Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2079 of 2008
PETITIONER:
Yogesh Ramchandra Naikwadi
RESPONDENT:
State of Maharashtra & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/03/2008
BENCH:
CJI K. G. Balakrishnan & R. V. Raveendran
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
CIVIL APPEAL NO 2079 OF 2008
(Arising out of SLP [C] No.8241 of 2006)
K. G. Balakrishnan, CJI.,
Leave granted. Heard learned counsel for the parties.
2. The appellant sought admission to Engineering course claiming the
benefit of reservation alleging that he belonged to ’Mahadeo Koli’ - a
scheduled tribe. The Scrutiny Committee which verified the validity of his
caste certificate, made an order dated 29.3.1995 rejecting his claim that he
belonged to a Scheduled Tribe. The appellant challenged the order of the
scrutiny committee in W.P. No.2667/1995. In the said petition, the Bombay
High Court issued an interim order directing the third respondent (Director
of Technical Education, State of Maharashtra) to accept the application of
Appellant for admission to BE course and process the same and give
admission by treating him as a candidate belonging to a scheduled tribe,
with a condition that the admission, if granted, will be provisional and
subject to the final decision. In pursuance of it, the appellant was admitted to
the BE course by extending the benefit of reservation under the quota for
Scheduled Tribes. Eventually he completed the Engineering course and was
conferred a degree by the University of Pune on 31.3.2004.
3. The writ petition filed by the Appellant was dismissed by order
dated 28.3.2006, upholding the order of the Scrutiny Committee, with a
direction to the third Respondent to take appropriate steps for recall of the
degree granted to the appellant. The said order of the High Court is
challenged in this appeal by special leave. The only contention urged by the
appellant is that even if his scheduled tribe claim was rejected, he should not
have been denied the benefit of the degree obtained by him. In support of
this contention, he relied on the decisions of this Court in State of
Maharashtra v. Milind \026 (2001) 1 SCC 4 and R.Vishwanatha Pillai v. State
of Kerala \026 (2004) 2 SCC 105.
4. In Milind, a Constitution Bench of this Court while rejecting the
caste claim of first Respondent therein, extended the benefit of retention of
degree to him on the following reasoning :-
"Respondent 1 joined the medical course for the year 1985-86. Almost 15
years have passed by now. We are told he has already completed the course
and may be he is practicing as a doctor. In this view and at this length of
time it is for nobody’s benefit to annul his admission. Hege amount is spent
on each candidate for completion of medical course. No doubt, one
Scheduled Tribe candidate was deprived of joining medical course by the
admission given to Respondent 1. If any action is taken against Respondent
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1, it may lead to depriving the service of a doctor to the society on whom
public money has already been spent. In these circumstances, this judgment
shall not affect the degree obtained by him and his practicing as a doctor.
But we make it clear that he cannot claim to belong to the Scheduled Tribe
covered by the Scheduled Tribes Order. In other words, he cannot take
advantage of the Scheduled Tribes Order any further or for any other
constitutional purpose."
In Vishwanatha Pillai, this Court, following Milind, permitted one of the
appellants therein, who had been admitted to an Engineering Degree College
against a seat reserved for a scheduled caste and whose caste claim was
negatived, to be allowed to take his degree with the condition that he will not
be treated as a Scheduled Caste candidate in future either for securing
employment or other benefits on the basis of the cancelled caste certificate.
5. In Milind, the question was whether the first respondent who
belonged to ’Koshti’ caste could claim the benefit of ST reservation on the
ground that it was a sub-tribe of ’Halba’ [Entry No.19 in Part IX of the
Constitution (Scheduled Tribes) Order 1950]. This Court held that ’Koshti’
was not a part of the Scheduled Tribe of Halba and that the entries in the
Scheduled Tribes Order could not be amended or expanded by any
Authority. As a consequence, the State’s appeal was allowed and the claim
of first respondent therein that he belonged to a scheduled tribe was rejected.
Having allowed the State’s appeal, this Court moulded the relief in exercise
of its power under Article 142 by permitting the first Respondent therein to
retain the benefit of his degree (for the reasons extracted above).
