Full Judgment Text
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2463 OF 2015
[Arising out of S.L.P. (Civil) No. 3686 OF 2007]
Assistant General Manager, State Bank of
India & Others ... Appellants
| Versus<br>WITH<br>EAL NOS. 2287-228 | |
| EAL NOS. | 5035-503 |
| APPEAL NO | . 10813 O |
| J U D G M E N T |
Dipak Misra, J.
JUDGMENT
Leave granted in S.L.P. (Civil) No. 3686 of 2007.
2. Having regard to the commonality of controversy in this
batch of appeals it was heard together and is disposed of by a
singular judgment. For the sake of clarity and convenience, I
shall adumbrate the facts from Civil Appeal Nos. 2287-2288
of 2010 and at the appropriate stage refer to the views
st
expressed in other appeals. The 1 respondent, M.P. Hallan,
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2
an ex-serviceman joined as a clerk on 18.5.1981 in the
appellant-Bank which has been constituted under the State
Bank of India Act, 1955 (for brevity ‘the Act’). The Indian
Banks Association (I.B.A.), after obtaining approval from the
Government of India evolved a Voluntary Retirement Scheme
(V.R.S.) and the appellant-Bank adopted the Scheme with
certain modifications, despite it having its own Voluntary
Retirement Scheme in the existing service conditions meant
for its employees to seek voluntary retirement/premature
retirement/resignation. The Scheme, namely, S.B.I. Voluntary
Retirement Scheme (for short ‘the Scheme’) was adopted by
the State Bank of India on 29.12.2000. The Scheme was to
remain open during the period 15.1.2001 to 31.1.2001 with
the option either to close it early or extend the period,
JUDGMENT
without assigning any reason.
3. After adoption of the Scheme, the Deputy Managing
Director, the competent authority, issued a Circular No.
HRD/CDO/ VRS/1 on 29.12.2000 clarifying certain aspects of
the Scheme. Another Circular being No. HRD/CDO/VRS/5 was
issued on 10.1.2001. On 11.01.2001, the said Circular was
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brought to the notice of all the Branches/offices of all the
Circles, including Chandigarh Circle.
4. As per the Scheme, the applications for voluntary
retirement under the Scheme were to be submitted during
st
the period i.e. 15.1.2001 to 31.1.2001. The 1 respondent
submitted his application seeking voluntary retirement and it
was accepted on 17.3.2001 with effect from 31.3.2001. On
27.3.2001, the respondent No. 1 submitted an application to
withdraw his request for voluntary retirement. The said
application was declined by the Bank on 18.4.2001 stating
that the date for withdrawal of application had already
expired on 15.2.2001. It is apt to note that here the
respondent wrote a letter on 12.4.2001 claiming pension
under the Pension Fund Rules, 1995 in terms of State Bank of
JUDGMENT
India Employees Pension Rules (for short ‘the Rules’). The
st
claim of the 1 respondent for withdrawal of his application
for voluntary retirement and grant of pension and leave
encashment was refused by the Bank on 4.7.2001. Being
grieved by the aforesaid refusal and declination of the prayer,
st
the 1 respondent preferred writ petition being CWP No.
14325 of 2001.
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5. The Writ Court took note of the fact there was acceptance
of the voluntary retirement on 17.3.2001 with a stipulation
that the employee would be relieved from his duties at the
close of business hours on 31.3.2001. The Division Bench
referred to the decision in Mohinder Pal Singh v. Punjab
1
and Sind Bank and others and the decision of this Court in
2
Bank of India and others v. O.P. Swarankar etc. and
after reproducing the directions of from Swarankar’s case
came to hold as follows:-
“In view of the aforesaid finding, the moment a
decision is taken by the Bank, the jural
relationship of employer and employee stood
terminated. The petitioner has admittedly
sought to withdraw his offer to seek voluntary
retirement after the acceptance was conveyed
to the petitioner. Mere fact that the date of
voluntary retirement was fixed as 31.03.2001,
is wholly inconsequential as employer and
employee relationship has already come to an
end with the communication of acceptance. It
was only the procedural part under which the
petitioner continued to work till 31.03.2001.”
JUDGMENT
In the ultimate analysis, the High Court did not find any merit
with regard to refusal by the Bank in not accepting the
application for withdrawal submitted by the employee.
1
2002 (2) SLR 716
2
(2003) 2 SCC 721
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5
Determination on the said score is not under assail in any of
the appeals before this court.
6. The next question that emerged for consideration before
the High Court was whether the employee was entitled to
pension in terms of the rules, including computed value of
st
pension. It was contended by the 1 respondent in the writ
court that the pension rules were amended on 9.3.2001 and
the said rules were in vogue when the petitioner had
submitted his application for voluntary retirement, and hence,
he was entitled to get the pensionary benefits. It was also
urged that in terms of the amended Rule 22 of the pension
rules, he was entitled to pension. The said submission was
resisted by the Bank that Rule 22 did not cover the cases like
that of the petitioner. In justification of the said submission,
JUDGMENT
reliance was placed on the Division Bench judgment of the
High Court of Delhi in Vipin Kalia and Ors. v. State Bank
of India and Ors. decided on 28.2.2007 in L.P.A. No. 410 of
2002 and also on a decision rendered by the High Court of
Andhra Pradesh in C.W.P. No. 2098 of 2006.
7. The Division Bench referred to the anatomy of Rule 22 and
after analyzing the scope of the rule distinguished the
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decision of the High Court of Delhi as well as that of Andhra
Pradesh and came to hold that it was apparent from the
record that the writ petitioner was in service of the Bank on
01.11.1993 and had completed 10 years of pensionable
service and further had attained the age of 58 years.
Therefore, in terms of Rule 22 of the Pension Rules, he was
entitled to pension. Dealing with the claim for leave
encashment which is based upon the circular of the Bank
dated 23.09.1986, it opined that the leave encashment was
payable to an employee of the Bank, who had been
discharged if he was eligible for pension and as it had been
found that the petitioner was entitled to pension in terms of
the Pension Rules he would be entitled to leave encashment
as well.
JUDGMENT
8. In this batch of appeals, the question that emanates for
consideration whether the respondent-employees are entitled
to get pension. There can be no cavil over the fact that their
right to seek withdrawal from the scheme of voluntary
retirement has been negatived by the impugned judgments
passed by various High Courts and, therefore, I am not
required to address the said issue. It is essential to advert
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to the issue whether the employee would be entitled to
pension under the four corners of the Rules. Rule 22 which
squarely falls for consideration is as follows:-
“22. (i) A member shall be entitled to a
pension under these rules on retiring from the
Bank’s service –
(a) After having completed twenty years’
pensionable service provided that he has
attained the age of fifty years or if he is in
the service of the Bank on or after 1.11.93,
after having completed ten years
pensionable service provided that he has
attained the age of fifty eight years or if he
is in the service of the Bank on or after
22.5.1998, after having completed ten
years pensionable service provided that he
has attained the age of sixty years;
(b) After having completed twenty years’
pensionable service, irrespective of the
age he shall have attained, if he shall
satisfy the authority competent to sanction
his retirement by approved medical
certificate or otherwise that he is
incapacitated for further active service;
JUDGMENT
(c) After having completed twenty years
pensionable service, irrespective of the
age he shall have attained at his request in
writing.
(d) After twenty five years’ pensionable
service.
(ii) A member who has attained the age of fifty-
five years or who shall be proved to the
satisfaction of the authority empowered to
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sanction his retirement to be permanently
incapacitated by bodily or mental infirmity
from further active service (such infirmity
not being the result of irregular or
intemperate habits) may, at the discretion
of the trustees, be granted a proportionate
pension.
(iii) A member who has been permitted to retire
under Clause 1(c) above shall be entitled to
proportionate pension.”
9. Keeping the aforesaid Rule in view, it is obligatory to
scrutinize the analysis made by the High Court in the
backdrop of the facts. The High Court has taken note of the
st
fact that the 1 respondent had completed more than 19
years and 10 months of service as on 31.3.2001 and,
therefore, the first part of Clause (a) is not applicable to him.
The High Court has also opined that the third part of Clause
(a) is not applicable to him as he had completed more than
JUDGMENT
19 years of service but not attained the age of 60 years. The
st
case of the 1 respondent was that his case was covered
under second part of Clause (a) which enables an employee
to get pension if he was in service of the Bank as on
1.11.1993 and had completed ten years’ of service and
attained the age of 58 years. The High Court took note of the
fact that the counter-affidavit was silent regarding the claim
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9
st
of the 1 respondent under second part of Clause (a).
Analysing further in this regard, the High Court opined as
follows:-
“The petitioner has submitted his offer for
voluntary retirement in terms of the Pension Rules
existing in the month of January, 2001. On the
said date a member of the Pension Funds was
entitled to pension on completion of 20 years of
pensionable service provided he has attained the
age of 50 years. Alternatively, if a member is in
service of the Bank on or after 01.11.1993 and has
completed 10 years of pensionable service and has
attained the age of 58 years, he shall be entitled to
the pension. The petitioner fulfils the second part
of Clause (a) of Rule 22 which was in existence on
the day when the petitioner submitted his request
for voluntary retirement. Even after the
amendment on 09.03.2001, another clause has
rd
been added i.e. 3 part of Clause (a) as mentioned
above, which does not affect the claim of the
petitioner for pension as he is entitled to pension
in the second part of Rule 22(1)(a).”
JUDGMENT
10. The High Court referred to the voluntary Retirement
Scheme floated on 29.12.2000, and reproduced the relevant
part of the said Scheme which is as follows:-
“5. Amount of Ex-Gratia:
The staff member whose request for retirement
under SBIVRS has been accepted by Competent
Authority will be paid an amount of ex-gratia of 60
days’ salary (pay plus stagnation increments plus
special pay plus dearness allowance) for each
completed year of service (for this purpose fraction
of service of six months and above will be taken as
one year and accordingly service of less than six
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months will be counted) or salary for the number
of months service is left, whichever is less, fraction
of a month, if any, will be ignored. ‘Relevant Date’
means the date on which the employee ceases to
be in service of the Bank as a consequence of the
acceptance of the request for voluntary retirement
under the scheme.
For the purpose of calculation of ex-gratia,
60 days salary mentioned in the Scheme is
to be taken as equivalent to 2 months
salary (with reference to salary for the
month in which employee is relieved from
service on (Voluntary Retirement).
Income Tax shall be deducted at source in
respect of ex-gratia exceeding Rs.5.00
lakhs or such other ceiling as may be
prescribed under the Income Tax Act as on
the relevant date.
6. Other benefits:
• Gratuity as payable under the extent
instructions on the relevant date.
Provident Fund Contribution as per State
•
Bank of India Employees Provident Fund Rules as
on relevant date.
JUDGMENT
• Pension in terms of State Bank of India
Employees’ Pension Fund Rules on the relevant
date (including commuted value of pension).
Encashment of balance of privilege Leave, as
•
applicable on the relevant date.
• Respective facilities extended to
officers/others such as retention of
accommodation, telephone, car, continuation of
housing loan etc., will be extended to
officers/others retiring under SBIVRS as per
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present dispensations, at the discretion of
Competent Authority. However, in such cases of
retention of physical facilities, 50% of the amount
of ex-gratia payable will be released only after the
employee surrenders the facilities. No interest,
however, will be paid for the amount so withheld.
All other outstanding loans/advances will have to
be repaid before date of retirement under SBIVRS,
failing which the amount of ex-gratia and other
terminal benefits payable to the employee will be
appropriate towards the outstanding
loans/advances and the balance amount only will
be payable to the employee.”
11. The High Court opined that the said paragraphs, when
properly appreciated, convey that the amount of ex-gratia is
to be paid and what are the other benefits to be paid have
also been enumerated. Referring to Clause 6 it ruled that it
deals with gratuity, provident fund contribution, pension in
terms of the Rules on the relevant date (including commuted
value of pension), encashment of balance of privilege leave
JUDGMENT
and certain other benefits. The Court also took note of the
clarificatory circular issued by the Bank on 10.1.2001. While
answering the question, whether or not, the employee
completing 15 years of pensionable service as on relevant
date the Court held he would be entitled for pension benefit.
12. Presently I shall refer to the relevant part of
Clarificatory circular:-
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“In this connection, we invite a reference to para
6(c) of the Scheme forwarded under the cover of
Circular No. CIR.DO/PER & HRD/99 dated
29.12.2000. The payment of pension to the
employee retiring under SBIVRS would be
governed by State Bank of India Employees
Pension Fund Rules on the relevant date (including
commuted value of pension). However, as per
existing rules, employees who have not completed
20 years of Pensionable Service are not eligible for
pension.”
