Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5760-5761 of 1999
Appeal (civil) 5910 of 1999
Appeal (civil) 6995-6996 of 1999
Appeal (civil) 562 of 1999
PETITIONER:
K. DURAISAMY & ANR., ETC. ETC. C
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/01/2001
BENCH:
R.C.Lahoti, Doraswamy Raju
JUDGMENT:
L.....I.........T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
RAJU, J.
The above appeals have been filed against the decision
of a Full Bench of the Madras High Court dated 1.10.1999 in
Writ Appeal Nos.929/99, etc. The Writ Petition (C) No.562
of 1999 has been filed by a person similarly placed like the
appellants, directly in this Court raising identical issues
as are raised in the appeals, canvassing at the same time
the correctness of the decision of the Full Bench of the
Madras High Court.
Having regard to the question decided by the Full
Bench and the issues raised in the above Appeals and Writ
Petition, it is unnecessary to advert to the factual details
relating to the Courses applied by the respective parties or
as to the total number of seats available, number of seats
reserved, the marks obtained by the respective candidates
and the inter se ranking in the merit list. It is stated
that Civil Appeal No.5910 of 1999 concerns D.M.
(Obstetrics) & (Gynaecology), a post- graduate course, and
the courses involved in the other Appeals and the Writ
Petition are said to be super speciality courses.
The Government of Tamil Nadu, Health and Family
Welfare (MCA) Department, issued G.O.Ms. No.55 dated 9.2.99
laying down the procedure for selection of candidates for
admission to Post- graduate Diploma, Degree, M.D.S. and
Higher Speciality courses for the academic session
1999-2000, with Annexure-I thereto containing the Prospectus
pertaining to Post-graduate Diploma/Degree/M.D.S. courses
and Annexure-II containing the Prospectus relating to Higher
Speciality courses. The Government Order envisaged
reservation confining up to 50% in favour of in-service
candidates on merit basis and further stipulated that 50% of
the seats available in each of the speciality, shall be
allotted exclusively to service candidates. The Government
Order also enumerated various categories of Medical
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Officers, who alone will be treated as service candidates
and considered for selection against the 50% of the seats
allocated exclusively for service candidates. As for the
remaining 50%, referred to as Open Quota, while stipulating
the criteria for selection to what has been referred to as
the remaining 50% Open Quota, it has been stated that all
other eligible Medical Officers, except those enumerated
categories of Medical Officers, shall be eligible to apply
for the same. The further stipulation, which requires to be
noticed, is the one providing that all procedures in respect
of such of those matters enumerated in the relevant clause
of the Order followed during 1998- 1999 shall be followed
for 1999-2000 also. The above stipulations in respect of
allocation of seats exclusively for the service candidates
and the other for non-service candidates have been carried
out in the Prospectus, both relating to the Post-graduate
Degree/Diploma courses as well as the Higher Speciality
courses. So far as the Post- graduate Degree/Diploma
courses are concerned, the same were incorporated under the
heading IX. METHOD OF SELECTION AND ADMISSION, and in
respect of Higher Speciality courses, they were incorporated
under the heading X. METHOD OF SELECTION AND ADMISSION.
The necessary program has been published prescribing the
last date for receipt of application forms, the dates for
undertaking Entrance Examination, publication of merit
lists, etc. After conduct of written Entrance Examination
for the purpose and publication of the results of selected
candidates, it came to be known, according to the
appellants, that they were not selected due to a particular
understanding of the Orders of the Government and
stipulations contained in the Prospectus relating to
earmarking or allocation of seats for in-service candidates
and non-service candidates in a manner by which the claims
of in-service candidates based on merit on the basis of
marks came to be ignored in respect of 50% of the seats
allocated as Open Quota by confining them exclusively to
non-service candidates and considering claims of in- service
candidates like the appellants only in respect of 50%
allocated to and reserved for service candidates.
