
| ASPECTS | DETAILS |
| Case Title | Union of India & Ors. vs Doly Loyi |
| Introduction | Appeal against Delhi HC’s decision upholding CAT’s order to promote Doly Loyi despite pending criminal charges. |
| Factual Background | Doly Loyi, a government officer, was denied promotion due to a pending corruption case. The sealed cover procedure was invoked. |
| Legal Issues | Whether the mere grant of prosecution sanction constitutes a pending prosecution, justifying the sealed cover procedure. |
| Applicable Law | Office Memorandum dated 14th September 1992, and relevant provisions of the CCS (Pension) Rules, 1972. |
| Analysis | The court ruled that the prosecution for a criminal charge begins only after the charge sheet is issued, not at the grant of sanction. |
| Conclusion | Appeal dismissed. Sealed cover opened, showing Doly Loyi was fit for promotion. The court ordered the promotion to be effective. |
| Current Scenario | Doly Loyi’s promotion has been ordered, with back wages and other consequential benefits. |
CASE SUMMARY – In this case, a government officer was denied promotion due to a corruption case filed against him, and the sealed cover procedure was applied. The case hinged on whether the mere grant of prosecution sanction counted as a “pending prosecution.” The Supreme Court ruled that a prosecution is considered pending only after a charge sheet is filed, not when a sanction is granted. Since the charge sheet was filed after the Departmental Promotion Committee (DPC) meeting, the sealed cover procedure was wrongly applied. The court ordered Loyi’s promotion, declaring him fit and entitled to back wages.
“The prosecution of a criminal charge is deemed to have commenced not from the grant of sanction but from the filing of a charge sheet.” – Supreme Court of India
SOURCE – SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
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