Sh Dinesh Kumar vs State Bank Of India And Others on 6 April, 2026

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    Delhi High Court – Orders

    Sh Dinesh Kumar vs State Bank Of India And Others on 6 April, 2026

    Author: Sanjeev Narula

    Bench: Sanjeev Narula

                              $~68
                              *         IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                              +         W.P.(C) 4362/2026
                                        SH DINESH KUMAR                                                                        .....Petitioner
                                                                      Through:            Mr. R. S. Gautam, Advocate.
    
                                                                      versus
    
                                        STATE BANK OF INDIA AND OTHERS            .....Respondents
                                                     Through: Mr. Akshit Kapur, AoR for SBI.
    
                                        CORAM:
                                        HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJEEV NARULA
                                                                      ORDER
    

    % 06.04.2026

    1. This petition assails the order dated 31st May, 2023, whereby the
    Disciplinary Authority imposed the penalty of dismissal from service; the
    appellate order dated 24th September, 2024; and the review order dated 30th
    July, 2025. Consequential service and retiral benefits are also sought.
    Background

    SPONSORED

    2. The Petitioner joined the State Bank of India [“the Bank”] on 14th
    March, 1988 as a clerk/typist and, during the relevant period, was serving as
    Deputy Manager (Accountant) at the Bank’s Chandni Chowk Branch, Delhi.

    3. On 14th June, 2021, the Petitioner and the then Cash Officer, Mr.
    Rajeev Kumar Gupta, entered the strong room/cash bin area for counting
    cash. During the course of the day, officials from another branch visited for
    verification of the cash position of the branch. It is recorded that, at that
    stage, no shortage in the currency chest was reported and the day-end
    reporting to RBI/FSLO proceeded. Later in the evening, a shortage of INR

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    20 lakhs in the running bin was reported, and, during a search, three packets
    of INR 2,000 notes amounting to INR 6 lakhs were found in a drawer at the
    Petitioner’s workstation. The amount was thereafter taken into custody by
    branch officials.

    4. The disciplinary proceedings, however, proceed on a broader
    allegation. The impugned order dated 31st May, 2023 records that, while the
    Petitioner was posted as Deputy Manager (Accountant), unauthorized
    withdrawals from the currency chest and ATMs/CDMs aggregated to INR
    61.42 lakhs; that INR 6 lakhs was recovered from his drawer on 14 th June,
    2021; and that the resulting net loss to the Bank was INR 55.42 lakhs. The
    order further records that the Petitioner had, in writing, made statements
    admitting withdrawal of funds on 14th June, 2021 and 15th June, 2021.

    5. A charge-sheet dated 22nd December, 2021, subsequently amended on
    23rd March, 2022, framed nine allegations, including alleged
    misappropriation of INR 44 lakhs from the currency chest, shortage of INR
    11.42 lakhs in ATMs/CDMs, unauthorized use of another custodian’s
    credentials, use of a third-party account for diversion of funds, possession of
    INR 6 lakhs in the drawer, reliance on written statements attributed to the
    Petitioner, and consequential financial and reputational loss to the Bank. In
    the first inquiry, all nine allegations were held proved.

    6. Upon conclusion of the first inquiry, a tentative penalty order dated 4 th
    August, 2022 proposed dismissal from service. Thereafter, further
    proceedings were undertaken, including a reinvestigation by Mr. Naresh
    Kumar Kohli, whose report dated 18th November, 2022 and clarification
    dated 22nd December, 2022 were considered. A further inquiry was
    conducted on aspects described as involving “new facts”. The appellate and

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    review orders record that, in the subsequent inquiry, six allegations were
    examined, of which four were held proved, one partly proved, and one not
    proved.

