Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K.G. MADHAVAN PILLAI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 49 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 94
1988 SCC (4) 669 JT 1988 (4) 613
1988 SCALE (2)1247
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1117 (9)
R 1991 SC2160 (33)
ACT:
Kerala Education Act, 1957/Kerala Education Rules--
Sections 2(7), 2(8), 37/Chapter V--Rules 2, 2A, 9, 11 and
12--Opening new unaided recognised Schools or upgrading
existing schools-Government according sanction to
educational agencies--Later order cancelled--Held Order
vitiated by reason of non-observance of principles of
natural justice.
HEADNOTE:
Respondents are running Private Schools. In pursuance of
the State of Kerala publishing in the Gazette a final list
of areas where new unaided recognised high schools/upper
primary schools/lower primary schools were to be opened or
existing unaided lower primary schools/ upper primary
schools were to be upgraded in the year 1986-87 the
Respondents-educational agencies submitted applications for
grant of sanction to open the unaided recognised schools or
for upgrading the schools already run by them. These
applications were duly inquired and considered by the
District Educational Officer as also by the Director of
Education as per the Rules & procedure laid down therefor,
particularly Rules 24(3) and (4) and thereafter the
Government considered the applications in accordance with
Rule 2A(5) and took a final decision for grant of necessary
sanction for opening/upgrading of 36 lower primary schools,
36 upper primary schools and 19 high schools, totalling in
all 91 schools in the list of areas selected. On 4.2.87, the
State Government issued an Order under Ex. P-4, granting
sanction to the Respondents to open new unaided schools or
to upgrade their existing schools subject to the conditions
set out therein. However, by an Order Ex. P-5, dated
20.2.87, the Government directed that the earlier order
under Ex P-4 be kept in abeyance. The Respondents challenged
the Order of the Government by means of a Writ Petition.
During the pendency of the Writ Petition general
elections were held to the Kerala Legislative Assembly as a
result whereof a new Ministry assumed office. The Government
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under the new Ministry passed an order dated 19.5.87 under
Ex P-7 cancelling in toto the order under Ex-P-4 granting
sanction to the Respondents to open the school or to upgrade
the existing schools.
PG NO 94
PG NO 95
The Respondents thereupon amended their Petition
suitably and challenged the validity of the order of
cancellation passed under Ex.P-7. The Singie Judge of the
High Court before whom the Writ Petition first came up for
hearing took the view that while it was obligatory for the
Government to follow the procedure prescribed in Rules 2 &
2A, Chapter V, if it was to permit the opening of new
unaided recognised schools or upgradation of existing
schools, the converse result would not follow i.e. wherever
the Government had gone through the procedure under the
Rules the Government could not retrace its steps and was
bound to proceed further in the matter and that the
Government had no option to reverse its decision. On the
question of revocation of the order of sanction, however,
the learned Judge held that the power to sanction new
schools carried with it the inherent power of cancellation
of an order passed under Rule 2A(5). Accordingly the learned
Singie Judge dismissed the petitions. The respondents
thereafter preferred appeals before the Division Bench. The
Division Bench allowed the appeals, reversed the order
passed by the Single Judge but granted only limited reliefs
to the Respondents in that it quashed the order under Ex. P-
7 dated 19.5.87 and issued a mandamus to the State
Government to consider the applications of the Respondents
on their merits on the basis of the earlier order passed in
their favour under Ex. P-4 dated 4.2.87. The Division Bench
further held that the Respondents have locus-standi to
challenge the order of cancellation and that the Government
did not have the power or jurisdiction to revoke the
cancellation order. It also held that the cancellation order
violated the principle of natural justice.
Being aggrieved by the decision of the Division Bench of
the High Court, the State filed these appeals after
obtaining special leave.
Dismissing the appeals this Court,
HELD: The importance of securing recognition lies in the
fact that without recognition the students studying in the
unaided schools will neither be permitted to appear as
candidates in the examinations conducted by the State nor be
eligible to avail of the opportunities for higher education
or to enter public service examination. The obtainment of
recognition from the Government is therefore a vital factor
for the educational agencies starting new schools or newly
upgrading their existing schools. [ 107B-C]
Rule 2A(1) makes it imperative for the Director to call
for applications from interested parties for opening new
schools or upgrading existing schools in the selected areas.
The mandate contained therein goes to show that the
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idenffication and selection of inadequately served areas
under Rule 2(4) is not an idle or meaningless exercise.
[111A-C]
When even an unsuccessful applicant is conferred a right
to represent to Government against the non-approval of the
application, can it be said that an approved applicant has
no right whatever to complain when the sanction granted to
him is revoked all of a sudden without he being given any
opportunity to show cause against such cancellation. [111D-
E]
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The further scrutiny of the application of the approved
applicant under Rule 9 and the confirmation of approval
under Rule 11 would not, however, mean that the earlier
sanction granted under Rule 2A(S) does not create
"legitimate expectation right" in the approved applicant.
[111G-H: 12A]
The Rules do not provide for the Government reviewing
suo moto any order of sanction passed under Rule 2A(5) in
favour of any applicant for opening of a new school or
upgrading an existing school and its power of revision under
Rule ] 2 is confined to the reconsideration of the case of
any applicant whose name did not find a place in the final
list of approved applications published by the Government.
[116D-E ]
Though the sanction granted to the respondents under Ex.
P-4 would not by itself entitle them to open new schools or
upgrade the existing schools, it did confer on them a right
to seek the continuance of the statutory procedural stream
in order to have their applications considered under Rule 9
and dealt with them under Rule 11 [122C]
It was not open to the Government, either under the Act
or Rules or under Section 20 of the Kerala General Clauses
Act to cancel the approval granted to the respondents under
Rule 2A(5), for opening new schools or upgrading existing
schools in the selected areas on the basis of a revised
policy. [122D]
The impugned order under Ex. P-7, irrespective of the
question whether the government had the requisite power of
cancellation or not, is vitiated by reason of non-
observance of the principles of natural justice and the vice
of extraneous factors. [ 122E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1407-15
of 1988.
PG NO 97
From the Judgment and Order dated 29.9.1987 of the
Kerala High Court in W.A. Nos. 601, 602, 604, 605, 610, 655,
664, 680 and 735 of 1987.
P.S. Poti, K. Sudhakaran and K.R. Nambiar for the
Appellants.
T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer, K.K. Venugopal, Dr. Y.S.
Chitale, E.M.S. Anam and Mrs. Baby Krishnan for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. These appeals by special leave arise out
of a common judgment rendered by the High Court of Kerala in
a batch of writ appeals filed by the respondents herein
against the dismissal of their petitions under Article 226
of the Constitution of India for the issue of writs of
certiorari, mandamus, prohibition etc. by a learned single
Judge. Though the appeals were allowed and the order of
learned single Judge was reversed, the Division Bench has
granted only limited reliefs to the respondents in that it
has quashed the impugned order of the Government under Ex.
P-7 dated 19-5-87 and issued a mandamus to the State
Government to consider the applications of the respondents
on their merits on the basis of the earlier order passed in
their favour under Ex. P-4 dated 4-2-87. The State of
Kerala, feeling aggrieved with the judgment of the Division
Bench, has preferred these appeals.
