Administrative Exigency Over Personal Preference: High Court Clarifies “Couple Case” Transfer Policy
In the judgment of Ashok Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh, the High Court dismissed a challenge to a transfer order, ruling that the State’s policy regarding “couple cases” does not grant employees a vested right to be posted at a specific station. The Court emphasized that personal interests must remain subservient to administrative requirements and public interest.
The Dispute: Transfer and Representation Rejection
The petitioner, a State Cadre employee, was transferred from GSSS Kashmaila (District Mandi) to GSSS Deothi (District Solan) after completing his normal tenure. He challenged the transfer on two main grounds:
- Couple Case Status: He argued that because his wife is also a government employee, the authorities erred by disturbing his current posting.
- D.O. Note Allegation: He claimed the transfer was improperly motivated by a “D.O. (Demi-Official) Note”.
The Court’s Legal Reasoning
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel rejected the petitioner’s arguments based on several key principles of service law:
- No Vested Right in “Couple Case” Policy: The Court clarified that while the State’s Transfer Policy mandates an “endeavour” to post husband and wife at the same or contiguous stations, it does not confer an indefeasible or vested right upon the couple to choose their station.
- Duty to Serve: As a State Cadre employee, the petitioner is legally duty-bound to serve at any station where he is posted by the department.
- Delay as an “Afterthought”: The Court noted a significant procedural delay: the petitioner’s representation was rejected in August 2025, yet he waited until February 2026 to file his petition. The Court viewed this six-month gap as evidence that the legal challenge was an “afterthought”.
Medical Considerations and Proximity to Care
During the proceedings, the petitioner highlighted that his wife suffers from Hepatitis-B, requiring monthly treatment at PGI Chandigarh. Ironically, the Court observed that his new posting in District Solan is actually closer to Chandigarh than his previous station in Mandi.
Conclusion and Liberty to the Parties
The High Court dismissed the petition but provided a compassionate observation to assist the family:
- Wife’s Transfer: The dismissal does not prevent the petitioner or his wife from making a joint representation to the authorities to have the wife moved to a station contiguous to the petitioner’s new location in Solan.
- Sympathetic Consideration: The Court directed the authorities to sympathetically consider such a request if supported by medical evidence of the wife’s condition.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Ashok Kumar V. State Of Himachal Pradesh And Another (D.O.J. 27-02-2026)
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 48






