The case of Tej Ram v. Himachal Pradesh Electricity Board Ltd. and Anothercenters on the legal requirement to count “work-charge” service toward the qualifying period for pensionary benefits.
Core Legal Principle
It is well-settled law that work-charge status followed by regular appointment must be counted as qualifying service for the purpose of pension and other retiral benefits. Any executive instructions that exclude this period are considered unconstitutional and violative of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
Factual Background
- Service Timeline: The petitioner was initially engaged as a daily wager in April 1987, conferred work-charge status in November 2002, and regularized in January 2010. He retired from service in May 2012.
- The Denial: The respondent Authority denied the petitioner a pension because they only counted his regular service (approx. 2 years) and a portion of his daily wage service (using a formula where 5 years of daily wage equals 1 year of regular service).
- The Error: In making this calculation, the Authority totally ignored nearly nine years of work-charge service rendered by the petitioner between 2002 and 2010.
The High Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel set aside the denial of pension based on the following determinations:
- Glaring Mistake: The Court found that the Authority committed a “glaring mistake” by failing to refer to or include the work-charge period in its eligibility calculations.
- Inclusion Leads to Eligibility: Had the nine-year work-charge period been included, the petitioner would have easily met the 10-year qualifying service threshold required for a pension.
- Binding Precedent: The Court relied on settled law from State of H.P. vs. Matwar Singh, which established that work-charge service is a component of qualifying service. It noted that the Authority’s reliance on the Sunder Singh case to deny the claim was misplaced because that case actually supports the “doctrine of proportionate equality” for workers.
Conclusion
The Court quashed the order denying the pension and directed the respondents to grant the petitioner his pension effective from January 1, 2018. The State was ordered to pay all arrears within three months and begin regular monthly pension payments starting in May 2026.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 180
Tej Ram V. Himachal Pradesh Electricity Board Ltd. And Another (D.O.J. 09.04-2026)
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