The Karnataka High Court, in an important judgment delivered on July 2, 2026, has reminded organizations that employment disputes should not be converted into criminal prosecutions without adequate legal foundation.
(See: Indian Express : Medicaldiologues : Court Proceedings in YouTube)
In a judgment delivered by Honourable Justice M. Nagaprasanna, the Court strongly criticized the decision of Manipal Hospital to pursue criminal proceedings against a distinguished oncologist who had served the institution for nearly nineteen years before moving to Aster Hospital in a higher position.
While the judgment provides relief to an individual doctor, its significance extends much beyond the parties to the dispute. It highlights an often-overlooked reality of the digital era—that employment records are no longer mere HR documents. They are electronic records capable of becoming crucial legal evidence.
The Background
According to the complaint filed by Manipal Hospital, the doctor resigned from service in 2022 after nearly two decades of association and was formally relieved with appreciation.
About three months later, Manipal Hospital reportedly received, through e-mail from the background verification agency DataFlow, a copy of an experience certificate purporting to have been issued by the Hospital and bearing what was alleged to be the signature of one of its officials.
The Hospital considered the signature to be forged and initiated criminal proceedings by filing a private complaint.
The Police investigated the complaint and submitted a B-Report, indicating that no criminal offence appeared to have been made out. Dissatisfied with this conclusion, the complainant filed a protest petition, following which the Magistrate took cognizance and issued summons to the doctor.
The doctor challenged these proceedings before the Karnataka High Court.
The High Court Restores Judicial Balance
Quashing the proceedings, the High Court observed:
“Such cases should not be even permitted to be tried; the concerned court has erred in taking cognizance of the offence against a doctor and issuing summons without even looking at the documents which were produced at the time when the B report was filed. Therefore, the further proceedings, if permitted to continue, would on the face of it be an abuse of process of law and result in miscarriage of justice.”
During the hearing, the Court also orally advised the Hospital:
“Allow doctors to treat patients. Do not drag them into your inter-hospital disputes.”
Equally noteworthy was the Court’s refusal to permit retaliatory proceedings for malicious prosecution. Thus, while protecting the doctor from an unwarranted criminal trial, the Court also discouraged unnecessary escalation of litigation.
This balanced approach deserves appreciation.
A Forgotten Lesson from the Satyam-UPaid Litigation
The facts of this case immediately reminded me of the well-known UPaid-Satyam controversy that surfaced nearly two decades ago.
UPaid had engaged Satyam Computer Services for software development that later became the subject matter of patent litigation involving Qualcomm and Verizon. During the proceedings, intellectual property assignment documents allegedly signed by software developers assumed great significance.
Two former Satyam employees, who had by then joined Qualcomm and Verizon respectively, denied that the signatures appearing on the assignment documents were theirs.
At that time, Business Standard reported:
“UPaid had filed this case against Satyam in 2007. Satyam had done a project between 1997 and 2002 for which it got $10 million, partly in shares due to UPaid’s inability to pay cash. When UPaid wished to patent the technology, Satyam needed to provide signatures of the people who worked on the technology. Though the company gave UPaid the signatures, some of these employees had moved out.
When UPaid received the patent, it filed a suit against Verizon Wireless and Qualcomm in 2005, as they were using the company’s patented technology. However, one of the former Satyam employees had moved out of the company and joined Verizon. He said the signature was not his.”
The litigation ultimately culminated in a settlement reportedly involving nearly USD 70 million.
Whether or not the disputed signatures were actually forged was less important than the governance lesson that emerged. Employment-related documentation, once produced before a Court, assumes enormous evidentiary significance. A document casually prepared today may become the deciding factor in litigation years later.
The Missing Governance Perspective
The High Court was rightly concerned with the sustainability of the criminal proceedings against the doctor. However, from a governance perspective, another question deserves academic consideration.
How did the disputed experience certificate originate?
If the investigation had proceeded from the standpoint of document governance, several questions might naturally have arisen:
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- Did an original signed experience certificate actually exist?
- Was the document generated electronically for verification purposes?
- How did the background verification agency obtain the document?
- Was the signature reproduced from another legitimate record?
- Was the document created by someone attempting to facilitate verification without appreciating its legal consequences?
- Did the prospective employer specifically require such a certificate?
These questions are raised purely for academic discussion. There is no material presently available in the public domain to suggest wrongdoing by the background verification agency or any other participant.
The purpose of raising these questions is only to demonstrate how forensic examination of electronic records would ordinarily proceed.
Every HR Document Is an Electronic Record
More than twenty-five years ago, the Information Technology Act, 2000 recognized the legal validity of electronic records. Today, the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 reminds organizations that employee records are also personal data requiring appropriate governance.
Yet many organizations continue to treat HR documentation as routine administrative paperwork. That approach is no longer adequate.
Experience certificates…
Relieving letters…
Employment verification responses…
Background verification reports…
Promotion letters…
Digitally signed approvals…
Every one of these documents is an electronic record capable of becoming evidence before a Court. Every one of them carries legal consequences.
The DGPSI Perspective
From the standpoint of the Data Governance and Protection Standard of India (DGPSI), this case demonstrates why HR documentation deserves the same governance standards applied to financial records.
Organizations should implement documented controls covering:
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- Creation and authorization of employment records.
- Digital authentication and approval mechanisms.
- Version control and document integrity.
- Audit trails for every modification.
- Secure storage and transmission.
- Formal procedures for responding to background verification requests.
- Record retention and secure destruction.
- Periodic Cyber Law awareness training for HR personnel.
Many cyber incidents are not failures of technology. They are failures of governance.Technology merely exposes them.
Hospitals Carry a Higher Fiduciary Responsibility
Hospitals are unlike ordinary commercial enterprises. They occupy a fiduciary position in society because they deal with human life itself.
Professional differences between hospitals, doctors, recruiters and verification agencies should therefore be handled with restraint unless supported by compelling evidence of criminal misconduct.
The Court’s observations are therefore a timely reminder that criminal law should never become an instrument for resolving competitive employment disputes.
Naavi’s Governance Takeaway
This judgment offers several practical lessons for every organization.
First, every HR document should be treated as a legally significant electronic record.
Secondly, background verification processes should be governed by documented procedures identifying who may issue responses, how authenticity is verified and how audit trails are preserved.
Thirdly, organizations should progressively replace scanned signatures with stronger authentication mechanisms such as digital signatures, secure verification portals or verifiable electronic credentials.
Fourthly, Cyber Law awareness should extend beyond IT departments. HR personnel, recruiters, administrators and vendor managers routinely handle electronic records that may later become legal evidence.
Finally, Data Protection Officers, Chief Information Security Officers and HR Heads should work together. Employee records constitute personal data under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act and require governance over their integrity, confidentiality, authenticity and lawful disclosure.
The Larger Lesson
The importance of this judgment lies not merely in protecting one doctor from an unwarranted criminal trial. Its enduring value lies in reminding organizations that governance begins long before litigation.
Every experience certificate, relieving letter, employment verification response or digitally exchanged HR document becomes part of an organization’s trust architecture.
When questioned before a Court, the issue is no longer whether the document originated in the HR Department. The question is whether the organization can demonstrate its authenticity, integrity, provenance and accountability.
If the answer is uncertain, the governance process—not merely the document—requires strengthening.
That, in my view, is the enduring lesson emerging from the Karnataka High Court’s judgment.
Every HR document is also a Cyber Law document.
Naavi














