Kalinga Ray vs Uco Bank on 15 April, 2026

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    Orissa High Court

    Kalinga Ray vs Uco Bank on 15 April, 2026

                  ORISSA HIGH COURT : CUTTACK
    
                      W.P.(C). No.13691 of 2018
    
                  In the matter of an Application under
         Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India, 1950
    
                                 ***
    
           Kalinga Ray
           Aged about 36 years
           Son of Late Prahallad Ray
           Village: Kanalpada
           P.O.: Bharodia, Via: Delang
           District: Puri
           Presently working as Sweeper
           On daily wage basis
           At: Bidyut Marg Branch of UCO Bank,
           Bhubaneswar.                 ...            Petitioner
    
                                   -VERSUS-
    
    1.     UCO Bank, represented by
           The Zonal Manager, UCO Bank,
           Zonal Office, C-2, Ashoka Nagar
           Bhubaneswar.
    
    2.     The General Manager
           (Personnel Services Department)
           UCO Bank, Head Office No.2, 3-4
           D.D. Block, Sector-1, Salt Lake
           Kolkata - 700 064               ...    Opposite parties.
    
    Counsel appeared for the parties:
    
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018                            Page 1 of 59
     For the Petitioner           : Mr. Surendra Nath Panda,
                                   Advocate
    
    For the Opposite parties     : Mr. Sunil Kumar Swain,
                                   Advocate
    
    P R E S E N T:
    
                            HONOURABLE
                  MR. JUSTICE MURAHARI SRI RAMAN
    
    Date of Hearing : 13.03.2026 :: Date of Order   : 15.04.2026
    
                               O R D E R
    

    The petitioner, Sweeper on daily wage basis craving for
    regularisation in service in the post of Housekeeper-
    cum-Peon/Peon, filed this writ petition craving for
    grant of following relief(s):

    “Under the above stated facts and circumstances, the
    Petitioner sincerely prays the Hon‟ble Court to be
    graciously pleased to direct the opposite parties-Bank to
    regularize his service as House Keeper-cum-Peon/Peon
    at any of the Branches of the Bank in the Zone and
    oblige.

    And/or pass such further order/orders, direction/
    directions as this Hon‟ble Court may deem fit and
    proper.

    And for this act of your kindness the Petitioner is duty
    bound shall ever pray.”

    The facts:

    SPONSORED

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 2 of 59

    2. From the adumbrated facts on record it does emanate
    that the petitioner, casual worker (Sweeper), was
    engaged on daily wage basis in the Bhubaneswar CRP
    Headquarters Branch of UCO Bank, with effect from
    18.07.2005, and upon instruction of the authority, he
    joined to work in the Branch of UCO Bank at
    Bidyutmarg, Bhubaneswar as Sweeper since
    10.01.2011. In addition to discharge of such duty as
    Sweeper, as he was the only sub-staff available to the
    Branch, he has been attending the Branch Office
    regularly during the Office hours, i.e., from 9.30 a.m.
    till the Office is closed for the day.

    2.1. The petitioner, possessing prescribed requisite
    qualification (Class VIII pass), worked in the Branch
    uninterruptedly since 2005 and, therefore, he is
    entitled to be considered for regularization in service in
    the post of Peon/ Housekeeper-cum-Peon, even as the
    Bank in Circular bearing No.CHO/PAS/08/2015-16,
    dated 01.09.2015 clearly envisioned “for conversion of
    all Part-Time Sweepers/Full Time Sweepers as Full
    Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon”. The Short Recital of
    said Circular reads as follows:

    “With a view to meet the requirement of the Bank and
    aspiration of the employees in Full Time Sweepers/Part
    Time Sweepers to become Full Time Peon; it is decided
    to convert all the existing FTS/PTS as the Full Time
    Housekeeper-cum-Peon.”

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 3 of 59

    2.2. Drawing parity with that of those similarly situated
    persons, namely Sri Niranjan Das (joined as casual
    sweeper on 24.10.2008 and regularised in service by
    Letter dated 16.09.2015 of Zonal Office); and Sri
    Krushna Chandra Karan (regularised as Sweeper on
    consolidated wage basis by Letter dated 05.02.2014 of
    Zonal Manager), whose services have been regularized
    in other Branches of UCO Bank, it is urged that the
    case of the petitioner could not have been sidetracked.
    Hence, this writ petition.

    3. A Counter Affidavit has come to be filed by the
    opposite parties refuting to grant the relief claimed by
    the petitioner. The following stand is taken by the
    opposite parties:

    “13. That with an objective to improve the financial
    strata of the existing part-time sweepers on scale
    wages and to address the need of peons in the
    branches, the Management of the opposite parties-
    Bank held negotiations with the All India UCO
    Bank Employees‟ Federation, the Majority
    Organization for Workmen in the bank under the
    provisions of IR policy for workmen staff and
    detailed discussions took place on different
    aspects of the issue and a Memorandum of
    Settlement was reached between the Management
    of the opposite parties-Bank and the All India UCO
    Bank Employees‟ Federation (Majority
    Organization for Workmen) on 06.07.2015 in the
    atter of conversion of Part-Time Sweepers/Full-

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 4 of 59

    Time Sweepers as Full-Time Housekeeper-cum-
    Peon. Subsequently, the proposal was placed by
    Human Resource Management department, Head
    Office of the opposite parties-Bank before the
    Board of Directors of the opposite parties-Bank
    and the Board accorded its approval to the
    proposal for conversion of all part-time
    sweepers/Full-time sweepers as Full-time
    Housekeeper-cum-Peons.

    Hence, it is denied that the petitioner is eligible to
    be appointed as Full-time Housekeeper-cum-Peon
    as he does not come within the purview of the
    above settlement.”

    3.1. The opposite parties-UCO Bank disputing the factual
    averment of the petitioner submitted that while
    working in the Bhubaneswar CRP Headquarters
    Branch on daily wage basis the petitioner left said
    Branch and started working at Bidyutmarg Branch as
    casual sweeper on daily wage basis. However, the
    Management took a decision to regularise the services
    of the casual sweepers working in different Branches
    as on 31.12.2008 as sweeper on consolidated wage
    basis.

    3.2. By virtue of Letter dated 13.06.2009 the UCO Bank
    the casual sweeper is regularised in service subject to
    certain qualification specified therein. In Letter bearing
    No.ZO/BBSR/PSD/186/2009-10, dated 30.07.2009
    was issued by Zonal Office, Bhubaneswar it was

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 5 of 59
    stipulated that certain casual sweepers working as on
    31.12.2008 were regularised in service. In the
    Memorandum of Settlement dated 27.04.2010 reached
    between the Indian Banks‟ Association and the
    Workmen Unions, “the part time employees, who were
    members of the subordinate staff on consolidated
    wages and whose normal working hours per week up
    to 3 hours or more than 3 hours but less than 6
    hours, were converted as Part Time Sweepers on 1/3rd
    scale wages”. A Memorandum of Settlement was
    reached between the Management of the opposite
    parties-Bank and the All India Bank Employees‟
    Federation on 06.07.2015 in the matter of conversion
    of Part Time Sweepers/Full Time Sweepers as “Full
    Time Housekeeping-cum-Peon”. Subsequently the
    proposal being placed by the Human Resources
    Management Department, Head Officer of the Bank
    before the Board of Directors of UCO Bank, it got
    approval for such conversion. Accordingly detailed
    guidelines in Circular No. CHO/PAS/08/2015-16,
    dated 01.09.2015 was issued by specifying eligibility
    criteria as “All the existing Full Time/Part Time
    Sweepers (i.e., PTS-1/3, 1/2, 3/4) who are on
    permanent rolls of the Bank as of 31.08.2015”.

    3.3. The petitioner engaged in Bidyutmarg Branch with
    effect from 10.01.2011 as casual sweeper having not

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 6 of 59
    fulfilled eligibility criteria laid down in the Circular
    dated 01.09.2015 (Annexure-1 of the writ petition), his
    case was rightly not considered for absorption as Full
    Time Sweeper/Peon. As the petitioner was engaged as
    a “Casual Worker” on daily wage basis with effect from
    10.01.2011, but not “Casual Sweeper”, he does not
    come within the purview of the criteria stipulated in
    said Circular and, hence the claim of the petitioner to
    be appointed as Full Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon is
    fallacious and misconceived.

    Submissions of counsel for the petitioner:

    4. It is submitted by Sri Surendra Nath Panda, learned
    Advocate that the petitioner being initially engaged in
    CRP Headquarters Branch of the UCO Bank in
    Bhubaneswar on 18.07.2005, on the instruction of
    authority concerned was shifted to Bidyut Marg
    Branch of the Bank in Bhubaneswar. In addition to
    the duty as Sweeper, he has been discharging his
    duties as Peon due to inadequacy of staff position in
    the said Branch.

    4.1. In pursuance of Circular No.CHO/PAS/08/2015-16,
    dated 01.09.2016 issued by the Human Resource
    Management Department of Head Office of UCO Bank
    stating conversion of existing Part Time/Full Time
    Sweepers working in different branches of the UCO

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 7 of 59
    Bank as on 31.08.2015 were to be treated as
    Housekeeping-cum-Peon. Though one Sri Niranjan
    Dash was engaged as Casual Sweeper (shown as
    1/3rd Scale Sweeper) on 24.10.2008, vide Letter
    No.ZO/BBSR/HRM/STF/ 95, dated 16.09.2015
    issued by the Deputy Zonal Head/Zonal Head, Zonal
    Office, Bhubaneswar, his service has been converted
    to Full Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon. Another similarly
    situated person, namely Krushna Chandra Karan,
    working as Shree Jagannath Temple Branch was
    treated as Sweeper on consolidated wage basis with
    effect from 30.04.2010. The petitioner being senior to
    them he should have been given preference to be
    considered for regularization in service, but the reason
    known best to the employer to discriminate. The
    authorities having not adhered to the clauses
    stipulated in the Memorandum of Settlement between
    the Management and the Employees fell in grave error
    in not taking up the case of the petitioner.

