The case of Raj Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh involves a retired official’s attempt to retrospectively claim Class-IV status to benefit from a higher retirement age and additional service credits for pension purposes.
Factual Background
- Service History: The petitioner began as a part-time Water Carrier in 2002, moved to daily wages in 2012, and was regularized as a Class-IV employee in 2017.
- Promotion: In March 2022, he was promoted to Laboratory Attendant, a Class-III post.
- Retirement: He retired at the age of 58 in March 2025 as a Class-III employee and began receiving a pension based on the higher wages associated with that rank.
The Petitioner’s Claims
The petitioner sought a “strange” relief from the Court, asking to have his Class-III service treated as Class-IV service. His goal was twofold:
- Extended Service: To benefit from the Baldev judgment, which sets the retirement age for Class-IV employees at 60 years rather than the 58 years applicable to Class-III.
- Service Credits: To merge his daily wage service with his regular service to enhance his pensionary benefits.
The High Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel dismissed the petition, characterizing it as “misconceived” and an “abuse of the process of law”. The Court’s reasoning included:
- Finality of Promotion: The Court held that once the petitioner accepted a promotion to Class-III, received the associated higher wages without protest, and retired at the age of 58, he could not later ask to be “downgraded” just to gain two extra years of service.
- Misapplication of Precedents: While cases like Balo Devi and Sunder Singh allow for the counting of daily wage service to meet pension eligibility thresholds, they do not permit an employee to nullify their Class-III status to claim Class-IV retirement benefits.
- Systemic Stability: The Court warned that allowing such a request would open a “Pandora’s box” of litigation, as many retired Class-III employees might attempt to claim Class-IV benefits to extend their service.
- Equitable Balance: Since the petitioner was already drawing a pension based on his higher Class-III salary, he was not entitled to the specific age-based benefits reserved for the Class-IV cadre.
Conclusion: The Court affirmed that employees must abide by the service norms of the cadre they belong to at the time of retirement. The petition was dismissed without costs.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 188
Raj Kumar V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 20.04.2026)
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