Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8485 of 2001
Appeal (civil) 8486-8488 of 2001
PETITIONER:
K. S. BHOIR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/12/2001
BENCH:
V.N. Khare & B.N. Agrawal
JUDGMENT:
V. N. KHARE, J.
Leave granted.
This group of appeals gives rise to following two questions for our
decisions :
1) Whether, in view of an extraordinary situation having arisen, the
Central Government was justified in rejecting the request of the State
Government to grant one time increase in admission capacity in Medicine
(MBBS) and Dentistry (BDS) courses run in various medical colleges
located within the State of Maharashtra.
2) Whether, in view of the facts and circumstances of the case, the High
Court in exercise of its power under Article 226 of the Constitution ought to
have issued directions to the Central Government to grant one time increase
in admission capacity in Medicine (MBBS) and Dentistry (BDS) courses
undertaken by various medical colleges (government run as well as private
management run colleges) in the State of Maharashtra.
The aforesaid questions have arisen in the context of the facts and
circumstances stated hereinafter. On 29.4.2001, the Maharashtra Health
Sciences Common Entrance Test (hereinafter referred to as MH-CET 2001)
was conducted for health sciences courses such as Medicine (MBBS),
Dentistry (BDS), Ayurved (BAMS), Homeopathy (BHMS), Unani Medicine
(MUMS), Physio Therapy (BPTH), Occupational Therapy, Audio and
Speech Therapy (BASLP) and Prosthetics and Orthotics (BP & O). In the
said examination about 67,563 students appeared throughout the State of
Maharashtra. With a view to see that there is no chance for any unfair
means, the question papers were prepared in four versions and they were
marked as versions 11, 12, 33 and 44. The questions in all the versions were
the same. But there was a change in their order. Thus, the students
answering the examination were given papers of different versions one after
another i.e. version 11, 22, 33, and 44 and thereafter version 11, 22, 33 and
44 and so on which would have made copying or use of unfair means very
difficult. The result of the said examination was declared on 17.5.2001. On
the basis of the result of the said examination a merit list was prepared for
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purposes of admission in various colleges. Those who were higher in merit
were given admission in colleges of their choice and adjusted against free
seats. In other words, admissions against free seat and payment seat in
various courses and disciplines were made according to the merit list.
Many selected students on the basis of the said merit list took admission in
various medical colleges and seats meant for Medicine and Dentistry were
particularly filled up. After the result was declared, the writ petitioners in
writ petition No. 1658/2000 before the High Court found that they have
received lesser marks in biology paper answered by them than their
expectations. The writ petitioners before the High Court suspected that there
was obviously some error in the evaluation of biology paper in the MH-CET
2001. Some newspapers printed and published from Mumbai also reported
that some mistakes have occurred in the process of computerization in the
master copy for answer paper in version 33. It is under such circumstances,
the writ petitioners filed a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution
praying for re-valuation of biology paper of the said examination. After
filing of the writ petition, the State Government got a re-verification of
answer sheets carried out by six Examiners. The Examiners reported that
there were mistakes/errors in the model key answer sheet of version 33 in
the subject of biology. In view of the aforesaid mistake and error, the
respondents decided to reevaluate all the answer sheets of version 33. After
revaluation of the answer sheets of version 33 the directorate prepared
revised merit list showing the correct ranking of the students in the light of
re-verification and undertook the entire admission process afresh in respect
of all the candidates, including those who have already been admitted. In
view of the aforesaid decision by the State Government, the writ petitioners
before the High Court got the writ petition amended and sought directions to
the respondents to publish and implement the revised merit list and grant
admission to them in the colleges of their choice in accordance with their
respective position in the revised merit list. The said amendment was
allowed.
