Ankita1001
737

Hello Seniors,

I am posting a case of my friend who urgently seek guidance on this -

My friend works in IT industry and joined this company about 1.5 years back. While joining she was not briefed about the terms and conditions. A formal appointment letter with service agreement was handed over only after a month's long tenure and by that time the service had picked up.

Now my friend has resigned with proper handover and notice period served. However HR claims that according to the service agreement, an employee who resigns before the bond expiry has to re-pay whole of the amount that company has paid him/her as salary. They are demanding my friend to give a salary for 1.5 years which was the employment period.

There was a discussion between the HR and my friend stating that if the whole amount earned is paid back to the company it would only mean there was nothing worthwhile contribution and HR said - YES.

I suggested to ask for training cost, negotiate to pay that and peacefully close the matter. But that was already communicated to the HR inspite of the fact that there was no training provided by the company.

What should be done in such thing.

The HR suggested my friend that if no money is to be paid then they can have a mutual settlement by giving a cheque amounting the due pay and do not write the date on it and give in writing that no employment would be accepted in 12 months from now.

My friend do not want to initiate any legal procedure. At the same time wants to know if there would be counter-results if discontinued to go to office (as the notice period is served as negotiated, pay recieved, they never accepted the resignation, but date was clearly mentioned in the resignation letter)

Also is it fair for a company to include such clause in service agreement? We all do know that such agreements are not legally viable and are signed only to discourage employees to resign but asking an employee to repay every penny that was paid in the service tenure is something really that one needs to think of before putting it into the agreement. Please advice and comment on this.

Kindly advice on the situation as early possible as it is little urgent.

Thanks in advance for the help and time.

From India, Mumbai
jhadevbrat
38

Dear Ms. Shah,

While giving the consent for acceptance of offer of appointment one has not only the right but also it is imperative to go through all the terms and conditions of employment, perticularly, as sensitive as a bond.

However, it is relevant to mention that the system of taking bond in the first instance has to be formal and expressed and not implied. if your friend had not signed any bond at the time of joining, she is not liable to accept any such conditions now.

Further, it is also important to tell you that the system of taking employment bond from employees has been held as illegal by the Apex Court of India in several judgements.Employers are forbidden from obataining bonds from employees as the contract of employment has to be based on the essence of Equity, justice and fareplay.Both employer and employee have equal rights to enter in the contract and also to terminate the same in terms of agreement.

Employees cannot be made bonded labour.

My suggestion is that if the current employer is not releasing on resignation and completion of notice period by your friend, she must not deposit even a single peny and walk out of the office and join some other organisation. If at all, she has some dues to be collected from the current employer, she may send a notice to him giving one month time. Despite, she is not getting relief, she should file a complaint, before the authority, under the Payment of wages Act,1936. The Authority under the Act will hear both the parties and pass necessary legal orders.

Dev

From India, Pune
tajsateesh
1637

Hello Ankita Shah,
A few clarifications/queries:
1] You mentioned that your friend worked in this company for 1.5 yrs--did she have any Appraisal in this period?
2] What is the Bond period, as per the Agreement?
3] You mentioned '....resigned with proper handover and notice period served'. Was this from your friend's perspective OR the Boss's OR HR's? The points that your mention relating to relieving/paying-back SHOULD have been discussed @ the time of resigning....NOT at the fag-end.
Also, suggest wait for the legal brains in this Forum to respond.
Rgds,
TS

From India, Hyderabad
Ankita1001
737

Hello TS Sir,

To give further clarifications -

Her performance was found to be contributing. There wasn't any official process with any letters or appraisal given. However she was always appreciated for her work, contributions and zeal to learn and unlearn as desired.

But as far as i understand you mean to ask if any appraisal letter was given. The answer is NO.

As per the agreement it is 2 years. 3 month's notice period but she had mentioned that she would serve 1 month and pay 2 month's salary.

She is getting married and so she has taken this decision.

The clause from her end was mentioned in her resignation. She never recieved a formal acceptance letter. After few days of resigning, she went to clarify the clauses but nothing conclusive happened. She asked me from when notice period starts and i think all would agree on this that notice period starts from the day an employee puts his/her paper down irrespective of he/she recieves a formal acceptance.

Also the company has hired someone in her place and she briefed him about all her duties and pending projects.

She is not too fussy about experience and relieving letter for now. But she needs it as if she may wish to join in future, her precious 1 and half year experience would be futile as she'd have to hunt as a fresher or as absconded.

She recieved her last month's salary from HR and she had gone to discuss further.

HR said it is okay if you don't pay me 2 month's salary as you're getting married. But give me in writing that you'd not join any firm for at least 12 months from now and give me signed cheque worth the pay you've got from here, so that if we found you're employed somewhere, we can deposit that cheque.

As far as my knowledge goes one can't put someone under such pressure.

Another thing was HR said you should have thought before you signed this agreement. But my question is how fair is it to have put a clause that demands the whole earning back if employee leaves? That is not at all right. It would just mean they exploited her and used her expertise for free of cost for this time and reaped benefits.

Yes, I am waiting if some legal advisor can also suggest.

She consulted one of the lawyers, and she told it would not affect if she leaves. But my concern is can they list her absconded or file a case against her regarding bond breakage and harass her or her family?

