Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAVU NARENDRANATH & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/02/1971
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
HEGDE, K.S.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2560 1971 SCR (3) 699
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 21 162 and Entry 66, List
I, Sch. VII-Executive Power of State-Scope of-Entrance test
to medical colleges-If affects personal liberty-Scope of
Entry 66-If affects Govt.’s power to hold test.
Andhra University Act (2 of 1926), ss. 23 and 33-Government
if obliged to make selection according to qualifying
examination.
Education-Medical Colleges-Admission to according to
Entrance test held by Government-If substitute of addition
to qualifying test.
HEADNOTE:
In the Andhra area of the State of Andhra Pradesh there are
four medical colleges run by the State Government. In July
1970, the Government prescribed for the first time an
Entrance test for admission to the colleges and also
prescribed the standard of eligibility for the test. A
large number of candidates, far in excess of the seats
available took the test. Some of the candidates, who were
unsuccessful, filed writ petitions challenging the validity
of the test prescribed and the method of selection for
admission. They contended that, (1) under the provisions of
the Andhra University Act" 1926 it was only the Academic
Council of the Andhra University that was competent to
prescribe qualifications for admission into all degree
courses, including the M.B.B.S. course in Govt. Colleges,
and it was not for the Government to substitute itself for
the statutory Academic body and test the academic standards
of candidates; (2) the holding of the Entrance Test and
making selections on the basis thereof. in disregard of the
marks obtained at the public examination held by the
University encroached upon the central subject listed in
Entry 66 of List I of VII Schedule to the Constitution; and
(3) the test interfered with the personal liberty of the
candidates violating Art. 21 of the Constitution. The High
Court allowed the petitions. In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) Under Art. 162 of the Constitution the executive
power of a State extends to the matters with respect to
which the Legislature of the State has power to make laws.
if there is no legislation covering the field the State
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Government would undoubtedly be competent to prescribe a
test itself to screen the best candidates. [703 F-H]
The Andhra University Act, 1926, prescribes the minimum
qualification for entry into a higher course of study. A
candidate has not an ,unqualified right to a seat in a
medical college merely because he has obtained higher marks
than another candidate at the qualifying examination.
Sections 23 and 33 of the Act do not make it incumbent upon
the Government to make their selection in accordance with
the marks obtained by applicant-candidates at the qualifying
examination. Since all the applicants could not be
admitted, the Government, which ran them colleges, had a
right to make a selection out of the large number of
700
candidates and for this purpose they could prescribe a test
of their own which was not against any law and prescribe the
minimum number of marks at the qualifying examination for
eligibility to the Entrance test. Merely because the
Government supplemented the eligibility rule by a written
test in subjects with which the candidates were already
familiar, their action cannot be impeached nor was there
anything unfair in the test prescribed. The test was not in
substitution of the University Examination but something
additional to that; and the mere fact that the test was
introduced for the first time would be no ground for holding
that the method of selection was invalid [704 D-F; 708 F-G;
709 A-B, F]
(2)The test prescribed by the Government in no way
militates against the power of Parliament under Entry 66 of
List I of the VII Schedule to the Constitution The Entry
gives Parliament power to make laws for laying_down how
stanards in an institutino for higher education are to be
determined and how they can be coordinated. It has no
relation to a test prescribed by Government or by a
university for selection of a number of students from out of
a large number applying for admission to a particular course
of study. [705 B-D]
(3)The test in no way affects the personal liberty of the
candidates secured under Art. 21 of the Constitution.
Everybody, subject to the eligibility prescribed by the
University was at liberty to apply for admission to the
medical colleges. The number of seats being limited every
candidate could not expect to be admitted. The deprivation
of personal liberty, if any, in the matter of admission to a
medical college was according to procedure established by
law. [709 H; 710 A-B]
R.Chitralekha v. Sate of Mysore, [1964] 6 S.C.R. 368,
Rajendran v. State of Madras, [1968] 2 S.C.R 786 and Chitra
Ghosn & Anr. v. Union ,of India, (1970) 1 S.C.R. 413,
followed.
Spottswood v. Sharpe, 98 L.Ed. 884 and Stawant Singh v.
