In the case of Dr. Sanjay Kumar Gupta vs. State of Himachal Pradesh and Ors. (2026), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed a challenge to an office order that rejected the petitioner’s claim for service benefits based on the now-defunct Himachal Pradesh Recruitment and Conditions of Service of Government Employees Act, 2024,.
Quashing of the 2024 Act
The Court noted that the constitutionality of the 2024 Act (Act No. 23 of 2025) had already been adjudicated in the landmark case of Devinder Kumar & others vs. State of H.P. (April 2026), where the Act was quashed and set aside,. As a result:
- All actions, instructions, or orders by the State that denied benefits or proposed recoveries based on this Act were declared illegal, unconstitutional, and null.
- The specific office order rejecting the petitioner’s claim was quashed.
Settled Principles for Service Claims
The Court directed the competent authority to re-evaluate the petitioner’s claim by June 30, 2026, applying five “settled principles of law”,:
- Judicial Mandates: Benefits already adjudicated by a court in favor of an employee must be extended, regardless of any internal policies.
- Contract Service (without full R&P Rules): Employees appointed on contract without strictly following regular Recruitment and Promotion (R&P) Rules, but later regularized without interruption, are entitled to have that period count toward pensionary and retiral benefits. They receive notional increments for the contract period to determine their last pay drawn, but they do not receive back-arrears or seniority for that time.
- Contract Service (with full R&P Rules): Employees appointed via a formal process under Article 309 (open competition with wide publicity) are entitled to all consequential benefits, including financial increments and seniority from their initial date of contract appointment,,.
- Financial Restrictions: For recurring claims like pensions, financial benefits may be restricted to three years prior to the date of the claim, unless a specific court order directs otherwise,.
- Seniority Claims: Seniority must be decided based on service jurisprudence, taking into account the timing of the claim and the rights of any affected third parties,.
Conclusion
The High Court disposed of the petition with instructions for the State to issue a reasoned, speaking order by the end of June 2026,. The petitioner was also granted liberty to file a fresh petition should any grievances survive after the new decision.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 224
Dr. Sanjay Kumar Gupta V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Ors.(D.O.J. 11.05.2026)
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