Yogendra Kumar Singh vs Union Of India - Service Jurisprudence
Summary
The Supreme Court of India is hearing a batch of appeals concerning the grant of Permanent Commission (PC) to Short Service Commission Officers (SSCOs) in the Indian Navy, many of whom are women. The Armed Forces Tribunal had previously directed the reconsideration of SSCOs not granted PC, but the appellants argue this perpetuates uncertainty.
What changed
The Supreme Court of India is reviewing a series of appeals filed by approximately 25 Short Service Commission Officers (SSCOs), predominantly women, of the Indian Navy who were denied Permanent Commission (PC). The core issue revolves around the fairness and transparency of the assessment process for career permanence. The Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT) had previously ordered a reconsideration of these officers, mandating that they be notified of the assessment criteria, methodology, and parameters. However, the appellants contend that this directive, following extensive litigation, merely prolongs their career instability and does not provide a definitive resolution.
This case highlights significant issues in military service jurisprudence regarding the career progression and equitable treatment of SSCOs. Compliance officers within defense organizations, particularly the Indian Navy, should monitor this case closely as it could lead to revised procedures for PC assessments, potentially impacting personnel policies and review processes. The outcome may necessitate updates to internal guidelines on officer evaluations, transparency in selection criteria, and grievance redressal mechanisms for service personnel seeking career permanence.
What to do next
- Monitor Supreme Court proceedings regarding the Indian Navy SSCO Permanent Commission appeals.
- Review internal policies for assessing Short Service Commission Officers for Permanent Commission.
- Ensure transparency in the notification of assessment criteria, methodology, and parameters for PC.
Source document (simplified)
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Yogendra Kumar Singh vs Union Of India on 24 March, 2026
Author: Surya Kant
Bench: Surya Kant
2026 INSC 282 REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
Civil Appeal No. 14681 / 2024
Yogendra Kumar Singh …Appellant(s)
versus
Union of India and others …Respondent(s) with
Civil Appeal No. 3769 / 2025
Civil Appeal Nos. 13062 - 13064 / 2024
Civil Appeal No. 14981 / 2024
Civil Appeal Nos. 14982 - 14988 / 2024
Civil Appeal No. 5425 / 2025
Civil Appeal No. 5433 / 2025
Civil Appeal No. 5450 / 2025
Civil Appeal Nos. 3492 - 3493 / 2025 Civil Appeal No. 9776 / 2025 Civil Appeal No. 9774 / 2025 Civil Appeal No. 9777 / 2025 Civil Appeal No. 12604 / 2025 Signature Not Verified Digitally signed by SATISH KUMAR YADAV Date: 2026.03.24 11:47:57 IST Reason: Page 1 of 49 JUDGEMENT
SURYA KANT, CJI.
Applications for intervention are allowed, and the Applicants therein are
directed to be impleaded as Intervenors.
The instant batch of appeals arises from a long and unsettled chapter in
the service jurisprudence of the Indian Navy. It has been instituted by a
group of roughly 25 Short Service Commission Officers (SSCOs), the
majority of whom are women seeking the grant of Permanent
Commission (PC). At its core, this dispute does not concern mere
instances of non-selection; rather, it calls for a detailed evaluation of the
fairness and transparency of the process by which officers, after long
years of service, were assessed for career permanence.
In brief, the Short Service Commission Women Officers (SSCWOs),
together with certain similarly-placed male officers, approached the
Armed Forces Tribunal, Principal Bench at New Delhi (AFT), seeking
redressal after PC was not granted to them. By its judgement dated
27.09.2024 (Impugned Judgement) and orders dated 13.02.2025 and
06.03.2025 (Impugned Orders), the AFT allowed their Original
Applications (OAs) and directed the Respondents to reconsider all SSCOs
who had not been granted PC in the Selection Boards convened in
December 2020 and September 2022. Such reconsideration was to be
undertaken afresh, after duly notifying the assessees of the criteria,
methodology, and parameters governing the assessment. Page 2 of 49
Notwithstanding the apparent relief granted, the Appellants still felt
aggrieved and have approached this Court contending that the direction
effectively consigns them to yet another Selection Board, after two full
rounds of litigation before multiple fora, and after more than fifteen years
spent in pursuit of an equitable opportunity for consideration. According
to them, the directions in the Impugned Judgement merely perpetuate
the career uncertainty that has marked almost their entire service profile.
A. FACTS
Given the chequered history of litigation, it is necessary, before turning
to the legal questions that arise for determination, to trace the factual
trajectory which has given rise to these appeals.
5.1. The Appellants and Intervenors before us, comprising both male and
female officers, were inducted into various branches/cadres of the Navy
between 1999 and 2011. Most of the Appellant-SSCWOs were inducted
at a time when women officers were not eligible to be considered for the
grant of PC in their respective branches/cadres. Some of their male
counterparts, who are also before this Court, are aggrieved by their own
non-selection for PC. Of the SSCOs involved in these proceedings, 7 have
since retired from service, while the remaining continue in service
pursuant to interim orders staying their release. The Respondents
comprise the Union of India through the Ministry of Defence, the Director
of Personnel (OA&R) of the Navy, the Chief of the Naval Staff, and the
Commander (Personnel)–Log of the Navy.
Page 3 of 49 5.2. To appreciate the nature of the grievances raised, it is necessary to first
understand the structural and regulatory framework within which the
Navy operates, particularly in relation to the grant of PC.
5.3. Although the Army, Navy, and Air Force together constitute the Indian
Armed Forces, each service functions through its own institutional
architecture. The Navy, with a sanctioned strength of approximately
11,000 officers, is the smallest of the three. It follows a pyramidal
hierarchical structure, characterised by a broad base of junior officers
tapering sharply towards a limited number of senior command positions.
Organisationally, the Navy is divided into four principal branches: (i)
Executive; (ii) Electrical; (iii) Engineering; and (iv) Education.
5.4. The induction of officers on Short Service Commission (SSC) was
originally conceived as a measure to address manpower shortages
following the exodus of British personnel from the Indian Armed Forces.
For several decades, only male officers were inducted as SSCOs, owing
to the conditional statutory bar on the recruitment of women contained
in [Section 9(2)](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1289381/) of the Navy Act, 1957.
5.5. The regulatory framework governing service conditions was subsequently
elaborated through the Regulations for the Navy Part III (Naval
Ceremonial, Conditions of Service and Miscellaneous Regulations 1963)
(1963 Regulations), framed under [Section 184](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1520952/) of the Navy Act, 1957.
Regulations 122(14) and 203 expressly contemplate the grant of PC to
suitable SSCOs, subject to the availability of vacancies and prevailing Page 4 of 49 regulations. Before we tread any further, let us reproduce the text of the
aforementioned Regulations:
“ Regulation 122: Short Service Commissions
xxxx Permanent Commissions - Suitable officers may be
considered for the grant of Permanent Commission in the
Indian Navy at any time after successful completion of the
period of probation, subject to the existence of vacancies
and regulations current at the time.
[xxxx]
Regulation 203: Grant of Permanent Commission
(1) Subject to the availability of vacancies in the
stabilized cadre of the Navy, Permanent Commission
may be granted from time to time to Short Service
Commission Officers of the rank of Sub Lieutenant
and above who are considered suitable and are
recommended by the Chief of the Naval Staff.
(2) Officers granted Permanent Commission may be
transferred, with their existing rank and seniority. The
retention of any acting rank held by an officer at the time of
transfer to a Permanent Commission shall be governed by
Regulation 202.
(3) Short Service Commission Officers selected for the
grant of Permanent Commission in the Navy shall conform
to the medical standard laid down by the Chief of the Naval
Staff from time to time.”
[Sic] [Emphasis Supplied]
5.6. Until 1991, SSCOs in all the technical branches, barring the Naval
Constructor cadre, were considered for the grant of PC periodically,
guided by service requirements rather than any uniform, annualised
policy. The transition from SSC to PC was governed directly by
Regulation 203, as reproduced above. Each eligible batch was ordinarily
entitled to two opportunities for consideration: a ‘First Look’ in the sixth
year of service alongside the batch immediately senior to them, and a
‘Second Look’ in the seventh year alongside their immediate juniors. Page 5 of 49 5.7. A significant shift occurred with the notification dated 09.10.1991,
issued under [Section 9(2)](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1289381/) of the Navy Act, 1957 and published on
26.10.1991, whereby women were permitted to be inducted as SSCOs in
select branches/cadres, namely, Logistics, Law, and Education.
