer
among OBCs.
The Supreme Court will
hear a petition to exclude the affluent members, or the creamy layer, of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes from the benefits of reservation. A
Bench, led by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, will hear the petition which
argues that the rich among the SCs/STs are “snatching away” the benefits, while
the deserving and impoverished continue to “bite the dust.” It is this lack of
percolation of benefits to the poor and really backward among these communities
that has led to social unrest, Naxalite movements and perennial poverty, it
says. This is the first time a petition has been filed urging the Supreme Court
to introduce the creamy layer concept for the SCs/STs. The petition, filed by advocate Shobhit Tiwari, refers to the
Constitution Bench’s 2006 judgment in the M. Nagaraj case that the “means test
[a scrutiny of the value of assets of an individual claiming reservation]
should be taken into consideration to exclude the creamy layer from the group
earmarked for reservation.”
See “Plea to exclude SC/ST creamy layer from quota”, The
Hindu, January 29, 2018. (http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/plea-to-exclude-scst-creamy-layer-from-quota/article22544974.ece)
[3] As per the
creamy-layer criteria issued by Government of India DOPT O.M.
No.36012/22/93-Est. (SCT) dated 8.9.1993 (also adopted by Supreme Court in
judgment in Ashoka Kumar
Thakur Vs. Union of India and Ors (Civil writ petition no.
265/2006) on 27% OBC reservation in Central
higher educational institutions) actually the creamy-layer income limit
of Rs. 6 lakhs is not applicable to "salary income" of
“government servants and those employed in private sector" and
“farmer’s agricultural income”. Further, Only those candidates/applicants
will be treated in creamy-layer whose farmer parents are having irrigated land
which is equal to or more than 85% of the statuary ceiling area and the rule of
exclusion will not apply if the land holding of a family is exclusively
un- irrigated. In Haryana, there is no qualifying limit of 85%. (Note:
Ceiling on land holding varies in different States.) Only
“business income” is reckoned into creamy layer limit. The
Applicants are to be checked by income/posts/landholding made/held by their
parents. In rule- (6) showing creamy-layer limit of Rs.4.50 lakhs (now
spiked to 6 lakhs) following explanation is already given: “Income from
salaries or agricultural land shall not be clubbed with income” . In terms
of creamy-layer criteria issued by Government of India DOPT O.M.
No.36012/22/93-Est. (SCT) dated 8.9.1993, Government of India clarification dt
14 October 2004 and NCBC Letter to Government of India in July 2016, income
from salaries [Government as well as PSU, Banks Autonomous bodies,
private where no equivalence or comparability of posts vis-a-vis posts in
government has been evaluated (in fact no such evaluation at
all took place yet as clear from said NCBC letter to Government of India)]
and agricultural land both shall not be clubbed with the annual
income of parents because there is a separate rule number (2) & (3)
provided on the basis of “post held” for salaried persons & rule
number (5) is provided on the basis of “land holdings” for persons holding
agricultural land. Government of India DOPT O.M. No
36033/1/2013-Estt. (Res)dated 27-5-2013 has further raised the income limit
from Rs. 4.5 lakh to Rs. 6 lakh per annum for determining the creamy layer
among OBCs.
GOI , Ministry of
Personnel, Public grievance & Pension, Dept of Personnel & Training
O.M. No. 36033/5/2004-Estt (Res) dt 14th October 2004 has amply
clarified that “THE CREAMY LAYER STATUS OF CANDIDATE/APPLICANT IS DETERMINED ON
THE BASIS OF THE STATUS OF HIS PARENTS AND NOT ON THE BASIS OF HIS OWN STATUS
OR INCOME OR ON THE BASIS OF STATUS OR INCOME OF HIS/HER SPOUSE. THEREFORE
WHILE DETERMINING THE CREAMY LAYER STATUS OF A PERSON THE STATUS OR THE INCOME
OF THE CANDIDATE HIMSELF OR OF HIS/HER SPOUSE SHALL NOT BE TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT”.
