The case of Suram Singh and Others v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Otherscenters on the principle of Article 14 of the Constitution, specifically prohibiting hostile discrimination by an employer when granting service benefits to similarly situated employees.
Factual Background
- The Recruitment: In 2002, the petitioners and one Shri Daya Krishan were recruited by the Kangra Central Cooperative Bank as Helper-cum-Peons against posts reserved for ex-servicemen.
- The Benefit Granted: In February 2007, the Bank passed a resolution accepting Shri Daya Krishan’s request for pay protection based on his prior service in the Army. His pay was fixed at ₹5,150/-.
- The Denial: When the petitioners (who were appointed in the same process and were also ex-servicemen) requested the same benefit, the Bank denied their claim.
The Bank’s Defense
The Bank raised two primary arguments to justify the denial:
- Absence of Rules: It argued there was no specific provision in the Bank’s rules or bye-laws that mandated pay protection for service rendered in the Armed Forces.
- The “Mistake” Defense: The Bank claimed the benefit given to Shri Daya Krishan was erroneously conferred. It contended that just because a mistake was made once, the Bank was not legally bound to repeat that mistake for others.
The High Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel allowed the petition, finding the Bank’s actions to be discriminatory and unsustainable in law. The Court’s reasoning included:
- Prohibition of Double Standards: The Court held that an employer cannot apply double standards to employees who are in identical circumstances.
- Failure to Rescind the “Mistake”: The Court noted that if the Bank truly believed the benefit given to Shri Daya Krishan was a mistake, it should have withdrawn or rescinded that relief. Since the Bank allowed Shri Daya Krishan to continue enjoying the benefit for nearly two decades, it could not use the “mistake” argument to deny the same treatment to the petitioners.
- Hostile Discrimination: Because the petitioners and Shri Daya Krishan were recruited in the same process and held the same status, treating them differently without a valid reason constituted a violation of the right to equality.
- Ignoring Bye-Law Technicalities: The Court intentionally did not rule on whether the Bank’s rules required pay protection; instead, it focused solely on the fact that once the Bank voluntarily acceded to one employee’s request, it was legally obligated to treat similarly situated colleagues the same way.
Conclusion and Relief
The High Court allowed the petition and directed the Bank to:
- Extend the benefit of pay protection to the petitioners for their Armed Forces service.
- Ensure this benefit is granted from the same “due date” it was provided to Shri Daya Krishan.
- Release all actual financial arrears and consequential benefits, noting that the petitioners had been diligently agitating for this relief since 2008.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 197
Suram Singh And Others V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 21.04.2026)
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