In Pawan Kumar vs. State of Himachal Pradesh and Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a writ petition seeking retrospective promotion filed after retirement, ruling that an employee must act as a “vigilant citizen” and assert their rights while in active service. The Court held that delay and laches are fatal to such claims, emphasizing that a litigant who “sleeps over their rights” cannot seek judicial intervention post-superannuation, especially when they failed to seek a mandamus to compel a timely Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC) during their tenure. Furthermore, the Court reaffirmed that retrospective promotion cannot be granted for a period when the employee was not yet “born in the cadre,” and that repeated administrative representations do not revive a stale cause of action.
- Factual Background and Reliefs Sought
The petitioner retired from service on September 30, 2025. Following his retirement, he approached the High Court seeking a direction to the respondents to grant him a regular pay scale, increments, and a retrospective promotion to the post of Principal effective until his date of superannuation. The petitioner’s grievance was that although he was fully eligible for promotion, the respondents failed to convene a DPC during his active service. Instead, a DPC was conducted on December 30, 2025—three months after he retired—wherein his juniors were recommended and promoted.
- Maintainability and the Fatal Issue of Delay
The High Court held that the petition was highly belated and not maintainable because it was filed only after the petitioner had already superannuated. Key legal observations included:
- Duty to be Vigilant: A citizen is expected to assert their legal rights before an appropriate forum within a reasonable timeframe.
- Proactive Legal Recourse: Nothing prevented the petitioner from approaching the Court while in service to seek a writ of mandamus compelling the government to hold a timely DPC.
- Judicial Disfavour for Indolence: Citing Supreme Court precedents, the Court noted that “procrastination is the greatest thief of time” and that law does not permit a litigant to “sleep and rise like a phoenix”. Inordinate, un-rationalized delay is sufficient ground to dismiss a service dispute at the threshold.
- Ineffectiveness of Administrative Representations
The petitioner argued that his case should be considered in light of his past representations. However, the Court clarified the settled law that repeated administrative representations neither give rise to a fresh cause of action nor revive one that has already become stale.
- The Doctrine of “Birth in the Cadre”
The Court rejected the claim for retrospective promotion based on the following principles:
- No Retrospective Entry: An employee cannot legally claim promotion or seniority for a period during which he was not even born in that specific promotional cadre.
- Lack of Prejudicial Promotion: The Court observed that while the delay in holding a DPC was evident, no junior was promoted ahead of the petitioner while he was still in active service.
- No Malice: Since there were no allegations of mala fides (bad faith) against the administration and the promotions were only executed post-retirement, the petitioner had no legal right to demand entry into a higher cadre after leaving service.
Final Outcome
Finding that the petitioner failed to seek timely redressal during his service tenure, the High Court concluded that the petition was not maintainable. The writ petition was dismissed, along with any pending miscellaneous applications.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 320
Pawan Kumar V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 14.05.2026)
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