Pursuant to the State Government publishing in the
Gazette a final list of areas where new unaided recognised
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high schools/upper primary schools/lower primary schools are
to be opened or existing unaided lower primary schools/upper
primary schools are to be upgraded in the year 1986-87, the
respondent educational agencies submitted applications for
grant of sanction to open new unaided recognised schools or
for upgrading the schools already run by them. By 4-2-87,
the State Government issued an order under Ex. P-4 granting
sanction to the respondents to open new unaided schools or
to upgrade their existing schools subject to the conditions
set out therein. However, by an order under Ex. P-5 dated
20-2-87, the Government directed the earlier order under Ex.
P-4 to be kept in abeyance. The respondents challenged the
order of the Government by means of petitions under Article
226 of the Constitution. During the pendency of the writ
petitions, the general elections were held in Kerala State
and a new ministry came to assume office. The government
under the new ministry passed an order dated 19-5-87 under
Ex. P-7 cancelling in toto the order under Ex. P-4 granting
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sanction to the respondents to open new schools or to
upgrade the existing schools. This led to the respondents
amending the writ petitions suitably so as to direct their
challenge to the validity of the cancellation order passed
under Ex. P-7. The respondents failed before the single
Judge but on appeal the Division Bench has granted them
limited reliefs as set out above.
Before adverting to factual matters. it is necessary to
refer to some of the relevant provisions of the Kerala
Education Act (for short ‘The Act’) and the Kerala Education
Rules (for short ‘The Rules). After the Kerala Education
Bill, 1957, had been passed by the Kerala Legislative
Assembly and was reserved by the Governor for the
consideration of the President, the President made a
reference to the Supreme Court under Article 143(1) of the
Constitution for obtaining the opinion of the Court upon
certain questions relating to the constitutional validity of
some of the provisions of the Bill and the Supreme Court
gave its opinion as reported In re. Kerala Education Bill,
1957 ( 1959 SCR 995). The preamble to the Act states that
the Act is being enacted "to provide for the better
organisation and development of educational institutions in
the State providing a varied and comprehensive educational
service throughout the State". Section 2 is the definition
section and for our purpose it is enough if we look at the
definitions of ’educational agency’, ’private school’, and
’recognised school’ because we are concerned in these
appeals only with private recognised schools and not with
government or departmental schools or aided schools. Section
2(2), 2(7) and 2(8) read as under:
2(2). "Educational agency" means any person or body of
persons permitted to establish and maintain any private
school under this Act;
2(7). ‘-Private school" means an aided or recognised
school;
2(8). "Recognised school," means a private school
recognised by the Government under this Act".
Section 3(1) empowers the Government to regulate primary and
other stages of education and courses of instruction in
government and private schools. It is apposite to mention
here that recognised schools do not receive any financial
aid from the Government though they are bound to impart
instruction only according to the prescribed curriculum of
studies and they can have recognised standards or divisions
of classes only in accordance with the Act and the Rules.
Section 3(3) sets out that the Government may provide
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PG NO 99
educational facilities by (a)establishing and maintaining
schools or (b) permitting any person or body of persons to
establish and maintain aided schools or (c) recognising any
school established and maintained by any person or body of
persons. Section 3(4) confers deemed recognition to all the
schools which were in existence when the Act came into
force. Section 3(5) stipulates that after the commencement
of the Act, the establishment of a new school or the opening
of a higher class in any private school shall be subject to
the provisions of the Act and the Rules made thereunder and
that if any school or higher class is established or opened
otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the Act
and the Rules, they will not be entitled to be recognised by
the Government. Section 9 provides that the Government shall
pay the salary of all teachers in aided schools direct or
through the Headmaster of the school. Section 13 lays down
that if there is any retrenchment of teachers in any aided
school on account of orders of Government, then the
retrenched teachers can be absorbed in any Government school
or aided school. Section 36 confers power on Government to
make Rules, either prospectively or retrospectively for the
purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the Act.
Section 37 provides that all Rules made under the Act shall
be laid before the Legislative Assembly for its approval.
In exercise of its powers under Section 36, the
Government have framed Rules and they have been approved by
the Legislature. Though the Rules contain several chapters,
we need look only into chapter V and the relevant rules
therein. Rule 2 provides for the Director of Public
Instructions (hereinafter the Director) preparing once in
two years "a report indicating the locality where new
schools or class or grades are to be opened and existing
lower primary schools or upper primary schools or both are
to be upgraded." In preparing such a report, the Director is
enjoined to take into consideration several factors. The
list so prepared by the Director should be published in the
Gazette before the end of January of the year of
publication, inviting objections or representations against
such list. Every objection filed by an objector has to be
accompanied by a challan for Rs.10. On receipt of the
objection. the educational authorities have to conduct
enquiries, hear the parties, visit the areas and submit
their reports, together with their views on the objections
raised, to the Director within a period of two months. The
Director, if he find6 it necessary, may also hear the
parties and thereafter he has to finalise the list and send
his recommendations with the final list to Government within
a period of two months. The Government has thereafter to
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scrutinise the records and approve the list with or without
modifications and cause the approved list to be published by
the Director. As against the final list published by the
Director, there is no right of appeal or revision for anyone
but the Govern nent is empowered to review the list. As
Rules 2(4) and 2(5) are relevant for consideration, they
are extracted hereunder:
"2(4). Government after scrutinising all the records may
approve the list, with or without modification and forward
it to the Director within a month from the last date of the
receipt of the recommendation of the Director. The list
shall be finalised before the end of July by the Government
and shall be published by the Director."
"2(5). No appeal or revision shall lie against the final
list Published by the Director
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Provided that the Government may, either suo moto or on
application by any person objecting to the list published by
the Director under sub-rule (4) made before the expiry of
thirty days from the-date of such publication, review their
order finalising such list and make such modifications in
that list as they deem fit by way of additions or omissions,
if they are satisfied that any relevant ground has not been
taken into consideration or any irrelevant ground has been
taken into account while finalising the said list;
Provided further that no modification shall be made
under the preceding proviso without giving any person likely
to be affected thereby an opportunity to make
representations against such modification."
Then comes Rule 2A which is an important provision and
requires close scrutiny. Rule 2A(1) provides that after the
publication of the final list under Rule 2(4) the Director
shall, by notification in the Gazette in the month of
October, call for applications for opening of new schools
and for upgradation of existing schools in the areas
specified in the final list. Rule 2A(2) lays down that only
applications made in response to the notification published
by the Director will merit consideration and not
applications made otherwise. Rule 2A(3) lays down that on
receipt of such applications for permission to open new
schools or for upgrading of existing schools, the District
Educational Officer should make appropriate enquiries
regarding the cor
PG NO 101
rectness of the particulars contained in the application and
other relevant matters and then forward the applications
with his report thereon to the Director. Rule 2A(4)
obligates the Director to peruse the applications and the
reports of the District Educational Officers and forward all
the papers to the Government with his own report. Rule 2A(S)
enJoins the Government to consider the applications and the
reports accompanying them and take a finfill decision and
publish the same in the Gazette. As this sub-rule is of
importance it requires extraction:
"2A(5). The Government shall consider the applications
in the light of the report of the District Educational
Officer and the Director and other relevant matters which
the Government think necessary to be considered in this
connection nd shall take a final decision and publish their
decision in the Gazette with the list containing necessary
particulars."
