Indian Judgements

Indian Judgements

Illegal sand mining inside a protected wildlife sanctuary – Directions issued

Evaluating the abysmal compliance, institutional apathy, and enforcement failure by the States of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh regarding rampant illegal sand mining inside a protected wildlife sanctuary, the proliferation of unregistered/unidentified vehicles, massive vacancies in frontline forest staff, and critical threats to public infrastructure.

Directions issued under Article 142 of the Constitution of India. The Supreme Court fast-tracked technology setups, mandated a crackdown on mining mafias and their unregistered vehicles, ordered immediate filling of vacancies, directed the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) to protect vulnerable bridges, and summoned further accountability from central and state ministries.

1. Introduction and Factual Background

This suo motu environmental litigation addresses rampant illegal sand mining inside the ecologically fragile National Chambal Gharial Sanctuary, which spans the states of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh. The continuous mining has severely disrupted local river morphology, fragmented wildlife habitats, and endangered protected aquatic fauna such as gharials, dolphins, and freshwater turtles.

Compounding the crisis, the Central Empowered Committee (CEC) exposed a severe breakdown of regulatory oversight on the ground:

  • Thousands of unregistered and unidentified commercial vehicles and heavy earthmoving machines operate completely unchecked inside protected forest limits to transport stolen river sand.
  • Indiscriminate excavation has crept dangerously close to and underneath the supporting structures and pillars of the inter-state bridge on National Highway-44 (near the Morena-Dholpur border), directly threatening its structural stability and public safety.

2. State-Wise Compliance Assessment

The Supreme Court analyzed the action reports filed by the three neighboring states and structural feedback from the NHAI:

  • State of Rajasthan: The Court expressed serious displeasure with Rajasthan’s initial “abysmal state of compliance” and administrative paralysis. Following strict coercion and orders requiring the personal presence of top secretaries, the state finally cleared ₹65.47 crores for IT-enabled surveillance, deployed Armed Constabulary battalions at 40 vulnerable locations, established 24 permanent camps, and set up District Level Task Forces. However, the state’s proposed timeline of 18 to 36 months to operationalize these cameras and recruit personnel was rejected by the Court as far too slow for an ongoing ecological emergency.
  • State of Uttar Pradesh: UP reported coordinated enforcement actions resulting in multiple challans against vehicles running without High Security Registration Plates (HSRP) and detailed the filing of scores of criminal chargesheets under the Mining Act in the Agra region.
  • State of Madhya Pradesh: MP reported significant financial penalties recovered from errant vehicles in Morena and proposed eight static check-posts. However, the Court observed that MP totally failed to address the root issue, noting that over 250 unregistered vehicles were simply let go with nominal ₹5,000 fines, treating penal consequences merely as insignificant operational costs for organized mining networks.
  • National Highways Authority of India (NHAI): The NHAI placed on record a joint technical inspection report from April 2025 stating that the NH-44 Chambal bridge’s scour levels were currently within safe design limits. The NHAI claimed its role was strictly restricted to highway maintenance within the Right of Way, while actual mining enforcement lay under state jurisdiction. The Court rejected this passive hand-washing, ruling that the NHAI has a statutory obligation to proactively safeguard public infrastructure from external structural threats.

3. Critical Systemic Failures Identified by the Court

  • Frontline Vacancies: The Court highlighted an alarming, institutional deficiency: massive vacancies in critical, field-level positions like Forest Guards. In Rajasthan, no recruitment drive for Forest Guards had occurred for four years, drastically crippling physical patrolling and enforcement capabilities.
  • Diminishing Environmental Flows (E-Flows): Relying on scientific assessments by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), the CEC pointed out that summer and lean-season water flows in the Chambal River have hit critically low levels over the past three decades due to upstream dams and water regulation projects, leading to habitat fragmentation for endangered species.

4. Operative Directions Issued under Article 142

To bypass administrative lethrage and ensure absolute justice, the Supreme Court issued a comprehensive set of mandatory directives:

