Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURESH KOSHY GEORGE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNIVERSITY OF KERALA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/07/1968
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 198 1969 SCR (1) 317
CITATOR INFO :
R 1970 SC 150 (20)
E 1970 SC1896 (22)
R 1973 SC1124 (11,12)
RF 1975 SC2045 (6,7)
R 1976 SC2002 (3)
F 1977 SC1627 (2)
R 1978 SC 597 (61)
E&R 1978 SC 851 (45)
R 1985 SC1416 (96,98)
RF 1986 SC 555 (6)
ACT:
Kerala University Act, 1957,-Rules framed by Syndicate
delegating power to Vice-chancellor to hold inquiries on
malpractices during examinations-rules not followed-if
inquiry invalid.
Natural Justice-principles of-if require that inquiry
report must be furnished with show-cause notice.
HEADNOTE:
As certain preliminary reports indicated that the appellant
had indulged in malpractices during an examination, the
Vice-Chancellor of the respondent University appointed the
second respondent to conduct an enquiry. The second
respondent submitted a report holding the appellant guilty
of the malpractice and on the basis of this report, a show
cause notice was issued to the appellant by the Vice-
Chancellor. After the appellant had submitted his
explanation in response to the notice, and not being
satisfied with his explanation, the Vice-chancellor passed
an order debarring the appellant from appearing in any
examination for a year. This order was subsequently
approved by the Syndicate of the University.
The appellant challenged the Vice-Chancellor’s order by a
writ petition under Article 226 contending inter alia that
(i) the rules framed by the Syndicate delegating its powers
to the Vice-Chancellor required that for conducting the
inquiry should have appointed an officer designated by the
principal of the college in which the appellant appeared for
his examination; this was not done in the present case and
hence there was no proper inquiry; and (ii) the impugned
order was invalid inasmuch as no copy of the report made by
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the second respondent was made available to the appellant
before he was called upon to submit his explanation in
response to the show cause notice. A Single Bench of the
High Court allowed the petition, but his decision was
reversed in appeal by a Division Bench,.
On appeal to this Court,
HELD : Dismissing the appeal.
(i) The rules made by the Syndicate of the University under
which the inquiry was ordered were not statutory rules but
merely rules framed for guidance. The rule under which the
Vice-Chancellor was required to request the principal of the
concerned college to appoint -an Inquiry Officer merely laid
down a convenient procedure. Hence the Vice-Chancellor
cannot be said to have contravened any law in appointing the
Inquiry Officer not designated by the principal.
Furthermore. the principal in the present case was the
father of the appellant; the Vice-Chancellor was therefore
right in not appointing him but an independent person as the
Inquiry Officer. [321 B-C, F-H]
(ii) There was no breach of the principles of natural
justice in the appellant not being furnished with a copy of
the report of the second respondent before he was called
upon to give his explanation. The appellant had been duly
informed of the charge against him long before the inquiry
began; the inquiry was held after due notice to him and in
12 Sup C.I./68-6
318
his presence; he was allowed to cross-examimne the witnesses
examined in the case and he was permitted to adduce evidence
in rebuttal of the charge. No rule, either statutory or
otherwise, required th Vice-Chancellor to make available to
the appellant a copy of the report submitted by the Inquiry
Officer. [322 B-C]
Russel v. Duke of Norfolk and others, [1949] 1 All E.R. 108
(at 118); Local Government Board v. Alridge, [1915] A.C.
120, De Verteuil v. Knaggs and Anr., [1918] A.C. 557; Byrne
and Anr. v. Kinematograph Renters Society Ltd. & Ors.,
[1958] All E.R. 579; The Board of High School and
Intermediate Education U.P. v. Bagleshwar Prasad. and Ors.,
[1963] 3 S.C.R. 767 (775), referred to.
B.Surinder Singh Kanda v. Government of the Federation of
Malaya, [1962] A.C. 322; General Council of Medical
Education and Registration of the United Kingdom v.
