Please help me regarding relieving letter

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I am a software engineer. I served in a company for 2.5 years but due to a lack of projects and work, I resigned. However, they forced me to stay.



I had an agreement with employer too. But just before 3 months, I resigned.

After a few days I had a good offer and was good for development point of view, so I didn't want to miss this.



I asked them to release me in one month as specified by the notice period,
but they didn't agree and asked me 200000 where the agreement was for 50000.



I told the same with the current organisation and they were ready without document. And i joined here.



Could this get me into trouble in the future?

If yes, then what should I do?







share|improve this question


















  • 1




    @user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
    – Jan Doggen
    Jul 29 '14 at 14:03







  • 2




    Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
    – user2813274
    Jul 29 '14 at 15:26







  • 1




    How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
    – Aaronaught
    Jul 30 '14 at 22:18










  • This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
    – HLGEM
    Jul 31 '14 at 21:06
















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I am a software engineer. I served in a company for 2.5 years but due to a lack of projects and work, I resigned. However, they forced me to stay.



I had an agreement with employer too. But just before 3 months, I resigned.

After a few days I had a good offer and was good for development point of view, so I didn't want to miss this.



I asked them to release me in one month as specified by the notice period,
but they didn't agree and asked me 200000 where the agreement was for 50000.



I told the same with the current organisation and they were ready without document. And i joined here.



Could this get me into trouble in the future?

If yes, then what should I do?







share|improve this question


















  • 1




    @user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
    – Jan Doggen
    Jul 29 '14 at 14:03







  • 2




    Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
    – user2813274
    Jul 29 '14 at 15:26







  • 1




    How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
    – Aaronaught
    Jul 30 '14 at 22:18










  • This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
    – HLGEM
    Jul 31 '14 at 21:06












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I am a software engineer. I served in a company for 2.5 years but due to a lack of projects and work, I resigned. However, they forced me to stay.



I had an agreement with employer too. But just before 3 months, I resigned.

After a few days I had a good offer and was good for development point of view, so I didn't want to miss this.



I asked them to release me in one month as specified by the notice period,
but they didn't agree and asked me 200000 where the agreement was for 50000.



I told the same with the current organisation and they were ready without document. And i joined here.



Could this get me into trouble in the future?

If yes, then what should I do?







share|improve this question














I am a software engineer. I served in a company for 2.5 years but due to a lack of projects and work, I resigned. However, they forced me to stay.



I had an agreement with employer too. But just before 3 months, I resigned.

After a few days I had a good offer and was good for development point of view, so I didn't want to miss this.



I asked them to release me in one month as specified by the notice period,
but they didn't agree and asked me 200000 where the agreement was for 50000.



I told the same with the current organisation and they were ready without document. And i joined here.



Could this get me into trouble in the future?

If yes, then what should I do?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 29 '14 at 15:22









Jan Doggen

11.5k145066




11.5k145066










asked Jul 29 '14 at 13:11









Laxmikant

142




142







  • 1




    @user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
    – Jan Doggen
    Jul 29 '14 at 14:03







  • 2




    Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
    – user2813274
    Jul 29 '14 at 15:26







  • 1




    How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
    – Aaronaught
    Jul 30 '14 at 22:18










  • This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
    – HLGEM
    Jul 31 '14 at 21:06












  • 1




    @user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
    – Jan Doggen
    Jul 29 '14 at 14:03







  • 2




    Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
    – user2813274
    Jul 29 '14 at 15:26







  • 1




    How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
    – Aaronaught
    Jul 30 '14 at 22:18










  • This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
    – HLGEM
    Jul 31 '14 at 21:06







1




1




@user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 14:03





@user379013 I understand that English is not your first language and have cleaned your question up a little. However, it's still not clear to me. Can you edit it and improve it further? Give the companies/employer/organisation fictional names X, Y, ... so that we know who you are talking about. Also: if with "good from ...view" you mean "the job looked good for my development career", then please say so. And: where does the relieving letter come in - you don't mention it anywhere in your text?
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 14:03





2




2




Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
– user2813274
Jul 29 '14 at 15:26





Note that this is not a place nor substitute for professional legal advice, and it sounds like that is what you may need if you intend to enforce an "agreement" or "notice period".
– user2813274
Jul 29 '14 at 15:26





1




1




How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
– Aaronaught
Jul 30 '14 at 22:18




How could they force you to stay after you resigned?
– Aaronaught
Jul 30 '14 at 22:18












This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
– HLGEM
Jul 31 '14 at 21:06




This is a legal mess, you need a lawyer. You need to get this cleaned up for your own protection. I hope you have copies of the applicable contracts.
– HLGEM
Jul 31 '14 at 21:06










1 Answer
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up vote
2
down vote













I don't think it would be any trouble in your current organization but it can pose trouble in two cases:



  1. When you join some other organization in future, they may ask you to provide the relieving/ work-experience letter etc. from your first organization.


  2. There is minor chance that it may affect your visa application, when time comes.


Second part of your question is that what you should do in such case.



(i) In case you have agreement with them in written, then you can challenge them legally. But I suppose you are from India and this can get cumbersome.



(ii) My suggestion would be that you negotiate with them. Get you experience letter from them for a lesser amount. Your first company will still be in win-win situation and hence, they might agree upon it.






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    1 Answer
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    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I don't think it would be any trouble in your current organization but it can pose trouble in two cases:



    1. When you join some other organization in future, they may ask you to provide the relieving/ work-experience letter etc. from your first organization.


    2. There is minor chance that it may affect your visa application, when time comes.


    Second part of your question is that what you should do in such case.



    (i) In case you have agreement with them in written, then you can challenge them legally. But I suppose you are from India and this can get cumbersome.



    (ii) My suggestion would be that you negotiate with them. Get you experience letter from them for a lesser amount. Your first company will still be in win-win situation and hence, they might agree upon it.






    share|improve this answer


























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      I don't think it would be any trouble in your current organization but it can pose trouble in two cases:



      1. When you join some other organization in future, they may ask you to provide the relieving/ work-experience letter etc. from your first organization.


      2. There is minor chance that it may affect your visa application, when time comes.


      Second part of your question is that what you should do in such case.



      (i) In case you have agreement with them in written, then you can challenge them legally. But I suppose you are from India and this can get cumbersome.



      (ii) My suggestion would be that you negotiate with them. Get you experience letter from them for a lesser amount. Your first company will still be in win-win situation and hence, they might agree upon it.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        I don't think it would be any trouble in your current organization but it can pose trouble in two cases:



        1. When you join some other organization in future, they may ask you to provide the relieving/ work-experience letter etc. from your first organization.


        2. There is minor chance that it may affect your visa application, when time comes.


        Second part of your question is that what you should do in such case.



        (i) In case you have agreement with them in written, then you can challenge them legally. But I suppose you are from India and this can get cumbersome.



        (ii) My suggestion would be that you negotiate with them. Get you experience letter from them for a lesser amount. Your first company will still be in win-win situation and hence, they might agree upon it.






        share|improve this answer














        I don't think it would be any trouble in your current organization but it can pose trouble in two cases:



        1. When you join some other organization in future, they may ask you to provide the relieving/ work-experience letter etc. from your first organization.


        2. There is minor chance that it may affect your visa application, when time comes.


        Second part of your question is that what you should do in such case.



        (i) In case you have agreement with them in written, then you can challenge them legally. But I suppose you are from India and this can get cumbersome.



        (ii) My suggestion would be that you negotiate with them. Get you experience letter from them for a lesser amount. Your first company will still be in win-win situation and hence, they might agree upon it.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jul 30 '14 at 5:10

























        answered Jul 30 '14 at 5:04









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