The case of Meena Kumari v. State of H.P. and Others concerns the illegal withholding of retiral benefits by a government department based on “contemplated” disciplinary actions that were never formally initiated.
Factual Background
- Service History: The petitioner was appointed as a Peon in 2004 and promoted to the post of Clerk in 2017. She retired from service upon reaching the age of 58 on February 28, 2025.
- The Allegations: Shortly before her retirement, the Department initiated a preliminary inquiry into allegations that she had produced fake qualification and date-of-birth documents and tampered with her service records.
- The Dispute: While the inquiry committee submitted a report in February 2025 confirming these allegations, the Department failed to issue a formal charge sheet or initiate disciplinary proceedings for over 14 months following her retirement.
- Withheld Benefits: The Department released the petitioner’s GPF in October 2025 but continued to withhold her pension, gratuity, leave encashment, and Group Insurance Scheme (GIS) benefits.
The High Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel ruled in favor of the petitioner, emphasizing that statutory retiral dues are “earned property” that cannot be denied without due process:
- Inadequacy of Preliminary Inquiry: The Court held that the findings of a preliminary inquiry alone, without the issuance of a formal charge sheet, are insufficient grounds to deny an employee their statutory retiral dues.
- Unjustifiable Delay: The Court found the delay of more than a year in initiating any formal action post-retirement to be “totally unjustifiable”.
- Intent vs. Action: The Department’s “intent” to initiate action (contemplating a charge sheet) is not a legal substitute for actual disciplinary proceedings. Since no formal action had been taken since her superannuation in February 2025, there was no legal justification for withholding her benefits.
Conclusion and Directives
The Court allowed the petition and directed the respondents to:
- Release all retiral benefits (pension, gratuity, leave encashment, and GIS) to the petitioner within six weeks.
- Pay statutory interest on these payments for the period they were delayed.
The Court explicitly declined to comment on whether the Department still possessed the legal right to initiate disciplinary proceedings at this late stage, focusing solely on the immediate illegality of withholding earned benefits without a formal charge.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 196
Meena Kumari V. State of H.P. And Others (D.O.J. 22.04.2026)
Loading Viewer...






