2016-UNAT-629, Prasad et al.
UNAT held that UNDT had not addressed the Appellants’ request for an extension of time but had rather converted sua sponte the request into incomplete applications and summarily adjudged their applications as not receivable. UNAT held that UNDT could not have converted sua sponte the Appellants’ request for more time into applications. UNAT held that UNDT had not afforded the Appellants the opportunity to file an application and had committed several procedural errors, exceeded its jurisdiction and competence, and violated the Appellants’ due process rights. UNAT vacated the UNDT judgment and remanded the matter to UNDT with directions to permit the Appellants to file their applications.
The Applicants filed a request for an extension of time to file their applications against the decision which found according to a comprehensive salary survey conducted in New Delhi, India, that the current salaries for locally recruited staff were above the labour market. UNDT reiterated that the decision to freeze the existing salary scales did not constitute an administrative decision for the purpose of art. 2. 1(a) of its Statute. UNDT decided by way of summary judgment that the applications were not receivable ratione materiae.
A request for an extension of time to file an application is not equivalent to an actual application and shall not be treated as such. The requests for an extension of time were made so that the staff members could obtain the information needed to prepare an application. In other words, the staff members were not ready to file an application without first obtaining additional information needed to support said application. In such circumstances, however, the UNDT is not necessarily required to grant the staff members’ requests for an extension of time but shall not sua sponte convert such requests to applications.