Creamy layer in OBC quota cannot be decided on parents income alone: Supreme Court
New Delhi [India], March 13 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Thursday held that creamy layer status in OBC reservations cannot be determined solely on the basis of parents' income, clarifying that the status and category of the post held by the parents must also be taken into account.
A bench of Justices R Mahadevan and Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha delivered the ruling while dismissing civil appeals filed by the Central government - Ministry of Personnel and Training (MoPT) challenging judgments which had granted relief to certain OBC candidates in the Civil Services Examination.
At the centre of the dispute was the interpretation of the Office Memorandum (OM) dated September 8, 1993, which laid down the framework for identifying the creamy layer among OBCs and a clarificatory government letter issued on October 14, 2004.
The 1993 OM created a structured scheme to identify socially advanced sections within OBCs. It excluded from reservation children of persons holding high-ranking government posts, such as Class I/Group A and certain Class II/Group B positions, treating such advancement in the service hierarchy as an indicator of social progression. The OM also introduced an Income/Wealth Test as an additional criterion of exclusion, particularly for categories where the equivalence of posts had not been formally determined.
Rejecting this approach, the Supreme Court held that the framework established by the 1993 policy cannot be reduced to a purely income-based test.
"It is also evident from a comprehensive reading of the 1993 OM along with the clarificatory letter dated 14.10.2004 that income from salaries alone cannot be the sole criterion to decide whether a candidate falls within the creamy layer. The status as well as the category of post to which a candidate's parent or parents belong is essential. The exclusion under Categories I to III of the Schedule is status-based rather than purely income-based... Mere determination of the status of a candidate as to whether he/she falls within the creamy layer or the non-creamy layer of the OBCs cannot be decided solely on the basis of the income," it said.
"It is settled law that a clarificatory instruction cannot introduce a substantive condition that does not exist in the parent policy. If it travels beyond explanation and alters rights or liabilities, it ceases to be clarificatory and assumes the character of an amendment", it said.
"Overemphasis on the 2004 Letter to the extent of making income alone determinative without regard to parental status or category of service would defeat the structural framework of exclusion envisaged under the 1993 OM. Thus, determination of creamy layer status solely on the basis of income brackets, without reference to the categories of posts and status parameters enunciated in the 1993 OM is clearly unsustainable in law," the Court noted in its judgement.
"Treating the children of those employed in PSUs or private employment... as being excluded from the benefit of reservation only on the basis of their income derived from salaries, and without reference to their posts... would certainly lead to hostile discrimination between parties who are similarly placed and would amount to equals being treated unequally," the Court noted in its judgement.
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