This resulted in the appellants and others filing Writ
Petitions before the High Court. A learned Single Judge,
while allowing the writ petitions held that reservation of
50% of seats for non-service candidates have to be given
effect to or worked out by selecting candidates from
in-service and non-service, on the basis of merit in the
first instance and thereafter the 50% seats reserved for
in-service candidates shall be filled up by in-service
candidates who could not gain selection on the basis of
merit as against the other 50% earmarked as open. The
learned Judge, even overlooking the fact that a description
of the respective classification has been given, was of the
view that there is no category as non-service candidates,
and it is only the in-service candidates who form a separate
class. The learned Judge also drew inspiration from
decisions of Courts pertaining to reservation under Article
16 (4) of the Constitution of India to hold in these cases
also that those candidates belonging to special categories
who have a reservation in their favour but could get or got
selection purely on the basis of their own merits shall not
be counted against the number reserved for that class or
category and must be treated as having got in against the
seats available in open competition. Aggrieved, some of the
selected candidates who had intervened in the writ petitions
filed in Writ Appeal Nos. 905, 906 and 918 of 1999 but the
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same were dismissed on 18.6.99 even at the stage of
admission, summarily. The appeals filed by the State in
Writ Appeal Nos. 929, 952 to 956 of 1999 came up
subsequently before another Division Bench and finding
themselves unable to agree with order of dismissal of the
earlier appeals, the matters were referred for consideration
by a larger Bench after obtaining orders of the Chief
Justice. This Division Bench was of the view that the
decision of the Single Judge was not correct. Thereupon the
matters were placed before the Full Bench, which, in turn,
reversed the judgment of the learned Single Judge and
dismissed the Writ Petitions.
The Full Bench, whose judgment is under challenge
before us, was of the view that the interpretation given by
the Single Judge, particularly on the basis of the
guidelines of the earlier year cannot be sustained, that the
writ petitioners who participated in the written examination
and selection process duly proclaimed cannot challenge the
same subsequently on finding themselves unsuccessful and
cautioned the authorities to be more careful to avoid vague
clauses/language of doubtful purport and import leading to
unnecessary and avoidable litigation, in future.
The learned counsel for the appellants and the writ
petitioner, while adopting the line of reasoning of the
learned Single Judge in the High Court, vehemently contended
that the interpretation placed by the Full Bench on some of
the clauses in the Government order/prospectus was not
justified in law and that the manner of working out the
policy of reservation indicated by the Full Bench is opposed
to the well-settled principles laid down by Courts in the
matter of implementing reservation policies and if allowed
to stand, according to the appellants, would defeat the
policy and objects of reservation, itself. The learned
counsel for the State supported the reasoning of the Full
Bench by contending that the classification made as service
quota and open quota for non-service candidates for purposes
of confining the respective class/category of candidates to
the percentage earmarked for them exclusively is permissible
and well within the powers of the State which establish,
administer and maintain the Medical Colleges and that such
prescription of quota cannot be treated on par with communal
and other reservations, ordinarily made. It was also urged
that in law there can be different sources of recruitment
under classified heads or categories such as service
candidates and non-service or private candidates, they
having distinct and different identity based on intelligible
criteria and that too when made with a definite purpose and
object.
Before dealing with contentions of parties, it is
useful and necessary to refer to the clauses on which there
had been divergent views of the High Court. The Government
order dated 9.2.99, which forms the basis for the prospectus
issued and the relevant clauses found extracted therein,
lays down the criteria, as follows:-
1. (iii) (a) The reservation will be confined to and
kept at 50% in favour of in-service candidates on merit
basis.
(b) 50% of the seats available in each of the
specialities shall be allotted exclusively to service
candidates.
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(c) If sufficient number of eligible service
candidates are not available for the seats reserved
exclusively for them, such vacancies shall be filled up by
the non-service candidates from the merit list/waiting list
in the respective reserved compartments. If vacancies exist
even after this, such vacancies shall be filled up applying
the order of preference indicated in the prospectus.
(d) The following categories of Medical Officers only
will be treated as Service candidates and considered for
selection against 50% of seats allocated exclusively for
service candidates:-
(1) All Medical Officers selected by the TNPSC and
appointed in Tamilnadu Medical Services on regular basis,
who have put in minimum of 2 years continuous service as on
1.2.99.
