The case of UCO Bank & Ors. v. SK Shrivastava (2026 INSC 328) addresses the legal validity of a voluntary retirement notice when an employer fails to formally refuse it within the stipulated notice period.
Factual Background
- The Parties: The respondent, SK Shrivastava, was a Manager at UCO Bank.
- Voluntary Retirement: On October 4, 2010, the respondent submitted a three-month notice for voluntary retirement under the UCO Bank (Employees’) Pension Regulations, 1995. The notice period was set to expire on January 4, 2011.
- The Conflict: During the notice period, the bank issued a show-cause notice (November 11, 2010) regarding alleged suspicious transactions. However, the bank did not formally refuse the retirement request or initiate formal disciplinary proceedings before the notice period lapsed.
- Cessation of Service: The respondent stopped working on May 16, 2011. Eight months later, the bank issued a charge-sheet and subsequently dismissed him from service.
Legal Issues
The central question was whether the respondent’s voluntary retirement became effective automatically after the notice period, making the subsequent disciplinary action and dismissal illegal. This required a harmonious reading of Regulation 29 of the Pension Regulations (governing voluntary retirement) and Regulation 20(3) of the Service Regulations (restricting resignation during pending disciplinary proceedings).
Supreme Court’s Reasoning
The Supreme Court upheld the High Court’s decision in favor of the respondent, based on the following findings:
- Automatic Effectiveness (Ipso Facto): Under Regulation 29, if the appointing authority does not refuse permission for retirement before the expiry of the notice period, the retirement becomes effective automatically on the date specified. The Court ruled that a positive act of refusal is required to stop this automatic operation.
- Harmonious Construction: The Court held that while Regulation 20(3) allows the bank to withhold permission if disciplinary proceedings are pending, it must still do so within the notice period.
- Show-Cause vs. Disciplinary Action: The Court clarified that the mere issuance of a show-cause notice does not constitute the institution of disciplinary proceedings. Therefore, there was no legal embargo in place to prevent the voluntary retirement from taking effect.
- Termination of Master-Servant Relationship: Once the notice period expired without a formal refusal, the master-servant relationship was deemed severed. Consequently, the bank lacked the jurisdiction to issue a charge-sheet or a dismissal order months after the respondent had effectively retired.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that the bank’s non-acceptance of the retirement notice after the expiry of the period was of “no avail”. The appeals were dismissed, and the bank was ordered to settle all post-retiral and pensionary benefits with applicable interest within three months.
2026 INSC 328
Uco Bank & Ors. V. Sk Shrivastava & Ors. (D.O.J. 07.04.2026)




