Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 29
PETITIONER:
DR.PREETI SRIVASTAVA,DR.SADHNA DEVI,DR.ASHUTOSH AGRAWAL.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ORS,STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/08/1999
BENCH:
A.S. Anand, Sujata V.Mahohar, K.Venkataswami, V.N.Khare
JUDGMENT:
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
Leave granted in SLP(C) No.12231 of 1997.
The following issue formulated by this Court at the
commencement of hearing, requires consideration: "The
question is whether apart from providing reservation for
admission to the Post Graduate Courses in Engineering and
Medicine for special category candidates, it is open to the
State to prescribe different admission criteria, in the
sense of prescribing different minimum qualifying marks, for
special category candidates seeking admission under the
reserved category."
"This question certainly requires consideration of the
Constitution Bench as it arises and is likely to arise in a
number of cases in different institutions of the country and
needs to be decided authoritatively keeping in view the
observations made in three different two or three-Judge
Bench judgments". These judgments are Ajay Kumar Singh &
Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors. ([1994] 4 SCC 401), Dr.
Sadhna Devi & Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors. ([1997] 3 SCC
90) and Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education &
Research, Chandigarh & Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr.
([1997] 6 SCC 283)
Facts:
The State of Uttar Pradesh has prescribed a Post
Graduate Medical Entrance Examination for admission to Post
Graduate Degree/Diploma courses in medicine. This is in
conformity with the relevant Regulations of the Medical
Council of India. By G.O. dated 11.10.1994, the State
Government fixed a cut-off percentage of 45% marks in the
Post Graduate Medical Entrance Examination (PGMEE) for
admission of the general category candidates to the Post
Graduate Courses in Medicine. The cutoff percentage of
marks for the reserved category candidates viz. Scheduled
Castes, Scheduled Tribes etc. was fixed at 35%.
Thereafter, by another G.O. dated 31.8.1995 the State of
Uttar Pradesh completely did away with a cut-off percentage
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 29
of marks in respect of the reserved category candidates so
that there were no minimum qualifying marks in the Post
Graduate Medical Entrance Examination prescribed for the
reserved category candidates who were seeking admission to
the Post Graduate Courses.
This G.O. of 31.8.1995 was challenged before this
Court in Writ Petition (C) No.679 of 1995 Dr. Sadhna Devi &
Ors. v. State of U.P. & Ors. [1997] 3 SCC 90). This
Court, by its judgment dated 19.2.1997, held that while
laying down minimum qualifying marks for admission to the
Post Graduate Courses, it was not open to the Government to
say that there will be no minimum qualifying marks for the
reserved category of candidates. If this is done, merit
will be sacrificed altogether. This Court struck down G.O.
dated 31.8.1995.
After the said decision, the State of U.P. issued
another G.O. dated 2.4.1997 under which the cut-off
percentage of marks for the reserved category candidates was
restored at 35%. However, the State of U.P. moved an
application before this Court, being I.A. No.2 of 1997 Dr.
Sadhna Devi (Supra) in which the State of U.P. (inter alia)
prayed that it should be given the liberty to reduce the
cut-off percentage from 35% to 20% for the reserved category
candidates who appear in the PGMEE for 1997. Without
waiting for a decision, by an Ordinance dated 15.6.1997, the
State of U.P. reduced the minimum qualifying marks for the
reserved category candidates appearing in the PGMEE 1997
from 35% to 20%. This Ordinance is challenged in the
present Writ Petition (C) No.300 of 1997. The Ordinance has
now been replaced by the Uttar Pradesh Post Graduate Medical
Education (Reservation for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled
Tribes and Other Backward Classes) Act, 1997. The
petitioners have now amended the said writ petition to
challenge this Act.
For admissions effected in 1998, the State of U.P.
again prescribed a cut-off percentage of 20% marks for the
reserved category candidates. Learned counsel for the State
of U.P. has further stated that for the current year’s
admission, i.e. for admission to the P.G.M.E.E. 1999, the
State has introduced a Bill in the Legislative Assembly
prescribing the same cut-off percentage of 20% marks for the
reserved category candidates.
The lower percentage of qualifying marks prescribed
for the scheduled caste, scheduled tribe and backward class
candidates are in conjunction with the following reservation
of seats at the PGMEE:
Scheduled Castes : 21%, Scheduled Tribes : 2%,
Backward Classes : 27% In the State of Madhya Pradesh also
a common entrance examination is held for admission to the
Post Graduate Courses in Medicine. Under the Madhya Pradesh
Medical and Dental Post Graduate Entrance Examination Rules,
1997, certain seats were reserved for the Scheduled Caste,
Scheduled Tribe, BC and in-service candidates. The Rules,
however, did not lay down any minimum qualifying marks for
admission to the Post Graduate Courses either for the
general category or for the reserved category of candidates.
These Rules were challenged by a writ petition before the
Madhya Pradesh High Court. By its judgment which is under
challenge in these proceedings, the Madhya Pradesh High
Court directed the State Government to stipulate minimum
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 29
qualifying marks in the PGMEE for all categories of
candidates, including the general category candidates, in
view of the decision of this Court in Dr. Sadhna Devi’s
case (supra).
By G.O. dated 7.6.1997 the State of Madhya Pradesh
prescribed the following minimum percentage of qualifying
marks for the reserved category candidates to make them
eligible for counselling and admission to the Post Graduate
Medical Courses:
Scheduled Castes : 20% Scheduled Tribes : 15% Other
Backward Classes : 40%
This Government Order of the State of Madhya Pradesh
is under challenge before us.
We have, therefore, to consider whether for admission
to the Post Graduate Medical Courses, it is permissible to
prescribe a lower minimum percentage of qualifying marks for
the reserved category candidates as compared to the general
category candidates. We do not propose to examine whether
reservations are permissible at the Post Graduate level in
medicine. That issue was not debated before us, and we
express no opinion on it. We need to examine only whether
any special provision in the form of lower qualifying marks
in the PGMEE can be prescribed for the reserved category.
The Constitutional Imperative:
The constitutional protection of equality before the
law under Article 14 of the Constitution is one of the basic
tenets of the Constitution. It is a cardinal value which
will govern our policies and actions, particularly policies
for employment and education. Article 15(1) prohibits State
discrimination on the ground (among others) of religion,
race or caste. Article 16(1) prescribes equality of
opportunity for all in matters relating to employment or
appointment to any office under the State. Article 16(2)
prohibits discrimination on the ground (among others) of
religion, race, caste or descent. At the same time, the
Constitution permits preferential treatment for historically
disadvantaged groups in the context of entrenched and
clearly perceived social inequalities. That is why Article
16(4) permits reservation of appointments or posts in favour
of any backward class which is not adequately represented in
the services under the State. Reservation is linked with
adequate representation in the services. Reservation is
thus a dynamic and flexible concept. The departure from the
principle of equality of opportunity has to be constantly
watched. So long as the backward group is not adequately
represented in the services under the State, reservations
should be made. Clearly, reservations have been considered
as a transitory measure that will enable the backward to
enter and be adequately represented in the State services
against the backdrop of prejudice and social discrimination.
But finally, as the social backdrop changes ? and a change
in the social backdrop is one of the constitutional
imperatives, as the backward are able to secure adequate
representation in the services, the reservations will not be
required. Article 335 enters a further caveat. While
considering the claims of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes for appointments, the maintenance of efficiency of
administration shall be kept in sight.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 29
Article 15(4), which was added by the Constitution
First Amendment of 1951, enables the State to make special
provisions for the advancement, inter alia, of Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes, notwithstanding Articles 15(1)
and 29(2). The wording of Article 15(4) is similar to that
of Article 15(3). Article 15(3) was there from inception.
It enables special provisions being made for women and
children notwithstanding Article 15(1) which imposes the
mandate of non- discrimination on the ground (among others)
of sex. This was envisaged as a method of protective
discrimination. This same protective discrimination was
extended by Article 15(4) to (among others) Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes. As a result of the combined operation
of these Articles, an array of programmes of compensatory or
protective discrimination have been pursued by the various
States and the Union Government. Marc Galanter, in his
book, "Competing Equalities" has described the
constitutional scheme of compensatory discrimination thus:
"These compensatory discrimination policies entail
systematic departures from norms of equality (such as merit,
evenhandedness, and indifferences of ascriptive
characteristics). These departures are justified in several
ways: First, preferential treatment may be viewed as needed
assurance of personal fairness, a guarantee against the
persistence of discrimination in subtle and indirect forms.
