JUDGEMENT
SANJAY KISHAN KAUL, J. -
(1.) THE petitioner seeks to assail the order dated 14.03.2006 passed in O.A. No. 656/CH/2005 by the Central Administrative Tribunal, Chandigarh
Bench which in effect has substantially granted relief to the petitioner.
The allegation against the petitioner which gave rise to the
chargesheet is of serious and grave mis -conduct of distorting certain facts in
the note -sheet in the matter of pay scales of Laboratory Attendants which
resulted in issuance of a notification causing a huge loss to the government.
The petitioner is stated to have paid a bribe to one Shri N.K. Jain for
dropping the charges against him, but on fresh inquiry being conducted, the
petitioner was visited with the penalty of 50 per cent cut in pension by the
disciplinary authority on 30.10.2001 which was modified to one third cut in
pension on appeal by the Advisor to the Administrator in terms of order
dated 11.10.2002. However, the further challenge laid by the petitioner in
O.A. No. 991/CH/2003 subsisted on technical grounds on 18.05.2004 on
account of the powers to impose punishment being not available with the
concerned authority.
(2.) IT is in the background of the aforesaid that the petitioner faced seven charges of grave misconduct vide a memo dated 01.02.2001 including
in respect of illegal gratification. We are informed that in one of the
corruption cases, the petitioner obtained a clean acquittal on 30.05.2013,
while in the other the petitioner has been convicted, while Shri N.K. Jain
was acquitted and the appeal is pending before this Court.
The petitioner took various objections to departmental
proceedings, but the charges were held to be duly proved and vide the order
dated 11.04.2005 the entire pension of the petitioner was ordered to be
withheld permanently. It is this order which was assailed by the petitioner in
O.A. No. 656/CH/2005 which has resulted in the impugned order dated
14.03.2006.
In the impugned order, after discussing the conspectus of the matter, a finding was reached that the inquiry was properly held and the
petitioner had been rightly found guilty. However, while dealing with the
issue of quantum of punishment, the Tribunal opined as under: -
"23. In the present case, we find that the cut in entire pension of the applicant permanently is strikingly very harsh and unconscionable even if, the gravity of charges warrants severest punishment, delinquent's right to life to him and his family's survival under Article 21 of the Constitution cannot be taken away. Moreover, applicant has retired five years back, therefore, referring the matter to authorities concerned would further protract his case. Thus, in our considered opinion, interest of justice would be met if the matter of cut in entire pension is modified to the extent of one third cut in pension permanently. We order accordingly. 24. For the foregoing reasons, Original Application is partly allowed and respondents are directed to pass appropriate orders to make the payment of arrears of the pension in full from 01.11.2001 to 11.04.2005 and thereafter to calculate arrears as per modified order of penalty to one third cut in pension. Needful be done within the period of two months from the date of receipt/production of copy of this order."
(3.) THE sole point urged before us by learned counsel for the petitioner is that this cut in pension to the extent of one third cannot operate
permanently and it should have been with a qualification as to the time
period.;
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