Present creamy layer
criteria is parent specific. Income from salaries and/or agricultural
land should be taken into the annual income of parents of the beneficiary
rather than keeping it confined to “business income” only. Moreover,
income/status of candidate/applicant himself/herself should also bear some
consideration in determining creamy layer status. The present ceiling of Rs. 6
Lakh should be rationalized and pegged at not more than Rs 3 lakh per annum.
The first ceiling for OBC reservation was fixed at Rs one lakh annually
in 1993, which was increased to Rs 2.5 lakh in 2004 and hiked to Rs. 4.5
Lakh in 2008 and further spiked to Rs 6 lakh in 2013. The present criterion of
creamy layer in OBCs’ compared with the limit of below poverty line is highly
ludicrous. As per the Government of India, poverty line for the urban areas is
Rs. 296 per month and for rural areas Rs. 276 per month. Although, income
ceiling vis-a-vis creamy layer in States is not necessarily in consonance with
central ceiling and it varies from State to State. For example, in Haryana and
Rajastan it is Rs 4.5 Lakh and Rs 2.5 Lakh respectively. (also note
the ANNUAL INCOME CRITERIA FOR ECONOMICALLY BACKWARD PERSONS IN GENERAL
CASTES CATEGORY in HARYANA: Total annual income of the FAMILY OF THE APPLICANT
should not CUMULATIVELY exceed Rs 2.5 LAKHS per annum FROM ALL SOURCES eg.
SALARY (PRIVATE, PUBLIC, GOVERNMENT SECTORS), AGRICULTURAL INCOME, BUSINESS,
PROFESSIONAL INCOME etc etc. . "Family"
for the purpose of applicant seeking reservation as "Economically
backward" is defined as follows: (a) Head of the family and his/her
spouse; (b) Dependent children and their spouses; (c) unmarried dependent
brothers and sisters).
12 comments:
Law wrt ceiling on Land Holding in Haryana and Delhi:-
( A) THE HARYANA CEILING ON LAND HOLDINGS Act 1972
Section 4. PERMISSIBLE AREA. -(1) The permissible area in relation to a land-owner or tenant or mortgagee with possession or partly in one capacity or partly in another, of person or family consisting of husband, wife and upto three minor children (hereinafter referred to as "the Primary unit of family"), shall be, in respect of-
(a) land under assured irrigation capable of growing at least two crops in a year (hereinafter referred to as the land under assured irrigation), 7.25 hectares; . b) land under assured irrigation capable' of growing at least one crop in a year, 10.9 hectares;
(c) land of all other types including land under orchard, 21.8 hectares. .
(2) The permissible area shall be increased by one-fifth of the permissible area of the primary unit of family for each additional member of family;
Provided that the permissible area shall not exceed twice the permissible area of the primary unit of family.
(3) The permissible area shall be further increased up to the permissible area of the primary unit of a family for each separate unit: (Vide Act No. 17 of 1976).
Provided that where the separate unit also owns any land, the same shall be taken into account for calculating the permissible area.
(4) -The permissible area shall be determined on the basis of valuation to be calculated in the prescribed manner taking into consideration the ownership of the means of irrigation, their intensity and such other factors as may be prescribed subject to the condition that the total physical holding does not exceed 21:8. hectares.
(5) In determining the permissible area for the purpose of clause (a) of sub-section (1) five hectare are of land under irrigation from privately-owned tubewells, pumping sets, etc., shall be equal to four hectares of land under irrigation from canal as defined in the Northern India Canal and Drainage Act, 1873 (Central Act 8 of 1873) or from State tubewells as defined in the Punjab State tubewells Act, 1954 (Punjab Act No. 21 of 1954).
(6) For evaluating the land of any person at any time under this Act, the land owned by him immediately before the commencement of this Act as well as the land acquired by him after such commencement by inheritance, bequest or gift from a person to whom he is an heir shall be evaluated as if the evaluation was being made on the appointed day and the land acquired by him after the appointed day in any other manner shall be evaluated as if the evaluation was being made on the date of such acquisition.
Note: Also see THE HARYANA CEILING ON LAND HOLDINGS (AMENDMENT) ACT, 2011 wrt non-applicability of said law of 1972 on land qua non-agricultural purposes/usages in urban and other areas.
(B) Delhi Land Holdings (Ceiling) Act, 1960.
