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Summary and Analysis Mala Devi vs. Union of India & Ors

1. Heading of the Judgment

Civil Appeal No. 10672 of 2016
Mala Devi (Appellant) vs. Union of India & Ors. (Respondents)
Decided on: July 16, 2025
Judges: Sanjay Karol and Satish Chandra Sharma, JJ.
Core Issue: Entitlement to family pension for the widow of a temporary railway employee who died in service.

2. Relevant Laws & Rules

The judgment interprets:

  • Indian Railway Establishment Manual (Vol-I):
    Rule 1515:
     Grants temporary railway servants' rights/privileges to substitutes after 4 months of continuous service.

  • Railway Service (Pension) Rules, 1993:
    Rule 18(3):
     Extends family pension and death gratuity to temporary railway servants on par with permanent staff.
    Rule 75(2)(a): Mandates family pension if an employee dies after 1 year of continuous service.

  • Constitution of India:
    Article 142:
     Empowers the Supreme Court to pass orders for "complete justice."

3. Basic Case Details

Background

  • Deceased Employee: Om Prakash Maharaj, appointed as "Summer Waterman" (substitute) on 15.10.1986.

  • Service Duration: Served 9 years, 8 months, 26 days until his death in a work accident on 10.07.1996.

  • Appellant’s Claim:
    Sought family pension as the widow.
    Railways denied pension citing:
    Deceased was a "substitute," not regularized.
    Service (<10 years) fell short of "minimum qualifying service."

  • Lower Courts:
    Central Administrative Tribunal (2015):
     Rejected claim, stating "screening for regularization ≠ right to pension."
    Patna High Court (2016): Upheld denial, relying on Uttar Haryana Bijli Vitran Nigam Ltd. v. Surji Devi (2008).

4. Judgment Explanation

Key Findings

  1. Temporary Status Granted After 4 Months:
    Rule 1515 of the Railway Manual confers temporary servant status on substitutes after 4 months of continuous service.
    Om Prakash served for 9+ years, far exceeding this threshold.

  2. Family Pension Requires Only 1 Year of Service:
    Rule 75(2)(a)
     of Pension Rules mandates family pension if an employee dies after 1 year of continuous service.
    Rule 18(3) extends this benefit to temporary staff.
    Court’s View:
    *"The qualifying service for family pension is 1 year, not 10 years. Denial based on non-regularization is unjustifiable."*

  3. Precedent Support:
    Cited Prabhavati Devi v. UOI (1996): Family pension granted to a temporary railway employee’s widow.
    Om Prakash had cleared screening for regularization before death, strengthening his case.

  4. Humanitarian Grounds:
    Deceased served "till his last breath" and was 3 months short of 10 years – a technical shortfall not warranting denial.
    Family pension aims to support dependents in crisis.

  5. Relief Granted:
    Family Pension:
     Directed to be paid with arrears within 4 months.
    Ex-Gratia Compensation: ₹5 lakhs awarded under Article 142 for litigation hardship (since 2014).

Critique of Lower Courts

  • Error: Patna High Court wrongly applied Surji Devi (which dealt with casual laborers, not screened substitutes).

  • Overlooked Rules: Failed to consider Rule 75(2)(a) (1-year threshold) and Rule 1515 (temporary status).

5. Simplified Takeaway

  • For Employees: Temporary/substitute staff gain pension rights after 1 year of service if they meet criteria (Rule 1515 + screening).

  • For Authorities: Technicalities (e.g., 3-month service shortfall) cannot deny welfare benefits.

  • Legal Principle: Pension rules must be interpreted liberally to protect dependents.

Impact: Reinforces social security for families of temporary government staff and curbs arbitrary denials.

"Salutary purpose of pension rules is to support families of those who served diligently." – Supreme Court

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