Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Bipolar Disorder Without Benchmark Disability Not Enough to Invoke Transfer Protection: says Delhi High Court

Court: High Court of Delhi
Bench: Justice Anil Kshetarpal and Justice Amit Mahajan
Case No.: W.P.(C) 3022/2026
Case Title: Ms. Shalu Pruthi v. Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan & Anr.
Date of Judgment: 25.03.2026

In a decision that sits at the intersection of service law and disability rights, the Delhi High Court has declined to interfere with the transfer of a Kendriya Vidyalaya teacher who invoked Bipolar Affective Disorder as a ground for retention at a preferred station.

The Court upheld the order of the Central Administrative Tribunal, finding no infirmity in the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan’s (KVS) decision to transfer the petitioner from Delhi to Babugarh Cantt. in the Agra region.

Background and Facts

The petitioner, a Primary Teacher appointed in 2009, had been serving in Delhi for over a decade. Her transfer traces back to the 2022 rationalisation exercise within KVS, which later became the subject matter of litigation culminating in proceedings before the Supreme Court.

Pursuant to directions issued therein, teachers were invited to indicate preferred stations. The petitioner opted for Faridabad, Ghaziabad, and Noida. However, owing to non-availability of vacancies, she was posted to Babugarh Cantt., approximately 90 km from her first preference.

Challenging this, she relied primarily on her long-standing diagnosis of Bipolar Affective Disorder, contending that:

  • she required continuous psychiatric care,
  • family support was essential for stability, and
  • the authorities failed to extend reasonable accommodation under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016.

Tribunal’s View

The Tribunal had rejected her plea, holding that her case did not fall within the “Medical Disability Ground” (MDG) category under the KVS Transfer Policy dated 30.06.2023.

This policy recognises limited categories, including specified illnesses and “any other disease with more than 50% mental disability.”

High Court’s Findings

The High Court’s reasoning proceeds along three distinct lines:

1. Transfer is an Incident of Service

Reiterating settled service jurisprudence, the Court emphasised that:

  • an employee cannot claim posting at a particular place as a matter of right,
  • judicial review in transfer matters is narrow, confined to mala fides or statutory violation.

The Court relied on established precedents such as S.L. Abbas, S.C. Saxena, and Shilpi Bose, which consistently hold that administrative discretion in transfers must be respected unless clearly arbitrary.

2. Absence of Benchmark Disability Was Decisive

The core issue turned on whether the petitioner could bring herself within the protective framework of either:

  • the KVS transfer policy, or
  • the disability law regime.

The Court noted that while medical documents showed ongoing treatment, there was no certification indicating benchmark disability (i.e., the statutory threshold of 40% or more under the RPwD Act, and 50% mental disability under the policy).

This evidentiary gap proved fatal. The Court accepted the employer’s view that without such certification, the case could not be treated under the MDG category.

3. Reasonable Accommodation Cannot Be Claimed in the Abstract

The petitioner relied on Ravinder Kumar Dhariwal v. Union of India and Net Ram Yadav v. State of Rajasthan, both of which strongly affirm the principle of reasonable accommodation. 

However, the Court distinguished these precedents on facts.

Case Analysis: The “Benchmark” Barrier—Why the Delhi HC’s Ruling on Bipolar Disorder Fails the Mental Health Test

In a decision that highlights the cold friction between administrative policy and the fluid reality of mental health, the Delhi High Court upheld the transfer of a teacher struggling with Bipolar Affective Disorder. While this judgment aligns with rigid service law, it leaves a glaring void in the progressive interpretation of disability rights.

For the disability rights community, this isn't just about a transfer—it’s about the "quantification of suffering" and the invisible walls built by bureaucratic benchmarks. 

The Outcome: A "Mechanical" Dismissal

The Petitioner, Shalu Pruthi, has served as a Primary Teacher with the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS) since February 2009. Having served in Delhi for over 12 years, she was caught in a rationalization exercise and transferred from Delhi to Babugarh Cantt., roughly 90 km from her preferred stations.

She challenged the move, citing a decade-long battle with Bipolar Affective Disorder that requires consistent psychiatric care and essential family support for stability. She argued that the authorities failed to provide reasonable accommodation as mandated by the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016.

The High Court dismissed the petition, leaning on two primary pillars:

  • Transfer as an Incident of Service: An employee cannot claim a specific posting as a right, especially in a cadre with All India transfer liability.

  • The Certification Gap: The KVS Transfer Policy (2023) recognizes medical grounds only for "specified illnesses" or "any other disease with more than 50% mental disability".

Deep Dive: Diverging from the Supreme Court

The Petitioner relied on two landmark Supreme Court rulings to argue for a sensitive, humane approach:

  • Ravinder Kumar Dhariwal v. Union of India (2023): This case established that the Doctrine of Reasonable Accommodation is a fundamental component of equality. It mandates that the State adopt a sensitive approach to ensure administrative actions do not unfairly penalize employees for conditions beyond their control.
  • Net Ram Yadav v. State of Rajasthan (2022): This ruling emphasized that disability rights must be interpreted in a purposive and rights-based manner, moving away from rigid or formalistic approaches.
Despite these powerful precedents, the High Court held that their application presupposes a "demonstrated legal entitlement". Because Pruthi’s medical records did not explicitly quantify her condition as 50% or more, the Court found no "benchmark disability" and refused to interfere.

Critique: Ignoring the Invisible Reality

This judgment exposes a harsh reality for those with mental health conditions: the quantification of suffering. By sticking strictly to the policy's percentages, the Court has signaled that "reasonable accommodation" has a high entry barrier—one that is fundamentally at odds with the Supreme Court’s interpretation.

1. The Stigma of Certification

The Court noted an "evidentiary gap" because the petitioner lacked a formal certificate. However, this ignores the severe stigma attached to mental illness. Many users are reluctant to seek "Benchmark Disability" certificates due to the social "labeling" that follows. Furthermore, there is a chronic shortage of professionals to assess mental illness, and the process often requires repeated, exhausting hospital visits.

2. The 40% vs. 50% Inconsistency

The RPwD Act recognizes "benchmark disability" at 40%. Yet, the KVS policy demands a 50% threshold for mental disability. The Court did not question this discrepancy or consider how a more restrictive internal policy might dilute the spirit of national disability law.

3. A Missed Opportunity for Writ Jurisdiction

Under its writ jurisdiction (Article 226), the Court had the power to order an independent medical assessment to determine the degree of disability. Instead of bridging this evidentiary gap, the Court chose a mechanical approach, rejecting the petition on technical grounds alone.

The Bottom Line: Need-Based, Not Score-Based

Reasonable Accommodation is defined as the necessary and appropriate modifications to ensure persons with disabilities can exercise their rights equally with others. By its very nature, it is need-specific, not just percentage-specific.

Bipolar Disorder can be debilitating and requires environmental stability long before it hits a "50% disability" score on a bureaucratic chart. This ruling highlights the urgent need for more nuanced policy frameworks—so that the promise of reasonable accommodation does not remain narrowly confined to those with the "right" paperwork.

Read the judgement (PDF 578 KB)