Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DR. (MRS.) KIRTI DESHMANKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/09/1990
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
KANIA, M.H.
CITATION:
1990 SCR Supl. (1) 355 1991 SCC (1) 104
JT 1991 (5) 291 1990 SCALE (2)471
ACT:
Professional Colleges--Admission of: Medical
College--Foreign national--Admission of -No objection cer-
tificate by Ministry of External Affairs no substitute for
certificate of no objection by Ministry of Health & Family
Planning.
Natural Justice--Regrettable that rules of natural
justice not heeded even by highly educated persons.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant and respondent No. 5 along with others
were candidates for admission to the post-graduate course in
Obstetrics and Gynecology in the G.M. Medical College,
Gwalior. Respondent No. 5 was selected as the last candidate
in the list of the successful applicants. The appellant was
placed on the top of the waiting list.
The appellant challenged the admission Of respondent no.
5 on the ground that the latter was a foreign national and
was not entitled to be considered for admission in absence
of prior clearance certificate by the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare, Central Government, which she could not file
along with her application nor could she produce it before
she was finally selected.
The respondent had however produced a no objection
letter from the Ministry of External Affairs. Later, she was
also able to obtain the necessary certificate from the
Ministry of Health and Family welfare.
The writ application under Article 226 of the Constitu-
tion filed by the appellant was dismissed by a Full Bench of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court.
Before this Court it was contended on behalf of the
appellant that (i) the selection of respondent no. 5 was
vitiated on account of participation of the respondent’s
mother-in-law (a former Professor and Head of Department) as
a member of the College and Hospital Council; and (ii) under
the Government of India Instructions it was necessary for
respondent no. 5 to have produced before the College and
Hospital
356
Council the necessary certificate from the Ministry of
Health and Family Welfare before her final selection, and
the certificate issued by the Ministry of External Affairs
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could not be a substitute.
Dismissing the appeal on merits, this Court,
HELD: (1) The mother-in-law of respondent no. 5 was,
without any doubt, vitally interested in the admission of
her daughter-in-law and her presence in the meeting of the
Council must be held to have vitiated the selection of
respondent no. 5 for admission.
A.K. Kraipak v. Union of India, [1970] 1 SCR 457; Ashok
Kumar Yadav v. State of Haryana, [1985] 4 SCC 417, referred
to.
(2) It is regrettable that in spite of repeated remind-
ers by the Courts of law, the College and Hospital Council
constituted by a number of highly educated persons and
headed by the Dean himself did not pay any heed to the
principles of natural justice.
(3) The State has to spend a large sum of money in
running institutions of higher technical education and the
seats are limited. In such a situation a seat can be allot-
ted to a foreign national only at the cost of a citizen of
this Country. The College and Hospital Council was, there-
fore, not right in deciding to admit the respondent no. 5 on
the strength of no objection certificate by the Ministry of
External Affairs.
(4) A certificate of no objection by one Department
cannot be a substitute for the clearance by the other.
(5) The purpose of the Instructions is to ensure that no
foreign national is allowed to occupy a seat ordinarily
meant for the citizen of the country without the permission
of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of
India, and once that hurdle is cleared, the purpose is fully
satisfied. After the production of the necessary clearance,
there does not remain any reason for rejecting the claim of
respondent No. 5 who was a more meritorious candidate, who
had secured higher percentage of marks than the appellant in
the M.B.B.S. examination.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4479 of
1990.
357
From the Judgment and Order dated 19.4. 1989 of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in M.P. No. 1378 of 1989.
S.K. Dholakia and D. Bhandari for the Appellant.
Kapil Sibal. Additional Solicitor General, G.L. Sanghi,
B.R. Agarwala. Ms. Sushma Manchanda, S.K. Agnihotri, Mahen-
der Singh, Ms. Sushma Suri, Ujjwal A. Rana and Ashok Singh
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHARMA, J. Special leave is granted.
