Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
A. PERIAKARUPPAN CHETTIAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/01/1971
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2303 1971 SCR (2) 430
1971 SCC (1) 38
ACT:
Admission to Medical Colleges-Allegation of malafides
against Selection Committee-Proof of Interview marks
Government specifies heads of distribution of marks but no
marks allotted to each head Presumption that marks should be
distributed equally-Violation of presumption by Selection
Committee-Elect on selections made.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, who was an unsuccessful applicant for a seat
in one of the medical colleges in the respondent-State
challenged the selections made by a writ petition in this
Court. This Court came to the conclusion that the
selections made were invalid, but did not strike them down,
and instead, directed the State to constitute a separate
expert Committee for making selections to the unfilled
seats. The Court further directed that the Committee should
interview only the candidates shown in the waiting list and
those who moved unsuccessfully the High Court and this
Court. This Court observed that the 75 marks allocated for
interview should be divided equally among the five different
beads with respect to which the marks should be given at the
interview.
In pursuance of the direction the State constituted a
Selection Committee. The Committee called for interview
several other candidates besides those asked to be
interviewed by this Court, though the Committee refrained
from interviewing such additional candidates. The Selection
Committee also distributed the 75 interview marks, among the
five heads not equally but according to its own discretion.
Candidates were selected for all the unfilled seats but the
petitioner was not selected. He challenged the selection on
the grounds that : (1) the Selection Committee showed open
hostility to him at the interview, (2) the violation of the
directions of this Court showed malafides, and (3) those
illegalities vitiated the selection made.
HELD : (1) The Selection Committee denied that they had
exhibited any hostility towards the petitioner. The charge
of malafides has to be established by the petitioner by
satisfactory evidence, and the fact that the petitioner
could not get any outside evidence to establish what
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happened at the interview cannot shift the burden that is on
him. [451 F-H]
(2) The Selection Committee explained that they called
additional candidates for interview because they did not
understand the scope of the judgment of this Court, and that
they distributed the 75 marks in their dicretion because
there was no specific direction in the operative portion of
the judgment of this Court to distribute them equally.
Though the explanation was not satisfactory, it could not be
said that the Committee had acted mala fide. [452 B-C; 453
E-F]
(3) The interview rules were made by Government and
Government alone could have distributed the marks amongst
the various heads. In the absence of such a distribution’
it should be deemed that each one of the heads carried equal
marks. Therefore, the procedure adopted by the Committee
was illegal and contrary to the directions of this Court and
was likely to have affected the result of the interview.
[453 F-G]
450
Moreover, the Moreover the Committee even on the basis
adopted by it, had proceeded on wholly wrong premises while
granting marks to the petitioner under the head ’National
Cadet Corps activities’. [455 F-G]
Therefore, the selections made could not be sustained.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTiON : Writ Petition No. 623 of 1970.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of fundamental rights.
K. K. Venugopal and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioner.
S. Govind Swaminathan, Advocate-General, Tamil Nadu, S.
Mohan and A. V. Rangam, for respondents Nos. 1 to 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. This is an unfortunate case. The petitioner, a
bright young student is approaching this Court for the
second time to seek justice. He, had a brilliant academic
career. He secured high marks in all the examinations in
which he appeared. In the Pre-University Examination, he
secured First class with Grade D plus in Physics and
Chemistry and A plus in Biology. He stood 4th in his
college. Grade D plus represents 85 to 99 per cent marks
and A plus 65 to 75 per cent marks. He applied for
admission for a seat in one of the medical colleges in the
State of Tamil Nadu. He was called for interview but was
not selected as he is said to have secured low marks in the
interview. He challenged before this Court the selections
made on various grounds in Writ Petition No. 285 of 1970.
