Finance HomeNational
No arrears in case of retrospective promotion
Sunday, December 28, 2008 12:46 [IST]
New Delhi: The Delhi High Court has held that an employee is not entitled to arrears if he or she is promoted with retrospective effect.

Justice S N Aggarwal passed the order on a petition filed by an employee of India Tourism Development Corporation, seeking court's direction to the government to grant her arrears for the period during which she was denied promotion and was later given promotion with retrospective effect.

"I hold that she is not entitled to any arrears of salary for the period of her notional promotion preceding the date of her actual promotion," the court said.

The court referred previous Supreme Court verdict formulating the doctrine of "no work no pay".

"It has been held that the salary and allowances of a promotional post cannot be granted to an incumbent as no work was done by employee in the promotional post till the time the incumbent was actually promoted," the court referring to apex court judgement.

The petitioner, Shashi Kiran Suri, had pleaded that as she was denied the promotion because of the mistake of the administration, the authorities are bound to pay the arrears of salary along with the benefit with retrospective effect to undo their mistake.

The Corporation, however, contended that the promotion was not granted to her because of pendency of chargesheet against her at the relevant time.
Therefore, denial of the promotion to the petitioner was bona fide and no fault can be attributed to the management in this regard, it pleaded.
Source : PTI

 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Press Releases
Stock Research
Market Tools
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives

  
More Finance News
Shutdown paralyses Telangana
Indian Railways to upgrade 1000...
Tiger Woods scandal cost sponsors...
ICICI sees growth in 2010
'3 idiots' makes a record breaking...
Oil tops $79 mark amid supply...
China grew at 7.8pc in 12 months
Police go shopping for hi-tech...
Pay more for that crunchy bite next...
Financial resolutions for 2010
Tighter credit won't ease inflation
Oil price might rise "reasonably"
Jingle bells in Ahemdabad
Delhi earns 8,300 crore in taxes
Blackberry blacksout in America
Citigroup returns $20 bn in bailout...
India may Raise Interest Rates in...
Spice Mobile's Bangladesh...
100 million world bank loan for...
Do's n don'ts of an insurance...
Indian rupee holds steady

    WORTH A CLICK
  Sarees
Baby Clothes
Jewellery
Bluetooth Headsets
Health & Fitness