Court: High Court of Delhi
Bench: Justice S. Muralidhar and Justice Talwant Singh
Case No.: W.P.(C) 1904/2018
Case Title: Dileep Kumar Shukla v. Union of India & Ors.
Date of Judgment: January 20, 2020
Citation: 2020:DHC:338-DB
Cases Referred: Government of India v. Ravi Prakash Gupta (2010) 2 SCC (L&S) 448
; Ravi Prakash Gupta v. Union Public Service Commission W.P.(C) 5429/2008 ; Union of India v. National Federation of the Blind (2013) 10 SCC 772 ; South Central Railway Employees Cooperative Credit Society Employees Union v. B. Yashodabai (2015) 2 SCC 727 .
Summary & Brief Background
The petitioner, a candidate with a benchmark visual impairment (Low Vision), participated in the Civil Services Examination (CSE) 2011 conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) and secured an overall rank of 780
Based on his merit rank within the low vision category, he was allocated the Indian Information Service (Junior Grade) Group 'A' [IIS (JG)]
Core Arguments & Institutional Contradiction
The Bureaucratic Omission: The petitioner contended that the Cadre Controlling Authorities (CCA) of the IRS cadres failed to provide the mandatory 1% reservation for the B/LV category across the vacancies distributed for the CSE 2011
. Under Section 33 of the PWD Act, an establishment can only be exempted from this statutory allocation if a formal, specific Gazette Notification is issued by the appropriate government having regard to the nature of the work . No such exemption notification was ever processed or issued for these services . The Backlog Realities: Through subsequent Right to Information (RTI) queries, the petitioner established that hundreds of sanctioned posts remained completely unfilled in both the IRS (IT) and IRS (C&CE) cadres
. For instance, as of late 2019, IRS (IT) recorded 543 vacant posts , while IRS (C&CE) revealed 2,202 vacant positions . The Institutional Contradiction: The respondent authorities relied on internal minutes from a 2007 departmental meeting which generalized that IRS portfolios were "not considered suitable for persons with visual disabilities"
. However, the petitioner exposed a clear systemic contradiction: in subsequent CSE rules (such as those notified in 2017 and 2018), both the IRS (IT) and IRS (C&CE) formally recognized the B/LV category and actively provided reservations for visually impaired candidates . This structural change shattered the respondents' argument that the physical nature of the work rendered the cadre inherently unsuitable for visually impaired officers .
Key Issues Addressed
Whether an individual government department can bypass the mandatory reservation framework of Section 33 of the PWD Act based on internal suitability policies, in the complete absence of an official executive exemption notification
. Whether the completed training and service confirmation of other batchmates can be used as a fait accompli to deny remedial service allocation to a disabled candidate whose statutory rights were compromised by bureaucratic inaction
.
Observations & Findings of the Court
The Division Bench of the Delhi High Court set aside the CAT's order, ruling that statutory welfare protections cannot be structurally deferred or diluted by systemic delays
Dismantling of Erroneous Exemptions: The Court found that the CAT had proceeded on an entirely false premise by assuming that the Department of Revenue enjoyed an official legal exemption from reserving vacancies for the B/LV sub-category
. Internal meeting logs or circulars are not substitutes for a statutory notification required under the proviso to Section 33 . Rejection of Bureaucratic Delays: Highlighting established supreme court precedents, the Court observed that the mandate of reserving posts cannot be left at the mercy of delayed administrative identifying processes
: "The submission made on behalf of the Union of India regarding the implementation of the provisions of Section 33 of the Disabilities Act, 1995, only after identification of posts suitable for such appointment, under Section 32 thereof, runs counter to the legislative intent with which the Act was enacted. To accept such a submission would amount to accepting a situation where the provisions of Section 33 of the aforesaid Act could be kept deferred indefinitely by bureaucratic inaction."
No Shielding Behind a Fait Accompli: The Court firmly rejected the respondents' defence tha
t any current intervention would destabilize the civil service cadres due to the passage of time since the 2011 recruitments : "The Court would not in the context of failure by the Government to provide reservations for the PH category, be presented with a fait accompli."
Directions Issued
Finding that the unfilled statutory vacancies should have legally been carried forward, the High Court issued the following time-bound operational directions
The Respondents are directed to ascertain, within a period of eight weeks, which specific posts within the IRS (IT) and IRS (C & CE) frameworks earmarked for the PH category can be legally allocated to candidates with blindness or low vision
. Within a further period of eight weeks, the authorities must evaluate whether the petitioner can be successfully accommodated into any such earmarked PH vacancies for B/LV and subsequently issue appropriate appointment orders
. Upon appointment, the petitioner will not be eligible for arrears of actual pay
. However, for the precise calculations of seniorities, future promotions, and notional pay fixations, his appointment will relate back to the original date he joined his service in the IIS (JG) under the CSE 2011 batch .
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