Court: Supreme Court of India
Bench: Justice J. K. Maheshwari and Justice Aravind Kumar
Case Title: Ch. Joseph v. The Telangana State Road Transport Corporation & Ors.
Case No.: Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 36278 of 2017
Neutral Citation: 2025 INSC 920
Decided on: 1 August 2025
Background
In a landmark judgment strengthening employment rights of persons acquiring disabilities during service, the Supreme Court has held that public employers cannot prematurely retire an employee on medical grounds without first making a genuine effort to identify suitable alternative employment.
The appellant, Ch. Joseph, was appointed as a driver in the then Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) in 2014 after satisfying all eligibility requirements. During a routine medical examination conducted while in service, he was found to be suffering from colour blindness and was declared medically unfit to continue as a driver.
Although Joseph sought reassignment to a non-driving post, the Corporation rejected his request on the ground that its internal circulars did not permit alternate employment for colour-blind drivers. Instead, he was compulsorily retired and offered additional monetary benefits.
The Single Judge of the High Court directed the Corporation to provide alternate employment. However, the Division Bench reversed that decision by relying upon an earlier Supreme Court judgment that interpreted the definition of disability under the Persons with Disabilities Act, 1995.
The Supreme Court was therefore called upon to determine whether the Corporation could retire the appellant without exploring alternative employment and whether binding industrial settlements guaranteeing redeployment continued to protect colour-blind drivers.
Issues Before the Court
The Supreme Court considered the following issues:
- Whether retirement of a driver solely on account of colour blindness, without considering alternate employment, was legally sustainable.
- Whether a binding settlement executed under Section 12(3) of the Industrial Disputes Act guaranteeing alternate employment continued to remain enforceable.
- Whether internal administrative circulars could override rights created under a statutory industrial settlement.
- Whether the Corporation had discharged its obligation to meaningfully assess alternative employment before terminating the appellant's services.
Key Findings
a) Medical Unfitness for One Post Does Not Mean Unfitness for All Employment
The Court held that the Corporation fundamentally erred in assuming that inability to perform driving duties automatically rendered the appellant unsuitable for every other post.
Colour blindness may disqualify a person from driving public transport vehicles, but it does not establish incapacity to discharge numerous other functions within the organisation.
The Court observed that Joseph had specifically sought appointment as a Shramik, a post that did not require normal colour vision. Yet the Corporation made no attempt to examine his suitability or identify available vacancies.
b) Alternate Employment Must Be Explored Before Medical Retirement
The Supreme Court held that retirement on medical grounds can only be a measure of last resort.
Before terminating an employee, the employer must make a genuine and documented effort to identify suitable alternative employment. Failure to undertake such an exercise amounts to a substantive violation of law rather than a mere procedural lapse.
The Court described this obligation as flowing from the constitutional principle of reasonable accommodation, which forms part of substantive equality under Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
c) Binding Industrial Settlements Cannot Be Overridden by Administrative Circulars
One of the most significant aspects of the judgment concerns the legal status of settlements arrived at under Section 12(3) of the Industrial Disputes Act.
The Court examined a 1979 Memorandum of Settlement entered into between the Corporation and recognised trade unions. Clause 14 expressly provided that drivers who developed colour blindness during service would be given alternate employment while protecting their pay and seniority.
Rejecting the Corporation's contention that a later settlement had superseded the earlier one, the Court held that:
- the 1986 settlement did not expressly repeal Clause 14;
- the earlier clause specifically dealt with colour-blind drivers;
- the later settlement merely dealt generally with medically unfit drivers; and
- applying the principle generalia specialibus non derogant, the specific provision continued to prevail.
The Court further held that internal circulars issued in 2014 and 2015 could not override a statutory settlement possessing binding legal force under the Industrial Disputes Act.
d) Reasonable Accommodation Extends Beyond Statutory Definitions
The judgment is particularly significant because it moves beyond the technical question whether colour blindness falls within the statutory definition of disability.
Relying upon its recent decisions in Mohamed Ibrahim v. Chairman and Managing Director, Vikash Kumar v. UPSC, Ravinder Kumar Dhariwal v. Union of India and Kunal Singh v. Union of India, the Court held that the obligation of reasonable accommodation cannot be defeated merely because a particular medical condition falls outside the enumerated categories of disability.
The Bench observed that constitutional principles of equality, dignity and non-discrimination require employers to preserve employment wherever an employee retains the functional ability to perform other duties.
e) Inaction Is Institutional Exclusion
The Court made an important observation regarding the burden resting upon employers. It held that the employer—not the employee—must demonstrate that no suitable alternative post exists.
Merely asserting that no vacancy was available is insufficient. The employer must place material on record showing that it examined available posts, assessed the employee's suitability and genuinely attempted redeployment. Failure to undertake such an exercise amounts to institutional exclusion of persons with disabilities.
Directions Issued
Allowing the appeal, the Supreme Court:
- set aside the judgment of the Division Bench of the High Court;
- directed the Corporation to appoint the appellant to a suitable alternative post consistent with his medical condition;
- directed that he be placed in the same pay scale he held before retirement;
- awarded 25% of salary arrears and consequential benefits; and
- directed that the intervening period be treated as continuous service for all purposes.
Why This Judgment Matters
1) Expands Protection Beyond Technical Definitions
The judgment recognises that equality in employment cannot depend solely upon whether a medical condition falls within statutory definitions. Constitutional guarantees of dignity and reasonable accommodation may independently require employers to retain employees through suitable redeployment.
2) Reinforces Reasonable Accommodation in Public Employment
The Court firmly establishes that employers must actively explore adjustments and alternative assignments before terminating employees who acquire disabilities or medical conditions affecting their original duties.
3) Strengthens the Sanctity of Industrial Settlements
The decision also reinforces that settlements entered under Section 12(3) of the Industrial Disputes Act possess statutory force and cannot be diluted through unilateral administrative instructions.
4) Protects Livelihood and Human Dignity
The judgment recognises that loss of a particular functional ability should not automatically result in loss of livelihood where the employee remains capable of contributing in another capacity.
DRI Commentary
This judgment marks another important milestone in the Supreme Court's gradual transition from a narrow statutory understanding of disability towards a constitutional model founded on reasonable accommodation, substantive equality and preservation of dignity.
Although colour blindness has traditionally presented difficulties under disability legislation because it may not satisfy the statutory definitions of benchmark disability, the Court refused to allow those technical classifications to determine the outcome. Instead, it focused on the more fundamental question: Can the employee continue to contribute through another suitable role?
Equally significant is the Court's insistence that employers must demonstrate meaningful efforts at redeployment. For far too long, public authorities have treated medical retirement as an administrative convenience rather than a measure of last resort. This judgment reverses that approach by placing the burden squarely on the employer to prove that no suitable alternative employment exists.
The Court's reaffirmation of the doctrine of reasonable accommodation also reflects the evolution of Indian disability jurisprudence under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016. Drawing upon Vikash Kumar, Ravinder Kumar Dhariwal and Mohamed Ibrahim, the Bench makes it clear that equality often requires individualised assessment rather than rigid adherence to medical classifications.
Perhaps the most enduring contribution of this decision is its recognition that public employment is not merely about filling posts—it is about preserving human dignity. A medical certificate declaring an employee unfit for one job cannot become a licence to extinguish a career without first exhausting every reasonable possibility of continued employment.
For persons with disabilities and employees acquiring medical impairments during service, this judgment substantially strengthens the obligation of public employers to adopt accommodation and redeployment as the norm, and medical retirement as the exception.