Spackman, [1943] 2 All E. Reports, 337; New Prakash
Transport Co. v. New Savarna Transport Co., [1957] S.C.R.
98; distinguished.
There is an erroneous impression evidently influenced by the
provisions in Art. 311 of the Constitution particularly as
they stood before the amendment of that Article that every
disciplinary proceeding must consist of two inquiries, one
before issuing the, show cause notice to be followed by
another inquiry thereafter. Such is not the requirement of
the principles of natural justice. Law may or may not
prescribe such a course. Even if a show cause notice is
provided by law from that it does not follow that a copy of
the report on the basis of which the show cause notice is
issued should be made available to the per-,on proceeded
against or that another inquiry should be held thereafter.
[326 G-327 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 990 of 1968.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
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October 16, 1967 of the Kerala High Court in Writ Appeal No.
128 of 1967.
S.V. Gupte, A. S. Nambiar and Lily Thomas, for the appel-
lant.
V.S. Seyid Muhamad, P. Keshava Pillai for M. R. K. Pillai,
for respondents Nos. 1 and 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde J. This appeal by special leave from the decision of
the Division Bench of the Kerala High Court arises from the
disciplinary action taken by the Kerala University against
the appellant. He was a student in the I st year Degree
Course of the Five Year Integrated Course of Engineering, in
the Engineering College, Trichur during the academic year
1964-1965. The Vice Chancellor of the said University came
to the conclusion that he was guilty of malpractice during
the examination held in April 1965 and consequently debarred
him from appearing in any examination till April, 1966.
In the examination in question the appellant bad to appear
in two papers in Mathematics. In this case we are concerned
with
319
the Mathematics I paper. The Additional Examiner who valued
that paper awarded the appellant 14% marks but the Chief
Examiner gave him 64% in that paper. The appellant had
answered questions Nos. 1(a), 5(a), 9(a) and 4(a) in the
main answer book and secured 0.2 out of 6.0 and 0 marks
respectively from the Additional Examiner. Pages 611 of his
main answer book were left blank. There were some
additional answer books, certain pages of which were also
left blank. Two of the additional answer books were also
unused and left blank. In the used additional answer book
questions 1(a) and 9(a) which the appellant had already
answered in the main answer book and for which he had
secured 0 marks from the Additional Examiner were found re-
answered and for these he Secured 100% marks from the Chief
Examiner. The Chairman of the Board of Examinations, notic-
ing this unusual feature reported the matter to the Board of
Examiners in Mathematics. The Board suggested that the
University should take up the matter. The University
thereafter called for the answer books of the appellant and
the same was handed over to the Dean of the Faculty of
Science who is the Convener of the Standing Committee for
Examinations of the University for scrutiny. That official
suspected that the additional books must have been inserted
after the Additional Examiner had valued the paper and
therefore suggested to the University that a high powered
committee should be constituted to go into the matter.
Accordingly a committee consisting of the Chairman of the
Board of Engineering Examinations who is the Dean of the
Faculty of Engineering, Chairman of the Mathematics Section
of the Engineering Examinations, the Dean of Faculty of
Science who is the Convener of the Standing Committee on
Examinations, and the Registrar of the University was
constituted to go into the matter. That committee after
inquiry in which the Additional Examiner, the Chief Examiner
as well as the appellant were examined came to the
conclusion that the appellant was guilty of malpractice
which called for disciplinary action. Consequently the Vice
Chancellor ordered a formal inquiry as required by rules.
He appointed the second respondent, a retired Principal of
the University College, Trivandrum as Inquiry Officer for
conducting the inquiry. After inquiry the second respondent
submitted a report holding the appellant guilty of
malpractice during the examination in question. He opined
that subsequent to the valuation of the paper by the,
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Additional Examiner, the appellant had inserted additional
answer books with the collusion of the Chief Examiner. On
the basis of that report a show cause notice was issued to
the appellant by the Vice Chancellor. The appellant
submitted his explanation in response to that notice. Not
being satisfied with that explanation the Vice Chancellor
passed an order debarring the appellant from appearing for
any examination till April, 1966. The same was subsequently
approved by the Syndicate. The Order of the Vi
320
Chancellor was impugned before the High Court in a Petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution. A Single Judge of the
High ,Court who heard the matter at the first instance
allowed the, petition and set aside that order but his
decision was reversed in appeal by a Division Bench of that
High Court. The appellant appeals to the Court against that
decision.
