2025 INSC 353
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(HON’BLE
SANJAY KUMAR, J. HON’BLE AUGUSTINE GEORGE MASIH, JJ.)
ZAID SHEIKH
Petitioner
VERSUS
STATE OF MADHYA
PRADESH THROUGH
Respondent
Civil
Appeal Nos. --------- & -------- OF 2025 (@ S.L.P.(C) Nos. 4361-4362 of
2019)-Decided on 18-03-2025
Education
Constitution of India,
Article 14 and 226 – Education - Eligibility for admission – BAMS Degree Course – Held that fulfilling the basic eligibility
for admission to a course is a sine qua non, which ought not to be overlooked
or ignore - Initial admission of the appellant in the first College was in
clear violation of the Madhya Pradesh Ayurveda/Unani/Homeopathy Undergraduate
Entrance Examination Rules - 2008, which prescribed the eligibility condition
that candidates of all categories and classes were required to have passed
English as a subject in the qualifying examination of 10+2 - However, the
said College came to be de-recognized and all the students of that College were
transferred to the Shaskiya Swasashi Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical College,
Ujjain, and the appellant was allowed to pass English as a subject in Class 12,
when he was provisionally admitted by the said College.
Held
that the fact ought to have been given more weightage by the High Court - More
so, as the appellant had acted upon the said Allotment Letter and reappeared
for the Class 12 examination, twice over, with English as a subject and had
passed it - The fact that he was permitted to complete the entire course and
had also finished part of his mandatory internship ought not to have been
brushed aside lightly - Appellant had put in nearly 6 years by then in pursuing
B.A.M.S. Degree Course and the end result of the High Court’s order was to
decimate his entire labour of all those years.
Held
that an act of the Court should, ordinarily, not prejudice anyone (Actus curiae
neminem gravabit) - This is a fundamental principle of justice, but it was
disregarded by the High Court while considering the case of the appellant - In
any event, the appellant's so-called ineligibility, which was not essential in
the context of the course that he had taken, was cured by him thereafter owing
to the liberty given by the College itself while provisionally admitting
him to the course in September, 2012 - Given these peculiar facts, this is a
fit case for interference so that the appellant is not left out in the cold
after completing almost the entire course - Order passed by the High Court in
W.P. and the order passed by it in Review Petition liable to be set aside - The
appellant shall be permitted to complete his course and internship in Shaskiya
Swasashi Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical College, Ujjain, and the authorities
concerned shall thereafter issue him his B.A.M.S. Degree in accordance with due
procedure.
(Para
7 to 9)
JUDGMENT
Sanjay Kumar, J :- Leave granted.
2.
The appellant before us almost completed his education under the protection of
interim orders granted by the Madhya Pradesh High Court but was ultimately
shown the door, when Writ Petition No.10267 of 2012 filed by him was dismissed
on 18.06.2014 by a Division Bench of the High Court. His petition seeking
review of the said order, viz., Review Petition No. 236 of 2014, met with the
same fate on 01.08.2014. Aggrieved thereby, he filed these special leave
petitions in November, 2014, with a delay of 45 days, which was condoned
only in the year 2019.
3.
The appellant completed his High School Education (10+2) in the year 2008 from
the Madhya Pradesh Sanskrit Board, Bhopal. He appeared in the Pre-Ayurvedic,
Homeopathic and Unani Entrance Test, 2008, and secured admission to B.A.M.S.
(Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery) Degree Course in Smt. Dhairya
Prabha Devi Sojatia Ayurvedic Medical College at Neemthur in Tehsil Bhanpura,
District Mandsaur, Madhya Pradesh, in September, 2008. He completed the
first-year course and secured 940 marks out of 1600. While so, Smt. Dhairya
Prabha Devi Sojatia Ayurvedic Medical College at Neemthur came to be
de-recognized. The students of the said College were transferred to Shaskiya
Swasashi Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical College at Ujjain in July, 2012.
However, the appellant was not given this benefit on the ground that he was
actually ineligible to be admitted to B.A.M.S. Degree Course as he had not
taken and passed 'English' as a subject in his 10+2 examination.
4.
Challenging the same, he filed the subject Writ Petition No.10267 of 2012
before the Madhya Pradesh High Court in October, 2012. Pursuant to the interim
orders passed therein on 30.10.2012, he was permitted to attend classes.
