Authorities Cannot Rely On 8-Year-Old Notice To Recover Provident Fund Dues Or Freeze Bank Accounts: Bombay High Court
The Bombay High Court has held that authorities cannot freeze bank accounts or recover provident fund dues without issuing a fresh notice and providing an opportunity of hearing to the affected party. The Court observed that reliance on a stale notice issued several years earlier violates principles of natural justice and renders the recovery action unsustainable.Justice Prafulla S. Khubalkar...
The Bombay High Court has held that authorities cannot freeze bank accounts or recover provident fund dues without issuing a fresh notice and providing an opportunity of hearing to the affected party. The Court observed that reliance on a stale notice issued several years earlier violates principles of natural justice and renders the recovery action unsustainable.
Justice Prafulla S. Khubalkar was hearing a writ petition filed by the Municipal Council, Pusad, challenging a recovery order dated 08 December 2025 passed under Section 8-F(3)(i) of the Employees' Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952. The dispute arose from proceedings initiated for the recovery of provident fund dues, which were originally determined by an order under Section 7-A of the Act. The petitioner contended that the impugned recovery order was passed without issuing any fresh notice or granting an opportunity of hearing, despite serious civil consequences, including freezing of multiple bank accounts.
The Court found that the impugned order dated 08 December 2025 did not refer to any prior notice issued in proximity to the order. It noted that the authorities had relied on a notice issued on 14 June 2017. Such a notice, issued eight years earlier, could not be treated as a valid or reasonable notice for initiating fresh recovery proceedings.
“… the order dated 08.12.2025 under Section 8-F of the Act is passed without giving any prior reasonable notice and opportunity of hearing to the petitioner… the notice dated 14.06.2017 issued prior to eight years cannot be considered as a reasonable notice before passing the order,” the Court observed.
The Court emphasized that a valid notice must be reasonable and temporally proximate to the action sought to be taken. A stale notice lacking such proximity fails to satisfy the requirement of fairness and denies the affected party an effective opportunity to respond; the drastic action of freezing as many as 25 bank accounts and recovering substantial sums without fresh notice was arbitrary and unsustainable. It observed:
“A stale notice issued prior to eight years cannot be made the basis to pass a final order having serious and drastic consequences to the extent of freezing all the bank accounts of the Municipal Council (25 Bank Accounts) and unilaterally recovering an amount of more than Rupees Three Crores from some of the accounts.”
The Court also took note of the fact that the petitioner's appeal against the underlying liability was pending before the Tribunal and that the application for restoration of the appeal had been accepted. It held that initiating recovery in such circumstances, without affording proper opportunity, was hasty.
Accordingly, the High Court allowed the writ petition and quashed the impugned recovery order dated 08 December 2025, passed under Section 8-F of the Act.
Case Title: Municipal Council, Pusad v. Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner & Ors. [Writ Petition No. 7975 of 2025]
Citation: 2026 LiveLaw (Bom) 118