Passport Officer, [1967] 3 S.C.R. 525, 540, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 2161-A and
2161-B of 1970.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 18, 1970 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ
Appeals Nos. 587 and 588 of 1970.
S.V. Gupte and P. Parameshwara Rao, for the appellants
(in both the appeals).
P.A. Chaudhury and K. Rajendra Chowdhary, for respondents
Nos. 1 to 7 (in C.A. No. 2161-A of 1970) and respondent No.
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1 (in C.A. No. 2161-B of 1970).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. These two appeals are from a common judgment of
the High Court of Andhra Pradesh rendered in two writ
appeals from the judgment and order of a learned Judge of
the
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same court dismissing the applications filed by the
appellants in the High Court and some others under Art. 226
of the Constitution. The central question in these appeals
is, whether the Entrance Test prescribed under notification
of the Government dated July 23, 1970 for selection of
candidates in the four Medical Colleges run by the State in
the Andhra area is justified in law.
The facts are as follows. In the Andhra area of the State
there are four Medical College S run by the Government and
the total number _of seats available for admission in the
first year Integrated M.B.,B.S. course in all the four
colleges is 550. The State Government has been issuing
rules every year after the publication of the results of the
H.S.C. or S.S.L.C. Board of the University for selection of
candidates for admission into the Medical Colleges. The
test which was prescribed in July 1970 was the first of its
kind. The test was duly held after the Additional Director
of Medical and Health Services had issued a notification
inviting applications from candidates for the purpose on
July 31, 1970. Any one desiring to enter any of these
Medical Colleges had to complete and file his application in
the prescribed form by August 14, 1970 and appear at the
Entrance Test to be conducted by the Director of Medical and
Health Services on 30th August, 1970 at any of the centres
indicated in the rules. There was an exemption from
appearance at such examination for candidates who had taken
an M.Sc. or B.Sc. Degree. The Government notification of
23rd July prescribed inter alia the following Standard of
eligibility
(1) Candidates possessing the minimumqualification
of H.Sc. (Multipurpose), I.S.C., P.U.C.,
A.I.H.S.C. or equivalent qualifications were,
eligible to appear for the Entrance Test
provided that
(a)In the above qualifying examinations,
the candidates had taken up Physical sciences
and Biological sciences for study and
examination.
(b) Candidates had passed the qualifying
examination in one attempt.
(c) Candidates had obtained not less than
50% of the marks in Physical and Biological
sciences put together in their qualifying
examination.
(2)The Entrance Test was to consist of four
papers of 50 marks each of the following
subjects in two sessions
(a)The subject of Physical Sciences
(Chemistry and Physics).
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(b) The subject of Biological Sciences
(Zoology and Botany).
The candidates had to appear and answer two
papers i.e. Chemistry and Physical Sciences in
the morning session and the remaining two
papers i.e’ Zoology and Botany in the evening
session. The Entrance Test was to be
conducted in a single day in two sessions each
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of two hours’ duration.
(3)The standard of the test was to be
comparable to the standard of qualifying
examinations referred to above.
(4)The test was to be partly objective and
partly narrative.
5,137 candidates applied for the Entrance Test out of which
4,669 were accepted for, the test. 4,331 candidates actually
took the test. As the number of seats were limited the
majority of the candidates who appeared for the test failed
to secure admission. Several writ petitions were filed in
the Andhra Pradesh High Court challenging the validity of
the Entrance Test prescribed and the method of selection for
admission to the Medical Colleges.