Second, such policies are justified in terms of beneficial
results that they will presumably promote: integration, use
of neglected talent, more equitable distribution, etc. With
these two - the anti-discrimination theme and the general
welfare theme - is entwined a notion of historical
restitution or reparation to offset the systematic and
cumulative deprivations suffered by lower castes in the
past. These multiple justifications point to the
complexities of pursuing such a policy and of assessing its
performance." Since every such policy makes a departure from
the equality norm, though in a permissible manner, for the
benefit of the backward, it has to be designed and worked in
a manner conducive to the ultimate building up of an
egalitarian non-discriminating society. That is its final
constitutional justification. Therefore, programmes and
policies of compensatory discrimination under Article 15(4)
have to be designed and pursued to achieve this ultimate
national interest. At the same time, the programmes and
policies cannot be unreasonable or arbitrary, nor can they
be executed in a manner which undermines other vital public
interests or the general good of all. All public polices,
therefore, in this area have to be tested on the anvil of
reasonableness and ultimate public good. In the case of
Article 16(4) the Constitution makers explicitly spelt out
in Article 335 one such public good which cannot be
sacrificed, namely, the necessity of maintaining efficiency
in administration. Article 15(4) also must be used, and
policies under it framed, in a reasonable manner
consistently with the ultimate public interests.
In the case of M.R. Balaji & Ors. v. State of
Mysore ([1963] Suppl. 1 SCR 439 at pages 466-467), a
Constitution Bench of this Court considered this very
question relating to the extent of special provisions which
it would be competent for the State to make, under Article
15(4). This Court accepted the submission that Article
15(4) must be read in the light of Article 46 and that under
it, the educational and economic interests of the weaker
sections of the people can be promoted properly and
liberally, to establish social and economic equality. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 29
Court said, "No one can dispute the proposition that
political freedom and even fundamental rights can have very
little meaning or significance for the backward classes and
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes unless the
backwardness and inequality from which they suffer are
immediately redressed".
The Court, however, rejected the argument that the
absence of any limitation on the State’s power to make an
adequate special provision under Article 15(4) indicates
that if the problem of backward classes of citizens and
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in any given State is
of such a magnitude that it requires the reservation of all
seats in the higher educational institutions, it would be
open to the State to take that course. This Court said:
"When Article 15(4) refers to the special provisions for the
advancement of certain classes or Scheduled Castes or
Scheduled Tribes, it must not be ignored that the provision
which is authorised to be made is a special provision; it
is not a provision which is exclusive in character so that,
in looking after the advancement of those classes the State
would be justified in ignoring altogether the advancement of
the rest of the society. It is because the interests of the
society at large would be served by promoting the
advancement of the weaker elements in the society that
Article 15(4) authorises special provision to be made. But
if a provision which is in the nature of an exception
completely excludes the rest of the society, that clearly is
outside the scope of Article 15(4). It would be extremely
unreasonable to assume that in enacting Article 15(4) the
Parliament intended to provide that where the advancement of
the Backward Classes or the Scheduled Castes and Tribes was
concerned, the fundamental rights of the citizens
constituting the rest of the society were to be completely
and absolutely ignored." This Court struck down a
reservation of 68% made for backward classes for admission
to Medical and Engineering Courses in the university. This
Court further observed, (at page 407) "A special provision
contemplated by Article 15(4), like reservation of posts and
appointments contemplated by Article 16(4), must be within
reasonable limits. The interest of weaker sections of
society which are a first charge on the States and the
Centre have to be adjusted with the interest of the
community as a whole". The Court also said that while
considering the reasonableness of the extent of reservation
one could not lose sight of the fact that the admissions
were to institutes of higher learning and involved
professional and technical colleges. "The demand for
technicians, scientists, doctors, economists, engineers and
experts for the further economic advancement of the country
is so great that it would cause grave prejudice to national
interests if considerations of merit are completely excluded
by wholesale reservation of seats in all technical, medical
or engineering colleges or institutions of that kind." (Page
468) Therefore, consideration of national interest and the
interests of the community or society as a whole cannot be
ignored in determining the reasonableness of a special
provision under Article 15(4).
In the case of Dr. Jagdish Saran & Ors. v. Union of
India ([1980] 2 SCC 768), reservation of 70% of seats for
the local candidates in admissions to the Post Graduate
Medical Courses by the Delhi University was struck down by
this Court. While doing so, Krishna Iyer J. speaking for
the Court spelt out the ambits of Articles 14 and 15. He
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 29
said, (at page 778) "But it must be remembered that
exceptions cannot overrule the rule itself by running riot
or by making reservations as a matter of course in every
university and every course. For instance, you cannot
wholly exclude meritorious candidates as that will promote
sub-standard candidates and bring about a fall in medical
competence injurious in the long run to the very
region..........Nor can the very best be rejected from
admission because that will be a national loss and the
interests of no region can be higher than those of the
nation. So, within these limitations without going into
excesses there is room for play of the State’s policy
choices." He further observed, "The first caution is that
reservation must be kept in check by the demands of
competence. You cannot extend the shelter of reservation
where minimum qualifications are absent. Similarly, all the
best talent cannot be completely excluded by wholesale
reservation......A fair preference, a reasonable
reservation, a just adjustment of the prior needs and real
potentials of the weak with the partial recognition of the
presence of competitive merit - such is the dynamic of
social justice which animates the three egalitarian articles
of the Constitution."
"Flowing from the same stream of equalism is another
limitation. The basic medical needs of a region or the
preferential push justified for a handicapped group cannot
prevail in the same measure at the highest scales of
speciality where the best scale or talent must be handpicked
by selecting according to capability. At the level of
P.H.D., M.D. or levels of higher proficiency where
international measure of talent is made, where losing one
great scientist or technologist in the making is a national
loss, the considerations we have expended upon as important,
lose their potency, where equality measured by matching
excellence has more meaning and cannot be diluted much
without grave risk."
The same reasoning runs through Dr. Pradeep Jain &
Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. ([1984] 3 SCC 654). It
dealt with reservation of seats for the residents of the
State or the students of the same university for admission
to the medical colleges. The Court said, (at page 676)
"Now, the concept of equality under the Constitution is a
dynamic concept. It takes within its sweep every process of
equalisation and protective discrimination. Equality must
not remain mere ideal indentation but it must become a
living reality for the large masses of people............
It is, therefore, necessary to take into account de facto
inequalities which exist in the society and to take
affirmative action by way of giving preference to the
socially and economically disadvantaged persons or
inflicting handicaps on those more advantageously placed in
order to bring about real equality." The Court after
considering institutional and residential preferences for
admission to the M.B.S.S. course, said that different
considerations would prevail in considering such
reservations for admission to the Post Graduate Courses such
as M.D., M.S. and the like. It said, (at page 691) "There
we cannot allow excellence to be compromised by any other
considerations because that would be detrimental to the
interest of the nation." Quoting the observation of Justice
Krishna Iyer in Dr. Jagdish Saran case (supra) the Court
said, "This proposition has far greater importance when we
reach the higher levels of education like Post Graduate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 29
Courses. After all, top technological expertise in any
vital field like medicine is a nation’s human asset without
which its advance and development will be stunted. The role
of high grade skill or special talent may be less at the
lesser levels of education, jobs and disciplines of social
inconsequence, but more at the higher levels of
sophisticated skills and strategic employment. To devalue
merit at the summit is to temporise with the country’s
development in the vital areas of professional expertise."
(underlining ours)
A similar strand of thought runs through Indra Sawhney
& Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. ([1992] Supp.(3) SCC
217), where a Bench of nine Judges of this Court considered
the nature, amplitude and scope of the constitutional
provisions relating to reservations in the services of the
State. Jeevan Reddy J. speaking for the majority (in
paragraph 836) stated that the very idea of reservation
implies selection of a less meritorious person. At the same
time, we recognise that this much cost has to be paid if the
constitutional promise of social justice is to be redeemed.
We also formally believe that given an opportunity, members
of these classes are bound to overcome their initial
disadvantages and would compete with ? and may in some
cases excel ? members on open competition. Having said
this, the Court went on to add, (in paragraph 838) "We are
of the opinion that there are certain services and positions
where either on account of nature of duties attached to them
or the level (in the hierarchy) at which they obtain, merit
as explained herein above alone counts. In such situations
it may not be advisable to provide for reservations. For
example, technical posts in research and development
organisations/departments/institutions, in specialities and
super-specialities in medicine, engineering and other such
courses in physical science and mathematics, in defence
services and in the establishments connected therewith."
(underlining ours)
A similar view has been taken in Mohan Bir Singh
Chawla v. Punjab University, Chandigarh & Anr. ([1997] 2
SCC 171) where this Court said that at higher levels of
education it would be dangerous to depreciate merit and
excellence. The higher you go in the ladder of education,
the lesser should be the reservation. In Dr. Sadhna Devi’s
case (supra) also this Court has expressed a doubt as to
whether there can be reservations at the Post Graduate level
in Medicine.
We are, however, not directly concerned with the
question of reservations at the Post Graduate level in
Medicine. We are concerned with another special provision
under Article 15(4) made at the stage of admission to the
Post Graduate Medical Courses, namely, providing for lesser
qualifying marks or no qualifying marks for the members of
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for admission to
the Post Graduate Medical Courses. Any special provision
under Article 15(4) has to balance the importance of having,
at the higher levels of education, students who are
meritorious and who have secured admission on their merit,
as against the social equity of giving compensatory benefit
of admission to the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe
candidates who are in a disadvantaged position. The same
reasoning which propelled this Court to underline
reasonableness of a special provision, and the national
interest in giving at the highest level of education, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 29
few seats at the top of the educational pyramid only on the
basis of merit and excellence, applies equally to a special
provision in the form of lower qualifying marks for the
backward at the highest levels of education.