That petition was heard along with another petition and
those petitions were allowed on September 23, 1970. In that
petition the petitioner had alleged that the selections made
were illegal for various reasons. He had also alleged that
the selections were manipulated by the Government. This
Court came to the conclusion that the allegations of mala
fide had not been established but yet selections were held
to be invalid for the reasons mentioned in our order dated
23rd September, 1970. Despite coming to the conclusion that
the selections made were invalid, we did not strike down the
selections in view of the fact that the selected candidates
had not been made parties to those petitions. We directed
the State of Tamil Nadu to immediately constitute a separate
expert committee consisting of eminent medical practitioners
(after excluding all those who were the members of the
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previous committee) for making selections to the 24 unfilled
seats. We further ordered :
"The selection shall be made on statewise basis. The
committee shall interview only the candidates who are shown
in the waiting list, the persons who unsuccessfully moved
the High Court of Madras and the two
451
petitioners before this Court. They shall allot separate
marks under the five he-ads mentioned in the rule. The
committee shall take into consideration only matters laid
down in the rule exclude from consideration all irrelevant
matters and thereafter prepare a gradation list to fill up
the 24 seats mentioned earlier."
In pursuance of the above direction, the State of Tamil Nadu
constituted a selection committee and the selection
committee has selected 24 students for being admitted into
one or the other medical colleges run by the Government of
Tamil Nadu but the petitioner has not been selected.
Thereafter the petitioner has come up with this writ
petition challenging the validity of the selections made.
The main contention taken by him in his writ petition is
that in view of the widespread publicity given to our
previous judgment by the newspapers and the radio, there had
been a widespread discontent and criticism in regard to the
prevailing system of interviews. That widespread publicity
affected very much the prestige of the State Government of
Tamil Nadu and therefore the Government of Tamil Nadu was
particular to see that the petitioner was not selected. He
sought to establish this plea primarily on the basis of
three circumstances namely (1) that during the interview the
members of the selection committee showed open hostility
towards him; (2) that despite the order of this Court, the
selection committee called for interview several persons in
addition to those directed to be interviewed by this Court
and it is only after he moved this Court to take action
against the committee for disobeying the orders of this
Court, the committee refrained from interviewing the
candidates other than those directed to be interviewed by
this Court and (3) the selection committee has deliberately
contravened the directions of this Court.
The members of the selection committee have denied the al-
legation that they had exhibited any hostility towards the
petitioner during the interview. On the question as to what
happened during the interview, we have only the version of
the petitioner on the one side and of the members of the
committee on the other. On the basis of the material before
us it cannot be said that the allegations made by the
petitioner are established. The charge of mala fide is a
serious charge and the same has to be established by
satisfactory evidence. The fact that the petitioner could
not get any outside evidence to establish what happened at
the time of the interview cannot shift the burden that is on
him to prove his allegations.
It is true that at one stage, the selection committee called
for interview several candidates other than those asked to
be interviewed by this Court. When those persons were
called for interview, the petitioner approached this Court
to restrain the selection
452
committee from interviewing those persons. This Court
declined to go into that matter at that stage. Thereafter
the State of Tamil Nadu moved this Court for clarification
of our order. We rejected that application as in our view
the order did not require any clarification. Thereafter the
selection committee refrained from interviewing the
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candidates whom it had called for interview in addition to
those whom this Court asked the selection committee to
inter-view. The members of the selection committee say that
they did not clearly understand the scope of our judgment
and it is in those circumstances they called for interview
some candidates whom they ultimately did not interview.
Though this explanation is not very satisfactory but from
that circumstance alone, we cannot come to the conclusion
that the selection committee had any ulterior purpose in
calling a large number of candidates for interview.
So far as the illegalities said to have been committed
during the interview are concerned, we shall separately deal
with them. But those illegalities do not establish either
by themselves or even when considered along with
circumstances mentioned above the plea of mala fide.