    7. By the impugned order dated 31st May, 2023, the Disciplinary
    Authority considered the record of both inquiries and the Petitioner’s
    submissions, and imposed the penalty of dismissal from service under Rule
    67(j) of the State Bank of India Officers’ Service Rules, 1992 [“SBI Service
    Rules”]. The period of suspension was directed to be treated as not spent on
    duty. The order also records that the Petitioner attended the personal hearing
    on 16th August, 2022, but did not attend hearings fixed on 30 th May, 2023
    and 31st May, 2023.

    8. The appeal was dismissed on 24th September, 2024. The Appellate
    Committee endorsed the findings of the Disciplinary Authority, took note of
    both inquiries, and held that the penalty was “commensurate with the
    gravity” of the misconduct. It also rejected the contention regarding
    impermissibility of the further inquiry and the reliance placed on the order
    dated 20th March, 2023 passed by this Court in the earlier writ proceedings
    being W.P.(C) 3439/2023.

    9. The review was rejected by order dated 30th July, 2025. The
    Reviewing Committee reiterated the position of the Bank and upheld the
    disciplinary action. The order also refers to the Vigilance Manual to justify
    the course adopted in conducting further inquiry.

    Petitioner’s Submissions

    10. Mr. R.S. Gautam, counsel for the Petitioner, assails the impugned
    orders and his submissions are summarised as follows:

    10.1. The first challenge is directed at the handwritten letters dated 14 th

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    June, 2021 and 15th June, 2021. These writings are involuntary and obtained
    under extreme pressure from senior branch officials, at a time when the
    Petitioner’s physical condition was unstable and he had been isolated from
    normal duties. An earlier writing referring to INR 14 lakhs was torn up and a
    fresh writing for INR 20 lakhs was procured. The disciplinary case rests
    disproportionately on these writings, and once their voluntariness is in
    dispute, the matter required far closer scrutiny.

    10.2. The functioning of the currency chest and ATM/CDM system
    required joint custodianship, separate keys, and independent authentication
    mechanisms. In that backdrop, the theory that the Petitioner alone removed
    substantial amounts of cash, without corroboration from guards, access logs,
    or CCTV footage, is inherently implausible and insufficiently examined in
    the impugned orders.

    10.3. Regarding the recovery of INR 6 lakhs, the record establishes only
    recovery from an open drawer, without any evidence as to who placed the
    money there or when. There is no recovery from his person. Given that this
    recovery forms a crucial link in the Bank’s narrative, its evidentiary fragility
    undermines the broader conclusion drawn against him.

    10.4. As regards the evidentiary gaps in the first inquiry, out of six material
    witnesses identified, only three were examined. Key persons, including Mr.
    Santosh Kumar Tiwari, Mr. Shivanand Tiwari and Mr. Vinay Kumar, were
    not examined, despite the case involving alleged diversion of funds through
    a third-party account, ATM/CDM operations, and unauthorized use of
    credentials. The omission to examine such witnesses vitiates the inquiry.
    10.5. The legality of the further inquiry is also questioned. The first inquiry
    had culminated in a tentative penalty order dated 4 th August, 2022, and the

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    SBI Service Rules do not contemplate a second inquiry of the nature
    undertaken. Reliance is also placed on order dated 20 th March, 2023 passed
    by this Court in W.P.(C) 3439/2023, to contend that the earlier decisional
    framework stood set aside and could not have been revived in substance.
    10.6. Particular emphasis is placed on the report furnished by Mr. N.K.
    Kohli. The said report records that CCTV coverage did not extend to the
    entire bin, vault, or accountant’s seat, and that there was no clear recording
    showing unauthorized removal of cash. In the face of such material, the
    authorities could not proceed on the premise of direct visual evidence.
    10.7. Further, the appellate and reviewing authorities failed to undertake an
    independent evaluation. Both orders substantially reiterate the disciplinary
    findings, with the review order, in particular, recording absence of
    submissions under several heads despite detailed objections on record. The
    exercise, therefore, is affirmatory rather than a review.
    10.8. The impugned proceedings also suffer from violation of constitutional
    and procedural safeguards. The penalty of dismissal is in breach of Article
    311
    of the Constitution, inasmuch as the findings are not supported by
    cogent evidence on record and the procedure adopted, including the conduct
    of a second inquiry, is contrary to the governing service rules.
    10.9. The proportionality of the penalty is also assailed. Even assuming
    some lapse, the material on record does not establish misconduct of such
    gravity as would warrant the extreme penalty of dismissal. There is no clear
    proof of dishonest intent, criminal motive, or gross misconduct, and the
    punishment is disproportionate to the alleged acts.