Section 3.Ceiling on holding.- No person either by himself, or if he has a family, together with any other member of his family (hereinafter referred to as the person representing the family) shall, whether as a Bhumidhar or an Asami or partly in one capacity and partly in another, hold land in excess of thirty standard acres in the aggregate:
Provided that where the number of members of the family of such person exceeds five, he may hold five additional standard acres for each member in excess of five so however, as not to exceed sixty standard acres in the aggregate.
Explanation.- In the case of a company, an association or any other body of individuals, the ceiling limit shall be thirty standard acres
Vertical and Horizontal Reservation:
In Indra Sawhney vs. Union of India [1992 Supp.(3) SCC 217], the principle of horizontal reservation was explained thus (Pr.812) :
"all reservations are not of the same nature. There are two types of reservations, which may, for the sake of convenience, be referred to as 'vertical reservations’ and 'horizontal reservations’. The reservations in favour of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes [(under Article 16(4)] may be called vertical reservations whereas reservations in favour of physically handicapped (under clause (1) of Article 16] can be referred to as horizontal reservations. Horizontal reservations cut across the vertical reservations - what is called interlocking reservations. To be more precise, suppose 3% of the vacancies are reserved in favour of physically handicapped persons; this would be a reservation relatable to clause (1) of Article 16. The persons selected against the quota will be placed in that quota by making necessary adjustments; similarly, if he belongs to open competition (OC) category, he will be placed in that category by making necessary adjustments. Even after providing for these horizontal reservations, the percentage of reservations in favour of backward class of citizens remains - and should remain - the same."
A special provision for women made under Article 15(3), in respect of employment, is a special reservation as contrasted from the social reservation under Article 16(4). The method of implementing special reservation, which is a horizontal reservation, cutting across vertical reservations, was explained by this Court in Anil Kumar Gupta vs. State of U.P. [1995 (5) SCC 173] thus :
"The proper and correct course is to first fill up the Open Competition quota (50%) on the basis of merit; then fill up each of the social reservation quotas, i.e., S.C., S.T. and B.C; the third step would be to find out how many candidates belonging to special reservations have been selected on the above basis. If the quota fixed for horizontal reservations is already satisfied - in case it is an overall horizontal reservation - no further question arises. But if it is not so satisfied, the requisite number of special reservation candidates shall have to be taken and adjusted/accommodated against their respective social reservation categories by deleting the corresponding number of candidates therefrom. (If, however, it is a case of compartmentalized horizontal reservation, then the process of verification and adjustment/accommodation as stated above should be applied separately to each of the vertical reservations. In such a case, the reservation of fifteen percent in favour of special categories, overall, may be satisfied or may not be satisfied.)
6. We may also refer to two related aspects before considering the facts of this case. The first is about the description of horizontal reservation. For example, if there are 200 vacancies and 15% is the vertical reservation for SC and 30% is the horizontal reservation for women, the proper description of the number of posts reserved for SC, should be : "For SC : 30 posts, of which 9 posts are for women". We find that many a time this is wrongly described thus : "For SC : 21 posts for men and 9 posts for women, in all 30 posts". Obviously, there is, and there can be, no reservation category of ’male’ or ’men’.
Sub-categorization of 27% Central quota is on the card ahead of UP State Assembly election 2017
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/obc-quota-subcategorisation-the-next-political-gamble-ahead-of-up-polls/articleshow/54858906.cms?utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ETTWMain
Central govt raised the 'creamy layer' income cap in the OBC category to Rs 8 lakh per annum from Rs 6 lakh and also constituted a commission to examine the sub-categorisation of the Other Backward Classes (OBC) in central government jobs.