    4.2. It is contended by Sri Surendra Nath Panda, learned
    Advocate that even if the petitioner‟s service is not
    recognized as working since 2005 seamlessly, at least
    from 10.01.2011 the UCO Bank has admitted the
    petitioner to have working till date in the Bidyut Marg
    Branch in Bhubaneswar. The petitioner having
    fulfilled the eligibility criteria stipulated in the

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 8 of 59
    Circular/Guidelines issued by the UCO Bank his
    service ought to be directed for consideration of
    regularization.

    4.3. Thus, winding up his argument, it is submitted by the
    learned counsel that the case of the petitioner could
    not have been ignored and his service should have
    been regularised maintaining parity with those of the
    employees whose services have been regularised.

    4.4. Since the case of the petitioner was not considered
    despite the fact that he has been discharging his
    duties as entrusted by the Bank for more than 20
    years a representation dated 26.04.2018 was
    submitted to the Zonal Manager, Bhubaneswar for his
    regularization as Housekeeper-cum-Peon. In view of
    principles for regularization in service as set forth by
    the various Hon‟ble Courts and taking into
    consideration the policy of the UCO Bank in this
    respect coupled with the fact that the employees who
    joined the Bank much after the petitioner have been
    considered for regularization in service, Sri Surendra
    Nath Panda, learned Advocate prayed for issue of writ
    of mandamus to the opposite parties in this regard.

    4.5. Pleading thus, it is sought to be impressed upon this
    Court that even if the date of engagement of the
    petitioner in Bidyut Marg Branch is taken into

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 9 of 59
    considered, the case of the petitioner cannot be
    ignored. It is vehemently contended by Sri Surendera
    Nath Panda, learned Advocate that long years of
    service can be considered as a valid and germane
    ground to construe that the employer-UCO Bank is in
    need of such service perennially and having worked for
    over a decade possessing requisite qualification, the
    petitioner can be found qualified for regularisation in
    the service which he has been discharging at present
    without any demur from any quarter. The UCO Bank
    having exploited the service of the petitioner since
    2005 or 2011, as the case may be, the opposite
    parties-employer cannot leave the fate of the
    petitioner-employee on tenterhooks. For years, the
    petitioner has been treated as staff by assigning not
    only sweeper work but also work of peon, he cannot be
    now left in a lurch without job security. The
    Damocles‟s sword of potential termination would be
    hanging over his head, unless the long-awaited
    regularisation in service gets finally secured.

    5. Opposing the contentions advanced by the learned
    counsel for the petitioner and refuting claim of the
    petitioner for regularisation, Sri Sunil Kumar Swain,
    learned counsel appearing for the opposite parties-

    Bank submitted that the petitioner having not
    satisfied the eligibility criteria cannot be considered for

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 10 of 59
    regularization in service. The Zonal Office,
    Bhubaneswar after scrutinizing the list of sweepers
    engaged on casual basis, as requested in letter dated
    13.06.2009 issued by the Head Office with reference to
    eligibility criteria, forwarded applications of seventeen
    casual sweepers along with statement disclosing full
    particulars of such employees with recommendation to
    the Personnel Services Department, Head Office of
    UCO Bank for approval. As the petitioner was
    deployed as a “casual worker” on daily wage basis, but
    not as a “casual sweeper”, his name was not
    recommended for regularization. It is submitted that
    on settlement being reached between the Indian
    Banks‟ Association and the Workmen‟s Union it was
    decided that the Part Time employees-Members of the
    supporting staff on consolidated wages having normal
    working hours were treated as Part Time Sweepers on
    1/3rd scale wages. Expanding his argument, he would
    further rely on paragraph 13 of the counter affidavit to
    contend that “with an objective to improve the
    financial strata of the existing Part-Time Sweepers on
    scale wages and to address the need of Peons in the
    Branches, the Management of the Opposite Parties-
    Bank held negotiations with the All India UCO Bank
    Employees‟ Federation, the Majority Organization for
    Workmen in the Bank under the provisions of I.R.
    Policy for workmen staff and detailed discussions took
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 11 of 59
    place on different aspects of the issue and a
    Memorandum of Settlement was reached between the
    Management of the opposite parties-Bank and the All
    India UCO Bank Employees‟ Federation (Majority
    Organization for Workmen) on 06.07.2015 in the
    matter of conversion of Part-Time Sweepers/Full-Time
    Sweepers as Full-Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon”.
    Subsequently, the proposal was placed by Human
    Resource Management Department, Head Office of the
    opposite parties-Bank before the Board of Directors of
    the Opposite Parties-Bank and the Board accorded its
    approval to the proposal for conversion of all part-time
    sweepers/Full-time sweepers as Full-time
    Housekeeper-cum-Peons.

    5.1. Sri Sunil Kumar Swain, learned counsel appearing for
    the opposite parties-Bank canvassed before this Court
    that the Bank has been converting all part-time
    sweepers to Housekeeper-cum-Peons subject to certain
    criteria. Copy of Bank‟s Circular No.CHO/PAS/08/
    2015-16, dated 01.09.2015 (Annexure-1), clearly
    demonstrates inter-alia the detailed guidelines for
    conversion of Part Time Sweepers who were on the
    permanent rolls of the Bank. In tune with the
    Settlement between Bank and Employees‟ Federation
    on 06.07.2015, as per said Circular dated 01.09.2015,
    all the existing Full Time/Part Time Sweepers (PTS:

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 12 of 59

    1/3, 1/2, 3/4) who were on the permanent rolls of the
    Bank as of 31.08.2015 and subject to fulfilment of
    other criteria/terms and conditions as laid down
    therein were eligible to be converted as Full Time
    Housekeeper-cum-Peons with effect from 01.09.2015.
    Accordingly, they were converted as Full Time
    Housekeeper-cum-Peons. Since the petitioner is
    engaged as a casual worker on daily wages basis, he
    does not come within the ken of the said Circular and
    hence, he is not found eligible to be appointed as Full
    Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon.

    5.2. He, therefore, fervently prays for dismissal of the writ
    petition.

    Analysis and discussions:

    6. There is no dispute that the petitioner has been
    working in UCO Bank, Bidyut Marg Branch,
    Bhubaneswar with effect from 10.01.2011, though no
    denial that the petitioner did work in CRP
    Headquarters Branch of UCO Bank in Bhubaneswar
    since 18.07.2005, but for objection by the opposite
    parties that he left the work to join at Bidyut Marg
    Branch. Thus, as Sweeper he worked for more than
    twenty years, though no objection has been raised
    with respect to the fact that in addition to such duty
    his service has been utilised as if subordinate staff,

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 13 of 59
    i.e., Peon in the Branch. Be that be, the fact remains
    that the petitioner has been working in the Bidyut
    Marg Branch of UCO Bank in Bhubaneswar since
    10.01.2011 till date uninterruptedly.

    6.1. At the outset it may be relevant to have regard to the
    view expressed by the Hon‟ble Madras High Court in
    the case of N. Karunanidhi Vrs. Union of India, W.P.
    No.12887 of 2016 and batch, vide Judgment
    22.04.2022 wherein the following observations are
    made with respect to exploitation of service of persons
    awaiting regularisation in service:

    “17. Be that as it may, as far as the issuance of Writ of
    Mandamus towards regularisation of petitioners’
    services, this Court‟s power to issue such
    command in the face of the fact that the petitioners
    have been engaged as project workers, is not
    legally available. But at the same time, these
    petitioners who have been engaged for a public
    purpose for years together cannot be left in the
    cold and be told that being project employees, no
    law in the country would support your cause.
    Such a stand if it were to be taken in the facts and
    circumstances of the case, it is opposed to the
    concept of welfare State. A State cannot employ
    scores of persons for years together on an
    exploitative terms of engagement and be allowed
    to simply take refuge behind the contention that
    the petitioners are project employees simplicitor
    and have therefore no rights whatsoever.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 14 of 59

    18. If the Courts cannot give direction for their
    regularisation of service, in the constrained legal
    scenario what other remedies that are available to
    these unfortunate employees, who have been
    engaged in service for public purpose, without
    having any definite future to hold on? These
    petitioners cannot be kept on the tenterhooks of
    their employment for years together, by brushing
    aside and discarding their concerned yearning for
    a definite future, with unresponsive indifference.

    19. A welfare State grounded on constitutional values,
    cannot come up with apathetic and callous stand
    that despite continued employment of these
    petitioners for years together, no semblance of
    right is available to them. Such stand by the State
    is opposed to constitutional values as enshrined in
    Article 21 of the Constitution of India. The Courts
    of course have held that equal opportunity must be
    provided in public employment and entry through
    back door should be discountenanced. When
    Article 21 being violated by the State action
    towards its servants, the consideration of the
    Government must primarily be focussed on
    alleviating legitimate grievances of its employees.
    Even assuming that the recruitment of these writ
    petitioners had not been fully in consonance with
    the procedure for appointment in Government
    services, the fact remained that these persons
    have been consciously appointed by the
    Government for implementing public projects and
    the work has been extracted from them
    continuously for several years. It is therefore, not
    open to the Government after a period of time to
    turn around and contend that these writ

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 15 of 59
    petitioners have no right at all to seek any kind of
    guarantee for their future.