Consequently, through two communications dated 20.12.1991, the
specific service conditions for SSCOs in these three branches/cadres
were prescribed. While the tenure of male SSCOs was fixed at seven
years, SSCWOs were appointed for a five-year term, subject to review.
Importantly, it was indicated that a policy for the grant of PC to SSCWOs
would be promulgated in 1997. The scope of women’s induction was
further expanded by a notification dated 06.11.1998, permitting
SSCWOs to enter all four branches of the Navy.
5.8. The Ministry of Defence issued a communication on 25.02.1999 to the
Chief of Naval Staff, informing that the President of India, in reference to
the guidelines laid down in the communications dated 20.12.1991, had
sanctioned certain terms and conditions of service of SSCOs, including
women. It was clarified that the grant of PC would be in accordance with
Regulation 203 of the 1963 Regulations. Further, SSCWOs of all
branches/cadres could be directed to serve onboard ships during
training and subsequent employment, if the exigencies of service
so required.
5.9. Prior to 2002, the tenure of SSCOs was fixed at seven years, with
discretionary extensions up to ten years. This was later revised by a
communication dated 27.02.2002 to ten years, with a maximum Page 6 of 49 extension of up to fourteen years. Until 2008, however, SSCOs in several
non-technical branches were not considered for PC, in accordance with
their initial terms of entry.
5.10. A turning point emerged with the policy dated 26.09.2008, whereby the
Union of India permitted prospective consideration for PC for SSCWOs in
the Education, Law, and Naval Architecture branches/cadres. The
Implementation Guidelines dated 03.12.2008, proposed to permit all
SSCOs (male and female) from these branches/cadres, inducted after
January 2009, to be eligible for consideration for PC. These
‘Implementation Guidelines’ laid down a structured choice in the sixth
year of service between opting for PC or extension, and contemplated
selection by a Selection Board based on inter se merit derived from the
Annual Confidential Reports (ACRs), subject to the availability of
vacancies. This policy decision concerning the prospective grant of PC to
SSCWOs inducted after January 2009 in limited branches/cadres
became the inflexion point for sustained litigation concerning
consideration for PC on the basis of cadre, batch, and sex.
5.11. Shortly thereafter, on 28.10.2009, the Navy Headquarters amended the
existing ACR format by including a column for formal endorsements for
PC by the Initiating Officers (IOs). These endorsements could be ‘B’ i.e.
recommended for PC or ‘D’ i.e. not recommended for PC. The purpose of
this amendment was to obtain a clear opinion on the suitability of the
assessee for PC during the period under review.
Page 7 of 49 5.12. In the meantime and in the wake of the High Court of Delhi’s (High
Court) judgement dated 12.03.2010 in [Babita Puniya v. Secretary,1](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/159839005/) which held that all SSCWOs serving in the Army and Air Force were
entitled to be considered for PC, an SSCWO in the Navy, namely, Annie
Nagaraja (who is also the Appellant before us in Civil Appeal No.
5425/2025) along with several others, approached the High Court by
way of Writ Petitions under [Article 226](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1712542/) of the Constitution. They sought
to contest the ‘prospective’ nature of the policy dated 26.09.2008 and its
confinement to only three branches/cadres. These Writ Petitioners,
inducted between 1992 and 2001 into the Logistics, Air Traffic Controller
(ATC), and Education branches/cadres in the Navy, highlighted the
anomaly of being discharged after fourteen years of service without a
single opportunity for PC consideration.
5.13. The High Court, vide judgement dated 04.09.2015 in [Annie Nagaraja
v. Union of India,2](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) drew upon the reasoning of the coordinate Bench in
its decision dated 12.03.2010 and took a serious view of the continued
denial of PC to SSCWOs inducted prior to 2009. The High Court held
that, in terms of the letter dated 20.12.1991, the SSCWOs had a
legitimate expectation of being considered for PC from 1997 onwards,
and the failure to operationalise this assurance had materially impeded
their career progression. Upon finding the policy dated 26.09.2008 to be
irrational and discriminatory, the High Court directed that those SSCOs
who had opted for PC, but were granted only extension and had not
1 2010 SCC OnLine Del 1116.
2 2015 SCC OnLine Del 11804.
Page 8 of 49 retired by the time the Writ Petitions were filed, be granted PC with all
consequential benefits. In respect of officers who had attained the age of
superannuation prior to the filing of the Writ Petitions, reinstatement
was directed, subject to the medical fitness of the officer and the outcome
of the Special Leave Petitions preferred by the Union of India against the
High Court’s judgement dated 12.03.2010, which was then pending
before this Court. Aggrieved by these directions, the Respondents chose
to assail this judgement by way of Civil Appeal No. 2182/2020, before
this Court.
5.14. The ripple effects of the High Court’s decision dated 04.09.2015 soon
reached the AFT. Citing the judgement dated 04.09.2015, six SSCWOs
from the Logistics, ATC, and Education branches/cadres approached the
AFT, seeking the grant of PC. In doing so, they challenged both the policy
dated 26.09.2008 and the Implementation Guidelines dated 03.12.2008.
These officers had been inducted pursuant to an advertisement issued
in July 2002, which expressly provided that “deserving officers” from the
ATC, Logistics, and Education branches/cadres “may also be considered
for PC.” Consequently, in its judgement dated 11.08.2016 in Priya
Khurana and Ors. v. Union of India,3 the AFT opined that the policy
dated 25.02.1999, whereby the Ministry of Defence had decided to grant
PC to both men and women SSCOs in accordance with Regulation 203,
continued to govern the field, and that the policy dated 26.09.2008 had
been promulgated without due regard to the earlier policy. On this basis,
3 2016 SCC OnLine AFT 798.
Page 9 of 49 the AFT directed the Respondents to consider the Applicants before it for
the grant of PC, irrespective of gender and cadre, within a period of six
months. These directions were challenged by both, the Respondents and
the SSCOs, before this Court, and the matters were accordingly tagged
with Civil Appeal No. 2182/2020.
5.15. While these challenges remained pending, this Court intervened to
preserve the status quo of service. By an interim order dated 20.11.2015,
it was directed that only those SSCWOs who were Petitioners before the
High Court and were in service as on 26.09.2008 be reinstated and
permitted to continue on the same terms as SSCOs until disposal of the
cases. Subsequently, by an order dated 28.10.2016, this Court further
permitted the SSCWOs who were Applicants before the AFT to continue
in service until further orders.
5.16. The legal position was finally crystallized by this Court through its
judgement dated 17.03.2020 in [Union of India v. Annie Nagaraja.4
Upholding](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/25678827/) the judgement of the High Court, this Court quashed the
Implementation Guidelines dated 03.12.2008 to the extent that they
made the grant of PC prospective and confined it to specified
branches/cadres. The Respondents were directed to consider all serving
SSCOs in the Education, Law, and Logistics branches/cadres for the
grant of PC in accordance with Regulation 203, subject to the availability
of vacancies in the stabilised cadre at the relevant time and inter se merit
derived from the ACRs. In addition, all SSCWOs who had been denied
4 (2020) 13 SCC 1.
Page 10 of 49 consideration for PC on account of their induction prior to 26.09.2008
and were no longer in service, as well as those who were before the High
Court and the AFT but were not granted PC, were deemed, as a one-time
measure, to have completed substantive qualifying service for the
purpose of pension. It was categorically held that once the statutory bar
on women’s entry into the Navy was lifted, all SSCOs, irrespective of
gender, were to be governed by Regulation 203 in matters concerning PC.
Ultimately, the policy dated 26.09.2008 was found to be inconsistent
with the notifications dated 09.10.1991 and 06.11.1998. This Court
poignantly recorded that the Respondents had systematically failed to
implement the judgements of the High Court and the AFT, despite no
stay having been granted, leaving a large number of SSCOs serving for
over two decades without the grant of PC.
