IN THE HIGH COURT OF SINDH

AT LARKANA

 

Present:

Shamsuddin Abbasi, J.

Agha Faisal, J.

 

C.P D-973 of 2012               :           Waseem Ahmed vs.

Government of Pakistan and others.

For the Petitioner                 :           Mr. Habibullah G. Ghouri, Advocate

For the Respondents          :           Mr. Asif Hussain Chandio, Advocate 

For Federation of Pakistan:           Mr. Oshaq Ali Sangi, Assistant Attorney

General.

 

Date of hearing                    :           08.05.2024

 

Date of Order                        :           08.05.2024

 

 

ORDER

 

Agha Faisal, J. The Petitioner claims to have participated in competitive recruitment process in 2009 and upon failure to obtain employment filed this petition in 2012, prima facie the petition is barred by laches. The matter pertains to service in GENCO, admittedly devoid of statutory rules. Therefore, no case has been set forth to entertain this petition on such count either.

 

The Petitioner claims that Respondents No.6 to 14 ought not to have been appointed and that he should be appointed instead. Admittedly, the petitioner was not declared as successful in the competitive recruitment process and no case is made out to inquire into such proceedings, as sought in the petition, inter alia as the writ jurisdiction is not amenable for determination of disputed factual controversies requiring inquiry and / or evidence[1].

 

In so far as the prayer seeking cancellation of the respondents’ appointment is concerned, perhaps the petitioner seeks a writ of quo warranto; being a judicial remedy by virtue whereof a holder of public office may be called upon to demonstrate the right where under he holds office, failing which he may be ousted from such office[2]. The petition remained singularly unable to demonstrate any subsisting impediment in respect of the eligibility of the relevant respondents to hold office, hence, no case was made out to merit any interference in such regard. Even otherwise quo warranto proceedings are inquisitorial in nature, as opposed to adversarial, hence, it is imperative to consider the bona fides of the petitioner. In the present case the entire case of the petitioner is that she ought to have been appointed in place of the respondent; notwithstanding the fact that such a plea is untenable from the record demonstrated, the same could also not be sustained on the anvil of the bona fide requirement[3].

 

            Article 199 of the Constitution contemplates the discretionary[4] writ jurisdiction of this Court and the said discretion may be exercised in appropriate circumstances. In the present matter no case has been set forth before us for invocation of writ jurisdiction. In view hereof, this petition is hereby dismissed.

 

                                                                        Judge

 

Judge

                                                                                   

 

 



[1]2016 CLC 1; 2015 PLC 45; 2015 CLD 257; 2011 SCMR 1990; 2001 SCMR 574; PLD 2001 Supreme Court 415.

[2]Per Mansoor Ali Shah J. in Barrister Sardar Muhammad vs. Federation of Pakistan & Others reported as PLD 2013 Lahore 343.

[3]Per Mian Saqib Nisar CJ in Muhammad Hanif Abbassi vs. Jahangir Khan Tareen reported as PLD 2018 Supreme Court 118 - Relief in the nature of quo warranto should not be allowed as a matter of course, rather the conduct and the bona fides of the petitioner, the cause and the object of filing such petition was of considerable importance and should be examined. It should be ascertained if the petition had been filed with some mala fide intent or ulterior motive and to serve the purpose of someone else as the remedy should not be allowed to be a tool in the hands of the petitioners, who approached the Court with mala fide intentions and either had their own personal grudges and scores to settle with the holder of a public office or were a proxy for someone else who had a similar object or motive.

[4] Per Ijaz Ul Ahsan J. in Syed Iqbal Hussain Shah Gillani vs. PBC & Others reported as 2021 SCMR 425; Muhammad Fiaz Khan vs. Ajmer Khan & Another reported as 2010 SCMR 105.