03 March 1975
Supreme Court
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GANDHI FAIZEAM COLLEGE SHAHAJAHANPUR Vs UNIVERSITY OF AGRA AND ANOTHER

Bench: KRISHNAIYER,V.R.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1611 of 1969


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PETITIONER: GANDHI FAIZEAM COLLEGE SHAHAJAHANPUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNIVERSITY OF AGRA AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT03/03/1975

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN GUPTA, A.C.

CITATION:  1975 AIR 1821            1975 SCC  (2) 283  CITATOR INFO :  R          1980 SC1042  (2,62,81,99)

ACT: Staute  14, A of the Agra University--If violative  of  Art. 30, Constitution of India.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant  is  a minority  College,  affiliated  to  he respondent-University.    In   August  1964,   the   College management applied to the respondent for permission to start teaching  in  certain  courses  of  study.   The  respondent insisted,  that  as  a  condition  of  recognition  of   the additional  subjects,  the Managing Committee  must  be  re- constituted in conformity with statute 14-A by including the Principal  of the College and the senior most member of  the staff  in it.  The, appellant filed a writ petition in  the, High  Court challenging Statute 14-A a,,, violative of  Art. 30, but the High Court dismissed the petition. (Per majority, V.R. Krishna Iyer and A.C. Gupta, JJ.) The inclusion of the Principal and the senior member of  the staff on the Managing Committee, improves the administration and  does  not  inhibit its autonomy,  and  the  Statute  is therefore good and valid. [833A] (1)  Abridgement of the right under Art. 30 is as  obnoxious as  its  annihilation, but the right can be regulated  in  a benign   manner  which  neither  abridges  nor   exaggerates autonomy  but promotes better performance.  To  regulate  is not to restrict, but to facilitate the effective exercise of the very right regulated. [820B-C; 824D] (2) The Principal is an invaluable insider-the  Management’s own choice and not an outsider.  He brings into the work  of the  Managing  Committee  that  intimate  acquaintance  with educational  operations  and that  necessary  expression  of student-teacher  aspirations  and complaints  which  are  so essential  for the minority institutions to achieve a  happy marriage between individuality and excellence.  An  activist Principal  is  an  asset in discharging the  duties  of  the Managing, Committee which are inextricably inter-laced  with academic  functions.  The senior most teacher is a  seasoned representative  of  the teachers and is also chosen  by  the management itself.  His role, though less striking and moire unobstrusive, is also a useful input into managerial skills.

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[8251-H] (3)  Moreover,  the  Managing Committee is  subject  to  the hierarchiral control ofthe  Governing  Body  and   General Council. [825H] (4) To draw a distinction between creating a managing  body, and  regulating  the manner of its  functioning  to  obviate maladministration,  and hold that-the former is  beyond  the pale  of  legislative  prescription  while  the  latter   is permiSSible  as a preservative, is broadly sound; but, as  a rigid logical formula, it breaks down.  For example, if  the law says that a person convicted of breach of trust or  that ,in  undischarged insolvent would be disqualified to be  the treasurer,  it affects the structure of the governing  body, but   it   is  indubitably  a  protection   against   likely maladministration. [823E-H] (5) In the D.A.V. College case (1971) Supp.  S.C.R. 688  and Stat  of  Kerala v. Very Rev.  Mother, Provincial  (1971)  1 S.C.R. 734 some provisions relating to the principal of  the institution  were  struck  down, but  the  real  reason  for striking  them  down was that those  provisions  and  others deprived  the  minority  of  its right  to  manage  its  own institutions. [83ID-832B] 811 Kerala  Education Bill Case (1959) S.C.R. 995; St.  Xavier’s College  case, (1975) 1. SCR 173; Rev.  Fr.  W. Proost  case (1969) 2 S.C.R. 73 and Rt.  Rev. Bishop Patro’s case  (1970) 1 S.C.R. 172, referred to. (Per K. K. Mathew, I dissenting The  Whole temper and tone of a college do depend  upon  the principal and the teachers, but that does not mean that they should  be  members of the governing council of  a  college. [815F-G] The  matter  is concluded by the decision of this  Court  in Ahmedabad  St. Xavier’s College Society V. State of  Gujarat (1975) 1 S.C.R. 173.  This Court held by a majority that  s. 33A(1)  (a)  of  the  Gujarat  University  Act,  1949,   was violative of Art. 30(1) because, that provision required the inclusion, in the: governing body of the College, of persons whom  the religious minority did not want to include.   When the article says that a religious or linguistic minority has the  right  to administer educational  institutions  of  its choice,   it   means  that  the  right  to  carry   on   the administration  of  the  institution must  be  left  to  the managing body consisting of Persons in whom the religious or linguistic minority has faith and confidence.  The  minority community has the exclusive right to vest the administration of  the  College  in  a  body of  its  own  choice  and  any compulsion  from an outside authority to include  any  other person  in  that body is an abridgement of  its  fundamental right  to  administer  the  educational  institution.   The, determination of the composition of the, body to educational institution   established  by  a  religious  minority   must minority  as  that is the core of the right  to  administer, though   prevent   maladministration  by   that   body   are permissible.   But,such regulations can only relate  to  the manner  of administration after the to administer  has  come into being. [812D; 815B-D] State of Kerala v. Mother Provincial [1971] 1 S.C.R. 734; W. Proost v. Bihar [1969] 2 SCR 73 and Rev.  Bishop S. K. Patro v. Bihar [1969] 1 SCR 863, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  1611  of

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1969. Appeal  by special leave from the Judgment and  Order  dated the  25th July, 1967 of the Allahabad High Court in  Special Appeal No. 165 of 1967. Frank  Anthony,  K.  L.  Hathi and  P.  C.  Kapur,  for  the appellant. Santosh   Chatterjee   and  G.  S.   Chatterjee,   for   the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Krishna lyer,  J. K. K., Mathew, J. gave a dissenting opinion. MATHEW, J. The question is whether Statute 14A framed by the University of Agra abridges the fundamental right guaranteed under  Article  30(1)  of the  Constitution  of  the  Muslim community of Saharanpur, a religious minority, to administer the Gandhi Faizeam College,.  Saharanpur, established by it. In   August, 1964, an application was made on behalf of  the college management to the University for permission to start teaching in courses of study including Sociology,  Sanskrit, Arabic,   Military  Studies,  Drawing  and  Painting.    The University  insisted  that as condition for  recognition  of these additional subjects as courses of study, the  managing committee of the college must be reconstituted in conformity with 812 Statute  14A by including the Principal and the  senior-most member of the staff in it.  Statute 14A provides :               "14-A.   Each college, already  affiliated  or               when  affiliated,  which  is  not   maintained               exclusively  by Government must be  under  the               Management of a regular constituted  Governing               Body (which term includes Managing  Committee)               on  which  the staff of the college  shall  be               represented  by the Principal of  the  College               and   at  least  one  representative  of   the               teachers  of  the college to be  appointed  by               rotation  in order of seniority determined  by               length  of service in the college,  who  shall               hold office for one academic year." In  the  writ  petition filed before  the  High  Court,  the appellant   contended   that  Statute   14A   abridged   its fundamental  right under Article 30(1).  But the High  Court negatived the contention holding that even if Statute 14A is implemented  by  the religious minority, the  right  of  the minority to administer the educational institution would not be taken away or destroyed and dismissed the writ petition. I  should have thought that the matter was concluded by  the decision  of  this Court in Ahmedabad St.  Xavier’s  College Society  v. State of Gujarat(1).  Section 33A(1) (a) of  the Gujarat  University Act, 1949, which fell for  consideration in that case, among other matters, read               "33A(1) Every college (other than a Government               college   or  a  college  maintained  by   the               Government) affiliated before the commencement               of  the Gujarat University (Amendment)  Act,.               1972 (hereinafter in this section referred  to               as ’such commencement’)-                (a)shall  be  under  the  management  of  a               governing body which shall include amongst its               members  the  Principal  of  the  College,   a               representative of the University nominated  by               the Vice Chancellor, and three representatives               of  the teachers of the college and  at  least               one representative each of the members of  the               non-teaching  staff  and the students  of  the               college,  to  be  elected  respectively   from

