Supreme Court clarifies that premature tenure curtailment based on performance is not automatically punitive.
SUPREME COURT ON TENURE CURTAILMENT-TRANSFER & STIGMATIC ORDERS
CASE SUMMARY- In Sadachari Singh Tomar vs. Union of India, the Supreme Court upheld the premature curtailment of the appellant's tenure as Assistant Director General in ICAR. The appellant alleged victimisation after exposing corruption and challenged adverse performance reports and reversion to Senior Scientist. The Court held that ICAR, being an autonomous body, was not subject to Article 311 protections. Since the appointment order allowed tenure "for five years or until further orders," the authority could curtail tenure based on performance assessment. The remarks "unsatisfactory" and "below average" were held non-stigmatic. Mala fide allegations were unproven. Appeals were dismissed.
| ASPECTS | DETAILS |
| Case Title | Sadachari Singh Tomar vs. Union of India & Ors. |
| Introduction | The Supreme Court examined whether curtailment of the appellant's tenure as Assistant Director General (ADG-ARIS) in ICAR and his reversion to Senior Scientist was illegal, punitive, stigmatic, or mala fide. |
| Factual Background | The appellant was appointed ADG-ARIS for five years or until further orders. He alleged that after exposing procurement irregularities in ICAR, adverse Annual Assessment Reports (AARs) were issued and his tenure was prematurely ended on 31.01.2001. CAT and Delhi High Court dismissed his challenge. |
| Legal Issues | 1. Whether Article 311 protection applied. 2. Whether tenure curtailment was punitive. 3. Whether reversion amounted to reduction in rank. 4. Whether the order was stigmatic. 5. Whether mala fides were proved. |
| Applicable Law | Article 311 Constitution of India, Service Jurisprudence, ICAR Rules & Bye-laws, Agricultural Research Scientists Rules, principles of judicial review in transfer/service matters. |
| Analysis | Court held ICAR is an autonomous society, not a civil post under Union/State, hence Article 311 inapplicable. Appointment expressly allowed tenure till five years or earlier orders. Curtailment based on performance review was administrative, not punitive. Words like "unsatisfactory" and "below average" were non-stigmatic. Mala fide allegations lacked concrete proof. |
| Conclusion | Supreme Court dismissed the appeals and upheld CAT and High Court decisions. |
| Current Scenario | Appellant had already superannuated in July 2013. Retiral benefits were directed to be released earlier and reportedly paid. Judgment now stands as precedent on contractual tenure curtailment and non-stigmatic service orders. |
"Administrative assessment based on performance, when exercised fairly and without mala fides, does not become punitive merely because tenure is curtailed."
SOURCE - SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