    20. In the opinion of this Court, continued employment
    for several years, even on a projects meant to
    serve the State as a whole, certain rights would
    definitely accrue to them, atleast to the extent of
    making a claim for formulation of a scheme
    towards their absorption. This Court is quite
    conscious of the fact that the Government has
    been benevolent and had come up with several
    schemes in the past and directed regularisation of
    services of thousands of employees over a period
    of time. Such benevolence ought to permeate to the
    lowest levels to take within its sweep the
    desperate cry of the petitioners as well. As in the
    sublime words of the father of nation, Mahatma
    Gandhi, „A nation‟s greatness is measured by how
    it treats its weakest members‟. Merely because
    these writ petitioners have been employed in the
    projects, the policy makers may not shut their
    mind and close their eyes to their precarious plight
    having to serve public purpose but left in the lurch
    and unprotected, at the end of the day.

    21. The State Government which is now responsible
    for their engagement ought to consider the pitiable
    state of employment of these employees, hanging
    precariously by a thread and initiate all necessary
    and earnest steps towards addressing their
    grievance. The Government as a reflection of its
    commiserate understanding ought to first remove
    its fixated and unconscionable stand that the
    petitioners are project employees and therefore
    their grievance is not even worth consideration.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 16 of 59

    Such pachydermatous stand is opposed to equity ,
    good conscience and justice.

    22. The Government cannot shut the doors of hope to
    the petitioners and still would expect them to work
    effectively in implementation of the projects,
    serving public purpose. It is a constitutional
    imperative and also a moral obligation too on the
    part of the Government to come up with some kind
    of a comprehensive scheme to address the claim of
    these employees for regularisation. The
    Government may graciously consider, taking into
    account the long period of employment and
    requirement of their experienced service for
    serving the larger interest of public in the State.”

    6.2. A Division Bench of this Court in Orissa Water Supply
    and Sewerage Board Vrs. Bijay Kumar Samal and
    others, W.A. No.857 of 2024 and batch, disposed of
    vide judgment dated 30.07.2025, held as follows:

    “6. Having heard learned counsel appearing for the
    parties and having perused the appeal papers and
    having adverted to relevance of the rulings cited at
    the Bar, we decline indulgence in the matter for
    the following reasons.

    6.1. Appellant-Board is constituted under the
    provisions of the Orissa Water Supply & Sewerage
    Board Act, 1991
    ; the Board discharges public
    functions with service rendered by Respondent-
    employees since a quarter century or so, is not in
    dispute. It is obvious that the work in question is
    perennial in nature and that these poor employees
    have been accomplishing the same with no

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 17 of 59
    complaint whatsoever. It is also not in dispute that
    the Board, being the employer in terms of Section
    9
    of the Act, has engaged the services of these
    respondents, there being no regular recruits,
    despite its recommendation to the State
    Government on several occasions. This being the
    position, the Appellant-Board, being an
    instrumentality of State under Article 12 of the
    Constitution of India, has to conduct itself as a
    Model Employer, vide Bhupendra Nath Hazarika
    Vrs. State of Assam, AIR 2013 SC 234. It hardly
    needs to be stated that there is Preambular
    Socialistic Pattern prescribed by the Constitution
    itself and therefore such an instrumentality cannot
    take up a stand that runs contrary to the same,
    apart from being bereft of elements of justice &
    fair play. After all, a Statutory Body like the
    Appellant-Board cannot run its ordained functions
    as East India Company of bygone era.

    6.2. The vehement submission of learned panel
    counsel appearing for the Board that the very
    initial entry of the respondents to the service is
    illegal and therefore no regularization/absorption
    would have been granted in terms of Umadevi
    (supra) cannot be acceded to and reasons for this
    are many:

    Firstly, Section 9(1) of the Act says:

    „The Board may appoint such officers
    and employees as it considers
    necessary for the efficient performance
    of its duties and discharge of its
    functions against posts sanctioned by
    the State Government.‟

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 18 of 59
    Secondly, it is specifically admitted in the
    statement of objections filed in the writ
    petitions that the Board has engaged
    the services of these respondents.

    It is not the contra case of the Board and it cannot
    be either, the battle lines having been drawn up
    both the sides having filed their pleadings. It need
    not be stated that an admission in the pleadings is
    a substantive piece of evidence, if not a sacrosanct
    one. Therefore, the ratio in State of Karnataka Vrs.
    Uma Devi, (2006) 4 SCC 1 would not come to the
    aid of Appellant-Board, initial entry being
    absolutely legal.

    6.3. Illegality is one thing and irregularity is another,
    even if arguably they are not polls asunder. At
    times, the difference between these two, sages of
    law like Fedric Pollock say, more often than not, is
    in degrees & not in kind. In a constitutionally
    ordained Welfare State its instrumentality like the
    Board cannot be permitted to contend that
    although it made the appointments in question, the
    same are marred by illegality, especially when
    they are not, for the reasons already discussed
    above. Here are employees who have been
    shading their sweat, if not blood, to the soil in the
    discharge of their functions for more than twenty
    five years.

    Firstly, a perpetrator of illegality, if at all these
    appointments are of the kind, cannot be
    permitted to take the advantage of its
    own illegal act.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 19 of 59

    Secondly, whatever arguable illegality at the
    entry level of employment would
    diminish year by year and become nil
    at least after a quarter century, as a
    concession to the shortness of human
    life.

    One cannot dig the grave profitably, the dead
    having gone with the winds long ago once for all.
    Therefore, the entry of these respondents is at the
    most can be termed as irregular and therefore
    Umadevi cannot be chanted like mantra to defeat
    their legitimate expectation, if not right.

    6.4. The next submission of panel counsel appearing
    for the Board that it is the prerogative of State
    Government under Section 9 to create & sanction
    posts is only a half legal truth. The text of said
    provision, which is already reproduced above,
    prescribes only a sanction for the posts that needs
    to be created by the Board itself. If the legislature
    intended the view of Board, it would have possibly
    employed the expression “posts created and
    sanctioned by the Government” or “posts
    sanctioned and created by the Government”.
    However, that is not the nature of language here.
    Ordinarily, sanctioning follows the creation of
    posts in service jurisprudence. Added, power to
    appoint would necessarily include all ancillary
    powers, such as creating of posts to facilitate
    appointment. No rule or ruling is brought to our
    notice to sustain a view in variance. We note that
    the Appellant-Board is not a Department of the
    Government, which works as its limb but is a
    statutory entity having a fair degree of autonomy.
    This aspect has to enter the construing of Section
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 20 of 59
    9(1) of the Act to make it meaningful, if not
    functional. We fail to understand, why the Board
    failed to create posts without abdicating that
    power and thereafter to seek sanction of the
    Government. However, it is strange that the
    converse is practised.

    6.5. The vehement submission of learned panel
    counsel for the Board that it is invariably the
    prerogative of Government to create posts and
    Court cannot interfere in any circumstance vide
    UOI Vrs. Ilmo Devi, 2021 SCC OnLine SC 899,
    again is difficult to completely agree with and
    reasons of this are not far to seek: Firstly, as
    already mentioned above, ordinarily power to
    appoint includes, power to create posts, unless the
    statute otherwise says; that otherwise is missing
    here. Apparently, State is not the appointing
    authority, although it has power to sanction the
    posts. It remains a riddle wrapped in enigma as to
    why the Board abdicated its power of creating
    posts in favour of the Government contrary to the
    policy enacted in Section 9(1) of the Act. It is not
    that there is no circumstance warranting creation
    of posts, when Board itself had asked for such
    creation and sanction at the hands of Government,
    more particularly when the engaged personnel
    have been working since last a quarter century or
    so. Power to create posts, as already mentioned
    above, lies with the Board and it is coupled with a
    duty as well, inasmuch as the legislature has
    employed the word „power’ in this provision and
    not the word „discretion’. Board cannot say such
    power is its prerogative and a Constitutional Court
    cannot regulate it. There is nothing like absolute

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 21 of 59
    power or prerogative, “limited Government” being
    one of the basic features of our Constitution. A
    contra argument counters the rule of law.

    6.6. Very importantly, it is not the State Government,
    which is in appeal before us against the direction
    purportedly for the creation and sanctioning of
    posts. Government happens to be one of the
    parties to the writ petition and it is not making out
    any grievance against the said direction, which
    accords with the multiple recommendations made
    by the Board several times hitherto fore. In fact,
    Board cannot be considered as an aggrieved party
    in order to call upon us to undertake a deeper
    examination of the contention as to the prerogative
    of the State Government to create and sanction
    posts for accommodating the poor employees, who
    have been relentlessly working, we repeat, for
    more than a quarter century with no complaints
    whatsoever. Courts have to individualize justice in
    the pleaded facts and circumstances. They cannot
    turn a worthy cause away by mindlessly invoking
    broad propositions canvassed at the Bar. We
    hasten to add that ordinarily Writ Courts do not
    interfere in matters of prerogatives of the
    Government; however, when it comes to lesser
    bodies, like the statutory Board in question,
    exceptions are recognized to the norm; the case in
    appeals at hand is one such exception.