It is of course, important to provide adequate
educational opportunities for all since it is education
which ultimately shapes life. It is the source of that thin
stream of reason which alone can nurture a nation’s full
potential. Moreover, in a democratic society, it is
extremely important that the population is literate and is
able to acquire information that shapes its decisions.
The spread of primary education has to be wide enough
to cover all sections of the society whether forward or
backward. A large percentage of reservations for the
backward would be justified at this level. These are
required in individual as well as national interest. A
university level education upto graduation, also enables the
individual concerned to secure better employment. It is
permissible and necessary at this level to have reasonable
reservations for the backward so that they may also be able
to avail of these opportunities for betterment through
education, to which they may not have access if the college
admissions are entirely by merit as judged by the marks
obtained in the qualifying examination. At the level of
higher post-graduate university education, however, apart
from the individual self interest of the candidate, or the
national interest in promoting equality, a more important
national interest comes into play. The facilities for
training or education at this level, by their very nature,
are not available in abundance. It is essential in the
national interest that these special facilities are made
available to persons of high calibre possessing the highest
degree of merit so that the nation can shape their
exceptional talent that is capable of contributing to the
progress of human knowledge, creation and utilisation of new
medical, technical or other techniques, extending the
frontiers of knowledge through research work - in fact
everything that gives to a nation excellence and ability to
compete internationally in professional, technical and
research fields.
This Court has repeatedly said that at the level of
superspecialisation there cannot be any reservation because
any dilution of merit at this level would adversely affect
the national goal of having the best possible people at the
highest levels of professional and educational training. At
the level of a super speciality, something more than a mere
professional competence as a doctor is required. A
super-specialist acquires expert knowledge in his speciality
and is expected to possess exceptional competence and skill
in his chosen field, where he may even make an original
contribution in the form of new innovative techniques or new
knowledge to fight diseases. It is in public interest that
we promote these skills. Such high degrees of skill and
expert knowledge in highly specialised areas, however,
cannot be acquired by anyone or everyone. For example,
specialised sophisticated knowledge and skill and ability to
make right choices of treatment in critical medical
conditions and even ability to innovate and device new lines
of treatment in critical situations, requires high levels of
intelligent understanding of medial knowledge or skill and a
high ability to learn from technical literature and from
experience. These high abilities are also required for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 29
absorbing highly specialised knowledge which is being
imparted at this level. It is for this reason that it would
be detrimental to the national interest to have reservations
at this stage. Opportunities for such training are few and
it is in the national interest that these are made available
to those who can profit from them the most viz. the best
brains in the country, irrespective of the class to which
they belong.
At the next below stage of post-graduate education in
medical specialities, similar considerations also prevail
though perhaps to a slightly lesser extent than in the super
specialities. But the element of public interest in having
the most meritorious students at this level of education is
present even at the stage of post-graduate teaching. Those
who have specialised medical knowledge in their chosen
branch are able to treat better and more effectively,
patients who are sent to them for expert diagnosis and
treatment in their specialised field. For a student who
enrols for such speciality courses, an ability to assimilate
and acquire special knowledge is required. Not everyone has
this ability. Of course intelligence and abilities do not
know any frontiers of caste or class or race or sex. They
can be found anywhere, but not in everyone. Therefore,
selection of the right calibre of students is essential in
public interest at the level of specialised post-graduate
education. In view of this supervening public interest
which has to be balanced against the social equity of
providing some opportunities to the backward who are not
able to qualify on the basis of marks obtained by them for
post-graduate learning, it is for an expert body such as the
Medical Council of India, to lay down the extent of
reservations, if any, and the lowering of qualifying marks,
if any, consistent with the broader public interest in
having the most competent people for specialised training,
and the competing public interest in securing social justice
and equality. The decision may perhaps, depend upon the
expert body’s assessment of the potential of the reserved
category candidates at a certain level of minimum qualifying
marks and whether those who secure admission on the basis of
such marks to post-graduate courses, can be expected to be
trained in two or three years to come up to the standards
expected of those with post-graduate qualifications.
The speciality and super speciality courses in
medicine also entail on-hand experience of treating or
operating on patients in the attached teaching hospitals.
Those undergoing these programmes are expected to occupy
posts in the teaching hospitals or discharge duties attached
to such posts. The elements of Article 335, therefore,
colour the selection of candidates for these courses and the
Rules framed for this purpose.
In the premises the special provisions for SC/ST
candidates whether reservations or lower qualifying marks -
at the speciality level have to be minimal. There cannot,
however, be any such special provisions at the level of
super specialities.
Entrance Examination for post-graduate courses and
qualifying marks:
When a common entrance examination is held for
admission to postgraduate medical courses, it is important
that passing marks or minimum qualifying marks are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 29
prescribed for the examination. It was, however, contended
before us by learned counsel appearing for the State of
Madhya Pradesh that there is no need to prescribe any
minimum qualifying marks in the common entrance examination.
Because all the candidates who appear for the common
entrance examination have passed the M.B.B.S. examination
which is an essential pre-requisite for admission to
postgraduate medical courses. The PGMEE is merely for
screening the eligible candidates.
This argument ignores the reasons underlying the need
for a common entrance examination for post-graduate medical
courses in a State. There may be several universities in a
State which conduct M.B.B.S. courses. The courses of study
may not be uniform. The quality of teaching may not be
uniform. The standard of assessment at the M.B.B.S.
examination also may not be uniform in the different
universities. With the result that in some of the better
universities which apply more strict tests for evaluating
the performance of students, a higher standard of
performance is required for getting the passing marks in the
M.B.B.S. examination. Similarly, a higher standard of
performance may be required for getting higher marks than in
other universities. Some universities may assess the
students liberally with the result that the candidates with
lesser knowledge may be able to secure passing marks in the
M.B.B.S. examination; while it may also be easier for
candidates to secure marks at the higher level. A common
entrance examination, therefore, provides a uniform
criterion for judging the merit of all candidates who come
from different universities. Obviously, as soon as one
concedes that there can be differing standards of teaching
and evaluation in different universities, one cannot rule
out the possibility that the candidates who have passed the
M.B.B.S. examination from a university which is liberal in
evaluating its students, would not, necessarily, have
passed, had they appeared in an examination where a more
strict evaluation is made. Similarly, candidates who have
obtained very high marks in the M.B.B.S. examination where
evaluation is liberal, would have got lesser marks had they
appeared for the examination of a university where stricter
standards were applied. Therefore, the purpose of such a
common entrance examination is not merely to grade
candidates for selection. The purpose is also to evaluate
all candidates by a common yardstick. One must, therefore,
also take into account the possibility that some of the
candidates who may have passed the M.B.B.S. examination
from more "generous" universities, may not qualify at the
entrance examination where a better and uniform standard for
judging all the candidates from different universities is
applied. In the interest of selecting suitable candidates
for specialised education, it is necessary that the common
entrance examination is of a certain standard and qualifying
marks are prescribed for passing that examination. This
alone will balance the competing equities of having
competent students for specialised education and the need to
provide for some room for the backward even at the stage of
specialised post-graduate education which is one step below
the super specialities.
The submission, therefore, that there need not be any
qualifying marks prescribed for the common entrance
examination has to be rejected. We have, however, to
consider whether different qualifying marks can be
prescribed for the open merit category of candidates and the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 29
reserved category of candidates. Normally passing marks for
any examination have to be uniform for all categories of
candidates. We are, however, informed that at the stage of
admission to the M.B.B.S. course, that is to say, the
initial course in medicine, the Medical Council of India has
permitted the reserved category candidates to be admitted if
they have obtained the qualifying marks of 35% as against
the qualifying marks of 45% for the general category
candidates. It is, therefore, basically for an expert body
like the Medical Council of India to determine whether in
the common entrance examination viz. PGMEE, lower
qualifying marks can be prescribed for the reserved category
of candidates as against the general category of candidates;
and if so, how much lower. There cannot, however, be a big
disparity in the qualifying marks for the reserved category
of candidates and the general category of candidates at the
post-graduate level. This level is only one step below the
apex level of medical training and education where no
reservations are permissible and selections are entirely on
merit. At only one step below this level the disparity in
qualifying marks, if the expert body permits it, must be
minimal. It must be kept at a level where it is possible
for the reserved category candidates to come up to a certain
level of excellence when they qualify in the speciality of
their choice. It is in public interest that they have this
level of excellence.
In the present case, the disparity of qualifying marks
being 20% for the reserved category and 45% for the general
category is too great a disparity to sustain public interest
at the level of post-graduate medical training and
education. Even for the M.B.B.S. course, the difference in
the qualifying marks between the reserved category and the
general category is smaller, 35% for the reserved category
and 45% for the general category. We see no logic or
rationale for the difference to be larger at the
post-graduate level.