  • Staff Augmentation: The Chief Secretaries of MP, Rajasthan, and UP must immediately expedite and complete the recruitment process to fill all vacant posts for Forest Guards and frontline enforcement staff within one year.
  • Surveillance Deployment: Proposed IT-enabled infrastructure, night-vision high-resolution CCTV systems, and integrated control command rooms across vulnerable routes must be fast-tracked and fully operationalized within six months.
  • Vehicle Crackdown & Confiscation: Authorities must launch a aggressive crackdown against vehicles operating without registration, with fake plates, or missing number plates. Such machinery must be immediately intercepted, seized, and subjected to statutory confiscation proceedings rather than being released on petty fines.
  • Targeting the Kingpins: Criminal prosecutions and financial investigations must target not just hired drivers, but the entire backing ecosystem—including vehicle owners, financiers, operators, and contractors running the organized mining networks.
  • Sovereign Protection for Forest Guards: Given frequent violent attacks by mining mafias, the three states must evaluate and file status reports on implementing notifications under Section 218(3) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (formerly Section 197 CrPC) to provide official legal protection for frontline guards taking bona fide action.
  • NHAI Infrastructure Mandates: The NHAI must install high-mast, high-resolution night-vision CCTV systems covering 1 km upstream and 500 meters downstream of the NH-44 bridge and route real-time live feeds continuously to the state police and forest control rooms. Furthermore, the NHAI must establish tamper-proof fencing and protective mesh on the bridge to completely halt commuters from throwing trash and polluting the sanctuary’s riverine ecosystem.
  • Environmental Flow Assessment: The Ministry of Jal Shakti, Central Water Commission (CWC), and state irrigation departments must submit exhaustive action plans regarding minimum environmental flows. No new project damaging ecological flows shall be allowed within the sanctuary, except essential drinking water pipelines.
  • Local Welfare and Monitoring: States must formulate special employment and skill schemes for local youth in sensitive zones to reduce economic dependence on the mining mafia, while involving communities directly in eco-tourism and surveillance.
  • High-Level Periodic Review: The Chief Secretaries of all three states must personally review enforcement progress at least once every two months and present routine status reports directly to the apex court.

5. Interlocutory Applications

  • A. No. 143798 of 2026 (Conservation Action Trust): Disposed of with liberty granted to the NGO to continuously coordinate and feed critical ground insights to the Amicus Curiae.
  • A. No. 143904 of 2026 (M.P. Forest Employees Association): The Court issued formal notices to MP, Rajasthan, and UP, ordering them to submit clear replies defining uniform welfare policies, insurance coverage, ex-gratia distribution, and compassionate appointments for families of frontline forest personnel killed or injured in the line of duty.

The matter stands listed for subsequent consideration on July 22, 2026.

The prompt has a definitive answer based entirely on the provided case files; standard scannable completion rules apply, concluding the response.

2026 INSC 549

“In Re: Illegal Sand Mining In The National Chambal Sanctuary And Threat To Endangered Aquatic Wildlife” (D.O.J. 26.05.2026)

2026 INSC 549 click here to view full text of judgment

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Right to Information: Subordinate legislation that exceeded the clear boundaries set by the parent Act

In Special Police Establishment v. Kamta Prasad Mishra and Others [Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 644, decided on June 15, 2026], the Supreme Court of India adjudicated an important legal question regarding the scope of state exemptions under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, 2005. The appeal was preferred by the Special Police Establishment (SPE), Bhopal, against a Madhya Pradesh High Court judgment directing it to disclose information to a former Town Inspector regarding the internal decision-making process for granting sanction to prosecute him under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988. The SPE and the State Government resisted disclosure by heavily relying on a General Administration Department (GAD) Notification dated August 25, 2011, issued under Section 24(4) of the RTI Act, which excluded the SPE from the purview of the transparency law.

The Supreme Court dismissed the criminal appeal, affirming the High Court’s disclosure directive. A Division Bench comprising Justice J.K. Maheshwari and Justice Atul S. Chandurkar exercised its inherent constitutional powers to examine the legal validity of the state’s exemption notification, despite it not being directly challenged in the lower court. The Court ruled that Section 24(4) of the RTI Act strictly permits State Governments to exempt only specialized “intelligence and security organisations” from the Act’s coverage. Because the statutory architecture of the SPE is explicitly restricted to investigating white-collar crimes and public corruption—such as offenses under the anti-corruption law and specific cheating/breach-of-trust clauses of the Penal Code—it does not possess any foundational operational nexus to state security or intelligence. Consequently, the Court struck down the 2011 Notification to the extent that it exempted the SPE, holding it to be an invalid and excessive piece of subordinate legislation that exceeded the clear boundaries set by the parent RTI Act.