This takes us to the illegalities alleged to have been
committed by the selection committee. As mentioned in our
earlier judgment, the selection committee was directed to
interview the candidates under five different heads viz.-
1 . Sports or National Cadet Corps activities;
2. Extra Curricular special services;
3. General Physical condition and endurance;
4. General ability; and
5. Aptitude.
The Government allocated 75 marks for interview but it did
not prescribe separate marks for the separate heads. In the
previous writ petition, it was contended that the interview
was invalid inasmuch as the Government did not prescribe
separate marks for separate heads. We rejected that
contention with these observations :
"It is true that the rule did not prescribe separate marks
for separate heads. But that in our opinion did not permit
the selection committee to allot marks as it pleased. Each
one of the tests prescribed had its own importance. As
observed at foot-note 20 at p. 485 of American Jurisprudence
Vol. 15 that the interviewers need not record precise
questions and answers when oral test(; are used to appraise
personality traits; it is sufficient if the examiner’s
findings are recorded on the appraisal
453
sheet according to the personal qualifications itemised for
measure. A contention similar to those advanced by the
petitioners came up for consideration before the Mysore High
Court in D. G. Viswanaih v. Chief Secretary of Mysore and
Ors.(1). There the Court observed thus
"it is true that Annexure IV does not specifically mention
the marks allotted for each head. But from that
circumstance it cannot be held that the Government had
conferred an unguided power on the Committees. In the
absence of specific allocation of marks for each head, it
must be presumed that the Government considered that each of
the heads mentioned in Annexure IV as being equal in
importance to any other. In other words we have to infer
that the intention of the Government was that each one of
those heads should carry 1/5th of the ’Interview marks’."
It is clear from our judgment that we quoted the decision in
Viswanath’s case (supra) with approval. But yet when the
impugned selections were made, the selection committee
allotted marks to the various heads according to their own
discretion. It was admitted before us at the hearing that
the selection committee distributed the 75 interview marks
among the five heads mentioned above according to its own
discretion. For some heads, 1 0 marks were allotted and for
others 25 marks. The procedure adopted by the selection
committee clearly contravened our judgment in the earlier
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writ petition. There is no substance in the plea advanced
on behalf of the selection committee that in the operative
portion of our order, we did not direct the selection
committee that each one of the heads should carry 1/5th of
the "interview" marks. The selection committee was not the
rule making authority. The interview rules were made by the
Government. The Government alone could have distributed the
marks amongst the various heads. In the absence of such a
distribution, as mentioned by us in our earlier judgment, it
should be deemed that each one of those heads carried equal
marks. There can be no doubt that the procedure adopted by
the selection committee is likely to have affected the
result of the interview.
As seen earlier, one of the heads under which the
interviewers were asked to interview is "Snorts or National
Cadet Corps activities". It is not Sports and National
Cadet Corps activities. The requirement is either snorts or
National Cadet Corps activities. Admittedly the petitioner
produced a "A" certificate to show that he had the National
Cadet Corps training. But yet he was given
(1) A.I.R. 1964. Mys. 132.
454
only five marks out of the 10 marks allotted for that head
by the selection committee. The petitioner’s complaint is
that the selection committee had no right to cut down the
marks to which he was entitled to. We called upon the
selection committee to disclose the basis on which the marks
were given for National Cadet Corps activities. In response
to that direction, the Chairman of the Selection Committee
filed an affidavit on December 28, 1970. In paragraph 4 of
his affidavit he deposed thus :
"Likewise in the National Cadet Corps also, there are
various grades and the candidate may have joined in N.C.C.
in school or college for one year or 2 years or more; (ii)
passed examinations and attained certificates and stripes.
The grades arc certificate-A-Part 1, lowest in rank then
Part 11, Certificate B, Certificate C being the highest.
Some candidates may in addition have attained promotions as
Lance Corporal, Sergeant or Under Officer. Marks were
allotted according to the grades as shown by various
certificates."
In the reply affidavit filed by one Ramanathan, a relation
of the petitioner (the petitioner is a minor), it was
averred as follows (in paragraphs 5 and 6 of the affidavit)
:
"I state the averments in para 4 of the supplemental counter
affidavit are misleading and do not attempt to place before
this Honourable Court the entire facts. The N.C.C. is
divided into two Divisions, namely, Junior Division and
Senior Division. The Junior Division N.C.C. is conducted
only in the High Schools, while the Senior Division N.C.C.
only in the colleges. The ’A’ Certificate is issued to the
Junior Division N.C.C. cadets who pass the ’A’ Certificate
Examination, while the ’B’ and ’C’ Certificates are issued
to the Senior Division N.C.C. Cadets who pass the ’B’ and
’C’ Certificate Examinations respectively held in the
Colleges for the Senior Division. As such, a High School
student would be eligible to obtain only an ’A’ Certificate
and not the ’B’ and ’C’ Certificates.