2. The appellant and the respondent no. 5 along with
others were candidates for admission to the Post-graduate
Course in Obstetrics and Gynaecology in the G.R. Medical
College, Gwalior. They had duly passed the M.B.B.S. examina-
tion and satisfied the other essential conditions for admis-
sion. The selection of the candidates was made on the basis
of their relative merit and the respondent no. 5 was select-
ed as the last candidate in the list of the successful
applicants. The appellant was placed on the top of the
waiting list and was admitted for the Diploma Course. She
challenged the admission of the respondent no. 5 on the
ground that the latter was a foreign national, and was not
entitled to be considered for admission in absence of prior
clearance certificate by the Ministry of Health and Family
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Welfare, Central Government; which she could not file along
with her application nor could she produce it before she was
finally selected. A writ application under Article 226 of
the Constitution filed by the appellant was heard by a Full
Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court and was dismissed by
the judgment under appeal.
3. The learned counsel for the appellant has relied upon
the Instruction dated the 6th August, 1983 issued by the
Government of India, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare,
to the Deans and the Principals of all Medical Colleges
regarding procedure for admission of foreign students in
medical institutions in the country. By a subsequent order
the Instruction which in terms had been issued for a partic-
ular year was kept alive. The learned counsel for the re-
spondents have not disputed the binding nature of the In-
struction. But there is a serious dispute about its inter-
pretation.
4. After the receipt of the applications for admission
the matter was scrutinised by a committee described as the
College and Hospital
358
Council and-it prepared a merit’list in which the respondent
no. 5 ranked higher than the appellant. Objections were
invited latest by the 23.10.1989 and the appellant filed her
application within time alleging that the respondent no. 5
was not eligible for admission at all as she had not pro-
duced the necessary certificate from the Ministry of Health
and Family Welfare. It appears that the respondent no. 5 had
produced a letter from the Ministry of External Affairs
stating that the said Ministry had no objection to the
admission of the respondent. The objection was considered by
the College and Hospital Council of which besides others the
Dean Dr. A.K. Govila as also the mother-inlaw of the re-
spondent no. 5. Dr. (Mrs.) P. Oliyai, a former Professor and
Head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of the
College were members. The objection raised by the appellant
was rejected by the following decision:
"(b) Dr. Roza Oliyai, since married to an Indian Doctor and
obtained the permission of Ministry of External Affairs
(Letter No. 1703/Dir. (GMS)/89 dated 31.3.1989), the objec-
tions raised were rejected and her merit stands as status
quo.
Accordingly the final list was published on 8.11. 1989. The
respondent no. 5 was, however, able to obtain the necessary
certificate from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
later and the same was filed in the College. The respondent
no. 5 was formally admitted in the first week of December,
1989.
5. The learned counsel for the appellant has pressed the
following two points in support of the appeal:
(a) The selection of the respondent no. 5 by the College and
Hospital Council was vitiated on account of participation of
the respondent’s mother-in-law as a member; and
(b) Under the Government of India Instruction it was neces-
sary for the respondent no. 5 to have produced before the
College and Hospital Council the necessary certificate from
the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare before her final
selection. The crucial date was when the respondent no. 5
was finally selected and her formal admission later in
December, 1989 was not material. Also the certificate issued
by the Ministry of External Affairs could not be a substi-
tute for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
359
6. The first argument of the learned counsel for the
appellant is well-founded. Dr. (Mrs.) P. Oliyai was, without
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any doubt. vitally interested in the admission of her daugh-
ter-in-law and her presence in the meeting of the Council
must be held to have vitiated the selection of the respond-
ent no. 5 for admission. As was observed in A.K. Kraipak and
Other v. Union of India, and Others, [1970] 1 SCR 457. there
was a conflict between her interest and duty and taking into
consideration human probabilities in the ordinary course of
human conduct, there was reasonable ground for pleading that
she was likely to have been biased. In the Kraipak’s case
the person concerned was the Acting Chief Conservator of
Forests who did not participate in some of the deleberations
of the selection Board, but the fact that he was a member of
the Board and that he participated in the deleberations
where the claims of his rivals were considered and in the
preparation of list were held to have necessarily caused an
impact on the selection, as the Board must have given weight
to his opinion. In that case the other members of the Board
had filed affidavits stating that the Acting Chief Conserva-
tor had in no manner influenced their decision, but this was
not considered sufficient to save the selection. The princi-
ple has been followed in numerous cases including in Ashok
Kumar Yadav and Others v. State of Haryana and Others,
[1985] 4 SCC 4 17, where it was emphasised that it was not
necessary to establish bias and that it was sufficient to
invalidate the selection process if it could be shown that
there was reasonable likelihood of bias. It is regrettable
that in spite of repeated reminders by the courts of law,
the College and Hospital Council constituted by a number of
highly educated persons and headed by the Dean himself did
not pay any need. It was expected of Dr. (Mrs.) Oliyai to
dissociate from the Council instead of espousing the case of
her daughter-in-law and in any event it was the bounden duty
of the Dean to have seen that Dr. Oliyai did so before
proceeding with the selection process. We, accordingly hold
that the selection of the respondent no. 5 for admission to
the Post-graduate Course was vitiated in law.
