Madras High Court rejects plea to award marks to Tamil Nadu board student
A Tamil Nadu student had moved Madras High Court challenging state govt's order from 2021 declaring all students to have passed without awarding marks.
Press Trust of India | May 4, 2022 | 07:03 PM IST
CHENNAI: The first bench of the Madras High Court has rejected a plea from a State Board student to strike down a GO issued in July 2021 by the Tamil Nadu government, which declared all the students to have passed without awarding the marks. The bench of Chief Justice M N Bhandari and Justice D Bharatha Chakravarthy refused to quash the GO while dismissing a writ appeal from Nakshatra Bind A K, represented by her mother Dhanya, recently.
Nakshatra, who studied in a Higher Secondary Matriculation school in Kolathur here, wanted to join a school in Kerala. As the school in that state insisted on furnishing the mark sheet of secondary class, she moved the High court here with a writ petition to quash the July 26, 2021 GO. But a single judge rejected it on January 19, this year. Hence, the present writ appeal.
Also Read | West Bengal Board mulling holding Class 12 exams twice a year from 2023; decision on May 6
Dismissing the appeal, the first bench observed that the contention of her counsel that the award of marks, as has been decided by the CBSE, cannot be accepted. The CBSE is a different examination Board and otherwise, their decision cannot mandate the Tamil Nadu government to change its policy decision and more specifically to award the marks without an examination which otherwise would not be appropriate.
It is not only Tamil Nadu but many states have taken a similar decision, to not to insist the students to appear in the examination during the course of covid-19 pandemic and to be declared to have passed the examination without award of marks and consequently thereupon, marksheet was issued to declare them as passed without award of marks, the bench pointed out.
Also Read | UP Board Result 2022: Evaluation by May 7, result in June
"The State of Tamil Nadu has taken the decision of similar nature and we do not find any illegality in the policy decision of the state government so as to cause interference in the impugned GO. Marks can be awarded in case of examination where performance of a student is assessed but cannot be in a case where no examination was conducted," the judges said. In view of the above and finding no error in the judgment of the single judge, the writ appeal as also the writ petition are dismissed, the judges added.
Meanwhile, the petitioner has moved the Kerala High Court, which passed an order in her favour with regard to her admission in a local school. The bench also rejected a plea from the counsel for the petitioner to grant permission to appeal in the Supreme Court, as there was no legal issue involved of such nature.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Data Science, Maritime and Property Law: Top LLB, LLM colleges launch courses in niche frontiers
- Music, arts and Harry Potter: How top law colleges are using films and fiction to teach legal concepts
- Manipal Law School director: ‘Our LLM courses focus on data privacy, IT laws and other emerging areas’
- Litigation to corporate law: A first-generation lawyer's journey from burnout to breakthrough
- AI and Law: Top law schools blend artificial intelligence into curriculum, with research and global insights
- GLC Mumbai: Asia’s oldest law college struggles with falling academic standards, fund crunch
- NEET PG 2024 Counselling: DNB seats ‘withdrawn’ after being allotted; candidates may lose a year
- Free ‘GP Sir’s Law Classes’ help poor, marginalised students become judges
- 5-year LLB courses soon; want to be India’s top law school: Government Law College Ernakulam principal
- Distance education hampers state bar council entry in Telangana; LLB graduates seek SC intervention