13. Having noted the rule relating to pension on which the
case is founded and the scheme on which reliance has been
placed by the High Court, it is necessary to notice how
various High Courts have approached this problem. I have
already stated that the High Court of Punjab and Haryana has
opined that the employee who had opted for voluntary
retirement is entitled to pension in the second part of Rule 22
(1) (a). Now, I shall advert to the analysis made by the High
JUDGMENT
Court of Calcutta which is the subject matter of C.A. No.
5035-37 of 2002. The learned Single Judge of the High Court
of Calcutta took note of the contention that when an offer of
acceptance had become a concluded contract any
subsequent change of the pension fund rules could not have
adversely affected his rights, for the explanatory
th
memorandum issued by the bank on 9 March 2001
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stipulated to the effect that no employee/pensioner of the
State Bank of India is likely to be effected adversely by the
notification being given retrospective effect. He repelled the
contention of the bank that the voluntary retirement scheme
itself provided that payment of pension was dependent upon
the rules prevalent on the date on which the employee would
cease to be in service of the bank and admittedly the writ
st
petitioner therein had ceased to be an employee on 31
March 2001 and, thereafter, the amendment of the pension
rules effecting from that day was binding upon him and as
such he was not liable to get any pension. The learned Single
Judge formulated two issues namely, (i) whether the right of
the petitioner to receive pension as per the existing rules
could have been taken away by the amended rules which
JUDGMENT
st
became effective on 31 March, 2001? and (ii) was the writ
petitioner estopped from espousing his cause of action due
to delay, laches and acquiescence and answered both the
issues in the negative against the bank and in favour of the
writ petitioner.
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14. On an appeal being preferred the division bench
referred to Section 17 and 19 of the Contract Act and came to
hold as follows:-
“In the case before us, on the date of acceptance
of the contract, it was known to the bank that it
had already decided to amend its pension rules by
which the appellant would be deprived of his right
to get pension although on the date of acceptance
if he retired he would be entitled to get pension.
The employee ad no means of knowledge of such
change of pension rules at the time of agreement.
In such a situation, the relation between the
parties being that of employer and employee, it
was the duty of the employer to inform the
employee about the future amendment of the
pension rules which would deprive the employee
of his right to get pension by entering into the
voluntary retirement scheme. If he had known
this fact, he would not definitely enter into the
scheme because if he had retired in due course
without opting for voluntary retirement, he would
be entitled to get pension even under the
amended rules. Therefore, the silence maintained
by the employer in such a situation amounted to
fraud on its part. As pointed out in illustration (b)
to S. 17 of the Contract Act, if it becomes a duty of
a father to disclose the defect of the horse
proposed to be sold to his just grown up daughter,
in the same manner, it is also the duty of the
employer to inform his employee about the future
amendment of the pension rules causing prejudice
to his employee at the last stage of his service life
before accepting the terms of the voluntary
retirement scheme declared by it when such
source of prejudice is know to the employer and
the employee had no manner of knowledge of
such perilous condition.”
JUDGMENT
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Thereafter, the Bench referred to Food
Corporation of India v. Kamdhenu Cattle Feed
3
Industries and opined thus:-
“Therefore, on that ground also the writ petitioner
is entitled to get the pensionary benefit which was
available to him on the date of declaration of the
scheme and also on the date of acceptance of the
offer of the employee under voluntary retirement
scheme. If the proposed amendment was
disclosed to the writ petitioner in advance, he
would not have accepted such prejudicial terms of
voluntary retirement scheme and offered for the
scheme. We do no for a moment dispute the
submission of Mr. Gupta, the Ld. Sr. Advocated
appearing on behalf of the appellant that the
contract was competed by acceptance of the offer
of the employee under the scheme as laid down in
the case of Bank of India v. O.P. Swarnanakar but
the appellant having committed fraud upon the writ
petitioner by adopting silence in the matter of
proposed amendment of the pension rules on the
last date of the service of the employee, the writ
petitioner is entitled to the relief claimed by taking
aid of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.”
15. Be it stated, as the Single Judge had not granted
JUDGMENT
interest, the division bench thought it appropriate to grant
interest at the rate 12% per annum on arrears amount of
pension.
16. As far as the High Court of Allahabad is concerned, the
learned Single Judge had remitted the matter to the bank to
consider the case of the writ petitioner for his entitlement for
grant of pension. In the intra-court appeal, the Division
3
AIR 1993 SC 1601
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1
Bench addressed to the lis on merits, referred to clause 6 (c)
of the scheme which provides that pension shall be granted in
terms of State Bank of India Employees’ Pension Fund Rules
on the relevant date (including commuted value pension)
and opined that the said clause was a binding contract
between the writ petitioner and on 18.3.2001 the bank
accepted the offer of retirement made by the writ petitioner,
though the employee did in fact retire on 31.3.2001. The
High Court took note of the fact although the amendments
were sufficiently formulated before 31.03.2001 yet the
trustees of the pension fund accepted the amended rules
only on the 30.10.2001. The High Court referred to the
existing rules and the amended rules which I shall refer to at
a later stage. It was contended by the writ petitioner before
JUDGMENT
the Division Bench that he was covered under second part of
the Rule 22 (i) (a) inasmuch as he was in the service of the
Bank on and after 1.11.1993 and he had completed 10 years
of pensionable service, and attained the age of 58 years
before the date he retired. The bank resisting the said stand
contended that the clarificatory circular issued by the bank
and contended that the employee was not entitled to get
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pensionary benefits. The High Court observed that the
clarification had no greater status in law than the reading and
understanding the terms of the contract according to one
party. It opined that the pension rules should apply to the
writ petitioner not by any force of special statutory law but
only by force of agreement. Eventually the Court ruled thus:-
“The second important point raised by the Bank
was that under 22(1)(c) of the Pension Fund Rules,
when an employee retires upon a request in
writing being made by him, he has to complete 20
years of service. Thus the voluntary retirement
being a retirement pursuant to the employees’
request, it is this clause which will be applicable to
him and it will not be proper to give him pension
because he comes under another clause i.e.
Clause (a), which was merely introduced to
accommodate late entrants into service when the
retirement age was raise to 58 on 1.11.1993 and
then to 60 on 22.5.1998. Clause (a) was inserted
so as to give employees benefit of pension after 10
years of pensionable service even if they had
joined late. According to the Bank the writ
petitioner is seeking to take advantage of this
clause although this clause was never intended to
cover it.
JUDGMENT
It is also said that if in cases of retirement on
request in writing clause (a) is made applicable
then clause (c) will have no field of operation at all.
Everybody will be entitled to pension after 10
years and, therefore, the 20 years’ requirement of
Clause (c) will lose all meaning.”
17. Thereafter the division bench referred to Clause 15 of
the Bank Fund Rules which permits retirement on request by
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the bank employee provided a sanction is made by the
competent authority. After referring to the said clause the
court held thus:-
“In our opinion, the voluntary retirement under
the scheme should not be equated to a retirement
to clause 15 of the Pension Fund Rules. It might
be that Clause 22(c) made to cover pension
aspects for Clause 15 retirements and Clause
22(i)(a) was made to cover normal
superannuation retirements, but voluntary
retirement was a special contract made available
for special purpose, and that too for a very small
period of time which was practically one moment
or just one short fleeting period during an
employee’s service career. For this scheme and
this contract the pension rules did not apply as
rules. The rules apply only as words in the
contract. Therefore, if a contracting party is
entitled to take benefit of a permissive clause,
then that cannot be denied to him on the basis of
purpose if construction of a statutory rule. This
type of purposive construction is far less, if at all,
applied to contracts. Contacts are, generally
speaking, strictly interpreted on the basis of the
language agreed upon by the parties. The Court
does not make out the parties’ contract, they
make their own contact.
JUDGMENT
On this basis of strict interpretation, the writ
petitioner clearly comes within Rule 22(i)(a)
although this is better put as Clause 22(i)(a) of
the Pension Fund Rules in reference to the
contract.
Regarding the other aspect of Clause 22(i)(c)
having no field of operation at all, one bare look
will show that the said clause will operate in all
cases where the retiring employee has not even
attained the age of 58 years. If the pensionable
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period of 20 years has been completed before
that, and the competent authority grants sanction
to retire under Rule 15, then and in that event
one would get pension although one would not
under the second or third parts of Clause 22(i)(a).
Thus each part of the contractual document is left
with a meaning even if the interpretation in favour
of the writ petitioner is wholly accepted.”
18. At this juncture, it is apt to appreciate the decision
rendered in case of Vipin Kalia (supra) by the division
bench of Delhi High Court. In the said case the division bench
dealing with the State Bank of India Voluntary Retirement
Scheme whereunder the option exercised by the employees
was accepted by the respondent bank on 31.3.2001. All the
appellants therein had either completed 15 years of service
or were of 40 years of age as on 31.12.2000 and accordingly,
as per the provision of the State Bank of India Employees
JUDGMENT
Pension and Provident Fund Rules they had claimed pension
as per the rules. The court referred to Indian Bank’s
Association letter dated 11.12.2000 which was the fulcrum of
the scheme to get the pension. The division bench
reproduced the said letter which I think it appropriate to
reproduce.
“Indian Bank's Association Stadium House 6th
Floor, Block 2 Veer Nariman Road Mumbai-400020
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2
PD/CIR/76/G2/G4/
December 11,2000
Designated officers of all Public Sector Banks.
Dear Sirs,
Voluntary Retirement Scheme in Public Sector
Banks-Amendments To Bank, (Employees')
Pension Regulations, 1995.
Please refer to our circular letter No.
PD/CIR/76/G4/933 dated 31st August 2000
convening the 'No Objection' of the Government in
banks adopting and implementing a voluntary
retirement scheme for employees on the lines of
what was contained in the Annexure to the
circular.
As per the scheme, an employee who is eligible
and applies for voluntary retirement is entitled for
the benefit of CPF, Pension, Gratuity and
encashment of accumulated privilege leave, as
per rules.
Bank (Employees') Pension Regulations, 1955 do
not have provisions enabling payment of pension
to an employee who retires before attaining the
age of super annuation except under
circumstances as in Regulations 29, 30, 32 and 33.
We had, therefore, taken up with the Government
the need to incorporate necessary provisions in
the Pension Regulations by way of amendments to
Regulation 28 so that employees who retire as
above under special/ad hoc schemes formulated
by the banks, after serving for a prescribed
minimum period would be eligible for pro rata
pension.
JUDGMENT
Government of India has after examining the
proposal conveyed its approval and desired that
IBA advise banks to make necessary amendments
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2
to their Pension Regulations as in the Annexure.
We request banks to take note accordingly.
Please note that with the above amendments,
employees who apply for voluntary retirement
after having rendered a minimum of 15 years of
service under a special/ad hoc scheme formulated
with the specific approval of the Government and
the Board of Directors will be eligible for pro rata
pension for the period of service rendered as they
are to retire on attaining the age of
superannuation on that date.
Yours faithfully,
sd/-
(Allen C A Pereira)
PERSONNEL ADVISER”
19. It was contended before the High Court that under the
said recommendation the bank was obliged to pay pension to
them but the said contention was not accepted by the Single
Judge on the ground the said letter is not a binding circular
under Section 18 of the State Bank of India Act, 1955. The
JUDGMENT
learned Single Judge had also opined that voluntary
retirement scheme was a package by itself and it was not
open to the employees to ask for modification of the scheme
and if the employees wanted to avail of the benefit of
pension, they should not have opted under the scheme and
after completing requisite years of service, would have been
entitled to pension. The Court examined the SBIVRS dated
30.12.2000 and opined that it was an invitation to the
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employees to make an offer and opt for voluntary retirement.
The scheme, as analysed by the Division Bench, specifically
stipulated that the employees who were eligible and the
period during which an offer for voluntary retirement could be
made. Reference was made to Clause 5 and 6 of the scheme
that provides for ex-gratia payment to the officers who had
opted for voluntary retirement. The court referring to the
letter dated 11.1.2001 opined that the payment of pension to
an employee retiring under the voluntary retirement scheme
are to be governed by the relevant pension rules, and as per
the existing rules, an employee who had not completed 20
years of pensionable service would not be eligible for
pension. Thereafter the Division Bench observed that the
employee who has opted under voluntary retirement scheme
JUDGMENT
was fully conscious and aware of the fact that he would not
be entitled to pension under the scheme as he had not
completed 20 years of pensionable service and pension was
payable only to those employees who were eligible for
pension under the rules as applicable o the relevant date.