Rule 2A(7) sets out the time schedule in which the
applications are to be made and the orders of Government are
to be issued. It is worthy of note that as against the list
of applications approved by the Government and published in
the Gazette under Rule 2A(S), there is no provision for the
Government reviewing the list to the detriment of the
applicants whose applications have been approved and the
provision made under Rule 12 is only for unsuccessful
applicants to present revision petitions to complain of
their non-selection. The next rule which requires notice is
Rule 9 which sets out the conditions for grant of permission
to open new schools. Rule 10 which was originally in the
Rules and which prescribed the preparation of a Development
Plan by the Director came to be deleted when the Rules were
amended. Rule 11 pertains to grant of permission to open new
schools. The rule provides that if the Government are
satisfied that permission to open the schools included in
the development plan may be granted, the Government may
issue orders to that effect through the Director specifying
(i) the educational agency to whom permission i9 granted,
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(ii) the grade of the school, (iii) the standard or
standards to be opened, (iv) the location of the school, (v)
the date from which the school should start functioning and
(vi) the conditions to be fulfilled by the educational
agency in respect of the site, area, buildings, equipments,
staff, financial guarantee etc. Rule 14 provides that when a
new school is opened with permission granted under Rule 11,
the District Educational Officer and the Director should be
informed of the date of opening of the school. the location.
the standards opened, the name and qualifications of the
PG NO 102
staff etc. etc. The District Educational Officer should then
visit the school and report to the Director about the
conditions stipulated for opening the school being complied
with. Rule 15 provides for withdrawal of permission if the
conditions stipulated have not been fulfilled. Rule 16(a)
deals with applications for recognition of schools or of
additional standards. The rule states that within three
B months from the date of opening of schools or of
additional standards, applications should be made to the
educational authorities for grant of recognition or
continuance of temporary recognition. Rule 17 sets out that
if all the conditions prescribed have been satisfied, then
the school shall be granted recognition.
Now turning to factual matters, the Director published
on March 6, 1986 a list indicating the areas where new un-
recognised schools are to be opened and existing lower/upper
primary schools are to be upgraded and inviting objections
or representations against the list from interested parties.
Thereafter, the educational authorities conducted the
necessary enquiries, considered the
objections/representations received and submitted their
reports to the Director. There upon the Director bestowed
his consideration to the matter and finalised the list and
sent his recommendations to the Government. The Government
approved the list with some modifications and then caused
the approved list to be published by the Director on June
24, 1986 in the Gazette. The list published by the
Government set out 122 areas where new schools are to be
opened or existing schools are to be upgraded in order to
fulfil the educational needs of the notified areas. The
Gazette publication was under the caption "The final list of
areas where new unaided recognised High schools/Upper
primary schools/Lower primary schools are to be opened or
existing unaided L.P. Schools/Upper primary schools are to
be upgraded in the year 1986-87."
The task of identifying and approving the areas where
new unaided schools are to be opened or existing schools are
to be upgraded having been accomplished, the Director took
the next step of issuing a notification under Rule 2A( I)
calling for applications from intending applicants for
opening new schools or for upgrading of existing schools in
the selected areas. The respondents submitted their
applications in response to the notification made by the
Director. These applications were duly enquired into and
considered by the District Educational Officer and
thereafter by the Director as laid down in Rule 2A(3) and
(4) and thereafter the Government considered the
applications in accordance with Rule 2A(5) and took a
H final decision and caused their decision to be published
in the Gazette on February 4, 1g87. As per the Gazette
notification, the Government granted sanction for the
opening/upgrading of 36 lower primary schools, 36 upper
primary schools and 19 high schools, totalling in all 91
schools in the list of areas selected. This Gazette
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PG NO 103
notification has been marked as Ex. P-4. The names of all
the respondents found a place in the notification and they
were granted permission to open/ upgrade unaided schools.
The order reads as under:
"Government are pleased to accord sanction to open/
upgrade unaided recognised schools as detailed in Annexure
to the Government Order subject to the following conditions.
1. The schools will be permitted to be opened during the
academic year 1986-87 .......
2. For L.P. Schools and U.P. Schools without L.P.
Scction, the educational agencies must provide one acre of
land; for U.P. School with L.P. Section 1.5 acres of land;
and for High Schools with or without primary section 3 acres
of land. Recognition will be given only to the educational
agency who produce evidence before the concerned controlling
authority of having provided the required site.
3. The applicants for opening of the schools or
upgradation of the schools shall give an undertaking as
provided under Note (V) to Rule I l Chapter V of K. E. Rs .
It so happened that on February 4, 1987, itself an
announcement was made regarding the holding of general
elections in Kerala State but no dates were announced for
the election. Presumably, to avoid criticism about the
timing of the publication of the sanction order, the Chief
Minister passed orders for keeping in abeyance the sanction
accorded to the successful applicants under Ex. P-4 and a
Gazette notification to that affect was published on
February 23, 1987. Thereupon. the respondents moved the High
Court through petitions under Article 226 of the
Constitution challenging the action of the Government.
During the pendency of the writ petitions, the general
elections came to be held and a new ministry assumed power
in Kerala State. The new ministry decided to revoke the
order of sanction passed under Ex.P-4and caused a Gazette
notification Ex. P-7 to be made in that behalf. The
notification was as under:
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"In the G.O. read as first paper above sanction was
accorded to open/upgrade 91 unaided recognised schools of
various categories during the academic year 1986-87. As per
G.O. read as second paper above the orders issued in the
said G.O. were kept in abeyance until further orders.
2. Government have reconsidered the matter. At present
there are more than 16000 schools in the State. Thousands of
protected teachers will have to be absorbed from these
schools. Every time a recognised school is started in an
area, there is an immediate impact on the neighbouring aided
and Government schools leading to fall in strength and
divisions, creating more protected teachers and thereby
leading to wasteful expenditure. The 91 schools sanctioned
were at the fag end of the academic year 1986-87 and it was
not possible to start the schools during the same year. Many
schools do not fulfil the conditions for starting the
schools. In several cases exemption will have to be given to
fulfil the conditions year after year. AS such Government
strongly feel that instead of starting new schools the
existing schools should be strengthened in all respects,
i.e. site, building, equipment etc.
3. In the circumstances the orders issued in the G.O.
read as first paper will stand cancelled. No recognised
schools will be upgraded or sanctioned during 1987-88 also."
The learned single judge who heard the writ petitions
filed by the respondents took the view that while it was
obligatory for the Government to follow the procedure
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prescribed in Rules 2 and 2A of Chapter V of the Rules, if
it was to permit the opening of new unaided recognised
schools or the sanctioning of upgradation of existing
schools, the converse result would not follow i.e. wherever
the Government had gone through the exercise of the
procedure laid down in Rules 2 and 2A, the Government could
not retrace its steps and was bound to proceed further in
the matter of the opening of new schools or upgrading of
existing schools and that the Government had no option to
reverse its decision. In so far as the Government’s power to
revoke an order of sanction made under Rule 2A(5) is
concerned, the learned judge held that the Government’s
power to sanction new schools also carried with it an
inherent right of cancellation of an order passed under Rule
2A(5). The learned judge saw justification for the
cancellation order being passed by the Government on another
ground also viz. that the sanction for opening of new
PG NO 105
schools or upgrading of schools was given only at the fag
end of the academic year 1986-87 and, as such, the order of
sanction was not capable of implementation. Besides these
grounds, the single judge found merit in the reasons given
by the Government in the impugned order Ex. P-7 for revoking
the sanction viz. that the opening of new unaided schools or
upgrading of existing unaided schools invariably resulted in
fall of pupil strength and/or division strength in the
government-run as well as aided schools and this led to the
ousting of teachers from aided schools whom the State had to
treat as "protected teachers" and take care of them and
provide appointments for them in government as well as aided
schools. The last reason which weighed with the single judge
was that the Government’s experience in the past showed that
many of the schools proposed to be started or seeking
upgradation were not able to fulfil the minimum requirements
and resorted to seeking Government’s indulgence for granting
them exemption from complying with the prescribed conditions
and requirements. In accordance with these views, the
learned single judge dismissed the writ petitions.