    10.10. Reliance is also placed on the surrounding circumstances and
    timeline. The branch remained closed on 12th and 13th June, 2021; no

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    shortage was reported prior to 14th June, 2021; and the Petitioner was
    thereafter removed from active duties and eventually suspended on 17 th
    June, 2021. In this backdrop, the allegation that he alone effected large-scale
    withdrawals running into INR 61.42 lakhs, without detection by systems,
    guards, or contemporaneous reporting, is inherently improbable.
    Respondents’ Submissions

    11. On the other hand, Mr. Akshit Kapoor, counsel for the Bank, submits
    that the impugned orders and the disciplinary record establish the
    Petitioner’s misconduct. His submissions are summarised as follows:

    11.1. The case rests on a chain of circumstances, including the shortage
    detected in the currency chest, shortages in ATM/CDM operations, recovery
    of INR 6 lakhs from the Petitioner’s drawer, the handwritten letters dated
    14th June, 2021 and 15th June, 2021, the complaint of Mr. Santosh Kumar
    Tiwari, the supporting vouchers and account trail, and CCTV footage
    indicating suspicious movement.

    11.2. The plea of coercion is untenable. In departmental proceedings, the
    standard of proof is of preponderance of probability, and not proof beyond
    reasonable doubt, and the Disciplinary Authority has treated the handwritten
    letters as voluntary.

    11.3. As regards the further inquiry, the same was undertaken to address the
    Petitioner’s grievances and to ensure fairness in the process. The review
    order supports this course by reference to the Vigilance Manual and the
    circumstances in which reinvestigation was considered necessary.
    11.4. On the question of penalty, the proved misconduct pertains to
    handling of public funds and strikes at the integrity expected of a bank
    officer. The authorities have considered the penalty of dismissal to be

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    commensurate with the gravity of the misconduct.

    Discussion and Analysis
    Scope of Judicial Review

    12. The first point to be kept in view is the limited scope of judicial
    review in a disciplinary matter. A writ court does not sit as an appellate
    court over a domestic inquiry. It is not open to it to reappreciate the
    evidence, test its sufficiency as if conducting a fresh trial, or substitute one
    plausible factual view for another. The Court is concerned with a narrower
    set of questions, including: whether the inquiry was held by a competent
    authority; whether the prescribed procedure and the requirements of natural
    justice were observed; whether irrelevant considerations crept in or relevant
    material was wrongly excluded; and whether the conclusion is based on no
    evidence or is so perverse that no reasonable person could have reached it.1

    13. There is another principle which cannot be lost sight of in a matter
    concerning a bank officer. The Supreme Court has routinely emphasized that
    officers dealing with public funds are held to a high standard of integrity and
    discipline. Acting beyond authority, in the banking context, is itself serious
    misconduct, and actual loss is not always the sole measure of gravity.2

    14. Even so, the aforesaid principles do not relieve the disciplinary
    process of its obligation to remain fair, reasoned, and anchored in material
    that can legitimately support the conclusion reached. A bank case is not
    made stronger merely because it concerns a bank. The higher standard of
    integrity expected in such institutions cuts both ways. It justifies serious

    1
    B.C. Chaturvedi v. Union of India (1995) 6 SCC 749; Union of India v. P. Gunasekaran (2015) 2 SCC
    610; Deputy General Manager (Appellate Authority) v. Ajai Kumar Srivastava (2021) 2 SCC 612.

