Srikant Prasad vs The State Of Bihar on 22 August, 2025

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Patna High Court

Srikant Prasad vs The State Of Bihar on 22 August, 2025

Author: Harish Kumar

Bench: Harish Kumar

         IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT PATNA
                     Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No.1208 of 2021
     ======================================================
     Srikant Prasad Son of Ragho Prasad Resident of Village- Achalpur, Police
     Station- Hisua, District- Nawada.

                                                                ... ... Petitioner/s
                                       Versus
1.   The State of Bihar through the Home Secretary, Bihar, Patna.
2.   The Director General of Police, Bihar, Patna.
3.   The Additional Director General of Police, Law and Order, Bihar, Patna.
4.   The Inspector General of Police, Rail, Bihar, Patna.
5.   The Deputy Inspector General of Police, Rail, Bihar, Patna.
6.   The Superintendent of Police, Rail, Muzaffarpur.
7.   The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Rail, Samastipur.
8.   The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Rail, Sonepur, Chapra.
9.   The Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police, Rail, Sonepur, Chapra.

                                                            ... ... Respondent/s
     ======================================================
                                         with
                   Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 1528 of 2021
     ======================================================
     Bipin Kumar Son of Bishnudeo Yadav Resident of Village- Maisaur, Police
     Station- Kusheshwar Asthan, District- Darbhanga.

                                                                ... ... Petitioner/s
                                       Versus
1.   The State of Bihar through the Home Secretary, Bihar, Patna.
2.   The Director General of Police, Bihar, Patna.
3.   The Additional Director General of Police, Law and Order, Bihar, Patna.
4.   The Inspector General of Police, Rail, Bihar, Patna.
5.   The Deputy Inspector General of Police, Rail, Bihar, Patna.
6.   The Superintendent of Police, Rail, Muzaffarpur.
7.   The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Rail, Samastipur.
8.   The Deputy Superintendent of Police, Rail, Sonepur, Chapra.
9.   The Assistant Sub- Inspector of Police, Rail, Sonepur, Chapra.

                                               ... ... Respondent/s
     ======================================================
     Appearance :
     (In Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 1208 of 2021)
     For the Petitioner/s      :       Mr. Ramakant Sharma, Sr. Adv.
                                       Mr. Rakesh Kumar Sharma, Adv.
                                       Mr. Rabinder Kumar, Adv.
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       For the Respondent/s     :        Md. Nadim Seraj, GP-5
                                         Mr. Shailesh Kumar, AC to GP-5
       (In Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 1528 of 2021)
       For the Petitioner/s      :       Mr. Ramakant Sharma, Sr. Adv.
                                         Mr. Rakesh Kumar Sharma, Adv.
                                         Mr. Rabinder Kumar, Adv.
       For the Respondent/s      :       Mrs. Babita Kumari, AC to SC-1
       ======================================================
       CORAM: HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE HARISH KUMAR
       CAV JUDGMENT
         Date : 22-08-2025

                      This Court has heard Mr. Ramakant Sharma, learned

         Senior Advocate with Mr. Rakesh Kumar Sharma, learned

         Advocate for the petitioners and Mr. Shailesh Kumar, learned

         Advocate as well as Mrs. Babita Kumari, learned Advocate for

         the State.

                      2. Since both the impugned orders inflicting the

         punishment of dismissal from services are arising out of the one

         and the same occurrence, leading to identical charges and

         departmental proceeding in the premise of similar facts, hence

         both the writ petitions are being heard together and disposed off

         by this common order.

                      3. In CWJC No. 1208 of 2021, the challenge is made

         to the order contained in Memo No. 286 dated 27.02.2020,

         passed by the Superintendent of Police, Rail, Muzaffarpur,

         whereby and whereunder, in pursuant to Departmental Enquiry

         No. 16/2019, the petitioner has been inflicted with the

         punishment of dismissal. The appeal preferred by the petitioner
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         also came to be rejected vide order contained in Memo No. 173

         dated 26.05.2020, issued under the signature of respondent no.

         3, The Additional Director General of Police, Law & Order,

         Bihar, Patna. The challenge is also made to the aforesaid order

         along with the memo of charge.