7. Ordinarily as a result of our above finding the
matter would have been sent for reconsideration by a proper-
ly constituted selection committee, but having regard to the
nature of the dispute between the rival doctors for the
right of admission to the course of study for the present
session which is fast progressing necessitating expeditious
disposal of the issue, we asked the learned counsel for the
parties to place the merits of their respective cases.
Accordingly, arguments were addressed, and we have consid-
ered the same at some length, and we proceed to decide the
controversy finally here.
360
8. Although during the hearing the learned advocates for
the parties made submissions dealing with several other
facets of the disputed issue, but ultimately they agreed,
and in our view rightly, that the final outcome of the
present litigation is dependent on the interpretation of the
direction as contained in the Instruction issued by the
Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, referred to above. At
one stage it was suggested on behalf of the respondent that
since she has now acquired Indian nationality, she cannot be
thrown out of the College. There is no merit in this argu-
ment, as admittedly the respondent was not a citizen of this
country when she was actually admitted in the College in the
first week of December, 1989. Mr. G.L. Sanghi also relied
upon the letter dated 31.8. 1989 issued by the Ministry of
External Affairs in favour of the respondent which was
relied upon by the College and Hospital Council for reject-
ing the objection of the appellant. This again cannot be of
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any help. The role of the Ministry of External Affairs is
distinctly different from that of the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare, and a certificate of no objection by one
Department cannot be a substitute for the clearance by the
other. Scrutiny by the Ministry of External Affairs is made
with a view to screen the person concerned to find out
whether he is desirable person at all to enjoy the hospital-
ity of the country in the background of various relevant
factors in this regard. So far the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare is concerned, it has to take into account the
question whether a seat for the medical course either upto
the Degree standard or the Post-graduate stage can be spared
for a foreign national. The State has to spend a large sum
of money in running institutions of higher technical educa-
tion and the seats are limited. In such a situation a seat
can be allotted to a foreign national only at the cost of a
citizen of this country. The College and Hospital Council
was, therefore, not right in deciding to admit the respond-
ent no. 5 on the strength of no objection certificate by the
Ministry of External Affairs.
Now remains the question as to meaning of the afore-
said Instruction which contains two provisions as mentioned
in clauses (a) and (b). Undisputedly clause (a) is not
attracted in the present case as the seat in question has
not been made available by the Ministry of Health and Family
Welfare and consequently there is no question of a foreign
student to be sponsored by the said Ministry. The second
part of the Instruction as contained in clause (b) reads as
follows:
"(b) No foreign student, who is seeking admission directly
for such course, shall be admitted unless Ministry of Health
and Family Welfare gives its clearance.
361
According to the appellant the stage at which the condition
mentioned above has to be satisfied is when the final selec-
tion for.admission is made. Mr. Sanghi contends that the
direction has to be construed in the light of the expression
"admitted" used therein, which indicates that if the neces-
sary certificate is produced before the actual admission
takes place, the same cannot be held to be illegal. The
learned counsel pointed out that the purpose of the Instruc-
tion is to ensure that no foreign national is allowed to
occupy a seat ordinarily meant for the citizen of the coun-
try without the permission of the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare, Government of India, and once that hurdle is
cleared, the purpose is fully satisfied. After the produc-
tion of the necessary clearance, there does not remain any
reason for rejecting the claim of a more meritorious candi-
date. He emphasised the fact that the respondent no. 5
having secured higher percentage of marks than the appellant
in the M.B.B.S. examination was adjudged a better candidate
on merits. We agree. Accordingly, we find that the admission
of the respondent no. 5 cannot be ignored or cancelled on
the ground of any illegality. The appeal is, therefore,
dismissed but, in the circumstances, without costs.
R.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
362