Delhi High Court Upholds Quashing of Promotion Rules for Delhi and Union Territory Civil and Police Service Officers, Holds Government Must Frame a Reasoned Mechanism Without Hindering Career Progression
Delhi High Court Upholds Quashing of DANICS–DANIPS Promotion Rule Fixing 1 July Cut-Off, Directs Government to Frame Reasoned Mechanism Without Career Prejudice
Facts
The Union of India filed two writ petitions challenging separate orders dated 16 January 2025 passed by the Central Administrative Tribunal in proceedings concerning officers of the Delhi, Andaman and Nicobar Islands Police Service (“DANIPS”) and the Delhi, Andaman and Nicobar Islands Civil Service (“DANICS”).
The dispute concerned two dates used under the DANIPS and DANICS Rules, 2003:
- “Approved service” for directly recruited officers was calculated from 1 July of the year following the Civil Services Examination.
- Eligibility for promotion was earlier determined with reference to 1 January of the vacancy year.
Since promotion required completion of a prescribed period of approved service, the use of different dates caused officers to miss consideration for vacancies despite completing the required service later in the same year. This could delay promotion by nearly one year.
In 2014, DANIPS officers approached the Tribunal challenging the anomaly. By an order dated 23 July 2018, the Tribunal held that the dual-date system operated to their disadvantage and was discriminatory under Articles 14 and 16 of the Constitution. It directed the Ministry of Home Affairs (“MHA”) to submit a proposal to the Department of Personnel and Training (“DoPT”) for adopting 1 January as a uniform date.
The MHA proposed that approved service also be calculated from 1 January. However, the DoPT advised that both approved service and promotional eligibility should instead be aligned to 1 July.
Consequently, through Gazette Notifications dated 8 June 2022, the Government amended the DANIPS and DANICS Rules. The amendments changed the date for determining promotional eligibility from 1 January to 1 July while retaining 1 July for calculation of approved service.
The officers challenged the 2022 amendments before the Tribunal. The Tribunal quashed the amendments and directed the authorities to amend the rules so that 1 January following the year of examination would be treated as the date for calculating approved service.
The Union of India challenged those orders before the Delhi High Court.
Issues
- Whether the Tribunal was justified in quashing the 2022 amendments fixing 1 July as the uniform cut-off date.
- Whether the Government had provided adequate reasons for rejecting the MHA’s proposal to adopt 1 January.
- Whether fixing 1 July continued to discriminate against DANIPS and DANICS officers in comparison with analogous services.
- Whether calculation of approved service from 1 July adversely affected promotions, seniority and induction into the IAS or IPS.
- Whether the Tribunal exceeded its jurisdiction by directing the Government to amend statutory service rules in a particular manner.
- What interim arrangement should apply until valid amendments are framed.
Petitioner’s Arguments
The Union of India argued that the Tribunal had exceeded the permissible limits of judicial review by interfering with a policy decision taken after inter-ministerial consultation.
It submitted that the principal problem was the existence of two different dates—1 July for approved service and 1 January for promotional eligibility. The 2022 amendments cured the anomaly by aligning both dates to 1 July.
According to the Union:
- Harmonising both dates to 1 July prevented delays in promotion.
- DANIPS and DANICS could not claim parity with unrelated Group A or Group B services merely because recruitment occurred through the Civil Services Examination.
- Every service had distinct duties, hierarchy, promotional avenues and service conditions.
- The Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service was not comparable with DANIPS or DANICS.
- Officers of DANIPS and DANICS had superior career prospects because they could eventually be inducted into the IPS and IAS.
- Treating 1 January as the starting date would grant officers approximately six months of notional service before their actual joining.
- Officers had no vested right to promotion from a preferred date; they only had a right to be considered according to the applicable rules.
- The Tribunal could not substitute its own policy preference or command the executive to frame statutory rules in a prescribed form.
Respondent’s Arguments
The respondent officers and associations argued that the Tribunal had already identified the discriminatory effect of the dual-date system in its unchallenged order dated 23 July 2018.