The Division Bench which heard the writ appeals viewed
the matter in a wholly different manner and allowed the
appeals. The Division Bench held that firstly the writ
petitioners had adequate locus standi to challenge the
cancellation order of the Government and that the Government
did not have power or jurisdiction to revoke the sanction
order; secondly the order of cancellation violated the
principles of natural justice; thirdly there was no
application of mind and fourthly the order of cancellation
was passed on the basis of irrelevant grounds.
In presenting the case of the State before us in these
appeals Mr. Subramania Poti, learned senior advocate
appearing for the State assailed everyone of the findings
and reasons given by the Division Bench and argued that the
notifications made under Exs. P-4 and P-7 were only
announcements of the policy decisions taken by the
Government and, the Government could revise its decision at
any time and even if they are to be viewed as administrative
orders passed by the Government, it was always open to the
Government, in exercise of its powers under Section 20 of
the Kerala General Clauses Act (corresponding to Section 21
of the General Clauses Act X of 1897) to add, amend, vary,
or rescind the notifications. The learned counsel further
stated that the respondents would get the status of
’aggrieved persons’ and acquire locus standi to question any
order of revocation passed by the Government only if they
had been granted permission under Rule l1 to open new
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schools and not before as they would acquire "legitimate
expectation rights" only after satisfying the requirements
of Rule 11. Proceeding on the same lines, the learned
PG NO 106
counsel stated that the Government had not indulged in any
adjudicative process nor had the Government violated any
provisions of the Act or Rules or even the principles of.
natural justice and, as such, the writ petitions did not B
present any justiciable issue for consideration by the
Court. The last submission made was that the cancellation
order did not suffer either from the vice of non-application
of mind or the permeation of irrelevant grounds.
Controverting the arguments of the appellant’s counsel,
Dr. Chitale, Mr. Krishnamurthy Iyer and Mr. K.K.
Venugopal, learned Sr. Advocates appearing for the
respondents contended that the decision rendered by the
Division Bench is fully in accordance with law and needs no
interference by this Court. They pointed out that the
Division Bench has done nothing more than to place the
parties in their status quo ante position by quashing Ex. P-
and directing the Government to proceed further with the
applications in order to see whether permission could be
granted under Rule 11 of Chapter V.
In the light of these conflicting arguments what falls
for consideration in these appeals may broadly be enunciated
under the following heads:
(I) Whether any rights accrued to the respondents
pursuant to the sanction granted to them under Ex. P-4 for
opening new schools or upgrading existing schools; so as to
challenge the cancellation order under Ex. P-7 or whether
the right of challenge would accrue to them only after
further approval was granted under Rule l1.
2. Whether it was open to the Government under the Act
and Rules or under Section 20 of the Kerala General Clauses
Act to cancel in toto the sanction given to 91 approved
applicants for opening new schools or upgrading existing
schools;
3. Even if the Government had powers of cancellation,
whether the order under Ex. P-7 is vitiated by reason of (a)
nonobservance of the principles of natural justice (b) non-
application of mind and (c) influence of irrelevant grounds.
PG NO 107
Before taking up for consideration these questions, we
may set out the various stages contemplated by the Rules
which have to be passed through by an educational agency in
order to open a new school or upgrade an existing school and
obtain recognition from the Government. It is relevant at
this juncture to mention that the Act and the Rules do not
prohibit the starting and running of private unaided schools
by any agency and the only restriction is that it will not
be entitled to secure recognition for the said school from
the Government unless the conditions imposed by the Rules
are satisfied and complied with. The importance of securing
recognition lies in the fact that without recognition the
students studying in the unaided schools will neither be
permitted to appear as candidates in the examinations
conducted by the State nor be eligible to avail of the
opportunities for higher education or to enter public
service examination. The obtainment of recognition from the
Government is therefore a vital factor for the educational
agencies starting new schools or newly upgrading their
existing schools.
Coming now to the stages which should be gone through,
there are five stages as set out by the Division Bench and
which enunciation is accepted by the learned counsel for the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 22
appellants as the correct position. The first stage consists
of the Government going through the exercise under Rule 2
culminating in the Government publishing under Rule 2(4) the
localities where new schools are to be opened or existing
schools are to be upgraded. The second stage consists of the
Government calling for applications under Rules 2A(1) from
intending applicants for opening new schools or for
upgrading the existing schools in the areas specified and
taking a final decision and publishing the list of approved
applicants in the Gazette under Rule 2A(5). Then comes the
third stage when the applications are subjected to more
detailed scrutiny under Rule 11 regarding the fulfilment of
conditions set out in Rule 9 and the drawing up of the order
setting out the name of the educational agency, the grade of
the school, the standards to be opened, the location and
the date of opening of the school etc The fourth stage is
envisaged under Rule 14 and it consists of the educational
agency permitted under Rule 11 to report to the educational,
authorities the factum of the opening of the school and the
fulfilment of the conditions set out in the order and the
names and qualifications of the staff etc. so that the
educational officer can visit the school and submit a report
to the Director regarding the fulfilment of all the
conditions by the school authority. The fifth and the last
stage l5 set out in Rules 16 and 17 and it pertains to the
school authority applying for recognition under Rule 16A and
the Director granting sanction under rule 17 after being
satisfied that the school authority has satisfied all the
requisite conditions for grant of recognition.
PG NO 108
A four-fold argument was advanced by Mr. Poti to assail
the judgment of the Division Bench. The contentions were
formulated as under:
1. The respondents are not-entitled to the issue of a
writ of mandamus because firstly they had unauthorisedly
opened new schools in contravention of Section 3(5) without
obtaining the Government’s permission under Rule 11 Chapter
V and secondly the proceedings under Chapter V had reached
only the second stage of passing of an order under Rule
2A(5) and had not reached the third stage of permission
being granted under Rule 11 whereafter only the respondents
would acquire "legitimate-expectation rights" cognisable in
law.
2. There was no violation of any Rule or the principles
of natural justice when the Government dropped the proposal
of permitting new schools to be opened or existing schools
to be upgraded in the 91 localities mentioned in Ex. P-4
notification because it was an administrative decision based
on Government’s policy and no adjudicative process was
involved in the passing of the cancellation order.
3. In any event the Government had inherent powers of
revocation under Section 20 of the Kerala General Clauses
Act corresponding to Section 21 of the Central Act and the
exercise of such powers is not open to challenge.
4. In any view of the matter, this was not a case where
the High Court should have exercised its powers under
Section 226 to restore the sanction order under Ex. P-4
because the Court cannot impose an economic burden on the
State’s resources by issuance of a writ.
