In the judgment of Devinder Kumar &Ors. v. State of Himachal Pradesh &Anr. (and hundreds of connected petitions), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh declared the Himachal Pradesh Recruitment and Conditions of Service of Government Employees Act, 2024, to be unconstitutional and ultra vires. The Court quashed the entire Act, ruling that the State cannot use legislation to nullify judicial mandates or exploit employees by denying them service benefits for work performed under “contract” labels.
The Dispute: Legislative Overrule of Seniority Rights
The State enacted the 2024 Act (Act No. 23 of 2025) to retrospectively alter the service conditions of thousands of employees who began their careers on a contract basis.
- The Act’s Goal: It sought to classify “contract appointments” as a distinct mode of recruitment that did not count as “public service”. Under the Act, seniority, increments, and pension benefits would only accrue from the date of regularization, effectively wiping out years of past contract service.
- The Retrospective “Substitution”: Section 8 of the Act attempted to retrospectively change all Recruitment and Promotion (R&P) Rules since 2003, replacing the words “on contract basis” with “by regularisation” to circumvent previous court rulings.
Key Judicial Findings
Justice Vivek Singh Thakur and Justice Romesh Verma identified several constitutional failures in the Act:
- Encroachment on Judicial Power: The Court held that while a legislature can change the basis of a law, it cannot simply declare a binding judicial decision (such as the Taj Mohammad or Lekh Ram cases) as “wrong” or “ineffective”. This was viewed as a direct breach of the Separation of Powers.
- Violation of Equality (Articles 14 & 16): The Court found that contract employees who were recruited through the same competitive process as regular employees (via the Public Service Commission) were “identically situated”. Denying them seniority while granting it to regular peers was deemed manifestly arbitrary and discriminatory.
- Financial Constraints are Inadmissible: The State argued the Act was necessary to avoid a “huge burden on the State Exchequer”. The Court rejected this, asserting that paucity of funds is no excuse to shirk statutory duties or deny established legal rights to employees.
- Constitutional Scheme for Recruitment: The Act created a “mess” by proposing a mode of recruitment where individuals would perform the duties of a government servant but would not technically be “in service” until regularized. The Court ruled this bypassed the constitutional mandate for regular public employment.
Final Ruling and Directives
The High Court concluded that the Act was a “colourable exercise of power” designed to facilitate exploitative labor practices.
- Act Quashed: The Himachal Pradesh Recruitment and Conditions of Service of Government Employees Act, 2024, is void ab initio.
- Withdrawals Nullified: All State actions based on the Act—such as withdrawing seniority or proposing recoveries of pay—are declared illegal and null.
- Mandatory Compliance: The State is directed to extend all service benefits, including seniority and increments, to the affected employees in terms of previous court mandates within three months.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 163
Devinder Kumar & Ors. V. State Of Himachal Pradesh & Anr.(D.O.J. 25.04.2026)
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