Reference was made to Bank of India O.P. Swarankar
(supra) and accordingly it was held as follows:-
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“The appellants, therefore, cannot be allowed to
wriggle out of the terms and conditions accepted
and agreed upon by the two parties viz. the
appellants and the respondent-bank. The
appellants had entered into the said contract with
open eyes and fully conscious and aware of what
benefits they would be entitled to by opting under
the Voluntary Retirement Scheme. They were
conscious and aware and in fact specifically
informed by way of clarification by the respondent
that the employees who had not completed 20
years of service, would not be eligible for pension
under the relevant rules. The appellants by way of
appeal are seeking modification of the terms of the
concluded contract which in equity is not just and
fair.”
Eventually concurring with the Single Judge the
Division Bench ruled:-
“13. The State Bank of India, as already stated,
has its own pension regulations. The employees of
the State Bank of India are bound by the same.
Letter/circular dated 11th December, 2000 refers
to amendment to Bank (Employees') Pension
Regulations, 1995. The said regulations are not
applicable to the employees of State Bank of India.
The Pension regulations applicable to the State
Bank of India employees are different. As far as
employees of State Bank of India are concerned,
the Bank Employees' Pension Regulations, 1995
are not applicable. The amendment suggested by
letter/circular dated 11th December, 2000 by
Indian Bank's Association was not applicable to the
appellants and the employees of the State Bank of
India. We may also point out here that State Bank
of India in the counter affidavit has explained that
its Voluntary Retirement Scheme was a special
and a distinct scheme offering a handsome
package for the employees who were ready and
willing to opt for retirement. It is also pointed out
JUDGMENT
Page 23
2
that the State Bank of India's employees unlike
employees belonging to other public sector banks
were entitled to both contributory provident fund
and membership of a pension fund. It is stated
that employees of other public sector bank are
eligible either for contributory provident fund or
membership of pension fund.
14. Learned Counsel for the appellants, however,
also relied on the judgment of a single Judge of
this Court in the case of Punjab and Sind Bank
Officers Association and Ors. v. Union of India and
Anr. on 11th May, 2006. In the said case, learned
single Judge was examining regulations 28 and 29
of the Bank (Employees') Pension Regulations,
1995. The issue was which of the two regulations
would apply. It was held that Regulation 29 would
apply to employees who had taken voluntary
retirement whether under normal circumstances
or under a special scheme. It was further held that
the scheme or package cannot be altered
unilaterally. The said decision does not support the
contention of the appellants. The terms and
conditions of the Voluntary Retirement Scheme
were clear and specific. The terms were not
ambiguous. The employees including the
appellants were fully conscious of the decision
taken by them and the benefits they would be
entitled to. The appellants voluntarily, with open
eyes entered into an agreement and after having
retired and enjoyed the benefits, they cannot go
behind the concluded contract and claim further
benefits. It must be remembered that a Voluntary
Retirement Scheme is formulated and conceived
in public interest. Interest of the respondent bank
is also to be taken into consideration.”
JUDGMENT
20. Having stated the various views taken by the High
Courts I may now refer to certain authorities dealing with
these kind of schemes.
Page 24
2
21. In Arikaravula Sanyasi Raju v. Branch Manager,
4
State Bank of India, Visakhapatnam (A.P.) and others
the question arose whether an officer who is removed from
service on finding of misconduct would be entitled to get the
relief of pension under Rule 22 of the State Bank of India
Service Rules. In the said case the High Court had directed
the payment of provident fund in terms of rules but denied
the relief of pension. The Court referred to Rule 22 of the
rules and opined had the officer sought retirement on that
basis and allowed the retirement from service he would have
been entitled to pension on completion of 20 years of
pensionable service but removal would not entitle him to get
pension. Interpreting Clause 22(i)(c) the two-Judge observed
thus:-
JUDGMENT
”Clause 22(i)(c) envisage only that after
completing 20 years of pensionable service, if an
incumbent retired at his request in writing and was
permitted to retire, he would be entitled to
pension. In other words, for voluntary retirement,
on completion of 20 years of pensionable service,
clause (c) of Rule 22(1) gets attracted”
22. In V. Kasturi v. Managing Director, State Bank of
5
India, Bombay and another though the Court was dealing
4
(1997) 1 SCC 256
5
(1998) 8 SCC 30
Page 25
2
with eligibility to be entitled for pension under Rule 22(i)(c)
yet it reproduced the rule, referred to the contentions and
came to hold as follows:-
“12. On a close look at the relevant provisions of
the Rules, it is not possible to agree with this
contention. The appellant, in order to earn pension
under Rule 22(1) clause (c) as amended in 1986
has to satisfy the following twin conditions:
(i) at the time when the amended clause (c)
applied, i.e., from 22-9-1986, he should be a
member of the pension fund;
(ii) he should have by then completed 20 years
of pensionable service, and should have put
forward his requisition in writing for availing the
benefit of the said provision.
Unless both these conditions are satisfied the
amended clause (c) of Rule 22(1) cannot apply in
his case.”
23. The afore-referred two decisions show how the Court
JUDGMENT
had perceived the rule position.
24. In Vice-Chairman and Managing Director, A.P.
6
SIDC Ltd. and another v R. Varaprasad and others
while dealing with the concept of voluntary retirement
schemes the Court has ruled that:-
“All employees who accepted VRS could be
relieved at a time or batch by batch depending on
availability of funds. Further funds may be made
6
(2003) 11 SCC 572
Page 26
2
available early or late. If the argument of the
respondents that relieving date should be taken as
effective date for calculating terminal benefits and
financial package under VRS, the dates may be
fluctuating depending on availability of funds.
Hence it is not possible to accept this argument.
When the employees have opted for VRS on their
own without any compulsion knowing fully well
about the Scheme, guidelines and circulars
governing the same, it is not open to them to
make any claim contrary to the terms accepted. It
is a matter of contract between the Corporation
and the employees. It is not for the courts to
rewrite the terms of the contract, which were clear
to the contracting parties, as indicated in the
guidelines and circulars governing them under
which Voluntary Retirement Schemes floated.”
25. In O.P. Swarnakar (supra) the question arose
whether an employee who opts for voluntary retirement
pursuant or in furtherance of scheme floated by the
Nationalised Banks and the State Bank of India would be
precluded from withdrawing the said offer. The court dealing
JUDGMENT
with the concept of voluntary retirement held as follows:-
“59. The request of employees seeking voluntary
retirement was not to take effect until and unless it
was accepted in writing by the competent
authority. The competent authority had the
absolute discretion whether to accept or reject the
request of the employee seeking voluntary
retirement under the Scheme. A procedure has
been laid down for considering the provisions of
the said Scheme to the effect that an employee
who intends to seek voluntary retirement would
submit duly completed application in duplicate in
the prescribed form marked “offer to seek
Page 27
2
voluntary retirement” and the application so
received would be considered by the competent
authority on first-come-first-serve basis. The
procedure laid down therefor suggests that the
applications of the employee would be an offer
which could be considered by the bank in terms of
the procedure laid down therefor. There is no
assurance that such an application would be
accepted without any consideration.
60. Acceptance or otherwise of the request of an
employee seeking voluntary retirement is required
to be communicated to him in writing. This clause
is crucial in view of the fact that therein the
acceptance or rejection of such request has been
provided. The decision of the authority rejecting
the request is appealable to the Appellate
Authority. The application made by an employee
as an offer as well as the decision of the bank
thereupon would be communicated to the
respective General Managers. The decision-making
process shall take place at various levels of the
banks.”
Eventually analyzing the stand of various banks
the court expressed thus:-
JUDGMENT
“90. The basic concept of the Scheme, therefore,
underwent a change which also goes to show that
the banks had sought to invoke their power of
amending the Scheme. Once the Scheme is
amended and/or an apprehension is created in the
mind of the employees that they would not even
receive the entire benefits as envisaged under the
Scheme, they were entitled to revoke their offers.
Their action in our considered opinion is
reasonable. It may be that some of the employees
only opted for the provident fund benefit which did
not undergo any amendment but the same would
not change the attitude on the part of the banks.”
Page 28
2
26. In HEC Voluntary Retd. Employees Welfare
Society and Another v. Heavy Engineering Corpn. Ltd.
7
and others the Court referring to concept of voluntary
retirement opined that an offer for voluntary retirement in
terms of a scheme, when accepted, leads to a concluded
contract between the employer and the employee. In terms
of such a scheme, an employee has an option either to
accept or not to opt therefor. The scheme is purely
voluntary, in terms whereof the tenure of service is curtailed,
which is permissible in law. Such a scheme is ordinarily
floated with a purpose of downsizing the employees. It is
beneficial both to the employees as well as to the employer.
Such a scheme is issued for effective functioning of the
JUDGMENT
industrial undertakings. The court further observed that
although the Company is a “State” within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution, the terms and conditions of
service would be governed by the contract of employment.
Thus, unless the terms and conditions of such a contract are
governed by a statute or statutory rules, the provisions of
the Contract Act would be applicable both at the formulation
7
(2006) 3 SCC 708
Page 29
3
of the contract as also the determination thereof. By reason
of such a scheme, it only is an invitation of offer floated.
When pursuant to or in furtherance of such a Voluntary
Retirement Scheme an employee opts therefor, he makes an
offer which upon acceptance by the employer gives rise to a
contract. Thus, as the matter relating to voluntary retirement
is not governed by any statute, the provisions of the
Contract Act, 1872, therefore, would be applicable too. In
this context reliance was placed on O.P. Swarankar’s case
(supra). After so stating, the Court ruled:
“We have noticed that admittedly thousands of
employees had opted for voluntary retirement
during the period in question. They indisputably
form a distinct and different class. Having given
our anxious consideration thereto, we are of the
opinion that neither are they discharged
employees nor are they superannuated
employees. The expression “superannuation”
connotes a distinct meaning. It ordinarily means,
unless otherwise provided for in the statute, that
not only he reaches the age of superannuation
prescribed therefor, but also becomes entitled to
the retiral benefits thereof including pension.
“Voluntary retirement” could have fallen within the
aforementioned expression, provided it was so
stated expressly in the Scheme.
JUDGMENT
Financial considerations are, thus, a relevant factor
both for floating a scheme of voluntary retirement
as well as for revision of pay. Those employees
who opted for voluntary retirement, make a
planning for the future. At the time of giving
Page 30
3
option, they know where they stand. At that point
of time they did not anticipate that they would get
the benefit of revision in the scales of pay. They
prepared themselves to contract out of the jural
relationship by resorting to “golden handshake”.
They are bound by their own act. The parties are
bound by the terms of contract of voluntary
retirement. We have noticed hereinbefore that
unless a statute or statutory provision interdicts,
the relationship between the parties to act
pursuant to or in furtherance of the Voluntary
Retirement Scheme is governed by contract. By
such contract, they can opt out of such other
terms and conditions as may be agreed upon. In
this case the terms and conditions of the contract
are not governed by a statute or statutory rules.”
In the said case the court referred to V. Kasturi Case
(supra) and understood it in the following manner:-
“It has not been suggested that voluntary
retirement, in the absence of any express
statutory rule governing the field, would bring
about a case of superannuation. In V. Kasturi, a
new rule was introduced providing for pension of
an employee after retirement on completion of 20
years of service, provided he requested in writing
therefor. The questions which fell for consideration
therein were that if a person was eligible for
pension at the time of his retirement and if he
survives till the time of subsequent amendment of
the relevant Pension Scheme, whether he would
become entitled to enhanced pension or would
become eligible to get more pension as per the
new formula of computation of pension. In the fact
situation obtaining therein, it was held that
employees could be divided in two
JUDGMENT
categories i.e.
those who were eligible for pension at the time of
their retirement and those who were not. Whereas
in the case of first category the benefit of the
amended provisions would be applicable, but in
Page 31
3
the second it would not. V. Kasturi also, thus, in
our opinion, is not applicable to the fact of the
present case.”
27. In this backdrop, I am required to scan the anatomy of
Rule 22 and the appropriate interpretation is required to be
placed on the same. Rule 22(i) (a) postulates that members
shall be entitled to pension under the said rule on retiring
from the bank’s service. Thus, the key word is retiring from
bank’s service. The said rule when understood in proper
perspective, covers cases of normal
retirement/superannuation. There are various compartments
and each compartment has different criterion. An employee,
who has completed 20 years of pensionable service and has
attained the age of 50 years, would be entitled to get the
pension under the rules. This is one compartment. Second
JUDGMENT
one, as is envisaged, carves out an exception to the first part,
which stipulates that when an employee who is working in
the bank on or after 01.11.1993 and has completed 10 years
of pensionable service, shall be entitled for pension provided
he has attained the age of 58 years. The third part of the rule
stipulates that all employees who are in service of the bank
or after 22.05.1998 and have put in 10 years of pensionable
Page 32
3
service, to be eligible for pension provided they have attained
the age of 60 years i.e. age of superannuation. As the facts
would demonstrate, in the instant case, the
employees/respondents, before attaining the age of
superannuation, sought voluntary retirement under the
Scheme.