    2

    See: Chairman & Managing Director, United Commercial Bank & Ors. v. P.C. Kakkar (2003) 4 SCC
    364; Disciplinary Authority-cum-Regional Manager v. Nikunja Bihari Patnaik (1996) 9 SCC 69.

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    consequences where misconduct is established, but it also requires caution
    and care in ensuring that suspicion is not mistaken for proof and that
    disputed admissions are not treated as self-proving merely because they
    exist on paper. Therefore, if the findings are based on no evidence, or are
    perverse, or if relevant material has been excluded while irrelevant material
    has influenced the outcome, interference remains open under Article 226.

    15. The matter must therefore be examined on a narrower set of questions
    than the petition, in its present form, suggests. The real questions are
    whether the findings rest on legally sustainable material; whether the
    Petitioner was denied a fair opportunity in any substantial sense; whether the
    further inquiry was conducted within permissible bounds; whether the
    appellate and reviewing authorities addressed the substance of the challenge;
    and whether the penalty imposed survives the limited scrutiny that Article
    226
    permits in a disciplinary matter of the present nature.

    16. From that standpoint, some of the Petitioner’s formulations overstate
    the legal position. The repeated invocation of Article 311, and the manner in
    which the submissions are framed, tend to suggest that the charge must be
    established with a degree of rigour akin to a criminal proceeding, or that
    only misconduct of a criminal character would justify a major penalty. That
    formulation does not carry the case very far. What matters here is not
    whether the charge resembles a criminal accusation in form, but whether the
    domestic process was fair and whether the findings rest on some legally
    sustainable material.

    Whether Findings are based on “No Evidence”

    17. That brings the Court to the central question: is this a case of “no
    evidence”? In the opinion of the Court, on the record, it is not. The

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    Disciplinary Authority did not proceed on bare suspicion or on the basis of
    vague allegations. The impugned final order dated 31st May, 2023 records a
    case of alleged unauthorized withdrawals from the currency chest and
    ATMs/CDMs amounting to INR 61.42 lakhs, recovery of INR 6 lakhs from
    the Petitioner’s drawer, the Petitioner’s own writings dated 14 th June, 2021
    and 15th June, 2021, physical verification material, witness depositions,
    account-voucher material, and CCTV footage treated as corroborative of
    suspicious activity.

    18. The legal distinction that governs the inquiry must also be kept clear.
    A “no evidence” case is fundamentally different from a case where the
    evidence is said to be insufficient or open to doubt. In judicial review, the
    Court does not reappraise the adequacy of evidence, but it does examine
    whether there exists some material with probative value, whether relevant
    material has been ignored, and whether the conclusion drawn is so
    unreasonable as to be perverse.

    19. In a departmental proceeding, the material relied upon is not required
    to satisfy the strict standards of proof applicable in a criminal trial. The
    Indian Evidence Act, 1872
    does not, in terms, govern such proceedings.
    What is required is that the material must be logically probative, bear a
    reasonable nexus to the charge, and be such as a prudent mind may act upon.
    As explained by the Supreme Court in State of Haryana & Anr. v. Rattan
    Singh3
    , all materials which are logically probative for a prudent mind are
    permissible, and the inquiry is to be approached in a commonsense manner
    rather than by the technical rules governing court proceedings. At the same
    time, this relaxation does not permit arbitrariness; suspicion cannot

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    substitute proof, and findings cannot rest on inherently unreliable material or
    a chain of reasoning too weak to sustain the conclusion.

    Testing Evidentiary Value of the Handwritten Letters

    20. The Petitioner’s principal prong of attack is directed at the
    handwritten letters dated 14th June, 2021 and 15th June, 2021. It is urged that
    these writings were not voluntary admissions but were procured under
    pressure from senior officials; that an earlier writing referring to INR 14
    lakhs was torn up; and that fresh letters were dictated when the Petitioner
    was under severe physical and mental strain and effectively removed from
    normal functioning in the branch.