Taking up for consideration the first limb of the first
contention of the learned counsel, it is true the
respondents have opened new schools or upgraded their
existing schools at the approved localities on 2.6.1986
itself i.e. even before the final list of approved areas
under Rule 2(4) was published on 24.6.1986 and the sanction
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order under Ex. P-4 was published on 4.2.1987. The question
however will be whether by reason of the opening of the
schools prematurely, the respondents stand forfeited of
their right to question the cancellation order under Ex. P-
7. We think not. This is because Section 3(5) of the Act
PG NO 109
does not totally ban the establishment of a new school or
the opening of a higher class but only states that if any
school or higher class is opened without following the
procedure, then such new school or higher class will not be
entitled to recognition by the Government. It will not
therefore, be per se a contravention of the Act and the
Rules if an educational agency started a new school or
opened a higher class without following the provisions of
the Act and the Rules and the only disqualification it would
suffer is its disentitlement to Government’s recognition.
That apart the order of cancellation is not challenged by
the respondents on the ground they have already established
new schools or opened higher classes in existing schools but
on the ground the earlier order of sanction under Ex. P-4
had been cancelled without justifiable reason and without
the respondents being heard. Therefore, the respondents
cannot be non-suited merely on the ground they had opened
new schools or higher standards even before the Government
published its final list of approved areas under Rule 2(4).
Hence, the first limb of the first argument of Mr. Poti
cannot be countenanced.
In so far as the second limb of the first contention is
concerned, it was urged by Mr. Poti that the publication of
the final list under Rule 2(4) was only a preliminary
exercise and not a final one because the initial selection
of localities under Rule 2(4) for opening new schools or
upgrading existing schools requires further scrutiny and
approval under Rule 9 and consequently any order of sanction
granted under Rule 2A(5) would leave the grantee only in the
position of an applicant and not confer on him legitimate
expectation rights. In support of his contention Mr. Poti
placed reliance on certain passages in Chingleput Bottlers
v. Magestic Bottling. 11984] 3 SCR 190 at 211 to 213: AIR
1982 SC 149 paras 14 to 17; State of Kerala v. A. Laxmi
Kutti, [ 1986] 4 SCC 632 at 654 and certain passages in Wade
on Administrative Law pages 464, 465, 624 and 625.
Looking at Rule 2 and the procedure enunciated therein
for determining the areas where new schools are to be opened
or existing schools are to be upgraded, we are unable to
accept the contention of Mr. Poti that the selection of
areas where additional educational facilities are to be
provided is only an informal and inconsequential exercise
and as such the final list published by the Government
carried no force with it till such time the further
selection process under Rule 9 is gone through. The reason
for our saying so is because Rule 2 prescribes an elaborate
procedure and the due application of mind by several
agencies before the final list of approved areas is
published under Rule 2(4). Rule 2(1), enjoins the Director
PG NO 110
to prepare a list of localities where new schools or
upgraded schools are to be opened after taking into
consideration all the relevant factors viz. the existing
schools in and around the locality, the strength of the
several standards and the accommodation position in the
existing schools, distance factors and the educational needs
of the locality with reference to the habitation and
backwardness of the area etc. Besides publishing the
tentative list, the Director has to call for representations
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and objections from interested parties and they have to be
duly considered by the Educational Officers of the locality
and then by the Director himself and eventually the
Government itself has to apply its mind to the selection of
areas and then cause the final list to be published. The
proviso to Rule 2(5) grants only limited powers of
modification to the
Government viz. to alter the list here and there and not to
scrap it outright. Even the power of modification can be
exercised only after giving the affected parties an
opportunity to make representations against the proposed
modification. The selection of approved areas becomes final
once the list is published under Rule 2(4), with or without
modification and the finality is not contingent upon further
approval under Rule 9. What Rule 9 itself provides for is
the grant of permission to applicants approved under Rule
2A(5) to open new schools depending upon the applicant
subjectively satisfying the Government about his ownership
or right to possession of the site, buildings and other
needs of the school, his financial guarantee, has not being
convicted of any offence involving moral terpitude and about
the locality being in need of the new school and the
accessibility of the new school to the members of the
public. It is significant to point out that Rule 9 speaks of
fulfilment of conditions only for opening new schools and
not for the upgrading of existing schools. Thus it may be
seen that Rule 9 lays down subjective tests while Rule 2
prescribe objective as well as subjective standards in the
matter of selecting areas which are in need of new schools
or upgraded schools. It was also pleaded that the final list
published under Rule 2(4) was vulnerable to cancellation at
any time before new schools were actually opened in the
selected areas in accordance with the Rules because of
change of conditions in the selected areas or because of the
selected area losing their place of priority. This is too
fragile a statement to merit acceptance because the need of
a selected area, given recognition after an elaborate
process of selection, cannot disappear overnight unless the
need is fulfilled by the Government itself opening a new
school or by the residents of the locality migrating on a
large scale to another place.
That the publication of the final list under Rule 2(4)
PG NO 111
has not only binding force on the Government but it also
entails consequential obligations on the Government could be
seen from the fact that Rule 2A( 1) makes it imperative for
the Director to call for applications from interested
parties for opening new schools or upgrading existing
schools in the selected areas. Mr. Poti argued that it was
only to prevent a deluge of applications for opening new
schools all over the States the selection of areas under
Rule 2 is gone through so that the number of applications
could be restricted. It is difficult for us to accept this
statement because it runs counter to the scheme of Rule 2
regarding the selection of areas on objective factors and
subjective considerations. Be that as it may, the mandate
contained in Rule 2A(1) goes to show that the identification
and selection of inadequately served areas under Rule 2(4)
is not an idle or meaningless exercise. Such being the case
the applications made under Rule 2A( 1) cannot be treated as
applications made by mere speculators or adventurers. On the
contrary the applications carry with them a certain amount
of legitimacy in that they pertain to opening of schools in
the inadequately served areas notified by the Government and
are made in response to the Director’s notification calling
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for applications. In fact Rule 12 confers a right of
revision on those applicants whose applications for the
opening of new/upgraded schools are not included in the list
of approved applicants published by the Government under
Rule 2A(5). Thus when even an unsuccessful applicant is
conferred a right to represent to Government against the
non-approval of his application, can it be said that an
approved applicant has no right whatever to complain when
the sanction granted to him is revoked all of a sudden
without he being given any opportunity to show cause against
such cancellation. It is significant to note that the Rules
do not provide for the revocation or cancellation of a final
list published under Rule 2A(5) and that the right of
cancellation is given to the Government only if the approved
applicant fails to satisfy the conditions laid down in Rule
9 and thereby becomes disentitled to obtain sanction under
Rule 11. The scheme of the Rules is such that after sanction
is accorded to an applicant under Rule 2A(5) to open a
new/upgraded school, then the applicant acquires a right to
have his application considered further under Rule 9 as
regards his ownership or possession of land, buildings etc.
his declaration of financial guarantee, the suitability of
the place offered by him for location of the school and
about he being free of any conviction by any criminal court
so as to entitle him to the issue of an order under Rule 11.
The further scrutiny of the application of the approved
applicant under Rule 9 and the confirmation of approval
under Rule 11 would not, however, mean that the earlier
sanction granted under Rule 2A(5)does not create "legitimate
PG NO 112
expectation rights" in the approved applicant.
Mr. Poti contended that an applicant obtaining sanction
under Rule 2A(5) would only remain in the position of an
applicant and it is only after further permission is granted
under Rule 11, the applicant can be said to acquire
"legitimate expectation rights" and the requisite
locus to challenge any order of cancellation passed by the
Government. In support of his argument Mr. Poti relied upon
(1) State of Kerala v. Laxmi Kutty, (supra) where the Court
after referring to the ruling in Mani Subrat Jain v. State
of Haryana, [ 1977] 1 SCC 486 that a person whose name had
been recommended for appointment as a District Judge by the
High Court under Article 233(1) had no legal right to the
post, held that unless there was a judicially enforceable
right no w t of mandamus for enforcement of a right would
lie; (2) Chinglepet Bottler v. Majestic Bottling, (supra)
where the distinction drawn by Megarry V.C. in Mecinnes v.