Standard of Education:
A large differentiation in the qualifying marks
between the two groups of students would make it very
difficult to maintain the requisite standard of teaching and
training at the post-graduate level. Any good teaching
institution has to take into account the calibre of its
students and their existing level of knowledge and skills if
it is to teach effectively any higher courses. If there are
a number of students who have noticeably lower skills and
knowledge, standard of education will have to be either
lowered to reach these students, or these students will not
be able to benefit from or assimilate higher levels of
teaching, resulting in frustration and failures. It would
also result in a wastage of opportunities for specialised
training and knowledge which are by their very nature,
limited.
It is, therefore, wrong to say that the standard of
education is not affected by admitting students with low
qualifying marks, or that the standard of education is
affected only by those factors which come into play after
the students are admitted. Nor will passing a common final
examination guarantee a good standard of knowledge. There
is a great deal of difference in the knowledge and skills of
those passing with a high percentage of marks and those
passing with a low percentage of marks. The reserved
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 29
category of students who are chosen for higher levels of
university education must be in a position to benefit and
improve their skills and knowledge and bring it to a level
comparable with the general group, so that when they emerge
with specialised knowledge and qualifications, they are able
to function efficiently in public interest. Providing for
20% marks as qualifying marks for the reserved category of
candidates and 45% marks for the general category of
candidates, therefore, is contrary to the mandate of Article
15(4). It is for the Medical Council of India to prescribe
any special qualifying marks for the admission of the
reserved category candidates to the post-graduate medical
courses. However, the difference in the qualifying marks
should be at least the same as for admission to the
under-graduate medical courses, if not less.
Learned senior counsel Mr. Bhaskar P. Gupta for the
intervenors drew our attention to an interesting study done
by R.C. Davidson in relation to the affirmative action and
other special consideration admissions at the University of
California, Davis, School of Medicine. The study graded the
students who were admitted on a scale (MCAC) with a range
from 1 to 15. On this scale, the students who received
special consideration admission had an average score of nine
while the students who were admitted on open merit had an
average of 11. However, when both these groups graduated
from medical school both the groups had a high rate of
successful graduation though the general group had a
statistically significant higher rate. The special group
had a graduation rate of 94% while the general group had a
graduation rate of 98%. The study also found that the
differences in the abilities of special consideration
students were more evident in the first and second years of
the curriculum. In the third year also the differences were
visible. However, the two groups had begun to merge in
their achievements; and ultimately by the time the groups
qualified in the final examination, there was a convergence
of academic progress between the special consideration
admission students and the regularly admitted students as
the process of training lengthened. A similar study does
not appear to have been made in our country relating to the
progress of the reserved category candidates in the course
of their studies. But two things are evident even from the
study made by Davidson. The longer the period of training,
the greater the chances of convergence of the two groups.
Secondly, both the groups had an initial high score - more
than halfway up the scale. Also, the initial difference in
their scores was not very large. It was nine as compared to
eleven on a scale of fifteen. Therefore, at a high level of
scoring, the narrower the difference, the greater the
chances of convergence. This study, therefore, will not
help the respondents in the present case because of the
substantial difference in the qualifying marks for admission
prescribed for the reserved category candidates as against
the general category candidates; and the very low level of
qualifying marks prescribed. Thirdly, at the post-graduate
level the course of studies is relatively shorter and the
course is designed to give high quality speciality education
to the qualified doctors to enable them to excel in their
chosen field of speciality. Therefore, unless there is a
proper control at the stage of admission, on the different
categories of the students who are admitted, and unless the
differences are kept to a minimum, such differences will not
disappear in the course of time if the course of study is a
specialised course such as a post-graduate course.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 29
Who should decide the qualifying marks and will it
affect the standard of education:
Learned counsel for the States of Uttar Pradesh and
Madhya Pradesh contend that it is for the States to decide
the qualifying marks which should be prescribed for the
reserved category candidates at the PGMEE. It is a matter
of state policy. The Medical Council of India cannot have
any say in prescribing the qualifying marks for the PGMEE.
The two States have contended that it is the State which
controls admissions to the post-graduate courses in
medicine. It is for the State to decide whether to provide
a common entrance examination or not. This examination may
or may not have any minimum qualifying marks or it may have
different qualifying marks for different categories of
candidates. It is, therefore, not open to any other
authority to interfere with the rules for admission to the
post-graduate medical courses in each State. They have also
contended that a common entrance examination is merely for
the purpose of screening candidates and since all the
candidates have passed the M.B.B.S. examination the
standard is not affected even if no minimum marks are
prescribed for passing the common entrance examination. The
latter argument we have already examined and negatived. The
other contention, however, relating to the power of the
State to control admissions to the post-graduate courses in
medicine requires to be examined.
The legislative competence of the Parliament and the
legislatures of the States to make laws under Article 246 is
regulated by the VIIth Schedule to the Constitution. In the
VIIth Schedule as originally in force, Entry 11 of List-II
gave to the States an exclusive power to legislate on
"Education including universities subject to the provisions
of Entries 63, 64, 65 and 66 of List-I and Entry 25 of
List-III." Entry 11 of List-II was deleted and Entry 25 of
List-III was amended with effect from 3.1.1976 as a result
of the Constitution 42nd Amendment Act of 1976. The present
Entry 25 in the Concurrent List is as follows:
"Entry 25, List III: Education, including technical
education, medical education and universities, subject to
the provisions of entries 63, 64, 65 and 66 of List I:
vocational and technical training of labour."
Entry 25 is subject, inter alia, to Entry 66 of
List-I. Entry 66 of List-I is as follows:-
"Entry 66, List I: Co-ordination and determination of
standards in institutions for higher education or research
and scientific and technical institutions."
Both the Union as well as the States have the power to
legislate on education including medical education, subject,
inter alia, to Entry 66 of List-I which deals with laying
down standards in institutions for higher education or
research and scientific and technical institutions as also
co-ordination of such standards. A State has, therefore,
the right to control education including medical education
so long as the field is not occupied by any Union
Legislation. Secondly, the State cannot, while controlling
education in the State, impinge on standards in institutions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 29
for higher education. Because this is exclusively within
the purview of the Union Government. Therefore, while
prescribing the criteria for admission to the institutions
for higher education including higher medical education, the
State cannot adversely affect the standards laid down by the
Union of India under Entry 66 of List-I. Secondly, while
considering the cases on the subject it is also necessary to
remember that from 1977 education including, inter alia,
medical and university education, is now in the Concurrent
List so that the Union can legislate on admission criteria
also. If it does so, the State will not be able to
legislate in this field, except as provided in Article 254.
It would not be correct to say that the norms for
admission have no connection with the standard of education,
or that the rules for admission are covered only by Entry 25
of List III. Norms of admission can have a direct impact on
the standards of education. Of course, there can be rules
for admission which are consistent with or do not affect
adversely the standards of education prescribed by the Union
in exercise of powers under Entry 66 of List-I. For
example, a State may, for admission to the post-graduate
medical courses, lay down qualifications in addition to
those prescribed under Entry 66 of List-I. This would be
consistent with promoting higher standards for admission to
the higher educational courses. But any lowering of the
norms laid down can, and do have an adverse effect on the
standards of education in the institutes of higher
education. Standards of education in an institution or
college depend on various factors. Some of these are:
(1) The calibre of the teaching staff; (2) A proper
syllabus designed to achieve a high level of education in
the given span of time; (3) The student-teacher ratio; (4)
The ratio between the students and the hospital beds
available to each student; (5) The calibre of the students
admitted to the institution; (6) Equipment and laboratory
facilities, or hospital facilities for training in the case
of medical colleges; (7) Adequate accommodation for the
college and the attached hospital; and (8) The standard of
examinations held including the manner in which the papers
are set and examined and the clinical performance is judged.
While considering the standards of education in any
college or institution, the calibre of students who are
admitted to that institution or college cannot be ignored.
If the students are of a high calibre, training programmes
can be suitably moulded so that they can receive the maximum
benefit out of a high level of teaching. If the calibre of
the students is poor or they are unable to follow the
instructions being imparted, the standard of teaching
necessarily has to be lowered to make them understand the
course which they have undertaken; and it may not be
possible to reach the levels of education and training which
can be attained with a bright group. Education involves a
continuous interaction between the teachers and the
students. The pace of teaching, the level to which teaching
can rise and the benefit which the students ultimately
receive, depend as much on the calibre of the students as on
the calibre of the teachers and the availability of adequate
infrastructural facilities. That is why a lower
student-teacher ratio has been considered essential at the
levels of higher university education, particularly when the
training to be imparted is highly professional training
requiring individual attention and on-hand training to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 29
pupils who are already doctors and who are expected to treat
patients in the course of doing their post-graduate courses.
The respondents rely upon some observations in some of
the judgments of this Court in support of their stand that
it is for the State to lay down the rules and norms for
admission; and that these do not have any bearing on the
standard of education. In P. Rajendran v. State of Madras
& Ors. ([1968] 2 SCR 786), a Constitution Bench of this
Court considered the validity under Articles 14 and 15(1),
of district- wise reservations made for seats in the medical
colleges. In that case, the Act in question prescribed
eligibility and qualifications of candidates for admission
to the medical colleges. The Court observed, "So far as
admission is concerned, it has to be made by those who are
in control of the colleges - in this case, the Government.