28. At this juncture, it is relevant to state Rule 22(i)(b)
which provides that an employee who has completed 20
years of pensionable service, irrespective of age, if he
satisfies the authority competent to sanction retirement by
appropriate medical certificate or otherwise that he is
incapacitated for further active service, he would be entitled
to pension. This clause does not cover the present
respondents. Clause 22(i)(c) deals with entitlement of
JUDGMENT
pension by an employee if he has completed 20 years of
pensionable service irrespective of age, if he seeks
retirement at his own request in writing. It is the stand of the
Bank that Rule 22(i)(c) was added on 20.09.1986 for the
specific purpose of granting pension to those who have
voluntary retired. As is evident from the factual score under
the SBI VRS, the employees were required to submit written
Page 33
3
applications seeking voluntary retirement under the Scheme.
When the scheme was in operation, the competent authority
i.e. Deputy Managing Director had issued a circular dated
10/15.1.2001 clarifying the position that the employees could
withdraw their applications made under SBI VRS by 15.2.2001
and those employees who have not completed 20 years of
pensionable service, are not eligible for pension. There can
be no doubt, by abundant caution, the bank issued a
clarificatory circular. The said circular cannot be given any
type of nomenclature other than a clarificatory circular,
despite treated as such. It is graphically clear from the same
that an employee who has completed 20 years of pensionable
service would be entitled to pension, even if they seek
voluntary retirement under SBI VRS. It was open to the
JUDGMENT
employees to withdraw their applications under SBI VRS by
15.2.2001. The respondent-employees, as is manifest, chose
not to withdraw. In these circumstances, the question arises
whether any part of Rule 22 would apply to the respondent
for extension of benefit of pension. As has been elaborated
earlier, Clause 22(i)(a) and 22(i)(b) are not applicable to
them.
Page 34
3
29. Mr. Rohtagi, learned Attorney General, has submitted
that on 30.1.2001, the SBI Employees Pension Fund Rules
was amended by the Central Board of SBI. The SBI VRS was
in operation from 15.1.2001 to 31.1.2001. The employees
were at liberty, as has been stated earlier, to withdraw by
15.2.2001. Admittedly, the Rule was in force on 30.1.2001.
The employees were very well aware about the amended
Rule. There can be no scintilla of doubt that the Rule existed
as on 31.1.2001. If an employee wanted to withdraw, he
could have withdrawn prior to 15.2.2001 but as is the
admitted position, none of the employees withdrew. There is
no cavil over the fact that the employees had accepted all the
benefits of the VRS. The crux of the matter is whether the
respondents can get the benefit, despite the amendment
JUDGMENT
brought to the Rules.
30. In Arikaavula Sanyasi Raju (supra), it has been
clearly held, for voluntary retirement on completion of 20
years of pensionable service, clause (c) of Rule 22(i) gets
attracted. Another aspect needs to be noted. The SBI
Pension Rules have been framed under Section 50 of the SBI
Act, 1955. The Rules have statutory force. The concept of
Page 35
3
any kind of promissory estoppel, if any, could not be
applicable to promote or condone the breach of law.
31. In Bangalore Development Authority & Ors. Vs. R.
8
Hanumaiah & Ors. it has been held that rule of promissory
estoppel cannot be availed to permit or condone a breach of
law. It cannot be invoked to compel the Government to do an
act prohibited by law, for such a direction would be against
the statute. To arrive at the said conclusion, the two-Judge
Bench placed reliance on TISCO Ltd. V. State of
9
Jharkhand , Hira Tikkoo V. Union Territory,
10
Chandigarh and Savitaben Somabai Bhatiya V. State
11
of Gujarat .
32. The High Court, to sustain its conclusion, has referred to
Clause 6(c) of the Scheme which postulates that the benefits
JUDGMENT
shall be granted to the employee which include the pension
and the said pension shall be granted in terms of the State
Bank of India Employees Pension Fund Rules on the relevant
date. The High Court referred to Rule 22(i) prior to the
amendment i.e. 09.03.2001. The unamended portion of the
Rule reads as follows:
8
(2005) 12 SCC 508
9
(2005) 4 SCC 272
10
(2004) 6 SCC 765
11
(2005) 3 SCC 636
Page 36
3
“After having completed 20 years’ pensionable
service provided that he has attained the age of 50
years or if he is in service of the Bank on or after
01.11.1993, after having completed 10 years
pensionable service provided that he has attained
the age of 58 years.”
After the amendment that was incorporated on
9.3.2001, the Rule reads as under:
“After having completed 20 years’ pensionable
service provided that he has attained the age of 50
years or if he is in service of the Bank on or after
01.11.1993, after having completed 10 years
pensionable service provided that he has attained
the age of 58 years or if he is in the service of the
Bank on or after 22.05.1998, after having
completed 10 years pensionable service provided
that he has attained the age of 60 years”.
33. Analysing the said Rule, the High Court opined that the
employees would be covered under second part of clause (a)
of Rule 22(i) which was in existence on the date when the
JUDGMENT
petitioner submitted his request for voluntary retirement.
That apart, the High Court has also held even after
amendment on 09.03.2001, by which another clause has
been added, that is, third part of clause (a), would not affect
the claim of the employees for pension as he is entitled to
pension in the second part of Rule 22(i) (a). Here, as I find,
the High Court has opined as the respondent was in service of
Page 37
3
Bank on 1.11.1993 and had completed 10 years of
pensionable service and attained the age of 58 years, he
would be entitled to pension. There is no doubt that the
Government of India, on 22.5.98, advised all the banks that
the age of retirement would be 60 years. Accordingly, the
Board of SBI, on 22.5.1998 itself, passed a resolution whereby
it fixed the age of retirement 60 years w.e.f. that date. As a
consequence of re-fixation of age of retirement, the rules
were amended and third part of Rule 22(i)(a) was added for
all employees who were in service of the bank on or before
22.5.98 and had put in 10 years of pensionable service to be
eligible for pension benefit provided that they have attained
the age of 60 years. As has been stated earlier, the
respondents had not retired on attaining the age of
JUDGMENT
superannuation but sought voluntary retirement under the
SBI VRS. The Bank has placed reliance on the clarificatory
circular issued by the Deputy Managing Director on
10/15.1.2001, which lays a postulate that employees who
have not completed 20 years of pensionable service are not
eligible for pension.
Page 38
3
34. In this context, reference may be made to a decision in
12
Bank of Baroda & Others V. Ganpat Singh Deora ,
wherein the Court was interpreting Bank of Baroda
(Employees) Pension Regulations 1995. In the said case, the
Bank of Baroda had introduced “Bank of Baroda Employees
Voluntary Retirement Scheme 2001” and under the Scheme
along with terminal benefits pension in terms of 1995
Regulations was to be provided to the employees who opted
for the VRS Scheme. The respondent-employee therein, after
accepting voluntary retirement, filed an application for
claiming pension which was opposed by the Bank in terms of
Regulations 14, 28 and 29 of the Pension Regulations 1995.
Eventually, the matter travelled to the Tribunal, who, by its
award, allowed the respondent’s claim and directed the Bank
JUDGMENT
to pay to the respondent pension according to the Pension
Regulations. Against the award passed by the Industrial
Disputes Tribunal, the Bank preferred a writ petition before
the High Court but the said challenge did not meet with any
success. This Court referred to the language of the Scheme
and opined as follows:
12
(2009) 3 SCC 217
Page 39
4
“27. The conditions relating to completing 15
years of service for being eligible to apply for
BOBEVRS, 2001 are special to the Scheme as also
to the case of those employees who wished to
apply for voluntary retirement under the aforesaid
Scheme, if they had completed or would be
completing 40 years of age. The latter condition
appears to have been incorporated in view of the
provisions of Regulations 14 and 32 of the Pension
Regulations, 1995,
to enable employees who had
completed 10 years of service to also become
eligible to apply for premature retirement under
the Pension Regulations, 1995.
28. However, we are inclined to agree with Ms
Bhati that Regulation 29 does not contemplate
voluntary retirement under the Voluntary
Retirement Scheme and applies only to such
employees who themselves wish to retire dehors
any scheme of voluntary retirement, after having
completed 15 years of qualifying service for the
said purpose. There is a distinct difference
between the two situations and Regulation 29
would not cover the case of an employee opting to
retire on the basis of a voluntary retirement
scheme.
JUDGMENT
29. Furthermore, Regulation 2 of the Voluntary
Retirement Scheme, 2001 of the appellant Bank
merely prescribes a period of qualifying service for
an employee to be eligible to apply for voluntary
retirement.
30. On the other hand, Regulations 14 and 29 of
the Pension Regulations, 1995, relate to the period
of qualifying service for pension under the said
Regulations, in two different situations. While
Regulation 14 provides that in order to be eligible
for pension an employee would have to render a
minimum of 10 years’ service, Regulation 29 is
applicable to the employees choosing to retire
Page 40
4
from service prematurely, and in their case the
period of qualifying service would be 15 years”.
After so stating, the Court further opined thus:
“31. The facts of the present case, however, do
not attract the provisions of Regulation 29 since
the respondent accepted the offer of voluntary
retirement under the Scheme framed by the Bank
and not on his own volition dehors any scheme of
voluntary retirement. In such a case, Regulation 14
read with Regulation 32 providing for premature
retirement would not also apply to the case of the
respondent. While Regulation 2 of the BOBEVRS,
2001 speaks of eligibility for applying under the
Scheme, Regulation 14 of the Pension Regulations,
1995, contemplates a situation whereunder an
employee would be eligible for premature pension.
The two provisions are for two different purposes
and for two different situations. However,
Regulation 28 of the Pension Regulations, 1995,
after amendment made provision for situations
similar to the one in the instant case.
32. In the absence of any particular provision for
payment of pension to those who opted for
BOBEVRS, 2001 other than Regulation 11( ii ) of the
Scheme, we are once again left to fall back on the
Pension Regulations, 1995, and the amended
provisions of Regulation 28 which bring within the
scope of superannuation pension employees who
opted for the Voluntary Retirement Scheme, which
will be clear from the explanatory memorandum.
However, the period of qualifying service has been
retained as 15 years for those opting for BOBEVRS,
2001 and is treated differently from premature
retirement where the minimum period of qualifying
service has been fixed at 10 years in keeping with
Regulation 14 of the Pension Regulations, 1995.
JUDGMENT
33. We are, therefore, of the view that not having
completed the required length of qualifying service
Page 41
4
as provided under Regulation 28 of the 1995
Regulations, the respondent was not eligible for
pension under the Pension Regulations, 1995 of
the appellant Bank.”
Being of this view, the Court allowed the appeal
preferred by the Bank.
35. In Bank of India and Another V. K. Mohandas and
13
Others , the Court referred to Regulation 28 of the
Employees’ Pension Regulations 1995, which had provided
superannuation pension and Regulation 29 provided pension
on voluntary retirement. After referring to series of decisions,
the Court held thus:
“31. It is also a well-recognised principle of
construction of a contract that it must be read as a
whole in order to ascertain the true meaning of its
several clauses and the words of each clause
should be interpreted so as to bring them into
harmony with the other provisions if that
interpretation does no violence to the meaning of
which they are naturally susceptible. ( North
14
Eastern Railway Co. v. Lord Hastings )
JUDGMENT
32. The fundamental position is that it is the banks
who were responsible for formulation of the terms
in the contractual Scheme that the optees of
voluntary retirement under that Scheme will be
eligible to pension under the Pension Regulations,
1995, and, therefore, they bear the risk of lack of
clarity, if any. It is a well-known principle of
construction of a contract that if
the terms applied
by one party are unclear, an interpretation against
13
(2009) 5 SCC 313
14
(1900) AC 260
Page 42
4
that party is preferred ( verba chartarum fortius
accipiuntur contra proferentem )”.