August 23, 2017
http://www.firstpost.com/india/centres-decision-to-raise-creamy-layer-income-cap-in-obc-category-will-empower-poor-says-ram-vilas-paswan-3966329.html
1/3 Press Information Bureau
Government of India
Cabinet
30-August-2017 14:50 IST
Cabinet approves equivalence of posts in Central Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs), Banks, Insurance Institutions with Posts in Government so that the children of those serving in lower categories in PSUs and other institutions can get the benefit of OBC reservations
The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has given its approval to the norms for establishing equivalence of posts in Government and posts in PSUs, PSBs etc. for claiming benefit of OBC reservations. This addresses an issue pending for nearly 24 years. This will ensure that the children of those serving in lower categories in PSUs and other institutions can get the benefit of OBC reservations, on par with children of people serving in lower categories in Government. This will also prevent children of those in senior positions in such institutions, who, owing to absence of equivalence of posts, may have been treated as non Creamy Layer by virtue of wrong interpretation of income standards from cornering government posts reserved for OBCs and denying the genuine non creamy layer candidates a level playing field.
The Union Cabinet also approved the increase in the present income criterion of Rs. 6 lakh per annum for applying the Creamy Layer restriction throughout the country, for excluding Socially Advanced Persons/Sections (Creamy Layer) from the purview of reservation of Other Backward Classes (OBCs). The new income criterion will be Rs. 8 lakh per annum. The increase in the income limit to exclude the Creamy Layer is in keeping with the increase in the Consumer Price Index and will enable more persons to take advantage of reservation benefits extended to OBCs in government services and admission to central educational institutions.
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These measures are a part of the Government's efforts to ensure greater social justice and inclusion for members of the Other Backward Classes. The Government has already introduced in Parliament, a bill to provide Constitutional status to the National Commission for Backward Classes. It has also decided to set up a Commission, under section 340 of the Constitution, to sub categorize the OBCs, so that the more backward among the OBC communities can also access the benefits of reservation for educational institutions and government jobs. All these decisions, taken together, are expected to ensure greater representation of OBCs in educational institutions and jobs, while also ensuring that the more under-privileged within the category are not denied their chance of social mobility.
Background:
In its judgment dated 16.11.1992 in WP(C) 930/1990 (IndraSawhney case) the Supreme Court had directed the Government to specify the basis, for exclusion of socially and economically advanced persons from Other Backward Classes by applying the relevant and requisite socio-economic criteria.
An Expert Committee was constituted in February 1993 which submitted its report on 10.03.1993 specifying the criteria for identification of socially advanced persons among OBCs i.e. the Creamy Layer. The report was accepted by the then Ministry of Welfare and forwarded to DoPT which issued an OM dated 08.09.1993 on exclusion from the Creamy Layer.
The OM of 08.09.1993 specifies six categories for identifying Creamy Layer (a) Constitutional/Statutory post (b) Group ‘A’ and Group ‘B’ Officers of Central and State Governments, employees of PSUs and Statutory bodies, universities, (c) Colonel and above in armed forces and equivalent in paramilitary forces (d) professionals like Doctors, Lawyers, Management Consultants, Engineers etc. (e) Property owners with agricultural holdings or vacant land and/or buildings and (f) income/wealth tax asessee.
The OM further stipulates that the said parameters would apply mutatis mutandis to officers holding equivalent or comparable posts in PSUs, Banks, Insurance Organizations, Universities, etc. and Government was required to determine equivalence of positions in these organizations with those in Government.
Pending the equivalence to the established in these institutions Income criteria would apply for the officers in these Institutions.
However, this exercise of determining the equivalence of posts in Government and posts in PSUs, PSBs etc. had not been initiated. The determination of equivalence of posts has been thus pending for almost 24 years.
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The matter of formulating equivalence has since been examined in detail. In PSUs, all Executive level posts i.e. Board level executives and managerial level posts would be treated as equivalent to group 'A' posts in Government and will be considered Creamy Layer. Junior Management Grade Scale–1 and above of Public Sector Banks, Financial Institutions and Public Sector Insurance Corporations will be treated as equivalent to Group 'A' in the Government of India and considered as Creamy Layer. For Clerks and Peons in PSBs, FIs and PSICs, the Income Test as revised from time to time will be applicable. These are the broad guidelines and each individual Bank, PSU, Insurance Company would place the matter before their respective board to identify individual posts.
