The case of Saurabh Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Others addresses the legality of terminating a contract employee based solely on criminal charges once that employee has been honorably acquitted.
Factual Background
- The Petitioner: Saurabh Kumar was appointed as a Junior T-Mate on a contract basis with the Himachal Pradesh State Electricity Board (HPSEBL) in March 2021.
- The Arrest and Termination: In September 2022, an FIR was registered against him alleging serious offences under the IPC and the POCSO Act. Because he remained in police custody for more than 48 hours, the Board terminated his services in December 2022, citing contract policy.
- The Acquittal: In December 2023, the Special Judge (POCSO) acquitted the petitioner of all charges. The trial court found that the prosecution failed to prove the foundational facts of the case.
The High Court’s Reasoning
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel quashed the termination order, emphasizing that the foundation for the dismissal had been completely eroded.
- “Honourable Acquittal” vs. “Benefit of Doubt”: The Court held that terms like “benefit of doubt” are not “magic incantations”. Even if a trial court uses such language, a court in judicial review must examine the substance of the judgment.
- Collapse of Foundational Facts: The Court noted that DNA evidence was a “very important piece of evidence” in this case; the DNA of the victim’s baby did not match the petitioner’s DNA. Since the allegation that the petitioner had fathered the child was central to the prosecution, the DNA mismatch meant the entire case against him collapsed.
- Sustainability of Termination: Because the sole reason for the petitioner’s termination was the registration of the FIR and his subsequent custody, the termination could not be sustained once he was acquitted on merit.
Conclusion and Relief
The High Court quashed the termination order and directed the following relief:
- Reinstatement: The petitioner was ordered to be reinstated in service from the date of his original termination.
- Notional Benefits: The period during which he was out of service will be counted notionally for service benefits and seniority.
- Consequential Benefits: He was granted actual consequential benefits from the date of his acquittal (December 30, 2023).
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 200
Saurabh Kumar V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 23.04.2026)
Loading Viewer...






