
The Delhi High Court restrained DTIDC from
Aarav Jain & Ors. vs. Bihar Public Service Commission & Ors.
Commercial Arbitration
The main issue in this case revolves around the cancellation of candidature of eight successful candidates, including Aarav Jain, for the post of Civil Judge (Junior Division) under Advertisement No. 6 of 2018 by the Bihar Public Service Commission (BPSC). Despite scoring higher marks than the last selected candidates in their respective categories, these candidates were disqualified solely for non-submission of original documents at the time of the interview. The key legal question was whether such disqualification was valid and justified, given that the documents were subsequently submitted and were not found to be incorrect.
The petitioners, eight candidates who had cleared the selection process, argued that:
All candidates had submitted self-attested copies of required documents during the interview process.
Although they could not produce the originals at the time of the interview, the originals were submitted within a few days and before the Commission’s final decision dated 27.11.2019.
The Commission or the State never disputed the authenticity or validity of the documents eventually submitted.
The failure to bring originals was a technical lapse, not a reflection of fraud, ineligibility, or dishonesty.
Each of the petitioners had secured more marks than the last selected candidates in their respective categories. Disqualifying them purely on procedural grounds would defeat the merit principle.
The advertisement or rules did not mandate automatic disqualification for failure to produce originals at the interview. Further, final verification is always conducted post-appointment during probation and service verification.
Cancelling their selection was termed excessively harsh, especially when vacancies still existed and their performance in exams was superior.
The recruitment advertisement and interview call letters clearly required submission of original documents at the interview stage. The candidates were aware of these terms.
The Commission did not have the authority to relax the mandatory requirements. Any leniency would violate the sanctity and fairness of the recruitment process.
Rules were applied uniformly to all candidates, and those who failed to comply faced cancellation. Making exceptions would set a wrong precedent.
Allowing post-facto submission of documents could encourage manipulation or irregularities in future recruitments.
After considering the arguments, the Supreme Court observed:
The Court found that the rejection was based purely on technical grounds, despite the fact that original documents were submitted shortly thereafter, before the final meeting of the Commission.
The Court emphasized that the petitioners were more meritorious than the last selected candidates. Rejecting them despite fulfilling all other eligibility criteria, including submission of valid documents later, was disproportionately harsh.
There were still five vacancies in the General Category, and the Court noted that adjusting the appellants would not disturb the appointment of already selected candidates.
The purpose of recruitment is to fill vacancies with the most deserving candidates. The rigid adherence to formality should not come at the cost of substance and fairness.
Importantly, there was no allegation that any document was fake, invalid, or misrepresented, and the Commission acknowledged that the candidates later complied fully.
The Court highlighted that the State Government has the power to vary or borrow vacancies from future cycles to accommodate deserving candidates, especially in exceptional cases like this.
An intervenor (Jyoti Joshi) sought appointment based on a High Court order. The Court held that her claim was in conflict with its interim orders and was not sustainable. Her application was dismissed.
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals, setting aside the Patna High Court’s decision and the Commission’s resolution dated 27.11.2019. The Court issued the following directives:
(Mayank Kumar Pandey, Aarav Jain, Ashish Chandra, Siddharth Sharma, Sanjay Kumar Mishra) shall be appointed immediately against the five existing general category vacancies.
(Sumit Kumar – EBC, Anita Kumar – SC, Anand Raj – BC), the State may either adjust them against current vacancies or borrow posts from future vacancies under Advertisement No. 6 of 2018. The discretion to manage this was left to the State.
The judgment would not affect already appointed judicial officers.
The Court confirmed that its earlier interim orders protecting vacancies were valid and binding.
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