1/2 Press Information Bureau
Government of India
Cabinet
30-August-2017 14:50 IST
Cabinet approves equivalence of posts in Central Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs), Banks, Insurance Institutions with Posts in Government so that the children of those serving in lower categories in PSUs and other institutions can get the benefit of OBC reservations
The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has given its approval to the norms for establishing equivalence of posts in Government and posts in PSUs, PSBs etc. for claiming benefit of OBC reservations. This addresses an issue pending for nearly 24 years. This will ensure that the children of those serving in lower categories in PSUs and other institutions can get the benefit of OBC reservations, on par with children of people serving in lower categories in Government. This will also prevent children of those in senior positions in such institutions, who, owing to absence of equivalence of posts, may have been treated as non Creamy Layer by virtue of wrong interpretation of income standards from cornering government posts reserved for OBCs and denying the genuine non creamy layer candidates a level playing field.
The Union Cabinet also approved the increase in the present income criterion of Rs. 6 lakh per annum for applying the Creamy Layer restriction throughout the country, for excluding Socially Advanced Persons/Sections (Creamy Layer) from the purview of reservation of Other Backward Classes (OBCs). The new income criterion will be Rs. 8 lakh per annum. The increase in the income limit to exclude the Creamy Layer is in keeping with the increase in the Consumer Price Index and will enable more persons to take advantage of reservation benefits extended to OBCs in government services and admission to central educational institutions.
2/2
These measures are a part of the Government's efforts to ensure greater social justice and inclusion for members of the Other Backward Classes. The Government has already introduced in Parliament, a bill to provide Constitutional status to the National Commission for Backward Classes. It has also decided to set up a Commission, under section 340 of the Constitution, to sub categorize the OBCs, so that the more backward among the OBC communities can also access the benefits of reservation for educational institutions and government jobs. All these decisions, taken together, are expected to ensure greater representation of OBCs in educational institutions and jobs, while also ensuring that the more under-privileged within the category are not denied their chance of social mobility.
Background:
In its judgment dated 16.11.1992 in WP(C) 930/1990 (IndraSawhney case) the Supreme Court had directed the Government to specify the basis, for exclusion of socially and economically advanced persons from Other Backward Classes by applying the relevant and requisite socio-economic criteria.
An Expert Committee was constituted in February 1993 which submitted its report on 10.03.1993 specifying the criteria for identification of socially advanced persons among OBCs i.e. the Creamy Layer. The report was accepted by the then Ministry of Welfare and forwarded to DoPT which issued an OM dated 08.09.1993 on exclusion from the Creamy Layer.
The OM of 08.09.1993 specifies six categories for identifying Creamy Layer (a) Constitutional/Statutory post (b) Group ‘A’ and Group ‘B’ Officers of Central and State Governments, employees of PSUs and Statutory bodies, universities, (c) Colonel and above in armed forces and equivalent in paramilitary forces (d) professionals like Doctors, Lawyers, Management Consultants, Engineers etc. (e) Property owners with agricultural holdings or vacant land and/or buildings and (f) income/wealth tax asessee.
The OM further stipulates that the said parameters would apply mutatis mutandis to officers holding equivalent or comparable posts in PSUs, Banks, Insurance Organizations, Universities, etc. and Government was required to determine equivalence of positions in these organizations with those in Government.
Pending the equivalence to the established in these institutions Income criteria would apply for the officers in these Institutions.
However, this exercise of determining the equivalence of posts in Government and posts in PSUs, PSBs etc. had not been initiated. The determination of equivalence of posts has been thus pending for almost 24 years.
The matter of formulating equivalence has since been examined in detail. In PSUs, all Executive level posts i.e. Board level executives and managerial level posts would be treated as equivalent to group 'A' posts in Government and will be considered Creamy Layer. Junior Management Grade Scale–1 and above of Public Sector Banks, Financial Institutions and Public Sector Insurance Corporations will be treated as equivalent to Group 'A' in the Government of India and considered as Creamy Layer. For Clerks and Peons in PSBs, FIs and PSICs, the Income Test as revised from time to time will be applicable. These are the broad guidelines and each individual Bank, PSU, Insurance Company would place the matter before their respective board to identify individual posts.
