Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AMANJIT SINGH GILL ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF HEALTH SERVICES ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/11/1988
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
BENCH:
DUTT, M.M. (J)
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 386 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 905
1989 SCC (1) 231 JT 1988 (4) 469
1988 SCALE (2)1373
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1513 (7)
ACT:
Professional Colleges--Admission to.
HEADNOTE:
Medical Colleges--Admission to--All India Entrance
Examination for MBBS/BDS course Vacant seats as a result of
drop out in number of candidates allocated seats--Guidelines
issued by Court for allocation of vacant seats.
The petitioners in the writ petitions had been allotted
seats in MBBS/BDS courses in various Medical/Dental
Colleges. They sought change, and wanted admissions in
colleges which were near their home- towns.
The Union of India, respondent in the writ petitions
also filed Civil Miscellaneous Petitions seeking directions
of the Court in the matter of the allocation of 532 vacant
seats in the medical colleges in the MBBS/BDS courses
pursuant to the result of the All India Entrance Examination
conducted by the Central Board of Secondary Education, New
Delhi.
Disposing of the Writ and Civil Miscellaneous petitions
the Court laid down guidelines to be followed:
HELD: 1. The candidates, who have been allocated seats
to the Dhanbad Medical College which is not a recognised
College, by the Medical Council of India should first be
reallocated to the recognised medical colleges having
vacancies keeping in view the minimum distance from their
home-towns. [907H;908A]
2. Those candidates who have exercised their choice for
MBBS course only or to MBBS course by way of first
preference and to BDS course by way of second preference and
admitted to BDS Course for want of seats in the MBBS Course
shall, if they or any of them desire to be admitted in the
MBBS Course, be absorbed against the available vacant seats
in order of merit. [908B-C]
PG NO 905
PG NO 906
3. The vacant MBBS or BDS seats, thereafter available
should be offered to the candidates on the waiting list in
order of merits. [908C]
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4. The candidates will be given maximum time of twenty
days to join the medical colleges, failing with the seats
will be declared vacant. [908F]
5. The allocation of MBBs seats already made shall not
be disturbed. [908F]
6. The Director General of Health Services, shall
consider the question of allotment to candidates, who have
been already admitted to MBBS or BDS Course, nearer to their
home-town in order of merit. [908G]
[The Director General of Health Services to deal with
the cases of the petitioners in the different writ petitions
and also the cases of the other candidates in accordance
with the above guidelines and dispose of the same within a
period of three weaks.] [910B]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 961 of
1988 Etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Kuldip Singh, Additional Solicitor General, Rajindra Lal
Chopra, A.S. Pundir, Bharat Sangal, Dr. (Mrs.) Roxna S.
Swamy, M.C. Dhingra, Prem Malhotra and Ms. A. Subhashini for
the Petitioners.
Madan Lokur, Manik Karanjawala, C.M. Nayyar and S.K.
Mehta for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUTT, J. These writ petitions relate to the allocation
of seats in medical colleges in the MBBS/BDS Course pursuant
to the result of the All India Entrance Examination
conducted by the Central Board of Secondary Education, New
Delhi, in respect of 15 per cent of the total number of
MBBS/BDS seats in medical colleges of different States.
Before dealing with the individual writ petitions, we
may refer to an application made by the Union of India being
PG NO 907
C.M.P. No. 29264 of 1988 in Writ Petition (Civil) No. 348-52
of 1985 praying for suitable directions in the matter of
allocation of vacant seats. It has been stated in this
application that the results of the All India Entrance
Examination conducted by the Central Board of Secondary
Education for admission in the MBBS/BDS Course were declared
on July 15, 1988. A merit list of 1,600 candidates together
with a waiting list of 1,000 candidates was sent to the
Director General of Health Services by the Central Board of
Secondary Education for making allocations of candidates to
various medical colleges for admission to MBBS/BDS Course,
as the case may be. The Director General of Health Services
allocated 1,428 candidates to MBBS Course and 111 candidates
to BDS Course in the various medical/dental colleges.
Further, it is stated that on the basis of information
received in the office of the Director General of Health
Services, 532 candidates have not joined in all these
courses and, accordingly, the said 532 seats have been lying
vacant.
In order to decide the criteria to be adopted for
allocation of vacant seats as a result of drop-outs in the
number of candidates who had been allocated MBBS/BDS seats
in various medical/dental colleges, a meeting was held under
the chairmanship of the Secretary, Ministry of Health and
Family Affair. In this meeting, the Chairman of the Central
Board of Secondary Education, Secretary, Medical Council of
India, and representatives of the Ministry of Law and
Justice participated, besides others from the Ministry of
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Health and Family Affair and the Directorate General of
Health Services. The Committee took a decision regarding the
allocation of seats in the MBBS/BDS Course. The Committee
has also made certain suggestions regarding the guidelines
to be followed for the purpose of filling up the vacant
seats in the MBBS/BDS Course.
Mr. Kuldip Singh, learned Additional Solicitor General,
submits that this Court may approve of the suggestions made
by the said Committee or lay down the guidelines for the
purpose of filling up the vacant seats. After hearing the
learned Counsel of the petitioners in these writ petitions
and after considering the suggestions of the committee and
the submissions made by the learned Additional Solicitor
General, we direct that the following guidelines should be
followed for the purpose of filling up the said 532 seats in
the MBBS/BDS Course.
