Serious Crime Merely On The Benefits Of Doubt:
The Supreme Court has held that a public employer can reject a candidate as unsuitable if he/she had, in the past, been acquitted of a serious crime merely on the benefit of the doubt.
- The benefit of the doubt is granted to the accused when there is the total absence of evidence or in the criminal jurisprudence requiring the case to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
- The Petitioner in the Supreme Court cleared the recruitment for the post of constable in Rajasthan Police Service.
- However, he was not appointed in view of being tried in a criminal case.
- It was found that, though he was acquitted, the charges against him were not of a trivial nature but were serious offences and the candidate was acquitted on the “Benefit of Doubt”.
- He was not honourably acquitted by the Court.
Supreme Court Observations:
- The mere fact of an acquittal would not suffice but rather it would depend on whether it is a clean acquittal.
- Employers would be well within their rights to consider the antecedent and suitability of the candidate.
- In this context, the employer is entitled to take into account the job profile for which the selection is undertaken, and
the severity of the charge levelled against the candidate and whether the acquittal in question was an honourable acquittal or was merely on the ground of benefit of doubt. - An acquittal on the benefit of the doubt is quite different from an honourable acquittal.
- A person should be honourably acquitted of a heinous crime to be considered eligible for public employment.
- The court, however, reminded employers that the rejection should not be mechanical since employment opportunity is a scarce commodity in the country.