Vishwanatha Pillai merely followed Milind. In Milind, there was a bona
fide doubt as to whether ’Halba-Koshti’ could be considered as ’Halba’. In
Vishwanatha Pillai, the candidate’s caste certificate was cancelled merely as
a consequence of cancellation of his father’s caste certificate. Thus in Milind
and Vishwanatha Pillai, the candidates apparently believed that they
belonged to a scheduled tribe/caste when they sought admission and were
admitted. Further, their caste certificates showing them as belonging to a
scheduled tribe/caste had not been invalidated when they were admitted to
the course. The direction in both cases permitting retention of degree was in
exercise of power under Article 142 of the Constitution.
6. There may however be cases where it will not be proper to permit
the student to retain the degree obtained by making a false claim. One
example is where the candidates secure seats by producing forged or fake
caste certificates. There may be cases, where knowing full well that they do
not belong to a scheduled tribe/caste, candidates may make a false claim that
they belong to a scheduled tribe/caste. There may also be cases where even
before the date of admission, the caste certificates of the candidates might
have been invalidated on verification by the Scrutiny Committee. There may
be cases where the admissions may be in pursuance of interim orders
granted by courts subject to final decision making it clear that the candidate
will not be entitled to claim any equities by reason of the admission. The
benefit extended in Milind and Vishwanatha Pillai, cannot obviously be
extended uniformly to all such cases. Each case may have to be considered
on its own merits. Further what has precedential value is the ratio decidendi
of the decision and not the direction issued while moulding the relief in
exercise of power under Article 142 on the special facts and circumstances of
a case. We are therefore of the view that Milind and Vishwanatha Pillai
cannot be considered as laying down a proposition that in every case where a
candidate’s caste claim is rejected by a caste verification committee, the
candidate should invariably be permitted to retain the benefit of the
admission and the consequential degree, irrespective of the facts.
7. We may therefore examine the facts of this case to decide whether
the appellant should be given any benefit and if so whether they should be
similar to relief granted in Milind and Vishwanatha Pillai. As the caste
claim of the appellant had been rejected by the Scrutiny Committee even
before admission, this case stands on a different footing. But in this case
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though the scrutiny committee had rejected the appellant’s claim even prior
to his admission to the professional course, the High Court by order dated
22.6.1995 had directed the Director of Technical Education to accept the
admission form of appellant without insisting upon the validation of caste
and to process the same as if appellant belonged to Scheduled Tribe, making
it clear that admission if any made was provisional, and if the appellant
failed in his petition he will not be entitled to the benefit of degree he may
obtain. As observed in Milind, if the appellant’s admission or degree is to be
annulled, it is to nobody’s benefit as his seat cannot be offered to someone
else. There is also no allegation that appellant forged or faked the caste
certificate. His admission to engineering course was nearly thirteen years
back and he secured the degree more than four years back. We are therefore
of the view that the appellant herein should be permitted to retain the benefit
of the degree but subject to terms. The first is that he shall not claim or seek
any further benefit by claiming to belong to a scheduled Tribe. The second is
that if the State has spent or incurred any expenditure on the appellant’s
professional degree education by extending the benefit of exemption from
payment of fee or award of scholarship or by extending the benefit of
concession in fee (that is less than what is charged to general category
students) by treating him as a Scheduled Tribe candidate, the appellant
cannot retain such financial benefits. The third Respondent may, on behalf
of the State Government, take appropriate steps to enquire and assess the
amount, if any spent on the appellant either towards fee, scholarship or by
way of concession in fee and make a demand on appellant for payment
thereof. If the appellant fails to pay the amount so found due within six
months of the demand by the third Respondent, the third Respondent may
take steps for recalling the degree granted to the appellant. If no amount is
found to be due or if the amount determined and demanded is paid by
appellant, he may be permitted to retain the degree obtained by him.
8. The appeal is accordingly allowed in part, deleting the direction of
the High Court to the third respondent to take steps to recall the degree
awarded to the appellant.