Surprisingly, the Principal of Shaskiya Swasashi Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical
College, Ujjain, had issued Allotment Letter dated 19.09.2012 to the appellant
even before the filing of his writ petition. He informed the appellant that he
had been transferred to and admitted to B.A.M.S. 3rd Prof. in the said
College and directed him to present himself within 3 days along with requisite
documents and the prescribed fee for taking admission. Significantly, the said
Allotment Letter ended with the following paragraph.
‘Certificate of
Passing of Class 12th in English Subject in the attached Mark-sheet of Sanskrit
Board or Provisionally admitted on the condition of passing English Subject in
Class 12.’
It
is, therefore, clear that the appellant was required to either produce his pass
certificate in proof of having taken English as a subject and passing the same
or in the event he failed to do so, he was provisionally admitted subject to
the condition that he would pass English as a subject in Class 12.
5.
Admittedly, the appellant re-appeared for the 12 th class examination conducted
by the Board of Secondary Education, Madhya Pradesh, in March, 2013. Therein,
he took English as a subject and passed it by securing 70 marks. Apart from
this examination, he also appeared in the Senior Secondary School Examination
conducted by the National Institute of Open Schooling, an autonomous
institution under the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of
India, and the Provisional Certificate issued by the said Institute on
05.06.2014 demonstrates that he passed the said examination with the subjects -
English, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Hindi. It is also an admitted
fact that the appellant had prosecuted the entire studies of B.A.M.S.
Degree Course and had also completed part of his mandatory internship at the
time his writ petition was dismissed.
6.
The Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Bench at Indore,
non-suited the appellant on the ground that he was initially ineligible to be
admitted to B.A.M.S. Degree Course as he had not taken and passed ‘English’ as
a subject in the qualifying examination of 10+2. The Division Bench was
apprised of the fact that the appellant had again taken the 12th class
examination with English as a subject and had passed the same during the
pendency of the Writ Petition but it was not persuaded to hold in his favour.
The appellant’s entreaty to review the dismissal of his writ petition was
peremptorily rejected by the Bench on the ground that there was no error
apparent on the face of the record.
7.
Though there can be no dispute with the proposition that fulfilling the basic
eligibility for admission to a course is a sine qua non, which ought not to be
overlooked or ignored, the peculiar facts of the case on hand ought to have
weighed with the High Court while considering the plight of the appellant. His
initial admission in the first College was in clear violation of the Madhya
Pradesh Ayurveda/Unani/Homeopathy Undergraduate Entrance Examination Rules -
2008, which prescribed the eligibility condition that candidates of all
categories and classes were required to have passed English as a subject
in the qualifying examination of 10+2. However, the said College came to be
de-recognized and all the students of that College were transferred to the
Shaskiya Swasashi Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical College, Ujjain, and the
appellant was allowed to pass English as a subject in Class 12, when he was
provisionally admitted by the said College. That fact ought to have been given
more weightage by the High Court. More so, as the appellant had acted upon the
said Allotment Letter and reappeared for the Class 12 examination, twice over,
with English as a subject and had passed it.
8.
Though, the interim order granted by the High Court on 30.10.2012 recorded that
the appellant would not be entitled to claim equities, the fact that he was
permitted to complete the entire course and had also finished part of his
mandatory internship ought not to have been brushed aside lightly. Be it noted
that the appellant had put in nearly 6 years by then in pursuing B.A.M.S.
Degree Course and the end result of the High Court’s order was to decimate his
entire labour of all those years. An act of the Court should, ordinarily, not
prejudice anyone (Actus curiae neminem gravabit). This is a fundamental
principle of justice, but it was disregarded by the High Court while
considering the case of the appellant. In any event, the appellant's so-called
ineligibility, which was not essential in the context of the course that he had
taken, was cured by him thereafter owing to the liberty given by the
College itself while provisionally admitting him to the course in
September, 2012. Given these peculiar facts, we are of the opinion that this is
a fit case for interference so that the appellant is not left out in the cold
after completing almost the entire course.
9.
The appeals are accordingly allowed, setting aside the order dated 18.06.2014
passed by the Madhya Pradesh High Court in W.P. No. 10267 of 2012 and the order
dated 01.08.2014 passed by it in Review Petition No. 236 of 2014. The appellant
shall be permitted to complete his course and internship in Shaskiya Swasashi
Dhanwantari Ayurvedic Medical College, Ujjain, and the authorities concerned
shall thereafter issue him his B.A.M.S. Degree in accordance with due
procedure.
No
order as to costs.
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