    21. However, the matter cannot rest on mere assertion of coercion. The
    inquiry officer and the Disciplinary Authority did not treat these writings as
    isolated documents. The dismissal order shows that the letter dated 14 th
    June, 2021 was read alongside the contemporaneous allegation of shortage
    in the running bin, the stated recovery of INR 6 lakhs from the Petitioner’s
    drawer, and the supporting depositions of Mr. Rajeev Kumar Gupta and Mr.
    Praveen Kumar Malik. The letter dated 15th June, 2021, as well as the
    ATM/CDM-related writing, were likewise considered as part of a broader
    evidentiary chain. The plea of coercion was noticed and rejected, and the
    writings were accepted as inculpatory material.

    22. Once that is so, the question before this Court is not whether another
    fact-finder might have exercised greater caution, or whether this Court, if
    trying the matter afresh, would have insisted on stronger corroboration. The
    real question is whether the inference drawn from those writings, read with
    surrounding circumstances, was one that no reasonable authority could have

    3
    (1977) 2 SCC 491.

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    drawn. On the present record, that threshold is not met.

    23. It is equally true that a bare, uncorroborated writing, especially where
    coercion is specifically alleged, may not safely sustain a grave charge. The
    employer must still lead material that reasonably supports the conclusion
    reached. But this is not a case where the Bank relied solely on a disputed
    writing. The writings were treated as contemporaneous admissions and were
    read with the physical verification material, the recovery from the drawer,
    contemporaneous reporting, ATM/CDM shortage documents, voucher and
    account material, and witness depositions. Whether one considers that chain
    strong or weak, it is certainly not “non-existent”. That distinction is decisive:

    a case of “no evidence” is not the same as a case where the evidence is said
    to be insufficient.

    24. The position becomes clearer when the standard of proof is kept in
    view. In a disciplinary proceeding, guilt is tested on the standard of
    preponderance of probability, not proof beyond reasonable doubt. This
    permits the authority to look at the totality of circumstances and draw
    reasonable inferences from the material on record.

    25. A contemporaneous handwritten admission, if found genuine and not
    accepted as having been extorted, is a circumstance of considerable
    evidentiary weight, capable of tilting the evidentiary balance unless the
    explanation offered against it is sufficiently persuasive to displace it.

    26. That is where the Petitioner’s case ultimately falters. An explanation
    of coercion was offered but not accepted by the fact-finding authorities. That
    rejection may be open to debate on facts, but it is not irrational. The
    authorities were entitled to notice that the writings were broadly consistent
    with the shortages then being reported, that they referred to specific

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    amounts, and that they were accompanied by other incriminating
    circumstances on record. In these circumstances, the mere plea that the
    writings were dictated could not, by itself, compel exoneration.
    Testing Recovery of INR 6 lakhs from Petitioner’s Drawer

    27. The same reasoning applies to the INR 6 lakhs found in the
    Petitioner’s drawer. The Petitioner contends, not without force, that the
    money was not recovered from his person; that it was found in an open
    drawer; that it has not been established who placed it there; and that the
    Bank has not traced what happened to that amount after the search. These
    are not frivolous objections. But they do not advance the case of the
    Petitioner to the relief sought.

    28. A disciplinary authority is entitled to act on circumstantial material,
    provided the inference drawn is rational and not merely speculative. Direct
    recovery from the person is one form of incrimination; recovery from a
    drawer or desk under the employee’s control is another. It may not be
    conclusive, but it is certainly relevant. The law does not insist that every
    incriminating fact in a disciplinary case must assume the form of direct
    physical recovery from the employee’s person before it can be relied upon.

    29. The disciplinary order did not proceed on the bare proposition that
    ‘money was found in a drawer, therefore guilt stands proved’. It relied on
    the physical verification report, contemporaneous reporting of the shortage,
    and the depositions of Mr. Rajeev Kumar Gupta and Mr. Praveen Kumar
    Malik, both of whom are recorded as supporting the recovery from the
    drawer in the Petitioner’s presence. That circumstance was also read with
    the handwritten writings already referred to. In other words, the drawer
    recovery was treated as one link in the chain, not the whole chain.

