Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C.B.S.E. & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.SUNIL KUMAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/05/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL Nos. 2663-67 OF 1998
(Arising out of SPL (C) Nos 22135/97, 22136/97, 22137/97,
22139/97 & 22140/97)
J U D G M E N T
PATTANAIK, J.
Leave granted in all the Special Leave Petitions.
These six appeals filed by the Central Board of
Secondary Education are directed against the judgment and
order of the Division Bench of the Kerala High Court dated
18.6.1997 disposing of Writ Appeal Nos. 948/97, 978/97,
285/96, 300/96 as well as the two Original Petitions filed
before the Division Bench, namely, O.P. Nos. 2400/96 and
3559/96. The question that arises for consideration is :
whether students studying in institutions not affiliated to
the Board of Secondary Education can be permitted by the
High Court by an interim order to appear at the examination
conducted by the Board and ultimately can the Board be
compelled to issue certificates to those students who h ave
appeared at the examination pursuance to the interim
direction of the court notwithstanding the fact that the
institutions where the students were prosecuting their study
have not yet received affiliation of the Central Board of
Secondary Education? Writ Appeals 949/97 and 978/97 had been
preferred by the Board-Appellant, against the order of the
learned single Judge dated 6.2.1997 by which order the Board
was directed to allow the students of Sree Narayan Vidhya
Bhavan, Chandrappinny, Thrissur to appear at the examination
conducted by the Board. The learned single Judge had
indicated that the said order is being passed in the
peculiar circumstances of the case without the matter being
treated as a precedent. The learned Judge also further
directed that the question of affiliation to Devi Academy
Educational Society, Guruvayoor will be decided by the
Board. Writ Appeal No. 285/96 had also been preferred by the
Board against the order of the learned single Judge dated
7.2.1996 disposing of O.P. No. 1566/96. In the said case on
the basis of the order of the learned single Judge the
students of the non-affiliated institution were allowed to
sit at the examination and further they were granted
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certificates on the basis of the result of the examination
with the condition that the same will be subject to the
result of the O.P. The Writ Appeal No. 300/96 had also been
preferred by the Board against the interim order of the
learned single Judge dated 31.1.1996 by which order the High
Court had permitted the students of appear at the
examination conducted by the Board and then further directed
that the certificates granted should be attached to the
condition that the same will be subject to the result of all
the pending proceedings. The two original petitions have
been preferred by 23 petitioners praying therein that the
certificate that has been issued in their favour with the
condition that it would be subject to the final decision of
the pending proceedings should be modified and they should
be granted fresh certificates. All these appeals and the
original petitions were disposed of by the impugned judgment
of the Kerala High Court, wherein the Division Bench of the
Kerala High Court taking a sympathetic and compassionate
view of the matter and being of the opinion that students
who have been permitted to take admission and who have
appeared in the examination should not be allowed to suffer
and accordingly modified conditions attached to the
certificate and also directed that the students who ave
taken written examination for the 10th and 12th classes in
the institution - Sree Narayana Vidhya Bhavan, Thrissur -
should be granted certificates pursuant to the declaration
of the result of the examination and result should be
announced within one week and the certificates to be granted
pursuant to the result should not impose any restriction as
has been done in other cases. Similar directions were also
issued in other writ appeals as well as the original
petitions filed before the Division Bench.
There is no dispute that the institution in which these
students had pursued their studies have not yet received any
affiliation from the Central Board of Secondary Education,
who is the appellant in these appeals. Under the bye-laws
of the Board only regular students of affiliated schools
with the Board are entitled to appear in the Secondary
School Examination and the Senior Secondary School
Examination conducted by the Board. Since the institutions
in which the respondents - students have prosecuted their
studies are admittedly not affiliated to the Board but the
students have been allowed to appear at the examination
pursuance to the interim direction of the court, which is
in contravention of the Rules and Regulations of the Board,
the question that arises for consideration is : whether the
High Court was justified in issuing these impugned
directions ? This question no longer remains res integra.
This Court in several cases deprecated the practice of
allowing students to appear provisionally in the
examinations of the Board or the University and then
ultimately regularising the same by taking a sympathetic
view of the matter. In the case of A.P. CHRISTIANS MEDICAL
EDUCTIONAL SOCIETY v. GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND
ANOTHER, (1986) 2 SCC 667, this Court held that the court
will not be justified in issuing direction to the University
to protect the interest of the students who had been
admitted to the medical college in clear transgression of
the provisions of the University Act and the regulations of
the University. It was also observed that the court cannot
by its fiat direct the University to disobey the statute to
which it owes its existence and the regulations made by the
University itself as that would be destructive of the rule
of law. In the case of the STATE OF TAMIL NADU & ORS. v. ST.