Because the medical colleges are Government colleges
affiliated to the university. In these circumstances, the
Government was entitled to frame rules for admission to
medical colleges controlled by it, subject to the rules of
the university as to eligibility and qualifications. This
was what was done in these cases and, therefore, the
selection cannot be challenged on the ground that it was not
in accordance with the University Act and the rules framed
thereunder." This Court, therefore, upheld the additional
criteria framed by the State for admission which were not
inconsistent with the norms for admission laid down by the
University Act. Since these additional qualifications did
not diminish the eligibility norms under the University Act,
this Court upheld the additional criteria laid down by the
state as not affecting the standards laid down by the
University Act. The question of diluting the standards laid
down, did not arise.
The respondents have emphasised the observation that
admission has to be made by those who are in control of the
colleges. But, the question is, on what basis? Admissions
must be made on a basis which is consistent with the
standards laid down by a statute or regulation framed by the
Central Government in the exercise of its powers under Entry
66, List I. At times, in some of the judgments, the words
"eligibility" and "qualification" have been used
interchangeably, and in some cases a distinction has been
made between the two words ? "eligibility" connoting the
minimum criteria for selection that may be laid down by the
University Act or any Central Statute, while
"qualifications" connoting the additional norms laid down by
the colleges or by the State. In every case the minimum
standards as laid down by the Central Statute or under it,
have to be complied with by the State while making
admissions. It may, in addition, lay down other additional
norms for admission or regulate admissions in the exercise
of its powers under Entry 25 List III in a manner not
inconsistent with or in a manner which does not dilute the
criteria so laid down.
In Chitra Ghosh & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors.
([1970] 1 SCR 413), the Constitution Bench of this Court
considered, inter alia, reservation of nine seats for the
nominees of the Government of India in a Government Medical
College under Article 14 of the Constitution. This Court
upheld the reservation as a reasonable classification under
Article 14 on the ground that the candidates for these seats
had to be drawn from different sources and it would be
difficult to have uniformity in the matter of selection from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 29
amongst them. The background and the course of studies
undertaken by these candidates would be different and
divergent and, therefore, the Central Government was the
appropriate authority which could make a proper selection
out of these categories. The questions before us, did not
arise in that case.
In the State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors. v. Lavu
Narendranath & Ors. etc. ([1971] 3 SCR 699), this Court
considered the validity of a test held by the State
Government for admission to medical colleges in the State of
Andhra Pradesh. The Andhra University Act, 1926 prescribed
the minimum qualification of passing HSC, PUC, I.S.C. etc.
examinations for entry into a higher course of study. The
Act, however, did not make it incumbent upon the Government
to make their selection on the basis of the marks obtained
by the candidates at these qualifying examinations. Since
the seats for the MBBS course were limited, the Government,
which ran the medical colleges, had a right to make a
selection out of the large number of candidates who had
passed the HSC, PUC or other prescribed examinations. For
this purpose the State Government prescribed an entrance
test of its own and also prescribed a minimum 50% of marks
at the qualifying examination of HSC, ISC, PUC etc. for
eligibility to appear at the entrance test. The Court said
that merely because the Government supplemented the
eligibility rules by a written test in the subjects with
which the candidates were already familiar, there was
nothing unfair in the test prescribed. Nor did the test
militate against the powers of Parliament under Entry 66 of
List-I. Entry 66 List-I is not relatable to a screening
test prescribed by the Government or by a university for
selection of students from out of a large number applying
for admission to a particular course of study.
Therefore, this Court considered the entrance test
held by the State in that case as not violating Entry 66 of
List-I because the statutory provisions of the Andhra
University Act were also complied with and the test was not
inconsistent with those provisions. Secondly, in that case
the Court viewed the test as not in substitution of the HSC,
PUC, ISC or other such examination, but in addition to it,
for the purpose of proper selection from out of a large
number of students who had applied.
This latter observation is relied upon by the State of
Madhya Pradesh in support of its contention that the
additional test which the State may prescribe is only for
better selection. Therefore, it is not necessary to lay
down minimum qualifying marks in the additional test. Lavu
Narendranath (supra), however, does not lay down that it is
permissible not to have minimum qualifying marks in the
entrance test prescribed by the State; nor does it lay down
that every test prescribed by the State must necessarily be
viewed as only for the screening of candidates. On the
facts before it, the Court viewed the test as only a
screening test for proper selection from amongst a large
number of candidates.
On the facts before us, the PGMEE is not just a
screening test. Candidates who have qualified from
different universities and in courses which are not
necessarily identical, have to be assessed on the basis of
their relative merit for the purpose of admission to a
post-graduate course. It is for proper assessment of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 29
relative merit of candidates who have taken different
examinations from different universities in the State that a
uniform entrance test is prescribed. Such a test
necessarily partakes of the character of an eligibility test
as also a screening test. In such a situation, minimum
qualifying marks are necessary. The question of minimum
qualifying marks is not addressed at all in Levu
Narendranath (supra) since it did not arise in that case.
In Dr. Ambesh Kumar v. Principal, L.L.R.M. Medical
College, Meerut and Ors. ([1986] Supp. SCC 543), a State
order prescribed 55% as minimum marks for admission to
post-graduate medical courses. The Court considered the
question whether the State can impose qualifications in
addition to those laid down by the Medical Council of India
and the Regulations framed by the Central Government. The
Court said that any additional or further qualifications
which the State may lay down would not be contrary to Entry
66 of List-I since additional qualifications are not in
conflict with the Central Regulations but are designed to
further the objective of the Central Regulation which is to
promote proper standards. The Court said, (at page 552)
"The State Government by laying down the eligibility
qualification, namely, the obtaining of certain minimum
marks in the M.B.B.S. examination by the candidates has not
in any way encroached upon the Regulations made under the
Indian Medical Council Act nor does it infringe the central
power provided in the Entry 66 of List-I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. The order merely provides an
additional eligibility qualification." None of these
judgments lays down that any reduction in the eligibility
criteria would not impinge on the standards covered by Entry
66 of List-I. All these judgments dealt with additional
qualifications ? qualifications in addition to what was
prescribed by the Central Regulations or Statutes.
There are, however, two cases where there are
observations to the contrary. One is the case of the State
of Madhya Pradesh & Anr. v. Kumari Nivedita Jain & Ors.
([1981] 4 SCC 296), a judgment of a Bench of three judges.
In this case the Court dealt with admission to the M.B.B.S.
course in the medical colleges of the State of Madhya
Pradesh. The Rules framed by the State provided for a
minimum of 50% as qualifying marks for the general category
students for admission to the medical colleges of the State.
But for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes the
minimum qualifying marks were prescribed as 40%. Later on,
the minimum qualifying marks for the Scheduled Castes and
the Scheduled Tribes were reduced to 0. The Court observed,
(paragraph 17) "That it was not in dispute and it could not
be disputed that the order in question was in conflict with
the provisions contained in Regulation 2 of the Regulations
framed by the Indian Medical Council." But it held that
Entry 66 of List-I would not apply to the selection of
candidates for admission to the medical colleges because
standards would come in after the students were admitted.
The Court also held that Regulation 2 of the Regulations for
admission to MBBS courses framed by the Indian Medical
Council, was only recommendatory. Hence any relaxation in
the rules of selection made by the State Government was
permissible. We will examine the character of the
Regulations framed by the Medical Council of India a little
later. But we cannot agree with the observations made in
that judgment to the effect that the process of selection of
candidates for admission to a medical college has no real
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 29
impact on the standard of medical education; or that the
standard of medical education really comes into the picture
only in the course of studies in the medical colleges or
institutions after the selection and admission of
candidates. For reasons which we have explained earlier,
the criteria for the selection of candidates have an
important bearing on the standard of education which can be
effectively imparted in the medical colleges. We cannot
agree with the proposition that prescribing no minimum
qualifying marks for admission for the Scheduled Castes and
the Scheduled Tribes would not have an impact on the
standard of education in the medical colleges. Of course,
once the minimum standards are laid down by the authority
having the power to do so, any further qualifications laid
down by the State which will lead to the selection of better
students cannot be challenged on the ground that it is
contrary to what has been laid down by the authority
concerned. But the action of the State is valid because it
does not adversely impinge on the standards prescribed by
the appropriate authority. Although this judgment is
referred to in the Constitution Bench judgment of Indra
Sawhney & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (supra) the
question of standards being lowered at the stage of
post-graduate medical admissions was not before the court
for consideration. The court merely said that since Article
16 was not applicable to the facts in Kumari Nivedita Jain’s
case (supra), Article 335 was not considered there. Fort
post- graduate medical education, where the "students" are
required to discharge duties as doctors in hospitals, some
of the considerations underlying Articles 16 and 335 would
be relevant as hereinafter set out. But that apart, it
cannot be said that the judgment in Nivedita Jain is
approved in all its aspects by Indra Sawhney v. Union of
India.