Onslow Fane and Anr., [19781 3 All. E.R. 211 between initial
applications for grant of licence and the revocation,
suspension or refusal to renew licence already granted was
referred to and the Court observed that "the principle that
there was a duty to observe the audi alteram partem" Rule
may not apply to cases which relate not to rights or legal
expectations but to mere privilege or licence; (3) Wade on
Administrative Law, Vth Edition, where difference between
rights, liberties and expectations have been set out as
under:
’In many cases legal rights are affected, as where
property is taken by compulsory purchase or someone is
dismissed from a public office. But in other cases the
person affected may have no more than an interest. a liberty
or an expectation. An applicant for a licence, though devoid
of any legal right to it, is as a general rule, entitled to
a fair hearing and to an opportunity to deal with any
allegations against him. The holder of a licence who applies
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for its renewal is likewise entitled to be fairly heard
before renewal can be refused. So also is a race goer before
he can be put under a statutory ban against entering a
public race course.
In none of these situations is there legal right, but
they may, involve what the courts sometimes call "legitimate
expectation ’. This expression furnishes judges with a
flexible criterion whereby they can reject unmeritorious or
unsuitable claims. It was introduced in a case where alien
students of scientology" were refused extension of their
PG NO 113
entry permits as an act of policy by the Home Secretary. The
Court of Appeal held that they had no legitimate expectation
of extension beyond the permitted time, and so no right to a
hearing, though revocation of their permits within that time
would have been contrary to legitimate expectation. Likewise
where car-hire drivers had habitually offended against
airport byelaws, with many convictions and unpaid fines, it
was held that they had no legitimate expectation of being
heard before being banned by the airport authority. There is
some ambiguity in the dicta about legitimate expectation,
which may apparently mean either expectation of a fair
hearing or expectation of the licence or other benefit which
is being sought. But the result is the same in either case:
absence of legitimate expectation will absolve the public
authority from affording a hearing.
For the purpose of natural justice the question which
matters is not whether the claimant has some legal right but
whether legal power is being exercised over him to his
disadvantage. It is not a matter of property or of vested
interests, but simply of the exercise of governmental power
in a manner which is fair and considerate."
The argument, therefore, was that the respondents had no
locus standi to move the court to seek the quashing of Ex.
P-7 order and mandamus for their applications being approved
and granted sanctioned under Rule 17. Refuting this
contention Dr. Chitale argued that the respondents were
"persons aggrieved" and they had locus standi in the full
sense of the term to move the court since their right to
open a school, though not claimed as a constitutional right
was a natural right and their suitability to open a school
in the selected area having been accepted and their names
included in the list published under Rule 2A(S), the
Government could not cancel the list. Dr. Chitale relied
upon the decisions of this Court in Ebrahim Aboobakar and
Anr. v. Custodian General of Evacuee Property, [1952] SCR
696 and S.P. Gupta v. Union of India, [1981] Supp. SCC 87.
Arguments were also advanced by the appellant’s counsel to
contend that any permission given under the Rule to run a
school would only be a privilege while the respondent’s
counsel would say that it was a right within the meaning of
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. We do not think it
necessary to go into this aspect of the matter because of
the controversy narrowing down to the question whether after
having granted sanction to the respondents under Rule 2A(5)
PG NO 114
to open/upgrade schools, subject to satisfying the
conditions under Rule 9 and obtaining clearance under Rule
11, the Government could go back on the matter and cancel
the sanction order and that too without giving the
respondents any hearing at all.
In the course of the arguments Mr. Poti laid stress upon
the fact that while Rule 9 lays down several conditions for
being fulfilled before permission can be granted under Rule
11 to an educational agency to start a new school or upgrade
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a school, the order made under Rule 2A(5) makes mention of
only one of the several conditions being noticed by the
Government viz the provision of land for the proposed
school and as such the order, despite the use of the word
"sanction" can by no stretch of imagination be considered as
an order which conferred rights upon the respondents and
therefore it was futile for the respondents to say that
legally enforceable recognition had been given to them to
open schools in the selected areas. Going a step further Mr.
Poti said that in many cases even the solitary factor
noticed by the Government viz the provision of land for the
proposed school had not been adequately satisfied and this
shortcoming has been referred to in the alleged sanction
order passed under Rule 2A(S). Going to the other end, Mr.
Iyer and Dr. Chitale tried to take up the stand that the
sanction order passed under Rule 2A(5) was virtually one
under Rule 11 because the respondents had furnished
information pertaining to all the conditions enunciated in
Rule 9 and therefore what remained for the Government was
only to see whether the schools opened or upgraded by the
respondents were entitled to grant of recognition under Rule
17 or not. We are unable to find merit in the last
contention of the respondents in this behalf because the
Division Bench has clearly stated in para 52 of the judgment
that the stage of the Govern ment giving directions for
fulfilment of various conditions has not been reached and
therefore it was directing ’the State to proceed to take the
further steps commencing from Rule 11, Chapter V of the
K.E.R." In view of this categoric finding and since it is
the admitted position that the Government have not
subjectively scrutinised the application of each of the
respondents with reference to the conditions enunciated in
Rule 9, there is no scope for the respondents to say that
the sanction order made under Ex. P-4 was for all practical
purposes an order made under Rule 11. Even so, we cannot
accept the contention of the State that the applications
submitted by the respondents, despite their approval by the
District Educational Officer, the Director and the
Government and the publication of the sanction order under
Rule 2A(5) remained only at the threshold and it was
therefore open to the Government to revise its policy of
PG NO 115
opening new schools or upgrading existing schools and throw
overboard all the approved applications. We do not
therefore feel persuaded to accept the first contention of
the appellant’s counsel that the sanction order passed in
favour of the respondents under Rule 2A(5) carried no rights
with them and that they would remain still-born orders till
they passed through the third stage and were given
acceptance under Rule 11.
The second major contention of the appellant’s counsel,
it may be recalled, was that the Government had not violated
any statutory provision or the principles of natural justice
when it passed the cancellation order Ex. P-7 revoking the
earlier order Ex. P-4. To a large extent the arguments on
this aspect of the matter overlapped the arguments advanced
with reference to the first ground of attack already dealt
with. It was once again argued that the identification and
selection of poorly served areas in the matter of
educational facilities under Rule 2 was only an
administrative exercise in order to restrict the number of
applications for opening new schools within manageable
limits and that the real test of selection of the areas
began only when the applications were processed under Rule
9. It was likewise urged that though the Government was
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bound to implement the Directive Principles contained in
Article 41 of the Constitution in the matter of providing
educational facilities, the obligation was subject to the
limits of the economic capacity of the Government and as
such the Government cannot be compelled by any educational
agency or even by the Court to open new schools unmindful of
the financial burden that would be cast on the State by the
opening of such schools.
