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:
- 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.
- Whether an administrative defect at the final stage of a recruitment process nullifies the preceding open-market advertisement and interview stages.
- 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:
- 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.
- 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.
- 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].



