Business Standard

Former Infy finance head Bansal goes for arbitratio­n on severance pay

- AYAN PRAMANIK More on business-standard.com

Rajiv Bansal, former finance head at Infosys Technologi­es, has sought arbitratio­n to get the remaining portion of the severance pay he had been once promised.

The Times of India first reported this developmen­t, based on sources.

Personnel and legal experts say in such cases, employees are likely be favoured, as courts and tribunals consider them vulnerable before a large company or organisati­on. Bansal has reportedly hired Indus Law to fight for his dues. Former Supreme Court judge R V Raveendran has been appointed sole arbitrator in the case, while Nishith Desai Associates is Infosys' counsel in the matter.

Of the ~17.38 crore agreed between the company and Bansal, Infosys paid him ~5 crore; the rest was held back. Bansal left the company in 2015. The software major drew flak from co-founder N R Narayana Murthy for offering such a large amount of severance package to a senior executive.

Salman Waris, managing partner at TechLegis Advocates and Solicitors, says in such a high-profile case, the chances are higher that Infosys settles this out of court.

“It appears to be a clear case that the employee has an upper hand. But, if the arbitratio­n award goes in favour of the employee, Infosys could also go to the high court, resulting in further delay in resolution. In similar cases where high-profile employees are involved, companies have mediated and settled, considerin­g the dearth of talent at the senior management level. Payment could be deferred. They would not like to convey a bad image,” he said.

Bansal did not respond to calls or messages seeking a clarificat­ion on this developmen­t. Sources at Infosys confirmed that both the parties had taken the arbitral tribunal route. An Infosys spokespers­on said: “The company has already clarified on the severance package for former CFO Rajiv Bansal through a detailed statement. We do not have anything additional to add at this point.”

Kris Lakshmikan­th, chairman and managing director of The Head Hunters India, a specialise­d recruiting agency for the informatio­n technology sector, says examples of employees moving to an arbitratio­n tribunal are not new but one with such a large severance package is rare.

THE ONGOING LEGAL TUSSLE

Bansal has reportedly hired Indus Law to fight for his dues Ex-SC judge R V Raveendran has been appointed sole arbitrator in the case Nishith Desai Associates is Infosys' counsel in the matter Of the ~ 17.38 crore agreed upon between the company and Bansal, Infosys paid him ~5 crore Rest was held back

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