Full Judgment Text
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ITEM No. 1A Court No. 2 SECTION XVI
(For Judgment)
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
Civil Appeal No(s)..... of 2014 @ SLP(C) No. 36909 of 2012
SHASHIKALA DEVI Appellant(s)
VERSUS
CENTRAL BANK OF INDIA AND ORS. Respondent(s)
Date : 17/12/2014 This appeal was called on for judgment today.
For Appellant(s) Mr. Y.Rajagopala Rao, Adv.
Mr. Hitendra Nath Rath, Adv.
For Respondent(s) Ms. Jayshree Wad, Adv.
Mr. Ashish Wad, Adv.
Mr. Anshuman Srivastava, Adv.
UPON hearing the counsel the Court made the following
O R D E R
Hon'ble Mr. Justice T.S.Thakur pronounced
Judgment of the Bench comprising Hon'ble Mr. Justice
T.S.Thakur and Hon'ble Ms. Justice R.Banumathi.
Leave granted
The appeals is allowed in terms of the signed
reportable judgment.
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Shashi Sareen
Date: 2014.12.19
09:34:55 ALMT
Reason:
(Shashi Sareen)
(Veena Khera)
Court Master
(Signed reportable judgment is placed on the file)
Court Master
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 11488 OF 2014
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 36909 of 2012)
Shashikala Devi …Appellant
Vs.
Central Bank of India & Ors. …Respondents
J U D G M E N T
T.S. THAKUR, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. The short question that falls for our
consideration in this appeal by special leave is
th
whether letter dated 8 October, 2007 sent by late
Shri Mauzi Ram, husband of the appellant, was in
essence a letter seeking pre-mature retirement on
medical grounds or a letter of resignation from the
service of the respondent-bank. The High Court has
while dismissing the writ petition and the appeal
filed by the deceased-employee declared that the
letter in question was a letter of resignation that
resulted in forfeiture of the entire service rendered
3
by the employee disentitling him to claim any
pensionary benefits. The correctness of that view is
under challenge in this appeal filed by the widow of
the deceased employee who passed away during the
pendency of the proceedings before the High Court.
Since the answer to the question so much depends upon
the circumstances in which the letter referred to
above was written by the deceased-employee, we may as
well reproduce the same in extenso :
“Patna
Date: 09.10.07
To
The Zonal Manager,
Central Bank of India,
Zonal Office,
Patna.
Though : Proper Channel
Sub: Resignation from the service of bank
Respected Sir,
With due respect I have to submit the following
reasons which has compelled me to resign from my
service.
In the year 2002 I was attacked with severe
carnio cervical spondylisis problem and I was
referred to Dr. P.S. Ramani Lilavati Hospital,
Mumbai where I had to go under surgical
treatment. Within a month time I suffered acute
prostate problem also for which I had to go for
operation at Sheela Urology Centre Patna by Dr.
S.S. Ambasta. But I could not get rid of my
suffering of and on paid and giddiness goes
acute. As a result I have been finding myself
unable to move to the extent of discharging
routine duty.
4
Under the circumstances I had to remain on leave
on many occasions even on loss of duty.
Of late prostate problem has further aggravated
acutely. Presently I am under the treatment of
Dr. S.S. Ambasta at Patna. Acute Cervical
disease coupled with prostate treatment of Dr.
S.S. Ambasta at Patna. Acute Cervical disease
coupled with prostate complication has virtually
make me totally disabled even to perform my
routine work.
In support of my submission I enclose herewith
Xerox copies of medical prescriptions of my
treatment at Lilavati Hospital, Mumbai and of
Urology Centre, Patna and Doctor’s prescription
towards my present treatment.
Under the above stated circumstances of my
health which has made me incapacitated for
rendering service in the bank. This in view I
tender my resignation from the service of bank.
I urge upon your honour to be kind to accept my
resignation from service at the earliest so that
I may be able to go for advance treatment out of
my terminal benefits which is the only left out
financial resource for my livelihood and medical
treatment. I with my family members will be
highly obliged for your kind and favourable
consideration on my aforesaid request.
