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Five IAS officers pledge to visit old age homes, orphanages for exemption from contempt proceedings

Five Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers have pledged before the Madras High to visit old age homes and orphanages, spend time with the inmates over there and arrange lunch or dinner from their personal funds to get exemption  from contempt of court proceedings.

Justice Battu Devanand (since transferred to the Andhra Pradesh High Court) recorded the contents of the written undertaking filed by the IAS officers Kumar Jayant, S.K. Prabakar, V. Rajaraman, P. Kumaravel Pandian and D. Baskara Pandian and granted two weeks' time for complying with it.

“After visiting the homes, the contemnors shall file an affidavit before the Registrar (Judicial) of this High Court with regard to the service they rendered (to the inmates) within a week thereafter to enable the Registrar (Judicial) to keep the same in the record for perusal of the court,” the ordered.

After being satisfied with the undertaking filed on behalf of the five IAS officers, the judge closed the contempt proceedings against them with a warning that “if any contemnor fails to fulfil the undertaking, the Registry shall re-open the contempt petition and place it before this court.”

The contempt of court petition was filed jointly by three temporary drivers C. Chinnathambi, M. Krishnamurthy and P. Anandhan for alleged disobedience of an order passed by Justice C. Saravanan on September 29, 2021 to regularise their services and absorb them in permanent posts.

Their counsel K. Balu brought it to the notice of the court that though the court order was eventually complied with and the services of all three petitioners were regularised, he complained that there was a delay of nearly three years in complying with the judicial order leading to loss of wages for that period

Empathising with the petitioners, serving as drivers, Justice Devanand on July 21, 2025 (a day before his transfer) suggested that the five IAS officers could pay ₹1.25 lakh each from their personal funds to the three petitioners to compensate their collective monetary loss of around ₹6 lakh.

However, when Additional General P. Kumaresan stated it would be too onerous, the judge said, the officers could instead visit any old age home or orphanage, spend time with the inmates to motivate them and also buy either lunch or dinner for them out of personal funds.

The BuckStopper Reporter
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The BuckStopper, run by a group of seasoned journalists, holds the powerful accountable. The buck stops with them, as they cannot shrug off their official responsibilities.
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