36. Thereafter, the Court adverted to intention of the Banks
at the time of bringing out VRS 2000. The Court observed
that if the intention was not to give pension as provided
under Regulation 29 and particularly sub-Regulation (5)
thereof, they could have said so in the Scheme itself. The
Court also reproduced the communication dated 5.9.2000
sent by the Government of India, Ministry of Finance,
Department of Economic Affairs, Banking Division to the
Personnel Advisor, Indian Banks Association and came to hold
as follows:
“39. Two things immediately become noticeable
from the said communication. One is that as per
Regulation 29 of the Pension Regulations, 1995, an
employee can take voluntary retirement after 20
years of qualifying service and become eligible for
pension. The other thing is that the Scheme
provides that the employees with 15 years of
service or 40 years of age shall be eligible to take
voluntary retirement under the Scheme and under
Regulation 29, the employees having rendered 15
years of service or completed 40 years of age but
not completed 20 years of service shall not be
JUDGMENT
eligible for pensionary benefits on taking voluntary
retirement under the Scheme.
40. The use of the words “such employees” in the
communication is referable to employees having
rendered 15 years of service but not completed 20
years of service and, therefore, it was decided to
Page 43
4
bring an amendment in the Regulations so that the
employees having not completed 20 years’ service
do not lose the benefit of pension. The amendment
in Regulation 28, as is reflected from the afore
referred communication, was intended to cover
the employees who had rendered 15 years’ service
but not completed 20 years’ service. It was not
intended to cover the optees who had already
completed 20 years’ service as the provisions
contained in Regulation 29 met that contingency.
xxx xxx xxx
43. It was submitted that by such construction a
class within the class would be created which is
impermissible. We do not agree. If a special benefit
under Regulation 29(5) is available to the
employees who had completed 20 years of service
or more, by no stretch of imagination, can it be
said that it is discriminatory to those employees
who had completed 15 years of service but not
completed 20 years. In view of the provision
contained in Regulation 29(5), if the optees who
have not completed 20 years get excluded from
the weightage of five years which has been given
to the optees who have completed 20 years of
service or more, it is no discrimination. Such
provision can neither be said to be arbitrary nor
can be held to be violative of any constitutional or
statutory provisions. The weightage of five years
under Regulation 29(5) is applicable to the optees
having service of 20 years or more. There is, thus,
basis for additional benefit. Merely because the
JUDGMENT
employees who have completed 15 years of
service but not completed 20 years of service are
not entitled to weightage of five years for
qualifying service under Regulation 29(5), the
employees who have completed 20 years of
service or more cannot be denied such benefit.
xxx xxx xxx
Page 44
4
46. The precise effect of the Pension Regulations,
for the purposes of pension, having been made
part of the Scheme, is that the Pension
Regulations, to the extent, these are applicable,
must be read into the Scheme. It is pertinent to
bear in mind that interpretation clause of VRS
2000 states that the words and expressions used
in the Scheme but not defined and defined in the
rules/regulations shall have the same meaning
respectively assigned to them under the
rules/regulations. The Scheme does not define the
expression “retirement” or “voluntary retirement”.
We have, therefore, to fall back on the definition of
“retirement” given in Regulation 2( y ) whereunder
voluntary retirement under Regulation 29 is
considered to be retirement. Regulation 29 uses
the expression “voluntary retirement under these
Regulations”. Obviously, for the purposes of the
Scheme, it has to be understood to mean with
necessary changes in points of details. Section 23
of the Contract Act has no application to the
present fact situation.
xxx xxx xxx
50. It is true that VRS 2000 is a complete package
in itself and contractual in nature. However, in that
package, it has been provided that the optees, in
addition to ex gratia payment, will also be eligible
to other benefits inter alia pension under the
Pension Regulations. The only provision in the
Pension Regulations at the relevant time during
the operation of VRS 2000 concerning voluntary
retirement was Regulation 29 and sub-regulation
(5) thereof provides for weightage of addition of
five years to qualifying service for pension to those
optees who had completed 20 years’ service. It,
therefore, cannot be accepted that VRS 2000 did
not envisage grant of pension benefits under
Regulation 29(5) of the Pension Regulations, 1995,
to the optees of 20 years’ service along with
payment of ex gratia.
JUDGMENT
Page 45
4
51. The whole idea in bringing out VRS 2000 was
to right size workforce which the banks had not
been able to achieve despite the fact that the
statutory Regulations provided for voluntary
retirement to the employees having completed 20
years’ service. It was for this reason that VRS 2000
was made more attractive. VRS 2000, accordingly,
was an attractive package for the employees to go
in for as they were getting special benefits in the
form of ex gratia and in addition thereto, inter alia,
pension under the Pension Regulations which also
provided for weightage of five years of qualifying
service for the purposes of pension to the
employees who had completed 20 years’ service”.
37. In the said case, the decision rendered in Bank of
Baroda (supra) was distinguished by stating thus:
“63. The decision of this Court in Bank of Baroda
is, thus, clearly distinguishable as the employee
therein had not completed qualifying service
much less 20 years of service for being eligible to
the weightage under Regulation 29(5) and cannot
be applied to the present controversy nor does
that matter decide the question here to be
decided in the present group of matters”.
JUDGMENT
Eventually, the Court concluded thus:
“66. We hold, as it must be, that the employees
who had completed 20 years of service and were
pension optees and offered voluntary retirement
under VRS 2000 and whose offers were accepted
by the banks are entitled to addition of five years
of notional service in calculating the length of
service for the purposes of that Scheme as per
Regulation 29(5) of the Pension Regulations,
1995. The contrary views expressed by some of
the High Courts do not lay down the correct legal
position.”
Page 46
4
38. Recently, in State Bank of Patiala V. Pritam Singh
15
Bedi & Others , the Court was dealing with the State of
Bank of Patiala Voluntary Retirement Scheme, 2000,
introduced by a circular dated 20.1.2001. The Court quoted
in extenso from K. Mohandas & Others (supra). Thereafter
the Court referred to Clause 3 and 7. Clause 7 thereof dealt
with other benefits including pension or Bank’s contribution
to provident fund as the case maybe as per rules applicable
on the relevant date on the basis of actual years of service
rendered. The Court also took note of Regulation 2(w) and
2(y) of State Bank of Patiala (Employees) Pension
Regulations, 1995. Regulation 2(w) defined “qualifying
service” and 2(y) defined “retirement”. Regulation 2(y)(b)
JUDGMENT
referred to voluntary retirement in accordance with
provisions contained in Regulation 29 of the Regulations.
Reference was also made to Regulation 14 that defined
“qualifying service” which stipulates that employee who has
rendered a minimum of ten years in the bank from the date
of his retirement or on the date on which he is deemed to
have retired shall qualify for pension. Reference was also
15
2014 (8) SCALE 397
Page 47
4
made to Regulation 18 which prescribes how the broken
period of service of less than one year has to be computed.
Regulation 28 thereof dealt with superannuation pension and
Regulation 29 related to pension on voluntary retirement.
Scanning the various provisions of the Regulations, the Court
held thus:
“ 22 . The Respondents completed more than 10
years of service in the Bank on the date of
retirement; therefore, they fulfill the requirement
of qualifying service as per Regulation 14.
23 . It has not been disputed by Appellant-Bank
that the Respondents in all the appeals have
completed much more than 19 years 6 months of
service in the Bank. For example, Respondent No.
1-Prakash Chand in C.A. No. 173 of 2010 had
th
joined the Bank on 4 May, 1981 and relieved on
st
31 March, 2001. Thus, he had completed 19
years, 10 months and 28 days of qualifying service
on the date of relieving from service.
JUDGMENT
24 . Regulation 18 of the Pension Regulations,
1995 provides that if broken period is more than
six months, it shall be treated as one year.
Therefore, all the Respondents-writ Petitioners
having completed more than 19 years and 6
months of service in the Bank, they are to be
treated to have completed 20 years of service. The
aforesaid question was neither raised nor decided
in the case of 'Bank of Baroda' or 'Bank of India' .
25 . In view of the aforesaid fact, the Appellant-
Bank cannot derive the benefit of the decision of
this Court in Bank of Baroda as the employees who
were parties before the Court in the said case had
not completed 20 years of service. As per the
Page 48
4
decision of this Court in Bank of India , the
Respondents-writ Petitioners having completed 20
years of service are entitled to the benefit of
Regulation 29.”
39. Keeping in view the aforesaid pronouncements, I shall
advert to the Regulations and the Scheme in question. From
the aforesaid two decisions, it is graphically clear that the
Court has read into the scheme, Regulations governing the
pension. In the case at hand, as I find, the Regulation 22(i)(a)
refers to three categories; twenty years of pensionable
service and attaining age of fifty years, or as on 1.11.1993 an
employee in service has completed ten years of pensionable
service provided he has attained the age of fifty-eight years,
or an employee to be in service of the Bank on or after
22.05.1998 and has completed ten years of pensionable
JUDGMENT
service provided that he has attained the age of sixty years.
The High Court has held that the employees would be
covered under second part of Clause (a). I have already dealt
with clause (b). Mr. Rohtagi has heavily relied on Clause 22(i)
(c). It really requires close scrutiny. It stipulates that a
member shall be entitled to pension on completion of 20
years of pensionable service irrespective of the age he has
attained if the retirement is at his own request in writing.
Page 49
5
Thus, there is a distinction between a normal retirement and
a voluntary retirement. A voluntary retirement stands in a
distinction to retirement and also retirement which comes
under Clause 22(i)(b) which dwells on sanction of competent
authority and member being incapacitated. A scheme has
come into existence because of certain objectives. The
objectives of the scheme were to have a balanced age-profile
providing for mobility, training, development of skills and
succession plans for higher-level positions, to provide for an
exit for employees who have an honest feeling that they
should now retire and take rest or that there are better
opportunities elsewhere, to have overall reduction in the
existing strength of the employees and to increase
productivity and profitability. Clause 3 of the Scheme
JUDGMENT
provides eligibility criterion. It reads as follows:
“The Scheme will be open to all permanent
employees of the Bank except those specifically
mentioned as ‘ineligible’, who have put in 15 years
of service or have completed 40 years of age as on
st
31 December 2000. Age will be reckoned on the
basis of the date of birth as entered in the service
record.”
Clause 4 deals with ineligibility which need not be
referred to. Clause 5 deals with amount of ex-gratia. Clause
Page 50
5
6 deals with other benefits which I have already referred to.
Clause 6(c) clearly stipulates that an employee seeking
voluntary retirement would have the benefit of pension in
terms of State Bank of India Employees’ Pension Fund Rules
on the relevant date.
40. In this context, what I have noticed in the case of K.
Mohandas (supra) that the Court has referred to the Scheme
to understand the true meaning of several clauses;
formulation of the contractual scheme where reference has
been made to Pension Regulations 1995 of the Banks which
were in appeal before this Court and the special salient
features of the scheme which stipulated that an employee
whose application for voluntary retirement is accepted and
relieved from the Bank shall be eligible for contributory
JUDGMENT
provident fund or own contribution of provident fund and
pension in terms of the employees Pension Regulations 1995,
in case of those who have opted for pension and have put in
20 completed years of service in the Bank. The Court also
referred to Regulations 28 and 29, which deals with
superannuation pension and the pension on voluntary
retirement respectively. The Court also took note of the fact
Page 51
5
that all employees who have completed 20 years of service
and the amendment in Regulation 28, which was carried out
in 2002 with retrospective effect from 1.9.2000 and the
amendment inserted a proviso which provided that pension
shall also be granted to an employee who opts to retire
before attaining the age of superannuation but after having
served for a minimum period of 13 years in terms of any
scheme that may be framed for the purpose by the Bank’s
Board with the concurrence of the Government. The Court
took note of the fact that the benefits provided under
Regulation 29 were not found to be attractive by the
employees and, therefore, the necessity arose for floating a
special scheme i.e. VRS-2000. The grievance of the optees in
the case was that they were given the retiral benefits by the
JUDGMENT
respondent-Bank under VRS-2000 save and except the
benefit of pension under Regulation 29(5). Regulation 29(5)
in the case of those banks is as follows:
“The qualifying service of an employee retiring
voluntarily under this Regulation shall be increased
by a period not exceeding five years, subject to
the condition that the total qualifying service
rendered by such employee shall not in any case
exceed thirty-three years and it does not take him
beyond the date of superannuation”.
