The case of Kamal Prasad Dubey v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and Others (2026 INSC 353) centers on the principle of non-discrimination in public employment, specifically regarding the grant of relaxation in educational qualifications for promotion.
Factual Background
- Employment History: The appellant was appointed as a Sahayak Samiti Sevak (Assistant Society Manager) in 1987 on a permanent basis. At the time of his appointment, the required qualification was Higher Secondary, which he possessed.
- Proposed Promotion: In 2014, after 28 years of service with a clean record, the Board of Directors of his Society resolved to promote him to the post of Samiti Prabandhak (Society Manager) [4, 7.1].
- New Regulatory Hurdle: New service rules introduced in 2013 revised the qualification for Society Manager to a graduation degree. However, the rules contained a proviso (Rule 19A) allowing the Registrar to grant relaxation in educational qualifications based on an employee’s “special experience/competence/seniority”.
- The Rejection: Despite the Society’s Board of Directors and General Body unanimously recommending relaxation due to the appellant’s seniority and experience, the Registrar rejected the proposal in 2016 without assigning specific reasons.
The Issue of Discrimination
The core of the legal challenge was the arbitrary treatment of the appellant compared to his peers:
- The appellant identified two other employees (Sushil Kumar Tripathi and Ram Swaroop Pandey) who also possessed only a Higher Secondary qualification.
- In their cases, the Registrar had accepted the recommendations for promotion and granted the necessary relaxation.
- One of these promoted employees had only 20 years of experience, whereas the appellant had over 28 years of experience.
Supreme Court’s Legal Analysis
The Supreme Court set aside the High Court Division Bench’s order and restored the findings of the Single Judge, emphasizing the following:
- Violation of Equality: The Court held that the Registrar’s “cryptic” refusal to grant relaxation to the appellant while granting it to similarly situated juniors was a clear violation of the doctrine of equality under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution.
- Arbitrariness: The Court noted that since the Board of Directors—the competent authority—had validly exercised its power to recommend relaxation, the Registrar could not arbitrarily “negative and discard” the case of the appellant when identical circumstances existed for others.
- Subsequent Eligibility: The Court also observed that by 2019, the rules were reframed to lower the requirement back to Higher Secondary, and the appellant had since acquired an M.A. degree and a computer diploma, making the ongoing denial of his promotion even more irrational.
Conclusion
Declaring that “Discrimination is the other name of injustice,” the Supreme Court allowed the appeals and set aside the orders that had blocked the appellant’s promotion. The Court’s decision reaffirmed that substantive and real justice is subserved only by the strict application of the doctrine of equality in matters of employment.
2026 INSC 353
Kamal Prasad Dubey V. State of Madhya Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 10.04.2026)




