Posh law - Procedure as the Handmaiden of Justice": Overcoming Technical Loopholes in POSH Enforcement.

A recurring vulnerability in employment law is the weaponization of hyper-technical procedural rules to shield severe workplace misconduct. In high-stakes disciplinary actions, respondents frequently scour dense, legacy civil service rules or ancient standing orders to find minor administrative omissions, using them to stall, invalidate, or completely quash severe penalties. In Arun A. Iyer v. IIT Bombay, the Bombay High Court forcefully addressed this issue, reminding corporate and institutional employers that "procedure is the handmaiden of justice," designed to facilitate equity rather than act as a technical loophole for evasion.

The Court observed that a highly formalistic, myopic approach cannot be adopted when interpreting enforcement mechanisms under specialized, welfare-driven legislations like the POSH Act. When an autonomous institution or a corporate entity possesses a robust internal framework that explicitly outlines how sexual harassment complaints are investigated and penalized, those specialized provisions take precedence. Courts will no longer permit litigants to selectively import default, generic civil service rules simply to create artificial procedural friction or to claim that the absence of a hyper-specific administrative form invalidates a substantively fair inquiry.

The immediate takeaway for corporate governance is a mandate for absolute procedural hygiene during the IC phase. Because courts will view procedure through the lens of substantive fairness rather than rigid bureaucratic forms, the employer’s defense relies entirely on proving that the principles of equity were met. If the IC provides a clear charge, shares all relevant evidence, and grants an uncompromised right of reply, courts will actively protect the organization’s disciplinary conclusions against bad-faith technical challenges.

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Posh law - Procedure as the Handmaiden of Justice": Overcoming Technical Loopholes in POSH Enforcement.

A recurring vulnerability in employment law is the weaponization of hyper-technical procedural rules to shield severe workplace misconduct. ...