Thanking you,
Yours faithfully,
(Mauzi Ram)
Clerk,
Rajbanshi Nagar,
Patna.”
(emphasis supplied)
3. A plain reading of the above makes it manifest
that the employee sought relief from the duties
attached to his job on account of his medical
condition that had rendered him physically disabled to
5
which he has made extensive reference in the letter
itself. The letter relies upon and encloses copies of
medical prescriptions from the hospital where the
employee was undergoing treatment in support of his
prayer. It was because of his incapacity arising out
of his failing health that the employee prayed for
being relieved of his service in the bank. What is
important is that the employee had prayed for release
of his terminal benefits to enable him to undergo
treatment for his illness. The letter mentions that
his terminal benefits are the only financial support
for his livelihood and the treatment that he required.
4. The bank treating the letter of the employee as a
letter of resignation from service relieved him
apparently because the expression used in the letter
was resignation which obviously meant that no
financial burden would fall upon the bank in terms of
retrial benefits otherwise payable to an employee who
has served for the requisite number of years entitling
him to retirement.
5. Grant or refusal of pension to the employees of
the respondent-bank is regulated by Central Bank of
India (Employees) Pension Regulation, 1995. Chapter IV
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of the said Regulations deals with qualifying service.
Regulation 14 of the Regulations appearing in that
chapter postulates that an employee who has rendered a
minimum of ten years of service in the bank on the
date of his retirement or on the date on which he is
deemed to have retired shall qualify for pension.
Regulation 22 deals with forfeiture of service and,
inter alia , stipulates that resignation, dismissal,
removal or termination of an employee from the service
of the Bank shall entail forfeiture of his entire past
service. Chapter V of the Regulations deals with
Classes of Pension. While Regulation 28 envisages
superannuation pension, Regulation 29 deals with
pension on voluntary retirement and read 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”
Provided that this sub-regulation shall not
apply to an employee who is on deputation or on
study leave abroad unless after having been
transferred or having returned to India he has
resumed charge of the post in India and has
served for a period of not less than one year;
Provided further that this sub-regulation
shall not apply to an employee who seeks
retirement from service for being absorbed
permanently in an autonomous body or a public
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sector understanding or company or institution
or body, whether incorporated or not to which he
is on deputation at the time of seeking
voluntary retirement.
Provided that this sub-section shall not
apply to an employee who is deemed to have
retired in accordance with clause (1) of
regulation 2.
2. the notice of voluntary retirement given
under sub-regulation (1) shall require
acceptance by the appointing authority:
Provided that where the appointing authority
does not refuse to grant the permission for
retirement before the expiry of the period
specified in the said notice, the retirement
shall become effective from the date of expiry
of the said period.
(3) (a) An employee referred to in
sub-regulation
(1) may make a request to the appointing
authority retirement of less than three
months giving reasons therefor :
(b) On receipt of a request under clause
(a), the appointing authority may, subject
to the provisions of sub-regulation (2),
consider such request for the curtailment
of the period of notice of three months on
merits and if it is satisfied that the
curtailment of the period of notice will
not cause any administrative inconvenience,
the appointing authority may relax the
requirement of notice of three months on
the condition that the employee shall not
apply for commutation of a part of his
pension before the expiry of the notice of
three months.
(4) An employee, who has elected to retire under
this regulation and has given necessary notice
to that effect to the appointing authority,
shall be precluded from withdrawing his notice
except with the specific approval of such
authority:
Provided that the request for such
withdrawal shall be made before the intended
date of his retirement.
(5) The qualifying service of an employee
retiring voluntarily under this regulation shall
be increased by a period not exceeding five
8
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.
(6) The pension of an employee retiring under
this regulation shall be based on the average
emoluments as defined under clause (d) of
regulation (2) of these regulations and the
increase not exceeding five years in his
qualifying service, shall not entitle him to any
notional fixation of pay for the purpose of
calculating his pension.”