The consequences of the preparation of the revised merit list were that
at least 350 students from version 33 who ought to have been admitted in
Medicine and Dentistry at the first instance but for the wrong evaluation of
their answer sheets were denied admissions were to displace the students
already admitted in Medicine and Dentistry and other courses. The
displaced students were to be sent downwards and adjusted against seats in
various other Medical Colleges or other disciplines as per their ranking in
the revised merit list. In fact, an extraordinary situation arose due to mistake
at the hands of the paper setters and examiners. Under such circumstances,
to meet such an extra-ordinary situation, the State Government wrote to the
Central Government for grant of one time increase in admission seats in the
MBBS and BDS courses in various medical colleges in the State of
Maharashtra, but the same was refused by the Central Government on
account of non-compliance of the provisions of Section 10A and the
regulations. In that view of the matter, the High Court, in order to meet the
extraordinary situation, by the impugned judgment while allowing the writ
petitions, issued several directions to accommodate those students who were
already admitted on the basis of first merit list in various courses and
dislodged by the revised merit list.
Aggrieved, the students who were displaced due to revised merit list
having prepared and others have filed these appeals.
Shri T.R. Andhyarujina, learned senior counsel, appearing for the
appellants referred to certain passages of the impugned judgment which we
shall advert slightly later and, on the strength of the said passages argued
that in view of the extraordinary situation having arisen, it was incumbent
upon the Central government to have granted one time increase in
admissions in Medicine (MBBS) and Dentistry (BDS) courses in various
medical colleges in the State of Maharashtra. His further argument is that
provisions of Section 10-A of the Act apply only to such a situation where
medical colleges apply for regular and permanent admissions capacity.
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According to the learned counsel, there being no provision to comply with
the requirement for grant of one time increase in admission capacity in
various medical colleges, in the interest of the students who have suffered
for no fault of their own in a particular year, the Central Government acted
illegally in refusing to grant permission for one time increase in admissions
capacity in various Medical Colleges. He also argued that in any case, the
High Court, in view of an extraordinary situation having arisen, as noticed
by it, ought to have issued directions to the Central Government to grant
one time increase in admission capacity in Medicine (MBBS) and Dentistry
(BDS) courses in various colleges in the State of Maharashtra.
Learned counsel, appearing for the Central Government and Medical
Council of India argued that the view taken by the Central Government
while refusing to grant one time increase in admission capacity in Medicine
(MBBS) and Dentistry (BDS) courses was fully justified and was in
accordance with law. It was also argued that the High Court acted within the
parameter of law while refusing to issue writ of mandamus to the Central
government to increase one time admission capacity in Medicine (MBBS)
and Dentistry (BDS) courses.
Coming to the first question, since long time past, establishing of a
medical college and medical education therein are governed by the Indian
Medical Council Act, 1956 (hereinafter referred to as the Act ) and Dentist
Act, 1948. Despite there being such provisions, it was experienced that
large number of persons and institutions established medical colleges
without providing therein the minimum necessary and proportionate
infrastructure i.e. teaching and other facilities required for them. As a result
it was found that there was sharp decline in the maintenance of higher
standard of medical education. In order to put check on unregulated
mushroom growth of medical colleges and maintain high standard of
medical education, it was thought to bring more stringent provisions in the
Act. With the aforesaid view of the matter, in the year 1993, Sections 10A,
10B and 10C were inserted in the Medical Council Act by amending Act
31/93. Similarly, the provisions of Sections 10A, 10B and 10C were also
incorporated in the Dentists Act, 1948. Sub-section (1) of Section 10A of
the Act provides that no person shall establish a medical college or no
medical college shall open a new or higher course of study or training or
increase its admission capacity in any course of study or training except with
the previous permission of the Central Government obtained in accordance
with the provisions of the Act. Sub-section (2) thereof provides that every
person or medical college desirous of opening a medical college or increase
its admission capacity in any course of study or training, including a post
graduate course of study or training shall submit to the Central Government
a scheme prepared in accordance with the provisions of the Act and the
Central government shall refer the said scheme to the Medical Council for
its recommendation. Sub-section (3) of Section 10A further provides that on
receipt of such a scheme by the Council, it may obtain such other particulars,
as may be considered necessary and consider the said scheme having regard
to the factor referred to in sub-section (7) of Section 10-A of the Act and