                     4. In CWJC No. 1528 of 2021, the challenge is made

         to the order contained in Memo No. 287 dated 27.02.2020,

         passed by the Superintendent of Police, Rail, Muzaffarpur,

         whereby and whereunder, in pursuant to Departmental Enquiry

         No. 14/2019, the petitioner has been inflicted with the

         punishment of dismissal. The appeal preferred by the petitioner

         also came to be rejected vide order contained in Memo No. 172

         dated 26.05.2020, issued under the signature of respondent no.

         3, The Additional Director General of Police, Law & Order,

         Bihar, Patna. The appellate order as well as the memo of charge,

         are also put to challenge, herein.

                     5. The short facts, which led to the filing of the

         present writ petitions, as culled out from the materials available

         on record, are summarized hereinbelow:-

                     (i) At the relevant time, while the petitioners were

         posted as Constable at Rail P.P., Hasanpur; on 10.10.2019, a

         video was made viral in social media that in a hall like barrack
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         situated behind Railway P.P., Hasanpur, DPC.- 334 Manoj

         Kumar Singh and Bhusan Kumar Nirmal, railway employee

         were seen eating food sitting on chair and table. During the

         dining, both the aforenoted persons, picked up a bottle under the

         table and poured the substance in the glass and consumed the

         same. In the said video, the petitioner of CWJC No. 1208 of

         2020 (Srikant Prasad) was found sleeping and Sub-Inspector,

         Baijnath Singh and petitioner of CWJC No. 1528 of 2021

         (Driver Constable 07- Bipin Kumar) were found talking about a

         women liquor smuggler, Renu Devi.

                     (ii) On account of the viral video in social media, the

         Dy.S.P., Samastipur Rail was authorized to enquire into the

         matter, who submitted his report on 12.10.2019. Based upon the

         aforesaid report, the Superintendent of Police, Rail Muzaffarpur

         directed for institution of an FIR, accordingly, Rail Samastipur

         (Hasanpur) P.S. Case No. 179 of 2019 was registered for the

         offences punishable under Section 37(a) of the Bihar Prohibition

         and Excise Act, 2016 on 16.10.2019.

                     (iii) The blood and urine sample of the police

         personnels were collected on 14.10.2019 and forwarded to the

         Forensic Science Laboratory, Muzaffarpur and after clinical

         examination, report was furnished on 03.01.2020. In the
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         meanwhile, the petitioners were placed under suspension and a

         decision was taken to initiate a departmental proceeding against

         the petitioners. After appointment of the Enquiry Officer as well

         as Presenting Officer, the memo of charge containing the

         imputation, constituting misconduct and unbecoming a member

         of a discipline force, on account of their suspected presence in

         the room. The memo of charge contains the list of documents as

         well as the list of witnesses.

                     (iv) The petitioners submitted their detailed written

         statement/explanation refuting all the allegations. In course of

         enquiry, two of the witnesses were examined and after

         conclusion of the enquiry, the Conducting Officer submitted his

         report vide Memo No. 58 dated 20.01.2020. The second show-

         cause notices were issued to the petitioners. In response, thereto,

         the petitioners submitted their show-cause reply. However, on

         being dissatisfied with their second show-cause reply, inflicted

         the punishment of dismissal from the services. The petitioners

         aggrieved with the order(s) of punishment, preferred appeal, but

         to no succor and the same also came to be rejected.

                     6. Learned Senior Advocate while assailing the

         impugned orders of punishment has contended that the charges

         levelled against the petitioners were too vague to understand.
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         The alleged viral video was approximately 3-4 months old and

         the petitioners did not have any knowledge, who made the video

         or made it viral. Even as per the viral video clips, the petitioner

         in CWJC No. 1208 of 2021 (Srikant Prasad) was found sleeping

         in the room, whereas, the petitioner in CWJC No. 1528 of 2021

         (Bipin Kumar) was found talking to Sub-Inspector Baijnath

         Singh.

                     7. There is nothing in the video that it is the

         petitioners who were found consuming the liquor/alcohol. This

         fact has also been corroborated by the witnesses, namely, Smt.

         Smita Suman. Sr. Dy.S.P. Samastipur and ASI Shiv Shankar

         Singh, who were examined and cross examined in the enquiry.

                     8. The Enquiry Officer failed to appreciate that the

         blood and urine test was collected on 14.10.2019 with respect to

         incidence, which took place 3-4 months ago and thus, even for

         the sake of argument, it is accepted that urine report suggest

         ethyl alcohol by the Forensic Science Laboratory; though it is

         not corroborated by the blood test report, that may give a fresh

         cause of action, but could not satisfy the subjected charges. All

         the more, the report is itself contradictory and, as such, the order

         of punishment is not based upon any substantive material.