6. From a reading of the above, it is evident that an
employee who has completed twenty years of qualifying
service is entitled to seek voluntary retirement from
service of the bank provided he gives a notice of not
less than three months in writing to the appointing
authority in that regard. What is important is that
in terms of proviso to Regulation 29(2), if the
appointing authority does not refuse to grant
permission for retirement before the expiry of the
period specified in the said notice, the retirement
becomes effective from the date of the expiry of the
said period. It is also noteworthy that in terms of
Regulation 29(3)(a) the appointing authority is
competent to curtail the period of notice of three
months in appropriate cases subject to the condition
that the employee shall not apply for commutation of
his pension before the expiry of the notice period.
9
7. In the case at hand, Mauzi Ram-the deceased
employee had rendered nearly 34 years of service in
the respondent-bank. He was, therefore, qualified to
receive pension in terms of the Regulations applicable
to him. It is also evident from a reading of
Regulation 29 that the deceased-employee was entitled
to seek voluntary retirement in terms of Regulation 29
for he had completed more than twenty years of service
th th
by the 8 October, 2007. As on 8 October, 2007 the
deceased-employee was entitled either to resign from
service or to seek premature retirement in terms of
Regulation 29 (supra). The question in that backdrop
th
is whether letter dated 8 October, 2007 was a letter
of resignation simplictor or could as well be treated
to be a letter seeking voluntary retirement. The High
Court, as seen earlier, has taken the view that the
letter was one of resignation that resulted in the
forfeiture of past service under Regulation 22 of the
Regulations. The High Court appears to have been
impressed by the use of the word “resignation” in the
th
employee’s letter dated 8 October, 2007. The use of
the expression “resignation”, however, is not, in our
opinion, conclusive. That is, in our opinion, so even
10
when this Court has always maintained a clear
distinction between “resignation” and “voluntary
retirement”. Whether or not a given communication is a
letter of resignation simplictor or can as well be
treated to be a request for voluntary retirement will
always depend upon the facts and circumstances of each
case and the provisions of the Rules applicable. The
distinction between the expressions “resignation” and
“voluntary retirement” was elaborately discussed by
this Court in UCO Bank and Ors. v. Sanwar Mal (2004) 4
SCC 412 where this Court was examining the provisions
of UCO Bank (Employees’) Pension Regulations 1995
applicable to a bank employee who had resigned from
service after giving an advance notice to the
appointing authority. So also in Reserve Bank of India
and Anr. v. CECIL Dennis Solomon and Anr. (2004) 9
SCC 461 this Court was considering the provisions of
the Reserve Bank of India Pension Regulations, 1990
while it made a distinction between what is
resignation on the one hand and voluntary retirement
on the other. At the same time a long line of
decisions have recognised that pension is neither a
bounty nor a matter of grace but is a payment for past
11
services rendered by the employee. Decisions of this
Court in D.S. Nakara and Ors. v. Union of India (1983)
1 SCC 305 , and Chairman Railway Board and Ors. v. C.R.
Rangadhamaiah and Ors. (1997) 6 SCC 623 , are clear
pronouncements on the subject. Reference may also be
made to Sudhir Chandra Sarkar v. Tata Iron and Steel
Co. Ltd. and Ors. (1984) 3 SCC 369 where this Court
observed:
“18. For centuries the courts swung in favour of
the view that pension is either a bounty or a
gratuitous payment for loyal service rendered
depending upon the sweet will or grace of the
employer not claimable as a right and therefore,
no right to pension can be enforced through
court. This view held the field and a suit to
recover pension was held not maintainable. With
the modern notions of social justice and social
security, concept of pension underwent a radical
change and it is now well-settled that pension
is a right and payment of it does not depend
upon the discretion of the employer, nor can it
be denied at the sweet will or fancy of the
employer. Deokinandan Prasad v. State of Bihar
(1971) 2 SCC 330 , State of Punjab v. Iqbal Singh
(1976) 2 SCC 1 and D.S. Nakara v. Union of India
(1983) 1 SCC 305. If pension which is the
retiral benefit as a measure of social security
can be recovered through civil suit, we see no
justification in treating gratuity on a
different footing. Pension and gratuity in the
matter of retiral benefits and for recovering
the same must be put on par.”