    6.7. We notice that the Appellant-Board in the subject
    Resolutions dated 23.12.2013, 03.01.2014, etc.
    has specifically stated the circumstances
    warranting creation and sanctioning of posts
    explicit recommending to regularize the services of
    all employees of the kind. It is admitted by the
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 22 of 59
    learned panel counsel before us that quite a few
    employees having secured orders of regularization
    in WP(C) Nos.3921, 3922, 3924 of 2006, WP(C) No.
    10046 of 2008 and WP(C) No. 3395 of 2020, the
    Board had laid challenge in Writ Appeals that
    came to be negatived and further that even the
    SLPs filed before the Apex Court met the same
    fate. If one set of employees are granted
    regularization, another set similarly circumstanced
    cannot be unfavorably discriminated vide Apex
    Court decision in Raman Kumar and Ors. Vrs.
    UOI, 2023 LiveLaw SC 520. This decision
    specifically refers to Umadevi (supra). Again we
    need not say that an Article 12 entity cannot
    practise “pick and choose”, when it comes to
    employing the work force. What applies to goose,
    applies to gander, subject to all just exceptions
    into which argued case of the appellants does not
    fit.

    6.8. Learned advocates appearing for the employees
    are justified in reminding us that law like a living
    river flows and streams do emerge. Post Umadevi,
    that has happened in the matter of regularization/
    absorption of services. In its recent decision in
    Civil Appeal Nos. 8157, 8158-8179 of 2024
    between Shripal Vrs. Nagar Nigam, Gajiabad
    decided on 31.01.2025 vide MANU/SC/0139/
    2025 = 2025 SCC OnLine SC 221, the Apex Court
    has observed at Para-17 as under:

    „In light of these considerations, the Employer‟s
    discontinuation of the Appellant Workmen stands
    in violation of the most basic labour law principles.
    Once it is established that their services were
    terminated without adhering to Sections 6E and
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 23 of 59
    6N of the U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, and
    that they were engaged in essential, perennial
    duties, these workers cannot be relegated to
    perpetual uncertainty. While concerns of municipal
    budget and compliance with recruitment Rules
    merit consideration, such concerns do not absolve
    the Employer of statutory obligations or negate
    equitable entitlements. Indeed, bureaucratic
    limitations cannot trump the legitimate rights of
    workmen who have served continuously in de
    facto regular roles for an extended period.‟

    We appreciate the fairness of learned panel
    counsel appearing for the Appellant-Board rightly
    in not taking up contentions that these employees
    did not have requisite qualification, that their
    performance was unsatisfactory or that their
    services are no longer required for the functioning
    of the Board. He was also fair in laying bare the
    vacancy position of 32 ministerial posts with
    various designations, although some of them not
    availing to Respondent-employees, by producing
    the chart prepared by Administrative Officer of the
    Board on 20.03.2024. Chart also specifically
    mentions name of one employee Mr. A.K. Panda,
    who secured order of regularization in WP(C) No.
    10046 of 2008. Learned panel counsel does not
    dispute assertion of learned advocates appearing
    for the Respondents that this matter ultimately
    went up to the Apex Court and was laid to rest,
    the subject SLP having been dismissed.

    6.9. In Jaggo, 2024 INSC 1034 the Hon‟ble Supreme
    Court having surveyed the law relating to
    regularization from Umadevi to Vinod Kumar Vrs.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 24 of 59

    UOI, (2024) 1 SCR 1230 has observed at Para-20
    as under:

    „20. It is well established that the decision in
    Uma Devi (supra) does not intend to penalize
    employees who have rendered long years of
    service fulfilling ongoing and necessary
    functions of the State or its instrumentalities.
    The said judgment sought to prevent
    backdoor entries and illegal appointments
    that circumvent constitutional requirements.
    However, where appointments were not
    illegal but possibly “irregular,” and where
    employees had served continuously against
    the backdrop of sanctioned functions for a
    considerable period, the need for a fair and
    humane resolution becomes paramount.
    Prolonged, continuous, and unblemished
    service performing tasks inherently required
    on a regular basis can, over the time,
    transform what was initially ad-hoc or
    temporary into a scenario demanding fair
    regularization. ***‟

    This decision has discussed most of the rulings
    cited both by the Appellants’ counsel and learned
    advocates appearing for the employees. Therefore,
    we have not re-ventured the survey, so that this
    judgment does not become a thesis. More is not
    necessary to deliberate.

    In the above circumstances, these appeals being
    devoid of merits are liable to be and accordingly
    dismissed, costs having been reluctantly made
    easy.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 25 of 59

    The Appellant-Board and Official Respondents are
    directed to implement the impugned orders of the
    learned Single Judges and report compliance to
    the Registrar General of this Court within an outer
    limit of three months. Default or delay shall be
    viewed very seriously in the next legal battle, if
    waged by the Respondent-employees.”

    7. With the aforesaid prelude, this Court ventures to
    examine the issue raised by the petitioner that in the
    conspectus of accepted factual scenario that the
    petitioner has been working with the Bank at Bidyut
    Marg Branch of Bhubaneswar since 10.01.2011
    without intervention or interdiction of any court by
    way of interlocutory orders, by now has completed
    more than ten years. It emanates from the policy of the
    UCO Bank reflected in Letter dated 13.06.2009
    (Annexure-A/1 enclosed with counter affidavit) that
    the Bank was considering regularisation of service of
    casual sweeper. Therefore, the case of the petitioner is
    required to be considered in the light of decisions of
    the Hon‟ble Supreme Court of India that long years of
    service can be considered for regularisation in service.

    7.1. This Court through Division Bench in the case of
    Bansidhar Naik and others Vrs. Union of India and
    others, 126 (2018) CLT 695, spelt out that:

    “9. It is well settled law laid down by the apex Court
    that the casual workers having temporary status

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 26 of 59
    continuing for two to three years, the presumption
    can be taken that there is a regular need of their
    services and they should have been absorbed
    against Group-D posts.”

    7.2. The Hon‟ble Supreme Court of India in Dharam Singh
    and others Vrs. State of U.P. and another, (2025) 8 SCR
    1026, considering requirement of engagement of
    employees perennially made the following
    observations:

    “9. Moreover, it is undisputed that the nature of work
    performed by the appellants, i.e. sorting and
    scrutiny of applications, dispatch and office
    support, and driving, has been continuous and
    integral to the Commission‟s functioning since
    their engagement between 1989 and 1992. The
    Commission itself moved for sanction of fourteen
    posts and furnished a list of fourteen daily wagers
    including the appellants. That consistent internal
    demand, coupled with uninterrupted utilisation of
    the appellants‟ labour on regular office hours,
    fortifies the conclusion that the duties are
    perennial. To continue extracting such work for
    decades while pleading want of sanctioned
    strength is a position that cannot be sustained.

    10. It must be noted that the premise of “no vacancy”

    is, in any event, contradicted by the evidence on
    record. An RTI response of 22.01.2010 received
    from the office of Respondent No.2 indicated
    existence of Class-IV vacancies. Furthermore, I.A.
    No. 109487 of 2020 filed before this Court by the
    appellants specifically pointed to at least five

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 27 of 59
    vacant Class-IV/Guard posts and one vacant
    Driver post within the establishment. That
    application also set out the names of similarly
    situated daily wagers who were regularised
    earlier within the same Commission. No rebuttal
    was filed to the I.A. The unrebutted assertion of
    vacancies and the comparison with those who
    received regularisation materially undermine the
    High Court‟s conclusion that no vacancy existed
    and reveal unequal treatment vis-à-vis persons
    similarly placed. Selective regularisation in the
    same establishment, while continuing the
    appellants on daily wages despite comparable
    tenure and duties with those regularized, is a
    clear violation of equity.

    11. Furthermore, it must be clarified that the reliance
    placed by the High Court on Umadevi (Supra) to
    non-suit the appellants is misplaced. Unlike
    Umadevi (Supra), the challenge before us is not an
    invitation to bypass the constitutional scheme of
    public employment. It is a challenge to the State‟s
    arbitrary refusals to sanction posts despite the
    employer‟s own acknowledgement of need and
    decades of continuous reliance on the very
    workforce. On the other hand, Umadevi (Supra)
    draws a distinction between illegal appointments
    and irregular engagements and does not endorse
    the perpetuation of precarious employment where
    the work itself is permanent and the State has
    failed, for years, to put its house in order. Recent
    decisions of this Court in Jaggo Vrs. Union of
    India, (2024) 12 SCR 1235 and in Shripal &
    Another Vrs. Nagar Nigam, Ghaziabad, (2025) 1
    SCR 1427 have emphatically cautioned that

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 28 of 59
    Umadevi, (2006) 3 SCR 953 cannot be deployed
    as a shield to justify exploitation through long-term
    “ad hocism”, the use of outsourcing as a proxy, or
    the denial of basic parity where identical duties
    are exacted over extended periods. The principles
    articulated therein apply with full force to the
    present case. The relevant paras from Shripal
    (supra) have been reproduced hereunder:

    „14. The Respondent Employer places reliance on
    Umadevi (supra) to contend that daily-wage
    or temporary employees cannot claim
    permanent absorption in the absence of
    statutory rules providing such absorption.
    However, as frequently reiterated, Uma Devi
    itself distinguishes between appointments
    that are “illegal” and those that are
    “irregular,” the latter being eligible for
    regularization if they meet certain conditions.
    More importantly, Uma Devi cannot serve as
    a shield to justify exploitative engagements
    persisting for years without the Employer
    undertaking legitimate recruitment. Given the
    record which shows no true contractor-based
    arrangement and a consistent need for
    permanent horticultural staff the alleged
    asserted ban on fresh recruitment, though
    real, cannot justify indefinite daily-wage
    status or continued unfair practices.

