Can the family of a deceased government or bank employee demand a job on compassionate grounds? Not as a matter of right. The Supreme Court held in 2025 that a compassionate appointment is given only when the family proves it has been left in genuine financial indigence by the death.
This article explains what the Court decided, what courts treat as genuine indigence, how a compassionate appointment is actually claimed under an employer scheme, and the documents and time limits that apply. The key point first: it is a concession to rescue a family from penury, not an inheritance or a reserved seat.
When a court or employer weighs an indigence claim, it looks at:
In Canara Bank v. Ajithkumar G.K., neutral citation 2025 INSC 184, decided on 11 February 2025, the Supreme Court restated the settled position on compassionate appointment.
The Court held that compassionate appointment is not a vested right. The normal constitutional rule is equal opportunity in public employment. Article 14 guarantees equality before the law, and Article 16 guarantees equality of opportunity in matters of public employment. A compassionate appointment is an exception to that rule. It is allowed only to relieve a family that has been left in genuine indigence or penury by the sudden death of the earning member while in service.
Because it is an exception, it must be read narrowly. If appointments were handed out to every bereaved family regardless of their financial condition, it would amount to a kind of reservation for the dependants of employees who die in service, and that would clash directly with the equality guarantee.
The Court also clarified that the terminal benefits and family pension the family has already received are relevant when judging indigence. Those amounts cannot be ignored. If the family is comfortably provided for through pension and dues, the foundation for a compassionate appointment falls away. The scheme in force at the time the application is actually considered is the scheme that governs the claim.
Indigence is the heart of the test. It does not mean the family simply has less money than before. Almost every family loses income when an earning member dies. The Court has repeatedly said that a mere drop in the standard of living is not enough.
The question is whether the family has been pushed into real, immediate financial crisis with no reasonable means to meet its basic needs. Courts and employers weigh these factors:
Put simply, the family must show that without the appointment it cannot meet its basic needs. A comfortable cushion of benefits and pension usually defeats the claim.
There is no single national law that grants compassionate appointment. Each employer, whether a government department, a public sector bank or a public undertaking, runs its own scheme with its own eligibility rules. The general steps are:
Required documents usually include the death certificate, proof of the deceased's service, the family pension order, a statement of terminal benefits received, an income and asset declaration, identity and relationship proof, and the educational qualifications of the applicant.
If a department wrongly delays, withholds the scheme rules, or refuses to share how it decided a claim, you can ask for that information using the AI RTI Drafter and follow up through the first appeal process.
Consider an illustrative case. Suppose a public sector bank clerk dies in service, leaving a spouse, Kashvi Pathak, and one child. The family receives gratuity and provident fund dues of about Rs 22 lakh and a monthly family pension of about Rs 18,000. Kashvi applies for a compassionate appointment for her son.
These figures are illustrative and are used only to show how the test works. They are not drawn from any decided case. On facts like these, the employer would weigh the lump sum and the steady pension against the family's monthly needs. If those benefits comfortably cover the household, the indigence condition is not met and the appointment can be refused, even though the family genuinely earns less than when the employee was alive. That is exactly the distinction the Supreme Court drew in 2025: loss of income alone is not penury.
For families dealing with a death in service, the related guide on family pension after a husband's death explains how the pension itself is claimed, and the guide on a pending compassionate appointment application covers what to do while a claim is stuck. You can also keep The RTI Playbook handy for using RTI to track any government file.
No. The Supreme Court held in 2025 that it is a concession, not a vested right. It is an exception to the rule of equal opportunity in public employment and is granted only to relieve genuine indigence.
Reported as 2025 INSC 184 and decided on 11 February 2025, it held that compassionate appointment is not a vested right and that the family must prove genuine financial indigence. Terminal benefits and family pension already received are relevant to that assessment.
Yes. A steady family pension is counted when judging indigence. If the pension and other benefits comfortably meet the family's needs, the basis for a compassionate appointment weakens significantly.
Yes. The terminal benefits the family has already received are taken into account. The Court in 2025 said these amounts cannot be ignored when deciding whether the family is genuinely indigent.
No. A mere drop in the standard of living does not qualify. The family must show it has been left in real hand-to-mouth distress with no reasonable means to meet its basic needs.
The compassionate appointment scheme of the specific employer applies, and the scheme in force when your application is actually considered governs the decision. Apply within the time limit that scheme sets.
Article 14 guarantees equality and Article 16 guarantees equal opportunity in public employment. Compassionate appointment is an exception to that rule, so courts read it narrowly to avoid creating a hidden reservation for the dependants of deceased employees.