They submitted that the DoPT had rejected the MHA’s proposal to adopt 1 January without furnishing any cogent or recorded reason.
The respondents argued that the 2022 amendments did not genuinely cure the discrimination. They merely shifted the promotional eligibility date from 1 January to 1 July while continuing to count approved service from 1 July.
According to them:
- Comparable services recruited through the Civil Services Examination generally used 1 January as the standardised service date.
- The Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service, an analogous Group B service, calculated approved service from 1 January.
- DANIPS and DANICS officers would suffer a six-month reduction in recognised service if 1 July were retained.
- This reduction would have a cascading effect on every stage of promotion.
- It would also prejudice their seniority and eligibility when considered for induction into the IPS or IAS.
- Eligibility for induction was calculated with reference to completed service as on 31 December of the relevant year, making the six-month reduction materially significant.
- Different duties or better future promotional prospects could not justify discriminatory calculation of approved service.
Analysis of the Law
The Court observed that the amendments were framed under the proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution. Rules made under Article 309 possess statutory character and cannot be interfered with merely because a court considers another arrangement more reasonable or preferable.
Such rules may nevertheless be struck down where they are:
- unconstitutional;
- manifestly arbitrary;
- discriminatory;
- mala fide;
- perverse; or
- unsupported by a rational decision-making process.
Judicial review concerns the legality and rationality of the policy-making process, not the wisdom of the policy itself.
The Court noted that this was not a case in which the Tribunal had interfered with the Government’s policy at the first instance. In the earlier round of litigation, the Tribunal had already held that the different dates caused discrimination and delayed promotions. That finding was never challenged by the Union of India.
The Government itself accepted that harmonisation was necessary. Therefore, the principal question was whether adopting 1 July actually cured the discrimination identified earlier.
Practical effect of the two dates
The Court considered an illustration involving an officer selected through the 1999 Civil Services Examination and joining service on 1 October 2000.
Under the pre-amendment system:
- approved service began on 1 July 2000;
- eight years were completed on 30 June 2008; but
- since eligibility was tested on 1 January 2008, the officer could not be considered for vacancies of 2008 and had to wait until 2009.
Under the 2022 amendments:
- approved service continued from 1 July 2000; and
- eligibility was tested on 1 July 2008.
This removed the additional delay caused by the mismatch but did not address the six-month disadvantage in the calculation of approved service compared with services using 1 January.
If 1 January were adopted, both approved service and eligibility would be calculated from 1 January, enabling consideration from 1 January 2008.
The Court held that the amendments addressed only one part of the problem and left the broader discriminatory impact unresolved.
Precedent Analysis
B.S. Yadav v. State of Haryana
The Supreme Court recognised that service rules framed under Article 309 have statutory force. Courts cannot alter them merely because another policy may appear better.
However, such rules remain subject to constitutional limitations and can be invalidated if they violate fundamental rights or established grounds of judicial review.
R.L. Bansal v. Union of India, 1992 Supp (2) SCC 318
This decision reinforced the principle that courts must exercise restraint while reviewing statutory service rules. Interference is justified only on recognised constitutional grounds such as arbitrariness, discrimination or illegality.
Tribunal’s Order Dated 23 July 2018
In the earlier proceedings, the Tribunal had held that the use of 1 January for eligibility and 1 July for approved service delayed promotions of DANIPS officers by nearly one year at each stage.
It also noted that:
- 1 January was used for both purposes while granting Non-Functional Selection Grade;
- the Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service did not suffer the same disadvantage;
- the anomaly adversely affected eventual induction into the IPS; and
- career progression should be governed by definite and non-discriminatory service rules.
Since the Union of India did not challenge that order, its findings concerning the discriminatory effect of the anomaly attained significance in the subsequent proceedings.
Kaleidoscopic comparison with other services
The Tribunal and the High Court examined the rules applicable to services including:
- Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service;
- Indian Civil Accounts Service;
- Indian Defence Accounts Service;
- Indian Revenue Service;
- Indian Administrative Service; and
- Indian Police Service.
The Court acknowledged that most Group A services used the concept of “regular service” rather than “approved service.” However, it found that some services also used a standardised date linked to the Civil Services Examination rather than the officer’s actual date of joining.
