The
Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that a woman can file a sexual-harassment
complaint with the Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) of her own workplace
even if the accused is not employed there.
The
judgment was delivered by a bench of Justices JK Maheshwari and Vijay Bishnoi,
who dismissed an appeal filed by an Indian Revenue Service (IRS) officer
accused of sexually harassing an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer in
her New Delhi office.
The
bench said the purpose of the Prevention of Sexual Harassment (POSH) Act would
be diluted if women were forced to approach the ICC of every respondent’s
organisation for incidents involving third parties.
“If
the aggrieved woman had to approach the ICC constituted at the workplace of the
respondent for every third-party incident, it would fall short of the object of
the Act,” the court said.
The
court added that requiring the respondent’s ICC to examine incidents that did
not arise within their work environment “would create an impractical situation,
as the incident may not be connected to their employer’s premises or work
ecosystem”.
The incident occurred on
May 15, 2023, when the IAS officer said she was sexually harassed at her
workplace in Krishi Bhawan, New Delhi. She later filed an FIR and submitted a
complaint under the POSH Act to the ICC of the Department of Food and Public
Distribution, where she worked.
The
accused objected to this and challenged the ICC’s jurisdiction before the
Central Administrative Tribunal and later in the Delhi High Court. He argued
that as an employee of the Central Board of Direct Taxes (Department of
Revenue), only the ICC within his department could inquire into the
allegations.
Both
forums rejected his plea, after which he moved the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court
dismissed the narrow interpretation of “workplace” advanced in the appeal. It
said an interpretation that restricted jurisdiction to the ICC of the
respondent’s workplace “would undermine the POSH Act’s remedial and
welfare-based intent”, adding that such a view would impose “significant
practical hurdles” for women seeking redress.
The
bench noted the psychological pressures that already deter women from reporting
sexual harassment.
“The taboo around sexual harassment at the
workplace and the fear of stigma pose a substantial barrier for aggrieved
women. In this context, the legislature’s intent to give a broad meaning to the
term ‘workplace’, extending beyond the traditional office location, cannot be
ignored,” the court said.
The
court clarified that once the ICC at the woman’s workplace completes its
inquiry, it must forward its recommendations to the employer of the respondent.
The employer is then required to take disciplinary action under the applicable
service rules.