                     9. The entire enquiry report is based upon surmises
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         and conjectures and only on being found their presence in the

         room, suspicion has been raised against the petitioners and

         thereby, the Enquiry Officer returned the finding of guilt. The

         disciplinary authority also failed to consider the show-cause

         reply of the petitioners and inflicted the harshest punishment of

         dismissal only on the basis of suspicion and the Forensic

         Science Laboratory report, which could not be relied on account

         of being contradictory to each other. The appellate order is also

         wholly perverse and non speaking, inasmuch as, no ground of

         challenge has been discussed and deliberated.

                     10. Narrating the aforesaid facts, reliance has also

         been placed on a Bench decision of this Court in the case of

         Sonu Kumar Vs. The State of Bihar & Ors., CWJC No. 17527

         of 2019, wherein, based upon a viral video, in which the

         delinquent was seen consuming alcohol, had been subjected to

         departmental proceeding and inflicted with the order of

         dismissal. However, the Court on being found that the finding of

         misconduct being without evidence, to support the charges, has

         set-aside the impugned order of punishment.

                     11. Dispelling the aforesaid contention, learned

         Advocate for the State submitted that the entire departmental

         proceeding was conducted in terms with the Bihar Government
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         Servants (Classification, Control & Appeal) Rules, 2005.

         Having noticed the viral video, affecting and tarnishing the

         image of the police force, an enquiry was conducted by the Sr.

         Deputy Superintendent of Police, who submitted the report

         suspecting the role of the petitioners, constituting an act of

         misconduct. The aforesaid incidence also led to institution of a

         criminal case and the police on being found case true, has also

         submitted charge-sheet.

                     12. The Forensic Science Laboratory clearly suggest

         the petitioners had consumed liquor, which is prohibited and

         punishable in the State of Bihar under the Bihar Prohibition and

         Excise Act, 2016. The act of the petitioners was very grave in

         nature and flagrant violation of discipline and thus, they were

         placed under suspension. The witnesses were examined, who

         supported the charges. The Enquiry Officer returned the finding

         of guilt. The petitioners were extended ample opportunity,

         however, they could not be able to show their innocence and

         finally, the disciplinary authority on being found the charges

         proved, inflicted the punishment of dismissal, which is

         proportionate to the charges. The appeal(s) preferred by the

         petitioners also did not find any favour and accordingly, the

         appeal(s) were also rejected.
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                     13. This Court has carefully perused the materials

         available on record and also considered the rival submissions of

         the learned Advocate for the respective parties.

                     14. There is no dispute with regard to the facts that on

         10.10.2019

, a Whatsapp video went viral, which led to enquiry

and submission of the enquiry report on 12.10.2019, disclosing

that one Manoj Kumar Singh along with railway employee were

taking some liquor like substance in a room where both the

petitioners were present. The aforesaid incidence led to

institution of the FIR against the petitioners and others. In

course of enquiry, it has been found that the incidence was of 3-

4 months ago, when a female liquor trafficker was apprehended

and remanded to judicial custody, after institution of the FIR. It

is also admitted in the report that the viral video did not show

that both the petitioners were consuming the liquor and in fact,

all of them have submitted their respective explanation that on

the said date, one Manoj Kumar Singh, DPC.- 334 and Bhushan

Kumar Nirmal, Mechanical Engineer of Railway were taking

cold drinks. Neither the maker of the video nor the person who

had produced or who had made it viral have been enquired

upon. The blood and urine sample were collected on 12.10.2019

and sent to the FSL on 14.10.2019. The report was submitted
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under Memo No. R.F.S.L. No. 759/19 dated 04.01.2020. It is

reported that ethyl alcohol was detected in exhibits marked B2,

B3, B4 and B5, and ethyl alcohol could not be detected in

exhibits marked A1, A2, A3, A4, A5 and B1. It is only this

report, which has made the basis of punishment.

15. The memo of charge contains three documentary

evidence. Firstly, the order of suspension of the petitioners;

secondly, the preliminary enquiry report submitted by the

Dy.S.P., Railway, wherein she narrated the incidence seen in the

viral video and lastly a copy of the CD of viral video dated

10.10.2019. The list of witnesses contains the name of two

witnesses, one is the person who submitted the preliminary

enquiry report, the Dy.S.P. Rail Police Samastipur and second

Police Sub-Inspector, Shiv Shankar Singh.