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             amongst  such  teachers, members  of  the  non               teaching staff and students." This provision was challenged in that case as violating  the fundamental  right  under  Article  30(1)  of  the  minority community in question there. This Court held by a  majority that  the provision was bad as it offended  the  fundamental right  of  the  religious minority under  Article  30(1)  to administer its educational institution.  The reason was that the provision required the inclusion, in the governing  body of  the college, of persons whom the religious minority  did not  want  to  include.  When Article 30(1)  speaks  that  a religious or linguistic minority has the right to administer educational  institutions of its choice, it means  that  the fight to carry on the administration of the institution must be  left to the managing body consisting of persons in  whom the   religious  or  linguistic  minority  has   faith   and confidence. (1) [S.C.C. 717]                             813 The learned Chief Justice, speaking for himself and Palekar, J., after referring to the provisions of s. 33A(1) (a)  said in  that case that the right to administer is the  right  to conduct  and manage the affairs of the institution and  that this  right is exercised "through a body of persons in  whom the  founders of the institution have faith and  confidence, and who have full autonomy in that sphere".  He further said that  the  right  to administer is  subject  to  permissible regulatory measures and that permissible regulatory measures are those which do not restrict the right of  administration but  facilitate  it  and ensure better  and  more  effective exercise of the right for the benefit of the institution and through  the  instrumentality  of  the  management  of   the institution  and without displacing the management.  He  was of  the view that if the administration has to be  improved, it should be done through the agency or the  instrumentality of  the existing management and not by displacing  it.   The learned  Chief  Justice further observed  that  autonomy  in administration means right to administer effectively and  to manage and conduct the affairs of the institutions, that the right of administration means day to day administration  and that the choice in the personnel of management is a part  of the administration.  He concluded by saying :               "The  provisions contained in  Section  33A(1)               (a)  of the Act have the effect of  displacing               the   management  and  entrusting  it   to   a               different  agency.  The autonomy  in  adminis-               tration is lost.  New elements in the shape of               representatives of different types are brought               in.   The calm waters of an  institution  will               not  only be disturbed but also mixed.   These               provisions   in  Section  33A(1)  (a)   cannot               therefore apply to minority institutions." Jaganmohan Reddy.  J. speaking for himself and Alagiriswami, J.  agreed  with  the view expressed by  the  learned  Chief Justice on the question of the validity of s. 33A(1) (a)  in its application to the minority. Khanna, J. in his concurring judgment said that the argument that  a law or regulation could not be  deemed  unreasonable unless  it  was  totally destructive of  the  right  of  the minority   to   administer  educational   institutions   was fallacious  and was negatived by this Court by its  previous decisions and that a law which         ".....interferes  with  the minorities choice  of  a governing  body or management council would be violative  of the  right guaranteed by Article 30(1).  This view has  been

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consistently  taken by this Court in the cases of Rt.   Rev. S.  K.  Patro,  Mother  Provincial  and  D.  A.  V.  College (affiliated to the Guru Nanak University) (supra).  " Section 33-A which provides for a new governing body  for the  management  of  the  college  and  also  for  selection committees as well as the constitution thereof would  conse- quently   have  to  be  quashed  so  far  as  the   minority educational  institutions  are  concerned  because  of   the contravention of Article 30(1)." 814 On behalf of Chandrachud, J. and myself, I said               "The requirement that the college should  have               a  governing body which shall include  persons               other  than  those  who  are  members  of  the               governing  body of the Society of Jesus  would               take  away the management of the college  from               the governing body constituted by the  Society               of Jesus and vest it in a different body.  The               right    to   administer    the    educational               institution   established   by   a   religious               minority  is  vested  in it.   It  is  in  the               governing  body of the society of  Jesus  that               the  religious minority which established  the               college has vested the right to administer the               institution and that body alone has the  right               to administer the same.  The requirement  that               the  college  should  have  a  governing  body               including   persons  other  than   those   who               constitute  the governing body of the  Society               of Jesus has the effect of divesting that body               of   its   exclusive  right  to   manage   the               educational institution.  That it is desirable               in the opinion of the legislature to associate               the  Principal  of the  college  or-the  other               persons  referred to in s. 33A(1) (a)  in  the               management  of the college is not  a  relevant               consideration.   The question is  whether  the               provision  has  the effect  of  divesting  the               governing body as constituted by the religious               minority of its exclusive right to  administer               the   institution.    Under   the   guise   of               preventing maladministration, the right of the               governing  body of the college constituted  by               the  religious  minority  to  administer   the               institution cannot be taken away." In  State of Kerala v. Mother Provincial(1) this Court  said that "Administration means management of the affairs of  the institution, that the management must be free of control  so that   the  founders  or  their  nominees  can   mould   the institution  according  to  their way  of  thinking  and  in accordance  with  their ideas of how the  interests  of  the community in general and the institution in particular  will be  best served and that no part of this management  can  be taken   away   and  vested  in  another  body   without   an encroachment  upon the guaranteed right."Sections 48 and  49 of  the  Kerala  University  Act, 1969  which  came  up  for consideration  in  that  case respectively  dealt  with  the governing  body  for private colleges  not  under  corporate management  and  the managing council for  private  colleges under  corporate management.  Under the provisions of  these sections, the educational agency or the corporate management was  to  establish a governing body or  a  managing  council respectively.  The sections provided for the composition  of the two bodies It was held that the sections had the  effect of  abridging  the  right  to  administer  the   educational