The other case where a contrary view has been taken is
Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors. ([1994]
4 SCC 401) decided by a Bench of three Judges. It also
held, following Kumari Nivedita Jain & Ors.(supra) (at page
417) that "Entry 66 in List-I does not take in the selection
of candidates or regulation of admission to institutes of
higher education. Because standards come into the picture
after admissions are made." For reasons stated above we
disagree with these findings.
In this connection, our attention is also drawn to the
emphasis placed in some of the judgments on the fact that
since all the candidates finally appear and pass in the same
examination, standards are maintained. Therefore, rules for
admission do not have any bearing on standards. In Ajay
Kumar Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors. (supra) this
Court, relying on Kumari Nivedita Jain (supra), said that
everybody has to take the same post-graduate examination to
qualify for a post-graduate degree. Therefore, the
guarantee of quality lies in everybody passing the same
final examination. The quality is guaranteed at the exit
stage. Therefore, at the admission stage, even if students
of lower merit are admitted, this will not cause any
detriment to the standards. There are similar observations
in Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research,
Chandigarh & Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr. (supra).
This reasoning cannot be accepted. The final pass marks in
an examination indicate that the candidate possesses the
minimum requisite knowledge for passing the examination. A
pass mark is not a guarantee of excellence. There is a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 29
great deal of difference between a person who qualifies with
the minimum passing marks and a person who qualifies with
high marks. If excellence is to be promoted at post-
graduate levels, the candidates qualifying should be able to
secure good marks while qualifying. It may be that if the
final examination standard itself is high, even a candidate
with pass marks would have a reasonable standard.
Basically, there is no single test for determining
standards. It is the result of a sum total of all the
inputs - calibre of students, calibre of teachers, teaching
facilities, hospital facilities, standard of examinations
etc. that will guarantee proper standards at the stage of
exit. We, therefore, disagree with the reasoning and
conclusion in Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors. v. Stage of Bihar &
Ors. (supra) and Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Education & Research, Chandigarh & Ors. v. K.L.
Narasimhan & Anr. (supra).
The Indian Medical Council Act, 1956 and standards:
Has the Union Government, by Statute or Regulations
laid down the standards at the post-graduate level in
medicine in the exercise of its legislative powers under
Entry 66, List I? the appellants/petitioners rely upon the
Indian Medical Council Act, 1956 and the Regulations framed
under it. The respondents contend that, in fact, no
standards have been laid down by the Medical Council of
India. Also the standards laid down are only directory and
not mandatory.
Now, one of the objects and reasons contained in the
Statement of Objects and Reasons accompanying the Indian
Medical Council Act of 1956 is:".................(d) to
provide for the formation of a Committee of Post-Graduate
Medical Education for the purpose of assisting the Medical
Council of India in prescribing standards of post-graduate
medical education for the guidance of universities and to
advice universities in the matter of securing uniform
standards of post-graduate medical education throughout
India." Section 20 of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956
deals with post-graduate medical education. The relevant
provisions under Section 20 are as follows:-
"20. Postgraduate medical education committee for
assisting council in matters relating to postgraduate
medical education:-
(1) The Council may prescribe standards of
postgraduate medical education for the guidance of
universities, and advise universities in the matter of
securing uniform standards for postgraduate medical
education throughout India, and for this purpose the Central
government may constitute from among the members of the
council a postgraduate medical education committee
(hereinafter referred to as the postgraduate medical
education committee).
(2).............
(3).............
(4).............
(5) The views and recommendations of the postgraduate
committee on all matters shall be placed before the Council;
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 29
and if the Council does not agree with the views expressed
or the recommendations made by the postgraduate committee on
any matter, the Council shall forward them together with its
observations to the Central government for decision."
Section 33 of the Act gives to the Council the power
to make regulations generally to carry out the purposes of
the Act with the previous sanction of the Central
Government. It provides that without prejudice to the
generality of this power such Regulations may provide, under
Section 33(j) for the courses and period of study and of
practical training to be undertaken, the subjects of
examination and the standards of proficiency therein to be
obtained in universities or medical institutions, for grant
of recognised medical qualifications, and under Section
33(l) for the conduct of professional examinations,
qualifications of examiners and the conditions of admission
to such examinations.
Pursuant to its power to frame Regulations the Medical
Council of India has framed Regulations on Post-Graduate
Medical Education which have been approved by the Government
of India under Section 33 of the Indian Medical Council Act,
1956. These regulations which have been framed on the
recommendations of the Post-Graduate Medical Education
Committee prescribe in extenso the courses for post-graduate
medical education, the facilities to be provided and the
standards to be maintained. After setting out the various
courses, both degree and diploma, available for
post-graduate medical education, the Regulations contain
certain general provisions/conditions some of which need to
be noted. Condition 4 deals with the student-teacher ratio.
It says:
"The student-teacher ratio should be such that the
number of post-graduate teachers to the number of
post-graduate students admitted per year, be maintained at
one to one.
For the proper training of the post- graduate students
there should be a limit to the number of students admitted
per year. For this purpose every unit should consist of at
least three full time post-graduate teachers and can admit
not more than three students for post- graduate training per
year. If the number of post-graduate teachers in the unit
is more than three then the number of students can be
increased proportionately. For this purpose, one student
should associate with one post- graduate teacher".
Condition 5 says:
"The selection of post-graduates both for degree and
diploma courses should be strictly on the basis of academic
merit."
Condition 6 is as follows:-
"Condition 6: The training of post-graduates for
degree should be of the residency pattern with patient care.
Both the in-service candidates and the stipendaries should
be given similar clinical responsibility .............".
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 29
Under the heading "facilities for post-graduate
students" clause (1) provides as follows:-
"Clause (1): There would be two types of post-
graduate students:
(a) Those holding posts in the same Department like
Resident, Registrar, Demonstrator etc. Adequate number of
paid posts should be created for this purpose.
(b) Those receiving stipends. The stipends should
normally be Rupees 300/- per month payable for the duration
of the course."
Under the heading "criteria for the selection of
candidates" Clause (a) is as follows:-
"(a) Students for post-graduate training should be
selected strictly on merit judged on the basis of academic
record in the under-graduate course. All selection for
post-graduate studies should be conducted by the
Universities."
Under the heading "Evaluation of merit" it is provided
as follows:-
"The Post-graduate Committee was of the opinion that
in order to determine the merit of a candidate for admission
to post-graduate medical courses, (i) his performance at the
M.B.B.S. examinations, (ii) his performance during the
course of internship and housemanship for which a daily
assessment chart be maintained and (iii) the report of the
teachers which is to be submitted periodically may be
considered.
Alternatively the authorities concerned may conduct
competitive entrance examination to determine the merit of a
candidate for admission to post-graduate medical courses."
Under the heading "Methods of training" it is, inter
alia, provided:
".............The in-service training requires the
candidate to be a resident in the campus and should be given
graded responsibility in the management and treatment of
patients entrusted to his care. Adequate number of post of
clinical residents or tutors should be created for this
purpose."
Mr. Salve, learned counsel appearing for the Medical
Council of India has, therefore, rightly submitted that
under the Indian Medical Council Act of 1956 the Indian
Medical Council is empowered to prescribe, inter alia,
standards of post-graduate medical education. In the
exercise of its powers under Section 20 read with Section 33
the Indian Medical Council has framed Regulations which
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 29
govern post-graduate medical education. These Regulations,
therefore, are binding and the States cannot, in the
exercise of power under Entry 25 of List-III, make rules and
regulations which are in conflict with or adversely impinge
upon the Regulations framed by the Medical Council of India
for post- graduate medical education. Since the standards
laid down are in the exercise of the power conferred under
Entry 66 of List-I, the exercise of that power is
exclusively within the domain of the Union Government. The
power of the States under Entry 25 of List-III is subject to
Entry 66 of List-I.
Secondly, it is not the exclusive power of the State
to frame rules and regulations pertaining to education since
the subject is in the Concurrent List. Therefore, any power
exercised by the State in the area of education under Entry
25 of List-III will also be subject to any existing relevant
provisions made in that connection by the Union Government
subject, of course, to Article 254.
In Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors.
(supra), this Court examined the powers of the Indian
Medical Council under Section 20 of the Indian Medical
Council Act, 1956 and held that the power of the Council to
prescribe standards of post-graduate medical education under
Section 20 are only for the guidance of the universities.
Since Section 20 also refers to the power of the Council to
advice universities in the matter of securing uniform
standards for post-graduate medical education throughout
India, the Court said that the entire power under Section 20
was purely advisory. Therefore, the power of the Indian
Medical Council to prescribe the minimum standards of
medical education at the post- graduate level was only
advisory in nature and not of a binding character (page
415).
