In the case of Phulamu Devi v. State of H.P. & Others (2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a petition filed by the widow of a deceased employee seeking family pension and other pensionary benefits,.
The following is a summary of the judgment:
Case Background
The petitioner’s husband, Ranjha Ram, worked as a Helper for the respondents, initially as a daily wager (1983–1996) and later with work-charge status from January 1, 1997,. He resigned from service on August 13, 2003, and his resignation was accepted later that year. Following his death, his widow (the petitioner) approached the Court in 2018—fifteen years after the resignation—claiming that his total service entitled him to pensionary benefits,.
Key Findings of the Court
The Court dismissed the petition based on the following legal grounds and factual findings:
- Forfeiture of Service on Resignation: Under Rule 26 of the CCS (Pension) Rules, 1972, resignation from a post entails the forfeiture of all past service unless it is specifically allowed to be withdrawn in the public interest,. Consequently, the service rendered by the deceased prior to his resignation could not be counted toward pension eligibility,.
- Insufficient Qualifying Service: Even if the husband’s service were to be counted, the Court noted he had rendered only 6 years, 7 months, and 13 days of regular service,. This was significantly below the mandatory 10-year threshold required for pensionary benefits under the applicable rules,.
- Resignation vs. Voluntary Retirement: The Court emphasized that “resignation” and “voluntary retirement” are distinct legal concepts,. While voluntary retirement allows for retiral benefits after a prescribed period of qualifying service and requires employer permission, resignation is a unilateral act that results in the complete cessation of the master-and-servant relationship and the loss of benefits,,. The Court declined to reclassify the resignation as voluntary retirement,.
- Stale Claim and Delay: The employee resigned in 2003, but the claim for pension was not raised until 2018,. The Court held that “stray claims cannot be raked up” after such a long period and dismissed the petition on the grounds of delay and laches,.
Legal Conclusion
The Court concluded that since the deceased had resigned and did not meet the minimum service requirements, neither he nor his legal heirs were entitled to pensionary or compassionate allowances,. The petition was dismissed as being devoid of merit and barred by significant delay,.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 83
Phulamu Devi V. State Of H.P And Others (D.O.J. 12-03-2026)