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institution  of  the religious minority in  question  there. One  of the grounds given in the judgment for upholding  the decision  of  the High Court striking down the  sections  is that  these  bodies had a legal  personality  distinct  from governing  bodies set up by the educational. agency  or  the corporate  management and that they were not  answerable  to the  founders  in  the  matter  of  administration  of   the educational institution.  The Court- said that a law which (1)  [1971 1S.C.R. 734.                             815 interferes with the composition of the governing body or the managing   council  as  constituted  by  the  religious   or linguistic  minority  is an abridgment of the right  of  the religious   minorities   to   administer   the   educational institution  established  by  it  [see  also  W.  Proost  v. Bihar(1) and Rev.  Bishop S. K. Patro v. Bihar (2) ]. The  determination  of  the,  composition  of  the  body  to administer  the  educational institution  established  by  a religious  minority must be left to the minority as that  is the core of the right to administer.  Regulations to prevent maladministration  by  that body are  permissible.   As  the right  to determine the composition of the body  which  will administer  the educational institution is the very  essence of  the right to administer guaranteed to the  religious  or linguistic minority under Article 30(1), any interference in that area by an outside authority cannot be anything but  an abridgment  of  that  right.  The  religious  or  linguistic minority must be given the freedom to constitute the  agency through  which  it proposes to  administer  the  educational institution established by it as that is what Article  30(1) guarantees.  The right to shape its creation is one thing  : the right to regulate the manner in which it would  function after  it has come into being is another.   Regulations  are permissible  to prevent maladministration but they can  only relate to the manner of administration after the body  which is to administer has come into being. The provisions of Statute 14A are in pari materia with those of  s.33A(1)(a) of the Act which fell for  consideration  in Ahmedabad  St.   Xavier’s College case (supra)  except  that only  the principal and the senior-most member of the  staff alone are required to be included in the managing  committee of  the college in question here.  But, in  principle,  that makes no difference.  The principle, as I said, is that  the minority  community  has  the exclusive right  to  vest  the administration  of the college in a body of its own  choice, and any compulsion from an outside authority to include  any other   person  in  that  body  is  an  abridgment  of   its fundamental right to administer the educational institution. It is, no doubt, true that it is upon the principal and  the teachers  that  the whole temper and the tone of  a  college depend.   But that does not mean that the principal and  the teachers  should  be members of the governing council  of  a college.   It  was only in the context of the right  of  the religious  or linguistic minority to appoint  the  principal and  teachers of the college established by it that we  said in Amendabad St.  Xavier’s College case (supra)               "It  is upon the principal and teachers  of  a               college  that  the  tone  and  temper  of   an               educational institution depend.  On them would               depend  its  reputation,  the  maintenance               of discipline and its efficiency in  teaching.               The right to choose the principal and to  have               the  teaching conducted by teachers  appointed               by the management after an overall  assessment               of their outlook and philosophy is perhaps the

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             most important               (1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 73 at 77-78.               (2) [1969] 1 S.C.C. 863.               816               facet   of   the  right   to   administer   an               educational institution.  We cart perceive  no               reason why a representative of the  University               nominated by the Vice Chancellor should be  on               the  Selection  Committee for  recruiting  the               Principal or for the insistence of head of the               department  besides the representative of  the               University  being on the  Selection  Committee               for  recruiting  the members of  the  teaching               staff.  So_long as the persons chosen have the               qualifications  prescribed by the  University,               the  choice  must be left to  the  management.               That  is part of the fundamental right of  the               minorities   to  administer  the   educational               institution established by them." While  affirming the correctness of the observation  in  the context  in  which  it was made, I  think  it  necessary  to repudiate its relevance and application here. I would, therefore, allow the appeal without any order as to costs. KRISHNA  IYER, J.--Our essay in this appeal is to  interpret and  apply  Art. 30 of the Constitution,  illumined  by  the ratio  of  the  recent leading case  on  the  constitutional rights  of  minorities  vis-a-vis  educational  institutions where  a Bench of 11 Judges handed down six opinions on  the thorny issue.  As we proceed to Judgment, we are reminded of two  famous American observations.  Chief Justice  Marshall, while deciding the celebrated McColloch v. Maryland  Case(1) made the pregnant remark : ’We must never forget that it  is the constitution we are expounding’.  Governor Hughes,  soon to  ascend  the U.S. Supreme Court, said : ’We are  under  a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the Judges say it is.’ Reverentially guided and bound by great precedents  but mindful of the luminous texts and goals of the  Constitution itself, we have to attempt the task. The  facts of the present case are virtually  admitted,  the precedent  that binds us is of fresh vintage but  the  legal test  when applied to this concrete case-situation is  fine, if  not  baffling.  of course, the only  area  for  judicial exploration is decoct the rule from the ruling and fit it to the admitted facts.  The appellant is a registered society formed by the members of  the Muslim community at Shahjehanpur.  Indubitably,  the community   ranks  as  minority  in  the  country  and   the educational institution run by it has been found to be  what may  loosely be called a ’minority institution,  within  the constitutional  compass of Art. 30.  The earlier history  of the institution need not detain us and a rapid glance at its evolution  is enough.  The A. V. Middle School was the  off- spring  of  the effort of the Muslim  minority  resident  in Shahjehanpur  District.  It later became a High  School  and afterwards  attained the status of an Intermediate  College. Eventually it blossomed into a degree college affiliated to (1)  4 Wheaton 316, 407. 817 the  University of Agra.  In 1948, on the  assassination  of the  Father of the Nation, this college was  commemoratively renamed  as  Gandhi Faiz-e-am College.  In August  1964,  an application was made on behalf of the college management  to the  University for permission to start teaching in  courses of  study  including Sociology, Sanskrit,  Arabic,  military

