Core Issue: Whether an educational institute can arbitrarily issue a temporary contractual appointment to a fully qualified candidate who responded to an advertisement issued exclusively for regular, sanctioned vacancies.
Key Finding: The Supreme Court held that converting a regular appointment into a contractual one without recorded reasons is patently illegal, arbitrary, and violates Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. The conduct of an unemployed candidate accepting a contractual offer under economic duress cannot act as an estoppel against unconstitutional selection procedures.
Final Ruling:Appeal Allowed. The judgments of the Single Judge and Division Bench of the High Court were set aside. The Court directed the Institute to issue a regular appointment letter to the appellant with continuity of service, though without back wages.
1. Factual Background and Qualifications
In January 2013, IIIT-Allahabad (Respondent No. 2) issued Advertisement No. FS-01/2013 inviting applications for regular, sanctioned faculty posts—specifically Professor, Associate Professor, and Assistant Professor—in Pay Band-III and Pay Band-IV. Crucially, the advertisement contained no mention of any position being filled on a temporary or contractual basis.
The appellant, Lokendra Kumar Tiwari, applied for the regular post of Assistant Professor in the Information Security stream. He possessed all required eligibility criteria, holding a Ph.D. in Information Security from the University of Allahabad and an M.S. in Cyber Law & Information Security from IIIT-Allahabad with a First Division (CGPA 9.02/10). He also satisfied the mandatory three-year teaching requirement through his tenure as a Lecturer at Ewing Christian College.
2. The Selection Process and Disparate Treatment
The appellant was shortlisted and underwent a unified interview process alongside all other candidates on March 18, 2013. On April 6, 2013, the Selection Committee recommended fifteen candidates for appointment. While thirteen of those individuals were granted regular faculty appointments, the appellant and one other candidate (Dr. Ranjana Vyas) were singled out and offered appointments strictly on a contract basis for a 12-month period at a fixed pay of ₹40,000 per month. No administrative or merit-based reasons were recorded by the committee to justify this differential treatment.
The appellant accepted the contractual position, a choice he later asserted was made under oral protest and driven by economic compulsion.
3. Procedural History & Litigation Timeline
- March 2014 Cancellation: IIIT-Allahabad abruptly cancelled all fifteen appointments from the April 2013 batch due to perceived internal omissions in the selection process. The affected faculty members challenged this via Writ Petitions in the Allahabad High Court.
- December 2015 & March 2017 Remand: The High Court allowed the faculty’s petitions on December 11, 2015, directing the Institute to reconsider the matter. The Supreme Court subsequently disposed of related appeals on March 24, 2017, upholding the order of remand for reconsideration.
- The Reconsideration: Upon review, the Institute’s Board of Governors chose to regularize and reinstate all thirteen regular candidates. However, on June 27, 2017, they re-issued a strictly contractual offer to the appellant to complete the remainder of his original temporary term.
- High Court Dismissals: The appellant challenged this decision in Writ Petition No. 7099 of 2018. The Single Judge dismissed the petition on February 12, 2019, ruling that since the appellant accepted the contract without written protest and worked under its terms, he could not retroactively demand a regular appointment. The Division Bench affirmed this via a Writ Appeal, holding that the appellant’s acquiescence disentitled him from relief and that the Selection Committee retained absolute discretion.
4. Arguments Presented Before the Supreme Court
- For the Appellant: Senior Counsel Mr. Sudhir Kumar Saxena argued that the recruitment rules prescribed entirely separate selection procedures and independent committees for regular vs. contractual hiring. The committee completely bypassed these rules, acting without jurisdiction to arbitrarily convert a regular vacancy into a contract post for a fully qualified candidate. He emphasized that the lower courts were unduly swayed by the appellant’s “acquiescence,” ignoring that the unemployed have few options and that joining a post under economic necessity does not validate a patent illegality.
- For the Respondents: Counsel Mr. SanyatLodha countered that the scope of judicial review in academic selections is highly restrictive. He maintained that the Selection Committee exercised valid discretion based on relative merit and available positions. He further argued that because the appellant voluntarily signed the contractual terms twice without written objection, he was legally estopped from challenging the nature of his employment.
5. Findings and Legal Analysis of the Court
The Supreme Court reframed the core controversy: the issue was not whether a temporary contractual employee has a fundamental right to seek regularization, but whether an institution can validly subject a candidate to a regular selection process against a regular advertisement, find them fully qualified, and then arbitrarily downgrade their appointment to a contract basis.
The Court exposed several fundamental errors in the actions of the Institute and the lower courts:
- Violation of Equal Treatment: If the appellant had been genuinely unsuitable for the regular post of Assistant Professor, the Selection Committee could not have legally recommended him for a contractual version of the exact same position.
- Absence of Recorded Reasons: To justify treating the appellant differently from the other thirteen candidates who were processed identically, the administrative record was required to disclose clear, objective reasons. The complete absence of such reasons rendered the action discriminatory and a direct violation of Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
- Rejection of the Estoppel Argument: The Court implicitly rejected the High Court’s heavy reliance on the appellant’s acquiescence, noting that denying a regular appointment to a fully eligible candidate under these facts is patently unconstitutional and cannot be cleansed by a candidate’s forced acceptance of employment.
6. Final Order and Directed Relief
Noting that IIIT-Allahabad possessed ample room to accommodate the appellant—with thirty-two vacant Assistant Professor positions out of a sanctioned sixty-seven—the Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside all impugned lower court judgments.
To balance the equities, the Court molded the final relief:
- The appellant is declared entitled to a Regular Appointment as an Assistant Professor at IIIT-Allahabad.
- The Institute must issue his formal regular appointment order within four weeks.
- The appellant is granted continuity of service calculated from the original selection date (April 6, 2013), and his seniority shall be placed immediately below the last regular candidate appointed from that same April 2013 batch.
- No back wages or financial benefits are awarded for the period he was out of service.
2026 INSC 487
Lokendra Kumar Tiwari V. Union of India And Others (D.O.J. 13.05.2026)