1. Factual Matrix and Origin of the Dispute

  • The Implication and Sanction: The first respondent, Kamta Prasad Mishra, while serving as a Town Inspector in Katni, Madhya Pradesh, was implicated by the SPE in a corruption trap case. Following the registration of an FIR on April 11, 2017, the state’s Home Department granted formal statutory sanction for his criminal prosecution on May 20, 2020.
  • The RTI Request and Rejections: Desiring to understand the internal processing and communications that led to the grant of his prosecution sanction, the respondent filed an RTI request on July 1, 2020, under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act. The public information officer denied the request, and the State Information Commission subsequently rejected his appeal on December 16, 2020, ruling that the records were exempt from disclosure under Section 8(1)(h) of the Act.
  • High Court Intervention: The respondent challenged the refusal before the High Court of Madhya Pradesh. A Division Bench allowed his writ petition, observing that because the investigation was already complete and a formal charge-sheet had been filed, disclosing the sanction files would not “impede” any active police or court process under Section 8(1)(h). The SPE was ordered to supply the information, which prompted this appeal to the Supreme Court.

2. Core Legal Issues Formulated

The Supreme Court identified the following primary issues for determination:

  1. Whether the Supreme Court can evaluate the validity of a piece of subordinate legislation (suomotu or contextually) when its operational enforcement is relied upon to deny a statutory right, even if the notification was not explicitly challenged in the original writ petition.
  2. Whether the Special Police Establishment (SPE) of the Lokayukt Organisation qualifies as an “intelligence and security organisation” under the statutory framework of Section 24(4) of the RTI Act, 2005.
  3. Whether the GAD Notification dated August 25, 2011, conforms to the limits of the enabling parent statute or is void due to excessive regulatory execution.

3. Legal Analysis and Ratio Decidendi of the Court

A. Jurisdictional Power to Test Unchallenged Subordinate Rules

The State of Madhya Pradesh argued that because the respondent never explicitly pleaded or asked to strike down the August 25, 2011 Notification before the High Court, the Supreme Court was precluded from reviewing its validity for the first time on appeal.

The Supreme Court rejected this limitation by outlining the scope of its constitutional review powers. Relying on its recent rulings in Bihar Rajya DafadarChaukidar Panchayat (2025) and the foundational principles in Bharathidasan University v. AICTE (2001), the Court held that a constitutional court is bound to ignore an invalid piece of subordinate legislation when a party seeks its active enforcement to deny a right. While the absence of specific pleadings generally limits typical reviews—as noted in Union of India v. ManjuraniRoutray (2023)—the Court cured this procedural gap by providing extensive opportunities and time to the state’s Advocate General to formally defend and argue the notification’s statutory standing.

B. The True Definition of “Intelligence and Security”

The Court reviewed the structure of Section 24 of the RTI Act, noting that Section 24(1) completely excludes Central Government intelligence and security units listed in the Second Schedule (such as the Enforcement Directorate, CRPF, BSF, and NIA) from the Act’s purview. Section 24(4) extends this exact executive privilege to corresponding agencies established by State Governments.

The Court held that the phrase “intelligence and security” implies that an organization must be fundamentally empowered to handle matters of state safety, counter-espionage, border control, or internal stability. The state’s argument that “institutional parity” allowed them to blanket-exempt their primary anti-corruption police force was rejected.

C. The Narrow Statutory Mandate of the SPE

To determine whether the SPE possessed a security or intelligence character, the Bench dissected its parent acts and operational history:

  • The SPE Framework: Formed under the Madhya Pradesh Special Police Establishment Act, 1947, the SPE’s jurisdiction is strictly limited by state notifications issued under Section 3 of that Act.
  • The Operational Notifications: Reviewing historical notifications spanning 1959, 1989, 2000, and the operational notification of May 3, 2001, the Court observed that the SPE’s mandate is explicitly restricted to investigating offenses under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, alongside Sections 409 (breach of trust by public servants) and 420 (cheating) of the Penal Code.
  • The Lokayukt Connection: Under the Madhya Pradesh Lokayukt Evam Up-LokayuktAdhiniyam, 1981, the SPE functions under the superintendence of the Lokayukt to look into “allegations” of public corruption.

The Court observed that neither the Lokayukt nor the SPE has ever been given statutory jurisdiction to oversee intelligence gather-points or internal state security. Citing the Allahabad High Court precedent in Dr. Nutan Thakur (2017), which struck down a similar anti-transparency exemption for the Uttar Pradesh Lokayukt, the Supreme Court ruled that an investigative agency focused on financial crimes and corruption cannot be classified as an intelligence and security organization.