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studies,  drawing and painting.  The University  entertained the  thought  that a new organisational discipline  must  be brought into the institution and insisted, as a condition of recognition  of  these,  additional subjects  as  course  of study,  on certain mutations in the administrative  body  of the  college.   The  bone of contention before  us,  as  was before  the  High Court, is that this  prescription  by  the University\,, in tune with Statute 14-A framed by it, is  an invasion of the fundamental right guaranteed to the minority community  under Art. 30 of the Constitution of India.   The High Court has negatived the plea of the management and  the appeal issues from that decision. ,"’hat  is  the  core of the  restriction  clamped  down  by Statute 14-A What is the conscience and tongue of Art. 30  ? If the former is incongruous with the latter, it withers  as void; otherwise, it prevails and binds.  That is the crux of the controversy. The  minority college is administered by a  three-tier  body organised  intramurally  by the Society.   No  outsider  has entered  the  precincts of management which  has  all  along remained  with the members only.  The General  Council  with plenary  powers, the Governing body more  circumscribed  yet effective  as policy-maker and the Managing  Committee,  the day-to-day  administrative sub-agency-these are  the  organs vested  with controlling power, under the relevant rules  of the  Society.   The essential point is that the  Society  is that the Society is autonomous and its organs administer the institution, The  University  directive, backed by Statute  14-A,  it  is contended, forces two persons on the area of administration. This  is argued to be a serious erosion of the  great  right guaranteed  to cultural and religious  minorities.   Statute 14-A, may at the outset, be reproduced               "14-A.   Each college, already  affiliated  or               when  affiliated,  which  is  not   maintained               exclusively  by Government must be tinder  the               Management of a regular constituted  Governing               body (which term includes Managing  Committee)               on  which  the staff of the college  shall  be               represented  by the Principal of  the  college               and   at  least  one  representative  of   the               teachers  of  the college to be  appointed  by               rotation  in order of seniority determined  by               length  of service in the college,  who  shall               hold office for one academic year." Emboldened  by  this provision, the Registrar  of  the  Agra University has made the impugned demand which runs thus 818                            Agra University From Sri R. N. Pathak, Asst.  Registrar (Affiliation), Agra University, Agra. To The  Principal, G.   F. College, Shahjahanpur. No. Aff/7965           Dated Agra, 24 Apr. 1965 Sir, With  reference to your application dated December  1,  1964 recognition  in certain subjects upto the B. A. standard,  I am  to inform you that the Executive Council at its  meeting held  on April 10, 1965 after considering the report of  the Inspectors  on  the  inspection  of  your  college  and  the recommendations  of, the relevant committee thereon  decided

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that recognition applied for upto the B. A. Standard be  not granted  to  the  college unless provision is  made  in  the constitution  for  representation of the Principal  and  one Head of Department to be chosen in order of seniority  every year  on  the Managing Committee (A the  college  and  other conditions  have been fulfilled.  I am therefore to  request you  to  take  immediate steps to  implement  the  aforesaid decision  of the Council and let me know that you have  done so.   On  receipt of your reply the matter will  be  further considered. Yours faithfully, Sd/- R. N. Pathak Asst.  Registrar (Affl)" Maybe, we may as well mention the stand taken by the Manage- ment   of  the  College  in  the  correspondence  with   the Registrar.  In one reply it was represented "From The President,- Managing Committee, G.F. College, Shabjahanpur. To The Deputy Registrar (AM), Agra University. No. 660                                           Dated,                                               Shahjahanpur,                                              Nov. 22, 1965 819 Sir. With reference to your letter no.  Affl /1336, dated  August 31,  1965 and subsequent reminder dated October 20, 1965,  1 have  the  honour to say that we are very  grateful  to  the University for its acceptance of the minority status of  our college. While  mentioning that the University has no legal power  to interfere in our right to administer the institution, we are willing, to make the inclusion of the Principal and one Head of  Department by rotation obligatory in the Governing  Body as  proposed  in the written legal opinion of  our  counsel, (relevant  extract of which has been forwarded to  us  along with  your  letter under reference), simply for  the  reason that  we  are  very anxious to keep up  smooth  and  cordial relations with the University. The  learned  Vice-Chancellor is,  therefore,  requested  to grant  us affiliation in all the new subjects in respect  of which our applications are pending at a very early date,  to en-able  us  to make the necessary preparations,  which  are likely  to  take sufficient time, to start  the  classes  in those subjects from the beginning of the next session. We undertake to amend our constitution suitably to give  the proposal  a  practical shape within three months  after  the receipt of your kind reply. An early disposal of this letter is solicited. Yours faithfully, Sd/-. . President, Managing Committee, G. F. College, Shahjahanpur." This   concession  was  retracted  allegedly   because   the University  took no steps accepting it and a  writ  petition was  filed  challenging the vires of the  Statute  14-A  and legality of the directive. If  reliance  had  been placed by  the  University  on  this concession of the Management as amounting to a waiver of the fundamental  right,  thereby  making  short  shrift  of  the dispute,  it would have been difficult for us to accede,  to

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the  plea.   Indeed,  wisely  no  plea  of  waiver  of   the Fundamental right has been put forward and perhaps none  can be, in this branch of constitutional jurisprudence.  We  are therefore   concerned  with  discerning  the  parameter   of ’minority’ right in Art. 30. A stream of Supreme Court rulings commencing with the Kerala Education Bill Case (1) and climaxed by St. Xavier’s College Case(2)  has settled the law for the present, and  the  last refers to the procedential past.  We will confine  ourselves largely to the currently final pronouncement; but where  did the  Court draw the delicate line  between  unconstitutional conditions  and  constitutional-regulations  ?   A   certain thread of unanimity exists among the many opinions and  that common  ground-not individual deviations and different  must be  the  basis of our judgment.  Right at the  beginning  we must observe. (1) [1959] S.C.R. 995. (2) A.I.R. [1974] S.C. 1389. 8 20 that the whole edifice of case law on Art. 30 has been  bed- rocked on the Kerala Education Bill Case (supra), ’The greatest common measure of agreement among the  various opinions  in St. Xavier’s College case (supra) will have  to be ascertained.  Ray, C.J., following Das C.J. (in the first Kerala Case), has taken middle view, if one may say so  with great  respect.  ’Hands-off Administration altogether’ is  a tall call to day; but ’hand-cuff managements into uniformity is  also  not  the correct rule.   A  benignantly  regulated liberty which neither abridges nor exaggerates autonomy  but promotes better performance is the right construction of the constitutional  provision.   Such an  approach  enables  the fundamental right meaningfully to fulfill its tryst with the minorities’  destiny  in a pluralist polity.   That  is  the authentic  voice  of Indian democracy.  To regulate,  be  it noted,  is  not  to restrict. but  to  facilitate  effective exercise  of the very right.  The constitutional  estate  of the  minorities  should  not be,  encroached  upon,  neither allowed   to   be  neglected  nor   maladministered.    This quintessence  of the decision may now be aptly home  out  by pertinent excerpts from the various judgments.               "The  right  to administer is to  be  tempered               with regulatory measures to facilitate  smooth               administration.  The best administration  will               reveal  no  trace or colour  of  minority.   A               minority institution should shine in exemplary               clectricism  in  the  administration  of   the               institution"  (at P. 1398) "Regulations  which               will  serve  the interests  of  the  students,               regulations  which will serve the interest  of               the  teachers are of paramount  importance  in               good   administration.   Regulations  in   the               interest of efficiency of teachers, discipline               and  fairness in administration are  necessary               for   preserving  harmony   among   affiliated               institutions."  (at  p.  1398)  "Autonomy   in               administration   means  right  to   administer               effectively  and  to manage  and  conduct  the               affairs   of   the   institutions......    The               University  will  always have a right  to  see               that there is no maladministration.  If  there               is  mat-administration,  the  university  will               take  steps  to ewe the same.   There  may  be               control. and check on administration in  order                             to find on,, whether the minority inst itutions

