EPFO Can't Recover Provident Fund Settlement From Employee On Account Of Employer's Alleged Post-Surrender Violation: Telangana High Court
The Telangana High Court has held that if an establishment and its provident fund trust fail to transfer past accumulations to the Employee Provident Fund Organisarion after surrender of exemption, the statutory liability is on the employer and the trust and not automatically on the employee who received settlement of his own PF dues. Justice Nagesh Bheemapaka held that, in the absence of...
The Telangana High Court has held that if an establishment and its provident fund trust fail to transfer past accumulations to the Employee Provident Fund Organisarion after surrender of exemption, the statutory liability is on the employer and the trust and not automatically on the employee who received settlement of his own PF dues.
Justice Nagesh Bheemapaka held that, in the absence of any specific statutory provision authorising direct recovery from the employee, and in the absence of compliance with principles of natural justice, such a recovery notice cannot be sustained.
Setting aside a demand notice issued to former Pennar Industries Chairman J.V. Nrupender Rao, the Court observed that the Employee Provident Fund Act is a beneficial welfare legislation and that its scheme consistently places obligations on the employer in matters concerning contribution, exempted trusts, and transfer of accumulations on surrender of exemption. The Court said:
“The Act is a beneficial and welfare legislation intended to secure social security benefits to employees. The scheme of the Act consistently places obligations upon the employer in matters relating to contribution, maintenance of funds, compliance with conditions of exemption and transfer of accumulations upon surrender of exemption.The liability to transfer the entire past accumulations to EPFO upon surrender of exemption with effect from 01.03.2023 squarely rests upon the establishment and the Trust. The statutory design does not, on the face of it, shift that obligation onto an employee who is a beneficiary of the Fund.
Respondents have not brought to the notice of this Court any specific provision under the Act or the Scheme which authorises direct recovery from an employee of provident fund accumulations received by him, merely because the employer/Trust failed to transfer the total accumulations to EPFO within the stipulated time. The Act, undoubtedly, provides machinery for recovery of dues from employers and for proceeding against establishments for non-compliance. However, the impugned notice is not directed against the establishment or the Trust but seeks to fasten liability upon the Petitioner".
The petitioner stated that Pennar Industries, an exempted establishment with its own approved provident fund trust, had maintained his PF accumulations with the trust. After resigning in 2023 on account of ill health, he sought settlement of his PF dues. The trust then passed a resolution on 20.07.2023 to release Rs.2.50 crore towards his provident fund accumulations, while the balance Rs.70 lakh was said to be stuck in Yes Bank bonds that had been frozen. A sum of Rs.2,50,33,598 was thereafter remitted to his account on 21.07.2023.
However, the petitioner later received a notice dated 17.02.2025 from the EPFO directing him to remit Rs.2,50,33,598 along with 12% interest within seven days. The reason cited was that the establishment had surrendered exemption with effect from 01.03.2023, and therefore the payment made to him by the trust after that date was contrary to Paragraph 28(1)(ii) of the EPF Scheme, 1952.
The EPFO argued that once exemption is surrendered, the employer must transfer the total past accumulations standing to the credit of subscribers to the EPFO within the prescribed period, and that the trust was not authorised to make any direct settlement thereafter. According to the EPFO, instead of transferring the total past accumulations of Rs.8,51,98,967, the trust made a partial payment to the petitioner after surrender of exemption, which violated the EPF Act and the Scheme.
The High Court accepted that Paragraph 28(1)(ii) cast a mandatory obligation to transfer the entire past accumulations upon surrender of exemption. But it held that this obligation is cast “squarely upon the employer and the Trust,” and not on the employee.
The Court noted that the authorities had not pointed to any specific provision in the EPF Act or Scheme enabling recovery directly from the employee merely because the employer or trust failed to comply with the statutory mandate.
The Court also found it significant that there was no allegation that the petitioner had obtained the amount by fraud, misrepresentation, suppression of facts or collusion. The only basis of the impugned notice was the alleged statutory violation by the trust after surrender of exemption.
Further, the Court held that the notice suffered from violation of natural justice. It noted that the demand directing refund of a substantial amount with 12% interest had been issued without any prior show-cause notice or opportunity of hearing to the petitioner. Such a direction, the Court said, entailed serious civil consequences and therefore had to conform to principles of natural justice unless expressly excluded by statute, which had not been shown here.
The Court, however, clarified that it was not expressing any opinion on whether Pennar Industries and its PF trust had violated Paragraph 28(1)(ii), and left it open to the EPFO to initiate appropriate proceedings against the establishment and/or the trust in accordance with the EPF Act and Scheme.
It also said that if the authorities were of the view that liability could legally be fastened on the petitioner under any specific statutory provision, they would be at liberty to issue a fresh notice clearly setting out the statutory basis, factual foundation and computation, after giving him a reasonable opportunity of hearing and passing a reasoned order.
Accordingly, the Court set aside the notice dated 17.02.2025 insofar as it required the petitioner to refund Rs.2,50,33,598 with interest at 12% per annum within seven days.
Case Title: J.V. Nrupender Rao v. Regional P.F. Commissioner-II, Regional Office & Ors.
Case No.: W.P. No.6276 of 2025
Appearance: Sri A. Narasimha Rao for the petitioner; Sri Vijhay K. Punna, Standing Counsel for Respondents 1 and 2.