The petitioner, who continuously served the ZilaBachat Vikas Samiti, Bilaspur for over two decades (initially as a Part-Time Helper since 2005 and later as a Daily Waged Class-IV worker since January 2015), challenged the state’s refusal to regularize her services. The respondents contended that the Samiti was a registered society and not a core government department, rendering state regularization policies inapplicable.
The High Court allowed the writ petition, ruling that the society possesses deep and pervasive state control, thereby qualifying as an “Other Authority” under Article 12 of the Constitution of India and functioning as an extended arm of the state. The Court held that a model employer cannot extract regular labor under temporary labels indefinitely. It directed the respondents to confer regularization upon the petitioner with effect from the policy date of April 22, 2020, with notional financial benefits up to the date of judgment and actual regular benefits, including seniority, thereafter.
1. Factual Matrix and Contentions
- Service Timeline: The petitioner was initially engaged as a Part-Time Helper on November 22, 2005, and her services were later converted to a daily wage Class-IV status on January 9, 2015, within the ZilaBachat Vikas Samiti, Bilaspur. She continuously served the institution for over 20 years.
- The State’s Objection: The State argued that because the petitioner was engaged by a registered society (the Samiti) rather than a core government department, she could not claim the benefit of the regularization policies circulated by the State Government for daily wage workers.
- The Petitioner’s Counter: The petitioner asserted that the society was entirely owned and structurally directed by the state, pointing to financial guidelines issued by the Principal Secretary (Finance) which strictly mandated that such departmental societies could not hire or recruit temporary or daily wage staff without express government approval.
2. Status of the Society under Article 12 of the Constitution
The High Court rejected the state’s defense by meticulously analyzing the origin and structural machinery of the ZilaBachat Vikas Samiti:
- Governmental Genesis: The society did not emerge independently; it was born directly out of a 1991 directive issued by the Director of Small Savings, Himachal Pradesh, instructing District Magistrates to constitute these bodies.
- Ex-Officio Control: The entire membership of the society consists of ex-officio government officials, and it is chaired directly by the Deputy Commissioner of the District.
- Public Function Test: The core objectives of the society—such as executing social development work, promoting local employment, and developing weaker sections of society—align perfectly with the socialist and welfare goals of the state.
- Ruling: Consequently, the Court held that the society is an “Other Authority” under Article 12. It functions as an extended limb of the Small Savings Department, meaning its daily wage staff cannot be discriminated against based on the institutional nomenclature of their employer.
3. Obligations of a Model Employer and Perennial Nature of Work
Reviewing the latest Supreme Court jurisprudence, including Jaggo v. Union of India (2024), Dharam Singh v. State of H.P. (2025), and Bhola Nath v. State of Jharkhand (2026), the High Court emphasized the constitutional standard required of state instrumentalities:
- Eradication of Permanent Ad-Hocism: The fact that the petitioner performed her duties uninterruptedly for over two decades structurally establishes that the nature of her work was regular, permanent, and recurring. The state cannot exploit labor by using nominal labels like “temporary” or “daily wager” in perpetuity to balance budgets or evade statutory employment benefits.
- Doctrine of Legitimate Expectation: When daily wagers are legally engaged and granted consistent extensions over decades, a valid constitutional expectation arises that their service will be formally recognized. They cannot be abruptly treated as surplus after dedicating their prime working years.
- Duty to Create Posts: Under the equality mandates of Articles 14 and 16, if a regular post is missing, the state is obligated to create a regular post to house an eligible worker who has fulfilled the conditions of the governing framework.
4. Application of the Regularization Policy and Relief
- Policy Criteria: The State Regularization Policy dated April 22, 2020, mandated that daily wage/contingent paid workers who completed five years of continuous service (with a minimum of 240 days in a calendar year) as of March 31, 2020, were eligible for regularization.
- Petitioner’s Eligibility: Calculating from her commencement date of January 9, 2015, the petitioner successfully completed her five years of daily wage service on January 9, 2020, safely satisfying the 240-day baseline.
- Manner of Benefits: The Court directed that regularization must be granted with effect from April 22, 2020 (the date the policy was officially circulated). The financial relief for the back-period (from April 22, 2020, to the date of the judgment) shall be structured as notional. However, regular actual financial benefits must be released post-judgment, and her seniority must be fully preserved and counted from the original 2020 policy date.
5. Final Order
The High Court allowed the writ petition, set aside the restrictive communications issued by the respondents, and directed them to execute the regularization, ordering the creation of a regular post if explicitly required to fulfill the mandate.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 262
Manju Devi V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 06.05.2026)
Loading Viewer...