16. The witnesses were duly examined but both of

them have only stated that after having seen the viral video, it

appears that two persons were consuming liquors and these

petitioners were found sleeping and sitting, respectively in the

room. In course of examination, both of these witnesses have

categorically admitted that the petitioners were not found seen

consuming or taking meal or liquor. The persons, who were

found consuming the liquor like substance, were not even
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talking to the petitioners. The bottle which was found kept there

does not appear to be a bottle of liquor.

17. Notwithstanding the aforesaid fact, the presence of

the petitioners in the said room was found suspicious. Albeit, the

Enquiry Officer came to the definite conclusion that in course of

enquiry, the witnesses could not be able to prove the evidence of

consuming liquor by the petitioners, however, as the petitioners

have been made accused, based upon a viral video and in course

of investigation, the ethyl alcohol is found in the urine sample

and the supervising officers of the investigation has found the

petitioners guilty of consuming liquor and, therefore, returned

the finding of guilt against the petitioners.

18. Time without number, the Court has held that the

charges levelled against the delinquent officers must be found to

have been proved. The Enquiry Officer has a duty to arrive at a

finding upon taking into consideration the materials brought on

record by the parties. The Hon’ble Apex Court in the case of

Roop Singh Negi Vs. Punjab National Bank & Ors., reported

in (2009) 2 SCC 570 has unequivocally held that the purported

evidence collected during investigation by the investigating

officer against all the accused by itself could not be treated to be

evidence in the disciplinary proceeding. The Court in the
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aforesaid case said that since no witness was examined to prove

the said documents and the management witnesses were merely

tendered the documents and did not prove the contents thereof.

Reliance, inter alia, was placed by the enquiry officer on the

FIR, which could not have been treated as evidence.

19. In the case in hand, the memo of charge does not

contain the FSL report, based upon which the finding of the

Enquiry Officer proved the charges nor any of the witnesses

have been examined to prove the report and contents, thereof.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Sher Bahadur Vs.

Union of India & Ors., (2002) 7 SCC 142 has held that,

“sufficiency of evidence postulates existence of some evidence

which links the charged officer with the misconduct alleged

against him. Evidence, however, voluminous it may be, which is

neither relevant in a broad sense nor establishes any nexus

between the alleged misconduct and the charged officer, is no

evidence in law.”

20. Admittedly, in the preliminary enquiry report, it

has been found that the incidence, as shown in the viral video

was of 3-4 months ago, which led to institution of the FIR on

12.10.2019. The sample of blood and urine was collected and

sent to the FSL on 14.10.2019 and the report of the FSL has
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been submitted under Memo dated 04.01.2020. Thus, in any

view of the matter, the FSL report of the urine containing ethyl

alcohol cannot be said to be with respect to an incidence which

took place 3-4 months ago.

21. It would be pertinent to state here that alcohol

consumption and intoxication are frequent elements in criminal

and civil litigation. The books on medical jurisprudence

invariably, suggest that determining whether a person has

consumed alcohol and their level of intoxication requires

scientifically sound and legally reliable evidence. Blood and

urine reports are primary forensic tools, but their evidentiary

value depends on scientific methodology, detection window and

judicial scrutiny. So far the scientific reliability of a blood report

is concerned, it is said that blood alcohol concentration directly

measures alcohol present in the blood at the time of sample

collection. The blood alcohol concentration results are accurate

and widely accepted in Courts for quantifying the degree of

intoxication. Alcohol is detectable in blood for up to 12 hours

post-consumption. Special biomarkers can extend detection to

days/weeks for chronic use. However, legal protocols require

proper collection, preservation (often using sodium fluoride),

and documentation to ensure reliability. Mismanagement of
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samples or lack of chain of custody undermines evidentiary

value.

22. Similarly, the urine test detect alcohol and its

metabolites (such as EtG and EtS), which can indicate recent

consumption up to 24-80 hours post-intake. It also provides

evidence of recent use but not precise impairment at a specific

point in time. Urine alcohol levels reflect blood alcohol

concentration at time of urination, however, not necessarily at

the time of offence/alleged intoxication. It results susceptible to

dilution, recent fluid intake and possible contamination.