The last submission made in this behalf was that the
revocation order passed under Ex. P-7 was not in pursuance
of any adjudication of the rights of the applicants but to
make known the revised policy of the Government which was
taken after considering several relevant factors such as the
inadequate resources of the applicants in providing lands,
buildings, equipment, financial guarantee etc. for opening
the proposed schools, the backlash on Government’s finances
due to the resultant surplusage of teachers that would occur
in aided and government schools due to opening of more
unaided schools etc. and therefore the respondents could
neither complain of violation of the statute or the
principles of natural justice when the Government passed the
impugned order under Ex. P-7. It was pointed out by Mr. Poti
that the Secretary to Government, Education Department had
pointed out in January 1983 about the inadvisability of
opening new schools and aboutt many of the applicants
failing to satisfy most of the required conditions for
PG NO 116
opening new schools but in spite of it the Education
Minister had acted in a cavalier manner in passing the order
of sanction under Ex. P-4 and therefore the Government was
well within its rights in witholding the order in the first
instance and revoking it in toto subsequently.
We are unable to see persuasive force in these
contentions because they do not take notice of the realities
of the situation. As we have already pointed out, the
identification of inadequately served local areas in the
matter of educational facilities and their selection process
under Rule 2 cannot be construed as a meaningless and idle
exercise. That apart, the final list of selected areas
published under Rule 2(4) has not been revoked or cancelled
by the Government. Though a fresh list of areas has to be
prepared once in two years, that would not mean that the
list can be rendered irrelevant due to nonimplementation.
Such being the case the sanction order granted to the 91
applicants from among the total number of 122 applications
has the support of the earlier Government order made under
Rule 2(4). It must, therefore, logically follow that the
approved applicants are entitled to have their applications
taken to the next stage for consideration on more subjective
factors so as to obtain permission under Rule 11 if they
satisfied the requirements laid down by Rule 9. We have
already pointed out that the Rules do not provide for the
Government reviewing suo motu any order of sanction passed
under Rule 2A(5) in favour of any applicant for opening of a
new school or upgrading an existing school and its power of
revision under Rule 12 is confined to the reconsideration of
the case of any applicant whose name did not find a place in
the final list of approved applications published by the
Government.
In so far as the argument that the Government cannot be
compelled by any educational agency or by the Court to incur
additional financial burden by opening new schools, or new
classes is concerned, we have to point out that the argument
in the present context has no force because all the
applications that were approved pertained to the opening of
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unaided schools. Therefore, there is no question of the
Government being put to additional financial burden due to
the opening of new schools in the selected areas. Moreover,
the sanction order under Ex. P-4 specifically provided that
"the applicants for opening of the schools or upgradation of
the schools shall give an undertaking as provided under note
(v) to Rule 11 Chapter (V) of the K.E.R." The undertaking
referred to above is for ensuring that the approved
applicant "shall not move the Government at any time for the
conversion of the school into an aided school" and clause
(b) of Rule 11 further provides that "if any application is
made for conversion into an aided school, the permission
granted for opening of the school shall automatically
lapse." Hence the argument that the Government will be
saddled with additional financial burden by the opening of
new unaided schools is a mis-conceived one.
PG NO 117
It cannot be disputed that the applicants have to
necessarily make arrangements for purchasing or taking on
lease the required extent of land as well as making
arrangements for the building and equipment that would be
needed, for obtaining sanction from the Government even at
the stage of making an application under Rule 2A(2). The
Government cannot, therefore, be heard to say that no
prejudice would occur to the respondents by reason of the
cancellation order and that no principles of natural justice
would be voilated if the Government unilaterally revokes an
order of sanction granted under Rule 2A(5) to the
respondents for opening new schools or for upgrading
existing schools. For all these reasons, we are unable to
accept the second contention of the appellant’s counsel.
We now pass on to the third contention that even if
there is no provision in the Rules for the Government
cancelling the sanction order passed under Ex. P.4, the
Government is always possessed of inherent powers of
revocation under Section 20 of the Kerala General Clauses
Act and hence the Division Bench was wrong in holding that
the Government had no jurisdiction to pass the impugned
order Ex. P-7. In support of this argument, Mr. Poti
referred to the decisions in M. P. State v. V. P. Sharma, [
1966] 3 SCR 557 at 570 and Lt. Governor v. Avinash Sharma
[1971] 1 SCR 413 at 416. Both the cases arose under the Land
Acquisition Act and what was in issue before the Court was
whether the Government could exercise powers only under
Section 48 of the Land Acquisition Act to withdraw a
notification for acquisition made under Section 4(1) of the
Act. In the first case, after the issue of a notification
under Section 4(1), the Government issued successive
notifications under Section 6 of the Act covering different
portions of the land notified for acquisition under Section
4(1). The validity of the last of the notifications under
Section 6 was challenged on the ground that a notification
under Section 4(1) could be followed only by one
notification under Section 6 and that successive
notifications with respect to different parts of the land
comprised in one notification under Section 4(1) cannot be
made. The contention was upheld by the High Court and also
by this Court after over ruling the plea that once
notification was made under Section 4(1), the Government
PG NO 118
could issue successive notifications under Section 6 as long
as the notification under Section 4(1) was not withdrawn by
the Government in exercise of its powers under Section 48.
In repelling this contention, the Court incidentally
observed that the argument "that the only way in which the
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notification under Section 4(1) can come to an end is by
withdrawal under Section 48(1)" is not correct because
"under Section 21 of the General Clauses Act the power to
issue a notification includes the power to rescind it and
therefore it is always open to the Government to rescind a
notification under Section 4 or under Section 6 and a
withdrawal under Section 48(1) is not the only way in which
a notification under Section 4 or Section 6 can be brought
to an end."
In Lt. Governor v. Avinash Sharma, (supra) the
Government caused a notification under Section 4 of the Land
Acquisition Act to be made on March 31, 1964 and followed
the same by a composite notification on May 16, 1964 under
Section 6, 17(1) and (4). Then the Collector served notices
under Section 9 in June 1964. Subsequently on October 5,
1965 the State Government published an order cancelling the
earlier notifications dated March 31, 1964 and May 16, 1964.
The owner of the land challenged the cancellation order and
sought a mandamus to direct the Government to proceed with
the acquisition in accordance with law and determine the
compensation payable to him for compulsory and urgent
acquisition. It was contended on behalf of the State that
under Section 21 of the General Clauses Act the State had
the power to cancel the notification at any time and that
Section 48 of the Land Acquisition Act did not trench upon
that power. The contention was rejected and the Writ
Petition filed by the owner of the land was allowed. In the
course of the judgment it was observed as follows:
"Power to cancel a notification for compulsory
acquisition is, it is true, not affected by Section 48 of
the Act. By a notification under Section 21 of the General
Clauses Act, the government may cancel or rescind the
notifications under Sections 4 and 6 of the Land Acquisition
Act". The Court, however pointed out that "The power under
Section 21 of the General Clauses Act cannot be exercised
after the land statutorily vested in the State Government.
In another portion of the judgment it was observed that
after possession has been taken pursuant to a notification
under Section 17(1) the land is vested in the Government and
the notification cannot be cancelled under Section 21 of the
PG NO 119
General Clauses Act, nor can the notification be withdrawn
in exercise of the powers under Section 48 and that any
other view would enable the Government to circumvent the
specific provision by relying upon a general power.