We do not agree with this interpretation put on
Section 20 of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956. Section
20(1) (set out earlier) is in three parts. The first part
provides that the Council may prescribe standards of
post-graduate medical education for the guidance of
universities. The second part of sub-section(1) says that
the Council may advise universities in the matter of
securing uniform standards for post-graduate medical
education throughout. The last part of sub- section (1)
enables the Central Government to constitute from amongst
the members of the Council, a post-graduate medical
education committee. The first part of sub-section(1)
empowers the Council to prescribe standards of post-graduate
medical education for the guidance of universities.
Therefore, the universities have to be guided by the
standards prescribed by the Medical Council and must shape
their programmes accordingly. The scheme of the Indian
Medical Council Act, 1956 does not give an option to the
universities to follow or not to follow the standards laid
down by the Indian Medical Council. For example, the
medical qualifications granted by a university or a medical
institution have to be recognised under the Indian Medical
Council Act, 1956. Unless the qualifications are so
recognised, the students who qualify will be not be able to
practice. Before granting such recognition, a power is
given to the Medical Council under Section 16 to ask for
information as to the courses of study and examinations.
The universities are bound to furnish the information so
required by the Council. The post-graduate medical
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 29
committee is also under Section 17, entitled to appoint
medical inspectors to inspect any medical institution,
college, hospital or other institution where medical
education is given or to attend any examination held by any
university or medical institution before recommending the
medical qualification granted by that university or medical
institution. Under Section 19, if a report of the Committee
is unsatisfactory the Medical Council may withdraw
recognition granted to a medical qualification of any
medical institution or university concerned in the manner
provided in Section 19. Section 19A enables the Council to
prescribe minimum standards of medical education required
for granting recognised medical qualifications other than
post-graduate medical qualifications by the universities or
medical institutions, while Section 20 gives a power to the
Council to prescribe minimum standards of post-graduate
medical education. The universities must necessarily be
guided by the standards prescribed under Section 20(1) if
their degrees or diplomas are to be recognised under the
Medical Council of India Act. We, therefore, disagree with
and overrule the finding given in Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors.
v. State of Bihar & Ors. (supra), to the effect that the
standards of post-graduate medical education prescribed by
the Medical Council of India are merely directory and the
universities are not bound to comply with the standards so
prescribed.
In State of Madhya Pradesh & Anr. v. Kumari Nivedita
Jain & Ors. (supra), the provisions of Indian Medical
Council Act and the regulations framed for under-graduate
medical courses were considered by the Court. The Court
said that while regulation 1 was mandatory, regulation 2 was
only recommendatory and need not be followed. We do not
agree with this line of reasoning for the reasons which we
have set out above.
In the case of Medical Council of India v. State of
Karnataka & Ors. ([1998] 6 SCC 131) a bench of three judges
of this Court has distinguished the observations made in
Kumari Nivedita Jain (supra). It has also disagreed with
Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors (supra)
and has come to the conclusion that the Medical Council
Regulations have a statutory force and are mandatory. The
Court was concerned with admissions to the M.B.B.S. course
and the Regulations framed by the Indian Medical Council
relating to admission to the M.B.B.S. course. The Court
took note of the observations in State of Kerala v. Kumari
T.P. Roshana & Anr. ([1979] 1 SCC 572 at page 580) to the
effect that under the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956, the
Medical Council of India has been set up as an expert body
to control the minimum standards of medical education and to
regulate their observance. It has implicit power to
supervise the qualifications or eligibility standards for
admission into medical institutions. There is, under the
Act an overall vigilance by the Medical Council to prevent
sub-standard entrance qualifications for medical courses.
These observations would apply equally to post-graduate
medical courses. We are in respectful agreement with this
reasoning.
The Regulations governing post-graduate medical
education already referred to earlier, provide for admission
on the basis of merit. The Regulations, however, have not
clearly spelt out whether there can or cannot be, any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 29
reservations for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and/or
backward class candidates at the stage of post-graduate
medical admissions. Whether such a reservation would
impinge on the standards or not would depend upon the manner
in which such reservation is made, and whether the minimum
qualifying marks for the reserved categories are properly
fixed or not. It is for the Medical Council of India to lay
down proper norms in this area and to prescribe whether the
minimum qualifying marks for the admission of students in
the reserved category can be less than the minimum
qualifying marks for the general category students at the
post-graduate level; and if so, to what extent. Even if we
accept the contention of the respondents that for the
reserved category candidates also, their inter se merit is
the criterion for selection, although for the reserved
category of candidates lower minimum qualifying marks are
prescribed, the merit which is envisaged under the Indian
Medical Council Act or its Regulations is comparative merit
for all categories of candidates. For admission to a
post-graduate course in medicine, the merit criterion cannot
be so diluted by the State as to affect the standards of
post-graduate medical education as prescribed under the
Regulations framed by the Indian Medical Council. It is for
the Indian Medical Council to consider whether lower minimum
qualifying marks can be prescribed at the post-graduate
level for the reserved category candidates. We have already
opined that the minimum qualifying marks of 20% as compared
to 45% for the general category candidates appear to be too
low. This would make it difficult for the reserved category
candidates to bring their performance on a par with general
category candidates in the course of post-graduate studies
and before they qualify in the post-graduate examination.
It is also necessary in public interest to ensure that the
candidates at the post- graduate level have not just passed
the examination, but they have profited from their studies
in a manner which makes them capable of making their own
contribution, that they are capable of diagnosing difficult
medical conditions with a certain degree of expertise, and
are capable of rendering to the ill, specialised services of
a certain acceptable standard expected of doctors with
specialised training.
The States of U.P. and Madhya Pradesh have contended
that if the minimum qualifying marks are raised in the case
of the reserved category candidates, they will not be able
to fill all the seats which are reserved for them. The
purpose, however, of higher medical education is not to fill
the seats which are available by lowering standards; nor is
the purpose of reservation at the stage of post-graduate
medical education merely to fill the seats with the reserved
category candidates. The purpose of reservation, if
permissible at this level, is to ensure that the reserved
category candidates having the requisite training and
calibre to benefit from post-graduate medical education and
rise to the standards which are expected of persons
possessing post- graduate medical qualification, are not
denied this opportunity by competing with general category
candidates. The general category candidates do not have any
social disabilities which prevent them from giving of their
best. The special opportunity which is provided by
reservation cannot, however, be made available to those who
are substantially below the levels prescribed for the
general category candidates. It will not be possible for
such candidates to fully benefit from the very limited and
specialised post-graduate training opportunities which are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 29
designed to produce high calibre well trained professionals
for the benefit of the public. Article 15(4) and the spirit
of reason which permeates it, do not permit lowering of
minimum qualifying marks at the post-graduate level to 20%
for the reserved category as against 45% for the general
category candidates. It will be for the Medical Council of
India to decide whether such lowering is permissible and if
so to what extent. But in the meanwhile at least the norms
which are prescribed for admission to the M.B.B.S. courses
ought not to be lowered at the post-graduate level. The
lowering of minimum qualifying marks for admission to the
M.B.B.S. courses has been permitted by the Indian Medical
Council upto 35% for the reserved category as against 45%
for the general category. The marks cannot be lowered
further for admission to the post-graduate medical courses,
especially when at the super speciality level it is the
unanimous view of all the judgments of this Court that there
should be no reservations. This would also imply that there
can be no lowering of minimum qualifying marks for any
category of candidates at the level of admission to the
super-specialities courses.
In Mohan Bir Singh Chawla v. Punjab University,
Chandigarh & Anr. (supra) also this Court has taken the
view that the higher you go the less should be the extent of
reservation or weightage and it would be dangerous to
depreciate merit and excellence at the highest levels. In
S. Vinod Kumar & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors. ([1996] 6
SCC 580) this Court while considering Articles 16(4) and 335
held that for the purpose of promotion lower qualifying
marks for the reserved category candidates were not
permissible. Dr. Sadhna Devi & Ors. v. State of U.P. &
Ors. (supra) has rightly prescribed minimum qualifying
marks for the common entrance examination for post-graduate
medical courses. The Court left open the question whether
there could be any reservation at the post- graduation level
and to what extent lesser qualifying marks could be
prescribed, assuming the reservations can be made. As we
have said earlier, these are matters essentially of laying
down appropriate standards and hence to be decided by the
Medical Council of India. However, the disparity in the
minimum qualifying marks cannot be substantial.
In Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education &
Research, Chandigarh and Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr.
([1997] 6 SCC 283) there are observations to the effect that
the reservation of seats at the post-graduate and doctoral
courses in medicine would not lead to loss of efficiency and
would be permissible under Article 15(4). There are also
observations to the effect that since all appear for the
same final examination, there is no downgrading of
excellence. These observations, in our view, cannot be
accepted for reasons set out earlier. The judgment of the
Court in Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education &
Research, Chandigarh and Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr.
(supra) in so far as it lays down these propositions is
overruled.
In the premises, we agree with the reasoning and
conclusion in Dr. Sadhna Devi & Ors. v. State of U.P. &
Ors. (supra) and we overrule the reasoning and conclusions
in Ajay Kumar Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors.