Moreover, it is easier to adulterate than blood samples.

23. Bare reading of the aforenoted summarization of

the evidentiary value of blood and urine report, in case of

consumption of alcohol, any prudent person, can very well

reach to the conclusion that the FSL report, which is made the

very basis to prove the charges cannot be with regard to an

incidence, which took place 3-4 months ago. The mode and

manner in which it is produced and relied upon by the Enquiry

Officer, that is also not at all admissible in the eyes of law.

24. Now coming to the evidentiary value of the viral

video, it would be pertinent to refer to a decision rendered by

the Hon’ble Apex Court in the case of Arjun Panditrao
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Khotkar Vs. Kailash Kushanrao Gorantyal & Ors., (2020) 7

SCC 1, wherein the Court underscored the requirement of

certificate under Section 65-B(4) of the Evidence Act before

placing reliance upon the electronic evidence. To appreciate the

legal position of the evidentiary value of electronic evidence,

this Court thinks it apt and proper to encapsulate paragraph nos.

60, 61 and 84, hereinbelow:-

“60. It may also be seen that the
person who gives this certificate can be
anyone out of several persons who occupy a
“responsible official position” in relation to
the operation of the relevant device, as also
the person who may otherwise be in the
“management of relevant activities” spoken
of in sub-section (4) of Section 65-B.
Considering that such certificate may also be
given long after the electronic record has
actually been produced by the computer,
Section 65-B(4) makes it clear that it is
sufficient that such person gives the requisite
certificate to the “best of his knowledge and
belief”. [Obviously, the word “and” between
knowledge and belief in Section 65-B(4) must
be read as “or”, as a person cannot testify to
the best of his knowledge and belief at the
same time.]

61. We may reiterate, therefore,
that the certificate required under Section 65-
B(4) is a condition precedent to the
admissibility of evidence by way of electronic
record, as correctly held in Anvar P.V. [Anvar
P.V. v. P.K. Basheer
, (2014) 10 SCC 473 :

(2015) 1 SCC (Civ) 27 : (2015) 1 SCC (Cri)
24 : (2015) 1 SCC (L&S) 108] , and
incorrectly “clarified” in Shafhi Mohammad
[Shafhi Mohammad v. State of H.P.
, (2018) 2
SCC 801 : (2018) 2 SCC 807 : (2018) 2 SCC
(Civ) 346 : (2018) 2 SCC (Civ) 351 : (2018)
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1 SCC (Cri) 860 : (2018) 1 SCC (Cri) 865] .

Oral evidence in the place of such certificate
cannot possibly suffice as Section 65-B(4) is
a mandatory requirement of the law. Indeed,
the hallowed principle in Taylor v. Taylor
[Taylor v. Taylor, (1875) LR 1 Ch D 426] ,
which has been followed in a number of the
judgments of this Court, can also be applied.
Section 65-B(4) of the Evidence Act clearly
states that secondary evidence is admissible
only if led in the manner stated and not
otherwise. To hold otherwise would render
Section 65-B(4) otiose.

84. But Section 65-B(1) starts
with a non obstante clause excluding the
application of the other provisions and it
makes the certification, a precondition for
admissibility. While doing so, it does not talk
about relevancy. In a way, Sections 65-A and
65-B, if read together, mix up both proof and
admissibility, but not talk about relevancy.
Section 65-A refers to the procedure
prescribed in Section 65-B, for the purpose of
proving the contents of electronic records,
but Section 65-B speaks entirely about the
preconditions for admissibility. As a result,
Section 65-B places admissibility as the first
or the outermost checkpost, capable of
turning away even at the border, any
electronic evidence, without any enquiry, if
the conditions stipulated therein are not
fulfilled.”

25. In the case of Sonu Kumar (supra), learned co-

ordinate Bench of this Court while setting-aside the order of

dismissal, which was culminated upon a departmental

proceeding based upon a viral video, where the delinquent was

seeing consuming liquor, the learned Court has placed reliance

upon a Bench decision of this Court in the case of Bharat
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Prasad Yadav Vs. The State of Bihar & Ors., CWJC No. 18331

of 2019. In case of Bharat Prasad Yadav (supra), the learned

Single Judge also placing reliance upon the Arjun Panditrao

Khotkar (supra), has observed that since the viral video clip

containing in CD has not been proved during the course of

enquiry by resorting to the procedure established by law, as

such, is inadmissible by way of evidence, as per the Evidence

Act, 1892. The Court, in aforenoted case, besides aforesaid

observation, further held that neither the maker of the video clip

was examined, as a witness nor the mobile through which the

video was made viral has been recovered, much less exhibited

and, moreover, no eyewitness to the alleged incidence has been

examined by the prosecution in the aforesaid departmental

enquiry, resulted in the entire enquiry proceedings having been

rendered nugatory on account of no evidence being available on

record to substantiate the allegations leveled against the

petitioner.

