Rajalakshmi Engineering College rapped by Madras HC for withholding monetary aid from government
High Court of Madras: Rajalakshmi Engineering College had held the money due to the petitioner for being reimbursed to a branch of Indian Bank.
Press Trust of India | March 12, 2022 | 08:10 PM IST
CHENNAI: The Madras High Court has rapped the management of a college of engineering near here for withholding the financial assistance provided by the government to a poor student thereby causing problems to him. Owing to the fact that Rajalakshmi Engineering College had held the money due to the petitioner for being reimbursed to a branch of Indian Bank, the petitioner was subjected to ignominy, in that he had been visited with notices both legally and also from the Lok Adalat and had been pestered to such an extent as if he had flown away with the money.
For no fault of the petitioner, he had been made to suffer mental and monetary ordeal by the bank, which had not extended the moratorium period. The petitioner could not claim an extension of the moratorium, but definitely, he was entitled to the amount from the college, which, if it had been reimbursed at the earliest, would not have resulted in the situation he had faced and also the resultant monetary loss in the form of interest and penal interest.
"The said sufferings of the petitioner definitely warrant compensation at the hands of the college towards interest for the amount being held by it, which was due to be paid to the petitioner towards reimbursement of the bank loan," Justice M Dhandapani has said.
The Bench was disposing of a writ petition recently from C Ashok Kumar, who prayed for a direction to the Registrar of Anna University and the Commissioner of Technical Education to consider his representation and to recover from the college the entire education fee paid to it under various heads during the course and along with interest and other incidental charges incurred by him on the educational loan account and refund the same to him to enable him to re-pay the outstanding loan amount to the bank.
The judge directed Anna University and the Technical Education Commissioner to take appropriate action against the college for the wrongful withholding of the amount given towards financial assistance by the government. He directed the college to return the amount of Rs 60,000 (Rs 20,000 for each year) along with interest at 7.5 per cent per annum from the date of receipt of the amount by the college from the government till the date of payment to the petitioner.
Also read | CBSE Result Term 1: Only theory performance out; individual result not on website
Since the non-payment of the money taken towards education loan by the petitioner from the bank was not due to any of his fault, though this court is conscious of the fact that the period of moratorium cannot be extended for the cause of the petitioner alone taking into consideration the unique circumstances, the bank higher authorities may look into the case for waiver of interest over and above the interest granted by this court, so that the petitioner from a economically weaker section of society can breathe a bit at least after such a belated point of time, the judge said.
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
]- ‘Jamia Hamdard’s BMS course is industry-driven; saw 80-85% placement’: Dean, School of Management
- IIM Ahmedabad, Kozhikode, Lucknow: Top MBA colleges take the lead in school leadership training
- For IIM Ranchi, commitment to tribal issues is a ‘social responsibility’
- ‘I’ve seen students delivering food’: Expert on Canada’s study visa policies and why demand may drop 50%
- How online MBA courses at top management schools are enabling career transitions
- Happy Children’s Day 2024! Take this quiz to test how much you know of child rights and education in India
- MBA Pharmacy: How AI, data science and technology are reshaping the industry, boosting career options
- What happened to the NExT exam? Only 31% medical students know exam pattern, says study
- 100 MBBS students’ fate uncertain as HC reverses ruling on extra seats at Rajasthan private medical college
- ‘GMAT completely different from CAT; AICTE ratification making exam more popular now’: GMAC chief