In Baby Rani v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Another (CWP No. 6336 of 2023, decided on May 12, 2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh adjudicated a service dispute regarding whether a waitlisted candidate can claim appointment against a vacancy created by the resignation of a selected candidate. The petitioner, who stood second in the merit list under the Scheduled Caste category for the post of Assistant District Attorney, sought a Mandamus to be appointed after the top-ranked candidate joined the post but subsequently resigned five months later.
The High Court dismissed the petition, ruling that once a selected candidate actively joins duty, the advertised post stands legally exhausted and cannot be treated as “unfilled”. The Court held that a subsequent resignation gives rise to a “fresh vacancy” that cannot be filled by operating an old waiting list, but must instead be filled exclusively through a fresh public advertisement to satisfy the constitutional mandate of Article 14.
1. Factual Background and Claims
- The Recruitment: The Himachal Pradesh Public Service Commission initiated a selection process to fill 24 posts of Assistant District Attorneys, which included one post reserved for the Scheduled Caste category.
- The Selection & Joining: Babita Dhiman secured the top rank and was recommended for the Scheduled Caste vacancy. She officially joined the post on March 1, 2023. The petitioner stood second in order of merit within the same category.
- The Resignation: After serving for five months, Ms. Dhiman resigned from the post on August 1, 2023, following her selection into the Himachal Pradesh Administrative Service.
- The Relief Sought: The petitioner argued that as the next eligible candidate on the merit list, she should be pushed up to occupy the vacated seat. She filed a writ of Mandamus demanding the Commission sponsor her name under Rule 7(D)(ix) of the 2021 Rules.
2. Key Legal Issues & Court’s Observations
A. Scope of Waiting Lists under the 2021 Statutory Rules
The High Court strictly evaluated the text of Rule 7(D)(ix) of the Himachal Pradesh Public Service Commission (Procedure and Transaction of Business and Procedure for Conduct of the Screening Tests/Examinations and Personality Tests Etc.) Rules, 2021:
- Condition Precedent: Under the statutory rules, the Commission’s authority to substitute or recommend a replacement candidate from a waitlist is strictly conditional upon a recommended selectee “failing to join the post”.
- Exhaustion of the Post: In this case, the top-ranked candidate did not fail to join. She actively accepted the appointment letter and entered service. Justice Ajay Mohan Goel observed that the exact moment the selectee assumed duty, the advertised slot was legally filled and exhausted. Because the non-joining contingency was never triggered, the waiting list spent its force and could not be extended to cover subsequent operational resignations.
B. Characterization of Vacancies: Advertised vs. Fresh Vacancy
The petitioner asserted that the vacancy caused by the resignation should be viewed as part of the original selection pool. The High Court rejected this contention by adhering to settled judicial precedents:
- The Rule of Fresh Vacancies: Relying on the Supreme Court precedent Sudesh Kumar Goyal v. State of Haryana (2023), the Court held that if a selected candidate joins a post and then resigns, the resulting vacancy is classified as a “fresh vacancy”. It ceases to be an unfilled advertised slot from the past selection.
- Limits of Recruitment Pools: Citing the High Court Division Bench ruling in Dharmender Kumar v. State of H.P. (2020), the Court reiterated that a waiting list does not serve as a permanent, floating reservoir of recruitment. Once the advertised positions are occupied, the select list is legally dead. Filling a post-resignation vacancy via an old roster violates Article 14 of the Constitution, as such vacancies must be filled through fresh public advertisements to allow all eligible citizens a fair chance to participate.
C. Rejection of Negative Equality Claims
To bolster her case, the petitioner cited an administrative incident from 2013 (Annexure P-7) where a waitlisted candidate was accommodated after a post was vacated. The High Court dismissed the comparison:
- The 2013 incident occurred long before the codification of the restrictive 2021 Rules.
- Even if an irregular administrative accommodation took place in the past, it was executed in ignorance of settled apex court rulings. A prior unlawful action or executive error cannot form the basis of a claim for equality under Article 14 (“negative equality”). A High Court cannot issue a writ commanding an authority to act in direct violation of the law established by the Supreme Court.
3. Final Conclusion of the Court
- Dismissal: Finding no legal merit or statutory backing in the petitioner’s claims, the High Court dismissed the writ petition.
- Consequential Orders: All connected miscellaneous applications were formally disposed of, and no order as to costs was issued.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 271
Baby Rani V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Another (D.O.J. 12.05.2026)
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