The 25-Year Local Stretch: Why Decades of Proximity Do Not Bar a Tribal Posting
In the case of Sh. Raman Singh v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed the validity of a transfer order involving a state cadre employee who had served near his residence for a quarter-century.
Case Overview
The petitioner, a Superintendent Grade-II, challenged a transfer order dated December 22, 2025, which moved him from GSSS Mubarkpur (District Una) to GSS Jahalma (District Lahaul&Spiti). He contended that since he had only joined his current station in June 2025, he should be allowed to complete a normal tenure of three to five years before being moved again.
The State’s Justification
The State government opposed the petition by highlighting the petitioner’s long history of local postings. Records showed that since October 2000, the petitioner had consistently served at stations contiguous to each other, all within 15 to 20 kilometers of his residence in District Kangra. The State argued that the transfer was justified by “clubbing the previous stays” of the petitioner in the region.
The Court’s Ruling
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel dismissed the petition, emphasizing that an employee holding a State Cadre post has a fundamental obligation to serve across the entire state. The Court’s decision rested on several key principles:
- Duty to Serve Diverse Stations: The Court held that a State Cadre employee should be willing to be posted at different stations, including tribal areas, rather than expecting to remain near home indefinitely.
- Reciprocity to the Department: Having been accommodated at stations of his choice for more than 25 years, the Court remarked that the petitioner “owes at least this much to the Department” to serve elsewhere for a reasonable time.
- Tribal Postings are Not Punitive: The Court explicitly rejected the notion that a transfer to a tribal area is “bad” or constitutes a punishment. It noted that citizens in tribal regions deserve administrative services just as much as those in other areas.
- Administrative Necessity: The Court warned that if it routinely interfered with tribal transfers, the government would struggle to find incumbents willing to serve in those regions, leading to an administrative imbalance.
Conclusion
The High Court found no merit in the petitioner’s grievance, ruling that his long-term stay in one vicinity justified the transfer to a tribal station. The petition and all pending applications were subsequently dismissed.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 61
Sh. Raman Singh V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J.) 03-03-2026