More importantly, the respondents were not principally claiming parity with all Group A services. They relied on the Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service, an analogous Group B service in which approved service was reckoned from 1 January.
The difference in the nature of duties did not establish any rational necessity for using different commencement dates for approved service.
Court’s Reasoning
The Court found a clear contradiction in the DoPT’s approach.
In 2012, the DoPT had rejected a proposal to shift promotional eligibility from 1 January to 1 July because its general policy treated 1 January as the relevant date for promotional eligibility.
Later, when the MHA proposed adopting 1 January for calculation of approved service, the DoPT changed its position and supported 1 July without giving adequate reasons.
The Court observed that:
- no reasoned decision rejecting the MHA proposal was produced;
- no record of meaningful deliberation was placed before the Tribunal;
- even after the High Court gave the Union an opportunity to produce the decision-making record, no satisfactory material was furnished;
- the Government failed to explain why 1 July was necessary or rational; and
- the unexplained reversal of position demonstrated arbitrariness and non-application of mind.
The Court further held that adopting 1 July continued to prejudice DANIPS and DANICS officers.
Although the amendments aligned the date for approved service and promotional eligibility, they did not address:
- the six-month deficit compared with the Armed Forces Headquarters Civil Service;
- delayed eligibility for promotion;
- reduced recognised service for induction into the IAS or IPS; and
- adverse seniority vis-à-vis direct recruits and contemporaneous officers.
The possibility of induction into the IAS or IPS could not justify the disadvantage. On the contrary, because service for induction was assessed with reference to completed service up to 31 December, the 1 July date could directly harm their prospects.
The Court therefore upheld the Tribunal’s conclusion that the 2022 amendments were arbitrary and discriminatory.
However, it held that the Tribunal exceeded its jurisdiction by directing the Government to amend Rule 2(e) in a specific manner.
A court or tribunal may invalidate an arbitrary rule, but it ordinarily cannot command the rule-making authority to enact or amend rules using a particular formula. Determining the precise mechanism lies within the executive’s policy and statutory rule-making domain.
The Tribunal’s direction mandating 1 January as the permanent date was therefore set aside.
At the same time, simply quashing the amendments would create an administrative vacuum. The Court accordingly directed the MHA and DoPT to conduct a reasoned exercise and frame a mechanism that addressed the discrimination without prejudicing the career prospects of DANIPS and DANICS officers.
Until new rules were validly framed, 1 January following the year of the Civil Services Examination was directed to operate as the date for determining approved service.
Conclusion
The Delhi High Court upheld the quashing of the DANIPS and DANICS Amendment Rules, 2022, which had fixed 1 July as the uniform date for calculating approved service and determining eligibility for promotion.
The Court held that the Government had failed to provide any reasoned justification for rejecting the MHA’s proposal to adopt 1 January. Fixing 1 July continued to cause a six-month disadvantage affecting promotions, seniority and possible induction into the IAS and IPS.
However, the Court set aside the Tribunal’s direction requiring the Government to amend the rules in a specific manner. It held that courts and tribunals cannot ordinarily direct the executive to frame statutory service rules according to a prescribed formula.
The MHA and DoPT were directed to undertake a reasoned exercise and formulate an appropriate mechanism, preferably within two months.
Until valid amendments were notified, 1 January following the year of examination was directed to be treated as the crucial date for calculating approved service of DANIPS and DANICS officers.
Case: Union of India v. Sanjeev Kumar Yadav and Another, with Union of India v. Delhi, Andaman and Nicobar Islands Civil Services Officers Association
Court: High Court of Delhi at New Delhi
Case Number: W.P.(C) 12877/2025 and W.P.(C) 13008/2025
Judge: Justice Anil Kshetarpal and Justice Amit Mahajan
Date: 1 July 2026
Result: Quashing of the 2022 DANIPS and DANICS amendments upheld; Tribunal’s direction to amend the rules in a prescribed manner set aside; Government directed to frame a reasoned mechanism, with 1 January to apply provisionally.
