In Mohammad Anees & Ors. vs. National Education Society for Tribal Students & Ors., the Delhi High Court addressed the cancellation of candidatures for Post Graduate Teacher (PGT) posts because the candidates had pursued their Master’s (M.A.) and B.Ed. degrees simultaneously. While the recruiting society argued such simultaneous qualifications were impermissible under its rules, the Court highlighted that the University Grants Commission (UGC) had modified its guidelines in April 2025 to retrospectively validate two academic programs pursued simultaneously before 2022, provided they followed university norms. Consequently, the Court directed the respondent to reconsider the petitioners’ eligibility in light of these revised UGC regulations and pass a reasoned order within six weeks.
- Factual Background
The four petitioners were successful candidates in the SEklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS) Recruitment, 2023, selected for PGT posts in Hindi, English, and Economics. Despite being issued provisional appointment letters, their candidatures were cancelled via emails dated June 19, 2024. The National Education Society for Tribal Students (Respondent No. 1) cited as the reason that the petitioners had pursued two degrees—M.A. and B.Ed.—during the same period, which it deemed a violation of eligibility norms.
- Arguments of the Parties
- The Petitioners: Contended that there was no express bar by the UGC against pursuing two degrees simultaneously, especially when one was through a regular mode and the other through distance learning. They relied on various UGC committee reports and minutes from 2012, 2013, and 2020 that had approved the concept of simultaneous degrees to facilitate multidisciplinary learning.
- Respondent No. 1: Argued that as an autonomous employer, it was lawfully entitled to prescribe rules for recruitment. They maintained that the advertisement only recognized a four-year integrated Bachelor’s course as a valid way to achieve two qualifications simultaneously and specifically excluded other non-standard methods. They further argued that the 2022 UGC guidelines allowing simultaneous degrees were prospective and did not apply to degrees obtained before their notification.
- The UGC’s Clarification
The Court examined an affidavit from the University Grants Commission (Respondent No. 3) which revealed a significant policy shift. While the 2022 “Guidelines for pursuing two academic programmes simultaneously” originally had no retrospective benefit, the Commission at its 589th meeting on April 3, 2025, approved a partial modification. This modification clarified that two academic programs pursued simultaneously before the 2022 guidelines shall be treated as valid, provided they were in accordance with the regulations and statutes of the concerned universities and professional councils.
- Court’s Findings and Directions
The High Court observed that the modified UGC guidelines directly impacted the validity of the petitioners’ qualifications. The Court noted that neither the petitioners nor Respondent No. 1 were originally aware of these clarified guidelines during the pleading stage.
The Court disposed of the petition with the following directions:
- Reconsideration: Respondent No. 1 must take a fresh decision on the validity of the petitioners’ qualifications for the PGT posts by considering the modified UGC guidelines.
- Timeline: This exercise must be concluded within six weeks from the receipt of the order, resulting in a reasoned and speaking order.
- Consequential Benefits: If the decision is favorable, the petitioners shall be entitled to appointment with seniority fixed as per their original merit and notional pay fixation, though they will not be entitled to any back-pay or arrears.
The Court further clarified that if the petitioners remain aggrieved by the new order to be passed by Respondent No. 1, they reserve the right to seek legal remedies.
2026 DHC 5303
Mohammad Anees & Ors. vs. National Education Society for Tribal Students & Ors (D.O.J. 03.07.2026)



