In the case of Seema Devi v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed a conflict regarding the recruitment of Part Time Multi Task Workers and the rights of candidates with intellectual disabilities. The Court ruled that “mild intellectual disability” is a recognized benchmark disability and does not disqualify a candidate from employment unless the department has specifically excluded that disability for the post in question.
The Core Conflict: Merit vs. Misinterpreted Disability
The case arose when the Education Department filled a post for a Part Time Multi Task Worker in Government Primary School, Luharda.
- Initial Appointment: The petitioner, Seema Devi, was initially appointed to the post in July 2022.
- The Appeal: A private respondent (Rajneesh Thakur) challenged her appointment, arguing that he was more meritorious but had been rejected solely because the selection committee deemed him “mentally retarded”.
- Termination: The Appellate Authority allowed the private respondent’s appeal, leading to the termination of the petitioner’s services in March 2024.
Distinguishing Intellectual Disability from “Unsound Mind”
The High Court emphasized that administrative authorities had misinterpreted the private respondent’s condition.
- Benchmark Status: Under government policy (specifically a Department of Personnel letter dated 22.06.2020), “mental illness” and “intellectual disability” are classified as benchmark disabilities entitled to reservation and consideration for direct recruitment.
- Medical Clarity: The Court noted that the term “unsoundness of mind” is not used in medical parlance to describe intellectual disabilities.
- Expert Opinion: A medical committee from AIIMS Bilaspur and the District Disability Medical Board found that while the respondent had a “mild intellectual disability” (50%), there was “nothing to suggest” he was unfit for the duties of a Multi Task Worker.
The Court’s Ruling on Correcting Legal Errors
The Court held that the initial denial of appointment to the private respondent was legally unjustifiable because he was the more meritorious candidate and his disability did not bar him from the post.
- Validation of Experts: The Court refused to substitute its own view for that of the medical experts who found the respondent fit for service.
- Dismissal of Petition: Finding no infirmity in the appellate orders that favored the respondent, the High Court dismissed Seema Devi’s petition.
A Compassionate Directive
Recognizing the unique circumstances of the case—where the petitioner herself belongs to a disabled category and had already served in the post for 21 months—the Court made an exceptional recommendation. It “impressed upon” the Education Department to adjust the petitioner in any other vacant post in District Bilaspur as an exceptional case.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Seema Devi V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D. O. J. 24-02-2026)
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 38






