'State Cannot Sleep For 20 Years & Recover Salary Before Retirement': Calcutta High Court Quashes Recovery Against Indian Museum Employee
Holding that the State cannot resurrect decades-old service decisions to penalise a blameless employee on the eve of retirement, the Calcutta High Court quashed a show-cause notice and recovery proceedings initiated against a Hindi Translator nearly 19 years after his financial upgradations and pay fixations had been repeatedly approved and acted upon.
Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay observed that “public administration is not a shifting desert where the sands of legality rearrange to suit administrative whims,” adding that when the State sleeps over its powers for decades, it forfeits the right to disturb the financial repose of an employee who neither misrepresented nor committed fraud. The Court emphasised that recovery of alleged excess payments after prolonged delay, particularly from a retired or soon-to-retire Group-C employee, is “iniquitous, arbitrary and constitutionally unconscionable.”
The petitioner, Ashok Tripathy, joined service in 1990 and was granted a personal upgradation in 1998 with retrospective effect from 1991. Though the upgradation was briefly cancelled in 1999, the High Court had earlier quashed that cancellation in 2000. Thereafter, he was granted ACP benefits in 2002 and successive pay revisions under the Fifth and Sixth Central Pay Commissions, all of which were consistently implemented and reaffirmed by the department for nearly two decades.
However, in 2017, the authorities suddenly issued a show-cause notice alleging wrongful fixation and proposed recovery of excess payments. Tripathy contended that the action was pre-determined, barred by delay and laches, and contrary to the Supreme Court's rulings protecting employees from recovery of long-standing payments made without fault or misrepresentation.
Rejecting the respondents' plea that “mistake does not confer a right,” the Court held that while the doctrine may be legally correct, it cannot justify reopening settled benefits after 15–20 years, especially when the employer itself repeatedly examined and endorsed the pay structure.
The Court noted that every pay revision between 1996 and 2011 incorporated the disputed benefits, no audit objection was raised, and there was “cumulative endorsement, not cumulative mistake.” The belated notice, the Court found, reflected a foreclosed mind rather than a genuine inquiry and amounted to an impermissible attempt to indirectly circumvent the earlier judicial protection.
Relying on precedents including State of Punjab v. Rafiq Masih (White Washer) and Thomas Daniel v. State of Kerala, the Court reiterated that recovery from lower-rung employees, retirees, or in cases where excess payments continued for over five years without employee fault, is legally impermissible. It held that compelling recovery after retirement would undermine dignity and financial security and offend Article 14.
Accordingly, the Court quashed the 2017 show-cause notice and consequential orders, affirmed all financial upgradations and pay fixations granted to the petitioner, and restrained the authorities from initiating any recovery, directing correction of records in his favour.
Case: Ashok Tripathy -Vs- Union of India & Ors.
Case No: W.P.A. 13911 of 2017