5.17. To give effect to the directions issued in Annie Nagaraja (supra), the
Respondents issued a circular dated 29.10.2020, proposing to conduct
a Selection Board in December 2020 to consider all SSCOs
commissioned prior to 30.11.2013. Officers already considered for PC
from the cadres of Law and Naval Constructor and the Electrical,
Engineering, and Education branches, as also all SSCOs of ATC, Sports,
and Information Technology (IT) cadres, were excluded from this
exercise. Willingness to be considered for PC was accordingly sought
from eligible officers. It is not in dispute that all the Appellants and
Intervenors before this Court were considered by the Selection Board
convened in December 2020.
Page 11 of 49 5.18. For the purpose of this exercise, the Navy devised a specific method to
identify vacancies. After identifying the stabilised strength of each
branch/cadre, the ideal PC strength was calculated at 60% of the
stabilised strength. Once the ideal PC strength was calculated, the
number of existing PC officers was deducted from the ideal PC strength.
The remaining figure signified the total deficiency and thereby, the
existing vacancies. This deficiency was then divided by 15 and
distributed among the batches under consideration as per the Dynamic
Vacancy Model. While this methodology distributed the deficiency across
batches, it simultaneously revealed that PC officers were overborne in
the Law, Executive General Service, and Naval Armament Inspectorate
(NAI) cadres, resulting in no vacancies therein. Further, only three
vacancies were available in the Naval Constructor cadre across
all batches.
5.19. The Selection Board assessed candidates on the basis of inter se merit
for each nominal year of vacancy. Keeping in line with the established
practice of affording each SSCO a First Look and a Second Look, the
Selection Board, convened in December 2020, considered officers from
two different years against each nominal year of vacancy, extending the
First and Second Look consideration accordingly.
5.20. Apart from direct ineligibilities such as adverse medical categorisation or
pending vigilance or disciplinary proceedings, the determinative criterion
for selection was inter se merit. For this purpose, the last five ACR cycles Page 12 of 49 of each officer were evaluated, and marks were apportioned in
accordance with the Approach Paper, as follows:
“(a) CR Marking - 90%
(b) Slt Seniority - 4%
(c) War Assessment - 2%
(Officer should not have been
recommended G and below any
time in the last five CR cycles
held on record)
(d) Peer Assessment - 2%
(Officer should not have been
recommended G and below any
time in the last five CR cycles
held on record)
(e) Recommendation for PC - 2%
(Officer should not have been
graded NO in three or more
times in the last five CR cycles
held on records)
(f) Medical Category - The officers should be in Medical
Category not below S2A2 (Pmt).
Officers in Low medical category
(LMC) for obesity would not be
considered for PC, irrespective of
medical category
(g) Discipline and Vigilance - Officers should have no
Disciplinary and Vigilance case
pending against them”
[Sic] 5.21. A computer-generated merit list was prepared by aggregating the marks
awarded under these heads. Unlike the procedure employed by the Army
in its selection process for the grant of PC, no marks were assigned for
‘value judgement’. Further, beyond the criteria specified in the Approach Page 13 of 49 Paper, no additional weightage was accorded for Honours, Awards, or
other achievements by the respective officers.
5.22. Through this process, from the cadres in which vacancies were available,
the Selection Board considered a total of 306 SSCOs, both male and
female, for the grant of PC. Of these, 80 officers were ultimately selected
to be granted PC. Immediately thereafter, the Respondents issued a
Signal Order releasing the remaining SSCOs from service on the ground
that they had not been granted PC and had completed their tenure
as an SSCO.
5.23. Aggrieved by their non-selection for PC, 20 SSCOs, including male and
female officers, approached this Court under [Article 32](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/981147/) of the
Constitution, while 12 SSCOs filed OAs before the AFT. By an order dated
24.08.2021 in [T. Rajkumar v. Union of India,5](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/47507332/) this Court transferred
the said Writ Petitions to the AFT, with a direction that all such cases be
considered together. Owing to this, the grievances raised before the AFT
spanned several facets of the selection process, including the non-
disclosure of criteria for consideration, reliance on ACRs lacking any
endorsement regarding recommendation for PC, and alleged errors in the
computation of available vacancies.
5.24. Upon consideration of the material on record, the AFT delivered its
judgement dated 03.01.2022 in Lt. Cdr. [Tarun and Ors. v. Union of
India.6 While](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1598700/) broadly approving the Navy’s methodology for vacancy
5 2021 SCC OnLine SC 3396.
6 2022 SCC OnLine AFT 5345.
Page 14 of 49 computation and its compliance with the directions in Annie Nagaraja (supra), the AFT rejected most of the OAs on the ground that non-
selection was attributable to comparative merit vis-à-vis limited
vacancies. At the same time, the AFT identified specific lacunae in the
process, especially when it came to the cadres in which no vacancy was
available, and issued corrective directions. It directed, as a one-time
measure, that officers from overborne or low-deficiency cadres, such as
Law, Executive General Service, and NAI, be considered afresh by
creating proportionate vacancies to ensure fair First and Second Look
consideration. It further noted that due to low cadre strength and
irregular induction in the Law cadre, the 2011 and 2014 batches, which
ought to have been considered together in 2019, were left without
vacancies, and directed their consideration alongside Cdr. Seema
Chaudhary (2007 Batch). Finally, in respect of 8 vacancies left unfilled
due to rigid distribution and absence of suitable candidates, the AFT
directed that the next eligible officers in the merit list be granted PC.
5.25. In compliance with the AFT’s directions in Lt. Cdr. Tarun (supra), the
Respondents created additional vacancies and convened a fresh
Selection Board in September 2022, considering 263 SSCOs from the
overborne cadres. As a result, 21 additional officers were granted PC.
Some of the Appellants before this Court were considered by this
Selection Board but were, once again, not granted PC.
5.26. In the interregnum, several SSCOs, including some of the instant
Appellants, challenged the decision in Lt. Cdr. [Tarun](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1598700/) (supra) before this Page 15 of 49 Court. They contended that all the information supplied to the AFT
regarding the manner of conducting the Selection Boards, the criteria for
preparing merit lists, and the ACRs relied upon for determining merit
scores was never disclosed to them. Rather, all such information was
furnished by the Respondents only to the AFT in a sealed cover. This, it
was claimed, deprived the officers of any meaningful opportunity to
contest the said material or defend their case.
5.27. This Court, vide judgement dated 07.11.2022 in [Amit Kumar Sharma
v. Union of India,7](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/67526790/) accepted the aforesaid contention. It was held that
disclosure of material exclusively to the Adjudicating Authority in a
sealed cover rendered the affected officers incapable of contesting the
AFT’s findings on the propriety of the Selection Boards and the alleged
absence of gender bias. Such a procedure was found to constitute a
breach of the principles of natural justice, besides setting a dangerous
precedent. Accordingly, this Court allowed the appeals, set aside the
judgement dated 03.01.2022, and remanded the matters to the AFT for
fresh consideration.
5.28. The officers who were granted PC on the basis of nominal vacancies
created as a result of the decision in Lt. Cdr. [Tarun](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1598700/) (supra) approached
this Court in 2023 for early re-instatement. Their claim was accepted
vide judgement dated 04.08.2023 in Lt. Cdr. [Manish Kumar Singh and
Ors. v. Union of India,8](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/155474234/) with directions to reinstate the said officers and
7 (2023) 20 SCC 486.
8 Writ Petition (Civil) No. 425/2023.
Page 16 of 49 grant them PC. However, this grant of PC would be subject to the
proceedings pending before the AFT, which eventually led to the
Impugned Judgement.
5.29. The AFT, after reconsidering the OAs that had earlier been disposed of
in Lt. Cdr. [Tarun](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1598700/) (supra), passed the Impugned Judgement, allowing
all the OAs and directing the Respondents to convene a Special Selection
Board to reconsider all SSCOs who had been considered by the Selection
Boards of December 2020 and September 2022 but were not granted PC.
Detailed instructions governing the conduct of the Special Selection
Board were directed to be issued, including the criteria, marks assigned,
overall assessment methodology, and other necessary particulars.
Officers not granted PC but having completed the minimum pensionable
service were directed to be released with full pensionary benefits. These
directions were issued owing to the AFT’s observation that crucial details
relating to criteria, vacancy computation, and cadre-wise apportionment
had not been disclosed to the officers under consideration, a practice
found to be inconsistent with comparable Special Selection Boards
conducted by the Army and Air Force pursuant to similar
judicial directions.
