The
Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that reservation based on domicile or
residence for admissions to postgraduate medical courses within the state quota
violates the right to equality under Article 14 of the Constitution.
The
Bench, comprising Justices Hrishikesh Roy, Sudhanshu Dhulia, and SVN Bhatti,
said that admissions should be determined strictly by merit.
"We
are all domicile in India and there is no provincial domicile etc. ... This
gives us a right to pursue trade across India. Benefit of reservation in
education to those who reside in certain areas can be given only in MBBS in
some cases. But reservation in higher level on the basis of residence is
violative of Article 14," the court stated.
While
acknowledging that reservation may be considered "for those who reside in
a particular state," the Bench clarified that such provisions should only
apply to undergraduate courses. "Considering the importance of specialised
doctors, reservation in higher levels - on the basis of residence - would be
violative of Article 14," the Bench stated.
The
apex court, however, noted that the judgment would not affect existing
domicile-based reservations and that students who had completed their degrees
under such criteria would not be impacted.
The case originated in 2019 when a two-judge Bench
reviewed appeals against a Punjab and Haryana High Court decision, which
declared domicile-based reservations for PG medical courses unconstitutional.
Recognising the significance of the matter, the two-judge Bench referred it to
a three-judge Bench.
The
ruling stemmed from a 2019 reference by the two-judge Bench, which raised the
following questions:
1.
Is domicile/residence-based reservation for PG Medical Course admissions within
the State Quota constitutionally invalid and impermissible?
2.
(a) If the answer to the first question is negative and such reservations are
permissible, what should be the extent and manner of providing them in PG
Medical Course admissions within the State Quota?
(b) If such reservations are permissible,
considering NEET-based merit and rank, how should domicile/residence-based
reservations be applied in states/UTs with only one Medical College?
3.
If domicile/residence-based reservations are impermissible, how should the
State Quota seats, other than permissible institutional preference seats, be
filled?
These
legal questions arose during the appeal hearing concerning PG admissions at the
Government Medical College and Hospital, Chandigarh. The Punjab and Haryana
High Court had invalidated certain provisions in the medical college's
prospectus that related to domicile-based reservations in the UT Chandigarh
Pool, the report said.
Before
the Supreme Court, Senior Advocate Nidhesh Gupta represented the private
respondents, arguing that domicile-based reservation is impermissible, as
concluded by the high court.