HC rejects plea of sportspersons appointed as DSPs
Unlock Exclusive Insights with The Tribune Premium
Take your experience further with Premium access. Thought-provoking Opinions, Expert Analysis, In-depth Insights and other Member Only BenefitsThe Punjab and Haryana High Court has dismissed a petition filed by Mamta Kharb and other sportspersons appointed as DSPs in Haryana under the sports quota, holding that their seniority cannot be reckoned from the date of initial appointment.
“We are of the considered view that the action of the State in granting benefit of confirmation to petitioners in first writ from the date of their successful completion of training is just, legal and fair. The consequential determination of seniority also merits no interference,” the Bench of Justices Ashwani Kumar Mishra and Rohit Kapoor said.
Kharb and others petitioners — all international athletes who had brought laurels to Haryana and India — had contended that their seniority should flow from the date of their initial appointment.
The Bench observed that they were aggrieved by denial of seniority from the date of their initial appointment by virtue of Rule 12 of the Haryana Police Service Rules, 2002, which provided for seniority from the date of confirmation in service.
The court noted that the sportsperson-DSPs could not complete their training within the stipulated two years, or even the extended period of one year. Their confirmation was eventually granted on November 23, 2023, from the date of their satisfactory completion of training.
“The State was cognisant of the fact that one of the reasons for delay in completion of training may have been the fact that petitioners were participating at different forum representing the State or the nation,” the Bench asserted, adding that training remained “an essential part to be completed by the probationers before they could be confirmed on the post of DSP.”
The court also dealt with another petition filed by Ashish Chaudhary and other petitioners recruited through the regular selection process. They completed training earlier and were confirmed before the sportsperson-DSPs, despite being appointed later. The Bench in the matters were, among others, assisted by senior advocates DS Patwalia, Akshay Bhan and Sanjeev Manrai.
Dismissing the discrimination argument raised by the sportspersons, the Bench clarified: “So far as petitioners in first writ (Kharb and others) is concerned, they have not been appointed on the strength of their merit in the recruitment test as per recruitment Rules of 2002. Rather, they have been appointed on account of their exceptional merit in the field of sports. The petitioners in the second set, however, are persons who have secured appointment on the strength of their merit in the recruitment examination, and have also completed their training earlier in point of time. These two sets of petitioners, therefore, cannot be placed on the same footing nor the ‘principle of equality’ can be pressed against each other.” The second petition filed by the regular recruits was allowed.