4. Final Judgment and Structural Directions

  • High Court Order Affirmed: The Supreme Court dismissed the criminal appeal, sustaining the Madhya Pradesh High Court’s order directing the disclosure of the requested information to the respondent within the mandated timeline.
  • Exemption Struck Down: The General Administration Department’s Notification dated August 25, 2011, to the extent that it purports to exclude the Madhya Pradesh Special Police Establishment from the application of the RTI Act, 2005, is officially struck down as excessive and bad in law[cite: 17].
  • Section 8(1)(h) Restriction Removed: The Court confirmed that because the investigation against the respondent was complete and a charge-sheet had been filed, the SPE cannot use the Section 8(1)(h) exemption clause to withhold historical sanction files[cite: 17].
  • Economic Offences Left Intact: The Court explicitly clarified that it did not examine or adjudicate the validity of the 2011 Notification regarding the State Bureau of Investigation of Economic Offences[cite: 17]. The notification remains fully operational for that bureau[cite: 17].
  • Interlocutory Applications: All pending connected interlocutory applications were formally disposed of along with the final order[cite: 17].

2026 INSC 644

Special Police Establishment V. Kamta Prasad Mishra And Others (D.O.J. 15.06.2026)

2026 INSC 644 click here to view full text of judgment

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Election: Rejection of Nomination can only be adjudicated through an election petition

In Meenakshi Natarajan v. Election Commission of India, decided on June 12, 2026, the Supreme Court of India addressed a critical constitutional question regarding the extent of judicial intervention in ongoing electoral processes. The petitioner, a Congress leader, challenged a June 9, 2026 order by the Returning Officer (RO) rejecting her nomination for the Rajya Sabha biennial election from Madhya Pradesh.The rejection was based on her failure to disclose a pending private criminal complaint from Telangana in her Form 26 affidavit.The petitioner argued that under Section 33A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, disclosure is mandatory only when a court has formally framed charges, making the RO’s rejection a “patent and glaring error” that justified immediate remedy under Article 32.

The Supreme Court dismissed the writ petition. A Division Bench comprising Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and Atul S. Chandurkar ruled that the non-obstante clause and the strict mandate of Article 329(b) of the Constitution place an absolute bar on judicial interference at this stage of an election. Reaffirming the foundational principle established in N.P. Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer (1952), the Court held that any dispute arising during an ongoing election—including the improper rejection of nomination papers—can only be adjudicated through an election petition after the completion of the electoral process.The Bench refused to carve out a discretionary exception for “glaring errors,” noting that doing so would fracture the exclusive jurisdictional scheme intended by the framers of the Constitution.

1. Factual Matrix and Origin of the Dispute

  • The Nomination and Rejection: The petitioner, Smt. Meenakshi Natarajan, filed her nomination as an Indian National Congress candidate for a Rajya Sabha seat from Madhya Pradesh.On June 9, 2026, the Returning Officer rejected her candidature on the ground that she had suppressed material information in her Form 26 affidavit by failing to mention a pending criminal case against her.
  • The Omitted Case: The non-disclosure related to a private criminal complaint in Telangana stemming from allegations against another individual.The petitioner was arrayed because she was the All India Congress Committee (AICC) in-charge for Telangana.While she had received a notice or summons from the magisterial court, the case was still at a pre-cognizance stage, and no charges had been framed.
  • Administrative Appeal: Following the rejection, the petitioner filed a written representation before the Election Commission of India on June 10, 2026, and argued her case in person, but no orders were passed.She subsequently approached the Supreme Court under Article 32.

2. Core Legal Controversies

  1. Statutory Disclosure Limits: Whether Section 33A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, overrides the broad disclosure checklist in Form 26, effectively restricting a candidate’s mandatory reporting obligations solely to cases where a court has explicitly framed charges.
  2. Constitutional Bar vs. Facilitation: Whether the absolute bar under Article 329(b) can be bypassed via Article 32 or Article 226 when a petitioner claims that judicial intervention will protect a level playing field and facilitate, rather than thwart, a fair election.

3. Arguments Presented by the Parties

A. Submissions on Behalf of the Petitioner

  • Senior Advocate Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi argued that the RO’s rejection was arbitrary and suffered from a patent error.He emphasized that Section 33A of the 1951 Act explicitly mandates disclosure only if a candidate is accused of an offence punishable with two or more years of imprisonment and where charges have been framed by a competent court.Since the case was at a pre-cognizance stage, no case legally existed.
  • Relying on Mohinder Singh Gill (1978) and Ashok Kumar (2000), it was argued that constitutional courts can intervene if the action furthers the progress of the election.Because the rejection left candidates to be elected uncontested, judicial correction was necessary to preserve the basic structure of free and fair elections.

