High Court Dismisses Belated Reinstatement Claim in Labor Dispute
In the judgment of Hari Dass v. Union of India and Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a writ petition seeking reinstatement and back wages. The Court ruled that the petitioner failed to substantiate his claims with evidence, approached the Court with significant delay, and invoked the wrong legal forum.
The Dispute: Alleged Verbal Termination
The petitioner claimed he was engaged as a worker in 2007 and that his services were verbally and illegally terminated in 2011. He sought a writ of mandamus for re-engagement with full back wages, seniority, and continuity of service, alleging that the respondents had reinstated other similarly situated persons in 2014 while ignoring him.
The respondents contested these claims, stating that the petitioner was a casual paid laborer engaged only from May 21, 2009, to August 10, 2009, and was discharged once the available work was completed.
Key Judicial Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel dismissed the petition based on several critical procedural and substantive grounds:
- Total Lack of Evidence: The Court noted that the petitioner failed to append a single document or annexure to his petition to prove his period of service or the alleged verbal termination. Consequently, his contentions were entirely unsubstantiated by the record.
- Delay and Laches: Even if the petitioner’s version of events were true, he approached the Court in 2016 for a termination that allegedly occurred in 2011. The Court found this to be a highly belated approach.
- Alternative Remedy: The Court held that alleged violations of the Industrial Disputes Act must be agitated before the specific statutory fora (Labor Courts/Tribunals) provided under that Act. A writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution is not the appropriate vehicle for such disputes, as the Industrial Disputes Act provides both substantive and procedural remedies.
- Loss of Efficacy due to Age: The petitioner was 53 years old when he filed the petition in 2016 and had reached 63 years of age by the time of the judgment. The Court concluded that the petition had lost its efficacy as the petitioner had passed the typical age of service.
Final Ruling
The High Court concluded that the petition was meritless and dismissed it, along with any pending miscellaneous applications.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 164
Hari Dass V. Union Of India And Others(D.O.J. 25.04.2026)
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