In Sh. Vinay Jishtu v. State of H.P. and Another (CWP No. 4042 of 2026, decided on May 7, 2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh adjudicated a service law petition regarding the statutory time limits governing the continuation of a deemed suspension. The petitioner, a Senior Resident Doctor, was placed under deemed suspension following his arrest and custodial detention exceeding 48 hours in connection with a criminal case under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and the POCSO Act. Although he was released on bail and reported back for duty on December 22, 2025, the respondent-department failed to review his suspension within the mandated 90-day window, issuing a belated extension only on April 7, 2026, due to an ongoing legislative assembly session.
The High Court allowed the writ petition, quashing the delayed extension as non-est in the eyes of law. The Court held that under Rules 10(6) and 10(7) of the Central Civil Services (Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules, 1965, a suspension order automatically loses its efficacy and becomes ipso facto invalid if it is not formally reviewed and extended by a competent authority before the initial 90 days lapse. Administrative exigencies cannot cure a statutory failure, and a belated review cannot retroactively breathe life into a legally dead order.
1. Factual Background and Reliefs Sought
- The Arrest and Deemed Suspension: The petitioner was serving as a Senior Resident Doctor at Indira Gandhi Medical College and Hospital (IGMC), Shimla, when he was arrested on October 6, 2025, in connection with an FIR registered under Section 64(2)(m) of the BNS and Section 6 of the POCSO Act. Consequently, he was placed under deemed suspension effective from his arrest date via an order dated December 8, 2025.
- Release and Reporting: The petitioner was granted bail on December 20, 2025, and officially reported for duty to the Directorate of Health Services on December 22, 2025, while requesting the revocation of his suspension.
- The Administrative Delay: The department was fully aware of his release and return by December 22, 2025. Under the statutory framework, the suspension was required to be reviewed within 90 days of his release, making March 21, 2026, the strict deadline. Due to a Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) session, the department failed to conduct the review on time, later convening a Review Committee on April 7, 2026, to extend the suspension for an additional 90 days.
- Legal Action: The petitioner approached the High Court via a writ petition, seeking the quashing of the invalid suspension continuity and demanding full reinstatement with all consequential service benefits.
2. Key Legal Issues & Court’s Observations
A. Mandatory Timelines Under the CCS (CCA) Rules, 1965
The High Court conducted a rigorous textual analysis of Rule 10 of the CCS (CCA) Rules, 1965, clarifying the strict interaction between sub-rule (6), sub-rule (7), and its accompanying proviso:
- The 90-Day Rule: Rule 10(6) dictates that a suspension order must be reviewed by a competent authority, on the recommendations of a designated Review Committee, prior to the expiry of 90 days from its effective date.
- Calculation of Trigger Point: For a deemed suspension resulting from custodial detention under Rule 10(2), the proviso to Rule 10(7) clarifies that the 90-day countdown commences either from the exact date the government servant is released from detention or from the date such release is formally intimated to the appointing authority, whichever occurs later.
- Ipso Facto Invalidity: Rule 10(7) explicitly commands that a suspension order “shall not be valid after a period of 90 days unless it is extended after review”. Justice Ajay Mohan Goel observed that a harmonious construction of these provisions establishes that a timely review is a non-negotiable condition precedent. If the 90-day window closes without a reasoned extension order, the suspension legal architecture collapses automatically by operation of law.
B. Ineffectiveness of Post-Facto Extensions and Administrative Excuses
The state contended that the delay was unavoidable due to the legislative assembly session and that the subsequent review cured the lapse. The High Court firmly rejected this defense:
- Exigencies Cannot Override Statutes: Routine administrative workloads or ongoing legislative sessions are insufficient legal grounds to bypass or forgive a mandatory statutory deadline.
- No Retroactive Revival: Relying on the landmark Supreme Court ruling Union of India v. Dipak Mali (2010), the Court held that any review or extension executed after the initial 90 days has elapsed is a complete nullity. An employer cannot review, modify, or extend an order that has already died and lost its legal validity.
C. Human Dignity and Supreme Court Precedents
The Court heavily reinforced its findings by invoking the principles established in Ajay Kumar Choudhary v. Union of India (2015):
- The apex court has clearly established that the currency of a suspension order must not be prolonged indefinitely. If a formal memorandum of charges or a charge-sheet is not served upon the delinquent employee within three months, the suspension becomes invalid unless a well-reasoned extension order is passed within that strict time frame.
- These rigid procedural timelines exist to protect universally recognized principles of human dignity and an individual’s constitutional right to a speedy trial, balancing government interests against the severe professional and personal impact of prolonged administrative stagnation.
3. Final Directions of the Court
The High Court allowed the writ petition and issued the following operational orders:
- Quashing of Extension: The subsequent extension of the suspension order enacted by the department after the expiry of the initial 90 days is declared non-est and bad in law.
- Deemed Reinstatement: Because the state failed to properly review or revoke the original suspension within 90 days of December 22, 2025, the suspension became legally invalid upon the expiry of that period. The petitioner is officially deemed to be on active duty immediately following the conclusion of the initial 90 days.
- Consequential Benefits: The respondents are commanded to grant the petitioner all consequential service benefits accruing from his deemed reinstatement.
- Disposal: The petition and all connected miscellaneous applications were formally disposed of with no order as to costs.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 273
Sh. Vinay Jishtu V. State of H.P. And Another (D.O.J. 07.05.2026)
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