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             are  engaged  in  activities  which  are   not               conducive  to the interest of the minority  or               to  the requirements of the teachers  and  the               students." (at p. 1399). The  ’inner voice’ of the whole pronouncement should not  be muffled while reading the particular result in the case  and that it happily expressed thus               "The  right  conferred on  the  religious  and               linguistic     minorities    to     administer               educational  institutions of their  choice  is               not an absolute right.  This right is not free               from regulation.  Just as regulatory  measures               are necessary for maintaining the  educational               character and contest of minority institutions               similarly  regulatory measures  are  necessary               for                821               ensuring   orderly,   efficient   and    sound               administration.   Das,  C.J.,  in  the  Kerala               Education  Bill Case (supra) summed up in  one               sentence  the  true meaning of  the  right  to               administer   by  saying  that  the  right   to               administer is not the right to maladminister."               (at  p.  1396) Mr.  Justice  Jaganmohan  Reddy               summed up the law at the threshold               "The  right  of  a  linguistic  or   religious               minority     to    administer     education-at               institutions  of their choice, though  couched               in absolute, terms had been held by this Court               to be subject to regulatory measures which the               State   might   impose  for   furthering   the               excellence of the standards of education." (at               p. 1401)               Mr. Justice Khanna stressed what is  sometimes               ill-remembered               "The idea of giving some special rights to the               minorities  is  not  to  have  a  kind  of   a               privileged   or   pampered  section   of   the               population but to give the minorities a  sense               of security and a feeling of confidence."  (at               p. 1415).’ The   learned   Judge-,  after  visualising   the   abundant catholicity of the guarantee in favour of minorities in  our multi-cultural  country, insisted that regulations  for  the welfare of the institution were not constitutional anathema:               "It  is,  in my opinion, permissible  to  make               regulations  for ensuring the regular  payment               of  salaries before a particular date  of  the               month.  Regulations may well provide that  the               funds  of the institution should be spent  for               the   purposes   of  education  or   for   the               betterment  of  the institution  and  not  for               extraneous purposes." (at p. 1422) And,  after  itemising,  illustratively  other   permissible constraints, observed :               "A  regulation  which is designed  to  prevent               maladministration     of    an     educational               institution  cannot be said to  offend  clause               (1) of Article 30.  At the same time it has to               be  ensured  that under the  power  of  making               regulations  nothing is done as would  detract               from  the  character of the institution  as  a               minority  educational  institution  or   which               would   impinge   upon  the  rights   of   the               minorities   to   establish   and   administer

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             educational institutions of their choice." (at               p. 1422)               "As observed by this Court in the case of Rev.               Sidhrajbhai   Sabhai   (1963   3   SCR   837),               regulations  which  may  lawfully  be  imposed               either by legislative or executive action as a               condition of receiving grant or of recognition               must  be  directed to making  the  institution               while  retaining  its  character  as  minority               institution   effective  as   an   educational               institution.   Such regulation must satisfy  a               dual test-the test of reasonableness, and  the               test that it is regulative of the               8 22               educational  character of the institution  and               is  conducive  to making  the  institution  an               effective   vehicle  of  education   for   the               minority community or other persons who resort               to it." (at p. 1422)               In the context of affiliation of colleges, the               learned Judge concreteness the law thus :               "The  said  authority  can  always   prescribe               regulations  and  insist that they  should  be               complied   with   before   it   would    grant               affiliation  or recognition to an  educational               institution.   To  deny the  power  of  making               regulations  to the authority concerned  would               result  in robbing the concept of  affiliation               or  recognition of its real essence."  (at  p.               1423)               "It   would  be  wrong  to  assume   that   an               unrestricted right as in Article 30 postulates               absence  of regulations.  Regulations  can  be               prescribed in spite of the unrestricted nature               of the right." (at p. 1423) In  short, the view which appealed to Khanna J., shows  that the  law,  to  be  constitutional,  should  not  impair  the minorities’  right but may, be promotional in the  sense  of making the purpose of the institution more productive. One  of us, sitting on that Bench (Mr.  Justice Mathew)  has illumined  the amplitude of the right under Art. 30 but  has not  dissented  from the validity of putting on  that  right regulatory  harness.  In a pithy statement, this  point  has been made by the learned Judge: ’No right, however absolute, can  be free from regulation’ (at p. 1441).   The  spiritual seed  of this thought is found in the Holmesian  observation extracted by him :               "All   rights  tend  to   declare   themselves               absolute to their logical extreme.  Yet all in               fact  are  limited  by  the  neighbourhood  of               principles  of  policy which  are  other  than               those   on  which  the  particular  right   is               founded,  and  which become strong  enough  to               hold  their  own  when  a  certain  point   is               reached." (at p. 1441)               With specific reference to ’affiliation’ these               guidelines fell from the learned Judge :               "Recognition   or   affiliation   creates   an               interest in the university to ensure that  the               educational institution is maintained for  the               purpose intended and any regulation which will               subserve  or  advance  that  purpose  will  be               reasonable  and  no  educational   institution               established and administered by a religious or               linguistic  minority can claim recognition  or

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             affiliation   without  submitting   to   those               regulations.  That is the price of recognition               or  affiliation.. . . In other  words,  recog-               nition or affiliation is a facility which  the               university    grants   to    an    educational               institution." (at p. 1442) Justices Beg and Dwivedi have stretched the regulatory power further  than the majority, holding that it is  an  illusion for a minority 8 23 to claim absolute immunity.  The thrust of the case is  that real regulations are desirable, necessary and constitutional but,  when they operate on the ’administration’ part of  the right,  must  be  confined to  chiselling  into  shape,  not cutting down out of shape, the individual personality of the minority. The  discussion throws us back to a closer study of  Statute 14-A  to see if it cuts into the flesh of  the  Managements’ right  or  merely tones up its health and habits.   The  two requirements  the University asks for are that the  Managing Body  (whatever its name) must take in (a) the Principal  of the   College;  (b)  its  senior-most  teacher.    Is   this desideratum  dismissible  as  biting into  the  autonomy  of management  or  tenable as ensuring the  excellence  of  the institution without injuring the essence of the right ? On a careful  reflection  and  conscious  of  the  constitutional dilemma,  we are inclined to the view that this case  Ms  on the  valid  side  of the delicate  line.   Regulation  which restricts is bad; but regulation which facilitates is  good. Where  does this fine distinction lie ? No rigid formula  is possible but a flexible test is feasible.  Where the  object and  effect  is  to  improve the  tone  and  temper  of  the administration  without  forcing on it a  stranger,  however superb  his  virtues  be,  where the  directive  is  not  to restructure the governing body but to better its performance by  a  marginal  catalytic  induction,  where  no   external authority’s  fiat  or approval or outside  nominee  is  made compulsory to validate the Management Board but inclusion of an  internal  key functionary appointed  by  the  autonomous Management alone is asked for, the provision is salutary and saved,  being not a diktat eroding the freedom of the  free- dom. A  dichotomy is sometimes drawn in this branch of  juridical discussion.  More plainly,. the difference drawn is  between creating a Managing body  by  the  minority  community   and regulation  of  the  manner of its  functioning  to  obviate maladministration. The former is ordinarily beyond the  pale of legislative prescription while the latter is  permissible as a preservative. Broadly, this  is  sound, but as a  rigid logical  formula it breaks down. For, some  regulations  may impinge    marginally   upon   the   composition   of    the administrative  organ  though manifestly meant to  save  the institution  from mismanagement. Just   one or two examples. If the law says that a   person that a person sentenced  for a  prescribed period of imprisonment for breach of trust  or an  undischarged insolvent would be disqualified to  be  the treasurer or one who has been removed from public office for moral  delinquency  or has been punished for  outraging  the religious  feelings  of  the very  minority  under  s.295-A, I.P.C. should not hold office on the govern my body, such  a regulation  affects the structure of the governing body  but is     indubitably    a    protection     against     likely maladministration.   Likewise, supposing the management  has to  award  scholarships  to students  of  merit,  decide  on courses of study to be undertaken, regulate teacher-students