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    30. The Petitioner’s alternative theory remains possible as an argument. It
    may be said that the drawer was open, that someone else could have placed
    the cash there, and that the Bank ought to have gone further before fastening
    responsibility. But the existence of an alternative hypothesis does not, by
    itself, invalidate a disciplinary finding. In a writ court, the question is not
    whether such an alternative is possible; it is whether the conclusion actually
    drawn by the disciplinary authority was so unreasonable that no prudent
    authority could have accepted it on the material available. That threshold is
    not crossed here.

    31. There is also a point of ordinary evidentiary prudence that cannot be
    ignored. A person in charge of, or having dominion over, a drawer, desk, or
    workspace would ordinarily be expected to offer an explanation for a
    substantial amount of cash found there in suspicious circumstances,
    particularly in a banking environment. This is not a criminal-law
    presumption in the strict statutory sense; it is a commonsense inference that
    a disciplinary authority is entitled to draw, unless the explanation offered
    carries sufficient persuasive force. In service law, and especially in banking
    service, the employee’s control over the place of recovery is a relevant
    circumstance in assessing probability, more so where the recovery is
    accompanied by contemporaneous writings and shortage reports.

    32. Therefore, neither the handwritten letters nor the drawer recovery can
    be viewed in isolation. Looked at separately, each may admit debate.
    Looked at together, and in the context of the contemporaneous record, they
    provided the Disciplinary Authority with a body of material on which it
    could reasonably proceed.

    Arguments regarding Joint Custody and System Controls

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    33. The argument founded on joint custody does require careful attention.
    The Petitioner has consistently contended that the currency chest could not
    be operated by one person acting alone; that separate keys were required;
    that ATM/CDM operations proceeded on dual control; and that the very
    architecture of the system renders the Bank’s theory of single-handed
    withdrawal inherently doubtful. This submission is not insubstantial. Where
    the institutional design itself is said to prevent unilateral operation, a
    disciplinary authority cannot deal with the point casually.

    34. Even so, the matter does not end there. The Bank‘s case is not that
    these safeguards did not exist, but that they were bypassed, misused, or not
    adhered to by the Petitioner. The dismissal order refers to CCTV material
    indicating the Petitioner entering the currency chest area and accessing the
    running bin. It also refers to ATM/CDM shortage material, the allegation of
    unauthorized use of another custodian’s credentials, and the Petitioner’s own
    writings and signatures during the relevant period. Once the case is viewed
    in that light, the joint-custody argument ceases to be a complete answer. It
    remains a point in defence, but it does not, by itself, render the Bank’s
    conclusion impossible. In disciplinary law, particularly in banking service,
    acting beyond authority or outside prescribed controls is itself a serious
    feature of misconduct. The existence of safeguards does not, in law,
    preclude a finding that those safeguards were breached.

    35. This is also where the standard of proof assumes significance. In a
    criminal trial, the existence of dual control might be invoked as a source of
    reasonable doubt requiring strict elimination of alternative possibilities. In a
    domestic inquiry, however, the question is narrower: whether, on the totality
    of the record, it was reasonably open to the disciplinary authority to

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    conclude that the Petitioner had acted in derogation of those controls. That is
    to be assessed on the standard of preponderance of probability, and not proof
    beyond reasonable doubt. The writ court does not ask whether every
    theoretical alternative has been excluded; it asks whether the conclusion
    drawn was one that could reasonably be drawn from the material before the
    authority.

    ATM/CDM Component & Non-Examination of Witnesses

    36. The ATM/CDM component and the Mr. Santosh Kumar Tiwari
    account trail stand on somewhat less secure footing than the handwritten
    letters and the recovery made from the drawer. The Petitioner is justified in
    pointing out that not all named witnesses were examined. The appellate
    order itself records that six witnesses had been cited and only three were
    examined. It is also correct that the ATM verification documents were
    questioned as not being in standard format and as lacking COS numbers.

