In Jagdish Prasad and Others v. P.M. Manoj Kumar and Others (Civil Appeal No. 9041 of 2019, decided on May 27, 2026), the Supreme Court of India adjudicated a long-running service dispute among police personnel of the Andaman & Nicobar Administration regarding the valid rules for promotion from Head Constable to Assistant Sub-Inspector (Executive). The central issue was whether vacant promotional slots should be filled according to the rules in force when the vacancies originally accrued (the old 2010 Rules, which mandated a selection test and a matriculation qualification) or under newly substituted statutory rules (the 2016 Rules, which restored a 100% seniority-cum-fitness criteria).
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the Calcutta High Court’s judgment, which had ordered the retrospective application of the older rules. Erasing the historic Y.V. Rangaiah principle, the Supreme Court firmly ruled that public servants hold no vested right to be evaluated under repealed rules. Instead, promotions are governed strictly by the statutory frameworks active on the exact date actual consideration for promotion takes place. The Court declared that the statutory process of amending rules “by substitution” effectively erases the old provisions, making the 2016 Rules the exclusive benchmark for all accumulated and future vacancies.
1. Factual Background and Regulatory Timeline
- The Cadre and RKS Framework: The appellants, private respondents (Nos. 1 to 28), and intervenors entered the Andaman & Nicobar Police Department as Constables under the foundational Andaman & Nicobar Police Manual, 1963, eventually earning promotions to Head Constables. At entry, their minimum educational qualification was the 8th Standard.
- The 2008 and 2010 Rule Modifications: On March 31, 2008, new Group ‘C’ Recruitment Rules split the promotional pool into a 66-2/3% selection track (which introduced a competitive test and a mandatory 10th-standard matriculation requirement) and a 33-1/3% seniority-cum-fitness non-selection track. This structure was carried forward by the 2010 Recruitment Rules, which codified the recruitment channel as “100% by promotion” from Head Constables.
- The Promotional Trigger and Initial Litigation: On June 6, 2014, the Administration issued a circular inviting eligible matriculate Head Constables to apply for the 66-2/3% selection quota test. Non-matriculate senior Head Constables (the appellants) immediately challenged this circular by filing O.A. No. 351/2014 before the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT), arguing that the sudden academic requirement unfairly blocked their career path and caused professional stigma by elevating junior officers over them.
- The 2016 Restructuring: While the litigation was pending, the Administration issued the 2016 Amendment Rules on March 21, 2016. These rules completely abolished the selection test and the matriculation requirement, restoring the original position of promoting 100% of candidates on a seniority-cum-fitness basis.
2. Judicial History and Conflict of Laws
- CAT and High Court Disagreements: The Tribunal initially dismissed O.A. No. 351/2014 as infructuous, declaring that the newly active 2016 Rules granted the exact relief the applicants sought and would govern future promotions. However, on August 10, 2016, the Calcutta High Court (Port Blair Circuit Bench) set aside the CAT order. Relying on the old precedent Marripati Nagaraja v. Government of Andhra Pradesh (2007), the High Court held that vacancies must be filled using the regular recruitment rules that prevailed when the specific vacancies accrued. It commanded the State to process old vacancies using the repealed 2010 matriculation-based criteria. The appellants approached the Supreme Court to challenge this mandate.
3. Key Legal Issues & Supreme Court’s Observations
A. Absolute Overruling of the Y.V. Rangaiah Principle
The Supreme Court examined the legal conflict regarding whether promotions should align with the date a vacancy arises or the date of actual administrative consideration.
- Primacy of the Present Rules: Justice S.V.N. Bhatti recalled that a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court in State of Himachal Pradesh v. Raj Kumar (2022) explicitly overruled the traditional doctrine laid down in V. Rangaiah v. J. Sreenivasa Rao (1983).
- No Vested Rights to Old Vacancies: The Court confirmed that there is no universal rule requiring historical vacancies to be processed under past laws. Public servants possess only a right to be considered for promotion, and this consideration must be handled according to the statutory rules in force on the exact date the evaluation takes place.
- State Prerogative to Restructure: Relying on State of Odisha v. Sreepati Ranjan Dash (2026), the Court noted that the State retains an absolute administrative prerogative to restructure cadres or alter evaluation methods for public positions to ensure efficiency, provided its policy decisions satisfy the reasonableness standards of Article 14.
B. The Legal Consequences of Amendment “By Substitution”
The private respondents argued that their rights were safeguarded because a Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC) had finalized an ad hoc promotion list (“List-B”) in late 2014 while the 2010 Rules were still active, making it a “completed transaction” under the General Clauses Act. The Supreme Court rejected this stance:
- The Nature of Ad Hoc Orders: The 2014 promotion order explicitly carried riders stating the postings were purely ad hoc, did not confer permanent seniority rights, and were strictly subject to the final judicial outcome of O.A. No. 351/2014. Because these appointments were conditional and the promotees were later reverted, they could not be characterized as “completed acts” or vested rights.
- The Effect of Deletion: Citing statutory interpretation standards from Gottumukkala Venkata Krishamraju v. Union of India (2019) and Zile Singh v. State of Haryana (2004), the Court explained that when a legislature amends a rule “by substitution,” it carries out a dual process: the old text ceases to exist (is scored out), and the new rule is written in its place. Unless a contrary intent is explicitly stated, substitution completely deletes the old provision, meaning any subsequent administrative consideration can proceed only under the new 2016 framework.
4. Final Rulings and Operational Mandates
The Supreme Court allowed the Civil Appeal and issued the following structural directions:
- High Court Judgment Set Aside: The judgment of the Calcutta High Court directing the retrospective application of the old 2010 Rules was declared legally unsustainable and set aside.
- Validation of the 2016 Framework: The Recruitment Rules of 2016 stand as the sole valid statutory baseline for filling the Assistant Sub-Inspector (Executive) cadre within the Union Territory of Andaman & Nicobar.
- Immediate Recruitment Directive: The Union Territory Administration is commanded to fill all existing and accumulated vacancies for the post of Assistant Sub-Inspector (Executive) strictly under the criteria of the 2016 Rules (seniority-cum-fitness).
- Timeline for Compliance: The entire regular selection and appointment process must be completed within two months from the date of the judgment.
Disposal: The appeal was allowed, and all connected pending miscellaneous applications were formally closed with no order as to costs.
2026 INSC 572
Jagdish Prasad And Others V. P.M. Manoj Kumar And Others (D.O.J. 27.05.2026)