    15. It is manifest that the Appellant Workmen
    continuously rendered their services over
    several years, sometimes spanning more
    than a decade. Even if certain muster rolls
    were not produced in full, the Employer‟s
    failure to furnish such records-despite
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 29 of 59
    directions to do so-allows an adverse
    inference under well-established labour
    jurisprudence. Indian labour law strongly
    disfavors perpetual daily-wage or contractual
    engagements in circumstances where the
    work is permanent in nature. Morally and
    legally, workers who fulfil ongoing municipal
    requirements year after year cannot be
    dismissed summarily as dispensable,
    particularly in the absence of a genuine
    contractor agreement. At this juncture, it
    would be appropriate to recall the broader
    critique of indefinite “temporary” employment
    practices as done by a recent judgment of
    this court in Jaggo Vrs. Union of India, (2024)

    12 SCR 1235 in the following paragraphs:

    „22. The pervasive misuse of temporary
    employment contracts, as exemplified in
    this case, reflects a broader systemic
    issue that adversely affects workers‟
    rights and job security. In the private
    sector, the rise of the gig economy has
    led to an increase in precarious
    employment arrangements, often
    characterized by lack of benefits, job
    security, and fair treatment. Such
    practices have been criticized for
    exploiting workers and undermining
    labour standards. Government
    institutions, entrusted with upholding
    the principles of fairness and justice,
    bear an even greater responsibility to
    avoid such exploitative employment
    practices. When public sector entities

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 30 of 59
    engage in misuse of temporary
    contracts, it not only mirrors the
    detrimental trends observed in the gig
    economy but also sets a concerning
    precedent that can erode public trust in
    governmental operations. ***

    25. It is a disconcerting reality that
    temporary employees, particularly in
    government institutions, often face
    multifaceted forms of exploitation. While
    the foundational purpose of temporary
    contracts may have been to address
    short-term or seasonal needs, they
    have increasingly become a mechanism
    to evade long-term obligations owed to
    employees. These practices manifest in
    several ways:

     Misuse of “Temporary” Labels:

    Employees engaged for work that is
    essential, recurring, and integral to the
    functioning of an institution are often
    labelled as “temporary” or
    “contractual,” even when their roles
    mirror those of regular employees. Such
    misclassification deprives workers of
    the dignity, security, and benefits that
    regular employees are entitled to,
    despite performing identical tasks.

     Arbitrary Termination: Temporary
    employees are frequently dismissed
    without cause or notice, as seen in the
    present case. This practice undermines
    the principles of natural justice and

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 31 of 59
    subjects workers to a state of constant
    insecurity, regardless of the quality or
    duration of their service.

    
                          Lack of Career Progression: Temporary
                           employees     often find      themselves
    

    excluded from opportunities for skill
    development, promotions, or
    incremental pay raises. They remain
    stagnant in their roles, creating a
    systemic disparity between them and
    their regular counterparts, despite their
    contributions being equally significant.

     Using Outsourcing as a Shield:

    Institutions increasingly resort to
    outsourcing roles performed by
    temporary employees, effectively
    replacing one set of exploited workers
    with another. This practice not only
    perpetuates exploitation but also
    demonstrates a deliberate effort to
    bypass the obligation to offer regular
    employment.

     Denial of Basic Rights and Benefits:

    Temporary employees are often denied
    fundamental benefits such as pension,
    provident fund, health insurance, and
    paid leave, even when their tenure
    spans decades. This lack of social
    security subjects them and their
    families to undue hardship, especially
    in cases of illness, retirement, or
    unforeseen circumstances.‟ ***‟

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 32 of 59

    13. As we have observed in both Jaggo (supra) and
    Shripal (supra), outsourcing cannot become a
    convenient shield to perpetuate precariousness
    and to sidestep fair engagement practices where
    the work is inherently perennial. The
    Commission‟s further contention that the
    appellants are not “full-time” employees but
    continue only by virtue of interim orders also does
    not advance their case. That interim protection
    was granted precisely because of the long history
    of engagement and the pendency of the challenge
    to the State‟s refusals. It neither creates rights
    that did not exist nor erases entitlements that may
    arise upon a proper adjudication of the legality of
    those refusals.

    14. The learned Single Judge of the High Court also
    declined relief on the footing that the petitioners
    had not specifically assailed the subsequent
    decision dated 25.11.2003. However, that view
    overlooks that the writ petition squarely
    challenged the 11.11.1999 refusal as the High
    Court itself directed a fresh decision during
    pendency, and the later rejection was placed on
    record by the respondents. In such circumstances,
    we believe that the High Court was obliged to
    examine the legality of the State‟s stance in
    refusing sanction, whether in 1999 or upon
    reconsideration in 2003, rather than dispose of the
    matter on a mere technicality. The Division Bench
    of the High Court compounded the error by
    affirming the dismissal without engaging with the
    principal challenge or the intervening material. The
    approach of both the Courts, in reducing the
    dispute to a mechanical enquiry about “rules” and

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 33 of 59
    “vacancy” while ignoring the core question of
    arbitrariness in the State‟s refusal to sanction
    posts despite perennial need and long service,
    cannot be sustained.

    15. Therefore, in view of the foregoing observations,
    the impugned order of the High Court cannot be
    sustained. The State‟s refusals dated 11.11.1999
    and 25.11.2003, in so far as they concern the
    Commission‟s proposals for sanction/creation of
    Class-III/Class-IV posts to address perennial
    ministerial/attendant work, are held
    unsustainable and stand quashed.

    16. The appeal must, accordingly, be allowed.

    17. Before concluding, we think it necessary to recall
    that the State (here referring to both the Union and
    the State governments) is not a mere market
    participant but a constitutional employer. It cannot
    balance budgets on the backs of those who
    perform the most basic and recurring public
    functions. Where work recurs day after day and
    year after year, the establishment must reflect
    that reality in its sanctioned strength and
    engagement practices. The long-term extraction of
    regular labour under temporary labels corrodes
    confidence in public administration and offends
    the promise of equal protection. Financial
    stringency certainly has a place in public policy,
    but it is not a talisman that overrides fairness,
    reason and the duty to organise work on lawful
    lines.

    18. Moreover, it must necessarily be noted that “ad-

    hocism” thrives where administration is opaque.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 34 of 59

    The State Departments must keep and produce
    accurate establishment registers, muster rolls and
    outsourcing arrangements, and they must explain,
    with evidence, why they prefer precarious
    engagement over sanctioned posts where the work
    is perennial. If “constraint” is invoked, the record
    should show what alternatives were considered,
    why similarly placed workers were treated
    differently, and how the chosen course aligns with
    Articles 14, 16 and 21 of the Constitution of India.
    Sensitivity to the human consequences of
    prolonged insecurity is not sentimentality. It is a
    constitutional discipline that should inform every
    decision affecting those who keep public offices
    running.”

    7.3. In Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd. Vrs. Brajrajnagar Coal
    Mines Workers‟ Union, (2024) 3 SCR 627 the Hon‟ble
    Supreme Court of India unequivocally expressed
    similar view as referred to above.

    8. This Court is taken to certain clauses of Bipartite
    Settlement by the learned counsel for the petitioner.
    The relevant portions are quoted hereunder [see
    written note of submission of the petitioner]:

    “Clause No.20.7 and Clause 20.8 under Chapter XX
    and under Heading “Part Time Employees and
    Temporary Employees, etc.

    Clause No.20.7

    „In supersession of paragraph 21.20 and sub clause (c)
    of paragraph 23.15 of Desai Award, Temporary

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 35 of 59
    employee will mean a workman who has been
    appointed for a limited period for work which is of an
    essentially temporary nature or who is employed
    temporarily as an Additional workman in connection
    with temporary increase in work of a permanent nature
    and includes a workman other than a permanent
    workman who is appointed in a temporary vacancy
    caused by the absence of a particular permanent
    workman.‟

    Clause No.20.8

    „A temporary workman may also be appointed to fill a
    permanent vacancy provided that such temporary
    appointment shall not exceed a period of 3 months
    during which the Bank shall make arrangements for
    filling up the vacancy permanently. If such a temporary
    workman is eventually selected for filling up the
    vacancy, the period of such temporary employment will
    be taken into account as part of his probationary
    period.‟ ***”

    8.1. Attention is also drawn to the Circular dated
    13.06.2009 issued by the General Manager, UCO
    Bank, Personnel Services Department, Head Office,
    3&4, DD Block, Sector-1, Salt Lake, Kolkata, wherein
    the following is found mentioned:

    “Subject to your verification of the Annexure I, as stated
    above, the Casual Sweepers who are working on daily
    wages and named in Annexure-I will be eligible for
    regularization as Consolidated Wage Sweepers subject
    to fulfilment of following terms and conditions:

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 36 of 59

    i) The Casual Sweeper who would be regularized as
    Consolidated Wage sweeper should have worked
    as Casual Sweeper on daily wages in the
    respective Branch/Office form the date
    immediately after the permanent vacancy in
    sweepers post fallen vacant and still continuing as
    Casual Sweeper in the said branch;

    ii) No other permanent Sweeper should have been
    posted in the respective branch/office unless the
    floor area of the said branch/office requires
    engagement of more than one Sweeper.

    iii) In a particular branch/office, under any
    circumstances, not more than one Casual Sweeper
    will be regularized as Consolidated Wage
    Sweeper.

    iv) The Casual Sweeper who will be regularized as
    Consolidated Wage Sweeper should also satisfy
    the following eligibility criteria:

    (a) Age limit: Minimum 18 years and Maximum
    below 60 years as of 13th June, 2009. Those
    who have already crossed 60 years of age
    limit, will not be considered for regularization
    and will be discontinued.