(2) Medical Officers (or) Health Officers in the
Public Health Department who have been selected by the TNPSC
and working under the control of DPH & PM and who apply for
Public Health Course i.e. Diploma in Public Health can be
considered as Service candidates for DPH as the above
qualification namely Dip. in Public Health is essential for
declaration of probation. However, to consider under
service quota for MD (SPM), the candidates must have
completed 2 years of service like the other postgraduate
courses.
(3) Medical Officers who have put in 2 years of
continuous service and who are working in :-
(i) Local Bodies/Municipalities in Tamil Nadu.
(ii) Government of India Institutions in Tamil Nadu.
(iii) Public Sector Undertaking and Organisation under
the control of Govt. of India in Tamil Nadu.
(iv)Undertakings and Organisations of Government of
Tamil Nadu. These Medical Officers should produce bona-fide
certificates from the concerned authorities with the
declaration to serve in the respective institutions for a
minimum period of 5 years after completion of the course.
(e) Criteria for selection under 50% open quota:-
All other eligible Medical Officers except those
specified in clause (iii) (d) above are eligible to apply
under 50% open quota.
(iv) (a) The Rule of reservation i.e. 31% for open
competition, 30% for backward classes, 20% for most backward
classes/De-notified communities, 18% for Scheduled Castes
and 1% for Scheduled Tribes shall apply to 50% seats
reserved for service candidates and to the 50% seats to be
filled up on the basis of merit from service and non-service
candidates separately under each speciality.
(b) The rule of reservation shall apply to any course
with 8 seats and above both for open and service quota, in a
discipline.
(v) The cost of application form shall be Rs.600/-
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(Rupees Six Hundred only) for all the courses. The cost of
the application form shall be paid by a crossed Demand Draft
on any Nationalised Bank drawn in favour of the Secretary
Selection Committee KMCH campus Kilpauk, Chennai-600010. As
per G.O. MS No.111 Adi Dravidar & Tribal Welfare Department
dated 22.9.98 SC/ST candidates are exempted from payment of
DD for Rs.600/-
. .
6. The Government direct that all procedures such as
reservation of 25% of seats in Post Graduate Courses for all
India Quota, conduction of Entrance Examination at Chennai
only, eligibility criteria to apply allocation of seats
between open quota and service candidates on 50:50 basis,
the procedure for filling up of vacant seats allotted to
service candidates in the event of non- availability of
candidates, awarding of one mark to each answer with correct
response, Negative Mark System for incorrect response,
determination of inter se merit of candidates obtaining
equal marks, mentioning of number of seats in each
speciality college-wise and course-wise in the Annexure to
the prospectus, payment of stipend and other procedures
relating to execution of security bond and surety bond,
obtaining written undertaking from all non-service
candidates to serve within the country for a period of not
less than 5 years, computerisation of application/coding
sheet, evaluation of answer papers, taking of anti-
Hepatitis-B injection by selected candidates and incurring
of expenditure for the conduct of entrance examination,
scrutiny of applications, evaluation, the expenditure
relating to introduction of optical mark reader system in
admission to various courses from the personal deposit
account maintained by the Secretary Selection Committee
followed during 1998-99 shall be followed for the academic
year 1999-2000 also.
That the Government possess the right and authority to
decide from what sources the admissions in Educational
Institutions or to particular disciplines and courses
therein have to be made and that too in what proportion, is
well established and by now a proposition well settled, too.
It has been the consistent and authoritatively settled view
of this Court that at the super speciality level in
particular and even at the Post-Graduate level reservations
of the kind known as protective discrimination in favour
of those considered to be backward should be avoided as
being not permissible. Reservation, even if it be claimed
to be so in this case, for and in favour of in- service
candidates, cannot be equated or treated on par with
communal reservations envisaged under Articles 15(4) or
16(4) and extended the special mechanics of their
implementation to ensure such reservations to be the minimum
by not counting those selected in open competition on the
basis of their own merit as against the quota reserved on
communal considerations.
Properly speaking, in these cases, we are concerned
with the allocation of seats for admission in the form of a
quota amongst in- service candidates on the one hand and
non-service or private candidates on the other and the
method or manner of working out in practice the allocation
of seats among the members of the respective category.