From India, Mumbai
tajsateesh
1637

Where is she likely to settle after marriage? The options she can exercise will depend on these answers. However, giving the cheque to the company is an ABSOLUTE NO . Rgds, TS
From India, Hyderabad
Ankita1001
737

Hello sir, adding to your further points -
She has got a salary hike.
Currently she's not changing but she wishes to come back after a few month's time.
Her in-laws are in Mumbai itself. So there is no change of city.
However, giving the cheque [whether undated or post-dated] to the company is an ABSOLUTE NO [we will figure out how to handle it later].
Rgds,
TS[/QUOTE]

From India, Mumbai
tajsateesh
1637

Hello Ankita Shah,

Since she got a Salary Raise, she can use it IF & WHEN any discussion comes again with HR repeating what was said earlier ["mean there was nothing worthwhile contribution and HR said - YES"]--to rebut any such trashy argument by HR. Hope you get the point.

Actually she COULD have done it earlier itself--maybe it didn't strike her in the tension.

Coming to her career plans, does she intend returning to the same company? I am sure it depends on her views of her career here for 1.5 yrs [from the 'job enrichment' angle].

As regards the HR advice of giving the undated cheque, ask your friend to give a counter-suggestion that she will give an Affidavit stating what the HR means/wants, since legally that is acceptable [let her involve a lawyer to draft this]. If HR doesn't accept this suggestion & insists ONLY on the cheque, you can be SURE that the company WANTS TO AVOID going legal. Your friend can use this to her advantage.

Reg the cheque, she should take the stand that she doesn't want to give....period. WHAT IF the company deposits it based on some false info coming to them that she joined another job? She would rather enjoy her marital life than running after courts JUST BECAUSE someone in this company goofed [the Best-Case-Scenario]. The Worst-Case-Scenario would be the company depositing it willfully--though this is best left unsaid to the HR [could mess-up the situation further]--whether this CAN happen, only your friend can say, since she knows the nature/mentality of the Top people & HR here better [even though I do have an 'uncomfortable feeling' from this angle].

If she is OK to rejoin here later, she can use this to her advantage.

There's another subtle point here--how come the company wants the undated cheque for ONE YEAR, when she already completed 1.5 yrs & has only 6 months left to complete the Agreement?

Also, did your friend have any tussle with any of the bosses?

Rgds,

TS

From India, Hyderabad
B K BHATIA
455

The company HR seems to be over playing in this case, with unknown motives/ interests. The maximum they can ask her to deposit is the cash equivalent of the shortfall of notice period.
Please suggest to your friend to write a polite yet factual letter to the CEO, by name, & send it by Speed Post; track its delivery & maintain the tracking sheet for her future use (if required). If HR is not accept the payment in lieu of the shortfall of Notice period, a crossed cheque in Company's name may be enclosed.
In all probability, the CEO may not be aware of such issues related to the functioning of their HR. No individual heading an organization will attempt to be unfair to employees. In most cases, HR guys (who have limited understanding & experience) forget their role & tend to quote rules about which they lack clarity themselves. They should at least read these views of experts & senior professionals to add to their wisdom.

From India, Delhi
Ankita1001
737

Hello TS Sir
No she don't intend to join back the same firm having a bad experience now.
Suggested this to her. Probably she should meet her HR on mon / tue and shall share the consequences.
Exactly something that even I fail to understand. I had told her that a company can recover the training cost that they incurred on an employee if he breaks the bond. But if the employee has served considerable period, we deduct the training charge accordingly. Ideally that's how it works. But the HR wants full salary that was earned in the employment tenure. Strange.
She never had any tussles and arguments with any one.

From India, Mumbai
tajsateesh
1637

Hello Ankita Shah,

Suggest FIRST prepare your friend MENTALLY for the Worst-Case-Scenario--which is not being able to get any Docs for this exp & not being able to show this exp in her resume in future.

This is NOT to suggest that 'this is what will happen' but to ensure that she takes this issue/topic during her discussions from a 'position of mental strength'. That's Human Psychology--when one is prepared for the WCS, anything else would be a Bonus/Positive result.

When I referred to "how come the company wants the undated cheque for ONE YEAR, when she already completed 1.5 yrs & has only 6 months left to complete the Agreement?", I was referring to the 'Timeframe' & NOT the quantum of the salary the company wants to be returned. Suggest ask your friend to FOCUS on the timeframe part rather than the quantum--since this (focusing on the Quantum) is bound to boomerang on her [since this was a part of the Agreement she signed--howsoever flawed].

I think BK Bhatia has a very valid point--ask your friend to take this up with the CEO [or the Head of the Division, if the CEO sits elsewhere]. If the HR shows signs of preventing this contact, maybe she can put this in-writing/mail to the CEO with a cc" to HR--your friend has nothing to loose now--and everything to gain, IF this goes well.

Also, let her take the stand that she resigned NOT to join in any other company but DUE to marriage--most often companies have unwritten rules reg this part in the initial stage itself. They should have included this aspect for unmarried women employees in the beginning itself--while getting the Agreement/Bond signed--only goes to say a lot about the HR policies in-practice in this company.

Wish her All the Best.

Rgds,

TS

From India, Hyderabad
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