The Karnataka Excessive Courtroom has quashed an Upalokayukta report and put aside penalties levied towards a BBMP engineer, granting aid in a case of alleged dereliction of responsibility. The order was handed on September 10 by a division bench consisting of Justices D Okay Singh and Venkatesh Naik and was lately made public. The engineer had approached the excessive court docket towards the penalty levied on her.
On this case, Geetha C, an assistant government engineer in Maruti Seva Nagar underneath the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagar Palike (BBMP) in 2014, was the topic of a Upalokayukta inquiry primarily based on a grievance that 12 months by one Susheela. The complainant was concerned in a civil dispute along with her brother, who had allegedly carried out unlawful development on a disputed property. In response to the costs framed by the Upalokayukta, the engineer had not gone forward with the demolition even after the demolition order was handed. Based mostly on this, 4 cost increments had been withheld with a cumulative impact in a 2019 order.
The cost had said, “…after passing of ultimate order for demolition of the mentioned unlawful development and therefore, you… have failed to keep up absolute integrity and devotion to responsibility and dedicated an act which is unbecoming of Authorities Servants and thus you might be responsible of misconduct underneath Rule 3(1)(i) to (iii) of KCS (Conduct) Guidelines 1966.”
The engineer’s counsel submitted earlier than the court docket that she had handed the demolition order after listening to the brother’s reply within the matter. Nonetheless, the demolition price that she had submitted to the chief engineer was not permitted. Thus, the demolition couldn’t be carried out. The Upalokayukta counsel, then again, argued that it was the engineer’s accountability to make sure that no unauthorised development was carried out, and the demolition ought to have been achieved.
The bench noticed that there was no materials on document that advised that the associated fee for the demolition had been permitted by the chief engineer.
Having taken be aware of this, it noticed, “We’re of the thought-about view that the petitioner can’t be held responsible for dereliction of responsibility, or for not sustaining absolutely the integrity and devotion to the responsibility. We, subsequently, enable this writ petition…”