    37. At the same time, the non-examination of every cited witness is not,
    by itself, fatal to a departmental proceeding. The law does not require a
    disciplinary inquiry to fail merely because each person named in the charge-
    sheet was not ultimately examined. What is material is whether the charge,
    or its substantial part, still rests on evidence having some probative value,
    and whether the delinquent has suffered real prejudice because a withheld
    witness was indispensable to a decisive issue. This is not a case where no
    witness was examined, or where the findings rest entirely on undisclosed or
    untested material. Mr. Rajeev Kumar Gupta, Mr. Praveen Kumar Malik, and
    Mr. Prabhat Ranjan were examined. The dismissal order also refers to
    vouchers, account statements, ATM verification reports, the Petitioner’s
    signatures or stamp on certain vouchers, and the writings attributed to him.

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    The non-examination of some witnesses may weaken the Bank‘s case on
    certain aspects, but it does not, on the present record, reduce the entire
    disciplinary outcome to one based on no evidence.

    Effect of the Report by Mr. N.K. Kohli

    38. The report by Mr. N.K. Kohli must be stated fairly, as the Petitioner is
    justified in placing reliance on it. The report records that, “As the full
    coverage of CCTV camera not covering all the BIN/vault and accountant
    seat, only suspicious activity pointed out by me in this report and there is no
    clear-cut CCTV camera recording available, where a person picked cash
    unauthorisedly from the vault/Bin”. This aspect is significant. The Bank
    could not have proceeded on the footing that there existed direct visual
    evidence of the alleged act of removal of cash. No such recording emerges
    from the report.

    39. However, the report does not carry the Petitioner’s case to its logical
    conclusion. It weakens any overstatement based on CCTV, but it does not
    amount to a finding of innocence. The report does not state that nothing
    suspicious occurred, nor does it exclude the Petitioner from suspicion. What
    it indicates is that the footage does not directly capture the act of
    unauthorized removal. The case, however, did not rest solely on direct
    CCTV proof. It rested on the handwritten writings, the drawer recovery, the
    physical verification material, the ATM/CDM reports, witness depositions,
    and the account-voucher trail, with CCTV treated as corroborative of
    suspicious conduct and unauthorized access. The report, therefore, corrects
    exaggeration, but it does not efface the incriminating material on record.
    Seen in that cumulative context, the challenge cannot be characterised as
    one where the findings are based on no evidence or are perverse in law.

    W.P.(C) 4362/2026 Page 16 of 20

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    Legality of Further Inquiry / Second Inquiry

    40. The next question concerns the further inquiry. The Petitioner
    contends that there is no provision in the SBI Service Rules for a second
    inquiry and that the subsequent exercise was, therefore, unlawful. There is
    some force in the caution underlying that submission. A disciplinary
    authority cannot repeatedly reopen inquiries until it secures a report it
    prefers. The decision of the Supreme Court in K.R. Deb v. The Collector of
    Central Excise, Shillong4
    remains a reminder that repeated inquiries cannot
    be used as a device to hunt for an adverse conclusion after earlier inquiries
    fail to satisfy the authority.

    41. However, K.R. Deb itself recognises an important distinction. Where
    a serious defect has crept into the earlier inquiry, or where material evidence
    was unavailable or had not been examined for good reason, further evidence
    may be directed. The same distinction is material here. This is not a case
    where the Bank obtained an exonerating report and then kept re-running the
    process until guilt emerged. The first inquiry concluded against the
    Petitioner, not in his favour. The record indicates that, after the tentative
    penalty dated 4th August, 2022, the Petitioner raised substantial objections,
    whereupon the disciplinary authority ordered reinvestigation, obtained the
    N.K. Kohli report and clarification, and remitted the matter for further
    inquiry on aspects described as involving “new facts”, while retaining the
    earlier material on record. The review order also justifies this course with
    reference to the Vigilance Manual. Whether described as a second inquiry, a
    further inquiry, or a remittal, the material on record does not disclose an
    impermissible exercise of the kind cautioned against in K.R. Deb.