6. The students who appeared for the selection to the
Medical course for the year 1970-71 could not have obtained
a ’B’ or a ’C’ Certificate for the reason that N.C.C. was
discontinued in the State of Tamil Nadu in all Schools and
Colleges in Jan. 1968. In the Anglo Indian Schools, the
school year ends in December, while in the rest of the
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schools the school year is from June April. The students
studying in the High Schools other than Anglo-
Indian Schools during the year 1967-68
455
would , therefore, not have obtained even an ’A’ Certi-
ficate, as the Certificate is issued after undergoing train-
ing for a period of one year and then passing, he exami-
nation. The petitioner obtained such a certificate in
January, 1968 for the N.C.C. Course of one year in regard to
which he wrote his examination in October, 1967. The
students studying in the schools other than
the Anglo-Indian Schools would, therefore,
have not been able to obtain even an ’A’
Certificate for the year 1967-68, since the
N.C.C. was discontinued in the middle of their
academic year, N.C.C. was resumed in the State
of Tamil Nadu only in November 1969; and as
such students studying in the schools and
colleges in the State of Tamil Nadu would not
have been Able to get the ’A’ ’B’ or ’C’
Certificate in the Schools and ’Colleges
during the academic year 1968-69 or 1969-70: ’ The petition
er, therefore, sumbits that none
among the students who appeared for the
selection to the Medical Course for the year
1970-71 could have obtained the ’B’ or ’C’
Certificates, the ’A’ Certificate, therefore,
was in effect the highest certificate that a
candidate appearing for selection for the
Medical Course for the year 1970-71 could
possibly obtain. Even this certificate would
not be available to the students passing out
of the schools other than the Anglo-Indian
Schools and who appeared for this selection
for the Medical Course 1970-71. It is a mat-
ter of easy verification as to who among the
24 selected candidates or the 11.4 candidates
eligible for the selection for these 24 seats
in fact possessed the N.C.C. ’A’ Certificate
or even the ’B’ and ’C’ certificates."
No reply was made to the allegations quoted above. Nor was
the learned Advocate General of Tamil Nadu able to
controvert those allegations. Under those circumstances we
must hold that selection committee had proceeded on a wholly
wrong premises while granting marks under the head "National
Cadet Corps activities".
For the reasons mentioned above we hold at the selections
made are vitiated and as such they cannot be sustained. We
were informed that the 24 students whose selections are
impugned in the present writ petition have already joined
one or the other medical college in the State of Tamil Nadu
and they have been attending classes for over a month. In
view of the hardship that may be caused to those innocent
students, by the order that we, proposed to make, we asked
the Advocate General of Tamil Nadu on January 4, 1971, when
the petition came no for hearing to see if he could persuade
the Government of Tamil Nadu to admit
456
the petitioner in any one of the medical colleges in Tamil
Nadu and thus avoid the unpleasant consequence. For that
purpose we adjourned the petition to the 7th of this month.
When the matter was taken up on that date, the learned
Advocate General informed us that the Government was unable
to accept our suggestion. That day the hearing of the case
was completed. Bearing in mind the serious consequences
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that our order is likely to have on those 24 students, we
again asked the Advocate-General to explain to the
Government the hardship that is likely to be caused to the
selected students for no fault of their own and inform us
the decision of the Government before the 14th of this
month. The Government’s reaction was not favourable. Hence
there is no alternative before us but to allow the writ
petition, quash the impugned selections and direct the Stale
of Tamil Nadu to appoint a fresh selection committee for
making selections in accordance with our order dated
September 23, 1970. The State of Tamil Nadi, shall pay the
costs of the petitioner in this writ petition.
V.P.S. Petition
allowed
457