Equity Over Administrative Error: High Court Bars Recovery from Class-III Employees and Retirees
In the judgment of Ramesh Chand and Others v. State of Himachal Pradesh, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed the legality of withdrawing pay incentives and recovering excess payments from Technicians in the Public Works Department. While the Court allowed the State to correct its pay-fixation errors, it categorically prohibited the recovery of money already paid to these Class-III employees and retirees, ruling that such recovery would be “iniquitous and harsh”.
The Dispute: ACP Benefits vs. Three-Tier Pay Structure
The case involved Technicians (Junior, Grade-II, and Grade-I) who had been granted benefits under the Assured Career Progression (ACP) Scheme (4, 9, and 14 years of service) [4(ii), 4(iv)]. Years later, the State determined these benefits were inadmissible because the Technicians were already covered by a specific Three-Tier Pay Structure (50:30:20 ratio), which expressly excluded them from the general ACP schemes [1, 10(i), 10(ii)]. Consequently, the State issued orders in 2019 to withdraw the ACP benefits, re-fix their pay, and recover the “excess” amounts disbursed over several years [3, 5(ii)].
The Court’s Ruling on Pay Re-fixation
The Court upheld the State’s right to withdraw the ACP benefits and re-fix the petitioners’ pay. It reasoned that:
- Ouster Clauses: The 1998 and 2012 ACP schemes contained specific “ouster clauses” excluding categories of employees who already received multi-tier pay structures [1, 10(vi)].
- No Vested Right to Error: An employee has no vested right to claim benefits that are outside (dehors) the statutory scheme [1, 10(vii)]. The State has the inherent authority to correct a bona fide mistake in pay fixation.
The Prohibition of Recovery
While the re-fixation was upheld, the Court quashed the recovery orders, relying on established Supreme Court precedents like Rafiq Masih (White Washer) and Thomas Daniel [1, 11(vii), 20]. The Court’s decision was based on several key principles:
- No Fault of Employee: The excess payments were the result of the State’s negligence and wrong interpretation of rules, not fraud or misrepresentation by the employees [1, 11(ii), 19].
- Protection for Vulnerable Groups: Under the Rafiq Masih guidelines, recovery is strictly prohibited from Class-III/Group C employees and retirees (or those within a year of retirement).
- Five-Year Limit: Recovery is generally impermissible if the excess payment has been made for more than five years before the recovery order is issued.
- Constitutional Protection: Retiral benefits like pension and gratuity are not a “bounty” but earned property rights under Article 300-A of the Constitution [1, 30(ii), 31]. Withholding these funds without due process or statutory authority is arbitrary and illegal.
Final Mandate and Directions
The High Court partly allowed the petitions with the following directives:
- Refixation Upheld: The orders withdrawing the inadmissible ACP benefits and re-fixing pay are valid [35(ii)].
- Recovery Quashed: All orders to recover excess amounts from the petitioners are set aside [35(iii)].
- Mandatory Refund: The State must refund any amounts already recovered from the petitioners within two months [35(v)].
- Interest Penalty: If the refund is not made within two months, the State is liable to pay 6% annual interest until the actual refund is issued [35(vi)].
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Ramesh Chand and Others v. State of Himachal Pradesh & others: STPL (Web) 2026 HP 30




