A government employee
can't be kept suspended for more than three months if not formally
informed about the charges, the Supreme Court said Monday.
Based on the principle
of human dignity and the right to speedy trial, the landmark verdict is
expected to affect lakhs of government employees across India, many of
whom are under suspension for years pending departmental proceedings.
"Suspension, specially
preceding the formulation of charges, is essentially transitory or
temporary in nature, and must perforce be of short duration," a bench
headed by justice Vikramjit Sen said.
If the charge sheet or memorandum of charges was served within three month, the suspension could be extended, it ruled.
"If it (suspension) is
for an indeterminate period or if its renewal is not based on sound
reasoning…, this would render it punitive in nature," the court said.
It agreed with petitioner's senior counsel Nidhesh Gupta that a suspension order can't continue for an unreasonably long period.
Protracted periods of
suspension had become the norm and not the exception that they ought to
be, the court said. It drew a parallel with criminal investigation
wherein a person accused of heinous crime is released from jail after
the expiry of 90 days if police fail to file the charge sheet.
The suspended persons
suffers even before being charged and "his torment is his knowledge that
if and when charged, it will inexorably take an inordinate time for the
inquisition or inquiry to come to its culmination". "Much too often
this has now become an accompaniment to retirement," the court said,
setting aside a direction of the central vigilance commission that
required departmental proceedings to be kept in abeyance pending a
criminal investigation.
The government, however,
was free to transfer the officer concerned to any department in any of
its offices to ensure the employee did not misuse contacts for
obstructing the probe, the court said.
The order came on a
petition filed by defence estate officer Ajay Kumar Choudhary, who was
suspended in September 2011 for allegedly issuing wrong no-objection
certificates for the use of a four-acre land parcel in Kashmir. After
failing to get relief from the Delhi high court, Choudhary had moved the
top court in 2013.
Since a charge sheet had already been served on Choudhary, these directions would not apply to his case, the court said.
Source : http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/supreme-court-sets-bar-on-suspension-of-govt-employees/article1-1317561.aspx
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