1. The candidates, who have been allocated seats to the
Dhanbad Medical College which is not a recognised College by
PG NO 908
the Medical Council of India after 1982, should first be
reallocated to the recognised medical colleges having
vacancies keeping in view the aspect of the minimum distance
from their home-towns.
2. Those candidates who have exercised their choice for
MBBS Course only or to MBBS Course by way of first
preference and to BDS Course by way of second preference and
admitted to BDS Course for want of seats in the MBBS Course
shall, if they or any of them desire to be admitted in the
MBBS Course, be absorbed against the available vacant seats
in order of merit. The change from BDS Course to MBBS Course
will, however, be at their own cost and responsibility.
3. The vacant MBBS or BDS seats, thereafter available,
should be offered to the candidates on the waiting list in
order of merit. Allocation may be made to medical colleges
on the basis of the five preference indicated by the
candidates in the application forms. Any allocation of seat
made to a candidate in the waiting list either in the MBBS
or BDS Course shall be final and no request for change from
one course to the other will be entertained. In the case of
those candidates in the waiting list, who cannot be
allocated to medical colleges on the basis of five
preferences given by them in the application forms, the
Director General of Health Services will allocate them
colleges as near to their places of residence as possible
subject to availability of seats in those nearby colleges.
4. The candidates will be given maximum time of twenty
days to join the medical colleges allotted to them, failing
which the seats will be declared vacant.
5. The allocation of MBBS seats already made shall not
be disturbed.
6. The Director General of Health Services shall
consider the question of allotment of medical colleges to
candidates, who have been already admitted to MBBS or BDS
Course, nearer to their home-towns in order of merit.
7. Absorption in the said 532 vacant seats of candidates
who have already been admitted in the BDS Course and
reallotment of medical colleges to candidates also already
admitted in the MBBS or BDS Course, as the case may be,
PG NO 909
home-towns, and the reallocation to the recognised medical
colleges of candidates who have been already allocated seats
to the Dhanbad Medical College, shall be made within a
period of three weeks from today.
The petitioner Amanjit Singh Gill in Writ Petition
(Civil) No. 961 of 1988 is a resident of Punjab. He has been
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admitted in the MBBS Course in the Tamil Nadu Medical
College. He prays that the respondent may be directed to
allot a seat in Patiala Medical College, Punjab, which is
near to his residence.
The petitioner Shalu Sood in Writ Petition (Civil) No.
1110 of 1988 has been allotted a seat in the BDS Course in
S.C.B. Medical College, Cuttack, and she has since joined
the said College. According to her two seats in BDS Course
are lying vacant in Delhi. No particulars have, however,
been given by her as to in which medical college in Delhi,
the two seats are lying vacant. Be that as it may, she prays
for the allotment of one of such seats to her in order of
merit.
In Writ Petition (Civil) No. 1071 of 1988, the
petitioner Vimal Mehta, who is a resident of Faridabad,
Haryana, has been allotted a seat in the MBBS Course in
Darbhanga Medical College, Bihar, which is far off from the
place of residence of the petitioner. On behalf of the
petitioner preference has been given first to a medical
college in Delhi and second to a medical college in Rohtak
in the State of Haryana.
The grievance of the petitioner Mahesh Dutt in Writ
Petition (Civil) No. 1056 of 1988 is that although 7 seats
in the MBBS Course have been lying vacant in the Medical
College Rohtak in respect of which he gave his first
preference, he has been allotted a seat in the Medical
College Dhanbad. The home-town of the petitioner is in
Haryana and it is prayed by him that he should be allotted a
seat in the MBBS Course in the Medical College Rohtak. The
petitioner has, however, already joined the Medical College
Dhanbad.
The case of Kumari Shilpa Mehra, the petitioner in Writ
Petition (Civil) No. 936 of 1988, is that she has been
allotted a seat in the BDS Course at the Government Dental
College, Bombay, although candidates who have secured less
marks than her have been admitted in MBBS Course. The
petitioner has already joined the BDS Course in the said
Government Dental College, Bombay. It is prayed by her that
she may be allotted a seat in the MBBS Course in any medical
college in Bombay in order of merit.
PG NO 910
The guidelines for filling up the said 532 seats in the
MBBS/BDS Course cover the cases of the petitioners in the
different writ petitions mentioned above. Instead of giving
separate directions in each of the writ petitions, we direct
the Director General of Health Services to deal with all the
above cases and also the cases of other candidates in
accordance with the above guidelines laid down by us. All
the cases shall be disposed of by the Director General of
Health Services within a period of three weeks from today.
The Director General, after disposal of the representations
of the writ petitioners and others with regard to the
filling up of the said 532 vacant seats in the MBBS/BDS
Course, shall submit a report to this Court within six weeks
from today.
The writ petitions and C.M.P. No. 29264 of 1988 are
disposed of as above. There will, however, be no order as to
costs in any of them.
N.V.K. Petitions disposed of