Teacher's Gratuity Dream Shattered: Delhi HC Rules CCS Pension Rules Override PG Act
In a significant ruling for government school employees, the dismissed a writ petition by Vimla Singh, a former Post Graduate Teacher (History) at . Justices Anil Kshetarpal and Amit Mahajan held that employees governed by the —as adopted by KVS—fall outside the , due to its exclusionary definition under Section 2(e). Resignation triggered forfeiture of her 13 years of service under , barring gratuity claims.
A Decade of Dedication Ends in Resignation and Rejection
Vimla Singh joined KVS as a PGT (History) on , serving continuously until , when chronic back pain forced her resignation—accepted on . Opting for the GPF-cum-pension scheme at joining, her service fell under KVS bye-laws mirroring CCSP Rules.
Post-resignation, KVS denied retiral benefits, citing (identical to ) for forfeiting past service on voluntary resignation. Singh approached the under the PG Act, which in ordered payment, but KVS secured a stay via writ proceedings (still pending). She then challenged the bye-law at the (CAT) in OA No. 81/2018, dismissed on ; her review (RA No. 97/2023) followed on . This led to her writ petition, W.P.(C) 14081/2023, rejected on .
The core question: Does the PG Act apply despite CCSP Rules, or does resignation forfeit all claims?
Petitioner's Plea: Statutory Right Trumps Service Rules
Singh's counsel argued mandates gratuity for over five years' continuous service, including resignations—her 13+ years qualified. As a society under the , KVS must follow the PG Act; bye-laws or CCSP Rules cannot override Parliament's law. unconstitutionally strips post-qualifying service, citing the Supreme Court's five-judge bench in Chairman, Railway Board v. C.R. Rangadhamaiah (1996) 6 SCC 623.
KVS Counters: Rules She Accepted Govern Her Fate
KVS maintained Singh accepted CCSP Rules at entry, binding her to 's clear forfeiture on resignation. The PG Act doesn't apply, as supported by Supreme Court precedents: Union of India v. Braj Nandan Singh (2005) 8 SCC 325 (mandatory forfeiture) and N. Manoharan v. Administrative Officer (2026 INSC 143) (exclusion under Section 2(e) for rule-governed employees).
Dissecting Definitions: Why PG Act Takes a Backseat
The bench meticulously parsed
, excluding those
"governed by any other Act or by any rules providing for payment of gratuity."
Though KVS is a society, its adoption of CCSP Rules—which regulate gratuity—
. Singh's entitlements stemmed from these rules, not the PG Act.
's ? Inapplicable, as exclusion precedes it. N. Manoharan confirmed statutory rules like CCSP exclude PG Act coverage. Braj Nandan Singh affirmed 's unambiguous forfeiture, leaving no qualifying service. The Rangadhamaiah reliance failed—no retrospective change existed; applied from day one.
Key Observations from the Bench
"The is structured in two parts... The is clear that where gratuity is regulated by a distinct statutory or rule-based framework applicable to such an employee, the PG Act would not operate. The exclusion is substantive and not merely procedural."(Para 20)
"Once such statutory rules occupy the field, the employee cannot simultaneously invoke a parallel statutory regime under the PG Act."(Para 22)
"In the present case, once it is held that the Petitioner is governed by statutory rules providing for gratuity and therefore does not fall within the definition of 'employee' under Section 2(e), the PG Act itself has no application."(Para 25)
"The language of [ ] is mandatory, clear and unambiguous. Upon resignation, past service stands forfeited."(Para 26, citing Braj Nandan Singh )
No Relief, Precedent Stands Firm
The court upheld CAT's orders:
"The Impugned Orders are upheld. The present Petition is dismissed."
(Para 31-32)
This clarifies that for CCSP-governed employees like KVS staff, resignation severs retiral ties—no dual claims under the PG Act. Future cases may see stricter scrutiny of "governed by rules" exclusions, impacting thousands in autonomous bodies adopting government service conditions.