send its recommendations to the Central Government. Under sub-section (4)
of Section 10A, the Central government, on receipt of the recommendation
of the Medical Council is empowered to either approve or disapprove the
scheme. It may grant or refuse permission to open a medical college or
increase its admission capacity. If it is found that the scheme is not in
conformity with the provisions of the Act and regulations framed
thereunder, it may refuse to accord permission to increase the admission
capacity in any course of study or training. Section 33 of the Act empowers
the Medical Council to make regulations for carrying out the purposes of the
Act. The Medical Council, in exercise of power conferred by Section 33
read with Section 10A of the Act, has framed regulations known as
’Establishment of New Medical Colleges, Opening of Higher Courses of
Study and Increase of Admission Capacity in Medical Colleges Regulation,
1993’ (hereafter referred to as the ’regulations’). The said regulation
provides for eligibility criteria to be complied with even for making an
application and part of the said regulations deal with the requirements to be
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complied with when any medical college applies for increase in admission
capacity in the college. A perusal of the provisions of Section 10A read
with regulations shows that it is mandatory on the part of the institution or
management desirous of increasing its admission capacity in any course of
study to submit a scheme complying with the provisions of sub-section (7)
of Section 10A and the requirements envisages under the regulations. If any
of the infrastructure facilities, as required either under sub-section (7) or
under the regulations are absent, it is open to the Central Government to
refuse permission for increase in the admission capacity in any course of
study in a medical college. The object of compliance of requirements
mentioned in sub-section (7) of Section 10A and the regulation is to ensure
the maintenance of highest standard of education. In Medical Council of
India vs. State of Karnataka and others 1998 (6) SCC 131 and Dr. Preeti
Srivastava and another etc. vs. State of Madhya Pradesh and others etc.
1999 (7) SCC 120, it was held that the regulations framed by the Medical
Council under Section 33 of the Act are mandatory. In Medical Council of
India vs. State of Kartanaka (supra), while dealing with the admission made
in excess of intake capacity fixed by the Council, this Court observed thus:
" .A medical student requires gruelling study
and that can be done only if proper facilities are
available in a medical college and the hospital
attached to it has to be well equipped and the
teaching faculty and doctors have to be competent
enough that when a medical student comes out, he
is perfect in the science of treatment of human
beings and is not found wanting in any way. The
country does not want half-baked medical
professionals coming out of medical colleges when
they did not have full facilities of teaching and
were not exposed to the patients and their ailments
during the course of their study."
The compliance of the requirements under the Act and the regulations being
mandatory, in the absence of its compliance, no permission can be granted
by the Central Government for increase in admission capacity in any course
in any medical college. In the present case, the State Government sought
one time increase in admission capacity in various medical colleges on the
premise that medical colleges possessed all the facilities. This was not
sufficient. What was required, was that medical colleges desirous of one
time increase in admission capacity should have submitted a scheme
prepared in accordance with the Act and the regulation to the Central
Government. No such scheme was submitted to the Central Government
and medical council has no occasion to verify the sufficiency of the facilities
and other requirements. There being no compliance of requirements under
the Act, the Central Government was justified in refusing the permission for
one time increase in the admission capacity in the medical colleges. We do
not, therefore, find any infirmity in the order of the Central Government
when it refused to grant permission to the State Government to have one
time increase in admission capacity in Medicine and Dentistry in various
medical colleges located in the State of Maharashtra.
It was then urged by the learned counsel appearing for the appellants
that the provisions of Section 10A do not prohibit the possibility of one time
enhancement of intake capacity for admission to medical colleges and, thus,
permission ought to have been granted by the Central government for such a
one time enhancement or creation of additional number of seats beyond 150
in view of extraordinary situation and the refusal on the part of the Central
Government to grant such permission was erroneous. It was also argued
that sub-sections (1) to (5) of Section 10A being merely procedural, sub-
section (7) of Section 10A providing for factors to be taken into
consideration for an increase in the admission capacity in a medical college
has an overriding effect on the procedural provisions of sub-sections (1) to
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(5) and, therefore, the Central Government committed an error in refusing to
permit one time increase in admission capacity in Medicine and Dentistry
courses in the medical colleges. We do not find any merit in the submission.