(emphasis supplied )
8. It is also well settled by several decisions of
this Court that while interpreting a statute the Court
12
ought to keep the legislative intent in mind and
eschew an interpretation which tends to restrict,
narrow down or defeat its beneficial provisions. In
S. Appukuttan v. Thundiyil Janaki Amma and Anr. (1988)
2 SCC 372 this Court observed:
“16. After the arguments were concluded, learned
counsel for the respondents have circulated a
copy of the judgment of this Court in CA No. 165
of 1974 etc. K.M. Mathew v. Hamsa Haji (1987) 3
SCC 326 delivered on 29-4-1987 wherein Section
7-D of the Kerala Land Reforms
Act, 1963 as
amended by the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment)
Act, 1969 has been interpreted as conferring
benefit thereunder only on persons whose
occupation of the private forests or unsurveyed
lands had a lawful origin and not on persons in
unlawful occupation based on trespass or
forcible and unlawful entry. We have carefully
considered the judgment and find that the
pronouncement therein does not in any way lend
support to the contentions of the respondents
herein. The scheme of Sections 7-A, 7-B, 7-C,
7-D, 8 and 9 of the Kerala Land Reforms Act,
1963 is entirely different and this position is
succinctly brought out by the following passage
in the decision referred to above. The court had
summed up the scheme of the Act in the following
words: (SCC p. 330, para 5)
On a careful scrutiny of the aforesaid
provisions, it becomes abundantly clear
that the intention of the legislature was
to grant protection only to persons whose
possession had a lawful origin in the sense
that they had either bona fide believed the
lands to be government’s land of which they
could later seek assignment or had taken
the lands on lease from persons whom they
bona fide believed to be competent to grant
such leases or had come into possession
with the intention of attorning to the
lawful owners or on the basis of
arrangements like varam etc. which were
only in the nature of licences and fell
short of a leasehold right. It was not
13
within the contemplation of the legislature
to confer the benefit of protection on
persons who had wilfully trespassed upon
lands belonging to others and whose
occupation was unlawful in its origin. The
expression “in occupation” occurring in
Section 7-D must be construed as meaning
“in lawful occupation”.
9. Again in Vatan Mal v. Kailash Nath (1989) 3 SCC
79 , this Court observed:
“9. …….The intention of the legislature to
confer the benefit of Section 13-A to all
tenants, provided actual eviction had not taken
place, could further be seen by the terms of
sub-clause (c). Under sub-clause (c) the
provisions of sub-clauses (a) and (b) have been
made applicable mutatis mutandis to all appeals
or applications for revision preferred or made
after the commencement of the amending Ordinance
and the only stipulation contained is that the
tenant preferring an appeal or an application
for revision should apply to the court within a
period of thirty days from the date of
presentation of the memorandum of appeal or the
application for revision for giving him the
benefit of Section 13-A…..”
10. Reference may also be made to Employees’ State
Insurance Corporation v. R.K. Swamy and Ors. (1994) 1
SCC 445 where this Court observed:
“14. There is no doubt at all that the said Act
is beneficent legislation. If, therefore, it is
reasonably possible so to construe the word
“shop” as to include the activity of an
advertising agency within it, that construction
must be preferred.”
11. To the same effect is a later decision of this
Court in Union of India and Anr. v. Pradeep Kumari and
14
Ors. (1995) 2 SCC 736 where this Court declared:
“8. We may, at the outset, state that having
regard to the Statement of Objects and Reasons,
referred to earlier, the object underlying the
enactment of Section 28-A is to remove
inequality in the payment of compensation for
same or similar quality of land arising on
account of inarticulate and poor people not
being able to take advantage of the right of
reference to the civil court under Section 18 of
the Act. This is sought to be achieved by
providing an opportunity to all aggrieved
parties whose land is covered by the same
notification to seek redetermination once any of
them has obtained orders for payment of higher
compensation from the reference court under
Section 18 of the Act. Section 28-A is,
therefore, in the nature of a beneficent
provision
intended to remove inequality and to
give relief to the inarticulate and poor people
who are not able to take advantage of right of
reference to the civil court under Section 18 of
the Act. In relation to beneficent legislation,
the law is well-settled that while construing
the provisions of such a legislation the court
should adopt a construction which advances the
policy of the legislation to extend the benefit
rather than a construction which has the effect
of curtailing the benefit conferred by it. The
provisions of Section 28-A should, therefore, be
construed keeping in view the object underlying
the said provision.”