Before the High Court as well as in this court the impugned
order was assailed on two grounds viz.-(1) the formal
inquiry required under the rules should have been conducted
by an officer designated by the Principal of the College in
which the appellant appeared for his examination i.e.
Examination Centre and hence there was no proper inquiry and
(2) the impugned order was invalid inasmuch as no copy of
the report made ’by the second respondent was made available
to the appellant before he was called upon to submit his
explanation in response to the show ,cause notice issued to
him by the Vice Chancellor.
Those contentions appealed to, the learned Single Judge but
the Judges of the Division Bench found no merit in them.
Those very contentions have again been repeated before us.
Before examining those contentions, it is necessary to men-
tion a few more facts. The Kerala University is governed by
Kerala University Act, 1957. The Engineering College,
Trichur is affiliated to the Kerala University. Under s.
19(N) of the Kerala University Act, the control over the
discipline of the students is vested with the Syndicate of
the University. Cl. (V) of that section empowers the
Syndicate to delegate any of its powers to the Vice
Chancellor. Cl. 3(xxvii) of Chapter VII of the 1st Statutes
says :
"The Syndicate shall, in addition to the
powers and duties conferred and imposed on it
by the Act and subject to the provisions
thereof, have and exercise the following
powers and functions :-
.........
(xxvii) subject to the provisions in the
laws, to take cognizance of any misconduct by
any student in a college or institution or in
a hostel or approved lodging, or by any
student who seeks admission to a U
niversity
course of study, or by any candidate for any
University Examination, brought to the notice
of the Syndicate by the head of the
institution or by a member of any Authority of
the University or by the Registrar of the
University or by a Chairman of a Board of
Examiners or by a Chief Superintendent at any
centre of examination and to punish such
misconduct by exclusion from any University
examination or from any University course in a
321
college or in the University or from any
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Convocation for the purpose of conferring
degrees, either permanently or for a specified
period, or by the cancellation of the Uni-
versity examination for which he appeared or
by the deprivation of any University
scholarship held by him or by cancellation of
any University prize or medal awarded to him
or by such other penalty as it deems fit."
Admittedly the Syndicate delegated the above power to the
Vice Chancellor under Exh. R. 5, a set of rules framed by
the Syndicate. These rules are not statutory rules. They
are merely rules for guidance. They could not have been
framed under s. 28 of the Kerala University Act. No other
provision in that Act empowers the Syndicate to frame rules.
But the delegation of powers made under those rules is valid
as no fixed procedure is prescribed in that regard. Those
rules provide that on the receipt of a complaint against a
student the Vice Chancellor should get an inquiry made in
respect of that complaint by an officer designated by the
Principal of the College in which the concerned student
appeared for his examination. They further provide that on
receipt of the report of the Inquiry Officer the Vice
Chancellor after consultation with the sub-committee on
discipline should take a provisional decision, that decision
should be communicated to the student who should be called
upon to show cause against the provisional decision and
after receiving his representation, if any, the Vice
Chancellor should pass appropriate final orders.
In this case the Principal of the College in which the
appellant appeared for his examination was not requested to
appoint an Inquiry Officer. The Inquiry Officer was
directly appointed by the Vice Chancellor himself. The
reason for this course is obvious. The Principal in
question was the father of the appellants The Vice
Chancellor, therefore, thought it proper that be himself
should appoint some independent person as the Inquiry
Officer. We have earlier seen that the rule under which the
Vice Chancellor was required to request the Principal of the
concerned college to appoint an Inquiry Officer is not a
statutory rule. That rule merely laid down a convenient
procedure. Hence the Vice Chancellor cannot be said to
have; contravened any law in appointing the Inquiry Officer.
