In
a significant ruling, the Supreme Court (SC) on Thursday held that the “creamy
layer” status for reservation under the Other Backward Classes (OBS)
reservation policy cannot be determined solely on the basis of parental income,
noting that the status and category of posts held by parents must also be
considered.
A
bench of Justice PS Narasimha and Justice R Mahadevan delivered the ruling
while dismissing civil appeals filed by the Union government, the Ministry of
Personnel and Training (MoPT). The appeals challenged decisions of the Central
Administrative Tribunal (CAT) and various High Courts that had granted relief
to certain OBC candidates who had cleared the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC)
Civil Services examination, but were denied appointments after being classified
under the creamy layer category.
The earlier rulings held that candidates could not
be excluded from reservation benefits solely because their parents’ salary
income exceeded the prescribed limit. The top court upheld these rulings and
granted relief to several UPSC candidates.
What did the Supreme
Court say?
The court held that authorities
had wrongly applied an income-based test to determine creamy layer status
instead of applying the status-based criteria laid down in government policy.
“Mere determination of the status of a
candidate as to whether he or she falls within the creamy layer or the
non-creamy layer of the OBCs cannot be decided solely on the basis of income,”
the judgment authored by Justice Mahadevan stated, reported Live Law.
The bench emphasised that income
should not be treated as the sole criterion and that the nature of the parents’
employment and the category of posts they hold are central to determining
whether a candidate belongs to the creamy layer.
At the centre of the case was
the interpretation of the Office Memorandum (OM) on OBC creamy layer
identification, which laid down the framework for identifying socially advanced
sections among OBCs, along with a clarificatory government letter issued on October
14, 2004.
The 1993 memorandum created a
structured mechanism to identify socially advanced individuals within OBC
communities. It excluded from reservation the children of individuals holding
high-ranking government posts such as Group A/Class I and certain Group B/Class
II positions, treating advancement in the service hierarchy as a sign of social
progression.
The
policy also introduced an income or wealth test as an additional method of
exclusion, particularly in cases where equivalence between government posts and
positions in other organisations had not been formally established.
The
dispute arose after authorities treated several candidates as belonging to the
creamy layer solely because their parents’ salary income exceeded the
prescribed limit. Currently, the income threshold used to determine creamy
layer status stands at ?8 lakh per annum.
The
Union government argued that a combined reading of the 1993 memorandum and the
2004 clarificatory letter allowed authorities to treat candidates as part of
the creamy layer purely on the basis of their parents’ salary income,
especially when those parents worked in organisations outside the government
service structure.
The 2004 letter had explained
that where equivalence between PSU posts and government posts had not been
determined, authorities could examine salary income and income from other
sources separately. It stated that if either the salary income alone or income
from other sources exceeded ?2.5 lakh per year for three consecutive years, the
candidate could be treated as belonging to the creamy layer.
Rejecting the government’s
interpretation, the SC said the framework established by the 1993 policy was
primarily status-based, with income functioning only as a supplementary factor
in limited situations. The court observed that interpreting the 2004 letter in
isolation would distort the scheme of exclusion envisaged under the original
policy.