½ Jat reservation: Punjab & Haryana HC upholds quota provision, refers matter to Backward Class panel
The Punjab and Haryana High Court on Friday upheld the provisions specified under the Haryana Backward Classes (Reservation in Services and Admission in Educational Institutions) Act 2016, which ensures 10 per cent quota to six communities, including Jats. The reservation, however, has been kept in abeyance and the case has been referred to the Backward Class Commission which has been asked to prepare a report on the percentage of quota.
In February 2016, the state saw violent protests by the Jat community demanding quota in jobs and educational institutions which brought Haryana to a halt. The agitation left many dead, injured many others.
The Haryana Assembly passed the Act in March 2016, carving out a new BC (C) category which included the communities of Jat, Jat Sikh, Muslim-Jat, Bishnoi, Ror and Tyagi. The Act provisioned for reservations to these.
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More than a year after the constitutional validity of an Act providing reservation to Jats and five other communities under the newly created BC (C) category was challenged, the Punjab and Haryana High Court on Friday directed that it would be kept in abeyance till March 31, 2018.
Sending the matter back to the Backward Classes Commission, the Bench of Justice Surinder Singh Saron and Justice Lisa Gill asked it file its report by then.
Pronouncing the order in an open court in the afternoon, the Bench directed the collection of quantifiable data till November 30. Objections to the data would be collected and uploaded on the commission website till December 31 before the completion of the remaining process.
The direction came on petitions filed by Murari Lal Gupta challenging the constitutional validity of the Haryana Backward Classes (Reservation in Services and Admission in Educational Institutions), Act, 2016.
‘The Haryana Backward Classes (Reservation in Services and Admission in Educational Institutions) Bill, 2016’ was passed unanimously by the Haryana Assembly on March 29, 2016. It was notified in the official gazette on May 12, 2016, by the state government.
Five other communities--Jat Sikh, Mulla Jat/Muslim Jat, Bishnoi, Ror and Tyagi--were to be entitled to get 10 per cent reservation in government services and admission in educational institutes. On May 26, 2016, the Bench headed by Justice Saron had stayed the reservation, while taking up a public interest litigation.
Justifying quota for Jat and five other communities, the State of Haryana had claimed that the High Court could examine the decision’s validity only under exceptional circumstances.
The State argued that the Supreme Court had set aside the Central government’s notification providing OBC quota for the Jat community, but it was not related to reservation to the Jat community under the state quota.
In his petition, Gupta had earlier sought directions for quashing the block ‘C’ of the Act providing reservation to Jat community under a newly carved BC (C) category.
Counsel for Kumhar Maha Sabha Vijay Kumar Jindal submitted that reservation to Jat community was provided under the new Act on the basis of Justice KC Gupta Commission report, which had already been quashed by the Supreme Court.
He stated that reservation on the basis of the Justice Gupta Commission report would tantamount to revision of a judicial order, which could not be done by the legislature.
He further submitted that in 2014 also the state government had introduced a bill to include Jats in the list of other backward classes for reservation in job and educational institutes. But, the Supreme Court in case of Ram Singh and others versus the Union of India had held that Jats were not backward socially, educationally and politically.
The Haryana State Government has issued notification dated 17.08.2016 in exercise of powers conferred by Section 2 (d) of the 2016 Act which reads as under:-
“Notification The 17th August, 2016 No. 808-SW (1).- In exercise of the powers conferred by clause (d) of Section 2 of the Haryana Backward Classes (Reservation in Service and Admission in Educational Institutions) Act, 2016 (15 of 2016), the Governor of Haryana hereby specify the following criteria for exclusion of creamy layer within the Backward Classes as per the Schedules appended to the Act, namely Schedule I, II & III. The children of persons having gross annual income of upto Three Lakh rupees shall first of all get the benefit of reservation in services and admission in educational institutions. The left out quota shall go to that class of Backward Classes of citizens who earn more than Three Lakh rupees but upto Six Lakh rupees per annum. The sections of the Backward Classes earning above Six Lakh rupees per annum shall be considered as Creamy Layer under Section 5 of the said Act. T.C. Gupta, Principal Secretary to Government Haryana Welfare of Scheduled Castes and Backward Classes Department.”
(As set-out in the judgment by Chandigarh High Court on 1ST September in CWP No. 9931of 2016 (O&M) - Murari Lal Versus State of Haryana and others)
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