It cannot be said and it was not said that the steps taken
by the Vice Chancellor were in contravention of the
principles of natural justice. The second respondent as
mentioned earlier is a retired Principal of an Engineering
College, a responsible person and highly qualified for the
task entrusted to him. His disinterestedness was never
challenged at any stage of the inquiry. In our opinion, the
Divison Bench of the High Court rightly negatived the
contention that by appointing the second respondent as the
Inquiry Officer, the Vice Chancellor had either breached any
statutory rule or contravened any principle of natural
justice.
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The only other contention that was taken before the Division
Bench and repeated in this Court was that inasmuch as the
Vice Chancellor did not make available to the appellant a
copy of the report submitted by the second respondent before
he was called upon to make his representations against the
provisional decision taken by him, there was breach of the
principles of natural justice. The appellant had been duly
informed of the charge against him long before the inquiry
began; the inquiry was held after due notice to him and in
his presence; he was allowed to cross-examine the witnesses
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examined in the case and he was permitted to adduce evidence
in rebuttal of the charge. No rule either statutory or
otherwise was brought to our notice which required the Vice
Chancellor to make available to the appellant a copy of the
report submitted by the Inquiry Officer. It is not the case
of the appellant that he asked for a copy of that report and
that was denied to him. The rules of natural justice are
not embodied rules. The question whether the requirements
of natural justice have been met by the procedure adopted in
a given case must depend to a great extent on the facts and
circumstances of the case in point, the constitution of the
Tribunal and the rules under which it functions.
In Russel v. Duke of Norfolk and others(1),
Tucker, L.J. observed :
"There are, in my view, no words which are
of universal application to every kind of
inquiry and every kind of domestic tribunal.
The requirements of natural justice must
depend on the circumstances of the c
ase, the
nature of the inquiry, the rules under which
the tribunal is acting, the subject matter
that is being dealt with, and so forth.
Accordingly, I do not derive much assistance
from the definitions of natural justice which
have been from time to time used, but,
whatever standard is adopted, one essential is
that the person concerned should have a
reasonable opportunity of presenting his-
case."
In Local Government Board v. Alridge(2)
Viscount Haldane L.C. observed
"My Lords, when the duty of deciding an
appeal is imposed, those whose duty it is to
decide it must act judicially. They must deal
with the question referred to them without
bias, and they must give to each of the
parties the opportunity of adequately
presenting the case made. The decision must
become to in the spirit and with the sense of
responsibility of a tribunal whose duty
(1) [1949](1) All E.R. p. 108 (at 118).
(2) [1915] A.C. p. 120.
323
it is to mete, out justice. But it does not
follow that the procedure of every such
tribunal must be the same. In the case of a
Court of law tradition in this country has
prescribed certain principles to which in the
main the procedure must conform. But what
that procedure is to be in detail must depend
on the nature of the tribunal. In modem times
it has become increasingly common for
Parliament to give an appeal in matters which
really pertain to administration rather than
to the exercise of the judicial functions of
an ordinary Court, to authorities whose
functions are administrative and not in the
ordinary sense judicial. Such a body as the
Local Government Board has the duty of
enforcing obligations on the individual which
are imposed in the interests of the community.
Its character is that of an organization with
executive functions. In this it resembles
other great departments of the State. When,
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therefore, Parliament entrusts it with
judicial
duties, Parliament must be taken, in the
absence, of any declaration to the contrary,
to have intended it to follow the procedure
which is its own and is necessary if it is to
be, capable of doing its work efficiently. I
agree with the view expressed in an analogous
case by my noble and learned friend Lord
Loreburn. In Board of Education v. Rice(1) he
laid down that, in disposing of a question
which was the subject of an appeal to it, the
Board of Education was under a duty to act in
good faith, and to listen fairly to both
sides, inasmuch as that was a duty which lay
on everyone who decided anything. But he went
on to say that he did not think it was bound
to treat such a question as though it were a
trial. The Board had no power to administer
an oath, and need not examine witnesses. It
could. he thought, obtain information in any
way it thought best, always giving a fair
opportunity to those who were, parties in the
controversy to correct or contradict any
relevant statement prejudicial to their view.