B. Submissions on Behalf of the Respondents

  • Senior Advocates Mukul Rohatgi (for private respondents), Dama Seshadri Naidu (for the ECI), and Solicitor General Tushar Mehta (for the Intervenor) vehemently opposed the petition’s maintainability.
  • They argued that the right to contest an election is a purely statutory privilege and not a fundamental right, which makes an Article 32 writ petition inherently unavailable.
  • They asserted that since the landmark P. Ponnuswami (1952) ruling, the law has been clear: any grievance regarding the rejection of a nomination can only be reviewed through an election petition after the conclusion of the polls.Furthermore, they maintained that Rule 4A and Form 26 require a candidate to cleanly disclose all pending criminal cases, regardless of their procedural stage.

4. Legal Analysis and Doctrinal Guidance of the Court

The Supreme Court rejected the petitioner’s bid for intermediate judicial rescue, grounding its analysis entirely on the constitutional limits of its own power during elections:

A. The Supremacy of Article 329’s Non-Obstante Clause

The Court drew a vital textual contrast between the language of Articles 327 and 328, which open with the words “subject to the provisions of this Constitution,” and Article 329, which starts with the commanding phrase “notwithstanding anything in this Constitution.” This foundational distinction isolates electoral matters from immediate writ intervention while poll processes are active. Whenever an attempt is made to interject in an active election, the judiciary must step back to honor the timeline of the democratic process.

B. Rejecting the “Glaring Error” Exception

The Bench squarely turned down the petitioner’s argument that constitutional courts are duty-bound to correct “glaring” or “manifest” mistakes by an RO to maintain a level playing field.The Court observed that creating a dual track—where “clear” mistakes get an immediate hearing under Article 32 while other rejections are forced to wait for an election petition—would amount to reading an artificial, non-existent exception into Article 329.The Court underscored that there is no operational precedent where the top court has paused a parliamentary election midway to overturn an RO’s order and revive a rejected nomination.

5. Final Order and Operational Directions

  • Writ Petition Dismissed: The Supreme Court dismissed the petition on the grounds of maintainability, ruling that the Court lacked jurisdiction to interfere with the ongoing electoral process under Article 32.
  • Merits Kept Open for Election Petition: The Bench explicitly clarified that it did not venture into or express any opinion on the legal merits of the nomination’s validity, Section 33A, or Form 26 compliance.
  • Preservation of Future Remedies: The petitioner’s right to mount a full statutory challenge against the rejection order through an election petition before the appropriate High Court remains fully preserved, unguided by any observations made in this dismissal.

2026 INSC 643

Meenakshi Natarajan  V. Election Commission of India &Anr. (D.O.J. 12.06.2026)

2026 INSC 643 click here to view full text of judgment

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Service Law: Procedural irregularities in a recruitment are curable

In Gaurav Mehla&Ors. v. State of Haryana & Ors. [Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 641, decided on June 11, 2026], the Supreme Court of India addressed the delicate balance between strict compliance with statutory recruitment rules and equitable protections for long-serving employees facing displacement due to administrative procedural lapses. The dispute arose from the 2014 appointment of the appellants to the posts of Clerk-cum-Salesman and Peon-cum-Chowkidar in the Thanesar Cooperative Marketing-cum-Processing Society Ltd., Kurukshetra. The Additional Registrar Cooperative Societies, Haryana, and subsequently the Punjab and Haryana High Court, annulled the appointments on the ground that the selection panel’s final meeting in 2014 violated amended Rule 3 of the Service Rules, 2003, which mandatorily required the presence and concurrence of three specific departmental officials.

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgment. A Division Bench comprising Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice NongmeikapamKotiswar Singh ruled that public recruitment consists of three distinct stages: advertisement, method of selection (interview), and final appointment resolution. The Court held that the absence of departmental officials at the final stage was a curable, administrative defect that did not taint the entire recruitment process, especially since there were no allegations of fraud, manipulation, or ineligibility against the candidates. The Bench determined that penalizing innocent candidates for internal institutional lapses after over a decade of unblemished service would be highly inequitable. Accordingly, the Court directed the cooperative society to reconvene its Board of Directors (BOD)—with the required official members present—to review the final appointments on their merits without reopening the completed selection and advertisement phases.