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Could the State Government have legitimately made a
provision allocating 50% of seats exclusively in favour of
in-service candidates and keep open the avenue for
competition for them in respect of the remaining 50% along
with others denying a fair contest in relation to a
substantial or sizeable number of other candidates, who are
not in service and who fall under the category of
non-service candidates, will itself be open to serious
doubt. One such attempt seems to have been put in issue
before the Madras High Court which held that reservation in
favour of in-service candidates for the academic year
1992-93 should be confined to 50% and awarding of two
additional marks, instead of one additional mark for each
completed year of service in primary health centres, was
unconstitutional and when the matter was brought to this
Court, in the decision reported in State of Tamil Nadu Vs.
T. Dhilipkumar & Ors. [1995 (5) SCALE 67], the decision of
the High Court has been upheld. This Court also further
observed that the Government should appoint a highly
qualified committee to determine from year to year what, in
fact, should be the percentage-wise reservation required for
in-service candidates, having regard to the then prevailing
situation and that the percentage of fifty percent shall, if
found appropriate, be reduced.
The stipulations governing the selection for
admissions in these cases have got to be viewed and
construed in the above backdrop of events and legal
position. The learned Single Judge, in our view, was
certainly not right in equating the provisions made for
allocation of seats in the form of fixation of quota in this
case with the usual form of communal reservations and
allowing himself to be carried away by the peculiar method
of working out such reservations in order to ensure adequate
representation to such candidates, and applying those
principles to construe a provision of the nature involved in
these cases. Yet another error in the reasoning of the
learned Single Judge lies in his assumption that open
quota seats have to be thrown open to all and are meant
only to be filled up purely on the basis of merit
performance and no one from even the class of candidates in
whose favour a special quota has already been provided can
be excluded from consideration as against the open quota.
This reasoning of the learned Single Judge not only ignores
the object and scheme underlying the allocation of seats for
admissions for the academic year 1999-2000, but has the
consequence of rewriting the Prospectus and introducing
altogether a different pattern of admissions, overriding the
policy of the Government aimed at meeting out equal justice
and affording equality of opportunity to the different
categories classified for the purpose. If the Government
can be said to possess the power to fix a quota for the
exclusive benefit of in-service candidates, it is beyond
comprehension or dictates of either reason or logic as to
why the Government cannot equally exclusively earmark the
remaining seats in favour of non-service or private
candidates, thereby confining the claims of service
candidates to the number of seats earmarked and allocated to
them. As there can be a classified category of service
candidates, it is open to the Government to make
classification of all those other than those falling in the
category of service candidates, as non-service candidates
and allocate the remaining seats after allotment to the
service candidates for exclusive benefit of the source of
non-service or private candidates. There is nothing in law
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which deprive the Government of any such powers and no such
impediment has either been brought to our notice at the time
of hearing or seems to have been brought to the notice of
the learned Single Judge to warrant any such construction,
as has been adopted by him. We are also of the view that it
does not lie in the mouth of the writ petitioners to raise a
bogey of selection based on merit alone, only in respect of
a portion of the seats available for admission to non-
service candidates, when they belong to and are part of a
category or class who have got in their favour fifty percent
of the number of seats in each of the disciplines allocated
to their category of in-service candidates to be filled up
exclusively from such in-service candidates on the basis
of their own inter se merit and not on the overall merit
performance of all the candidates - both in-service and
non-service put together. The writ petitioners are found to
have applied as in- service candidates and merely because
they could not be selected within the number of seats
earmarked for their category or class on the basis of the
inter se merits among their own class, they cannot be
allowed to contend to the contrary in retrospect and on hind
sight experience of having obtained more marks, than those
who got selected as against the seats earmarked and
allocated to non-service candidates. The justification,
both in law and on facts for exclusive allocation and
stipulation of a definite quota or number of seats for
non-service or private candidates, in our view, lies in the
very principle which warranted or enabled the fixation of a
quota of fifty percent of seats and exclusively allotted to
in-service candidates. Any countenance of such claims of
the appellants is likely to also endanger the very
allocation of 50% of the seats exclusively to the category
of in-service candidates, too.