If the Board failed in this duty, its order
might be the subject of certiorari and it must
itself be the subject of mandamus."
In the above case the Local Government Board acted solely on
the basis of a report submitted by one of the Housing
Inspectors of the Board after a public inquiry. The House
of Lords held that the procedure adopted did not contravene
the principles of natural justice. In De Verteuil v. Knaggs
and Anr.(2) the ,Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
observed while considering the scope of the powers of the
Governor under s. 2 of the Immigration Ordinance of Trinidad
(1) [1911] A. C. 179. (2) [1918] A.C. 557.
324
"Their Lordships are of opinion that in making such an
inquiry there is, apart from special circumstances, a duty
of giving to any person against whom the complaint is made a
fair opportunity to make any relevant statement which he may
desire to bring forward and a fair opportunity to correct or
controvert any relevant statement brought forward to his
prejudice."
In Byrne and anr. v. Kinematograph Renters Society Ltd. &
ors.(1) Lord Harman J. observed:
"What, then, are the requirements of natural justice in a
case of this kind ? First, I think that the person accused
should know the nature of the accusation made; secondly that
he should be given an opportunity to state his case; and
thirdly, of course, that the tribunal should act in good
faith. I do not think that there really is anything more."
The decision of the Judicial Committee in University of
Ceylon V. Fernando (2 ) appears to go much further than what
was laid down in the aforementioned cases. For the purpose
of this case it is not necessary to take assistance from the
ratio of that derision. Suffice it to say that in the case
before us there was a fair inquiry against the appellant;
the officer appointed to inquire was an impartial person- he
cannot be said to have been biassed against the appellant;
the charge against the appellant was made known to him
before the commencement of the inquiry; the witnesses who
gave evidence against him were examined in his presence and
he was allowed to cross-examine them and lastly he was given
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every opportunity to present his case before the Inquiry
Officer. Hence we see no merit in the contention that there
was any breach of the principles of natural justice. It is
true that the Vice Chancelor did not make available to the
appellant a copy of the report submitted by the Inquiry
Officer. Admittedly the appellant did not ask for a copy of
the report. There is no rule requiring the Vice Chancellor
to provide the appellant with a copy of the report of the
Inquiry Officer before he was called upon to make his re-
presentation against the provisional decision taken by him.
If the appellant felt any difficulty in making his
representation without looking into the report of the
Inquiry Officer, he could have very well asked for a copy of
that report., His present grievance appears to be an after
thought and we see no substance in it.
Mr. S. V. Gupte, the learned counsel for the appellant, in
support of his contention that the failure of the Vice
Chancellor to make available to the appellant a copy of the
report submitted by the Inquiry Officer is an infringement
of the principles of natural justice, placed strong reliance
on the decision of the Judicial
(1) [1958] All E.R. 579. (2) [1960]
(1) All E.R. 631.
325.
Committee in B. Surinder Singh Kanda v. Government of the
Federation of Malaya(1). Therein, at the instance of the
Commissioner of Police, a preliminary inquiry was held
against S. S. Kanda. Thereafter a formal inquiry was
ordered On the basis of the conclusions reached at the
formal inquiry Surinder Singh Kanda was dismissed. Kanda
challenged his dismissal in an action brought in the High
Court of Malaya. During the pendency of that proceeding, it
came to light that the report made by the Board which held
the preliminary inquiry, a report which was highly pre-
judicial to Kanda had been placed in the hands of the
officer who held the formal inquiry but neither the copy of
that report nor its substance had been made available to
Kanda. That report was likely to have prejudiced the
Inquiry Officer against Kanda. Under those circumstances
the Judicial Committee came to the conclusion that the
inquiry held was not fair and consequently quashed the order
dismissing Kanda. The ratio of that decision has no
application to the present case. The decision of the House
of Lords in General Council of Medical Education and
Registration of the United Kingdom v. Spackman ( 2 ) does
not bear on the question under consideration. Therein the
House of Lords held that the General Medical Council was not
right in declining an opportunity being given to Dr.
