The Direct Path Wins: High Court Quashes “Manifestly Arbitrary” Panchayat Reorganization
In the case of Nehru Yuva Club of Village Manlog-Badog&Anr. v. State of H.P. & Ors., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh intervened in a government notification that reorganized Gram Panchayats, ruling that the State cannot use irrational geographical measurements to justify administrative changes,,.
Case Overview
The petitioners, representing the residents of Village Manlog-Badog, challenged a notification dated January 27, 2026, which excluded their village from Gram Panchayat Hanuman Badog and included it in Gram Panchayat Darlaghat,. The residents argued that the move was forced upon them despite their objections and that it disregarded the physical reality of their location,.
The “Circuitous Road” Controversy
The central dispute revolved around the distance between the villages. The State authorities justified the move by calculating the distance from Manlog-Badog to its original Panchayat (Hanuman Badog) as 14 km via a circuitous motorable road,,. However, the petitioners proved that:
- The two villages are contiguous (sharing a boundary),,.
- There is a direct pedestrian path and a Panchayat road connecting the two villages that is only 2.5 km long,,,.
The Court found the State’s method of measuring distance unreasonable, comparing it to measuring the distance between two adjacent buildings by taking a massive detour through a distant city center.
Irrational Population and Rights Imbalance
The Court highlighted further irrationality in the reorganization’s impact on population distribution:
- Village Manlog-Badog has a small population of only 280 residents,,.
- The State removed this small village from a mid-sized Panchayat (Hanuman Badog, pop. 1500) and added it to an already large one (Darlaghat, pop. 4500),.
- Furthermore, the move threatened the residents’ customary forestry rights in “Jungle Manlog,” which remained part of the original Panchayat,.
The Legal Principle: Judicial Review vs. Election Bar
The State raised a technical objection, arguing that Article 243-O of the Constitution bars judicial interference in delimitation matters once the election process has begun,. However, the Court, citing recent Supreme Court precedents, ruled that:
- Article 243-O does not impose a complete bar on judicial review,,.
- The High Court can intervene under Article 226 if the government’s action is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or irrational,,.
- The Court is the “guardian of public interest” and must ensure that citizens are not left solely at the mercy of administrative commissions.
Conclusion
Justice Vivek Singh Thakur and Justice Ranjan Sharma concluded that the reorganization was based on a flawed factual matrix and ignored factors like contiguity and public convenience,. The Court quashed the notification, restored Village Manlog-Badog to Gram Panchayat Hanuman Badog, and criticized the State for undertaking such “hasty” and “large-scale” reorganizations just before the expiration of the Panchayats’ terms,,.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 73
Nehru Yuva Club of Village Manlog-Badog&Anr. V. State of H.P. &Ors. (D.O.J.10-03-2026)