Writ Petition No. 3859 of 1970 was filed on August 6, 1970,
the main prayer being that the State should be directed to
withdraw the notification published by the Additional
Director of Medical and Health Services with a further
direction to the State, to admit the petitioners into the
first year Integrated M.B., B.S. course on the, basis of the
marks which had been awarded to them in the, public
Examinations Reliance was placed by the petitioners on
certain provisions of the Andhra University Act (II of 1926)
under which inter alia the Andhra University had been
constituted as a body corporate with powers to provide for
instructions in such branches of learning as might be
considered suitable and to make provision for research and
for the advancement and dissemination of knowledge, to hold
examinations, to confer degrees on persons who had pursued
courses of study in the University and to institute and
maintain colleges and hostels, etc,
The contention of the petitioners was that it was the
Academic Council of the University which was competent to
prescribe qualifications for admission into all degree
courses in the University and it was not for the Government
to substitute itself. or a statutory Academic body and test
academic standards of candidates seeking admission into the
Integrated M.B., B.S. course by the notification of the 23rd
July. This was described as an attempt to assess the merits
of the candidates on academic stan-
703
dards different from those fixed by the University. Holding
the Entrance Test and making selection on the basis thereof
in disregard of the marks obtained at the public
examinations held by the University was further said to
constitute an encroachment upon the Central subject listed
in Entry 66 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution. Besides the above, other grounds were also
taken, namely, that the Government order was discriminatory,
that it was not valid for want of publication in the
official gazette, that the candidates were, handicapped by
reason of the fact that they did not have sufficient time to
prepare themselves for the test and lastly that the test
held by the Government interfered with the personal liberty
of the candidates violating, Art. 21 of the Constitution.
The learned trial judge dismissed the Writ Petitions. In
appeal, however, the appellate Bench took a different view.
In substance the appellate court was of opinion that
although the. State Government had a right to prescribe
rules and lay down its own criteria for making admissions
into the colleges, it could not do so in total disregard of
the marks obtained by the students at the University or
other public examination necessary for eligibility and they
could only do so if their action did not contravene the,
University Act or any other law. It was also, held that the
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Government could hold a "test" in order to supplement or add
to the qualifications already prescribed by the University
or other educational authority for the purpose of assessing
the, merits of candidates but they could not hold a test in
substitution for the qualifying examinations- as this would
be encroaching upon the jurisdiction of the universities
concerned in the matter of laying down academic standards of
the students.
We have therefore to examine whether the Government had a
right to prescribe a test for making a selection of a number
of candidates from out of the large body of applicants for
admission into the first year M.B.,B.S. course and whether
such action of the Government contravened any provision
already made by the legislature in that respect. Under Art.
162 of the Constitution the executive power of a State
extends to the matters with respect to which the legislature
of a State has power to make laws but this is subject to the
provisions of the Constitution. As the Government runs
these colleges, it undoubtedly has a right and a duty to
make a selection from the number of applicants applying for
admission if all could not be admitted. If there was no
legislation covering this field Government would undoubtedly
be competent to-prescribe a test itself to screen the best
candidates. We have next to scrutinise the provisions of
the Andhra University Act relied on by the High Court to see
whether the action of the Government ran counter to any of
those provisions. Under s. 23
704
of the Act it was a body known as the Academic Council of
the University which had the power by regulations of
prescribing all courses of study and of determining
curricula and the, general control of teaching within the
university and was responsible for the maintenance of the
standards thereof. Under sub-s. (2) (h) of the Act these
powers include the power to make regulations regarding the
admission of students to the university or prescribing
examinations to be recognised as equivalent to university
examinations or the further qualifications mentioned in sub-
s. (1) of s. 33 for admission to the degree courses of the
university. Under s. 33 no student was to be eligible for
admission to a course of study qualifying for admission to a
post-matriculation university examination unless he had
passed the examination prescribed as qualifying for
admission to such course ’or an examination recognised by
the Academic Council with the previous sanction of the State
Government as equivalent thereto and possessed such further
qualifications, if any, as might be prescribed. Sri
Venkateswara University, the only other University
functioning in this area, was constituted under a similar
statute and had almost identical provisions as those
mentioned above.
The above provisions of law do not make it incumbent upon
,the _Government to make their selection in accordance with
the ,,marks obtained by the applicant-candidates at the
qualifying examination. Obtaining 50% of the marks at the
qualifying examinations was the first hurdle to be crossed
by any candidate before he could submit an application for
admission into a medical college. The Government which ran
the colleges had the right to make a selection out of a
large number of candidates and for this purpose they could
prescribe a test of their own which was not against any law.
Merely because they tried to supplement the eligibility rule
by a written test in subjects with which the candidates were
already familiar, their action cannot be impeached nor was
there anything unfair in the test prescribed. The test
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prescribed by the Government must be considered in the light
of a second hurdle for the purpose of a screening to find
out who of all the candidates applying should be admitted
and who should be rejected. Merely because the University
had made regulations regarding the admission of students to
its degree courses, it did not mean that any one who had
passed the qualifying examination such as the P.U.C. or
H.S.C. was ipso facto to be entitled to admission to such
courses of study. If the number ,of candidates applying for
such admission far exceeds the number of seats available the
University will have to make its choice out of the
applicants to find out who should be admitted and if instead
of judging the candidates by the number of marks obtained by
them in the qualifying examination the University thinks fit
,to prescribe another test for admission no objection can be
taken
705
thereto. What the University can do in the matter of
admissions to the degree courses can certainly be done by
the Government in the matter of admission to the M.B.,B.S.
course.
In our view the test prescribed by the Government in no way
militates against the power of Parliament under Entry 66 of
List I of the Seventh Schedule, to the Constitution. The
said entry provides
"Co-ordination and determination of standards
in institutions for higher education or
research and scientific and technical
institutions."
The above entry gives Parliament power to make laws for
laying down how standards in an institution for higher
education are to be determined and how they can be
coordinated. It has no relation to a test prescribed by a
Government or by a University for selection of a number of
students from out of a large number applying for admission
to a particular course of study even if it be for higher
education in any particular subject.
Several decisions of this Court were cited at the Bar which
throw some light on the subject. In R. Chitralakha v. State
of Mysore(1) one of the contentions urged before this Court
was that the Government of Mysore had no power to appoint a
selection committee for admitting students to colleges on
the basis of higher or different qualifications than those
prescribed by the University. What the Government had done
in that case was to appoint one common selection committee
for settling admissions to the Engineering Colleges and
another such committee for settling admissions to Medical
Colleges. The Government of Mysore had sent a letter to the
Director of Technical Education informing him that it had
been decided that 25 per cent of the maximum marks for the
examination in the optional subjects taken into account for
making the selection of candidates for admission to
Engineering Colleges shall be fixed as interview marks; it
also laid down the criteria for allotting marks in the
interview.
The selection committee converted the total of the marks in
the optional subjects to a maximum of 300 marks and fixed
the minimum marks for interview at 75. On the basis of the
marks obtained by the candidates in the examination and
those obtained at the interview, selections were made for
admission to Engineering and Medical Colleges. Some of the
candidates whose applications for admission to the said
colleges were rejected filed petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 368.
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706
Mysore for quashing the orders issued by the, Government in
the matter of admission to the said colleges and for a
direction that they should be admitted in the Colleges
’strictly in order of merit i.e. according to the marks
obtained in the qualifying examinations. The arguments
advanced before this Court were similar to those advanced
before us. Referring to s. 23 of the Mysore University Act
which gave the Academic Council the power to prescribe the
conditions for admission of students to the University and
in exercise of which power, the University had prescribed
the percentage of marks which a student had to obtain for
getting admission in medical or engineering colleges, it was
observed by this Court :
"The order of the Government does not
contravene the minimum qualifications
prescribed by the University, what the
Government did was to appoint a selection
committee and prescribe rules for selection of
students who have the minimum qualifications
prescribed by the University. The Government
runs most of the medical and engineering
colleges .... The colleges run by the
Government, having regard to financial com-
mitments and other relevant considerations,
can only admit a specific number of students
to the said colleges. They cannot obviously
admit all the applicants who have secured the
marks prescribed by the University. It has
necessarily to screen the applicants on some
reasonable basis. The aforesaid orders of the
Government only prescribed criteria for making
admissions to colleges from among students who
secured the minimum qualifying marks
prescribed by the University. Once it is
conceded, and it is not disputed before us,
that the State Government can run medical and
engineering colleges, it cannot be denied the
power to admit such qualified students as pass
the reasonable tests laid down by it. This is
a power which every private owner of a college
will have, and the Government which run its
own colleges cannot be denied that power."
Referring to Entry 66 in List I it was said
"If the impact of the State law providing for
such standards on Entry 66 of List I is so
heavy or devastating as to wipe out or
appreciably abridge the central field, it may
be struck down. But that is a question of
fact to be ascertained in each case. It is
not possible to hold that if a State
legislature made a law prescribing a higher
percentage of marks for extra-curricular acti-
7 0 7
vities in the matter of admission to colleges,
it would be directly encroaching on the field
covered by Entry 66 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. If so, it is
not disputed that the State Government would
be within its rights to prescribe
qualifications for admission to colleges so
long as its action does not contravene any
other law."
With regard to the scheme of selection in that
case it was said
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"So long as the order lays down a relevant
objective criteria and entrusts the business
of selection to qualified persons, this Court
cannot obviously have any say in the matter. ,
In this case the criteria laid down by the
Government are certainly relevant in the
matter of awarding marks at the interview."
With respect, it seems to us that the observations above
quoted are equally applicable to the case before us, the
only difference being that whereas in the Mysore case marks
were awarded on the basis of the impression created at the
interview and added in a certain manner ’to the marks
obtained at the university examination in the case before us
the marks obtained at the University only make candidates
eligible to appear at the written test and it is the last
test which is the determining factor as to who should be
admitted and who should be rejected.
In Rajendran v. State of Madras(1) the petitioners
challenged an order of the State Government by which rules
were promulgated for selection of candidates for admission
to a medical course. These rules inter alia provided for
selection and classification of candidates including one for
awarding a maximum of 75 marks for extra-curricular
activities which had been specified under five heads.
Turning down the contention that there was no objective test
laid down in the rules for the interview it was said (p.
795)
"So far as admission is concerned, it has to
be made by those who are in control of the
Colleges,-in this case the Government, because
the medical colleges are Government colleges
affiliated to the University. In these
circumstances, the Government was entitled to
frame rules for admission to medical colleges
controlled by it subject to the rules of the
university as to eligibility and
qualifications. This was what was done in
these cases and therefore the selection cannot
be challenged on the ground that it was not in
accordance with, the University Act and the
Rules framed thereunder."
(1) [1968] 2 S.C.R. 786.
708
In Chitra Ghosh & another v. Union of India and others(1)
the appellants who had passed the premedical examination of
the Delhi University obtaining over 62% marks were refused
admission to the first year M.B.,13.S. course at the Maulana
Azad Medical College which was a constituent of the
University of Delhi and was established by the Government of
India. The college prospectus contained certain rules
relation to the admission of students which made
reservations of places in the college in favour of various
categories of students and provided for nominations to be
mad,---by the Central Government to fill some of the
reserved places. The appellants challenged primarily the
power of the Central Government to make the nominations and
contended that nine students nominated by the Government’
had obtained lower marks than theirs in the pre-medical
examination so that if they were to be excluded, the
appellants would become entitled to be admitted in the
college. Rejecting this contention it was said :
"It is the Central Government which bears the
financial burden of running the medical
colleges. It is for it to lay down the
criteria for eligibility. From the very
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nature of things it is riot possible to throw
the admission open to students from all over
the country. The Government cannot be denied
the right to decide from what sources the
admissions will be made. That essentially is
a question of policy and depends inter alia on
an overall assessment and survey of the
requirements of residents of particular
territories and other categories of persons
for whom it is essential to provide facilities
for medical education. If the sources are
properly classified whether on territorial,
geographical or other reasonable basis it is
not for the courts to interfere with the
manner and method of making the classi-
fication."
The above case is not directly in point but it at least
shows that a candidate has not an unqualified right to seat
in, a medical college merely because he has obtained higher
marks than another candidate at the qualifying examination.
Mr. Choudhury the learned advocate for the respondents put
before us his contentions with regard to the above in three
propositions, namely, (1) The State has no power to trench
upon the powers given to the University. The test
prescribed contravenes s. 23 of the Act. (2) Even if the
matter is not covered by the Universities Act the executive
cannot be allowed to usurp a law-making power in prescribing
a test. (3) The rule affects prejudicially the right
conferred on candidates by the University Regulations.
(1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 413.
709
In our view there is no substance in any of the contentions
as will be apparent from our conclusions noted above and the
decisions of this Court bearing on this point. The
University Act, as pointed out, merely prescribed a minimum
qualification for entry into the higher courses of study.
There was no regulation to the effect that admission to
higher course of study was guaranteed by the securing of
eligibility. The Executive have a power to make any
regulation which would have the effect of a law so long as
it does not contravene any legislation already covering the
field and the Government order in this case in no way
affected the rights of candidates with regard to eligibility
for admission : the test prescribed was a further hurdle by
way of competition when mere eligibility could not be made
the determining factor.
Mr. Choudhury faintly tried to urge other points which may
be briefly noted. One of the grounds was that some of the
questions were not covered by the curricula by the P.U.C. or
the S.S.L.C. examinations. This was not a ground which has
any merit. If some of the questions were outside the
syllabi all the,candidates were at an equal disadvantage.
Alternatively the questions might have been put to find out
whether the candidate’s knowledge was limited to the
syllabus or whether he was sufficiently interested in the
subjects so as to acquire knowledge beyond the prescribed
curriculum.
The next ground urged was that the written test was in subs-
titution of the University examination and was altogether a
novel experiment, no such test having been held before. In
our view there is no substance in this contention either,
The written test was not in substitution of the University
examination but it was something additional to that and the
mere fact that a written test had been introduced in the
year 1970 would be no ground for holding that the method of
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selection was invalid. Further no complaint can be made
that the notice of examination was all too short or that it
was never published in the Gazette. If it was short it
affected everybody equally adversely and the figures showing
how many candidates had taken the test demonstrates very
clearly that everybody who had cared to sit for the
examination, had an opportunity of doing so. Publication of
the notification in the Gazette was not called for by any
law.
Lastly it was urged that such test affected the personal
liberty of the candidates secured under Art. 21 of the
Constitution. We fail to see how refusal of an application
to enter a medical college can be said to affect one’s
personal liberty guaranteed under that article. Everybody,
subject to the eligibility prescribed by the University, was
at liberty to apply for admission to the medical college.
The number of seats being, limited compared to the
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number of applicants every candidate could not except to be
admitted. Once it is held that the test is not invalid the
deprivation of personal liberty, if any, in the matter of
admission to a medical college was according to procedure
established by law. Our attention was drawn to the case of
Spottswood v. Sharpe(") in which it was held that due
process clause of the Fifth Amendment of the American,
Constitution prohibited racial segregation in the District
of Columbia. Incidentally the court made a remark (at p.
887) :-
"Although the Court has not assumed to define
’liberty’ with any great precision, that term
is not confined to mere freedom from bodily
restraint. Liberty under law extends to the
full range of conduct which the individual is
free to pursue, and it cannot be restricted
except for a proper governmental objective.
Segregation in public education is not
reasonably related to any proper governmental
objective, and thus it imposes on Negro
children of the District of Columbia a burden
that constitutes an arbitrary deprivation of
their liberty in violation of the Due Process
Clause."
The problem before us is altogether different. In this case
everybody subject to the minimum qualification prescribed
was at liberty to apply for admission. The Government
objective in selecting a number of them was certainly not
improper in the circumstances of the case.
Learned counsel also referred ’us to an observation of this
Court in Satwant Singh v. Passport Officer(2) that
"’liberty’ in our Constitution bears the same
comprehensive meaning as is given to the
expression ’liberty’ by the 5th and 14th
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and the
expression ’personal liberty’ in Art. 21 only
excludes the ingredients of ’liberty’
enshrined in Art. 19 of the Constitution."
We, do not find it necessary to dilate on this point in view
of our conclusion that even if personal liberty extends to
such conduct there has not been any deprivation thereof in
violation of any procedure established by law.
In the result the appeals are allowed, but in the
circumstances we leave the parties to bear their own costs.
V.P.S. Appeals allowed.
(1) 98 L.Ed. 884.
(2) [1967] 3 S.C.R. 525 at 540.
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918 Sup.C.I./71-20/6/72-GIPF.
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