CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 213 OF 2013
Appellants: State of Punjab & Ors.
Respondents: Jagjit Singh & Ors.
Bench: Hon'ble Justice Jagdish Singh Khehar
Hon'ble Justice S.A. Bobde)
Order Date: 26 October 2016
Status : Reportable
A platform to share the periodic updates on developments in disability law, policy formulation and related fields across the world with special focus on India. It analysis successes and failures in the struggle of restoring disability rights through Court Intervention and general discourse on Human Rights of People with Disabilities.
Court: Supreme Court of India
Bench: Hon'ble the Chief Justice T.S. Thakur, Hon'ble Mr. Justice A.M. Khanwilkar, Hon'ble Dr. Justice DY Chandrachud
Case No.: Civil Appeal No. 3910 of 2009 (Against the final order and judgment of the Karnataka High Court in PIL Writ Petition No. 16396 of 2005 dt. 29.09.2007)
Case Title: Selection Authority and Deputy Director Vs. Akhila Karnataka S.K. Andha Sangha
Date of Judgement: 01 Sep 2016
Supreme Court of India upheld the ruling of the Karnataka High Court in PIL Writ petition No. 16396 of 2005, directing the Karnataka State Government to ensure reservation for visually impaired persons in the role of primary school teachers and to execute this through a dedicated recruitment drive. This decision marked the culmination of a legal battle that saw the state government arguing that individuals with blindness or low vision were unsuitable for the role of primary school teachers and should not be entitled to reservation in these positions.
The repercussions of this Supreme Court ruling are significant, as it will necessitate the recruitment of hundreds of blind and low vision individuals to address the shortfall in reserved vacancies that had persisted since 2005.
This legal victory was achieved through the efforts of a non-governmental organization (NGO) representing blind individuals, known as the "Akhila Karnataka Andha S.K. Sangha", with the able representation of Advocate Jayna Kothari. The organization had previously succeeded in petitioning the Karnataka High Court, where the state had argued that primary school teacher positions were ill-suited for visually impaired persons. In an affidavit submitted to the Supreme Court in July 2016, the state contended that students in primary schools could not be effectively taught by teachers with blindness or low vision. They further claimed that many government primary schools, out of a total of 44,000, had only one or two teachers without additional support staff, making it difficult for such schools to function if reservations were granted to visually impaired persons.
However, the Supreme Court ultimately rejected these arguments put forth by the Karnataka State Government. The bench, led by the Chief Justice of India, pointed out that the Persons with Disabilities Act of 1995 mandates that a minimum of 3% of all government job vacancies should be reserved for disabled individuals. Of this quota, at least 1% should be allocated for persons with impaired vision. Moreover, both the Central and Karnataka State Governments had recognized primary school teaching positions as suitable for blind and low vision individuals in accordance with the said Act. The court maintained that placing visually impaired individuals in schools equipped with other teachers and support staff would not disrupt the schools' functioning, particularly given the availability of modern technology-based aids and appliances for blind and low vision individuals. Thus, the Supreme Court held the state government responsible for fulfilling its obligation to employ visually impaired persons in these positions and dismissed their appeal.
Below the Supreme Court's order dated 01.09.2016 dismissing the appeal of the State Govt. of Karnataka:
"We have heard learned counsel for the parties at considerable length who have taken us through the orders impugned in these appeals. We are of the considered view that the impugned orders do not suffer from any error much less any perversity to compel our interference in exercise of our powers under Article 136 of the Constitution of India. These civil appeals accordingly fail and are dismissed."
Access the Karnataka HC Judgement:
In a significant judgment strengthening the principles of inclusive education and disability rights, the Delhi High Court reaffirmed that educational institutions cannot deny admission to children with disabilities on the basis of institutional inconvenience, infrastructural limitations, or rigid procedural requirements.
The case arose from proceedings concerning Master Priyanshu, a child who had suffered amputation following a motor accident and thereafter used a prosthetic leg. Proceedings relating to his rehabilitation and compensation had earlier been initiated before the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT).
Taking note of the child’s educational deprivation and rehabilitation needs, the Tribunal directed facilitation of his admission in Siddharth International Public School under the Economically Weaker Section (“EWS”) and Disadvantaged Group (“DG”) category with appropriate relaxation in age criteria.
Aggrieved by these directions, the petitioner-school approached the High Court challenging the legality and jurisdictional basis of the orders passed by the Tribunal.
The school argued that:
The school further contended that admitting a ten-year-old child into Class I would adversely affect the educational environment for other students.
On the other hand, the respondents argued that the school had failed to comply with its obligations under the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 (“RTE Act”) and that inclusive education required accommodation of the child under the EWS/DG framework.