Mr. Poti’s contention was that till the permission was
granted under Rule 11 for opening new schools or upgrading
schools, the power of the Government under Section 20 of the
Kerala General Clauses Act remained unaffected. We are
unable to accept this argument because as pointed out by the
Division Bench, the Act and the Rules do not provide for
revocation of an order of sanction granted under Rule 2A(5)
before taking the application to the third stage and
evaluating it on subjective considerations as to whether
permission should be granted under Rule 11 or not. In other
words once the government approves an application for
opening a new unaided school or a higher class in an
existing unaided schools and passes an order under Rule
2A(5), then the successful applicant acquires a right of
legitimate expectation to have his application further
considered under Rules 9 and 1 l for the issue of a sanction
order under Rule 11 for opening a new school or upgrading an
existing school. It is no doubt true, as pointed out by the
Division Bench, that by the mere grant of an approval under
Rule 2A(5), an applicant will not acquire a right to open a
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new school or to upgrade an existing school but he certainly
acquires a right enforceable in law to have his application
taken to the next stage of consideration under Rule l l. The
Division Bench was, therefore, right in taking the view that
the general power of rescindment available to the State
Government under Section 20 of the Kerala General Clauses
Act has to be determined in the light of the "subject
matter, context and the effect of the relevant provisions of
the statute." For the aforesaid reasons the fourth
contention of Mr. Poti has also to fail.
The last contention of Mr. Poti was that the Division
Bench of the High Court ought not to have issued writs under
Article 226 of the Constitution for quashing the order under
Ex. P-7 and issuing a mandamus to the Government to proceed
with the approval-exercise’ and consider the eligibility
of the respondents for being granted permission under Rule
11 for opening new schools or upgrading existing schools in
the selected areas. Various factors were adverted to in
support of this plea. It was first of all stated that the
respondents have no enforceable right under law to open a
school or to insist upon government according them sanction.
Secondly, it was stated that many of the respondents were
not possessed of adequate land or suitable buildings or
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necessary equipment or financial resources etc. to open the
schools. Thirdly, it was urged that the academic year 1986-
87 had almost come to a close when the order under Ex. P-4
was issued and hence the order had practically become
infructuous. Fourthly, it was stated that though there would
be no direct expenditure for the State in the opening of
unaided schools, the consequential results would affect the
finances of the State. It was said that as a result of the
opening of new unaided schools or upgraded schools, the
pupil strength and the division strength in the existing
government and aided schools inevitably get reduced and this
led to reduction in the teaching staff strength of those
schools and the teachers thrown out of employment have to be
given protection by the State by treating them as protected
teachers and absorbing them in other government and aided
schools as and when vacancies arose and it was in this
manner the,State’s finances came to be affected. By this
devious reasoning it was contended that the State cannot be
compelled to incur additional expenditure in order to oblige
the respondents opening new schools etc.
We have given our careful consideration to these
submissions and find that they have no merit or substance.
We have already set out step that though the respondents do
not claim a fundamental right, since them base their claim
under Article 30(1), to open new schools, they do acquire a
legal right under the Act and the Rules, after the
Government finalises the list of approved applicants for
opening new schools or upgrading existing schools in the
selected areas. The Rules enjoin the Government to
scrutinise the applications at various levels and then cause
a list of the approved applications to be published. Any
applicant whose name is not included in the approved list
can file a revision to Government under Rule 12 and seek
redressal of his grievance. Therefore it follows that if an
application is approved and sanction is granted under Rule
2A(5), the applicant acquires a justiciable right to have
his application considered at the next level of
determination under 9 and Rule 11. To take any other view of
the matter would run counter to the Rules in Chapter V and
the legislative intent underlying them. In so far as many of
the respondents not possessing the required extent of land
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or the type of building or the amount of finance etc. for
opening a new school, it is always open to the Government
when scrutinising the applications in the context of Rule 9,
to refuse grant of permission to those applicants and reject
their applications. By the judgment of the Division Bench,
the right of the State Government to pass appropriate orders
under Rules 9 and 11 have not been taken away. As regards
the contention that the sanction granted under Ex. P-4 on
4.2.87 was almost at the
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close of the academic year and as such the order could not
have been effectively implemented by the respondents even if
the order had not been revoked, we have only to point out
that the applications were made well in time but at the
instance of some parties who moved the High Court, the
Government was restrained from passing sanction orders and
it was on account of that there was some delay. Even
otherwise Rule 11 provides for the Government prescribing
the date from which the school should start functioning. It
is always therefore open to the Government to fix the date
from which the school should start functioning and the
Government is not left without power to exercise regulatory
control in such matters. The last of the reasons given viz.
that by the opening of new aided schools, the teachers in
the government and aided schools will be rendered surplus
due to fall in the pupil strength or the division strength
in the existing schools, it speaks rather poorly of the
standards of education in Government and aided schools. Be
that as it may, this cannot be a reason which can be
advanced by the Government after it had gone half the way
through the exercise of opening new schools in areas and
localities where educational facilities are not adequate. It
was urged that there are 16,000 schools in Kerala State and
they themselves cast a heavy burden on the finances of the
State and as such the State cannot afford to have more
teachers thrown out of employment in Government and aided
schools due to opening of new schools and pay them their
salary till such time they are absorbed in regular vacancies
in the existing schools. The argument fails to take note of
the fact that all these factors were not new developments
but were in existence even when the Government took steps
under Rule 2 to identify the poorly served areas and then
called for applications from interested parties for grant of
permission to open new schools or to upgrade existing
schools. If really the opening of new aided schools would
result in an adverse effect upon the finances of the State,
then the Government should find remedy for the situation by
amending the Rules suitably so as to severely limit the
scope for opening new unaided schools by putting more
stringent conditions. In fact, the Government have already
proceeded in that direction and even now Rule 11 stipulates
that any unaided school granted recognition should not seek
conversion into an aided institution and that if such
conversion is sought for, then the recognition granted
earlier will automatically lapse. Over and above all these
things, it is inconceiveable that by the opening of 1
unaided schools, new or upgraded, even assuming all of them
are granted permission under Rule 11, the impact on the
pupil strength of division strength the existing government
and aided schools will be so great as to cause a large
number of teachers being rendered surplus and the Government
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being forced to incur heavy expenditure by treating them as
protected teachers and paying them their salary. We are,
therefore, in complete agreement with the Division Bench
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that these factors are undoubtedly extraneous ones and do
not afford justification for the passing of the impugned
order Ex. P-7 for revoking the earlier sanction order Ex.
p-4. Hence the last contention also fails.
In the light of our reasoning and conclusions, our
answers for the three questions formulated by us are as
under:
(1) Though the sanction granted to the respondents under
Ex. P-4 would not by itself entitle them to open new schools
or upgrade the existing schools, it did confer on them a
right to seek the continuance of the statutory procedural
stream in order to have their applications considered under
Rule 9 and dealt with under Rule 11
(2) It was not open to the Government, either under the
Act or Rules or under Section 20 of the Kerala General
Clauses Act to cancel in toto the approval granted to the
respondents under Rule 2A(S), for opening new schools or
upgrading existing schools in the selected areas on the
basis of a revised policy.
(3) The impugned order under Ex. P-7, irrespective of
the question whether the Government had the requisite power
of cancel-lation or not, is vitiated by reason of non-
observance of the principles of natural justice and the vice
of extraneous factors.
In the result, all the appeals fail and are accordingly
dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
However, even as the Division Bench has done, we make it
clear that we are not making any pronouncement about the
suitability or otherwise of the respondents to be granted
permission under Rule 11 to open new schools or upgrade
existing Schools. All that we hold is that the respondents
are entitled, on the basis of the earlier order passed in
their favour under Ex. P-4, to seek continuance of the
statutory procedure in order to have their applica-tions
considered under Rule 9 and for appropriate orders being
passed under Rule 11 in accordance with law.
Y. Lal Appeals dismissed.