LAWS(P&H)-2017-1-115

CHANDIGARH SPORTS COUNCIL Vs. PROVIDENT FUND COMMISSIONER

Decided On January 19, 2017
CHANDIGARH SPORTS COUNCIL Appellant
V/S
PROVIDENT FUND COMMISSIONER Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) Learned counsel submits on the strength of Sec. 7B(5) of the Employees Provident Fund & Misc. Provisions Act, 1952 that no appeal lies against an order of the officer rejecting the application for review and therefore, writ is maintainable. The submission is correct in law and in conformity with the aforesaid Section.

(2.) On merits, this Court is satisfied that there is a grievous error in the disposal of the statutory review application. The review application was filed by the organisation without mentioning the provision of law under which it was filed. This was a super-technical view which appealed to the Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner [APFC] to out rightly dismiss the application and permit filing of another application with the defect cured. He should have known that so long as power can be traced to a statutory provision without it being mentioned in an application, the law permits ignoring such minor deficiency because the court is concerned with the substance and not the form. This everyday principle was obviously beyond the ken of the APFC. The APFC should not have returned the review application or asked the petitioner to file a fresh one. And to my great surprise, when the fresh one was filed he ambushed the petitioner on bar of limitation and dismissed the application by playing a dirty and sneaky trick.

(3.) The order is so inherently perverse, arbitrary and illegal that without hearing the respondents, I would set aside the impugned orders and remand the case to any APFC other than Paripuran Nath [who passed the order] with a direction to the ADFC to whom the file is entrusted to act lawfully and pass a speaking order on the valuable rights and explanation furnished in the first review application clubbed with the second by restoring both by the present order and decide the same after considering all the pleas taken in the review applications and to record reasons on each of the issues raised and pass a fresh order in accordance with law.