(emphasis supplied)
12. Let us now examine the true purport of the letter
submitted by the deceased-employee in the light of the
above principles. Two distinct aspects stand out from
the record. The first is that the deceased-employee
had served for more than 34 years in the bank and was,
therefore, entitled to seek voluntary retirement if he
15
chose to leave prematurely. The second aspect which is
equally important is that the employee had chosen to
leave the employment not because of any disciplinary
or other action proposed against him or any order of
transfer or posting with which he was unhappy or
because any proceedings had been started that could
have visited him with any civil consequence if he had
continued in service, but because of his physical
inability to continue in service on account of
diseases with which he was stricken. This is evident
from the fact that not only in the letter, but also in
documents enclosed therewith the employee has laid
great stress on the reasons for leaving the service
prematurely. No such reasons were necessary if the
employee actually intended to resign in the true sense
of that term. Reasons why he was quitting were
obviously meant to support his case that he was doing
so under the compulsion of the circumstances. This is
rd
evident from letter dated 23 November, 2007 from the
Regional Manager which has recognised the poor health
condition of the deceased-employee and sanctioned 165
days without pay leave in his favour. It is also
th
evident from letter dated 29 November, 2007 by which
16
the acceptance of the request of the employee was
communicated to him that the employer had taken note
of his failing health, expressed the management’s
sympathy with him and wishing him early recovery from
his illness. The letter recognises the commitment of
the employee to his duties and the contribution made
by him in the growth of the organisation. To that
extent there is thus no communication gap between the
employee and the employer. The employee’s case,
however, is that all that he intended to do was to
seek premature/voluntary retirement from service. This
is, accordingly to the employee, evident also from his
th
letter dated 18 December, 2007 addressed within three
weeks of the acceptance of the request by the bank. In
the said letter the deceased-employee, inter alia ,
said:
“ As such, as per the said representation I
requested to accept my resignation from the
service. The whole reason and purpose, which I
have submitted and stated through my said
representation and my left over service of one
and half year have forced my conscience to seek
voluntary retirement from the service and not
resignation from the service in its literal
meaning.”
13. The letter once again enclosed with it medical
certificates and prescriptions in support of his
request that the letter written earlier and the
17
expression used therein may be understood in the right
spirit and terminal benefits released in his favour.
The refusal of the management of the bank to treat
th
letter dated 8 October, 2007 as a request for
premature retirement was conveyed to the employee on
th
24 June, 2008 in which the respondent-bank made
reference to the decision of this Court in UCO Bank’s
case (supra) whereby Regulation 22 of the Pension
Regulations was upheld by this Court.
14. When viewed in the backdrop of the above facts, it
is difficult to reject the contention urged on behalf
of the appellant that what the deceased-employee
th
intended to do by his letter dated 8 October, 2007
was to seek voluntary retirement and not resignation
from his employment. We say so in the light of several
attendant circumstances. In the first place, the
employee at the time of his writing the letter dated
th
8 October, 2007 was left with just about one and a
half years of service. It will be too imprudent for
anyone to suggest that a bank employee who has worked
with such commitment as earned him the appreciation of
the management would have so thoughtlessly given up
the retiral benefits in the form of pension etc. which
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he had earned on account of his continued dedication
to his job. If pension is not a bounty, but a right
which the employee acquires on account of long years
of sincere and good work done by him, the Court will
be slow in presuming that the employee intended to
waive or abandon such a valuable right without any
cogent reason. At any rate there ought to be some
compelling circumstance to suggest that the employee
had consciously given up the right and benefit, which
he had acquired so assiduously. Far from the material
on record suggesting any such conscious surrender
abandonment or waiver of the right to retiral benefit
including pension, we find that the material placed on
record clearly suggests that the employee had no
source of income or sustenance except the benefit that
he had earned for long years of service. This is
th
evident from a reading of the letter dated 8 October,
2007 in which the employee seeks release of his
retiral benefits at the earliest to enable him to
undergo medical treatment that he requires. The
letter, as seen earlier, lays emphasise on the fact
that for his sustenance the employee is dependent
entirely on such benefits. It is in that view
19
difficult for us to attribute to the employee the
intention to give up what was rightfully his in terms
of retiral benefits, when such benefits were the only
source not only for his survival but for his medical
treatment that he so urgently required. For a waiver
of a legally enforceable right earned by an employee,
it is necessary that the same is clear and
unequivocal, conscious and with full knowledge of the
consequences. No such intention can be gathered from
the facts and circumstances of the instant case. The
employee’s subsequent letters and communication which
are placed on record cannot be said to be an
afterthought. Being proximate in point of time letter
th
dated 8 October, 2007 must be treated to be a part of
the subsequent communication making the employee’s
intentions clear, at least for purposes of determining
the true intention underlying the act of the employee.