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committee  and discipline, who but the Principal  chosen  by the minority itself will be better on the Committee to guide it in these vital affairs.  These fine but real lines cannot be obfuscated by excessive emphasis on the character of  the organ  as  against  its method of working.   Men  matter  in extreme situations. 824 This perspective helps us discern the points made by  either side. The  pith  of Shri Frank Anthony’s submission  is  that  the command of the University to include even the Principal, the head  appointed  by that very Management to  be  in  plenary charge  of  the  education imparted in the  college,  is  an invasion  of the minority right.  Freedom from any  form  of external pressure, however well-meant and beneficent, is the soul  of the right to administer, if one may paraphrase  his contention.  This is simply countered by the words of Khanna J :               "It   would  be  wrong  to  assume   that   an               unrestricted right as in Article 30 postulates               absence  of regulations.  Regulations  can  be               prescribed in spirt of the unrestricted nature               of the right." (at p. 1423) All  the  other learned Judges who are party to  St.  Xavier (supra)  and  all  the earlier rulings  have  negatived  the untouchable absoluteness urged by the managements.   Equally fallacious  is  the simplistic submission which  appears  to have  appealed to the High Court that Art. 30  is  disturbed only  when the right is destroyed, not when it  is  damaged. St.  Xavier  (supra) has dispelled doubts in this  behalf  : Abridgement  of the constitutional right is as obnoxious  as annihilation.  To cripple is to kill. Steering clear of these unconstitutional shoals let us again feel our way through the controversy.  First, the principal. In the eloquent words of one of the learned Judges  (Mathew, J.) in St. Xavier’s case (supra) :               "It  is upon the principal and teachers  of  a               college  that  the  tone  and  temper  of   an               educational institution depend.  On them would               depend  its  reputation,  the  maintenance  of               discipline  and  its efficiency  in  teaching.               The right to choose the principal and to  have               the  teaching conducted by teachers  appointed               by the management after an overall  assessment               of their outlook and philosophy is perhaps the               most   important   facet  of  the   right   to               administer an educational institution." (emphasis ours) This  strategic appointee must be chosen by  the  management with   sedulos   care   and  his  choice   should   not   be ’externalised’  by  regulations.  All right.   But  for  the excellent  reason that the principal is the  vital,  vibrant and  luscent presence within the educational campus, no  ad- ministration  can bring out its best in the service  of  the institution  sans  the principal.  To alienate  him  is-  to self-inflict  wounds; to associate him is to  integrate  the academic  head into the administrative body for the  obvious betterment of managerial insight and proficiency.  He is  no stranger  to the college but the commander appointed by  the management   itself.   A  regulation  which   requires   his inclusion  in  the  Governing Council  imposes  no  external element nor exposes the college to the espionage of one with dual  loyalties.  His membership on the Board is a  blessing in many ways and not a curse in any conceivable  825

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way.  After all the functions of the Managing Committee,  as set down in bye     law 15, are : "15.  The Managing Committee shall- (a) Dispose of applications for scholarships and  concession etc., received by the Secretary or any other person. (b) Check and pass account kept by the treasurer,  Secretary or Principal. (c)  Have  powers to appoint, suspend, remove  or  otherwise punish  or dismiss any servant of the school or  college  or give them promotion or make reductions in their salaries and grant  them  leave in accordance with  the  Agra  University rules as the case may be. Provided  that  in  case of dismissal  or  removal  or  fine exceeding one month’s pay or suspension for a period exceed- ing  one  month, an appeal shall lie to the  Governing  Body whose  decision shall be final.  The period for  filing  the appeal  shall  be  15 days from the  receipt  of  the  order against which the appeal is to be preferred. (d)See that the property of the institution, whether movable or immovable, is properly managed and kept. (e)  Generally supervise the work of all the Office bearers. (f)  To pass the annual budget, annual report and dispose of the audit note. (g)  To sanction expenditure upto Rs. 25,000/- in the course of one year, irrespective of the budget provisions. (h)  To   acquire   by  purchase,  mortgage   or   otherwise immovable  or  movable property for the institution  and  to sell or otherwise dispose of movable property." An  activist  principal  is an asset  in  discharging  these duties  which,  are inextricably  interlaced  with  academic functions.   The  principal  is  an  invaluable  insider-the Management’s  own choice-not an outsider answerable  to  the Vice-Chancellor.   He brings into the work of  the  Managing Committee   that  intimate  acquaintance  with   educational operations and that necessary expression of  student-teacher aspirations  and complaints which are so essential  for  the minority  institution  to achieve a happy  marriage  between individuality   and  excellence.   And  the  role   of   the senior-most   teacher,   less  striking   maybe   and   more unobtrusive,  is  a  useful input  into  managerial  skills, representing  as  he  does the teachers  and  being  only  a seasoned minion chosen by the management itself.  After all, two  creatures  of  the  Society  on  a  16member   Managing Committee  can bring light, not tilt scales.  Moreover,  the Managing  Committee  itself is subject to  the  hierarchical control of the Governing Body, and the General Council. We  see  no  force in the objection  to  the  two  innocuous insiders being seated on the Managing Committee. 826 The  various  decisions  of  this  Court  where  legislative fetters have been struck down are cases in contrast.  There, the  rules maim; here they improve.  There the input  upsets the  balance; here the addition is minimal  and  strengthens from within.  There, are external mandates to approve;  here an  internal principal is proposed to be dovetailed to  make administration more proficient without injury to independent action.   In the Kerala University Act Case(1) the  vice  of ss. 48 and summarised by Ray C.J., in St. Xavier (supra) was stated thus               "Those  sections were found by this  Court  to               have  effect of displacing the  administration               of  the  college and giving it to  a  distinct               corporate body which was in no way  answerable               to  the institution.  The  minority  community               was found to lose the right to administer  the