Sub-section (1) of Section 10A is a substantive provision in itself and begins
with non-obstante clause "notwithstanding anything contained in the
Act..", it means there is a prohibition in the matter of an increase in the
admission capacity in a medical college unless previous permission of the
Central Government is obtained in accordance with the recommendation of
the Medical Council of India. The entire scheme of Section 10A of the Act
has to be read in consonance with other sub-sections to further the object
behind the amending Act. The object being to achieve highest standard of
medical education. The said objective can be achieved only by ensuring that
a medical college has the requisite infrastructure to impart medical
education. As noticed earlier, the object of amending Sections 10A, 10B
and 10C was for a specific purpose of controlling and restricting the
unchecked and unregulated mushroomed growth of medical colleges without
requisite infrastructure resulting in decline in the maintenance of highest
standard of education. The highest standard of medical education is only
possible when the requirement of provisions of Section 10A and the
regulations are complied with. It has been experienced that unless there is
required infrastructure available in the medical college, the standard of
medical education has declined. Unless an institution can provide complete
and full facilities for training to each student who is admitted in various
discipline, the medical education would remain incomplete and the medical
college would be turning out half-baked doctors which, in turn, would
adversely affect the health of public in general. Thus, for every increase in
the admission capacity either it is one time or permanent, the Council is
obliged to ensure a proportionate increase of infrastructure facilities. The
Medical Council can only make recommendations to the Central
Government for grant of permission for one time intake capacity in seats
only when it is satisfied that scheme to be submitted by the medical colleges
fulfils all the requirements. Unless such a scheme providing for all the
requirements provided for in the Act and the regulations is submitted to the
Central Government and the Medical Council is satisfied that the scheme
complies with all the requirement and makes a recommendation to that
effect, only then the Central government can consider for grant of
permission for increase of admission capacity in a medical college.
Similarly, the Central Government without compliance of the Act and the
regulations cannot grant, without recommendation of the Medical Council,
any permission for one time increase in admission capacity in various
courses conducted by the medical colleges. For the aforesaid reasons, we
are of the view that the Central Government was fully justified when it
rejected the request of the State Government for grant of permission for one
time increase in the admission capacity in medicine and Dentistry courses in
various medical colleges in the State of Maharashtra.
Coming to the second question, it is no doubt true that the High Court
while deciding the writ petitions made the following observations :
"The seats meant for Medicine and Dentistry were
particularly all filled in.. Just as the petitioners
were wrongfully denied admissions to the courses
and colleges of their choice are innocent students,
those students, who were already admitted to
different courses, were equally innocent. They had
in the meanwhile taken their admissions, paid fees
and bought costly equipments and books and had
incurred expenditure of around 10,000/- per
student apart from fees.
This was an extraordinary situation. The problem
cropped up because of mistakes at the hands of the
paper-setters and examiners. The Court was told
that these were bonafide mistakes and no body
disputed that position. The fact however remains
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that at least 350 students from version 33, who
would have gone up in Medicine and Dentistry or
other course, had suffered because of the wrong
evaluation and thousands of students had been
given wrong placements. On the other hand,
thousands of students had already been admitted
in the meantime in different colleges. We therefore
thought that the proposal of the State government
to get the seats increased as a one time measure
for this year was worth consideration. The
government had already approached the Medical
Council of India. Therefore, we thought that this
effort deserved to be followed up. This was
particularly on the background of the statement of
the Government lawyers that the Government and
Municipal Medical Colleges did have all the
necessary facilities to take care of these additional
seats."
The aforesaid observations by the High Court were in the context of
the extraordinary and difficult situation that had arisen due to revision of the
merit list. It is in this light the aforesaid observation has to be read and
understood. It is no doubt true that a large number of students who were
already admitted in the colleges and incurred a lot of expenditure in taking
admissions were to be dislodged by issue of the revised merit list. In such a
situation one can sympathise with the plight of such students who for no
fault of their own were to be dislodged. However, the compassion and
sympathy has no role to play where a rule of law is required to be enforced.