    W.P.(C) 4362/2026 Page 17 of 20

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    42. The order dated 20th March, 2023 passed by this Court in the earlier
    writ proceedings, being W.P.(C) 3439/2023, does not carry the Petitioner’s
    case further. It is correct that the tentative order dated 4th August, 2022 could
    not survive once further inquiry was directed, as that would amount to “pre-
    judging the matter”. That, however, is precisely why the Bank proceeded to
    pass a fresh final order on 31st May, 2023 after the further inquiry. The
    grievance, in substance, is that the conclusion remained the same. That, by
    itself, does not establish illegality. What the earlier order proscribed was
    prejudgment through the survival of the tentative view; it did not preclude
    the disciplinary authority, upon reconsideration, from arriving at the same
    conclusion if the record continued to support it.

    43. The real question, therefore, is whether the Petitioner was denied a
    substantive opportunity in the course of the further proceedings. On the
    record, opportunities of personal hearing were afforded, and the Petitioner
    had been actively contesting the matter throughout. In that backdrop, the
    Court is unable to hold that the disciplinary process stands vitiated on the
    ground that the further inquiry was impermissible in law.
    Adequacy of Appellate and Review Orders

    44. The adequacy of the appellate and review orders must next be
    examined. The disciplinary order records both the Bank’s material and the
    Petitioner’s response on each head before setting out the Disciplinary
    Authority’s conclusions. The appellate order also identifies the principal
    heads of challenge and deals with them. The review order indicates the
    reasons why the Committee was unpersuaded on the drawer recovery, the
    handwritten letters, the further inquiry, and the report by Mr. N.K. Kohli.

    4

    (1971) 2 SCC 102.

    W.P.(C) 4362/2026 Page 18 of 20

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    While these orders could have been more elaborately reasoned, they are not
    so devoid of reasoning as to warrant interference on that ground alone.
    Proportionality of Punishment Awarded

    45. That leaves the question of punishment. A bank officer deals with
    public funds and occupies a position where integrity, discipline, and fidelity
    to procedure are not ornamental expectations; they are operational
    necessities. The Supreme Court has consistently emphasized that bank
    officers are held to a higher standard of honesty and discipline, and that
    acting beyond authority constitutes serious misconduct.

    46. Once the findings against the Petitioner are not found to be based on
    no evidence or to be perverse, the penalty of dismissal cannot be said to
    shock the conscience of the Court. This is not a case of a minor or isolated
    procedural lapse. The Bank‘s case is of unauthorized withdrawal from the
    currency chest and ATM/CDMs, a substantial cash shortage, recovery from
    the Petitioner’s drawer, and contemporaneous writings attributed to him. In
    a case of this nature, involving a bank officer handling cash operations, the
    penalty cannot be said to be shockingly disproportionate merely because the
    Petitioner advances a competing factual explanation.

    Consequential Aspects

    47. The Petitioner’s prayer for pensionary and other consequential
    benefits cannot survive once the challenge to the dismissal fails. The petition
    itself indicates that by a letter dated 28th February, 2024, issued by the
    Assistant General Manager of the Bank, the gratuity and provident fund
    amounts have already been released to the Petitioner. If any admissible
    terminal or statutory dues remain, independent of the challenge to dismissal,
    the Petitioner is at liberty to pursue the same in accordance with law.

    W.P.(C) 4362/2026 Page 19 of 20

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    Conclusion

    48. In the opinion of the Court, no interference is warranted under Article
    226
    of the Constitution of India. The petition is, accordingly, dismissed.

    SANJEEV NARULA, J
    APRIL 6, 2026/hc

    W.P.(C) 4362/2026 Page 20 of 20

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