JOSEPH TEACHERS TRAINING INSTITUTE & ANR., JT 1991 (2) SC
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343, this Court held that the direction of admitting
students of unauthorised educational institutions and
permitting them to appear at the examination has been looked
with disfavour and the students of unrecognised institutions
who are not legally entitled to appear at the examination
conducted by the Education Department of the Government
cannot be allowed to sit at the examination and the High
Court committed error in granting permission to such
students to appear at the public examination. All these
cases were again considered by a three Judge Bench of this
Court in the case of the STATE OF MAHARASHTRA v. VIKAS
SAHEBRAO ROUNDALE & ORS., JT 1992 (5) SC. 175, and it was
held that the students of unrecognised and unauthorised
educational institutions could not have been permitted by
the High Court on a writ petition being filed to appear in
examination and to be accommodated in recognised
institutions. The Court ultimately struck down the direction
issued by the High Court. In yet another case, GURU NANAK
DEV UNIVERSITY v. PARMINDER KR, BANSAL AND OTHERS. (1993) 4
SCC 401, another three Judge Bench of this Court interfered
with the interim order passed by the High Court to allow
students to undergo internship course even without passing
the MBBS examination. The Court observed:
"We are afraid that this kind of
administration of interlocutory
remedies, more guided by sympathy
quite often wholly misplaced, does
no service to anyone. From the
series of orders that keep coming
before us in academic matters, we
find that loose, ill-conceived
sympathy masquerades as
interlocutory justice exposing
judicial discretion to the
criticism of degenerating into
private benevolence. This is
subversive of academic discipline,
or whatever is left of it, leading
to serious impasse in academic
life. Admissions cannot be ordered
without regard to the eligibility
of the candidates. Decisions on
matters relevant to be taken into
account at the interlocutory stage
cannot be deferred or decided later
when serious complications might
ensue from the interim order
itself. In the present case, the
High Court was apparently moved by
sympathy for the candidates then by
an accurate assessment of even the
prima facie legal position. Such
orders cannot be allowed to stand.
The courts should not embarrass
academic authorities by themselves
taking over their functions."
On the admitted position and in view of the law laid
down by this Court, referred to above, Mr. Altaf Ahmed,
Addl. Solicitor General, appearing for the appellants
contended that the impugned direction of the High Court is
wholly erroneous and cannot be sustained. The learned
counsel appearing for the students in different appeals did
not dispute the position that the schools from where their
clients have perused their studies are not yet affiliated to
the Central Board of Secondary Education. But they mainly
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contended that the students having been permitted to appear
at the examination and they having been successful and
certificates have been issued in their favour, it would work
out great injustice, if the impugned directions of the High
Court are set aside at this length of time. In support of
this contention they placed reliance on a recent decision of
this Court in the case of CENTRAL BOARD OF SECONDARY
EDUCATION v. NIKHIL GULATI AND ANOTHER,(1998) 2 SCC 5. In
the aforesaid case, this Court deprecated the practice
followed by the High Court to issue direction and also
observed that such aberrations should not be treated as a
precedent in future but did not interfere with the ultimate
direction of the High Court on the ground that found hopes
have been raised in the minds of the students and therefore
it would be inappropriate to interfere under Article 136 of
the Constitution. We are unable to apply the reasoning given
in the aforesaid case, inasmuch as there is no iota of
material placed before us to indicate that the Central
Board of Secondary Education, the appellants herein, either
directly or indirectly had held out to the students at any
point of time that the institutions in which they are
prosecuting their studies have been affiliated or are going
to be affiliated at a near future. We are conscious of the
fact that out order setting aside the impugned directions of
the High Court would cause injustice to these students. But
to permit students of an unaffiliated institution to appear
at the examination conducted by the Board under orders of
the court and then to compel the Board to issue certificates
in favour of those who ave undertaken examination would
tantamount to subversion of law and this Court will not be
justified to sustain the orders issued by the High Court on
misplaced sympathy in favour of students. In view of the
aforesaid premises, we set aside the impugned judgment of
the Division Bench of the Kerala High Court as well as the
interim orders issued by the single Judge in several
petitions out of which the writ appeals arose and t he writ
petitions filed by the respondents stand dismissed. These
appeals are allowed but in the circumstances there will no
order as to costs.