5.30. In the case of two officers, namely, Cdr. Asha Sharma and Cdr. Priyanka
Choudhary, their respective OAs were disposed of by the Impugned
Orders dated 13.02.2025 and 06.03.2025, respectively, in terms of the
Impugned Judgement. Some other officers have also filed Intervention Page 17 of 49 Applications before this Court, claiming to be similarly aggrieved as the
Appellant-SSCOs and seeking analogous relief.
5.31. It is against this factual and procedural backdrop that the instant
appeals have arisen for our consideration. From 08.11.2024 onwards,
this Court has passed several interlocutory orders, extending interim
protection to some of the Appellants by permitting them to continue in
service.
B. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
- Ms. Rekha Palli and Dr. Menaka Guruswamy, learned Senior Counsel;
Ms. Pooja Dhar, Mr. Abhimanue Shrestha, and Mr. Anshuman Ashok,
learned Advocates-on-Record; and Mr. Sudhanshu S. Pandey, learned
Counsel, appearing on behalf of the Appellants advanced the following
submissions in support of these appeals:
(a) The Navy historically declined to grant PC to officers serving in
cadres where both male and female officers were inducted,
restricting PC exclusively to all-male cadres. Even after this Court’s
judgement in Annie Nagaraja (supra), pensionary benefits were
extended only to SSCWOs, while their male counterparts were
denied the same, resulting in unequal treatment within identical
cadres.
(b) The ACRs of officers serving in cadres where PC was unavailable to
those inducted prior to January 2009 were written under the
prevailing assumption that such officers would never be eligible for Page 18 of 49 PC. Special Navy Order 02/2015 expressly requires the creation of
relative merit among officers of the same seniority while filling ACRs.
Thus, in a bell-curve-based appraisal system intended to generate
relative merit among officers of the same seniority, assessing officers
naturally prioritised those with prospects of career progression by
granting them better marks. The Appellants, both male and female
SSCOs, faced the same structural disadvantage recognised and
remedied by this Court in [Lt. Co. Nitisha & Ors v. Union of India
& Ors.9 The](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/8571728/) adverse impact is more pronounced in the Navy, since
90% of the assessment is derived from ACRs, with no weightage for
medals, awards, honours, or achievements, unlike in the Army. The
entire evaluation, thus, rests on the discretion exercised by IOs or
the Commanding Officers (COs). Despite this, the AFT has issued
no directions to remedy this foundational defect while mandating a
fresh Special Selection Board.
(c) Once the column relating to recommendation for PC was introduced
in ACR format pursuant to Special Navy Order 05/05, the IOs/COs
could record only one of two endorsements: “Recommended for PC”
or “Not Recommended for PC.” Since the Appellants were ineligible
for PC as a class, this column was routinely filled with “Not
Recommended for PC” as a matter of default, without any actual
evaluation of their merit or suitability for promotion. The Appellants
were consequently denied PC solely because they had been marked
9 (2021) 15 SCC 125.
Page 19 of 49 “Not Recommended for PC” in three or more of the last five ACR
cycles, making the process inherently arbitrary.
(d) Regulation 203 requires that the grant of PC be considered subject
to the availability of vacancies in the stabilised cadre at the “material
time,” namely, when the officer becomes eligible for consideration.
For the Appellants, the material time would ordinarily have been
their sixth and seventh years of service, falling a few years before
the Selection Board of December 2020 was actually conducted. No
data has been disclosed by the Respondents regarding the
availability of vacancies at this material time, thereby vitiating the
process of consideration by requiring them to compete for a smaller
number of available vacancies in 2020.
(e) In essence, vacancies available at the material time for each batch
were not considered, contrary to Paragraph 96(vi) of [Annie
Nagaraja](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) (supra). Deficiencies ought to have been computed both
at the material time and at the time of the Selection Board, with the
higher figure being finally adopted. The discriminatory impact
becomes evident when contrasted with the vacancies announced for
junior batches whose material time fell between 2023 and 2025,
during which 87, 191, and 149 vacancies were announced,
respectively. Despite the Special Selection Board directed by the AFT
remaining incomplete, a substantial number of officers have
been granted PC through regular Selection Boards conducted
from 2023 to 2025.
Page 20 of 49
(f) In computing PC deficiency in a particular cadre, the total stabilised
cadre was not taken as the baseline for applying the 60:40 ratio;
instead, posts of Captain and higher ranks were excluded. Had the
full stabilised cadre been taken as the base, the resultant PC
strength and vacancies would have been significantly higher.
(g) In the Selection Board convened in December 2020, a ‘Dynamic
Vacancy Model’ was adopted, under which progressively fewer
vacancies were allotted to successively junior batches. This model
is not traceable to any prior policy, guideline, or judicial direction
and was arbitrarily devised for the December 2020 Board. Further,
the total identified vacancies were not fully utilised. In the Logistics
cadre, despite a deficiency of 28 officers, only 19 vacancies were
actually offered. Similarly, in the Education branch, despite a
deficiency ranging between 67 and 85 officers, only 34 vacancies
were opened.
(h) Although each SSCO is entitled to two opportunities for
consideration, i.e. a First Look and a Second Look, the conduct of a
single Selection Board for both Looks deprived the Appellants of the
opportunity to improve their ACRs and merit position between the
two considerations. Ordinarily, different ACR cycles would apply at
the First and Second Looks. However, in the Selection Board, the
same five ACR cycles were used for both Looks, resulting in no
substantive distinction between them. While the Appellants were
formally considered twice, the consideration was effectively Page 21 of 49 identical. It also remains unclear which specific ACR cycles were
applied to individual officers at each stage.
(i) Material relating to the method of assessment adopted by the
Selection Boards was initially supplied only to the AFT in a sealed
cover during the proceedings in Lt. Cdr. [Tarun](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1598700/) (supra). Even
thereafter, the Appellants were not furnished with comparative
documents, including their own ACRs. Despite specific directions to
adjudicate the merits of the Appellants’ grievances, the AFT merely
relegated them to yet another Selection Board without addressing
the foundational defects alleged to have tainted the entire process
of selection. Furthermore, the directions in the Impugned
Judgement contemplate retired or released SSCOs being considered
alongside serving officers in the proposed Special Selection Board.
(j) While the objective of maintaining youth and agility in operational
cadres is not disputed, its uniform application across cadres where
experience and expertise are of greater relevance, such as Education
and Logistics, is unwarranted. Only about 27% officers of the rank
of Commander and above are required in operational billets, while
the remaining 72% serve in ground-based roles involving repair,
maintenance, design, and education.
(k) Three Appellants, namely, Cdr. Annie Nagaraja, Cdr. Urmila Bhat,
and Lt. Cdr. Barkha Rathore, have rendered over twenty years of
continuous service. Given such length of service, they ought to have Page 22 of 49 progressed to the Time-Scale rank of Captain, a purely time-bound
advancement requiring completion of twenty-six years of
commissioned service. Instead, they continue to serve only
as SSCWOs.
(l) Despite long years of service in the Navy, SSCOs who are not
granted PC are released from service after completion of their terms,
without any pensionary benefits, medical coverage, or employment
security. On par with the relief granted in [Annie Nagaraja](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) (supra),
the Appellants who are not granted PC seek pensionary benefits on
deemed completion of the requisite qualifying service.
Per contra, Ms. Aishwarya Bhati, learned Additional Solicitor-General of
India, appearing on behalf of the Respondents, submitted that the Navy’s
methodology for evaluation and vacancy allocation was transparent,
neutral, and consistent with judicial directions. In this regard, the
following submissions were adduced:
(a) The Respondents have not filed any appeal against the Impugned
Judgement and the Impugned Orders, and are considering their
implementation fairly and equitably. Although the Impugned
Judgement has not been stayed, the Respondents have moved a
Miscellaneous Application before the AFT, seeking more time to
complete the process of holding a Special Board anew. The
Respondents apprehend that moving forward to conduct another Page 23 of 49 Special Board while this Court is seized of the matter would appear
to be overreaching the orders of this Court.
