Res Judicata and the Finality of Seniority: High Court Dismisses Stale Claims for Regularization
In the judgment of Jarnail Singh v. Himachal State Electricity Board Ltd., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a petition seeking seniority from 1991 and regularization from 1996. The Court ruled that an employee cannot re-litigate issues that were either conclusively settled by a Division Bench or voluntarily abandoned in earlier legal proceedings.
The Conflict: A Thirty-Year Dispute
The petitioner was initially engaged as a daily-wage Beldar in 1991. His career was marked by multiple rounds of litigation following two service terminations in 1999 and 2001. After a series of appeals, a Division Bench in 2019 (later modified in a 2020 Review Petition) settled his date of seniority as August 20, 1999. In the present petition, the employee sought to bypass these rulings to claim seniority from his original 1991 engagement and regularization from 1996 based on a historical settlement.
Legal Reasoning: The Bar of Res Judicata
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel rejected the petition based on several fundamental legal principles:
- Abandonment of Claims (Order XXIII, Rule 1): The Court noted that in a 2000 Original Application, the petitioner had specifically asked for regularization but chose not to press that prayer. Because he abandoned the claim without seeking permission from the Tribunal to file it again later, he was legally barred from re-agitating the issue.
- Constructive Res Judicata: The petitioner relied on a settlement between the Board and its employees that existed long before his previous court cases. The Court held that since he failed to raise this issue in earlier rounds of litigation when he had the opportunity, he could not bring it up now as an “afterthought”.
- Hierarchy of Bench Decisions: The petitioner’s seniority had been specifically fixed to August 20, 1999, by a Division Bench. The Court emphasized that a Single Judge cannot issue a mandamus that contradicts or overrides a settled judgment of a higher (Division) Bench.
- Limitations of Executing Courts: The Court clarified that while the petitioner claimed the Executing Court gave him liberty to file this petition, an Executing Court cannot go behind the decree. The underlying “decree” in this case was the Division Bench’s final determination of his seniority date.
Final Ruling
The High Court found the petition to be “completely misconceived” and an attempt to reopen settled matters. Consequently, the petition was dismissed, affirming that the doctrine of finality prevents perpetual litigation over the same employment benefits.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Jarnail Singh V. Himachal State Electricity Board Ltd. & Another (D.O.J. 26-02-2026)
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 45





