Seasonal Dreams Denied: J&K&L High Court Rejects Plea for Labourer Regularisation Amid Hiring Freeze

In a ruling that underscores the boundaries of judicial intervention in government hiring policies, the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh at Srinagar dismissed a writ petition by long-serving seasonal labourers seeking permanent status. Justice Sanjay Parihar held that courts cannot direct regularization when a blanket government ban on engagements exists, especially where seniority and duties differentiate workers.

From Irrigation Fields to Courtroom Battle

The petitioners, Mohammad Amin Rather and others, have toiled as seasonal labourers in the Union Territory's irrigation department since 1998. Engaged only during the irrigation season on a need basis, they watched as respondents 6 to 9—similarly hired under the same scheme—were elevated to "permanent casual labourers" via a 2014 order. These peers were shifted to year-round watch and ward duties.

Challenging a 2020 rejection order, the petitioners filed under Article 226, demanding parity through certiorari and mandamus. The core question: Can the administration deny equal treatment to identically placed workers without violating Articles 14 and 16?

Petitioners Cry Foul on 'Hostile Discrimination'

The labourers' counsel argued arbitrary classification. "Despite long service, petitioners remain overlooked while juniors get year-round jobs," they contended, labeling it a breach of equality. Citing their identical origins as seasonal hires, they invoked precedents like E.P. Royappa to decry arbitrariness as antithetical to Article 14.

Respondents Defend with Rules, Ranks, and Reality

Government advocates countered sharply: Petitioners don't meet SRO 520 of 2017 eligibility. Unlike the favoured group, adjusted for seniority-driven watch duties amid exigencies, petitioners rank lower and stay strictly seasonal. A blanket ban on new engagements looms large, with over 3,000 similar workers across Kashmir districts—a policy courts can't override, they urged.

Judicial Scales: Seniority Tips the Balance

Justice Parihar dissected the parity claim, acknowledging initial similarities but spotlighting distinctions. "The petitioners admittedly figure much lower in the seniority list," he noted, validating differential treatment. Drawing from D.S. Nakara and Randhir Singh , the court affirmed equal pay for equal work but rejected "negative equality"—no right to perpetuate irregularity, per State of Bihar v. Kameshwar Prasad Singh .

The landmark Secretary, State of Karnataka v. Umadevi (3) loomed large: No regularization sans legal appointment. With the ban in place, mandating absorption would invade executive turf. Judicial review probes process, not policy, absent patent arbitrariness.

Key Observations from the Bench

"Equality under Article 14 of the Constitution postulates positive equality and not negative equality . Merely because some benefit may have been extended in favour of another set of employees, the same by itself does not confer an enforceable right..."

"This distinction [seniority and seasonal duties], in the opinion of this Court, constitutes a reasonable basis for differential treatment."

"Issuance of a direction by this Court for extending permanent casual labour status to the petitioners would amount to transgressing into the domain of executive policy."

"Courts must refrain from issuing directions for absorption, regularization, or permanent continuance unless the appointment itself is made in accordance with law." ( Umadevi cited)

Petition Dismissed: No Blanket Parity

The writ stands dismissed, vacating interim relief. Practically, it shields fiscal restraint amid bans, signals seniority's primacy in service claims, and cautions against judicial overreach. For thousands of Kashmir's seasonal workers, it cements status quo—hopes deferred, not demands decreed.

As LiveLaw reports, this reinforces Umadevi 's enduring grip, ensuring regularization remains policy, not petition-driven.