(b) As per the directives of this Court in Amit Kumar Sharma (supra),
all the relevant details, including the Appellants’ merit position,
parameters for consideration, and their weightage, which were
previously only disclosed to the AFT through a sealed cover, have
been supplied to the Appellants. Thus, the Respondents have
complied with this Court’s directions in letter and spirit.
(c) The procedure adopted for the Selection Board held in December
2020 was a one-time exercise wherein a large number of batches
were under consideration for PC. Therefore, mutually exclusive
vacancies were distributed amongst various batches so that officers
only compete amongst near peers with similar lengths of service.
The methodology for the calculation of vacancies was formulated to
grant equal opportunities to all SSCOs under consideration, to
ensure equitable distribution of the vacancies, and to comply with
this Court’s directions in [Annie Nagaraja](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) (supra). The reason
officers from batches inducted prior to 2008 and after 2008 were
considered jointly was that the material time for consideration of
officers inducted from 2011 to 2013 had arisen at the same time,
prompting this Court to direct the conduct of the Selection Board.
(d) Each officer was afforded two opportunities to be considered,
whereby their First Look would take place with the immediate senior Page 24 of 49 batch, and the Second Look would take place with their immediate
juniors. Merit-cum-suitability was determined on the basis of the
last five ACR cycles, subject only to vigilance and
disciplinary clearance.
(e) The merit list was computer-generated on recorded parameters,
leaving no scope for gender-based or subjective assessment.
Further, the ACRs of the officers were assessed purely based on
performance and accomplishments during the discharge of specific
duties. The grading was not influenced in any manner by the mode
of entry or gender. Ultimately, the Appellants have not been selected
for PC by the Selection Boards in 2020 and 2022 only because of
low inter se merit.
(f) It is essential for the Navy to maintain a youthful and lean profile to
remain operationally effective. A pyramidal force structure is
optimally suited to meet the demands of armed combat and other
technical requirements. Junior and middle leadership levels are
directly involved in combat and operational roles and must,
therefore, be staffed predominantly by younger officers. A higher
average age within the Armed Forces diminishes cumulative combat
capability and adversely affects national security. These
considerations were also recognised and emphasised by the Ajay
Vikram Singh Committee. Removing the SSC system or
substantially increasing PC intake would, over time, have a
significant and adverse impact on the average age profile of the Page 25 of 49 Navy. A similar effect would follow from permitting all SSCOs to be
retained until completion of minimum pensionable service.
(g) The rank of Captain (Time-Scale) exists to address stagnation
arising from limited vacancies in the rank of Captain and above.
Officers who are not empanelled for promotion to the rank of
Captain are promoted to the rank of Captain (Time-Scale) upon
completion of twenty-six years of commissioned service. No separate
sanction exists for the rank of Captain (Time-Scale); such officers
are counted within the sanctioned strength of the Commander rank
and are traditionally assigned Commander billets. The grant of
Captain (Time-Scale) is thus an administrative and human resource
measure rather than a substantive service upgradation.
(h) There is no shortage of officers in higher or select ranks within the
Navy. Deficiencies primarily exist at the rank of Lieutenant
Commander and below, that is, among officers with less than six
years of service. PC entries in the Navy are therefore optimally
calibrated to the current service requirements.
(i) Upon termination of service, SSCOs are entitled to leave
encashment for accumulated leave, terminal leave of up to 28 days,
and terminal gratuity. In addition, resettlement courses are
sponsored by the Directorate General Resettlement through
employment-oriented training programmes in various fields, with
only 40% of the course fee payable by the officer and the remaining Page 26 of 49 amount sponsored by the Navy. A total of 29 such courses are
scheduled for retirees between April 2025 and March 2026, with
230 vacancies reserved for Navy officers. SSCOs are also eligible for
recruitment under the ex-servicemen quota in public sector
undertakings, government services, and other government
departments. Thus, SSCOs receive ample security and support once
they are released from service.
C. ISSUES
In light of the foregoing factual narrative and the competing claimsadvanced before us, the controversy in these appeals narrows down to
the following issues:
i. Whether the ACRs of the Appellants were graded casually without
adjudging their suitability for promotion and thus, adversely
impacted their inter se merit?
ii. Whether the ‘Dynamic Vacancy Model’ created for the conduct of the
Selection Board in December 2020 is arbitrary and violates the
directions given in Annie Nagaraja (supra)?
iii. Whether the Respondents erred in not disclosing the evaluation
criteria and available vacancies prior to the conduct of the Selection
Board in December 2020?
D. ANALYSIS
D.1 Issue No. 1: Alleged Casual Grading of the Appellants’ ACRs
9. At the threshold, it is necessary to delineate the scope of this issue.
Broadly, the Appellants before us fall into two categories: male officers Page 27 of 49 and female officers. From the inception of women’s recruitment in the
Navy in 1991, SSCWOs were excluded from consideration for PC,
notwithstanding the assurance in the communication dated 20.12.1991
that a policy to that effect would be promulgated in 1997. Though
SSCWOs were finally made eligible for PC by the letter dated 26.09.2008,
such eligibility was confined to only three branches/cadres—Law,
Education, and Naval Architecture—and was further restricted to officers
inducted after January 2009. The cumulative effect of these policy
decisions was that, although women had been part of the officer cadre of
the Navy since 1991, and their entry into all branches/cadres was
opened up in 1998, they remained, as a class, ineligible for consideration
for PC until 2009. Even thereafter, eligibility was extended only to a
subset of women officers, leaving those in other branches/cadres outside
the zone of consideration as a matter of policy.
The position of male SSCOs is more nuanced. While male SSCOs, as a
class, were never rendered ineligible for PC, officers serving in certain
branches/cadres, i.e., predominantly non-technical branches, were, by
the terms of their initial entry and prevailing policies, not eligible for PC
until 2008. Consequently, a segment of male SSCOs stood on a footing
substantially similar to that of the SSCWOs, in that they too had no real
prospect of career progression during the relevant period of their service.
The Appellants, both male and female SSCOs, contend that ACRs were
casually graded for officers who were ineligible for PC as a matter of
practice. Resultantly, when they were eventually considered for PC Page 28 of 49 pursuant to judicial intervention in Annie Nagaraja (supra), their
evaluation was burdened by years of middling grades and negative
endorsements that were never intended to assess long-term suitability.
The Respondents, in contrast, assert that the appraisal process has
always been objective and gender-neutral, and that the Appellants were
denied PC solely on account of their low inter se merit.
To assess these rival positions, it is necessary to appreciate the role and
significance of ACRs within the service framework of the Navy. ACRs
constitute the foundational instrument through which an officer’s
professional competence, employability, and long-term potential are
assessed within the Navy. Accordingly, while being records of past
performance, they are also intended to serve as evaluative tools that
inform future decisions relating to career advancement, retention, and
progression. In a pyramidal force structure such as the Navy’s, ACRs
thus play a determinative role in identifying officers suitable for
sustained service and higher responsibility.
Against this backdrop, it becomes evident that where officers were
understood to have no avenue for PC, and where IOs/COs were
conscious that such officers would serve only for a finite tenure, the
appraisal process was inevitably affected at its inception. Under a bell-
curve-based system of assessment, which is designed to generate relative
merit among officers of the same seniority, higher gradings tend to be
reserved for those perceived to have a future in the service, as such
gradings are instrumental in identifying suitability for promotion. Page 29 of 49 Officers who lacked eligibility for long-term progression were, therefore,
routinely awarded average or middling grades, not on account of inferior
performance, but because higher grading was perceived to serve no
institutional purpose. This practice has assumed decisive significance in
the present case, as ACRs accounted for 90% of the marks in the
Selection Board convened in December 2020, rendering such historical
gradings determinative of inter se merit.
An additional and closely allied source of prejudice arose from the
manner in which endorsements regarding recommendations for PC were
recorded in the ACRs of the Appellants. Following the introduction of
formal endorsements for PC in October 2009, IOs/COs were required to
record one of two endorsements, either “Recommended for PC” or “Not
Recommended for PC,” reflecting their assessment of the officer’s
suitability for PC during the period under review. In respect of officers
who were, as a matter of policy, wholly ineligible for consideration for PC,
this column was routinely marked as “Not Recommended for PC,” again,
not as an evaluative conclusion drawn from performance, but as a
mechanical consequence of their ineligibility. Such endorsements came
to signify the prevailing policy positions rather than
professional appraisal.