Page 52
5
41. One of the contentions canvassed by the Bank was that
the Regulation 29 does not cover the persons retired under
VRS-2000 which is dehors the statutory scheme for voluntary
retirement. The counter submission on behalf of the
employees was that by making provisions in the scheme that
the optees would be eligible for the benefits in addition to the
ex-gratia amount, inter alia, pension as per the Pension
Regulations, 1995, the employees understood that what was
contemplated was pension under Regulation 29 and,
therefore, any ambiguity in VRS 2000 ought to have been
construed and harmonized with the intention of the parties;
Regulation 29 was the only regulation under the Pension
Regulations, 1995, applicable to the voluntary retirement
JUDGMENT
and, therefore, Regulation 29, ipso facto, became the terms
of the contract; and that each and every paragraph of
Regulation 29 can be made applicable to an optee of more
than 20 years of service without coming into conflict with any
provision of the scheme; the notice period of three months in
Regulation 29(3) can be waived at the discretion of the
banks. The Court posed the questions as follows:
Page 53
5
“The principal question that falls for our
determination is: whether the employees (having
completed 20 years of service) of these banks
(Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Punjab and
Sind Bank, Union Bank of India and United Bank of
India) who had opted for voluntary retirement
under VRS 2000 are entitled to addition of five
years of notional service in calculating the length
of service for the purpose of the said Scheme as
per Regulation 29(5) of the Pension Regulations,
1995?”
42. To examine the question posed, the Court thought it
appropriate to examine the contract and the circumstances in
which it was made in order to see whether or not from the
nature of it, the parties must have made their bargain on the
footing that a particular thing or state of things would
continue to exist.
43. I have already referred to Clause 6 of the Scheme,
JUDGMENT
which deals with ‘other benefits’. Sub-clause (3) of Clause 6
stipulates that an employee would be entitled to get pension
in terms of the State Bank of India Employees Pension Fund
Rules on the relevant date. The High Courts have placed
reliance on the second part of Rule 22(i)(a). Similar
contention has been advanced before us. Per contra, Mr.
Rohtagi would submit that it is Rule 22(i)(c) which would be
applicable. I find force in the said submission, for Rule 22(i)
Page 54
5
(a) deals with the concept of retirement and 22(i)(c) deals
with the concept of retirement on request. In K. Mohandas
(supra), the Rule was read into the Scheme in the absence of
any other postulate. Same is the case here and, therefore, I
read the Rule to the Scheme. Interpreting the 1995
Regulations, this Court had said that it will apply in entirety
and, therefore, benefit was extended in Rule 29(5). Be it
noted, in the said Regulation, it was categorically provided
that pensionary benefits should be available to a person
seeking voluntary retirement if he has put in 20 years of
service. Same is the provision here, that is, 20 years of
service irrespective of the age. As some doubts had arose, a
clarificatory circular was issued on 10.1.2001. Relevant part
has already been reproduced earlier. It has been clearly
JUDGMENT
clarified that as per existing Rules, employees who have not
completed 20 years of Pensionable Service are not eligible for
pension. This clarification is in consonance with the Rules.
The amendment facet which has come into existence
afterwards is absolutely inconsequential as it deals with
different facets of Rule 22(i)(a). In this context, reference to
Page 55
5
circular dated 11.1.2001 is absolutely necessitous. The
relevant part reads as follows:
“In this connection, queries have been raised
whether an employee who submits his
application for retirement under SBIVRS can
withdraw such an application subsequently.
Corporate Centre have examined the issue
and have advised that the scheme is purely
voluntary. The role of the employee is active.
It is his conscious decision and there will be
no reason for his withdrawal of application at
a later date. However, there could be few,
yet genuine cases where the employees
would like to withdraw the application
submitted under the scheme for various
reasons. It has, therefore, been decided that
the employee who has submitted an
application for retirement under SBIVRS may
be permitted to withdraw the application on
th
or before 15 February, 2001. For this
purpose, the employee will have to make a
written request which must reach the Branch
Manager/head of the Department/ Head of
the Unit i.e. authority to whom the
application for retirement under SBIVRS has
been submitted, on or before 15.02.2001.
The authority receiving the applications for
withdrawal must forward it to the competent
authority immediately but not later than the
following day and obtain a confirmation to
that effect from the competent authority.”
JUDGMENT
44. Both the circulars were almost simultaneous and both
were within the knowledge of the employees and if an
employee desired to withdraw, he could have done so as time
was there till 15.2.2001. None of the respondents chose to
Page 56
5
withdraw. In the absence of withdrawal, there cannot be any
trace of doubt that the employees would be governed by the
rules existing at the time of floating of the Scheme which has
to be read into the Scheme, for the Scheme clearly stipulates
that the employees availing the benefit of the Scheme would
be entitled to pension as per the Pension Rules. I have
already scanned the anatomy of the Rules and I notice that
there is a categorical distinction between ‘retirement’ and
‘voluntary retirement’. In all the impugned judgments, as I
find, the High Courts have not appreciated the said distinction
and applied the Rule pertaining to normal retirement. If the
decisions in K. Mohandas (supra) and Ganpat Singh
Deora (supra) are read carefully, it will go a long way to show
that a voluntary retirement and retirement are
JUDGMENT
distinguishable, if the Rule/Regulations/Scheme distinguishes.
In the case at hand, it is clear as day that the Rule carves out
two categories of retirement, one, normal retirement on
superannuation and second, retirement on request i.e.
voluntary retirement, ordinarily called the golden handshake
and, therefore, the scheme was floated. In the instant case,
as I perceive, the Scheme which is more beneficial was
Page 57
5
provided. It had the pension and the ex-gratia. However, it
had a condition as enumerated in the Rule that if an
employee had not completed 20 years of service, as per Rule
22(i)(c), he would not get pension. In K. Mohandas (supra),
if an employee has completed 20 years of service, apart from
pensionary benefits, he would also get the benefit under
Regulation 29(5) as stipulated therein. To elaborate, unless
one is not entitled to pension, the other additional benefits
pertaining to pension do not arise. I may hasten to add that I
am only concerned with the concept of voluntary retirement
under the Rules and the Scheme and as I find, the Rule
cannot be interpreted as employees would be entitled to
pension. That is neither the intention nor the spirit of the
Rule, which has to be read into the Scheme as a part of it.
JUDGMENT
45. I have been apprised with regard to the relevant details
of the respondents herein. It is as follows:
| NAME OF<br>THE<br>RESPONDEN<br>T | LENGTH OF<br>SERVICE | AGE AS<br>OF<br>31.03.200<br>1 | EX-GRATIA AMOUNT<br>PAID (Apart from<br>other benefits like<br>PF & Gratuity) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radhey<br>Shyam<br>Pandey<br>SLP No.<br>3686/07 | 19 yrs.<br>months 18 days | 8 59 yrs. 3<br>months | Ex-Gratia–<br>Rs.6,20,014/- |
| Mihir Kumar | 12 yrs. | 3 58 yrs. | Ex-Gratia- |
Page 58
5
| Nandi C.A.No.<br>5035-5037/12 | months 24 days | 1 month | Rs.2,46,576/- |
|---|---|---|---|
| M.P. Hallan<br>C.A. Nos.<br>2287-88/10 | 19 yrs.<br>months | 4 58 yrs. 11<br>months 25<br>days | Ex-Gratia-<br>Rs.5,55,108/- |
| R.P. Nigam<br>C.A. No.<br>10813/13 | 16 yrs 6 month | s 56 yrs. 11<br>months 29<br>days | Ex-Gratia-<br>Rs.4,40,037/- |
| 6. In the case at hand, unlike the decision of Ganpat<br>Singh Deora (supra), there is no provision for computation<br>f broken period and, therefore, unless an employee has<br>ompleted 20 years of service, he would not be entitled to<br>ension. Therefore, I have no hesitation in holding that the<br>mpugned judgments and orders passed by various High<br>Courts, namely, High Court of Judicature at Allahabad, Punjab<br>& Haryana High Court at Chandigarh and High Court of |
Calcutta are unsustainable in law and accordingly I set aside
JUDGMENT
the same.
47. Consequently, the appeals are allowed and the
impugned judgments and orders are set aside. In the facts
and circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as to
costs.
.............................J.
[Dipak Misra]
Page 59
6
New Delhi;
February 26, 2015
JUDGMENT
Page 60
6
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2463 OF 2015
(ARISING OUT OF S.L.P. (C) NO. 3686 of 2007)
| ………APPEL<br>….RESPO | |
|---|---|
| BANK OF INDIA & ORS. ………A<br>VERSUS<br>Y SHYAM PANDEY ….R<br>WITH<br>C.A. NOS.2287-2288 of 2010<br>BANK OF INDIA & ORS . ……. A<br>VERSUS<br>HALLAN & ANR. ……… R<br>C.A. NOS.5035-5037 of 2012<br>MAN, STATE BANK OF INDIA & ORS. …….<br>VERSUS | ………A<br>….R |
MIHIR KUMAR NANDI & ANR. ……… RESPONDENTS
JUDGMENT
AND
C.A. NO. 10813 of 2013
STATE BANK OF INDIA & ORS. ……APPELLANTS
VERSUS
RAMESH PRASAD NIGAM …….RESPONDENT
J U D G M E N T
Page 61
6
V. GOPALA GOWDA, J.
I had the opportunity to read the opinion of my
brother Judge, Justice Dipak Misra and I am in
respectful disagreement with the opinion rendered by
him in the present appeals.
2. Leave granted in SLP (C) No. 3686 of 2007. The
appellant Bank-the State Bank of India, on the
recommendation of the Indian Banks Association (in
short “IBA”), introduced a scheme titled ‘SBI
Voluntary Retirement Scheme, 2000 (in short ‘SBI-
VRS’). This scheme was introduced by SBI despite
there being provisions in the State Bank of India
JUDGMENT
Employees’ Provident Fund Rules, for its employees
to avail premature retirement/resignation/voluntary
retirement. SBI-VRS was in operation for a limited
period and was introduced by the appellant Bank with
package for the purpose specified in the scheme.
3. It is the claim of the appellant Bank that clause
6(c) of the SBI-VRS provided for “other benefits”
which is, “Pension in terms of the SBI Employees’
Page 62
6
Pension Fund Rules on the relevant date (including
the commuted value of pension).
4. It is the further claim of the appellant Bank that
the employees who applied for retirement under SBI-
VRS will be bound by the circular dated 11.01.01,
issued by the competent authority viz. , Dy. Managing
Director of the Bank clarifying that:-
“…. However, as per existing rules
employees who have not completed 20 years
of pensionable service are not eligible
for pension.”
The respondents, who were employees of the State Bank
of India, applied for voluntary retirement under SBI-
VRS on different dates between 15.1.2001 and
31.1.2001. Their applications got accepted and they
JUDGMENT
stood retired from the bank service with effect from
31.3.2001.
5. In the meanwhile, a parallel development had taken
place in the appellant Bank with respect to its
employees’ Pension Fund Rules. On 31.1.2001, the age
of normal retirement of the employees working in the
appellant Bank was extended from 58 years to 60
Page 63
6
years. Accordingly, the Service Rule as well as Rule
22(i)(a) of the SBI Pension Fund Rules was amended
wherein it was added that a member would be entitled
to pension :
“….. if he is in the service of the
bank on or after 22.5.1998, after
having completed 10 years pensionable
service provided that he has attained
the age of 60 years.”
6. The respondents made representations where they
sought pension under Rule 22(i)(a) and were advised
by the bank that they were not eligible for pension
under Rule 22(i)(a). The respondents filed Writ
Petitions before respective High Courts of their
jurisdictions namely, the High Court of Judicature at
Allahabad, High Court of Judicature at Kolkata and
JUDGMENT
the High Court of Punjab and Haryana, which were
allowed by both the Single Bench and the Division
Bench of the High Court. Hence, the appeals are filed
by the appellant Bank before this Court.
7. I am in respectful disagreement with the opinion
rendered by my brother Judge in the present appeals.
However, I intend to assign my reasons for the same,
Page 64
6
based on certain relevant considerations. The issues
arising for deliberation in this case are as under:
(i)
Whether the respondents in the present
appeals are to be considered for pension
benefits under the provisions of Rule 22(i)
(c) of the State Bank of India Employee’s
Pension Fund Rules alone, as claimed by the
appellant Bank?
(ii)
Whether the State Bank of India is
entitled to retain its own employment Rules
which is not in consonance with the
subsequent amendments made in the
Employee’s Pension Regulations, 1995 in all
the public sector undertaking Banks in the
light of the correspondence between the
Finance Ministry and Indian Banks
Association?
JUDGMENT
(iii) Under what legal provisions will the
respondent employees be entitled to make
their claims for pension?