1. Factual Matrix and Trajectory of Litigation

  • The Recruitment: In 2014, the Thanesar Cooperative Marketing-cum-Processing Society Ltd. obtained permission from the Registrar, Cooperative Societies, Haryana, to fill regular vacancies. After publishing public advertisements in English and Hindi newspapers, a sub-committee conducted interviews on August 11, 2014. On August 13, 2014, the Managing Committee approved the selection and issued appointment letters to the appellants, who then joined and rendered more than a decade of unblemished service.
  • The Statutory Challenge: Two members of the cooperative society subsequently filed a petition under Section 27 of the Haryana Cooperative Societies Act, 1984, challenging the recruitment. They alleged several procedural defects, including minor issues regarding medical certificates and the newspaper edition used, but their primary challenge focused on amended Rule 3 of the Service Rules, 2003. This rule mandated that any final decision on appointments must be taken in a meeting where the Assistant Registrar, the Inspector of Cooperative Societies, and the District Manager of HAFED are present and concurring. It was admitted that these official members did not attend the final meeting on August 13, 2014.
  • The Lower Courts’ Invalidation: The Additional Registrar in 2017 set aside the selection resolution, a finding later affirmed by the Additional Chief Secretary of the Cooperation Department, a Single Judge of the High Court (2024), and a Division Bench of the High Court (2025). The lower fora concurrently held that Rule 3 was a mandatory statutory provision, meaning its non-compliance rendered the appointments void ab initio, irrespective of equity or the length of time the appellants had spent in service. The appellants were subsequently relieved from service on August 19, 2025, leading to this Supreme Court appeal.

2. Core Legal Issues Formulated

The Supreme Court structured the controversy around the following core questions:

  1. Whether the requirement under amended Rule 3 compelling the presence and concurrence of specified departmental officials is an absolute mandatory rule that invalidates an entire selection, or if it is directory/salutary in nature.
  2. Whether an administrative defect at the final stage of a recruitment process nullifies the preceding open-market advertisement and interview stages.
  3. Whether employees who entered service via an advertised public process are entitled to equitable protection under the principles of fairness and proportionality when facing displacement due to institutional failures.

3. Legal Analysis &Ratio Decidendi of the Court

A. Deconstructing the Three Stages of Public Recruitment

The Supreme Court analyzed the architecture of public appointments, dividing the recruitment process into three distinct, chronological phases:

  1. The First Stage (Notification): Involves publicizing vacancies via wide advertisement to ensure equal opportunity under Articles 14 and 16. The Court found that the society’s advertisements satisfied this requirement.
  2. The Second Stage (Selection Mode): Involves evaluating candidates through written tests or interviews. In this case, interviews were held under Rule 15 without any allegations of fraud, manipulation, favoritism, or candidate ineligibility.
  3. The Third Stage (Appointment Resolution): Involves the formal resolution by the appointing authority to issue employment contracts.

The Court ruled that the third stage is entirely severable from the first two phases. While a fundamental flaw in the first two stages (such as a lack of public advertisement or an interview marred by fraud) will completely vitiate a recruitment, a defect occurring purely at the final administrative resolution stage does not retroactively destroy the legality of a fair public selection.

B. The Supervisory Nature of Rule 3 and Curability of Lapses

The Court then interpreted the nature of amended Rule 3, which notes that the presence of the Assistant Registrar, the Inspector, and the District Manager of HAFED is “compulsory”. The Bench explained that the underlying purpose of this rule is salutary and supervisory rather than an absolute block on the society’s power to hire. Elected board members may not be fully proficient in complex civil service rules or bylaws. The inclusion of non-elected, expert official members is meant to provide a checklist to confirm that the recruitment conformed to all necessary guidelines.

Because the role of these officials is essentially supervisory, their administrative absence from a meeting does not strip the society of its core authority or render a selection void. It constitutes an institutional lapse rather than a candidate defect. The Court held that for an irregularity committed entirely by the state’s own officials, the innocent candidates must not be made to suffer. The lapse is a curable irregularity that can be remedied simply by convening a new meeting with the proper composition.

C. Rejecting Mechanical Applications of Law Over Equity

The Bench observed that the appellants had continuously and honestly discharged their duties for over a decade. The Court noted that enforcing the strict “black letter of the law” to displace long-serving staff over an internal quorum issue—over which the candidates had no knowledge or control—violates the principles of proportionality and fairness. The interest of justice is better served by validating the fair selection while directing a administrative revisit to cure the final procedural loophole.