(supra) and Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education &
Research, Chandigarh and Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 29
(supra). To conclude:
1. We have not examined the question whether
reservations are permissible at the post-graduate level of
medical education;
2. A common entrance examination envisaged under the
Regulations framed by the Medical Council of India for
post-graduate medical education requires fixing of minimum
qualifying marks for passing the examination since it is not
a mere screening test.
3. Whether lower minimum qualifying marks for the
reserved category candidates can be prescribed at the
post-graduate level of medical education is a question which
must be decided by the Medical Council of India since it
affects standards of post-graduate medical education. Even
if minimum qualifying marks can be lowered for the reserved
category candidates, there cannot be a wide disparity
between the minimum qualifying marks for the reserved
category candidates and the minimum qualifying marks for the
general category candidates at this level. The percentage
of 20% for the reserved category and 45% for the general
category is not permissible under Article 15(4), the same
being unreasonable at the post-graduate level and contrary
to public interest.
4. At the level of admission to the super speciality
courses, no special provisions are permissible, they being
contrary to national interest. Merit alone can be the basis
of selection.
In the premises, the impugned Uttar Pradesh Post
Graduate Medical Education (Reservation for Scheduled
Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other Backward Classes) Act,
1997 and G.O. dated 7.6.1997 of the State of Madhya Pradesh
are set aside. However, students who have already taken
admission and are pursuing courses of post-graduate medical
study under the impugned Act/G.O. will not be affected.
Our judgment will have prospective application. Further,
pending consideration of this question by the Medical
Council of India, the two States may follow the norms laid
down by the Medical Council of India for lowering of marks
for admission to the under-graduate M.B.B.S. medical
courses, at the post-graduate level also as a temporary
measure until the norms are laid down. This, however, will
not be treated as our having held that such lowering of
marks will not lead to a lowering of standards at the post-
graduate level of medical education. Standards cannot be
lowered at this level in public interest. This is a matter
to be decided by an expert body such as the Medical Council
of India assisted by its Post- Graduate Medical Education
Committee in accordance with law.
I.A. No.2 in WP(C) No.679 of 1995, Writ Petition
Nos.290 of 1997, 300 of 1997, C.A. No........of 1999
(Arising out of SLP(C) No.12231 of 1997) and Writ Petition
(C) No.350 of 1998 are disposed of accordingly.
Review Petition Nos.2371-72 of 1997 in CA
Nos.3176-77/97
Normally the power to review is used by us sparingly
to correct errors apparent on the face of the record. In
the judgment sought to be reviewed, however, there are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 29
observations which are so widely worded that they may create
mischief or national detriment. We would, therefore, like
to clarify the position regarding admissions to the super
specialities in medicine. In Post Graduate Institute of
Medical Education & Research, Chandigarh and Ors. v. K.L.
Narasimhan & Anr. ([1997] 6 SCC 283), which is the judgment
in question, it was, inter alia, held that there could be
reservation of seats for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes at post-graduate levels or doctoral levels in
medicine and that such reservations would not lead to a loss
of efficiency and are permissible under Article 15(4).
In the group of civil appeals decided by Post Graduate
Institute of Medical Education & Research, Chandigarh and
Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr. (supra), the appeal of
the present petitioners had challenged an Admission Notice
No.15/90 issued in the Indian Express of 25.11.1990, under
which six seats for the super speciality courses of
D.M./M.C.H. were kept reserved for the Scheduled Caste and
the Scheduled Tribe candidates. The petitioners rightly
contend that at the super speciality level there cannot be
any relaxation in favour of any category of candidates.
Admissions should be entirely on the basis of open merit.
The ambit of special provisions under Article 15(4)
has already been considered by us. While the object of
Article 15(4) is to advance the equality principle by
providing for protective discrimination in favour of the
weaker sections so that they may become stronger and be able
to compete equally with others more fortunate, one cannot
also ignore the wider interests of society while devising
such special provisions. Undoubtedly, protective
discrimination in favour of the backward, including
scheduled castes and scheduled tribes is as much in the
interest of society as the protected groups. At the same
time, there may be other national interests, such as
promoting excellence at the highest level and providing the
best talent in the country with the maximum available
facilities to excel and contribute to society, which have
also to be borne in mind. Special provisions must strike a
reasonable balance between these diverse national interests.
In the case of Dr. Jagdish Saran & Ors. v. Union of
India (supra) this Court observed that at the highest scales
of speciality, the best skill or talent must be hand-picked
by selection according to capability. Losing a potential
great scientist or technologist would be a national loss.
That is why the Court observed that the higher the level of
education the lesser should be the reservation. There are
similar observations in Dr. Pradeep Jain & Ors. v. Union
of India & Ors. (supra). Undoubtedly, Dr. Pradeep Jain &
Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (supra) did not deal with
reservation in favour of the Scheduled Castes and the
Scheduled Tribes. It dealt with reservation in favour of
residents and students of the same university. Nevertheless
it correctly extended the principle laid down in Dr.
Jagdish Saran & Ors. v. Union of India (supra) to these
kinds of reservation also, holding that at the highest
levels of medical education excellence cannot be compromised
to the detriment of the nation. Admissions to the highest
available medical courses in the country at the
super-speciality levels, where even the facilities for
training are limited, must be given only on the basis of
competitive merit. There can be no relaxation at this
level.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 29
Indra Sawhney & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors.
(supra) has also observed that in certain positions at the
highest level merit alone counts. In specialities and
super-specialities in medicine, merit alone must prevail and
there should not be any reservation of posts. The
observations in Indra Sawhney & Ors. v. Union of India &
Ors.(supra) were in respect of posts in the specialities and
super-specialities in medicine. Nevertheless, the same
principle applies to seats in the specialities and
super-specialities in medicine. Moreover, study and
training at the level of specialities and super-specialities
in medicine involve discharging the duties attached to
certain specified medical posts in the hospitals attached to
the medical institutions giving education in specialities
and super-specialities. Even where no specific posts are
created or kept for the doctors studying for the
super-specialities or specialities, the work which they are
required to do in the hospitals attached to these
institutions is equivalent to the work done by the occupants
of such posts in that hospital. In this sense also, some of
the considerations under Article 16(4) read with Article 335
rub off on admissions of candidates who are given seats for
speciality and super-speciality courses in medicine. Even
otherwise under Article 15(4) the special provisions which
are made at this level of education have to be consistent
with the national interest in promoting the highest levels
of efficiency, skill and knowledge amongst the best in the
country so that they can contribute to national progress and
enhance the prestige of the nation. The same view has been
upheld in Dr. Fazal Ghafoor v. Union of India & Ors.
([1988] Supp. SCC 794) and Mohan Bir Singh Chawla v.
Punjab University, Chandigarh, & Anr. ([1997] 2 SCC 171).
The Post-graduate Institute of Medical Education and
Research, Chandigarh, has been set up as an institution of
national importance. The Post-graduate Institute of Medical
Education and Research, Chandigarh Act, 1966, under Section
2 provides that the object of the said institution is to
make the institution one of national importance. Section 12
sets out the objects of the Institute. These are as
follows:-
"Objects of Institute:
The objects of the Institute shall be -
(a) to develop patterns of teaching in under- graduate
and post-graduate medical education in all its branches so
as to demonstrate a high standard of medical education;
(b) to bring together, as far as may be, in one place
educational facilities of the highest order for the training
of personnel in all important branches of health activity;
and
(c) to attain self-sufficiency in post- graduate
medical education to meet the country’s needs for
specialists and medical teachers."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 29
Under Section 13 the functions of the Institute
include providing both under-graduate and post-graduate
teaching, inter alia, in medicine as also facilities for
research, conducting experiments in new methods of medical
education both under-graduate and post-graduate, in order to
arrive at satisfactory standards of such education,
prescribe courses and curricula for both under-graduate and
post-graduate study and to establish and maintain one or
more medical colleges equipped to undertake not only
under-graduate but also post-graduate medical education in
the subject.
Under Section 32 of the said Act, the Post-graduate
Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh
Regulations, 1967 have been framed. Regulation 27 provides
for 20% of the seats in every course of study in the
Institute to be reserved for candidates belonging to the
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes or other categories of
persons in accordance with the general orders issued by the
Central Government from time to time. Regulation 27,
however, cannot have any application at the highest level of
super-specialities as this would defeat the very object of
imparting the best possible training to select meritorious
candidates who can contribute to the advancement of
knowledge in the fields of medical research and its
applications. Since no relaxation is permissible at the
highest levels in the medical institutions, the petitioners
are right when they contend that the reservations made for
the Scheduled Caste and the Scheduled Tribe candidates for
admission to D.M. and M.C.H. courses which are
super-speciality courses, is not consistent with the
constitutional mandate under Articles 15(4) and 16(4).
Regulation 27 would not apply at the level of admissions to
D.M. and M.C.H. courses.
We, therefore, hold that the judgment of this Court in
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research,
Chandigarh and Ors. v. K.L. Narasimhan & Anr. (supra)
cannot be read as holding that any type of relaxation is
permissible at the super-specialities level. The review
petitions are disposed of accordingly.
All the interlocutory applications also stand disposed
of.