Spackman to show that the conclusion of the Divorce Court
that he was guilty of infamous conduct was not correct. In
that case the General Medical Council took action against
Dr. Spackman solely on the basis of the conclusions reached
by the Divorce Court in Pepper v. Pepper. Dr. Spackman
wanted to negative the court’s finding of adultery by
tendering evidence which though available was not called in
the divorce proceedings. The House of Lords held that the
Council’s refusal to take fresh evidence prevented their
being the due inquiry required by s. 29 of the Medical Act,
1858 and therefore an order of certiorari was granted.
The scope of the principles of natural justice as explained
by the English Courts was adopted by this Court in a large
number of cases. See New Prakash Transport Co. v. New
Savarna Transport Co.(3) and Nagendra Nath Bora v. The
Commissioner of Hill Divisions (4 ).
Before closing this case we would like to recall the
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observations made by Gajendragadkar J. (as he then was)
speaking for the Court in The Board of High School and
Intermediate Education U.P. v. Bagleshwar Prasad and
ors.(5). His Lordship observed :
"In dealing with petitions of this type, it is
necessary to bear in mind that educational
institutions like the
(1) [1962] A.C. 322. (2) [1943] (2)
All E. R. 337.
(3) [1957] S.C.R. 98. (4) [1958]
S.C.R. 1240 (1261).
(5) [1963] (3) S.C.R. 767 (775).
326
Universities or appellant No. 1 set up Enquiry
Committees to deal with the problem posed by
the adoption of unfair means by candidates,
and normally it is within the jurisdiction of
such domestic tribunals to decide all relevant
questions in the light of the evidence,
adduced before them. In the matter of the
adoption of unfair means, direct evidence may
sometimes be available, but cases may arise
where direct evidence is not available and the
question will have to be considered in the
light of probabilities and circumstantial
evidence. This problem which educational
institutions have to face from time to time is
a serious problem and unless there is justi-
fication ’Lo do so, courts should be slow to
interfere with the decisions of domestic
Tribunals appointed by educational bodies like
the Universities. In dealing with the
validity of the impugned orders passed by
Universities under Art. 226, the High Court is
not sitting in a appeal over the decision in
question; its jurisdiction is limited and
though it is true that if the impugned order
is not supported by any evidence at all, the
High Court would be justified to quash that
order. But the conclusion that the impugned
order is not supported by any evidence must be
reached after considering the question as to
whether probabilities and circumstantial
evidence do not justify the said conclusion.
Enquiries held by domestic Tribunals in such
cases must, no doubt, be fair and students
against whom charges are framed must be given
adequate opportunities to defend themselves,
and in holding such enquiries, the Tribunal,
must scrupulously follow rules of natural
justice; but it would, we think, not be
reasonable to import into these enquiries all
considerations which govern criminal trials in
ordinary courts of law. In the present case,
no animal is suggested and no mala fides have
been pleaded. The enquiry has been fair and
the respondent has bad an opportunity of
making his defence. That being so, we think
the High Court was not justified in
interfering with the order passed against the
respondent."
There seems to be an erroneous impression in certain quar-
ters evidently influenced by the provisions in Art. 31 1 of
the Constitution particularly as they stood before the
amendment of that article that every disciplinary proceeding
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must consist of two inquiries, one before issuing the show
cause notice to be followed by another inquiry thereafter.
Such is not the requirement of the principles of natural
justice. Law may or may not prescribe such a course. Even
if a show cause notice is provided by law from that it does
not follow that a copy of the report on the basis of which
the show cause notice is issued should be made available
327
to the person proceeded against or that another inquiry
should be held thereafter.
For the reasons mentioned above the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
328