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             institution  it founded.  The  governing  body               contemplated  in  those sections  was  to  ad-               minister  the colleges in accordance with  the               provisions  of the Act, statutes,  ordinances,               regulations,   bye-laws   and   orders    made               thereunder.   The powers and functions of  the               governing body, the removal of the members and               the procedure to be followed by it were all to               be   prescribed   by  the   statutes.    These               provisions amounted to vesting the  management               and  administration of the institution in  the               hands   of  bodies  with  mandates  from   the               University." (at p. 1397) Likewise in Rev.  Fr.  W. Proost(3) the mischief was  summed up in the St. Xavier Case by Ray C.J.., in these words :               "This  Court in Rev.  Fr.  W.  Proost  Case(2)               held that s.48-A of the Bihar Universities Act               which  came  into force from 1st  March  1962,               completely  took  away  the  autonomy  of  the               governing   body  of  St.   Xavier’s   College               established by the Jesuits of Ranchi.  Section               48-A of the said Act provided inter alia  that               appointments,      dismissals,       removals,               termination  of service by the governing  body               of  the  College  were  to  be  made  on   the               recommendation   of  the  University   Service               Commission and subject to the approval of  the               University.   There were other  provisions  in               that section, viz., that the Commission  would               recommend  to  the  governing  body  names  of               persons in order of preference and in no  case               could the governing body appoint a person  who               was not recommended by the University  Service               Commission." (at p. 1397) Again, the same judgment pinpoints in these brief words, the unconstitutional  sting  in the Bihar Case  viz.   Rt.   Rev Bishop Patro(3) :               "In Rt.  Rev.  Bishop S. K. Patro v. State  of               Bihar(3)  the  State of  Bihar  requested  the               Church Missionary Society School, Bhagalpur to               constitute a managing committee of the               (1)   State  of Kerala v. Very, Rev,.   Mother               Provincial; [1971] 1 S.C.R. 734.               (2) [19691 2 S.C. R. 73.               (3) [19701 1 S.C.R. 172.               827               school  in  accordance with an  order  of  the               State.    This  Court  held  that  the   State               authorities  could not require the  school  to               constitute a managing committee in  accordance               with their order." (at p. 1397) The  Gujarat  Case  of  St. Xavier (supra)  is  a  study  in contrast,  as stated earlier.  Sections 40 and 41 and s.  38 shackled the management, trenching seriously upon the  right to  administer.   The law, as now  expounded,  regards  this excess as unconstitutional. In  all  these cases administrative autonomy  is  imperilled transgressing   purely  regulatory  limits.   In  our   case autonomy  is  virtually left intact  and  refurbishing,  not restructuring, is prescribed.  The core of the right is  not gouged  out at all and the regulation is at once  reasonable and  calculated to promote excellence of the  institution--a text book instance of constitutional conditions. To   project   in  bold  relief  the  intrusion   into   the administration  of  the provisions in the  2nd  Kerala  Case

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(supra),  the D.A.V. College Case(1) and St.  Xavier’s  Case (supra)  as against the innocuous prescriptions  bearing  on management  in  the  present  case,  we  may  make  a  vivid comparison of the clauses.  A chart may speak with  eloquent clarity (1) 119711 Sup.  S.C.R. 688. 828 ----------------------------------------------------------- Kerala University Act       Guru Nanak University                             Statutes (D.A.V. College) ----------------------------------------------------------         (1)                       (2)  --------------------------------------------------------- S.48-Governing body for  Statue 2(1) (a) private college not under corporate management-    A college applying for adm- (1) The educational agency    ission to the privileges of of a private college,other    the University shall send a than a private college un-    letter of application to der a corporate management    the Register and shall shall constitute in accor-    satisfy the Senate : dance with the provisions of the statutes a governing body consisting of following members namely :    (a) That the College shall (a) the principal of the have a regularly constitu- private college;    ted governing body consist- (b the manager of the    ing of not more than 20 per Private college;    sons approved by the senate (c) a person nominated by     and including among others, the university on accorda- 2 representatives of the nce with the provisions  University and the Princi- in that behalf contained ple of the college ex-off- in the states; icio. (d) a person nominated by the Government; (e)  a Person elected in accordance with such procedure as may be prescribed by the Statutes from among themselves by the permanent teachers of the private college; and (f)  not more than six persons nominated by the educational agency. (2)  The governing body shall be a body corporate having perpetual succession and a common seal. (3)  The manager of the private college shall be the Chairman of the governing body. (4)  A member of the governing body shall hold office for a period of four years from the date of its constitution. (5)  It shall be the duty of the governing body to administer the private college in accordance with the provisions of this Act and the Statutes, Ordinances Regulations rules, Bye-laws and Orders made thereunder,  829 ---------------------------------------------------------- Gujarat University Act        Statue 14-A (St.  Xavier’s College  case) (impugned in the instant case) ----------------------------------------------------------

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        3          4 ---------------------------------------------------------- 33-A.(1) Every college (other 14.A,Each college,already than a Government college or  affiliated or when affiliat- college maintained by the     ed which is not maintained Government) affiliated before exclusively by Government the commencement of the Guja- must be under the Management rat University (Amendment)    of a regulat constituted Gov- Act, 1972 (hereinafter in this erning body (which term incl- section referred to as such   udes Managing Committee) on commencement’)-     which the staff of the college      shall be represented by the (a)shall  be under the          priciple of the college  and at management  of a governing     least one  representative  of the body which shall include      teachers of the college to be amongst its members the Pri-  appointed by rotation in order ncipal of the college, a of  of seniority determined by len- seniority representative of  th of service in the college the University nominated by  who shall hold office for one the Vice-Chancellor and three academic year. representatives of the tea- chers of the College and at least one representative each of the members of the non-teaching staff and the students of the college, to be elected respectively from amongst such teachers members of the non-teaching staff and students; and (b)  that for recruitment of the Principal and members of the teaching staff of a college there is a selection committee of the college which shall it)clude-(1) in the case of recruitment of the Principal, a representative of the University nominated by the Vice- Chancellor, and (2)in the case of recruitment of it member of the teaching staff of the college, a representative of the University nominated by the Vice-Chancellor and the Head of the Department, if any, concerned with the subject to be taught by such member. (2)  Every college referred to in sub- section   (1) shall,--  (a) within a period of six months after such commencement, constitute or reconstitute , its governing body in conformity with subsection(1) , and (b) as and when occasion   first arises after such com- mencement for     recruitment of the Principal and teachers of the college, constitute or reconstitute its selection committee so as to be in conformity with sub-section (1). (3)The provisions of subsection (1) shall be deemed to be a condition of affiliation of every college to in sub-section (1). 830 -----------------------------------------------------------             (1)                        (2) -----------------------------------------------------------