Answer to Point no. 1
8. Pension benefits accrue upon an employee on
retirement from his employment. Therefore, we first
need to assess the definition of ‘retirement’ before
Page 65
6
answering the question on pension benefits for the
respondents herein. Neither the State Bank of India
Act, 1955 nor the State Bank of India Employees’
Pension Fund Rules defines retirement. Therefore, I
am inclined to read the definition of retirement as
has been mentioned in the State Bank of Patiala
Employee’s Pension Regulation 1995 which provides for
the definition of retirement from employment since
the same is pari materia to the Employees’ Pension
Regulation 1995. Section 2(y) of the Regulation reads
thus:
“2(y) “retirement” means cessation from the
Bank’s service-
(a) On attaining the age of superannuation
specified in Service Regulations or
Settlements;
JUDGMENT
(b) On voluntary retirement in accordance
with provisions contained in regulation 29
of these regulations;
(c) On premature retirement by the Bank
before attaining the age of superannuation
specified in Service Regulations or
Settlements.”
In the present case, however, clause (b) of the
definition will also be read in the light of the
amended Regulation 28 which was intended to provide
Page 66
6
relief to the employees seeking voluntary retirement
under the VRS 2000, after providing 15 years of
pensionable service. Thus, from the above definition,
one is left with no doubt that the employees who
availed VRS 2000 have ‘retired’ from the Bank as per
the definitions.
It is pertinent now to highlight the object and
purpose of the SBI-VRS. At a meeting conducted on
13.6.2000 between the Finance Minister and the Chief
Executives of the Public Sector Banks, the human
resource and manpower planning in Public Sector Banks
was reviewed. A committee was constituted to examine
the issues confronting the Public Sector Banks in
this regard and to suggest suitable remedial
JUDGMENT
measures. The committee had observed that high
establishment costs and low productivity in Public
Sector Banks affect their profitability. It was
hence, necessary to convert their human resources
into assets compatible with business strategies
through a variety of measures including constant
upgradation of skills, achieving proper age and skill
profile, creating opportunities for lateral as well
Page 67
6
as vertical career progression and including fresh
skilled personnel with technical and professional
skills for new business opportunities.
9. The data available with IBA indicated that 43%
of employees in Public Sector Banks are in the 46+
age group and only 12% are in the 25-35 years age
group. This pattern of jobs in the public sector
Banks, according to the committee, had serious
implications for the Banks with reference to
mobility, training, development of skills and
succession plans for high level positions. This,
coupled with excess manpower wherever it exists,
would come in the way of induction of new skills and
proper career progression.
JUDGMENT
The Committee had therefore recommended
introduction of a Voluntary Retirement Scheme that
would assist the Bank in their effort to optimize
their human resources and achieve a balanced age
skills profile in keeping in mind with the business
strategies. The Banks were further advised by the IBA
to implement the scheme in right earnest.
Page 68
6
10. From the memorandum of the Voluntary Retirement
Scheme presented by the appellant Bank itself, it is
clear that the SBI-VRS scheme was introduced for the
purpose of business enhancement and profitability of
the Bank itself and not for the benefits of the
employees per se. The intention of the Public Sector
Banks including the appellant Bank, in introducing
the VRS 2000, is rightfully highlighted in the
decision of this Court in Bank of India v. K.
16
Mohandas & Ors. which read as under:
“36. ………..The banks decided to shed surplus
manpower. By formulation of the special
scheme (VRS 2000), the banks intended to
achieve their objective of rationalizing
their force as they were overstaffed. The
special Scheme was, thus, oriented to lure
the employees to go in for voluntary
retirement. In this background, the
consideration that was to pass between the
parties assumes significance and a
harmonious construction to the Scheme and
the Pension Regulations, therefore, has to
be given”.
JUDGMENT
(emphasis supplied)
In ordinary situation, an employee who retires either
on reaching the age of superannuation, or by request
in writing after completing the prescribed number of
16
(2009) 5 SCC 313
Page 69
7
years, become eligible to pension under the State
Bank of India Employee’s Pension Rules. The pertinent
provisions under the SBI Employees Pension Rules
relating to pension of employees, read as under:
“22. (i). A member shall be entitled to a
pension under these rules on retiring from
the Banks service-
a). After having completed twenty
years’ pensionable service provided
that he has attained the age of
fifty years or if he is in the
service of the Bank on or after
1.11.93, after having completed ten
years pensionable service provided
that he has attained fifty eight
years or if he is in the service of
the Bank on or after 22.05.1998,
after having completed ten years
pensionable service provided that he
has attained the age of sixty years.
XXX XXX XXX
JUDGMENT
c). After having completed twenty
years pensionable service,
irrespective of the age he shall
have attained at his request in
writing. “
11. This situation is altered temporarily by the
introduction of the SBI-VRS. Therefore, it is also
important to understand the framework of SBI-VRS. In
the absence of the SBI-VRS, the respondents had the
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7
option of seeking voluntary retirement under Rule
22(i)(c) which in fact, the respondents did not
avail. Instead they availed the SBI-VRS. It is
therefore pertinent to see how the SBI-VRS was
functioning and what the respondents seeking SBI-
VRS might have reasonably foreseen while availing the
scheme. When the application of voluntary retirement
of respondent Radhey Shyam Pandey was accepted by the
appellant Bank on 18.3.2001, he still had about 9
months services left and he was 59 years and 3 months
old.
st
As on 31 March, 2001, when his voluntary
retirement from service became effective, he had been
on pensionable service for 19 years, 9 months and 18
JUDGMENT
days.
12. If the respondent had chosen to retire by
superannuation after attaining 60 years of age which
was the normal age of retirement, he would have put
in a little more than 20 years of pensionable
service. He consequently, would have become eligible
to pension. However, when he retired on 31.3.2001, he
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7
still had 2 and ½ months short to complete 20 years
of service. It is pertinent to understand what
prompted him to opt for the SBI-VRS at this stage.
13. In clause 5 of the scheme, the incentive of the
Voluntary Retirement Scheme is mentioned. It is an
ex-gratia payment of 60 days salary for every year of
completed service. Since, the respondent had finished
20 years of service approximately, he would have been
entitled to 40 months of salary as ex-gratia.
Pension on the other hand, is calculated as half
month’s salary per month. Therefore, by utilizing the
SBI-VRS, although the respondent had given up 9
months service still left, he would have gained 40
JUDGMENT
months incentive. To add to this, he becomes eligible
for pension, then he in addition to ex-gratia, will
get half month’s salary as his pension from the time
he retires. This can be considered as a good bargain
from availing the SBI- VRS. On reasonable
presumption, it can be ascertained that it is this
benefit provided by the SBI-VRS through ex-gratia
payment along with pension which prompted the
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7
employees in availing the benefits of the scheme
rather than retiring on superannuation under the
Rules.
14. On the other hand, if he is not entitled to
pension, then availing SBI-VRS is unwise since the
respondent has given up his half month’s salary worth
pension for his working period in return of 40
months’ salary.
SBI-VRS is admittedly a contract between the Bank
and its employees as has been recognized in the case
of Bank of India v. K. Mohandas case mentioned supra.
The application of the Voluntary Retirement Scheme
meant that the Bank employees agreed with the Bank
JUDGMENT
that it would be bound by the scheme thereby entering
into a contract. However, clause 6(c) of SBI-VRS
states:
“6. Other Benefits :
XXX XXX XXX
XXX XXX XXX
(c) Pension in terms of State Bank
of India Employees’ Pension Fund
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7
Rules on the relevant date
(including commuted value
pension).”
15. Considering that the incentives of SBI-VRS are
distinct from the benefits provided under Rule 22(i)
(c) of the State Bank Employees Pension Fund Rules
and also, that Clause 6(c) of SBI-VRS does not
specifically state that the pension benefits are to
be provided under rule 22(i)(c) of SBI Employees
Pension Fund Rules, the claim for pension by the
respondents cannot be decided solely on the basis of
the provision of Rule 22(1)(c) of the State Bank of
India Employees’ Pension Rules.
Answer to Point no. 2
JUDGMENT
16. It has been claimed by the appellant Bank that
State Bank of India has its own Pension Rules that
are different from the Employees’ Pension Regulations
1995 which operate in the other Public Sector Banks.
The claim made by the appellant Bank that it is not
bound by the Pension Regulations 1995, is premised on
the assumption that the employees of the State Bank
of India form a distinct class of employment from the
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7
employees of the other Public Sector Banks on the
ground of reasonable and intelligible differentia.
This conclusion by the appellant Bank is not
warranted since all the employees of Public Sector
Bank forms one homogenous class since all the
fourteen Public Sector Banks which were formed under
the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertakings) Act, 1970 and the six banks under the
Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertakings) Act, 1980, are subject to the control
of the Central Government. It is pertinent to note
that Section 19 of both- The Banking Companies
(Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Acts of
1970 and 1980 and Section 50 of the State Bank of
JUDGMENT
India Act, 1955, vest the power on the Central
Government to make consistent rules for all the
Public Sector Banks.
Section 50(2)(o) of State Bank of India Act, 1955
reads thus:
“50. Power of Central Government to make
regulations : (1) The Central Board may,
after consultation with the Reserve Bank
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7
and with the previous sanction of the
Central Government [by notification in
the Official Gazette] make regulations,
not inconsistent with this Act and the
rules made thereunder, to provide for all
matters for which provision is expedient
for the purpose of giving effect to the
provisions of this Act.
(2) In particular and without prejudice
to the generality of the foregoing power,
such regulation may provide for-
XXX XXX XXX
(o) The establishment and
maintenance of superannuation,
pension, provident or other funds
for the benefit of the employees of
the State Bank or of the dependent
of such employees or for the
purposes of the State Bank, and the
granting of superannuation
allowances, annuities and pensions
payable out of any such fund;]”
17. The Central Government through a letter dated
JUDGMENT
5.9.2000 directed the Indian Banks Association to
formulate a uniform norm for pensions for employees
voluntarily retiring under SBI-VRS 2000 and the same
was formulated by the Indian Banks Association on
11.12.2000. Therefore, the State Bank of India is
bound by the directions issued in this regard by the
Indian Banks Association under Section 50(2)(o) of
the State Bank of India Act, 1955.
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7
18. The appellant Bank, State Bank of India is an
instrumentality of the State as has been held by this
Court in the case of Bank of India & Ors. v. O.P.
17
Swarnakar & Ors. which reads as under:
“48…But the State Bank of India as
also the nationalized banks are
“States” within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution of
India. The services of the workman
are also governed by several standing
orders and bipartite settlements
which have the force of law. The
banks, therefore, cannot take
recourse to “hire and fire” for the
purpose of terminating the services
of the employees. The banks are
required to act fairly and strictly
in terms of the norms laid down
therefor. Their actions in this
behalf must satisfy the test of
Articles 14 and 21 of the
Constitution of India.
JUDGMENT
Therefore, the appellant Bank cannot engage in acts
which are antithetical to equality. In the case of
18
E.P. Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu , the
constitution Bench of this Court held as under:
“Equality is a dynamic concept with many
aspects and dimensions and it cannot be
"cribbed cabined and confined" within
17
(2003) 2 SCC 721
18
AIR 1974 SC 555
Page 77
7
traditional and doctrinaire limits. From
a positivistic point of view, equality is
antithetic to arbitrariness. In fact
equality and arbitrariness are sworn
enemies; one belongs to the rule of law
in a republic while the other, to the
whim and caprice of an absolute monarch.
Where an act is arbitrary it is implicit
in it that it is unequal both according
to political logic and constitutional law
and is therefore violative of Art. 14,
and if it affects any matter relating to
public employment, it is also violative
of Art. 16. Arts. 14 and 16 strike at
arbitrariness in State action an( ensure
fairness and equality of treatment. They
require that State action must be based
on valent relevant principles applicable
alike to all similarly situate and it
must not be guided by any extraneous or
irrelevant considerations because that
would be denial of equality. Where the
operative reason for State action, as
distinguished from motive inducing from
the antechamber of the mind, is not
legitimate and relevant but is extraneous
and outside the area of permissible
considerations, it would :amount to mala
fide exercise of power and that is hit by
Arts. 14 and 16.”
JUDGMENT
19. Even though the SBI-VRS is in the nature of
contract, it has to be interpreted under the scanner
of Article 14 of the Constitution of India. In the
process of implementation of the Voluntary Retirement
Scheme on its own terms, the appellant Bank being an
associate Bank of the Indian Banks Organization, it
cannot set rules and procedures which deviates from
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7
the standard and safeguards set by the Central
Government in consensus with the Indian Banks
Association.