26. Similar is the finding in the case of Sonu Kumar

(supra) where the learned co-ordinate Bench having taken note

of the fact that no evidence was led before the Enquiring

Authority that there was alcohol in the said bottle and what the

delinquent was drinking was alcohol. Moreover, in the said case,
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neither there was any breath analyzer test nor the blood sample

of the delinquent was taken for chemical examination, apart

from the procedure not been followed to substantiate the

electronic evidence held the impugned decision of the

disciplinary authority, based upon no evidence and a perfunctory

and thereby, set-aside the impugned order of dismissal.

27. This Court is conscious of the limitation while

exercising the power of judicial review in a matter relating to

departmental enquiry/proceeding, which obviously caution the

Court to re-examine or re-appraise the evidence and substitute

its own conclusion in place of the conclusions arrived at by the

Enquiry Officer or the disciplinary authority on that evidence.

28. The Hon’ble Apex Court in the case of Kuldeep

Singh Vs. Commissioner of Police & Ors., (1999) 2 SCC 10,

has held that, true it is that the Court cannot sit in appeal over

those findings and assume the role of the appellate authority.

But this does not mean that in no circumstance can the Court

interfere. The power of judicial review available to the High

Court as also to the Apex Court under the Constitution takes in

its stride the domestic enquiry as well and it can interfere with

the conclusions reached therein, if there was no evidence to

support the findings or the findings recorded were such as could
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not have been reached by an ordinary prudent man or the

findings were perverse or made at the dictates of the superior

authority. It would be worth benefiting to encapsulate paragraph

nos. 7, 8, 9 and 10:-

“7. In Nand Kishore Prasad v.

State of Bihar [(1978) 3 SCC 366 : 1978
SCC (L&S) 458 : AIR 1978 SC 1277 : (1978)
3 SCR 708] it was held that the disciplinary
proceedings before a domestic tribunal are of
quasi-judicial character and, therefore, it is
necessary that the Tribunal should arrive at
its conclusions on the basis of some evidence,
that is to say, such evidence which and that
too, with some degree of definiteness, points
to the guilt of the delinquent and does not
leave the matter in a suspicious state as mere
suspicion cannot take the place of proof even
in domestic enquiries. If, therefore, there is
no evidence to sustain the charges framed
against the delinquent, he cannot be held to
be guilty as in that event, the findings
recorded by the enquiry officer would be
perverse.

8. The findings recorded in a
domestic enquiry can be characterised as
perverse if it is shown that such findings are
not supported by any evidence on record or
are not based on the evidence adduced by the
parties or no reasonable person could have
come to those findings on the basis of that
evidence. This principle was laid down by
this Court in State of A.P. v. Rama Rao
[(1964) 2 LLJ 150 : AIR 1963 SC 1723 :

(1964) 3 SCR 25] in which the question was
whether the High Court under Article 226
could interfere with the findings recorded at
the departmental enquiry. This decision was
followed in Central Bank of India Ltd. v.

Prakash Chand Jain [(1969) 2 LLJ 377 : AIR
1969 SC 983] and Bharat Iron Works v.

Bhagubhai Balubhai Patel [(1976) 1 SCC
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518 : 1976 SCC (L&S) 92 : 1976 Lab IC 4 :

AIR 1976 SC 98 : (1976) 2 SCR 280] . In
Rajinder Kumar Kindra v. Delhi Admn.
[(1984) 4 SCC 635 : 1985 SCC (L&S) 131 :

AIR 1984 SC 1805 : (1985) 1 SCR 866] it
was laid down that where the findings of
misconduct are based on no legal evidence
and the conclusion is one to which no
reasonable man could come, the findings can
be rejected as perverse. It was also laid down
that where a quasi-judicial tribunal records
findings based on no legal evidence and the
findings are its mere ipse dixit or based on
conjectures and surmises, the enquiry suffers
from the additional infirmity of non-

application of mind and stands vitiated.

