Tag: justice delayed

Supreme Court Orders Assam to Provincialise Services of Music Teachers
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Orders Assam to Provincialise Services of Music Teachers

The Supreme Court held that the appellants' right to provincialisation had crystallised under the 2011 Act. Despite favourable findings, the High Court erred in not granting mandamus relief. The Court modified the impugned judgment, ruling that a Writ Court has inherent power under Article 226 to mould relief and grant consequential mandamus to remedy injustice, which it duly issued. Facts Of The Case: The case originated from a batch of appeals before the Supreme Court, filed by a large group of Music Teachers employed in various provincialised schools in Assam. Their grievance stemmed from the State of Assam's failure to formally provincialise their services under the Assam Venture Educational Institutions (Provincialisation of Services) Act, 2011. The appellants' eligibility had been ...
Supreme Court Rules: “Vacancies Can Increase After Advertisement” – Quashes Illegal Terminations from 2008
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Rules: “Vacancies Can Increase After Advertisement” – Quashes Illegal Terminations from 2008

The Supreme Court held that appointments made in excess of originally advertised vacancies are permissible under the rules if filled from a valid waiting list within a reasonable period, typically the recruitment year or the succeeding year. Terminations based solely on the "excess vacancy" ground were found unjustified when such appointments align with the recruitment rule's intent and the advertisement's stipulation that vacancy numbers were subject to change. Facts Of The Case: The case involved four appellants who were appointed to Class IV posts in the District Judgeship of Ambedkar Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, in 2001 against an advertisement that notified twelve vacancies but included a rider that the number of posts could increase or decrease. In 2008, their services were te...
Supreme Court Rules: Promotion Cannot Be Denied Due to Illegal Departmental Proceedings
Supreme Court

Supreme Court Rules: Promotion Cannot Be Denied Due to Illegal Departmental Proceedings

The Supreme Court held that when departmental proceedings are quashed for being illegal and vitiated by delay, the employee must be restored to the position they would have occupied in the service's normal course. This entitles them to retrospective promotion from the date their immediate junior was promoted, with all attendant consequential benefits, including pay, allowances, and pensionary benefits. Facts Of The Case: The appellant, Jyotshna Singh, was a Block Development Officer in Jharkhand. In 2007, an audit objection raised a suspicion of misappropriation, but a subsequent inquiry by the Deputy Commissioner cleared her, finding the expenditure was within the estimated cost. A decade later, in 2017, a charge-sheet was issued on the same allegation, culminating in a punishment of wi...