On a consideration of the reasoning of the Full Bench
as also the construction placed upon the Government Order
and the Prospectus, we are of the view that State
Government, in the undoubted exercise of its power, has
rightly decided, as a matter of policy, so far as the
admissions to super speciality and Post Graduate
Diploma/Degree/MDS courses for the academic session
1999-2000 are concerned to have scheme or pattern of two
sources of candidates based upon a broad classification into
two categories, i.e., in-service candidates and non-service
or private candidates with each one of them allocated
exclusively for their own respective category of candidates
fifty percent of the seats, the ultimate selection for
admission depending upon the inter se merit performance
amongst their own category of candidates. As pointed out by
the Full Bench, the change in the nomenclature of the
categorisation from open competition in 1998-1999, to
open quota in 1999-2000 and the conspicuous omission in
the scheme and the Prospectus for 1999- 2000 of a specific
stipulation like the one contained in clause X (5) in the
Prospectus for 1998-1999 that the 50% of the seats available
for open competition shall be made available for selection
and admission of both service and non-service candidates, as
also the stipulation contained in the Government Order and
the Prospectus for 1999-2000 under the caption criteria for
selection under 50% open quota, which specifically reads
that all other eligible Medical Officers except those
specified in clause (iii)(d) above (meaning thereby Medical
Officers who will be treated as service candidates and
allowed to apply as such) are eligible to apply under 50% of
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the open quota, supports the stand of the State Government
and the Selection Committee and justify the selections for
admission already made by them. The further stipulation
that the reservation will be confined to and kept at 50% in
favour of in-service candidates on merit basis, coupled with
the other provisions noticed above make it abundantly clear
that the selection of in-service candidates is confined to
and has to be kept at 50% only of the total seats and not
against any of the other seats, exclusively earmarked for
the non-service or private candidates.
The mere use of the word reservation per se does not
have the consequence of ipso facto applying the entire
mechanism underlying the constitutional concept of a
protective reservation specially designed for the
advancement of any socially and educationally backward
classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes to enable them to enter and adequately
represented in various fields. The meaning, content and
purport of that expression will necessarily depend upon the
purpose and object with which it is used. Since reservation
has diverse natures and may be brought about in diverse ways
with varied purposes and manifold objects, the peculiar
principles of interpretation laid down by the Courts for
implementing reservations envisaged under the Constitution
in order to ensure adequate and effective representation to
the backward classes as a whole cannot be readily applied,
out of context and unmindful of the purpose of reservations
as the one made in this case, more to safeguard the interest
of candidates, who were already in service to enable such
in-service candidates to acquire higher and advanced
education in specialised fields to improve their
professional talents for the benefit of the patients to be
treated in such Medical Institutions where the in-service
candidates are expected to serve. That apart, where the
Scheme envisaged is not by way of a mere reservation but is
one of classification of the sources from which admissions
have to be accorded, fixation of respective quota for such
classified groups, the principles at times applied in
construing provisions relating to reservation simpliciter
will have no relevance or application. Though the
prescription of a quota may involve in a general sense
reservation in favour of the particular class or category in
whose favour a quota is fixed, the concepts of reservation
and fixation of quota drastically differ in their purport
and content as well as the object. Fixation of a quota in a
given case cannot be said to be the same as a mere
reservation and whenever a quota is fixed or provided for
one or more of the classified group or category, the
candidates falling in or answering the description of
different classified groups in whose favour a respective
quota is fixed have to confine their respective claims
against the quota fixed for each of such category, with no
one in one category having any right to stake a claim
against the quota earmarked for the other class or category.
Since we are of the view that the Full Bench has correctly
come to the conclusion that the scheme adopted for selection
of candidates for admissions in question provided for a
definite and fixed quota for the respective classified
sources of admission and the reasons assigned therefor do
not suffer from any infirmity whatsoever to call for any
interference at our hands, these appeals fail and are
dismissed.
In view of the above discussion, it is unnecessary for
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us to deal with the issue of estoppel on which also the Full
Bench has chosen to reject the claim of the appellants. In
view of the conclusion of ours in the appeals, the Writ
Petition also shall stand dismissed. There will be no order
as to costs.