4. Conclusion & Final Directions

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgments, issuing the following directions to resolve the dispute:

  • Reconvene the Board of Directors: The cooperative society is ordered to reconvene a meeting of its Board of Directors within one month from the date of the judgment to reconsider the appointments of the appellants[cite: 17].
  • Mandatory Official Presence: The non-elected official members—the Assistant Registrar, the Inspector of Cooperative Societies, and the District Manager of HAFED—must be present at this meeting to scrutinize the selection in accordance with Rule 3[cite: 17].
  • Restricted Scope of Review: The reconvened Board is strictly prohibited from re-examining or reopening the first two phases of the recruitment process[cite: 17]. It cannot question the adequacy of the 2014 advertisements or the integrity of the completed interviews[cite: 17].
  • Parameters of Scrutiny: The Board’s review must remain confined to checking whether the appellants fulfilled the essential educational qualifications, did not suffer from any disqualification, and were indeed the exact candidates recommended by the selection committee based on the interview scores[cite: 17].
  • Reinstatement and Past Service: If the appellants are verified as eligible during this review, they must be immediately re-appointed to their respective posts[cite: 17]. Their past decade of service shall be counted for all purposes, including seniority and benefits, though they will not be entitled to any arrears of pay for the brief period they were out of service following their removal in August 2025[cite: 17].
  • Costs: The parties are ordered to bear their own costs, and all pending connected applications are formally resolved[cite: 17].

2026 INSC 641

Gaurav Mehla&Ors. V. State of Haryana & Ors. (D.O.J. 11.06.2026)

2026 INSC 641 click here to view full text of judgment

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Service Law: Compassionate Appointment – Pending of Criminal Case

In Atul Chauhan v. State of Haryana & Ors. [Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 640, decided on June 11, 2026], the Supreme Court of India adjudicated an appeal against a Punjab & Haryana High Court judgment that had blocked a son’s application for a compassionate public service post following his father’s death. The appellant’s father, a government school teacher, died under suspicious circumstances in a 2021 road accident, leading to a murder trial where the appellant’s mother was ultimately acquitted based on a “benefit of doubt”. Because an appeal against that acquittal remained pending, the state kept the son’s compassionate job request in abeyance by applying Rule 23(1) of the Haryana Civil Services (Compassionate Financial Assistance or Appointment) Rules, 2019, which mandates the suspension of benefits when a family member is accused of murdering the employee.

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgment. A Division Bench comprising Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice NongmeikapamKotiswar Singh ruled that while Rule 23(1) is constitutionally valid under Article 14 to prevent individuals under a criminal cloud from profiting from their alleged crime, its explicit textual and structural boundaries confine it exclusively to “Compassionate Financial Assistance” and completely bar its application to “Compassionate Appointment”. Deploring this structural gap as a significant legislative anomaly where a lesser monthly payout is frozen during a trial but permanent lifelong public employment remains unregulated, the Bench nonetheless refused to judicially rewrite the law. The Court directed the state to evaluate the son’s job application on its independent merits within three months.

1. Factual Matrix and History of the Case

  • The Fatal Incident: The appellant’s father, Gajender Singh Chauhan, had been working as a Junior Basic Teacher for the Haryana government since 1997. On September 28, 2021, he died in a suspicious road accident after his motorcycle was struck from behind by a speeding car.
  • The Criminal Trial: The appellant’s mother, Pushpa Devi, was subsequently booked and tried under Section 302 of the IPC for allegedly conspiring to murder her husband. On October 14, 2024, the Additional Sessions Judge, Palwal, acquitted her of the charges, though the acquittal was specifically granted on the basis of a “benefit of doubt” rather than being an honorable acquittal.
  • The Pending Appeal and Relinquishment: The brother of the deceased preferred a criminal appeal (CRM-A No. 119 of 2025) before the High Court challenging the mother’s acquittal, leaving the criminal case sub judice. Meanwhile, the mother executed an official affidavit declaring that she had no objection to the policy benefits and compassionate appointment being granted directly to her son, explicitly waiving her independent claim.
  • The State’s Refusal: Citing the ongoing criminal appeal against the mother, the Director of Elementary Education issued orders keeping the son’s claim for a compassionate appointment in abeyance. The son filed a writ petition challenging this deferral and assailing the constitutional validity of Rule 23(1). On May 12, 2025, the High Court dismissed the writ, holding that an appeal is a continuation of a trial, and that the widow held an antecedent right that had to be conclusively resolved before the son could assert a derivative claim.

