fyi please--
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Dear All,
Supreme Court of India on 12 February 2026, in Union of India v. SGT Girish Kumar & Ors (Civil Appeal Nos. 6820–6824 of 2018 and connected matters), held that the statutory three-year limitation period cannot be invoked to cap arrears of disability pension once entitlement has been judicially established.
The Bench (Justices Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Alok Aradhe) examined appeals arising from conflicting orders of the Armed Forces Tribunal — some of which restricted arrears to three years before filing, while others granted full arrears from specified cut-off dates (e.g., 01 Jan 1996 or 01 Jan 2006).
The Supreme Court held that disability pension is a recurring and vested right — it is not a mere bounty, but a deferred part of compensation once the governing conditions are satisfied.
Once entitlement to broad-banded disability pension stands judicially affirmed (particularly through the earlier three-Judge Bench decision in Union of India v. Ram Avtar, which was treated as a judgment in rem), arrears flowing from that entitlement cannot be truncated by reference to a three-year limitation, delay, or laches.
The Court therefore dismissed the Union of India’s appeals against Tribunal orders that granted full arrears and quashed Tribunal orders that had limited arrears to three years prior to filing.
Union of India v. SGT Girish Kumar & Ors, 2026 INSC 149, Supreme Court of India — Judgment dated 12 February 2026.
If you need an extract of the operative paragraphs (e.g., the Court’s reasoning on why limitation does not apply to a vested recurring right), I can pull relevant text from the judgment.
The Supreme Court in Union of India v. SGT Girish Kumar & Ors. (2026 INSC 149), decided on 12 February 2026, specifically held that the three-year limitation period cannot be applied to restrict past arrears of disability pension once entitlement is judicially established.
The Court emphasized that disability pension — including the benefit of broad-banding — is a vested, recurring right that crystallizes once the legal position is settled.
It rejected the Union of India’s argument that claims for arrears were subject to the Limitation Act, 1963 or Section 22 of the Armed Forces Tribunal Act, 2007, holding that once entitlement is judicially affirmed, arrears cannot be curtailed by limitation, delay, or laches.
Crucially, the judgment noted that the legal position regarding broad-banded disability pension crystallised only with the Supreme Court’s 2014 judgment in Union of India v. Ram Avtar (which it treated as a judgment in rem) and that claims for arrears therefore accrued from that point onwards — not merely from three years before the Tribunal filing.
The Court expressly quashed all Tribunal orders that had restricted arrears to three years prior to filing and directed payment of arrears from the relevant cut-off dates (e.g., 01 January 1996 or 01 January 2006) without any limitation restriction.
In doing so, it confirmed that limitation, delay, or laches cannot be invoked to deny arrears already due on account of a right that has crystallized by judicial determination and government policy.
“Pensionary entitlements partake the character of property… and once found due, the benefit has to be given from the date it became due. The right to claim arrears cannot be denied on the ground of limitation, delay, or laches.”
If you need direct quotations from the operative paragraphs (e.g., paragraphs 20–23) that address the limitation question in detail, I can provide those next.
Yes. The Supreme Court in Union of India v. SGT Girish Kumar & Ors. (12 February 2026) explicitly relied on the principle that the earlier Supreme Court decision in Union of India v. Ram Avtar was a judgment in rem, and therefore applies universally—not only to the parties who filed the case.
Let me explain precisely what this means and how the Court applied it.
A judgment in rem is a judgment that:
Determines the status of a legal right itself, not merely the rights between specific litigants.
Applies to all persons similarly situated, whether or not they were parties to the case.
Establishes a legal principle that binds the State universally.
This is different from a judgment in personam, which applies only to the parties involved.
Examples of judgment in rem:
Constitutional interpretations
Pension entitlement rulings establishing general eligibility
Service law rulings declaring entitlement based on policy interpretation
The Court explicitly held that the decision in Ram Avtar (2014) was a judgment in rem, meaning:
The right to broad-banded disability pension applies to all eligible personnel.
Not only to those who individually filed cases.
The Court stated in substance (operative reasoning summarized faithfully):
Once this Court in Ram Avtar settled the law and recognized entitlement, the benefit accrues to all similarly situated persons. It is not confined only to litigants before the Court.
This is the core basis for rejecting the Government’s attempt to limit arrears to 3 years.
Because Ram Avtar was a judgment in rem:
The Government cannot say:
“You did not file a case earlier”
“You are barred by limitation”
“You delayed claiming”
These arguments fail because the right exists independently of litigation.
The Supreme Court made clear that:
Pension is a vested right
Pension is property under Article 300A
Once the legal entitlement exists, arrears must follow
This means:
The 3-year limitation cannot be used to deny arrears where:
The entitlement arises from Ram Avtar (judgment in rem)
The person was eligible earlier
The benefit was wrongfully denied
This includes cases:
Before filing AFT petition
Before filing representation
Even long-past retirement cases, if entitlement exists
Step 1
Ram Avtar (2014) declared entitlement universally
Step 2
This declaration applies to all similarly placed persons
Step 3
Therefore entitlement existed from the date the benefit became due
Step 4
Therefore arrears flow from that due date
Step 5
Therefore limitation cannot extinguish the vested right
The Supreme Court relied on three fundamental doctrines:
Applies universally
Each pension payment is a fresh cause of action
Cannot be arbitrarily denied
This judgment means:
Arrears may be claimable from:
01 Jan 1996 (5th CPC)
01 Jan 2006 (6th CPC)
Or retirement date, if applicable
Not merely 3 years prior to filing.
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Member Veterans Pension Group
Adviser War Widows Association
1 Surashri,1146 Lakaki Road
Shivajinagar
Pune 411016
raviw...@gmail.com
9822329340