15. It is, in our opinion, abundantly clear that the
beneficial provisions of a Pension Scheme or Pension
Regulations have been interpreted rather liberally so
as to promote the object underlying the same rather
than denying benefits due to beneficiaries under such
provisions. In cases where an employee has the
20
requisite years of qualifying service for grant of
pension, and where he could under the service
conditions applicable seek voluntary retirement, the
benefit of pension has been allowed by treating the
purported resignation to be a request for voluntary
retirement. We see no compelling reasons for doing so
even in the present case, which in our opinion is in
essence a case of the deceased employee seeking
voluntary retirement rather than resigning.
16. We may at this stage refer to a few decisions of
this Court in which somewhat similar questions have
been examined and answered by this Court. In Sudhir
Chandra Sarkar v. Tata Iron and Steel Company Ltd. and
Ors. (1984) 3 SCC 369 , a permanent uncovenanted
employee of the company had served for 29 years
whereafter he tendered his resignation which the
employer accepted unconditionally. The Company’s
Retiring Gratuity Rules did not provide for payment of
gratuity to employees who resigned from service. This
Court while reversing the view taken by the High Court
held that termination of service by resignation was
tantamount to retirement by resignation entitling the
employee to retiral benefits. The following passage is
21
apposite in this regard:
“7. The contention of the respondent is that the
plaintiff did not retire from service but he
left the service of the Company by resigning his
post. This aspect to some extent agitated the
mind of the High Court. It may be dealt with
first. It is not only in dispute, but is in fact
conceded that the plaintiff did render
continuous service from December 31, 1929 till
August 31, 1959. On exact computation, the
plaintiff rendered service for 29 years and 8
months. Rule 6(a) which prescribed the
eligibility criterion for payment of gratuity
provides that every permanent unconvenanted
employee of the Company
whether paid on monthly,
weekly or daily basis will be eligible for
retiring gratuity which shall be equal to half a
month’s salary or wages for every completed year
of continuous service subject to a maximum of 20
years’ salary or wages in all provided that when
an employee dies, retires or is discharged under
Rule 11(2)(ii) and (iii) before he has served
the Company for a continuous period of 15 years
he shall be paid a gratuity at the rate therein
mentioned. The expression “retirement” has been
defined in Rule 1(g) to mean “the termination of
service by reason of any cause other than
removal by discharge due to misconduct”. It is
admitted that the plaintiff was a permanent
uncovenanted employee of the Company paid on
monthly basis and he rendered service for over
29 years and his service came to an end by
reason of his tendering resignation which was
unconditionally accepted. It is not suggested
that he was removed by discharge due to
misconduct. Unquestionably, therefore, the
plaintiff retired from service because by the
letter Annexure ‘B’ dated August 26, 1959, the
resignation tendered by the plaintiff as per his
letter dated July 27, 1959 was accepted and he
was released from his service with effect from
September 1, 1959. The termination of service
was thus on account of resignation of the
plaintiff being accepted by the respondent. The
plaintiff has, within the meaning of the
expression, thus retired from service of the
respondent and he is qualified for payment of
gratuity in terms of Rule 6.”
22
17. In Union of India and Ors. v. Lt. Col. P.S.
Bhargava (1997) 2 SCC 28 , this Court was dealing with
a case where the respondent was denied pension on the
ground that he had voluntarily retired from service.