    (b) Educational qualification should not be more
    than VI (Sixth) Standard. However,
    educational qualification above VI standard
    will not be a bar, but no benefit whatsoever
    will be given for such higher qualification in
    future.

    The Zonal Office to verify the particulars in each
    case and ensure that the Casual Sweepers who

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 37 of 59
    are to be regularized as Consolidated Wage
    Sweeper fulfil the criteria as stated under point
    Nos.(i) to (iv) above.

    2) Those who will fulfil the eligibility criteria should
    be asked by the Zonal Office to submit application
    in the proforma given in Annexure-II to the
    respective Branch/Office and such application
    should be forwarded by the respective Branch/
    Office to Zonal Office concerned with their
    recommendation. Upon receipt of such
    applications, the zonal Office will scrutinize the
    application and subject to fulfilment of the
    eligibility criteria will forward a statement giving
    full particulars of such candidates to Head Office,
    Personnel Services Department with their
    recommendation for final approval.

    After receipt of final clearance from Head Office,
    the Zonal Office will issue Appointment Letter to
    the eligible Casual Sweepers who will be
    regularized as Consolidated Wage Sweeper. A
    proforma of the appointment letter is given in
    Annexure-III.

    While issuing appointment letter to the eligible
    Casual Sweeper as Consolidated Wage Sweeper,
    as stated above, the Zonal Office will follow
    Government guidelines on Reservation of Posts for
    SC/ST/OBC etc. ***”

    8.2. Circular No.F.N.8/4/2025-RRB, dated 29.09.2025
    issued by the Government of India, Ministry of
    Finance, Department of Financial Services indicates
    with respect to regularisation of Part Time Sweepers/

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 38 of 59
    Casual Workers as Full Time Employees in RRBs as
    follows:

    “I am directed to refer to the subject cited above and to
    say that the High Court of Calcutta vide order dated
    09.01.2025 in WPA No.1073 of 2024 has passed the
    following orders:

    „After hearing the parties and considering the
    affidavits filed, this court is of the view that the
    issue of regularization and/or absorption of the
    petitioners should be regulated to the Secretary,
    Department of Financial Services, Ministry of
    Finance, Government of India, 6A, 3rd Floor,
    Jeevan Deep Building, Sansad Marg, New Delhi-
    110001 who has been added as party respondent
    No.7 shall either through himself / herself or by
    forming a committee of at least three members
    having expertise in the field to decide on the issue
    of regularization and/or absorption of the writ
    petitioners. The respondent no.7 or the committee
    that may be constituted by respondent no.7 may
    also formulate a scheme for regularization and/or
    absorption of the writ petitioners if they find that
    the petitioners are to be regularized or absorbed
    which may aid other similarly circumstanced
    persons in the said bank as it is well-settled in
    view of the judgment reported in (2015) 1 SCC
    347, State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. Vrs. Arvind
    Kuumar Srivastva & Ors. that similar
    circumstances employees should be given the
    same benefits give to other group pursuant to
    orders of court to avoid multiplicity of judicial
    proceedings. The entire exercise of deciding the
    issue as to the regularizations and/or absorption

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 39 of 59
    of the writ petitioners are found suitable for being
    regularized and/or absorbed, shall be completed
    with a period of one years from the date of
    communication of a server copy of this order”.

    2. A copy of the order dated 09.01.2025 in WPA
    No.1073 of 2024 in High Court of Calcutta is
    enclosed (Annexure I).

    3. To comply with the above direction of the Hon‟ble
    Court, it has been decided to refer the matter to
    the Standing Consultative Committee (SCC) for
    RRBs constituted vide DFS letter no.7/6/2025-
    RRB dated 18.09.2025.

    4. A brief indicating multiple judicial pronouncements
    on the subject matter is enclosed as (Annexure II)
    for reference.

    5. The SCC for this purpose may co-opt the Chairmen
    of the concerned RRBs where litigations on the
    subject are either sub-judice or decided.

    6. The SCC may examine the issues along with
    relevant records, in light of the applicable rules/
    regulations/manpower policy in the RRBs & PSBs
    and give clear recommendations in the subject
    matter within three weeks of receipt of this letter,
    in compliance of the Hon‟ble High Court of
    Calcutta order dated 09.01.2025 in WPA 1073 of
    2024.”

    8.3. It is also brought to the notice of this Court that the
    Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department
    of Financial Services issued further Circular bearing
    F.No.8/4/2025-RRB dated 28.11.2025 with regard to

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 40 of 59
    “Regularization of Part Time Sweepers/ Casual
    Workers as Full Time Employees in RRBs, in
    compliance with judicial directions, which runs thus:

    “I am directed to refer to the subject cited above
    and to say that across the country, cases have
    been filed in various courts seeking regularisation
    of Temporary/Ad hoc/Part-time sweepers. Some
    cases have been decided in favour of the
    applicants/petitioners. In some court, the matters
    are still pending. Hon‟ble High Court of Calcutta,
    vide its order dated 09.01.2025 in WPA No.1073
    of 2024, has passed the following orders:

    „After hearing the parties and considering the
    affidavits filed, this court is of the view that the
    issue of regularization and/or absorption of the
    petitioners should be regulated to the Secretary,
    Department of Financial Services, Ministry of
    Finance, Government of India, 6A, 3rd Floor,
    Jeevan Deep Building, Sansad Marg, New Delhi-
    110001 who has been added as party respondent
    No.7 shall either through himself/herself or by
    forming a committee of at least three members
    having expertise in the field to decide on the issue
    of regularization and/or absorption of the writ
    petitioners. The respondent no.7 or the committee
    that may be constituted by respondent no.7 may
    also formulate a scheme for regularization and/or
    absorption of the writ petitioners if they find that
    the petitioners are to be regularized or absorbed
    which may aid other similarly circumstanced
    persons in the said bank as it is well-settled in
    view of the judgment reported in (2015) 1 SCC
    347, State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. Vrs. Arvind
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 41 of 59
    Kumar Srivastva & Ors. that similar
    circumstances employees should be given the
    same benefits give to other group pursuant to
    orders of court to avoid multiplicity of judicial
    proceedings. The entire exercise of deciding the
    issue as to the regularizations and/or absorption
    of the writ petitioners are found suitable for being
    regularized and/or absorbed, shall be completed
    with a period of one years from the date of
    communication of a server copy of this order.‟

    2. Department of Financial Services (DFS), vide its
    letter no.7/6/2025-RRB dated 18.09.2025, has
    constituted a Standing Consultative Committee
    (SCC) for RRBs for examination of issues referred
    to it by the Government (DFS)/NABARD with prior
    consultation with DFS from time to time, amongst
    others, on Service conditions of RRB employees.

    3. In compliance to above said orders of Hon‟ble High
    Court of Calcutta dated 09.01.2025 passed in
    W.P.A. 1073 of 2024, Department of Financial
    Services (DFS), vide its letter No.F.No.8/4/2025-

    RRB dated 29.09.2025 referred the issue of
    regularization of Part Time Sweepers (PTS) /
    Casual Workers in RRBs to the Standing
    Consultative Committee (SCC) for RRBs to examine
    the issues along with the relevant records, in light
    of the applicable rules / regulations / manpower
    policy in the RRBs & PSBs and give clear
    recommendations in the subject matter.

    4. In view of the submissions made above, the Govt.

    of India shall take appropriate decision in the
    matter after due scrutiny and evaluation of the

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 42 of 59
    recommendations of the said consultative
    committee.

    5. Therefore, in the context of ongoing legal
    proceedings on the captioned subject in which you
    are one of the respondents, it is advised to keep
    the Hon‟ble Court informed of the above
    developments and seek adjournment of matter for
    6 months.”

    8.4. When the above Circulars of the year 2025 are taken
    into consideration, this Court finds no substance in
    the argument of the learned counsel representing the
    opposite parties-Bank that “the petitioner is engaged
    as a Casual Worker, but not as a Casual Sweeper and
    as such he does not satisfy the criteria for conversion/
    regularisation as Full Time Housekeeper-cum-Peon
    (paragraph 9 of written submission of the opposite
    parties). In view of the aforesaid, there is no ambiguity
    that Part-Time Sweepers/Casual Workers can be
    considered for absorption in service when their
    services are perennially required and have been
    exploited by assigning duty not only of a sweeper but
    also of a peon in absence of or inadequate supporting
    staff. In the instant case, the petitioner has been
    working since more than twenty years if his
    engagement is considered since the year 2005 or ten
    years if engagement is considered when he joined and
    has been working at Bidyut Marg Branch of UCO
    Bank since 2011. The opposite parties have not denied
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 43 of 59
    in specific terms that the petitioner has been working
    in the CRP Headquarters, Bhubaneswar since
    18.07.2005. Only dispute which the opposites parties
    sought to raise is this, that the petitioner having left
    the job thereat, joined at Bidyut Marg Branch of UCO
    Bank. Thus, in such view of the matter, the service of
    the petitioner has been utilised on exploitative terms
    by the UCO Bank since 2005, may be in different
    capacity. Nothing is sought to agitate by the opposite
    parties that he could not perform the duty of the
    Housekeeper-cum-Peon efficiently or effectively when
    he was entrusted to do so. If the services rendered to
    the UCO Bank by the petitioner is considered since
    2005, it would more than twenty years.

    8.5. With the above legal position through very many
    decisions of various Courts, taking into account the
    anxious consideration depicted through decisions of
    the Hon‟ble Supreme Court of India and other High
    Court(s) including this Court when the present matter
    is glossed through, this Court cannot desist itself but
    by applying the principles so enunciated observes that
    the petitioner is entitled to be considered for
    regularization/absorption in service in the light of
    discussions made hitherto.

