The
Indian Banks' Association (IBA) performs public functions that imbue it with a
public law character when negotiating issues like pensioner benefits for public sector banks (PSBs), making its actions
amenable to judicial review (writ jurisdiction) under Article 226.
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]The Supreme Court of India reinforced this stance, clarifying that even if the IBA asserts it is a voluntary, private, or unregistered association,
it cannot escape public law accountability when its actions or agreements dictate the fundamental rights, livelihoods, and statutory terminal benefits of public servants.
[1, 2, 3, 4]The legal framework governing the IBA's public law role and its handling of pensioner benefits is broken down below:
1. The Public Law Character & Amenability to Writ Jurisdiction
For years, the IBA attempted to shield itself from transparency laws (like the Right to Information Act) and legal accountability by claiming it is a voluntary body and not a "State" under Article 12. However, the Supreme Court definitively drew a line between Article 12 and Article 226:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]- Public Function Doctrine: Since the IBA is heavily funded, controlled, and mandated by Public Sector Banks (which are instruments of the State), the functions it performs—such as negotiating nationwide wage revisions and pension rules—are inherently public functions. [1, 2]
- Article 226 Maintainability: The Supreme Court ruled that a body performing a public function that impacts fundamental rights (like the right to pension or livelihood) is fully answerable to High Courts under Article 226. Courts will look at the nature of the function performed, not just the legal structure of the organization. [1, 2, 3]
2. How Bipartite Settlements Inherit Public Law Force
When the IBA negotiates with bank unions (like the UFBU) and signs a Bipartite Settlement or Joint Note regarding retirement benefits, that agreement is not a simple private contract.
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]- Statutory backing: These agreements are formally integrated into the Bank Employees' Pension Regulations, 1995, which were framed under Section 19 of the Banking Companies Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings Act. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- Binding State Actions: Because these regulations require the approval of the Central Government (Department of Financial Services) and are published in the Gazette of India, the IBA’s negotiated terms carry statutory weight and are bound by the principles of constitutional fairness, equality, and non-discrimination. [1, 2, 3, 4]
3. Key Pensioner Issues Bound by Public Law Principles
Because the IBA operates within a public law domain, it is legally bound by constitutional principles when handling the following long-standing retirement disputes:
[1, 2]- No Discrimination Between Retirees: The Supreme Court repeatedly established that pensioners cannot be split into arbitrary classes. The IBA cannot create an artificial distinction to deny historical benefits—such as 100% Dearness Relief (DR) neutralization or pension updates—based on a worker's date of retirement. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
- Pension as a Vested Right: Under public law, a pension is a right to property and deferred wages, not a bounty or charity. The IBA cannot use "limited paying capacity" as an excuse to unilaterally alter or stall legitimate statutory updates modelled on Central Government or RBI patterns. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
- Arbitrary Group Insurance Premiums: Associations like the
All India Bank Pensioners and Retirees Confederation (AIBPARC) have continuously challenged the IBA for imposing steep, unfair medical insurance premiums on retirees, arguing that the IBA is violating the benevolent spirit of the government's welfare mandates. [1, 2, 3]