The appellant, Chhattisgarh Dental College and Research Institute, was established in 2002 [1, 3.1].
Its prospectus initially fixed tuition fees at Rs.2,12,500/- for general category candidates and Rs.1,12,500/- for reserved categories, plus a caution fee [3.2, 4]. The respondent-students were admitted based on this structure.
Following the Supreme Court’s judgment in Islamic Academy of Education (2003), a Fee Fixation Committee (Justice S.D. Jha Committee) was constituted by the State of Chhattisgarh.
This Committee determined the fee structure for the appellant-college at Rs.1,25,000/-, specifically making it effective from the academic year 2005-2006 for three years.
The State Government communicated this fixed fee to the college on 25th July 2005.
◦The appellant-college challenged this fee fixation in the High Court [6, 3.6].
◦Separately, some students admitted in 2003-2004 filed writ petitions, leading to interim High Court orders that restrained the college from demanding fees in excess of Rs.1,25,000/-, later modified to Rs.1,50,000/- subject to the final outcome.
The High Court, in its common impugned judgment dated 6th April 2010, directed that the Rs.1,25,000/- fee would apply even to students admitted prior to the 2005-2006 academic year, and ordered the college to refund any excess amount paid by these students.
The appellant-college then filed a special leave petition (SLP) against this High Court order.
On 12th May 2010, the Supreme Court passed interim directions for the appellant-college to refund the excess amount to 2003-2004 students who approached the Court, in exchange for bank guarantees from students for the refund amount, or Rs.1,00,000/- for those who hadn’t paid any fee, to facilitate the release of their documents.
Law Involved
The judgment primarily deals with the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court against High Court orders in writ petitions concerning educational fee fixation.
It references the Supreme Court’s own precedent in Islamic Academy of Education and Another v. State of Karnataka and Others (2003) 6 SCC 697, which mandated the constitution of fee fixation committees in states.
Reasoning
The appellant-college’s main grievance was that the High Court retrospectively applied the fee structure, thereby directing refunds for academic years prior to 2005-2006.
The Supreme Court found substance in this submission.
It was “admittedly” clear that the Fee Fixation Committee had directed the Rs.1,25,000/- fee to be applicable “only from the academic year 2005-2006 onwards”.
Therefore, the Supreme Court was of the considered view that the High Court “was not justified in directing the refund of excess fee to the students who were admitted prior to the academic year 2005-2006”.
Holding
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals.
It held that the High Court’s direction for retrospective application of the fee and refund of excess fee to students admitted prior to the academic year 2005-2006 was unjustified.
Acknowledging that refunds had already been made by the college under the Supreme Court’s interim order of 12th May 2010, and students had furnished bank guarantees, the Supreme Court permitted the appellant-college to encash these bank guarantees.
Chhattisgarh Dental College And Research Institute V. Shweta Kabra And Others Etc.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 720: (DoJ 06-05-2025)