    8.6. At this juncture this Court feels it apposite to have
    reference to the view expressed by the Hon‟ble Apex

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 44 of 59
    Court in the case of Bhola Nath Vrs. The State of
    Jharkhand and others, 2026 SCC OnLine SC 129,
    wherein the Hon‟ble Supreme Court of India has been
    pleased to enunciate as follows:

    “ISSUE II.

    Whether the action/inaction of the respondent-State in
    not recognizing the appellants‟ continuous service for
    the purpose of regularization is arbitrary and violative
    of Article 14 of the Constitution of India ?

    10. The learned Single Judge, vide common order,
    dismissed the writ petitions filed by the appellants
    seeking a writ of mandamus directing the
    respondent-State to regularize their services. In
    doing so, the writ Court placed reliance on the
    terms and conditions of the employment
    agreement entered into between the appellants
    and the respondents. The learned Single Judge, in
    this regard, recorded the following findings:

    i) The appellants were appointed on a purely
    contractual basis pursuant to a decision of
    the Finance Department to fill 22 sanctioned
    posts through contractual engagement, the
    expenditure being met from non-plan funds.

    Following issuance of an advertisement and
    completion of the selection process, the
    appellants were appointed by entering into
    contracts of employment for an initial period
    of one year, extendable from time to time for
    fixed durations.

    ii) The appellants were granted extensions
    periodically, with the last extensions having

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 45 of 59
    been issued in the year 2023 as a one-time
    measure. The respondent-State treated the
    said decision as a conscious policy
    determination, which, according to the
    learned Single Judge, did not warrant
    interference by the Court.

    iii) The appellants were held not entitled to
    regularization under the regularization
    scheme framed by the respondent-State in
    the year 2015, as modified in 2019, which
    prescribed completion of ten years of
    continuous service as on the cut-off year
    2019. It was further noted that the
    appellants had not laid any challenge to the
    validity of the said regularization scheme.

    iv) Since the appellants were appointed on a
    contractual basis and continued only through
    periodic extensions, it was held that they did
    not possess any statutory or legal right to
    continue in service once the contractual
    period, including its extensions, came to an
    end.

    v) Emphasis was laid on the fact that the
    appellants were fully aware, and were put to
    notice on each occasion of renewal, that their
    engagement was contractual and limited to a
    specified tenure. In view thereof, the learned
    Single Judge held that no question of
    legitimate expectation or enforceable right to
    renewal or regularization could arise, nor
    could any right be said to have crystallised
    in their favour.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 46 of 59

    vi) It was further noted that the appellants had
    not been replaced by another set of
    contractual employees. On the contrary, the
    material on record indicated that the
    respondent-State had undertaken regular
    recruitment and appointed nine persons as
    regular employees through a fresh
    advertisement.

    10.1. Aggrieved by the decision of the writ Court, the
    appellants preferred intra-Court appeals before
    the High Court. The learned Division Bench upheld
    the judgment of the writ Court and recorded the
    following findings:

    i) The law relating to regularization or
    absorption of contractual employees was
    held to be well settled, namely that such
    employees are governed by the terms and
    conditions of their engagement, the
    relationship being founded upon a bilateral
    contract between the employee and the
    employer.

    ii) It was further held that the terms and
    conditions of a contract cannot be altered,
    nor can new conditions be introduced, by
    issuance of judicial directions, as doing so
    would amount to impermissible re-writing of
    the contract. Once the parties have
    consciously entered into contractual terms,
    they cannot subsequently resile therefrom or
    question those conditions.

    11. At the outset, we find it necessary to express our
    disapproval of the manner in which the High Court

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 47 of 59
    has approached the present lis. The controversy
    before the Court was not one of mere acquiescence
    or implied waiver of rights. The High Court, in our
    view, has proceeded on a mechanical application
    of precedents without engaging with the core
    constitutional issues involved, thereby reducing
    the dispute to one of acceptance of contractual
    terms, divorced from its larger constitutional
    context.

    11.1. This Court has consistently held that the State,
    being a model employer, is saddled with a
    heightened obligation in the discharge of its
    functions. A model employer is expected to act
    with high probity, fairness and candour, and
    bears a social responsibility to treat its employees
    in a manner that preserves their dignity. The State
    cannot be permitted to exploit its employees or to
    take advantage of their vulnerability, helplessness
    or unequal bargaining position.

    11.2. It therefore follows that the State is required to
    exercise heightened caution in its role as an
    employer, the constitutional mandate casting upon
    it a strict obligation to act as a model employer, an
    obligation from which no exception can be
    countenanced.

    11.3. In the present case, the appellants were appointed
    by the respondent-State against sanctioned posts
    of Junior Engineers (Agriculture), with the
    engagement being described from the inception as
    contractual in nature. The terms and conditions
    governing the engagement stipulated that the
    appointment would be for an initial period of one

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 48 of 59
    year, extendable thereafter subject to satisfactory
    performance.

    11.4. The respondent-State accordingly granted
    extensions to the appellants from time to time until
    the year 2023, when it was expressly clarified
    that the extension being granted would be the
    last. It was thereafter that the appellants
    approached the High Court by filing writ petitions
    seeking a writ of mandamus directing the State to
    regularize their services.

    11.5. The consistent case of the appellants has been
    that the respondent-State‟s refusal to grant
    regularization is arbitrary and therefore warrants
    judicial interference. Article 14 of the Constitution
    casts a negative obligation upon the State to treat
    all persons equally, and arbitrariness, being
    antithetical to the equality principle, is proscribed
    as violative of Article 14.

    11.6. The Constitution Bench in Basheshar Nath Vrs.

    Comm. Income Tax, (1959) Supp. 1 SCR 528 long
    ago clarified that fundamental rights guaranteed
    under the Constitution are incapable of waiver.
    Consequently, if the action of the respondent-State
    is found to be violative of Article 14 of the
    Constitution, the mere fact that the appellants‟
    engagement was governed by contractual terms
    and conditions cannot be construed as a waiver of
    their fundamental rights.

    ***

    13. Another facet requiring consideration in the case of
    contractual employees, such as the present
    appellants, is the doctrine of legitimate
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 49 of 59
    expectation. Where employees have continued to
    discharge their duties on contractual posts for a
    considerable length of time, as in the present case,
    it is but natural that a legitimate expectation
    arises that the State would, at some stage,
    recognize their long and continuous service. It is in
    this belief, bolstered by repeated extensions
    granted by the Executive, that such employees
    continue in service and refrain from seeking
    alternative employment, notwithstanding the
    contractual nature of their engagement. At this
    juncture, it is thus apposite to advert to the
    principles governing the doctrine of legitimate
    expectation as enunciated by this Court in Army
    Welfare Education Society Vrs. Sunil Kumar
    Sharma, (2024) 16 SCC 598 wherein it was held
    as follows:

    „63. A reading of the aforesaid decisions brings
    forth the following features regarding the
    doctrine of legitimate expectation:

    63.1. First, legitimate expectation must be based
    on a right as opposed to a mere hope, wish
    or anticipation;

    63.2. Secondly, legitimate expectation must arise
    either from an express or implied promise; or
    a consistent past practice or custom followed
    by an authority in its dealings;

    ***

    63.5. Fifthly, legitimate expectation operates in the
    realm of public law, that is, a plea of
    legitimate action can be taken only when a
    public authority breaches a promise or
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 50 of 59
    deviates from a consistent past practice,
    without any reasonable basis.‟

    64. The aforesaid features, although not
    exhaustive in nature, are sufficient to help us
    in deciding the applicability of the doctrine of
    legitimate expectation to the facts of the case
    at hand. It is clear that legitimate
    expectation, jurisprudentially, was a device
    created in order to maintain a check on
    arbitrariness in State action. It does not
    extend to and cannot govern the operation of
    contracts between private parties, wherein
    the doctrine of promissory estoppel holds the
    field.‟

    It is, therefore, not difficult to comprehend the
    expectation with which such contractual
    employees continue in the service of the State. The
    repeated conduct of the employer-State in
    expressing confidence in their performance and
    consistently granting monetary upgrades & tenure
    extensions reasonably nurtures an expectation
    that their long and continuous service would
    receive further recognition.

    13.1. Another Constitution Bench in State of Karnataka
    Vrs. Umadevi, (2006) 4 SCC 1 cautioned that the
    doctrine of legitimate expectation cannot ordinarily
    be extended to persons whose appointments are
    temporary, casual or contractual in nature. The
    relevant extract of the judgment reads as follows:

    „47. When a person enters a temporary
    employment or gets engagement as a
    contractual or casual worker and the

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 51 of 59
    engagement is not based on a proper
    selection as recognised by the relevant rules
    or procedure, he is aware of the
    consequences of the appointment being
    temporary, casual or contractual in nature.
    Such a person cannot invoke the theory of
    legitimate expectation for being confirmed in
    the post when an appointment to the post
    could be made only by following a proper
    procedure for selection and in cases
    concerned, in consultation with the Public
    Service Commission. Therefore, the theory of
    legitimate expectation cannot be successfully
    advanced by temporary, contractual or
    casual employees. It cannot also be held that
    the State has held out any promise while
    engaging these persons either to continue
    them where they are or to make them
    permanent. The State cannot constitutionally
    make such a promise. It is also obvious that
    the theory cannot be invoked to seek a
    positive relief of being made permanent in
    the post.‟

    However, this Court in Umadevi (supra) clarified
    that the bar against invocation of the doctrine of
    legitimate expectation applies only to those
    temporary, contractual or casual employees whose
    engagement was not preceded by a proper
    selection process in accordance with the extant
    rules. Consequently, where such engagement is
    made after following a due and lawful selection
    procedure, there is no absolute bar in law
    preventing such employees from invoking the
    doctrine of legitimate expectation.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 52 of 59

    13.2. In the present case, the respondent-State had
    engaged the services of the appellants on
    sanctioned posts since the year 2012. It was only
    towards the end of the year 2022 that the
    respondents communicated that no further
    extension of the appellants‟ engagement was
    likely to be granted.