2. Core Legal Issues Formulated

The Supreme Court centered its review on three primary questions:

  1. Whether Rule 23(1) of the Rules of 2019, which directs the suspension of benefits during a murder trial, applies textually or contextually to a claim for a “compassionate appointment”.
  2. Whether Rule 5(1)(g) mandates a strict sequential priority bar where a child’s eligibility for an appointment is blocked until the living widow’s claim is conclusively determined.
  3. Whether Rule 23(1) is constitutionally valid under Article 14 of the Constitution of India within its proper regulatory domain.

3. Legal Analysis &Ratio Decidendi of the Court

A. The Jurisprudential Nature of Compassionate Welfare

The Court began by reiterating established jurisprudence from Tinku v. State of Haryana (2024), stating that a compassionate appointment is not a vested or heritable right. It functions as a humanitarian public response designed to bail out a bereaved family from sudden financial destitution.

However, referencing M.P. State Agricultural Marketing Board v. Harpal Singh (2025), the Court ruled that this strict standard applies equally to the state. A welfare state cannot deny or defer immediate financial succour through the mechanical operation of procedural formalities or by arbitrarily applying a exclusionary rule to a form of relief it does not legally govern.

B. Plain Meaning and Strict Structural Separation

The Supreme Court completely rejected the State’s argument that the rules should be read fluidly as a single integrated scheme where financial assistance implicitly encompasses job appointments. The Court highlighted that the explicit text and overall architecture of the Rules of 2019 maintain an absolute division between the two remedies:

The text of Rule 23(1) and its marginal heading exclusively feature the phrase “compassionate financial assistance,” with no mention of “compassionate appointment”. The Court ruled that where a statutory provision speaks clearly and exclusively about one category, reading another distinct category into it does not constitute interpretation but represents unauthorized judicial legislation.

C. Decoding the “Failing” Qualifier in Priority Claims

The Court dismantled the High Court’s finding that the son’s application was premature because the widow was still alive. Benches must distinguish between the drafting of Rule 5(1)(f) and Rule 5(1)(g):

  • The Financial Assistance Rule [Rule 5(1)(f)]: This rule is explicitly structured as a cascading hierarchy where lower-tier relatives are introduced by the word “failing” the tier above them (e.g., failing the widow, the eldest unmarried son). This creates an absolute sequential bar.
  • The Appointment Rule [Rule 5(1)(g)]: This section simply lists eligible family members (widow, children, dependent siblings) without utilizing any “failing” qualifiers or conditional text.

The omission of the cascading “failing” language means that a child’s eligibility for a job is not legally frozen by the mere existence of a living widow. Since the widow in this case explicitly disclaimed the job in favor of her son, there was no legal impediment preventing the state from processing the son’s application directly.

D. Constitutional Validity and the Legislative Lacuna

The Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of Rule 23(1) for its intended domain of monthly financial assistance. The rule is not penal but preventive and regulatory, possessing a rational nexus under Article 14 to prevent individuals who face criminal charges for an employee’s murder from pulling concessions from that very death.

However, the Bench exposed a glaring anomaly in the state’s drafting. Under the current rules, an individual facing criminal suspicion is blocked from receiving a modest monthly financial allowance, yet the rules contain no parallel safeguard to prevent that same individual from being granted a permanent, lifelong government job with salary, promotions, and pension benefits. The Court strongly advised the State of Haryana to amend the rules to fix this dangerous legislative gap, but emphasized that courts cannot step in to patch statutory deficiencies on their own.

4. Conclusion and Final Directions

  • Appeal Allowed: The Civil Appeal is allowed, and the judgment of the Punjab and Haryana High Court dated May 12, 2025, is set aside[cite: 17].
  • Rule 23(1) Declared Inapplicable: The Court declared Rule 23(1) constitutionally valid within its proper scope but ruled it completely inapplicable to compassionate appointments[cite: 17]. The state’s decision to hold the son’s application in abeyance based on this rule was overturned[cite: 17].
  • Mandate for Merit Evaluation: The respondents are directed to evaluate and decide the appellant’s claim for a compassionate appointment on its independent merits, strictly against the eligibility criteria of the Rules of 2019, within three months of the judgment[cite: 17].
  • No Right Conferred: The Court clarified that this direction does not confer an absolute right to employment, as the state must still evaluate standard administrative criteria such as vacancy availability and basic qualifications[cite: 17]. It also noted that this decision has no bearing on the pending criminal appeal[cite: 17].

2026 INSC 640

Atul Chauhan V. State of Haryana & Ors. (D.O.J. 11.06.2026)

2026 INSC 640 click here to view full text of judgment

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