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(6)  The powers and functions of the governing body, the removal of members thereof and the procedure to be followed by it, including the delegation of its powers, shall be prescribed by the Statutes, (7)  Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (6), decisions of the governing body shall be taken at meetings on the basis of simple majority of the members present and voting. S.49 Managing council for private colleges under corporate management- (a)  one principal by rotation in such manner as may be prescribed by the Statutes; (b)  the manager of the private college; (c)  a person nominated by the University in accordance with the provisons in that behalf contained in the statute,, (d)  a person nominated by the Government; (e)  two persons elected in accordance with such procedure as may be prescribed by the Statutes from among themselves by the permanent teachers of all the private colleges; and (f)  not more than fifteen persons nominated by the educational agency. (2)  The managing council shall be a body corporate having perpetual succession and a common seal. (3)  The manager of the private colleges shall be the chairman  of the managing council. (4)  A member of the managing council shall hold office for a period of four years from the date of the Constitution. (5)  it shall be the duty of the managing Council to administer all the private colleges under the corporate management in accordance with the provisions of this Act and the Statutes, Ordinances, Regulations, Bye-laws and orders made thereunder. 831 -----------------------------------------------------------           1                          2 ----------------------------------------------------------- (6)  The powers and functions of the managing council, the removal of members thereof and the Procedure to be followed by it, including the delegation of its Powers, shall be prescribed by the Statutes. (7)  Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (6), decisions of the managing council shall be taken at meetings on the basis of simple majority of the members present and voting, S.63-Power to regulate the management

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of private colleges :-  (4) If the governing body or managing council, as the case may be, disapproves any decision taken by the University in connection with the management of the private college the matter shall be referred by the governing body or managing council, as the case may be, to the Government, within one month of the date of receipt of the report under subsection (3) who shall there upon pass such order there on as they think fit and communicate the same to the governing body or managing council and also to the University. (6) The manager appointed under sub-section (1) of section 50 shall be bound to give effect to the decisions of the University and if at any time, it appears to the University that the manager is not carrying out its decisions, it may, for reasons to be recorded in writing and after giving the manager an opportunity of being heard, by order remove him from office and appoint another person to be the manager after consulting the educational agency. ----------------------------------------------------------- In  the chart aforesaid, we have confined our  attention  to the  ’management’  facet of the case but  may  mention  that while  in  the earlier cases even the power to  appoint  the principal  and staff was controlled, in the instant case  it is a refreshing contrast. First  the  D.A.V.  College.  He who  runs  and  reads  will discover  that Statute 2(1) (a) insists upon (a) a limit  to the strength of the governing body; (b) the approval of  the Senate  of  the  University  for  the  constitution  of  the governing body; and (c) the inclusion of two representatives of  the University as also the Principal of the college  ex- officio.   To  legislate  for the  governing  body  a  rigid restriction on its members is to deprive the minority of its free play in organising its management.  To compel  approval by   the   Senate-an  outside   instrumentality-before   the governing body can have legal status, is a violent violation of Art. 30.  To foist two representatives of the 832 University--rank  outsiders-is again an infringement of  the autonomy of the minority institution.  The Court, in D.A. V. College  case  (sup)  upheld the complaint  of  the  college authorities thus               "In   our   view   there   is   no    possible               justification for the provisions contained  in               Clauses  2(1)(a)  and 17 or Chap.   V  of  the               statutes  which decidedly interfere  with  the               rights   of  management  of  the   Petitioners               Colleges.   These provisions cannot  therefore               be made as conditions of affiliation, the non-               compliance    of    which    would     involve               disaffiliation and consequently they will have               to be struck down as offending Article 30(1)." It  is impossible to predicate from the  above  observations

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that tills Court regarded as obnoxious the inclusion of  the Principal of the very college.  On the other hand, the  more serious  encroachment  which  caved  into  the   independent management  of  the  College consists  in  the  first  three provisions which are deprivation in character.  The  present case  is a graphic contrast.  No ceiling on  membership;  no unbidden  guests, nominees of the University fobbed off-  on the  Managing Committee.  The solitary  but  inconsequential similarity  of circumstance that there is reference  to  the Principal, there and here, cannot approximate the two  cases from  the  constitutional angle at all, what  with  complete hold on staff appointment in the former and non,- in the latter. The  Kerala Case (supra), as the table above shows,  insists oil   the  appointment  of  the  Principal   himself   being controlled,  displaces the minority’s Managing Committee  by imposing an admixed governing agency of statutory concoction wresting authority from the minority.A different entity with legislatively limited functions robs the religious group  of its  right  of  administration.  The  distance  between  the Kerala  University  Act  provisions and those  of  the  Agra University Act is considerable and the constitutional import too obvious to]. argument. The  manacle regulations of the Gujarat University  Act  are also tell-tale.  Its metamorphic impact is best summed up in the  terse words of Ray, C.J. The minority character of  the college  is  lost.  Ministry institutions  became  part  and parcel of the University.  Why Because:               The  provisions contained in  section  33-A(1)               (a) of the Act state that every college  shall               be  under the management of a  governing  body               which  shall  include amongst its  members,  a               representative of the University nominated  by               the  Vice-Chancellor  and  representatives  of               teachers,  non-teaching staff and students  of               the college               833               "In (1971) 1 SCR 734 (State of Kerala v.  Very               Rev.  Mother Provincial) this Court said  that               if  the administration goes to a body  in  the               selection  of whom the founders have  no  say,               the  administration would be displaced.   This               Court  also  said  that  situations  might  be               conceived    when    they   might    have    a               preponderating voice.  That would also  affect               the    autonomy   in   administration.     The               provisions contained in section 33-A(1) (a) of               the  Act  have the effect  of  displacing  the               management  and entrusting it to  a  different               agency.   The  autonomy in  administration  is               lost.    New   elements  in   the   shape   of               representatives of different types are brought               in. The calm waters of an institution will not               only  be  disturbed  but  also  mixed.   These               provisions  in  Section  33-A(1)  (a)   cannot               therefore  apply  to  minority  institutions."               (at p. 1399) The  features  of  the Agra  University  Act  vis-a-vis  the minority institutions are conspicuously different and  leave almost unaffected the total integrity of the  administration by the religious group, save in the minimal inclusion of two internal  entities namely the principal of their own  choice and  the  senior-most lecturer  independently  appointed  by them. We  are  satisfied that the  regulatory  clauses  challenged

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before us improve the administration and do not inhibit  its autonomy and are therefore good and valid. We   therefore  hold  that  the  statute  impugned  is   not vulnerable nor void.  The appeal has to be and is dismissed, but without costs in the circumstances of this case.                            ORDER In  accordance with the opinion of the majority, the  appeal is dismissed without any order as to costs. V.P.S.                  Appeal dismissed. 834