The long-term consequences of these endorsements became apparent
only when, owing to the directions issued by this Court in [Annie
Nagaraja](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) (supra), the Appellants were suddenly rendered eligible for
consideration for PC. Under the Approach Paper governing the Selection Page 30 of 49 Board convened in December 2020, an officer who had been marked “Not
Recommended for PC” on three or more occasions in the last five ACR
cycles stood disentitled from being granted PC. These endorsements,
though originally recorded when the respective officer was ineligible for
PC as a matter of policy, were later converted into substantive
disqualifications from the grant of PC, even once the officer had become
eligible to be considered for the same.
In effect, the institutional assumption that these officers had no future
in the Navy was embedded in their service records and later invoked
against them at the decisive stage of consideration. A 3-Judge Bench of
this Court, having the same composition, has in a judgement of even date
titled, Lt. Col. Pooja Pal and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors.,10 dealt
with identical issues pertaining to the grant of PC to SSCWOs in the
Army. Building upon the principles recognised in Nitisha (supra), our
judgement of even date has held that when officers are assessed under
the prevailing assumption that they have no future in the service, the
appraisal process is inevitably affected from its very inception. Much like
their Army counterparts, the Appellants, too, have faced casual ACR
gradings and endorsements authored during the period in which they
were understood to be ineligible for PC and destined, at best, to serve
only until the maximum permissible tenure for SSCOs. In such a context,
the exercise of evaluating long-term potential for sustained service
became largely otiose, and the absence of a career horizon inevitably
10 Civil Appeal No(s). 9747 – 9757/2024.
Page 31 of 49 influenced the manner in which relative merit was perceived and
recorded. We are of the considered opinion that the reasoning adopted in
the even-dated decision applies with equal force to the instant case, as
the Appellants before us are similarly placed to the Appellants therein.
As a consequence, since the Appellants were graded in an environment
where their suitability for PC was never meaningfully evaluated, the
assessment of inter se merit is held to have been materially distorted.
We, therefore, conclude that this circularity, where past ineligibility was
belatedly transformed into ‘deemed unsuitability’ for career progression,
has resulted in an uneven playing field for the Appellants.
D.2 Issue No. 2: The Arbitrariness of the ‘Dynamic Vacancy Model’
Created for the Selection Board of December 2020
Quite apart from their challenge to the grading of ACRs, the Appellants
have also assailed the legality and fairness of the Dynamic Vacancy
Model adopted by the Respondents to determine the number of vacancies
made available for the grant of PC pursuant to the Selection Board
convened in December 2020. It is contended that this model has no
provenance in any pre-existing policy or settled practice, and that its
application resulted in an unduly restrictive and arbitrary allocation of
vacancies across branches/cadres, to the detriment of the Appellants.
The Respondents, on the other hand, have justified the adoption of this
model by pointing to the exceptional situation that arose in the aftermath
of the decision in Annie Nagaraja (supra). By virtue of that judgement, Page 32 of 49 multiple batches of SSCOs, who had been denied consideration for PC
solely on account of the prospective operation of the policy dated
26.09.2008, were required to be considered together. The Dynamic
Vacancy Model was thus devised as a one-time mechanism to distribute
available vacancies across several batches, while simultaneously
preserving cadre balance and operational viability within the Navy.
It is true that the AFT had, in its earlier decision in Lt. Cdr. Tarun (supra), considered and approved the validity of the Dynamic Vacancy
Model. However, that judgement was subsequently set aside by this
Court in Amit Kumar Sharma (supra), and the matter was remanded
to the AFT for fresh consideration. Despite this, in the Impugned
Judgement rendered after remand, the AFT did not meaningfully engage
with the Appellants’ specific challenges to the manner in which vacancies
were computed and apportioned under the Dynamic Vacancy Model.
Be that as it may, given that the Appellants have already undergone
multiple rounds of litigation in pursuit of PC, and that the controversy
raised in this issue is purely one of law, we consider it appropriate to
examine the merits of the challenge to the Dynamic Vacancy
Model ourselves.
D.2.1 The Computation of Vacancies and the ‘Dynamic Vacancy Model’
The grant of PC to SSCOs is governed by Regulation 203 of the 1963
Regulations, which stipulates that PC may be granted “subject to the
availability of vacancies in the stabilized cadre of the Navy.” The Page 33 of 49 ‘stabilised cadre’ refers to the permanent strength of any branch/cadre,
as per the stabilised positions sanctioned by the Government as well as
the Training Draft and Leave Relief (TDLR) positions, which account for
personnel temporarily unavailable due to training, postings, or leave.
Ordinarily, this would mean that, in a given year, consideration for PC
would be tied to the deficiency in sanctioned permanent posts within a
particular branch/cadre at the relevant time.
In the normal course, SSCOs are considered for PC in their 6th year of
service, being the First Look, and again in their 7th year of service, being
the Second Look. These two years are commonly understood as
constituting the officer’s ‘material time’ for consideration. It follows that
vacancies for PC are assessed with reference to the cadre position
prevailing when the SSCOs are being considered for the same, i.e. in their
‘material time’.
However, pursuant to the directions of this Court in Annie Nagaraja (supra), a large number of officers across multiple batches came to be
considered together by a Selection Board convened in December 2020.
In respect of these officers, the Respondents treated the year 2020 as the
‘material time’ for the purpose of assessing vacancy availability under
Regulation 203.
To operationalize this exercise, the Navy formulated an Approach Paper
setting out the methodology for computing vacancies and evaluating inter
se merit. The Approach Paper expressly acknowledged that it was Page 34 of 49 intended as a one-time measure, crafted to address the anomalous
situation of simultaneously considering as many as 24 batches of SSCOs
for PC, while maintaining the Navy’s pyramidal structure and
operational readiness.
Insofar as vacancy computation was concerned, the Approach Paper
introduced what has been described as the Dynamic Vacancy Model.
Under this framework, the total deficiency in the stabilised cadre of each
branch/cadre was first determined by applying the ideal PC-SSC ratio to
the total strength of the cadre, then subtracting the number of officers
already holding PC. The Respondents have stated that, with a view to
maximize the vacancies available for consideration, deficiencies in
temporary sanction posts and TDLR were also factored into
this computation.
The resultant deficiency was thereafter divided by 15 and distributed
across batches in a dynamic manner. Unlike a static allocation, the
number of vacancies available to each batch varied depending on the
number of vacancies already filled in preceding rounds. Thus, while the
first round involved dividing the total deficiency by 15, subsequent
rounds recalibrated the divisor by reducing the deficiency to account for
vacancies already allotted. To explicate, let us take the example of the
Dynamic Vacancy Model applied by the Respondents to the SSCOs in the
Executive-Logistics cadre:
Page 35 of 49
Round Batch No of officers Deficiency Vacancy Resultant
Deficiency
(A = C of (B = A/15)
for Next
previous
Round
round)
(C = A – B) 1 1995/ 01 (First look) 27 2 25 2001 01 (First look) 2 1995/ 01 (Sec look) 25 2 23 2001/ 01 (Sec look)
2002 05 (First look) 3 2002/ 05 (Sec look) 23 2 21 2003 05 (First look) 4 2003/ 05 (Sec look) 21 2 19 2004 04 (First look) 5 2004/ 04 (Sec look) 19 2 17 2005 05 (First look) 6 2005/ 05 (Sec look) 17 2 15 2006 07 (First look) 7 2006/ 07 (Sec look) 15 1 14 2007 08 (First look) 8 2007/ 08 (Sec look) 14 1 13 2008 12 (First look) 9 2008/ 12 (Sec look) 13 1 12 2009 06 (First look) 10 2009/ 06 (Sec look) 12 1 11 2010 16 (First look) 11 2010/ 06 (Sec look) 11 1 10 2011 35 (First look) 12 2011/ 35 (Sec look) 10 1 9 2012 04 (First look) 13 2012/ 04 (Sec look) 9 1 8 2013 30 (First look) Total 14 139 Officers 19 Batches
28. As may be seen from the above illustration, the deficiency diminishes
with each successive round as vacancies are allotted. At the same time,
this method does not result in the exhaustion of the entire deficiency. In Page 36 of 49 the Executive–Logistics cadre, for instance, out of an initial deficiency of
27, only 19 vacancies were ultimately allocated across 13 batches.