    13.3. In our considered opinion, the aforesaid action is
    not only vitiated by arbitrariness but is also in
    clear derogation of the equality principles
    enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution. The
    respondent-State initially engaged the appellants
    in their youth to discharge public duties and
    functions. Having rendered long and dedicated
    service, the appellants cannot now be left to fend
    for themselves, particularly when the employment
    opportunities that may have been available to
    them a decade ago are no longer accessible owing
    to age constraints.

    13.4. We are unable to discern any rational basis for the
    respondent-State‟s decision to discontinue the
    appellants after nearly ten years of continuous
    service. We are conscious that the symbiotic-

    relationship between the appellants and the
    respondent-State was mutually beneficial, the
    State derived the advantage of the appellants‟
    experience and institutional familiarity, while the
    appellants remained in public service. In such
    circumstances, any departure from a long-
    standing practice of renewal, particularly one that
    frustrates the legitimate expectation of the
    employees, ought to be supported by cogent
    reasons recorded in a speaking order.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 53 of 59

    13.5. Such a decision must necessarily be a conscious
    and reasoned one. An employee who has
    satisfactorily discharged his duties over several
    years and has been granted repeated extensions
    cannot, overnight, be treated as surplus or
    undesirable. We are unable to accept the
    justification advanced by the respondents as the
    obligation of the State, as a model employer,
    extends to fair treatment of its employees
    irrespective of whether their engagement is
    contractual or regular.

    13.6. This Court has, on several occasions, deprecated
    the practice adopted by States of engaging
    employees under the nominal labels of “part-time”,
    “contractual” or “temporary” in perpetuity and
    thereby exploiting them by not regularizing their
    positions. In Jaggo Vrs. Union of India, 2024 SCC
    OnLine SC 3826, this Court underscored that
    government-departments must lead by example in
    ensuring fair and stable employment, and evolved
    the test of examining whether the duties
    performed by such temporary employees are
    integral to the day-to-day functioning of the
    organization.

    13.7. In Shripal Vrs. Nagar Nigam, 2025 SCC OnLine SC
    221 and Vinod Kumar Vrs. Union of India, (2024)
    9 SCC 327, this Court cautioned against a
    mechanical and blind reliance on Umadevi (supra)
    to deny regularization to temporary employees in
    the absence of statutory rules. It was held that
    Umadevi (supra) cannot be employed as a shield
    to legitimise exploitative engagements continued
    for years without undertaking regular recruitment.
    The Court further clarified that Umadevi itself
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 54 of 59
    draws a distinction between appointments that
    are “illegal” and those that are merely “irregular”,
    the latter being amenable to regularization upon
    fulfilment of the prescribed conditions.

    13.8. In Dharam Singh Vrs. State of U.P., 2025 SCC
    OnLine SC 1735, this Court strongly deprecated
    the culture of ” ad-hocism” adopted by States in
    their capacity as employers. The Court criticised
    the practice of outsourcing or informalizing
    recruitment as a means to evade regular
    employment obligations, observing that such
    measures perpetuate precarious working
    conditions while circumventing fair and lawful
    engagement practices.

    13.9. The State must remain conscious that part-time
    employees, such as the appellants, constitute an
    integral part of the edifice upon which the
    machinery of the State continues to function. They
    are not merely ancillary to the system, but form
    essential components thereof. The equality
    mandate of our Constitution, therefore, requires
    that their service be reciprocated in a manner free
    from arbitrariness, ensuring that decisions of the
    State affecting the careers and livelihood of such
    part-time and contractual employees are guided
    by fairness and reason.

    13.10. In the aforesaid backdrop, we are unable to
    persuade ourselves to accept the respondent-
    State‟s contention that the mere contractual
    nomenclature of the appellants‟ engagement
    denudes them of constitutional protection. The
    State, having availed of the appellants‟ services on
    sanctioned posts for over a decade pursuant to a

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 55 of 59
    due process of selection and having consistently
    acknowledged their satisfactory performance,
    cannot, in the absence of cogent reasons or a
    speaking decision, abruptly discontinue such
    engagement by taking refuge behind formal
    contractual clauses. Such action is manifestly
    arbitrary, inconsistent with the obligation of the
    State to act as a model employer, and fails to
    withstand scrutiny under Article 14 of the
    Constitution.”

    8.7. The conspectus of the aforesaid discussion leads this
    Court to observe that when a person is engaged as
    Casual Worker/Sweeper in an Organization
    uninterruptedly for substantial number of years (long
    standing engagement), he is entitled to be considered
    for regularization in service. Denial of such benefit
    would entail arbitrariness rendering social injustice
    offending provisions of Article 14 and Article 38 of the
    Constitution of India.

    8.8. At this juncture, it is apposite to have regard to
    following observations made in Hari Nandan Prasad
    Vrs. Food Corporation of India, (2014) 7 SCC 190,
    wherein applicability of the judgment of Uma Devi
    (supra) has been clarified:

    “34. On a harmonious reading of the two judgments
    discussed in detail above, we are of the opinion
    that when there are post available, in the absence
    of any unfair labour practice the Labour court
    would not give direction for regularization only
    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 56 of 59
    because a worker has continued as daily wage
    worker/ad hoc/temporary worker for number of
    years. Further, if there are no posts available,
    such a direction for regularization would be
    impermissible. In the aforesaid circumstances
    giving of direction to regularise such a person, only
    on the basis of number of years put in by such a
    worker as daily wager, etc. may amount to back
    door entry into the service which is an anathema
    to Article 14 of the Constitution. Further, such a
    direction would not be given when the worker
    concerned does not meet the eligibility requirement
    of the post in question as per the recruitment rules.
    However, wherever it is found that similarly
    situated workmen are regularized by the employer
    itself under some scheme or otherwise and the
    workmen in question who have approached the
    Industrial/Labour Court are on a par with them,
    direction of regularization in such cases may be
    legally justified, otherwise, non-regularization of
    the left over workers itself would amount to
    invidious discrimination qua them in such cases
    and would be violative of Article 14 of the
    Constitution. Thus, the industrial adjudicator
    would be achieving the equality by upholding
    Article 14, rather than violating this constitutional
    provision.”

    8.9. The approach of the opposite parties-UCO Bank in not
    regularizing the services of the petitioner is violative of
    Article 14 of the Constitution of India as the Bank has
    regularized the services of juniors who were similarly
    situated. Hence, the action of the Bank is
    discriminatory in nature.

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 57 of 59

    9. In the present case, the petitioner has been working
    since 10.01.2011, if not since 18.07.2005, with the
    UCO Bank, may be with different branches of same
    Bank, seamlessly and uninterruptedly till date, as
    found from the pleadings of the writ petition, he is
    seen to have rendered service for substantial years
    continuously without any break. In the light of the
    view expressed through different Benches of Courts, it
    can safely be said that the case of the petitioner
    cannot be ignored from being considered for
    regularisation/absorption in service.

    9.1. In the wake of the aforesaid discussion on factual
    merit of the matter and the legal perspective discussed
    supra, this Court feels it expedient to hold that the
    authorities of UCO Bank are not justified in not
    recognizing the services rendered by the petitioner for
    regularization in service. The long standing
    engagement and services being exploited of him
    undisputedly since 2005 (documents enclosed with
    rejoinder affidavit showing payments being made to
    the petitioner prior to 2011 by the Bank are furnished
    for perusal of this Court), it presupposes that the
    Bank is in need of service of the petitioner. Having
    worked in the UCO Bank for number of years, mere
    culling out subtle discrimination between “Casual
    Worker‟ and „Sweeper‟, which runs contrary and

    W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018 Page 58 of 59
    counter to Circulars F.No.8/4/2025-RRB of
    Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department
    of Financial Services, dated 29.09.2025 and
    28.11.2025, the case of the petitioner for
    regularization cannot be overlooked; and doing so
    would be an action perceived as arbitrary and violative
    of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.

    9.2. Therefore, this Court is inclined to direct the opposite
    parties-UCO Bank to consider the case of the
    petitioner pragmatically in the light of the discussions
    made herein above by applying the view expressed in
    the decisions referred to supra.

    9.3. The entire exercise of consideration of the grievance of
    the petitioner for regularization/absorption in service
    shall be completed within a period of three months
    from today.

    10. In the result, the writ petition stands disposed of with
    the above observation and direction, and pending
    Interlocutory Application(s) shall also be disposed of;
    but in the circumstances, there shall be no order as to
    costs.

    
    
    
    Signature Not
    Verified                                                                  (MURAHARI SRI RAMAN)
    Digitally Signed
    Signed by: ASWINI KUMAR
    SETHY                                                                           JUDGE
    Designation: Personal Assistant
    (Secretary-in-charge)             High Court of Orissa, Cuttack
    Reason: Authentication            The 15th April, 2026//Aswini/MRS/Laxmikant
    Location: ORISSA HIGH
    COURT, CUTTACK
    Date: 15-Apr-2026 18:09:04
    
                                      W.P.(C) No.13691 of 2018                                        Page 59 of 59
     



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