Dismissing the appeal filed by the Union of India,
this Court held that Regulation 16 of the Pension
Regulations applicable to the respondent did not deal
with voluntary resignations and could not, therefore,
be pressed into service to deny pension to the
respondent. This Court said:
“19. Regulation 16 does not cover a case of
voluntary resignation. Regulation 16(b) does
refer to a case where an officer who has to his
credit the minimum period of qualifying service
being called upon to resign whose pension can be
reduced. Had the Regulations intended to take
away the right of a person to the terminal
benefits on his voluntary resigning, then a
specific provision similar to Regulation 16(b)
would have been incorporated in the Regulations
but this has not been done. Once an officer has
to his credit the minimum period of qualifying
service, he earns a right to get pension and as
the Regulations stand, that right can be taken
away only if an order is passed under Regulation
3 or 16. The cases of voluntary resignations of
officers, who have to their credit the minimum
period of qualifying service are not covered by
these two Regulations and, therefore, such
officers, who voluntarily resign, cannot be
automatically deprived of the terminal
benefits.”
18. In Sheel Kumar Jain v. New India Assurance Company
Limited and Ors. (2011) 12 SCC 197 , the facts were
23
somewhat similar to the case at hand. The appellant
in that case was an employee of an Insurance Company
governed by a Pension Scheme which provided, as in the
case at hand, forfeiture of the entire service of an
employee should he resign from his employment. The
appellant submitted a letter of resignation which
resulted in denial of his service benefits under the
scheme aforementioned. This Court, however, held that
since the employee had completed the qualifying
service and was entitled to seek voluntary retirement
under the scheme he could not be said to have resigned
so as to lose his pension. This Court said:
“25. Para 22 of the 1995 Pension Scheme states
that the resignation of an employee from the
service of the corporation or a company shall
entail forfeiture of his entire past service and
consequently he shall not qualify for pensionary
benefits, but does not define the term
“resignation”. Under sub-para (1) of Para 30 of
the 1995 Pension Scheme, an employee, who has
completed 20 years of qualifying service, may by
giving notice of not less than 90 days in
writing to the appointing authority retire from
service and under sub-para (2) of Para 30 of the
1995 Pension Scheme, the notice of voluntary
retirement shall require acceptance by the
appointing authority. Since “voluntary
retirement” unlike “resignation” does not entail
forfeiture of past services and instead
qualifies for pension, an employee to whom Para
30 of the 1995 Pension Scheme applies cannot be
said to have “resigned” from service.
26. In the facts of the present case, we find
that the appellant had completed 20 years of
qualifying service and had given notice of not
24
less than 90 days in writing to the appointing
authority of his intention to leave the service
and the appointing authority had accepted notice
of the appellant
and relieved him from service.
Hence, Para 30 of the 1995 Pension Scheme
applied to the appellant even though in his
letter dated 16-9-1991 to the General Manager of
Respondent 1 Company he had used the word
“resign”.”
19. In the result this appeal succeeds and is hereby
allowed. The impugned order passed by the High Court
is, hereby, set aside and the writ petition filed by
the deceased-employee allowed with a direction to the
th
respondent-bank to treat letter dated 8 October, 2007
as a notice for voluntary retirement of the employee
and for curtailment for three months notice period.
Depending upon the view the competent authority may
take on the question of curtailment of the notice
period and/or deduction of three months salary from
out of the retiral benefits of the deceased-employee,
the deceased-employee’s claim for payment of retiral
benefits due under the relevant rules including
pension shall be processed and released in favour of
the appellant-widow as expeditiously as possible but
not later than six months from the date a copy of this
order is served upon the bank. In the event of the
bank’s failure to comply with the directions within
25
six months as indicated above, the amount payable to
the employee and after his death his widow, shall
start earning interest @ 10% p.a. from the date the
period of six months expires. The parties are left to
bear their own costs.
……………………………..…….…..…J.
(T.S. THAKUR)
……………………………..…….…..…
J. (R. BANUMATHI)
New Delhi;
December 17, 2014