Constitutional Rights vs. Executive Inaction: High Court Mandates Salary and Grant-in-Aid for PTA Teacher
In the judgment of Deepika Jain v. State of Himachal Pradesh, the High Court ruled that the State cannot withhold salary or Grant-in-Aid (GIA) from a teacher who was duly appointed and has performed their duties, even if the State claims a scheme has “ended” or the teacher lacks specific qualifications that were previously waived. The Court characterized the withholding of pay as an exploitative practice akin to “Begar” (forced labor) and a violation of the constitutional right to property.
The Conflict: Qualifications and Scheme Validity
The petitioner was appointed as an Assistant Professor in Political Science on a Parents Teachers Association (PTA) basis at Government Degree College, Nalagarh, in August 2013. While she possessed a Master’s degree and an M.Phil, she did not have the NET/SLET qualification. The State denied her GIA and salary, arguing that:
- She did not fulfill the necessary educational qualifications.
- The GIA to PTA Rules of 2006 had allegedly ended in 2008, and the State had stopped such engagements.
The Court’s Rejection of State Arguments
Justice Ranjan Sharma found the State’s position to be “unreasonable, arbitrary, and unsustainable” for several reasons:
- Dispensation of Qualifications: The State itself had issued communications in July and August 2014 specifically exempting PTA teachers from the NET/SLET requirement. Therefore, the petitioner was eligible under the adjusted criteria.
- Statutory Supremacy: The Court held that Statutory Rules (GIA Rules 2006) cannot be repealed or overridden by mere executive orders or administrative silence. Since the State never legally repealed the rules and actually extended the scheme to 14 other colleges in 2014, the argument that the scheme had ended was “fallacious”.
- Parity and Precedent: The Court noted that the State had already released GIA to other similarly situated teachers (such as in the cases of Sangeeta Devi and Himender Pal Kashav). Denying the petitioner the same benefit constituted “hostile discrimination” and a violation of Article 14.
Salary as a Fundamental Right
The judgment placed heavy emphasis on the constitutional protections afforded to employees:
- Article 300-A: Salary for work performed is a legal entitlement and “property”; it cannot be taken away without the authority of law.
- Exploitative Practices: Extracting work for over 12 years without paying the designated salary was deprecated as a practice that forces an individual to live an undignified life, violating Articles 14, 16, and 21 of the Constitution.
- Model Employer: The Court reminded the State that it must behave as a “Model Employer” rather than a “chronic litigant” seeking technicalities to avoid its financial responsibilities.
Final Ruling and Mandate
The High Court quashed the State’s action of denying the GIA and salary.
- Reinstatement of Benefits: The State is mandated to release the Grant-in-Aid and resultant salary to the petitioner from her initial date of appointment (August 16, 2013) or the date of her eligibility.
- Timeline: All arrears and consequential benefits must be paid within six weeks.
- Natural Justice: The Court affirmed that any legal entitlement flowing from statutory rules cannot be curtailed without following the principles of natural justice, such as providing notice and a hearing.
Himachal Pradesh High Court
Deepika Jain v. State of Himachal Pradesh and others : STPL (Web) 2026 HP 28