The High Court has rightly declined to issue any direction to the Central
Government to grant one time increase in the admission capacity in the
medical colleges, otherwise it would not have been proper exercise of
jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution. Adjusting equities in
exercise of extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 is one thing, and the
High Court assuming the role of the Central Government and the Medical
Council under Section 10A of the Act is a different thing. The Court cannot
direct to waive the mandatory requirement of law in exercise of its
extraordinary power under Article 226. It is not permissible for the High
Court to direct an authority under the Act to act contrary to the statutory
provisions. The power conferred on the High Court by virtue of Article 226
is to enforce the rule of law and ensure that the State and other statutory
authorities act in accordance with law. However, it does not mean that the
High Court is powerless in that regard. It can do so only when it finds that
there was some illegality in the order of the Central government in refusing
to increase the admission capacity in various colleges. The increase in
admission capacity is permissible only when a scheme, in accordance with
the regulations, is submitted by a medical college under Section 10A of the
Act to the Central Government and the Medical Council is satisfied that the
scheme complies with the requirement of the Act and regulations and
thereafter the Medical Council recommends for such an increase in
admission capacity. So long as the requirements under Section 10A of the
Act are not complied with, no permission can be granted by the Central
Government. If any direction is issued by the High Court to the Central
Government to increase the admission capacity in a medical college, it
would be in the teeth of the statutory provisions and amounted to amending
the provisions of Section 10A. It is not permissible for the High Court to
direct an authority under the Act to act contrary to the statutory provisions.
The power conferred on the High Court by virtue of Article 226 is to enforce
the rule of law and ensure that the State and other statutory authorities act in
accordance with law.
In A.P. Christian Medical Society vs. Government of A.P. 1986 (2)
SCC 667, it was held thus:
" any direction of the nature sought by Shri
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Venugopal would be in clear transgression of the
provisions of the University Act and the
regulations of the University. We cannot by our
fiat direct the University to disobey the stature to
which it owes its existence and regulations made
by the university itself. We cannot imagine
anything more destructive of the rule of law than a
direction by the court to disobey the loss."
In State of Punjab & Ors. vs. Renuka Singla & Ors. 1994 (1) SCC
175, it was held thus:
"The High Courts or the Supreme Court cannot be
generous or liberal in issuing such directions
which in substance amount to directing the
authorities concerned to violate their own statutory
rules and regulations, in respect of admissions of
students. Technical education, including medical
education, requires infrastructure to cope with the
requirement of giving proper education to the
students, who are admitted. Taking into
consideration the infrastructure, equipment, staff,
the limit of the number of admissions is fixed
either by the Medical Council of India or Dental
Council of India. The High Court cannot disturb
that balance between the capacity of the institution
and number of admission, on ’compassionate
ground’. The High Courts should be conscious of
the fact that in this process they are affecting the
education of the students who have already been
admitted, against the fixed seats, after a very tough
competitive examination. There does not appear to
be any justification on the part of the High Court,
in the present case, to direct admission of
respondent 1 on ’compassionate ground’ and to
issue a fiat to create an additional seat which
amounts to a direction to violate Section 10A and
Section 10B(3) of the Dentists Act."
For the aforesaid reasons, we are of the view that the High Court acted
within its parameters when it refrained itself from issuing direction to the
Central Government to grant one time increase in admission capacity in
various courses in different medical colleges in the State of Maharashtra.
We are further of the view that in the facts and circumstances of the
case, the High Court was justified in issuing various final orders and
directions while allowing the writ petitions, excepting direction No. F (3),
which was not appropriate and the same is set aside.
For the aforesaid reasons, except for the aforesaid modification in the
judgment, we affirm the judgment of the High Court. Consequently, the
appeals fail and are accordingly dismissed. There shall be no order as to
costs.
.J.
(V. N. Khare)
J.
(B. N. Agrawal)
December 12, 2001
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