The case of The State of Uttarakhand v. Sarita Singh and Ors. (2026 INSC 337) involves a legal dispute regarding the grant of compensation and an extraordinary pension to the family of a government doctor who was murdered while on duty.
Factual Background
- The Incident: Dr. Sunil Kumar Singh, a pediatrician at CHC Jaspur in Uttarakhand, was shot dead on April 20, 2016, while performing his official duties.
- The Claim: His widow (the first respondent) sought an extraordinary pension under the Uttar Pradesh Civil Services (Extraordinary Pension) Rules, 1981 (as adopted by Uttarakhand) and monetary compensation.
- Initial State Response: The State initially paid ₹1,00,000 in compensation, granted a compassionate appointment to the doctor’s son as a lecturer, and allotted an official residence.
Decisions of the High Court
The High Court of Uttarakhand directed the State to pay a significantly higher compensation amount of ₹1,99,09,000 (calculated based on the deceased’s age and salary) and to grant the family an extraordinary pension. The State challenged this, arguing that a doctor’s post was not a “post of risk” and that the grant of such a pension required mandatory sanction from the Governor.
Supreme Court’s Legal Analysis
The Supreme Court partially modified the High Court’s order, focusing on the proper administrative procedure for granting extraordinary pensions:
- Mandatory Gubernatorial Sanction: Under Rule 4 of the 1981 Rules, no award of an extraordinary pension can be made without the sanction of the Governor. The Governor holds discretionary power to determine if a case meets the criteria after examining all relevant facts.
- Judicial Restraint: The Court emphasized that a High Court should not ordinarily substitute its own decision for that of a statutory authority, especially when that authority (the Governor) has not yet had the opportunity to consider the request or exercise its discretion.
- Proper Procedure: The High Court’s direction to grant the pension was deemed “unwarranted” because it bypassed the necessary administrative evaluation required by the Rules.
Final Directions
The Supreme Court issued the following directions to resolve the matter:
- Setting Aside Pension Direction: The High Court’s direct order to pay the extraordinary pension was set aside.
- New Application: The widow is permitted to file a formal application for the extraordinary pension within four weeks.
- Independent Review: The Competent Authority must consider this application on its own merits—without being influenced by previous court observations—and reach a decision within 12 weeks.
- Compensation Retention: The ₹1,00,00,000 already paid to the widow as compensation during the course of the litigation will be treated as her entitlement and cannot be recovered by the State.
2026 INSC 337
State of Uttarakhand V. Sarita Singh And Ors.(D.O.J. 09.04.2026)



