Delhi High Court Reinstates Army Officer's Disability Pension After 28 Year Dispute, Denounces Reduction Without Medical Basis
The Delhi High Court has reinstated the disability pension of retired Indian Army officer, Captain J K Verma, after it was ceased nearly 28 years ago. The court decision emphasized that a disability declared as permanent cannot be reduced without conducting a new medical evaluation.
Key Court Observation
A bench of Justices V Kameswar Rao and Manmeet Pritam Singh stated that:
| Once a disability is assessed as permanent for life, it cannot be altered arbitrarily |
| Any reduction must be supported by a fresh medical board evaluation |
| Administrative authorities cannot override medical findings without expert medical opinion |
The court described the 1998 decision to lower the disability percentage as "unsustainable in law".
Background of the Case
| Captain Verma was invalided out in 1979 due to pulmonary tuberculosis linked to military service |
| Initially granted 100% disability pension |
| In 1993, a medical board fixed disability at 20% (permanent) |
| In 1998, authorities reduced it to 11–14% without a fresh medical board, leading to discontinuation of pension |
Tribunal and Legal Battle
The officer took his case to the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT), which:
| Restored pension at 20% disability |
| Granted broad-banding to 50% for life |
This decision was contested by the government, resulting in the High Court’s involvement.
Final Directions by the Court
The Delhi High Court issued the following orders:
| Restoration of 20% disability pension from February 23, 1998 |
| Broad-banding to 50% applicable only from 2014 (as per Supreme Court guidelines) |
| Issuance of revised Pension Payment Order (PPO) within 3 months |
| Payment of arrears within 3 months, failing which 6% annual interest will apply |
Significance of the Judgment
The ruling underscores that:
| Medical assessments hold primacy in disability cases |
| Due process must be followed before altering pension benefits |
| Veterans’ rights cannot be curtailed through administrative decisions |
A Long Legal Journey
This case represents the end of a lengthy legal struggle for the officer, spanning over four decades of service-related litigation, and highlights the systemic difficulties veterans face in securing their entitled benefits.








1 comment
Good decision coming too late Judgment look into it. It is atrocious to wait for a decision for 28 years.Speaks about the urgency of the decision Regarding Armed Forces.Sad State of affairs