In S. Senthil Kumaran Bose v. The State of Tamil Nadu and Others [Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 645, decided on June 15, 2026], the Supreme Court of India adjudicated a batch of civil appeals concerning a highly contested, multi-year recruitment process for 113 posts of Motor Vehicle Inspector-Grade II conducted by the Tamil Nadu Public Service Commission (TNPSC) under a 2018 notification. The central dispute arose from the Madras High Court’s order directing a fresh selection exercise after invalidating previous candidate lists due to arbitrary, non-uniform verification of work experience certificates issued by private workshops whose administrative renewals were delayed or pending under state review. Aggrieved candidates from various stages of selection and the TNPSC appealed to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court disposed of the appeals by validating the High Court’s directives to level the playing field, while acknowledging subsequent structural corrections implemented during the pendency of the litigation. A Division Bench comprising Justice J.K. Maheshwari and Justice Atul S. Chandurkar ruled that because the State’s Motor Vehicles Maintenance Department (MVMD) had successfully completed the retroactive administrative approvals for all relevant workshops and submitted a verified eligibility list to the TNPSC, the long-stalled recruitment must now be carried to its logical end. The Court affirmed that innocent candidates cannot be penalized for bureaucratic delays in renewing workshop licenses. Furthermore, the Bench upheld mandates requiring the TNPSC to honor Tamil-medium educational certificates issued by institutional heads and to individually disclose marks to candidates falling outside the zone of consideration to ensure systemic transparency.
1. Factual Matrix & Procedural History
- The Initial Recruitment: The TNPSC issued Notification No. 3/2018 on February 14, 2018, to fill 113 vacancies for the post of Motor Vehicle Inspector-Grade II via direct recruitment under the Tamil Nadu Transport Subordinate Services. Out of 2,176 applications, 1,328 candidates sat for the written examination, culminating in a provisional appointment list of 32 candidates in November 2019.
- The First Round of Litigation: Unsuccessful candidates challenged this selection before the Madras High Court. In January 2020, a learned Single Judge set aside the initial appointments and ordered a complete re-verification of the workshop experience certificates for all 1,328 candidates, defining a valid year of experience as a minimum of 240 operational days. A Division Bench affirmed this exercise, and subsequent appeals to the Supreme Court were dismissed in January 2021.
- The Second Round of Litigation: Following the re-verification, the TNPSC published a expanded list of 226 candidates on April 28, 2021, to undergo oral interviews. This list triggered a fresh wave of writ petitions. While a Single Judge directed the immediate finalization of this revised list in February 2023, the Division Bench ultimately modified the order on December 22, 2023. The Division Bench discovered that the Director of the Transport Department had arbitrarily rejected several candidates whose experience was gained during periods when the respective workshops’ renewal applications were languishing in administrative backlogs. The High Court ordered a fresh, time-bound selection process after granting retrospective license renewals to the affected workshops to establish a level playing field.
2. Parties and Contentions Before the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court clubbed the cross-appeals into three distinct operational categories:
- Initial-List Candidates (S. Senthil Kumaran Bose, N. Vaithi, M. Mohammed Adhil, etc.): These appellants argued that because they were part of the very first selection pool of 32/33 candidates, their exclusion from the subsequent 226-candidate list was unjust, asserting that their private workshop credentials fully satisfied the original 2018 notification standards.
- Revised-List Candidates (S. Dinesh Kumar, G. Ramkumar, P. Karthic, etc.): These appellants contested the High Court’s order to scrap the entire selection process afresh. They asserted that their inclusion in the 226-candidate pool gave them a legitimate expectation of completion, and that re-doing the process scuttled steps scrupulously undertaken over five years.
- The TNPSC: The Commission filed appeals challenging directions requiring it to automatically accept Tamil-medium certificates without independent state verification, and to disclose raw scores to candidates who failed to make the cut-off.
3. Legal Analysis &Ratio Decidendi of the Court
A. Administrative Compliance & Workshop Experience Rectification
The Supreme Court examined how the state executed the High Court’s directive regarding retrospective workshop licensing. The Director of the Motor Vehicles Maintenance Department (MVMD) submitted a comprehensive compliance report dated April 10, 2024, confirming that the state had formally granted retrospective approval to the concerned workshops.
Following a exhaustive re-verification of the 1,328 candidates, the MVMD certified that 794 candidates (comprising 702 from approved private workshops, 30 from the Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation, and 62 from government establishments) now legally possessed the required one year of valid experience. The Court noted that the initial-list appellants (such as Bose and Adhil), who were previously disqualified, were now verified to have more than one year of experience due to this retrospective healing.
B. Balance of Equities and Lack of Vested Rights
The revised-list appellants (the 226 candidates) argued that scrapping the 2021 list subjected them to undue hardship. The Court rejected this plea, holding that mere placement on a provisional select list does not confer an absolute vested right to appointment.
Because an entire class of candidates had been erroneously excluded due to institutional delays, resetting the selection process to include all 794 certified candidates was necessary to guarantee equal public opportunity. The interests of the 226 candidates were protected since they remained free to compete within this expanded pool, allowing inter-se merit to govern the final appointments.
C. Finality of the PSTM Quota & Public Transparency Mandates
The Court firmly rejected the TNPSC’s resistance to the “Persons Studied in Tamil Medium” (PSTM) quota directives. It ruled that a certificate issued by the Head of an Institution confirming a candidate’s diploma was completed in a Tamil medium is textually sufficient under the 2018 guidelines. The TNPSC cannot independently seek additional clearance letters from the Directorate of Technical Education to question an institution’s word.
Furthermore, relying on Joint Directors and Central Public Information Officer v. T.R. Rajesh (2018), the Court ruled that since portions of the selection data were already in the public domain, it was in the interest of public transparency to individually communicate scores to below-cutoff applicants, thereby bringing a quietus to years of litigation.
4. Conclusion & Final Directions
- Appeals Resolved: All connected Civil Appeals filed by the candidates and the TNPSC are formally disposed of, and the findings of the Madras High Court’s Division Bench are modified and integrated.
- Select List Inclusions: The TNPSC is ordered to incorporate the names of the newly validated initial-list appellants (who now satisfy the experience threshold via retrospective state action) into the broader eligible pool[cite: 17].
- Expeditious Finalization Mandate: Since more than six years have elapsed since the issuance of Notification No. 3/2018, the TNPSC is directed to finalize the oral tests, evaluate the driving licenses, and publish the definitive select list for the 113 posts at the earliest, adhering strictly to the High Court’s timeline[cite: 17].
- PSTM Certification Validated: The TNPSC must honor the institutional PSTM certificates to fill the designated linguistic quotas without imposing extra-statutory verification hoops[cite: 17].
- Individual Score Disclosure: The TNPSC must individually communicate scores to candidates who fell outside the zone of consideration[cite: 17]. These candidates are not entitled to copies of their physical answer sheets[cite: 17].
- Interim Orders & Costs: The stay on paragraph 88(a) is dissolved, all pending interlocutory applications are wrapped up, and parties are ordered to bear their own costs[cite: 17].



