"This is not just a case of sexual harassment of a woman at workplace, but it is a clear case of misconduct or of a conduct that is unbecoming of a government servant.
"People with upright moral values and integrity should only make way into public service and not those who are beasts in disguise," a bench of justices Kailash Gambhir and I S Mehta said while also imposing a penalty of Rs 50,000 on the government servant, S K Jasra.
Jasra, in his plea challenging a decision of the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) upholding the penalty imposed on him, had contended that he cannot be subjected to any penalty after a departmental inquiry as the alleged conduct was not done in the course of his official duty.
Observing that his behaviour was a clear case of "conduct that was unbecoming of a government servant", the bench said a public servant should "at all times, be it in a professional setup or otherwise, conduct himself in a manner that is not subversive to discipline."
The court observed that Jasra, who retired in 2013, also "misused the dominant position that he was holding, courtesy his being a senior officer at the place where the complainant was working".
"He misbehaved with the daughter and daughter-in-law of the complainant in a sexually inappropriate manner. This abuse of dominant position by the petitioner outrightly reveals the nexus between the improper conduct of the petitioner with his official duties," the bench said.
