MUHAMMAD YOUSUF versus INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF POLICE, PUNJAB CIVIL. SECRETARIAT, LAHORE
Section 4 (1) (b) Constitution of Pakistan (1973), Article 199 Maintaining a Constitutional Appeal The public employee's fitness for promotion of public servants, the appointment of a government employee, was that his colleagues were promoted. , But its promotion was stopped without validity. The service tribunal had sought the appeal against the government employee, deciding the appeal and also said that the tribunal had no jurisdiction to interfere with the determination of the fitness of the public servants, before the service tribunal failed. The ruling issued by the authority in the jurisdiction under the jurisdiction of the civil servant assumed the responsibility was that the public servant should have filed an appeal before the Supreme Court and the present constitutional petition would be accepted by a competent service tribunal. It was justified that the tribunal had no jurisdiction in the matter This was not the case with section 4 (1) (b) of the PK once the Service Tribunals Act, 1974, once the Service Tribunal concluded that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to review the matter. If not, then the Tribunal should not have made any inquiries as to the merits of the case to which the civil servant had sued. After accepting the decision of the service tribunal order presented by the authorities, the constitutional petition was set aside and the matter was remanded to the public servants to decide on the representation filed by the government employees, Subsequent constitutional application was granted
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