The above table also demonstrates that each batch was afforded both a
First Look and a Second Look. Owing to the peculiar circumstances of
this case, however, both Looks were conducted within the same Selection
Board and the same calendar year. Nevertheless, each batch was
assessed alongside a senior batch in the First Look and a junior batch in
the Second Look, save for the earliest batch.
D.2.2 Grievances of the Appellants-SSCOs
Having outlined the mechanics of the Dynamic Vacancy Model, we now
turn to the three principal objections raised by the Appellants to its
adoption and implementation.
D.2.2.1 Deficiency wrongly computed as in 2020
The Appellants have contended that, under Annie Nagaraja (supra),
vacancies ought to have been assessed with reference to their 6th and 7th
years of service, rather than with reference to the cadre position in 2020.
This submission proceeds on the premise that the concept of ‘material
time’ must remain fixed, irrespective of the exceptional circumstances in
which consideration was eventually undertaken.
As discussed previously, this Court, in Annie Nagaraja (supra), directed
that the Selection Board consider the officers for the grant of PC as per
Regulation 203. This would involve the determination of vacancies at the
‘material time’. We have already observed that for the Appellants, who Page 37 of 49 were considered for the grant of PC by the Selection Board in December
2020, the ‘material time’ arose in 2020.
The relevance of ‘material time’ lies in its nexus with the availability of
vacancies capable of being filled when officers are actually considered for
PC. A historical deficiency that may have existed a decade earlier bears
no rational connection to the cadre position prevailing at the time of
actual consideration. In the instant case, the Selection Board was
convened in December 2020 pursuant to judicial directions, and it was
only at that point that vacancies could realistically be filled. The
Respondents were therefore justified in treating 2020 as the relevant
material time. On this count, thus, we find no infirmity with the actions
of the Respondents.
Before moving to the next grievance, we may also allude to another
argument made by some of the Appellants in relation to the material time
being set in 2020. They contended that the framework implemented by
the Respondents has unfairly resulted in them being considered on the
basis of the same ACRs in their First Look as well as their Second Look.
While this is factually correct, it is an inevitable consequence of the
extraordinary situation created by delayed consideration across multiple
batches. Importantly, the distinction between the two Looks was
preserved through comparison with different adjacent batches. In these
circumstances, we see no arbitrariness in relying on the most recent
ACRs available, nor do we find any violation of fairness warranting
interference.
Page 38 of 49 D.2.2.2 Arbitrary division of the deficiency by 15
The Appellants have further argued that the division of the deficiency by
15 was arbitrary and engineered to artificially suppress the number of
vacancies available for selection. The Respondents have, however,
explained the basis of this methodology before the AFT, contending
that vacancies for PC are always determined after taking
a long-term perspective.
This is necessitated due to the fact that, upon being granted PC, the
officer would continue to serve the Navy for at least 30 years, as
compared to the maximum tenure of 14 years as an SSCO. This
additional 15-16 years of service has an impact on the age composition
and the overall agility of the forces, especially given the lean sanctioned
strength of the Navy. The rationale advanced is that distributing
vacancies over a fifteen-year horizon ensures a balanced age and
experience profile within the officer cadre and prevents sudden
distortions in the pyramidal structure of the Navy. This distribution is
reflected in the division of the remaining deficiency by 15, before the
vacancy is allotted for a particular round of selection.
We find strength in the submission of the Respondents. Taking the long-
term requirements of the Navy as a lean military wing into account, a
policy of distribution of vacancies across the present and future rounds
of selection cannot be termed as an arbitrary exercise per se. That being
so, it would not be appropriate for this Court to interfere in the policy Page 39 of 49 decision when the means adopted bear a reasonable connection to the
stated objective.
The specific challenge to the choice of the number ‘15’ as the divisor also
fails to persuade us. Far from being an arbitrary figure, it corresponds to
the approximate years of service that accompany the grant of PC. Thus,
in our considered view, the selection of this divisor is anchored in service
realities rather than caprice.
D.2.2.3 Non-exhaustion of all vacancies
Lastly, the Appellants are also aggrieved by the fact that,
notwithstanding the existence of a substantial deficiency in certain
cadres, the Respondents failed to create and utilise all available
vacancies, thereby denying PC to otherwise eligible officers such as the
Appellants.
The Respondents have submitted before the AFT that limiting vacancies
despite the existence of a larger deficiency is based on a multitude of
policy considerations, from maintaining readiness for exigencies to
ensuring adequate vacancies for the future batches.
In our considered opinion, this issue is no longer res integra. It is well
settled, including through a judgement of a Constitution Bench of this
Court in Shankarsan Dash v. Union of India,11 that a candidate does
not have a right to be selected merely due to the existence of vacancy. It
is open for the Competent Authority, for policy reasons, to leave such
11 (1991) 3 SCC 47.
Page 40 of 49 vacancies unfilled as are required, as long as such action is not plagued
with the vice of arbitrariness, does not aim to undermine the merit of the
candidates, or is not otherwise illegal.
We find that the above-stated principle is squarely applicable in the
instant case, given that the Navy has, for well-explained reasons, chosen
not to exhaust all the available vacancies instantaneously. Owing to this,
we cannot fault the Respondents’ decision to leave certain vacancies
empty for future batches.
To reiterate, this Court finds that the modalities of conducting the 2020
Selection Board by the Respondents, with respect to the creation and
distribution of vacancies, in compliance with Annie Nagaraja (supra),
did not suffer from any infirmity of arbitrariness or discrimination. The
decisions of the Navy regarding such a one-time exercise were guided by
the terms of the said judgement, the extraordinary circumstances of the
Selection Board, and demonstrable rationality. As such, there is no case
made out for us to interfere with the same.
D.3 Issue No. 3: Non-disclosure of Evaluation Criteria and Available
Vacancies Prior to the Conduct of the Selection Board
Apart from the issues discussed above, the Appellants have also drawn
our attention to a fundamental procedural deficiency that permeated the
conduct of the Selection Boards held in December 2020 and September
2022, namely, the absence of any prior disclosure of the evaluation
framework governing the process and the number of vacancies available.
Unlike the Army and the Air Force, where the governing policies, vacancy Page 41 of 49 computation methodologies, and assessment criteria were formally
promulgated, the Navy did not place any document in the public domain
outlining the approved method of determining vacancies, the parameters
of evaluation, the moderative mechanisms employed (if any), or the
manner in which merit lists were to be prepared. According to the
Appellants, this opacity left officers aspiring for PC unaware of the
standards against which they would be judged, thereby depriving them
of a fair opportunity to address potential deficiencies in their
service records.
The practical consequences of this non-disclosure, it is urged, were far
from theoretical. The Appellants contend that they were never informed
that their ACRs from the preceding five years would serve as the exclusive
basis for evaluation. As a result, they did not seek redressal of adverse
remarks or omissions therein within time. Equally, they remained
unaware of whether, and if so how, the Respondents had sought to
mitigate the structural deficiencies inherent in the ACR regime, which
we have already adverted to while examining the first issue. Requiring
the officers to participate in the process for the grant of PC without
disclosing the material particulars of the selection procedure was akin to
asking them to navigate uncharted waters without a compass.
This submission of the Appellants has carried force in the previous round
of litigation before this Court. In Amit Kumar Sharma (supra), this
Court took serious exception to the Respondents’ failure to disclose the
material governing the selection process. At that stage, the AFT had Page 42 of 49 adjudicated the matter in Lt. Cdr. Tarun (supra) on the basis of
documents furnished to it in a sealed cover, without any corresponding
disclosure to the affected SSCOs. The Appellants had neither been
supplied the instructions issued to reporting officers and Selection
Boards, nor made privy to the rationale underlying the methodology
adopted by the Respondents. This Court found such a procedure to be
fundamentally flawed and, on that ground, remanded the matter to the
AFT for fresh consideration.