9. Normally the High Court and
this Court would not interfere with the
findings of fact recorded at the domestic
enquiry but if the finding of “guilt” is based
on no evidence, it would be a perverse
finding and would be amenable to judicial
scrutiny.

10. A broad distinction has,
therefore, to be maintained between the
decisions which are perverse and those
which are not. If a decision is arrived at on
no evidence or evidence which is thoroughly
unreliable and no reasonable person would
act upon it, the order would be perverse. But
if there is some evidence on record which is
acceptable and which could be relied upon,
howsoever compendious it may be, the
conclusions would not be treated as perverse
and the findings would not be interfered
with.”

29. In the light of the aforenoted settled legal position,

this Court on careful consideration of the enquiry report as well

as the impugned order of punishment finds that the very charge

is based upon suspicion, regarding the presence of the
Patna High Court CWJC No.1208 of 2021 dt.22-08-2025
21/23

petitioners in the room, where two persons were seen

consuming liquor. There is a specific finding of the Enquiry

Officer that none of the witnesses and the documentary evidence

have supported the charge of consumption of liquor by the

petitioners. Notwithstanding, the aforesaid fact, placing reliance

upon the FSL report showing ethyl alcohol in the urine samples

collected during the course of investigation, that too with

respect to Rail Samastipur (Hasanpur) P.S. Case No. 179 of

2019, the copy of which has also not been supplied to the

petitioners nor any witnesses have been produced to prove the

same and, as such, it cannot be held to be admissible, based

upon which the finding has been returned by the Enquiry

Officer. However, this fatal flaws has been completely

overlooked by the disciplinary authority.

30. This Court before moving further also notices that

the Presenting Officer did not perform any role by presenting

the case of the department before the enquiry authority and,

prima facie, it seems that the Enquiry Officer himself assumed

the role of the Presenting Officer. The Court on number of

occasions highlighted the role of Presenting Officer viz-a-viz the

Enquiry Officer. Reference may be taken to the decisions in case

of State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. Vs. Saroj Kumar Sinha,
Patna High
Court CWJC No.1208 of 2021 dt.22-08-2025
22/23

(2010) 2 SCC 772; and Panchanan Kumar Vs. The Bihar State

Electricity Board & Ors., (1196) 1 PLJR 401.

31. Coming to the impugned order passed by the

disciplinary authority inflicting the punishment of dismissal, the

same is only found to be based upon the FSL report, which has

been duly deliberated and discussed by this Court in the

aforenoted paragraphs, that the same cannot be said to be in

relation to an incidence which led to initiation of the present

departmental proceeding. Besides other infirmities noted

hereinabove, neither the FSL report nor the viral video clip have

been proved in the mode and manner required under the law

and, as such, the order of the disciplinary authority, which is

based on the finding of the enquiry authority is also without no

evidence and perfunctory one, wholly unjust, illegal and

unsustainable.

32. The appellate orders also appear to be completely

non speaking and there is no deliberation and discussion, as to

why the grounds raised by the petitioners are not found worthy

for consideration. The role of the disciplinary authority as

assigned under Rule 17 and the appellate authority under Rule

27 of the Bihar Government Servants (Classification, Control &

Appeal) Rules, 2005 has been completely overlooked.

Patna High Court CWJC No.1208 of 2021 dt.22-08-2025
23/23

33. Accordingly, both the impugned orders of

dismissal contained in Memo Nos. 286 & 287 dated 27.02.2020

as well as appellate order as contained in Memo Nos. 172 & 173

dated 26.05.2020 are hereby set-aside. Both the writ petitions

stands allowed.

34. The petitioners are directed to be reinstated

forthwith, with all the consequential benefits to be paid within a

period of twelve weeks, from the date of receipt/production of a

copy of this order/judgment.

35. The parties shall bear their cost.

36. Pending application(s), if any, also stands

disposed off.

37. The office is directed to return the records relating

to disciplinary proceeding to the Government Pleader No. 5,

after pronouncement/uploading of this order/judgment.

(Harish Kumar, J)
shivank/-

AFR/NAFR                NAFR
CAV DATE                24.06.2025
Uploading Date          25.08.2025
Transmission Date       NA
 

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