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An employee was arrested in a criminal charge for theft from office and was suspended in the year 2000. He was acquitted on technical ground by the Hon\'ble Court after 13 years. Thereafter he has been reinstated in duty after keeping under prolonged suspension period of 13 years. He has been allowed to resume duty from the year 2013 but decision was kept pending on the charge-sheet.
In the disciplinary proceedings, the disciplinary authority has decided to impose penalty to treat 5 years out of 13 years of suspension period as \"dies non\" for all purposes.
During the entire 13 years period of suspension, he has been paid subsistence allowance.
Now whether subsistence allowed of the period of 5 years treated as \'dies non\' should be recovered.

From India, Mumbai
Hi Yusuf,
The definition of dies non is as "In service terms, “dies non” means a day, which cannot be treated as duty for any purpose. It does not constitute break in service. But the period treated as ‘dies non’ does not qualify as service for pensionary benefits or increment"
I need to understand that why the disciplinary authority is considering the 5 years as dies non when the hon'able court has given its judgement in employee's favor irrespective of any so reason. As per my opinion non subsistence can be recovered.

From India, New Delhi
Dear Yusuf,
Had I correctly understood your post, the march of the events should have been as follows:
1) The delinquent employee might have been charged with the misconduct of committing theft while on duty in the year 2000.
2) So the management lodged a complaint with the Police accordingly and basing on which a criminal case was instituted against the delinquent in a Criminal Court.
3)Simultaneously, the management proceeded against him as per the service rules of the organization and placed him under suspension pending enquiry and started paying him subsistence allowance since 2000.
4) It is discernible from the post that the enquiry was conducted soon after suspension and the final orders was not issued in anticipation of the outcome of criminal trial.
5) Just because of the reason that the Court's verdict of 2013 was of acquittal based on technical grounds only and not exoneration of the accused, even after his reinstatement, the management wants to award some punishment on the same charges leveled by them and that's the "dies non of five years of service " mentioned.
Am I correct?
Well, since the misconduct involved is theft by the delinquent the management is not precluded from proceeding against the same set of charges internally or departmentally and can come to their own conclusion independent of the Criminal Court's verdict and award a punishment as they deem fit. Hence the punishment of dies non for a period of 5 years which implies that those five years would not be considered for service benefits,if any.
What about the remaining period of suspension undergone by the employee? how you are going to treat those years? As duty period with wages?
Any way, subsistence allowance once paid can not be recovered. And you have to pay him wages minus the subsistence allowance already paid for the period other than the five years.

From India, Salem
Thanks Harpreet WaliaJi and UmakanthanJi.
Yes Sir. Although Court's verdict of 2013 was of acquittal based on technical grounds only, but the management wants to award some punishment because of misconduct of committing theft while on duty in the year 2000.
However, to honour Court's decision and taking a lenient view, he has been allowed to resume duty in the year 2013. The remaining 8 years period of suspension undergone by the employee shall be treated as duty period with full pay.
With kind regards,

From India, Mumbai
KK!HR
1534

Dear Yusuf, It is a bit confusing, out of 13 years of suspension, the decision is to treat 8 years as on duty and five years as dies non. l feel the order cannot be sustained in court of law. Is there a punishment of treating suspension period to be dies non provided in your rules? Technically, when subsistence allowance is paid, how that period can be treated as dies-non.
From India, Mumbai
Dear Yusuf,
In this context our senior counsel Mr Umakanthan.M has given brief description to the topic. The substnenace allownce is a matter of right of an employee, when an employee keep-out of job whatever the reason be. It is a pitiable matter that to reasoned a theft commited by one took 13 long years by you. In this instant case 13 years is “dies-non” period which is neither counted as part of service nor considered as break in service. The penalty determined can not be adjusted against substinenece allownce. Rather the workmen at full liberty to challenge your decission of penalty, which seemed superficial.

From India, Mumbai
This is in response to the comments of our learned friends Prabhat and KK!HR. Besides, their response prompts me to rethink and therefore compels me to modify my earlier comment on the proposal of the management for which I am thankful to both of them.
At the outset, I would like to remind them the legal position already they are well aware of that suspension pending enquiry, per se, neither a punishment nor severance of the employer-employee relationship and even punitive suspension can not exceed the maximum no. of days prescribed in the standing orders or service regulations.
When any misconduct partaking the nature of a criminal offence is committed by an employee during the course of his employment, the employer has the discretion to take criminal action through the Police or to initiate departmental action under the Rules of discipline only or to take both the actions depending on the gravity of the misconduct and the circumstances. When both the channels of action are simultaneously preferred by the employer, since criminal action through Court of Law being a long-drawn battle and based on strict rules of evidence, the employer may proceed with the departmental disciplinary action, complete all the procedural steps and dispose it on merits independently or await the outcome of the criminal case. In case the criminal case ends up with conviction, the punishment awarded by the employer either before or after the Court's verdict would not get affected. Otherwise in the event of the acquittal being on exoneration of the accused/employee, the punishment if any awarded by the employer will not withstand; if the acquittal is purely on technical grounds, it will not affect the decision of the employer in the concurrent departmental proceedings. That's why some employers await the outcome of the criminal trial and award punishment to the delinquent on the same set of charges departmentally tried only after its final disposal.
Now, coming to the doubt raised by M/S. Prabhat and KK!HR. The delinquent employee was kept under suspension continuously for a period of 13 years coterminous with the disposal of the Criminal Case ending in acquittal on technical grounds. As such the employer can take any final decision independent of the verdict of the Criminal Court. He can issue a severe warning or award punitive suspension ( the no. of days is limited to the maximum as per the standing orders ), stop increments with or without cumulative effect or dismiss him. But, the employer wants to show some lenience for some reason or other and that leniency or mercy gives way to some problem. That is, any punishment other than dismissal would require the regularisation of the entire period of suspension of 13 years failing which it would tantamount to double punishment. In case of regularisation, the wages due for the entire 13 years of suspension should be paid, of course, after adjusting the subsistence allowance already paid. In order to circumvent this legal impediment only, the management proposes to award a punishment of "dies non for a period of five years of suspension already undergone" because it would disqualify him from claiming all employment benefits including wages.
If the workman simply accepts it in view of reemployment, there will be no problem. If he agitates it later, I am doubtful whether this would withstand judicial scrutiny.

From India, Salem
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