20. It is the claim of the appellant Bank that the
SBI-VRS provides the optees with handsome ex-gratia
amount on retirement. It does not however mean that
the appellant is entitled to deprive the respondent
of his pension on the ground that he has been given
handsome ex-gratia amount under the scheme. Pension
received by an employee upon his retirement is not a
bounty as has been held in the case of Deokinandan
19
Prasad v. State of Bihar as under:
“Pension is not a bounty payable on the
sweet will and pleasure of the Government
and that, on the other hand, the right to
pension is a valuable right…”
JUDGMENT
21. The same proposition of law was reiterated by the
Constitution Bench of this Court in the case of D.S.
20
Nakara v. Union of India wherein this Court held as
under:
“20. The antiquated notion of pension being
a bounty, a gratuitous payment depending
upon the sweet will or grace of the
19
1971 SCR 634
20
(1983) 1 SCC 305
Page 79
8
employer not claimable as a right and,
therefore, no right to pension can be
enforced through court has been swept
under the carpet by the decision of the
Constitutional Bench in Deokinandan Prasad
v. State of Bihar wherein this court
authoritatively ruled that pension is a
right and the payment of it does not depend
upon the discretion of the Government but
is governed by the rules and a government
servant coming within rules is entitled to
claim pension. It was further held that
the grant of pension does not depend upon
anyone’s discretion. It is only for the
purpose of quantifying the amount having
regard to service and other allied matters
that it may be necessary for the authority
to pass an order to that effect but the
right to receive pension flows to the
officer not because of the order but by the
virtue of rules. This view was reaffirmed
in State of Punjab v. Iqbal Singh .”
(emphasis supplied)
Therefore, depriving the respondents seeking
SBI-VRS of their right to pension solely on the
JUDGMENT
ground that they have availed voluntary retirement
under a scheme while providing less than 20 years of
service and also on the ground that they have been
provided with handsome ex-gratia amount on their
retirement, is arbitrary and attracts the wrath of
Article 14 of the Constitution of India. This is
particularly so, because SBI-VRS was introduced for
the benefit of the Public Sector Banks which included
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8
the appellant Bank. It was not a welfare scheme which
provided the respondents with multiple offers to
choose from. Therefore, the appellant Bank at this
stage, cannot absolve itself from the responsibility
of granting the respondents what is due to them by
virtue of providing pensionable services, on the
pretext of having provided ex-gratia amount.
22. In another case of Roop Chand Adlakha v. Delhi
21
Development Authority , this Court held as under:
“To overdo classifications is to undo
equality. The idea of similarity or
dissimilarity of situations of persons,
to justify classifications, cannot rest
on merely differentia which may, by
themselves be rational or logical, but
depends on whether the differences are
relevant to the goals sought to be
reached by the law which seeks to
classify. The justification of the
classification must needs, therefore, to
be sought beyond the classification. All
marks of distinction do not necessarily
justify classification irrespective of
the relevance or nexus of objects sought
to be achieved by the law imposing the
classification.”
JUDGMENT
(emphasis supplied)
23. In the case on hand, the classification between
employees who have voluntarily retired under the SBI-
21
1988 (Supp 3) SCR 253
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8
VRS and those who have retired under the same scheme
introduced by the other Public Sector Banks, is not
rational since they constitute the employees of the
appellant Bank into a distinct class on the basis of
the VRS 2000 scheme introduced by the appellant Bank
and the same scheme introduced by other Public Sector
Banks, with no intelligible differentia. The payment
of ex-gratia cannot be held against the employees
since it cannot be expected of a person to give up
his service before superannuation without reasonable
incentives. What the appellant Bank intends to show
as the benefit of the employees seeking VRS under the
scheme, is actually meant for the benefit of the
appellant Bank itself.
JUDGMENT
24. In setting up schemes such as the SBI-VRS, the
appellant Bank, which is the instrumentality of the
State under Article 12 of the Constituion, cannot
deviate from its constitutional duties as has been
held in the case of D.S. Nakara v. Union of India
(supra) :
“36. Having set out clearly the society
which we propose to set up, the direction in
which the State action must move, the
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8
welfare State which we propose to build up,
the constitutional goal of setting up a
socialist State and the assurance in the
Directive Principles of State Policy
especially of security in old age at least
to those who have rendered useful service
during their active years, it is
indisputable, nor was it questioned, that
pension as a retirement benefit is in
consonance with and in furtherance of the
goals of the Constitution. The goals for
which pension is paid themselves give a
fillip and push
to the policy of setting up
a welfare State because by pension the
socialist goal of security of cradle to
grave is assured at least when it is mostly
needed and least available, namely, in the
fall of life.
25. Moreover, this decision of the appellant Bank to
distinguish between two sets of employees, goes
against Article 39 of the Constitution of India which
directs the State to make policies to ensure equal
JUDGMENT
pay for equal work. The appellant Bank being an
instrumentality of the State, is not permitted to
make such discriminations. Hence, the appellant Bank
is liable to implement the amendments made by the
Indian Banks Association to accommodate the grant of
pension to those employees who sought voluntary
retirement through SBI-VRS.
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8
Answer to point no. 3
26. Under Rule 22 of the State Bank of India
Employees’ Pension Rules, an employee’s entitlement
to pension accrues on retiring from the Bank service
on one of the following conditions:
Under Rule 22(1)(a):
(a) After having completed 20 years pensionable
services provided that he has attained the age of 50
years OR
(b) If he was in the service on or after 1.11.93,
then after having completed 10 years of service
provided that he has attained the age of 58 years, OR
(c) If he was in the service on or after 22.5.98,
then after having completed 10 years pensionable
JUDGMENT
service provided, that he has attained the age of 60
years.
Under Rule 22(1)(c):
(d) After 20 years of pensionable service, at his
request in writing (where the entitlement is to
proportionate pension).
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8
On the other hand, the un-amended Employee’s
Pension Regulations, 1995 provide for pension under
the following condition:
Regulation 28 reads as under:
“28. Superannuation Pensions:-
Superannuation pension shall be
granted to an employee who has retired
on his attaining the age of
superannuation specified in the
Service Regulations and Settlements.”
Regulation 29 reads as under:
“29. Pension on Voluntary Retirement:
st
(1) On or after the 1 day of
November, 1993 at any time, after an
employee has completed twenty years of
qualifying service he may, by giving
notice of not less than three months
in writing to the appointing
authority retire from service; ……”
JUDGMENT
27. It can be observed that the State Bank of India
Employees’ Pension Rules and the un-amended
Employee’s Pension Regulation, 1995 are consistent in
so far as both Rules set the eligibility of pension
on voluntary retirement service only after 20 years
of pensionable service. However, it is imperative to
understand the amendment which the correspondence
between the Finance Ministry and Indian Banks
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8
Association, following the introduction of the SBI-
VRS, brought about.
28. By a letter (F.no.4/8/4/2000-IR), dated 5.9.2000,
written by the Finance Ministry to the Indian Banks
Association, the Ministry recommended to the IBA to
suggest amendments to Regulation 29 of the Pension
Regulations in the following terms:
“ I am directed to refer to this Division’s
Letter no. 11/1/99 IR dated 29-8-2000
conveying the Government’s no objection for
circulation of Voluntary Retirement Scheme
in public sector banks. The Scheme, inter
alia, provides that employees with 15 year
of service or 40 years of age shall be
eligible to take voluntary retirement under
the Scheme. As per the provisions contained
in Regulation 29 of the Pension Regulations,
an employee can take voluntary retirement
after 20 years of qualifying service and
thereafter becomes eligible for pension.
Thus employees having rendered 15 years of
service or completing 40 years of age, but
not having completed 20 years of service
shall not be eligible for pensionary
benefits on taking voluntary retirement
under the Scheme.
JUDGMENT
In order to ensure that such employees do
not lose the benefits of pension, IBA may
work out modalities and suggest amendments,
if any, required to be made in the Pension
Regulations to ensure that these employees
also get the benefits of pension”.
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8
Pursuant to this correspondence, the Indian Banks
Association suggested an amendment to the Regulations
in the following terms:
“ INDIAN BANKS ASSOCIATION
th
STADIUM HOUSE, 6 FLOOR
BLOCK 2 VEER NARIMAN ROAD
MUMBAI- 400020
PD/CIR/76/G2/G4/
December 11, 2000
VOLUNTARY RETIRMENT SCHEME IN PUBLIC SECTOR
BANKS AMENDMENTS TO BANK (EMPLOYEES’)
PENSION REGULATIONS, 1995
Designated officers of all Public Sector
Banks.
Dear Sirs,
Please refer to our circular letter no.
st
PD/CIR/76/G4/993 dated 31 August 2000
convening the ‘No Objection’ of the
Government in banks adopting and
implementing a voluntary retirement scheme
for employees on the lines of what was
contained in the Annexure to the circular.
As per the scheme, an employee who is
eligible and applies for voluntary
retirement is entitled for the benefits of
CPF, Pension, Gratuity and encashment of
accumulates privilege leaves, as per rules.
Bank (Employees’) Pension Regulations, 1955
do not have provisions enabling payment of
pension to an employee who retires before
attaining the age of superannuation except
under circumstances as in Regulations 29,
30, 32 and 33. We had, therefore, taken up
JUDGMENT
Page 87
8
with the Government the need to incorporate
necessary provisions in the Pension
Regulations by way of amendments to
Regulation 28 so that employees who retire
as above under special/ ad hoc schemes
formulated by the banks, after serving for a
prescribed minimum period would be eligible
for pro rata pension.
Government of India has after examining the
proposal conveyed its approval and desired
that IBA advise banks to make necessary
amendments to their Pension Regulations as
in the Annexure. We request banks to take
note accordingly.
Please note that with the above amendments,
employees who apply for voluntary retirement
after having rendered minimum 15 years of
service under a special/ ad hoc scheme
formulated with the specific approval of the
Government and the Board of Directors will
be eligible for pro rata pension for the
period of service rendered as they are to
retire on attaining the age of
superannuation on that date.
Yours Faithfully,
Sd/-
JUDGMENT
(Allen C A Pareira)
PERSONNEL ADVISER”
Pursuant to this suggestion, Regulation 28 of
Employees Pension Regulations, 1995 was amended to
include the proviso with retrospective effect from
1.9.2000 as under:
“Provided that pension shall also be
granted to an employee who opts to
retire before attaining the age of
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8
superannuation, but after having
served for a minimum period of 15
years in terms of any scheme that
may be framed for the purpose by the
Bank’s Board with the concurrence of
the Government.”
This Court, in the case of Bank of India v. K.
Mohandas (supra) further clarified the intention
behind amendment of Regulation 28 and its
retrospective application. The relevant paragraphs
read as under:
“40.……..The amendment in Regulation
28, as is reflected from the afore
referred communication, was
intended to cover the employees who
had rendered 15 years’ service but
not completed 20 years’ service. ….
41. Even if it be assumed that by
insertion of the proviso in
Regulation 28 (in the year 2002
with effect from 1-9-2000), all
classes of employees under VRS,
2002 were intended to be covered,
such amendment in Regulation 28,
needs to be harmonized with
Regulation 29……”
JUDGMENT
29. While answering Point no, 2 in favour of the
respondents, I held that the State Bank of India
should implement the amendment made to Rule 28 of the
Employees Pension Regulation in granting pension to
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9
the employees seeking voluntary retirement under SBI-
VRS.
I therefore, answer point no 3 in favour of the
respondents and direct the appellant Bank to grant
pension to the employees seeking voluntary retirement
under the SBI-VRS after completing 15 years of
pensionable service. Therefore, the respondent Radhey
Shyam Pandey, having completed 19 years 8 months and
18 days of service, respondent M.P. Hallan, having
completed 19 years and 4 months of service and the
respondent R.P. Nigam, having completed 16 years and
6 months of service, become eligible for pension as
per the amended Regulation 28 of Employees Pension
Rules, 1995. By virtue of power vested in this Court
JUDGMENT
under Article 142 Constitution of India, I hold that
the pension relief is also extended to all the other
employees who have availed SBI-VRS 2000 after having
completed 15 years of pensionable service. Thus, C.A.
No.@ SLP (C) No.3686 of 2007, C.A. Nos.2287-2288 of
2010 and C.A. No. 10813 of 2013 are dismissed.
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9
30. The C.A. Nos.5035-5037 of 2012 of the appellant
Bank succeed in that respondent Mihir Kumar Nandi,
having completed 12 years 3 months and 4 days of
service, becomes ineligible for pension benefits.
31. All the appeals are disposed of accordingly. No
costs.
………………………………………………… J.
[V. GOPALA GOWDA]
New Delhi,
February 26, 2015
JUDGMENT
Page 91