A retiring bus conductor with a state transport corporation reaches his last working day. His pension papers are ready, but his gratuity cheque is held back because a departmental inquiry against him is still open. Can the corporation do this? Yes. Under Rule 69 of the Central Civil Services (Pension) Rules, 1972, the government can lawfully withhold gratuity while a departmental OR a judicial proceeding is pending against a retired government servant, until that proceeding ends.
This is a hold, not a punishment. If you are cleared at the end, the gratuity is released, usually with interest. The Supreme Court confirmed this reading on 7 April 2026.
If you are short on time, jump to the decision table below: it tells you exactly when gratuity is held and when it must be paid.
The rule turns on whether any proceeding is still pending against you on the date you retire.
| Your situation | What happens to gratuity |
|---|---|
| Departmental inquiry pending on retirement | Held until the inquiry concludes |
| Criminal or other court case pending on retirement | Held until the case concludes |
| Both a departmental and a judicial proceeding pending | Held until BOTH conclude |
| All proceedings concluded and you are exonerated | Released, usually with interest |
| Concluded with a minor penalty only | Generally released, subject to any recovery ordered |
| Concluded with a major penalty or proven loss | May be reduced or withheld to that extent as ordered |
The key point: if even one proceeding is still open, your gratuity stays on hold. Winning the other one does not unlock it.
In Bikram Chand Rana v. Himachal Pradesh Road Transport Corporation, neutral citation 2026 INSC 326, decided on 7 April 2026, a bench of Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra and Justice Vipul M. Pancholi read Rule 69(1)© of the CCS (Pension) Rules, 1972.
The rule says: “No gratuity shall be paid to the Government servant until the conclusion of the departmental or judicial proceedings.”
The Court held that the word “or” is disjunctive. It bars gratuity while ANY proceeding is pending, departmental or judicial. So even if the employee is cleared in one set of proceedings, the gratuity stays barred as long as the other is still open. Both must end before gratuity can be released. The appeal was dismissed.
You can read the full judgment on Indian Kanoon: Bikram Chand Rana v. HRTC, 2026 INSC 326.
A departmental proceeding is an internal inquiry by your own department. It usually starts with a charge memo (memorandum of charges) and ends with a final order by the disciplinary authority.
A judicial proceeding is a case before a court. For Rule 69, the common example is a criminal prosecution arising from your service, such as a corruption or fraud case.
Rule 69 also fixes when a proceeding is treated as “pending” for this purpose. A departmental proceeding counts as pending if the charge memo was issued before you retired. A judicial proceeding counts as pending if the court took cognizance before you retired.
The withholding is temporary. It is a hold until the case is over, not a forfeiture by itself.
Do not let anyone tell you the gratuity is simply gone because an inquiry was opened. It is held, and the final order decides what happens next.
Rule 69 is part of the Central Civil Services (Pension) Rules, so it directly governs central government servants. Public sector corporations and many state governments have their own parallel pension rules with similar wording. The 2026 case itself involved a state road transport corporation applying a rule modelled on this provision.
If you are a state employee or work in a public sector body, check your own service rules, but expect a very similar bar. The disjunctive “or” reading is the safe assumption.
If your department goes silent and the deadline passes, escalate using the First Appeal Builder.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, a fictional central government officer, retires while a departmental inquiry over a tender decision is still open. A separate criminal complaint on the same matter is also pending in court.
His office withholds his gratuity under Rule 69. The inquiry concludes after eight months and clears him. He assumes the gratuity will now be paid. It is not. The criminal case is still going on, so the bar continues.
A year later, the court acquits him. Only then, with both proceedings closed and both in his favour, is his gratuity released, with interest for the period it was held. This is exactly the situation the 2026 Supreme Court ruling describes.
For the related question of how gratuity behaves when service ends in other ways, see gratuity on resignation and pension forfeiture.
Yes. Under Rule 69 of the CCS (Pension) Rules, 1972, if a departmental inquiry was started before you retired, your gratuity can be lawfully held until that inquiry concludes and final orders are passed. It is a hold, not a forfeiture.
No, not yet. The Supreme Court in 2026 INSC 326 held that the word “or” in Rule 69 bars gratuity while any proceeding is pending. Both the court case and the departmental inquiry must conclude before gratuity is released.
No. The withholding is temporary. If you are exonerated, the gratuity is released, usually with interest for the held-up period. Only a final order finding loss or major misconduct can reduce or take away part of it, under Rule 8.
Rule 69 is a central rule for central government servants. Most states and public sector bodies have parallel rules with similar wording. The 2026 case involved a state road transport corporation. Check your own service rules, but expect a similar bar.
Usually yes, if you are exonerated. Gratuity held during proceedings is normally paid with interest for the period of delay once you are cleared. Ask for it in writing. If it is refused, you can pursue it through representation or RTI follow-up.
Ask your office in writing for confirmation. If you get no clear answer, file an RTI with your department's Public Information Officer asking for the status and orders in any departmental or court proceeding. See our guide on using RTI for pension and gratuity delays.
Disclaimer: This article is general information, not legal advice. Pension and gratuity rules vary by service and state, and individual orders turn on their own facts. Verify your position with your department or a qualified advocate before acting.