A
RETROGRADE JUDGMENT JUST FOR INFORMATION
Retd employees can't
benefit financially at exchequer's cost - Judgement of Nagpur Bench of Mumbai
High Court in the case filed by Retd Postal Employees NAGPUR: A recent judgment
of the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court can serve as a guideline for
retired employees. The court ruled in favour of Union of India which had
approached the judiciary against gratuity claims of two of its former employees
for getting added pension benefits. "The retired employees, on the basis
of their meritless, unreasonable and excessive claim, cannot be allowed to make
money and enrich themselves unjustly by causing undue financial loss to the
state exchequer," a division bench comprising justices Bhushan
Dharmadhikari and Ashok Bhangale ruled.
Two city based
government employees working with the Postal Department - Venkatraman
Rajgopalan and Mukund Paranjape - retired on superannuation on the afternoon of
March 31, 1995. They applied for enhanced gratuity claims and other retirement
benefits from the government which came into effect from April 1, 1995.
However, it was rejected on the grounds that these benefits would be applicable
to them if they had retired on or after this date. The senior citizen duo then
approached Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT), Mumbai Bench camp at Nagpur.
They pleaded that they should be deemed in service till midnight of March 31
and retired on next day.
The ministry of
communication, however, opposed the move contending that the respondents
retired on March 31 and not on April 1, and hence are not entitled to the
benefits. However, the full bench of CAT decided in favour of the duo on
October 15, 1999. It ruled that a government servant completing the age of
superannuation on March 31, 1995, and relinquishing charge of his office in the
afternoon of that day is deemed to have effectively retired from service with
effect from April 1, 1995.
The ministry then moved
the judiciary challenging the tribunal's order in 2000. It cited Karnataka High
Court verdict stating that "the date of retirement is the last date of the
month in which the government servant retires and the gratuity is to be
calculated as per rules in force as on that date". The judges observed that
Rajgopalan was born on March 3, 1937, while Paranjape on March 29, 1937, and
both of them retired on March 31, 1995. "But law clearly lay down that
their date of retirement and last working day has to be the same. Due to Rule
5(2) of Pension Rules, they could continue till March 31; which in reality was
beyond their actual completion of the age of superannuation. Legally,
respondents retired on the last working day," they stated.
The court before
quashing CAT's order stated that such benefits which were available with effect
from the later operative date - April 1, 1995, but wrongly granted by the
tribunal to the respondents who retired with effect from the previous date,
were not only undeserved and unwarranted, but also were detrimental to the state
exchequer/revenue.
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