Upon remand, the AFT, vide the Impugned Judgement, has accorded
necessary impetus to this concern raised by the Appellants. It recognised
that the absence of such information being disclosed to the assessee
officers not only handicapped the Appellants in their attempts to litigate
against the validity and results of the Selection Board, but it vitiated the
selection process itself. It may be apposite to reproduce the relevant
extract thereof below:
“62. An analysis of the cases adjudicated by the AFT (PB)
as given at Para 55 above, indicate that consequent to the
judicial orders and consideration of the affected SSCOs, all
three Services obtained requisite Govt. Sanction for
implementing the judicial orders. In the case of the IAF,
they issued a HRP defining the criteria and details of
consideration. In the case of the IA, they obtained
sanction for additional vacancies and issued the
General Instruction for the conduct of the Special No
5 SB in which the criteria and the details of all the
615 eligible SSCOs was promulgated…
- In the case of IN after obtaining the requisite Govt. sanction, they obtained the approval of the competent authority of an 'Approach Paper' on the modalities for the conduct of the Special Board and the environment was intimated only of the batches that were being considered. However, while they had the criteria, method for calculating vacancies, apportionment of Page 43 of 49 vacancies to various Branches/Cadres on record duly approved, the details were not known to the SSCOs being considered, as these details were not promulgated…” [Sic] [Emphasis supplied]
- There is, patently, a dissonance on the promulgation of policy documents
on the conduct of the Selection Boards between the Navy and the other
two wings of the Armed Forces. While the Army and the Air Force ensured
that the affected officers were informed, in advance, of the criteria and
modalities governing selection, the Navy confined such material to
internal approval processes. This asymmetry in disclosure, as correctly
noted by the AFT, undermined the transparency of the selection exercise.
This dichotomy led the AFT to direct the Respondents to hold a renewed
Special Board, after the public dissemination of the relevant material and
policy considerations.
It would not be out of place to record that the Appellants, on this issue,
are not necessarily aggrieved by the findings forwarded by the AFT. In
line with the Appellants’ arguments, the AFT has held that the selection
process in the 2020 Selection Board, as well as the 2022 Selection Board,
suffered from the infirmity of opaqueness in procedure and criteria.
Significantly, the learned Additional Solicitor General, appearing on
behalf of the Respondents, has also fairly conceded that the Navy does
not propose to challenge the Impugned Judgement or its findings on this
aspect, and that the Respondents are prepared to abide by the AFT’s
directions for conducting a fresh Selection Board with full prior
disclosure, subject to the outcome of the instant appeals. Page 44 of 49
In these circumstances, the failure to disclose the evaluation criteria,
vacancy computation methodology, and allied policy considerations prior
to the conduct of the Selection Boards in 2020 and 2022 must be held
to have violated basic norms of fairness and transparency. We, therefore,
find no reason to differ from the view taken by the AFT in this regard.
The conclusion that the Navy was obligated to place the relevant policy
material in the public domain, in a timely manner and before the
commencement of the selection process, merits affirmation.
E. CONCLUSION AND DIRECTIONS
Before concluding the judgement and passing consequential directions
to the parties before us, it is necessary to recapitulate our findings on
the various issues raised before us. They are summarised as follows:
(i) The ACRs of the Appellants, who were ineligible for PC
consideration by virtue of their terms of entry and/or the prevailing
policies at the time, were written keeping in mind their ineligibility
for PC and with the assumption that they would never undergo
any substantive career progression. This presumption undermined
the assessment of their ‘suitability’ for such progression once it
became available and thus, adversely affected their overall merit in
the consideration for PC;
(ii) The Dynamic Vacancy Model adopted by the Respondents to create
and distribute vacancies amongst the officers considered by the
Selection Board held in December 2020 was rational, non- Page 45 of 49
arbitrary, and implemented as a one-time measure owing to the
directions issued by this Court in [Annie Nagaraja](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/106131468/) (supra); and
(iii) The failure of the Respondents to disclose the evaluation criteria,
vacancy computation methodology, and allied policy
considerations prior to the conduct of the Selection Boards has
adversely impacted the officers considered in those Boards.
We may hasten to observe at this stage that in ordinary circumstances,
having recorded our approval for the reasoning adopted by the AFT in
respect of the non-disclosure of the selection procedure and criteria and
without taking into consideration our analysis in the first issue, we would
have upheld the decision of the AFT directing another Selection Board to
consider the Appellants cases for grant of PC. There are, however, other
factors which weigh on our conscience and prevent us from approving
the said directions forthwith.
The first being that the instant appeals constitute the third round of
litigation regarding the Appellants’ claim for PC before this Court. After
securing their entitlement to be considered for the grant of PC initially in
2015 and 2016, and affirmed by this Court in 2020, the Appellants were
forced to approach the Courts afresh for a fair assessment. After their
claim was initially rejected by the AFT in 2022, the Appellants again
approached this Court, which remanded the matter to the AFT for fresh
adjudication. Regardless of this, the AFT has considered it wise to direct
a fresh consideration of the Appellants by a new Special Board. This Page 46 of 49 ordeal being faced by the aggrieved SSCOs, in our opinion, ought not to
be allowed to continue to a fourth round.
This is more so because of the second factor that the Appellants cannot
be expected to obtain a fair assessment in the renewed Special Board
due to the inherently skewed ACRs suffered by them, arising from being
considered ineligible for the grant of PC for almost the entirety of their
careers. Given the extensive non-consideration of any career progression
at the time of filling of ACRs of the Appellants, the result of another
consideration by a Selection Board would still not yield any equitable or
non-discriminatory result. The third factor which persuades us to finally
conclude these proceedings is that it is not in the overall interest of the
Navy and its officers to continue to indulge in a protracted litigation.
For the above-stated reasons, we consider it appropriate to allow these
appeals and consequently, modify the directions issued by the AFT by
way of the Impugned Judgement dated 27.09.2024, and the subsequent
Impugned Orders dated 13.02.2025 and 06.03.2025, in the
following terms:
(i) The grant of PC to the SSCOs who have already been granted PC
by the Selection Boards convened in December 2020 and
September 2022 as well as those granted relief by virtue of this
Court’s judgement in Lt. Cdr. Manish Kumar Singh (supra),
shall not be disturbed;
(ii) As a one-time measure, instead of convening a fresh Special Board
for reconsideration of the SSCOs’ cases for the grant of PC, the Page 47 of 49 following categories of officers, who were considered for the grant
of PC by the Selection Board convened in December 2020 and are
presently still in service, shall be entitled to the grant of PC, subject
to their meeting the prescribed medical criteria and on receiving
disciplinary and vigilance clearance:
a. SSCWOs who were inducted into the Navy prior to January
2009;
b. SSCWOs who were inducted into the Navy after January 2009
in branches/cadres excluding Law, Education, and Naval
Architecture; and
c. Male SSCOs who were barred from consideration for PC as
per their initial terms of service/entry.
(iii) The Appellants and Intervenors before us, who have been released
from service during the pendency of these proceedings, whether
before the AFT, before the High Court, before this Court, or in the
interregnum, but would otherwise fall within the categories of
officers identified in sub-paragraph (ii) shall be deemed to have
completed substantive qualifying service of 20 years and shall be
entitled to pension and all consequential benefits, except arrears
of pay, on the basis that they have completed such minimum
service;
(iv) The pension shall be fixed on the basis of the date of completion of
the deemed service of 20 years, but arrears thereof, if any, shall be
paid to the SSCOs only with effect from 01.01.2025; Page 48 of 49
(v) For all future Selection Boards, the Respondents shall issue
appropriate General Instructions, prior to the conduct of such
Board, laying down: the vacancies available in each branch/cadre
for each batch; the detailed criteria for evaluation along with the
apportionment of marks for each criterion; and any other
information that may be necessary to supply to the officers under
consideration for that purpose, in line with the direction contained
in Paragraph 66(b) of the Impugned Judgement dated 27.09.2024;
and
(vi) The Respondents shall undertake the policy examination directed
by the AFT in Paragraph 66(e) of the Impugned Judgement dated
27.09.2024 forthwith.
Ordered accordingly.
Pending applications, if any, also stand disposed of in the above terms.
............…….........CJI
(SURYA KANT)
..............…….........J.
(UJJAL BHUYAN)
………………………...............…….........J.
(NONGMEIKAPAM KOTISWAR SINGH)
NEW DELHI;
MARCH 24, 2026 Page 49 of 49
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