The matter therefore raised an important constitutional issue — whether institutional rules and administrative barriers could override the educational rights of a child with disability.
Justice Manmohan adopted a rights-based and constitutionally sensitive approach while examining the dispute.
At the outset, the Court clarified that the matter could not be treated merely as a technical controversy concerning admission procedures or seat allocation. Instead, the Court viewed the issue through the broader constitutional framework of equality, dignity, inclusion, and access to education.
A particularly important aspect of the judgment lies in the Court’s rejection of the petitioner-school’s attempt to invoke institutional autonomy to deny admission to a child with disability.
While private educational institutions often rely upon autonomy in administrative matters, the Court made it clear that such autonomy cannot override constitutional obligations flowing from welfare legislation and the rights of vulnerable children.
The judgment recognised that private schools performing public educational functions remain bound by constitutional values and statutory obligations aimed at ensuring social justice and educational inclusion.
The Court also rejected the school’s infrastructural objections, including its contention that it could not be compelled to provide special educators, barrier-free access, or disability-sensitive accommodations.
In doing so, the Court effectively affirmed the principle of reasonable accommodation — now recognised as a foundational component of disability rights jurisprudence. The judgment makes it clear that educational institutions cannot refuse admission merely because inclusion requires institutional adaptation or infrastructural effort.
Another important feature of the ruling is the Court’s purposive and child-centric interpretation of the educational framework under the RTE Act.
The Court declined to adopt a rigid approach regarding age eligibility and instead prioritised the child’s right to education and rehabilitation. It recognised that mechanical insistence upon procedural requirements, especially in cases involving vulnerable children facing extraordinary circumstances, may itself amount to exclusionary discrimination.
The Bench thereby embraced the principle of substantive equality rather than mere formal equality.
Importantly, the Court recognised that educational inclusion for children with disabilities is not a matter of charity or benevolence but a constitutional and statutory entitlement flowing from Articles 14, 21, and 21A of the Constitution of India.
The judgment also acknowledged the larger social importance of inclusive education. Implicit within the ruling is the understanding that schools must reflect constitutional values of fraternity, diversity, empathy, and equal participation.
The Delhi High Court upheld the essential objective underlying the directions passed for the child’s educational inclusion and rejected the challenge raised by the petitioner-school.
The Court effectively affirmed:
The judgment thereby reinforced that educational access for children with disabilities must be interpreted in a rights-based and constitutionally sensitive manner.
The decision in Siddharth International Public School v. Motor Accident Claims Tribunal & Anr. is an important reaffirmation of inclusive education as a constitutional obligation rather than a matter of institutional discretion.
One of the most significant contributions of the ruling lies in its rejection of the assumption that disability accommodation is optional or dependent upon institutional convenience. The Court instead recognised accessibility and inclusion as indispensable components of the right to education itself.
The judgment meaningfully advances the constitutional principle of substantive equality. Formal equality would merely allow disabled children to apply for admission; substantive equality requires dismantling the structural and institutional barriers that prevent meaningful participation in educational spaces.
Another transformative aspect of the ruling is its recognition of the doctrine of reasonable accommodation. Rather than expecting disabled children to adjust themselves to inaccessible educational systems, the judgment places responsibility upon institutions to become inclusive and responsive to diverse educational needs.
The decision also contributes significantly to the evolution of disability rights jurisprudence in India by rejecting bureaucratic and procedural formalism when dealing with vulnerable children. The Court recognised that rigid adherence to age norms, infrastructural limitations, or admission procedures cannot override constitutional guarantees of dignity, equality, and educational opportunity.
Importantly, the ruling departs from traditional charity-based understandings of disability and instead adopts a rights-based framework grounded in inclusion, autonomy, and equal citizenship.
The judgment also carries broader implications for private educational institutions across India. In an increasingly privatised educational landscape, vulnerable groups are often excluded through administrative and procedural barriers. The present decision acts as an important constitutional safeguard against such exclusionary practices.
The ruling further aligns with the principles embodied in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), which recognises inclusive education as a fundamental human right requiring equal participation within mainstream educational systems.
At a broader constitutional level, the judgment reinforces that schools are not merely academic institutions but constitutional spaces where values of equality, dignity, fraternity, and social justice must be realised in practice.
The decision therefore stands as a powerful affirmation that children with disabilities cannot be excluded from educational opportunities on the basis of inconvenience, inflexible procedures, or institutional reluctance. The Constitution requires accommodation, accessibility, and meaningful inclusion — not exclusion disguised as administrative limitation.
(a) