Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PUNJAB ENGINEERING COLLEGE ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANJAY GULATI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/04/1983
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1983 SCR (2) 801 1983 SCC (3) 517
1983 SCALE (1)404
ACT:
Justice to students-Admissions made contrary to Rules
and Regulations- Interference by the courts-Adjustment of
equities between students wrongly admitted vis-a-vis
students unjustly excluded-Solution-Creation of
supernumerary seats-Beneficiaries should include non-writ
Petitioners who are higher-up in the merit list.
HEADNOTE:
Admissions to the Punjab Engineering College,
Chandigarh for the academic year 1982-83 granted to eight
candidates by what is described as the spot test method, to
seven wards of the employees of the Punjab Engineering
College and another were struck down by the Punjab High
Court as in violation of the rules and regulations governing
admissions to the institution. However, the students wrongly
admitted were allowed to continue their studies on
humanitarian grounds. Hence the appeals after obtaining
special leave of the Court.
Disposing of the appeals, the Court
^
HELD: 1:1 Since all the sixteen students wrongly
admitted have already completed one or two semesters it will
be unjust to cancel their admission at this stage and to
remove their names from the rolls of the College, and
therefore, they must be allowed to continue their studies as
if their admission to the College suffered from no defect or
illegality. [803 F-G]
1:2 Cases like these in which admissions granted to
students in educational institutions are quashed raise a
sensitive human issue. It is unquestionably true that the
authorities who are charged with the duty of admitting
students to educational institutions must act fairly and
objectively. If admissions to these institutions are made on
extraneous considerations and the authorities violate the
norms set down by the rules and regulations, a sense of
resentment and frustration is bound to be generated in the
minds of those unfortunate young students who are wrongly or
purposefully left out. On the other hand, students who are
wrongly admitted do not suffer the consequences of the
manipulations, if any, made on their behalf by interested
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persons. [804 B-D-F]
1:3 Law’s delays work their wonders in such diverse
fashions with the result that the courts find it difficult
to adjust equities between students who are wrongly admitted
and those who are unjustly excluded. Since by the time the
High Courts take up the matter and finally decide the cases,
students who are
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wrongly admitted finish one or two semesters of the course
and the courts are regretfully perforced to allow them to
continue their studies. [804 F-G]
The court observed that "this situation has emboldened
the erring authorities or educational institutions of
various States to indulge in violating the norms of
admission with impunity. They seem to feel that the courts
will leave the admissions in tact, even if the admissions
are granted contrary to the rules and regulations, which is
a most unsatisfactory state of affairs. Laws are meant to be
obeyed, not flouted. Some day not distant, if admissions are
quashed for the reason that they were made wrongly, it will
have to be directed that the names of students who are
wrongly admitted should be removed from the rolls of the
institution." [804 H, 805 A-B]
2:1 The contention that the seats cannot
correspondingly be increased since the State Government
cannot meet the additional expenditure which will be caused
by increasing the number of seats or that the institution
will not be able to cope up with the additional influx of
students cannot be accepted. [805 C-D]
2:2 Those who infringe the rule must pay for their
lapse and the wrong done to the deserving students who ought
to have been admitted has to be rectified. The best solution
under the circumstances is to ensure that the strength of
seats is increased in proportion to the wrong admissions
made. [805 E-F]
The court directed that 8 seats should be for the
students from the Chandigarh list and the other 8 seats from
the General List of students which were prepared for the
academic year 1982-83. [805 G-H]
3. The reservation of the sixteen seats are not open
exclusively to the writ petitioners. The circumstance that
they filed writ petitions in the High Court but others
similarly aggrieved did not, will not justify the granting
of admission to them by ignoring those others who were
higher up in the merit list. [806 A-B]
[The Court directed the authorities to fill up the
additional vacancies "on the basis of open merit"]
State of Kerala v. Kumari T.P.Roshana, [1979] 2 SCR
974; Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehrawardi, [1981] 2
SCR 89; Arti Sapru v. State of Jammu and Kashmir and Ors.,
[1981] 3 SCR 34, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 3779,
3653-66, 3524-3528, 3054 of 1982 & C.A. No. 4066 of 1983.
Appeals by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 14th September, 1982 of the Punjab & Haryana High
Court in C.W.P. Nos. 3669, 3706, 3499, 3443, 3498, 3919,
3958, 3525, 3750, 3912, 3572, 3663, 3680, 3731, 3566 & 3750
of 1982 respectively.
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Kapil Sibbal, R.C. Pathak and Atul C. Jain for the
Appellant in CA. 3779/82, CAs. 3653-67/82 & for the
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Respondents in rest of the Appeals.
P.R. Mridul and R.K. Anand for the Appellant in CAs.
3524-26 of 1982.
Prem Malhotra and Sarva Mitter for the Appellant in CA.
3527/82.
Rameshwar Dayal for the Appellant in CA. 3528/82.
Mrs. J. Wad for the Appellant in CA. 3054/82.
Randhir Jain for the Intervener.
Wadhwani, A. Minocha, P.C. Khunger, Harbans Lal, N.K.
Aggarwal for the Appellants in CA. 4065/83
R.K. Jain, P.K. Jain, A.K. Goel, K.K. Mohan, Randhir
Jain, P.R. Mridul, Ravi Kant Chadha and K.B. Rohatgi, for
the appearing Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRCHUD, CJ. Eight candidates were admitted to the
Punjab Engineering College, Chandigarh for the academic year
1982-83, by what is described as the "spot test". Their
admission has been struck down by the Punjab and Haryana
High Court on the ground that it is contrary to the rules
and regulations governing admissions to the institution. We
are of the opinion that since these students have already
completed one or two semesters, it will be unjust to cancel
their admission at this stage and to remove their names from
the rolls of the College. We therefore direct that they will
be allowed to continue their further studies in the College
uninterrupted.
By the same standard, even though the admission of
seven wards of the employees of the Punjab Engineering
College has been quashed by the High Court on the ground
that such admissions are contrary to the relevant rules of
admission, it will not be fair to cancel their admission at
this stage. They have also, like the eight "spot test"
students, completed either one or two semesters of the
academic year 1982-83. They will be allowed to continue
their further tudies in the College uninterrupted.
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The admission granted to the candidate Ashok Kumar
Kaushik has also been struck down by the High Court, but he
too will be allowed to continue his further studies in the
College. We cannot apply to him a different standard than
the one which we have applied to the fifteen candidates
referred to above, who are being allowed to continue their
studies as if their admission to the College suffered from
no defect of illegality.
Cases like these in which admissions granted to
students in educational institutions are quashed raise a
sensitive human issue. It is unquestionably true that the
authorities who are charged with the duty of admitting
students to educational institutions must act fairly and
objectively. If admissions to these institutions are made on
extraneous considerations and the authorities violate the
norms set down by the rules and regulations, a sense of
resentment and frustration is bound to be generated in the
minds of those unfortunate young students who are wrongly of
purposefully left out. Indiscipline in educational
institutions is not wholly unconnected with a lack of sense
of moral values on the part of the administrators and
teachers alike. But the problem which the courts are faced
with in these cases is, that it is not until a period of six
months or a year elapses after the admissions are made that
the intervention of the court comes into play. Writ
Petitions involving a challenge to such admissions are
generally taken up by the High Courts as promptly as
possible but even then, students who are wrongly admitted
finish one or two semester of the course by the time the
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decision of the High Court is pronounced. A further appeal
to this Court consumes still more time, which creates
further difficulties in adjusting equites between students
who are wrongly admitted and those who are unjustly
excluded. Inevitably, the Court has to rest content with an
academic pronouncement of the true legal position. Students
who are wrongly admitted do not suffer the consequences of
the manipulations, if any, made on their behalf by
interested persons. This has virtually come to mean that one
must get into an educational institution by means, fair or
foul: once you are in, no one will put you out. Law’s delays
work their wonders in such diverse fashions.
We find that this situation has emboldened the erring
authorities of educational institutions of various States to
indulge in violating the norms of admission with impunity
They seem to feel that the Court will leave the admissions
in fact, even if the admissions are
805
granted contrary to the rules and regulations, This is a
most unsatisfactory state of affairs. Laws are meant to be
obeyed, not flouted. Some day, not distant, if admissions
are quashed for the reason that they were made wrongly, it
will have to be directed that the names of students who are
wrongly admitted should be removed from the roll of the
institution. We might have been justified in adopting this
course in this case itself, but we thought that we may utter
a clear warning before taking that precipitate step. We have
decided, regretfully, to allow the aforesaid sixteen
students to continue their studies, despite the careful and
weighty finding of the High Court that at least eight of
them, namely, the seven wards of employees and Ashok Kumar
Kaushik, were admitted to the Engineering Course in
violation of the relevant rules and regulations.
It is strange that in all such cases, the authorities
who make admissions by ignoring the rules of admission
contend that the seats cannot correspondingly be increased,
since the State Government cannot meet the additional
expenditure which will be caused be increasing the number of
seats or that the institution will not be able to cope up
with the additional influx of students. An additional plea
available in regard to Medical Colleges is that the Indian
Medical Conucil will not sanction additional seats. We
cannot entertain this submission. Those who infringe the
rules must pay for their lapse and the wrong done to the
deserving students who ought to have been admitted has to be
rectified. The best solution under the circumstances is to
ensure that the strength of seats is increased in proportion
to the wrong admissions made.
Since in this case eight students, and perhaps sixteen
were wrongly admitted, we direct that over and above
sanctioned strength for the next academic year commencing in
July 1983, sixteen additional seats shall be created, to
which sixteen students shall be admitted to the Punjab
Engineering College from the lists which were prepared for
the 1982-83 academic year. These sixteen seats shall be
apportioned in an equal measure between the local students
belonging to Chandigarh and the general group of students
belonging to areas outside Chandigarh. That is to say, eight
students will be admitted from the Chandigarh List of
students and eight from the General List of students, which
were prepared for the last academic year, viz, 1982-83.
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The only question which survives is whether the sixteen
writ petitioners should be admitted to those sixteen seats
or whether admission to those seats should be strictly in
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accordance with merit. We are unable to accept the
submission made by the petitioners that they should be
preferred for admission irrespective of merit. The
circumstance that they filed writ petitions in the High
Court but others similarly aggrieved did not, will not,
justify the granting of admission to them by ignoring those
others who were higher up in the merit list.
When a similar question arose before this Court in
State of Kerala v. Kumari T.P. Roshana,(1) the Court
directed the State Government to admit thirty more students.
Krishna Iyer, J. observed:
"The selection of these 30 students will not be
confined to those who have moved this Court or the High
Court by way of writ proceedings or appeal. The measure
is academic excellence, not litigative persistence. It
will be thrown open to the first 30, strictly according
to merit measured by marks secured."
In Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi, (2) the
State Government the College, and the Society which was
running the College, all agreed before this Court that the
best fifty students out of those who had applied for
admission for the academic year 1979-80 and who had failed
to secure admission, would be granted admission for the
academic year 1981-82 and that the seats allocated to them
would be in addition to the normal intake of students in the
College. In Arti Sapru v. State of Jammu and Kashmir &
Others,(3) after allowing the writ petitions of candidates
who were wrongly denied admission to the Medical Colleges,
it was observed by one of us Pathak, J., that:
"The candidates who will be displaced in
consequence have already completed a few months of
study and in order to avoid serious prejudice and
detriment to their careers it is hoped that the State
Government will deal sympathetically with their cases
so that while effect is
807
given to the judgment of this Court the rules may be
suitably relaxed, if possible by a temporary increase
in the number of seats, in order to accommodate the
displaced candidates."
The authorities were directed by this Court to fill up
the additional vacancies "on the basis of open merit."
Following these decisions, we direct that admission to
the 16 additional vacancies for the academic year 1983-84
shall be made in accordance with merit on the basis of the
lists which were prepared for the academic year 1982-83 for
the Chandigarh group of students and the general group of
students.
We must add that though we are satisfied that the
admission of seven wards of employees of the College and of
Ashok Kumar Kaushik is contrary to the rules and
regulations, we have not examined the correctness of the
finding of the High Court in regard to the alleged
illegality of the admission of the eight students who were
admitted by the test of "spot selection". We will only
reiterate as to this latter class of admissions that the
conduct of the authorities charged with the duty of making
admissions to educational institutions has to be above
suspicion. They cannot play with the lives and careers of
the young aspirants who, standing at the threshold of life,
look to the future with hope and expectations.
The appeals will stand disposed of in accordance with
this order.
S.R.
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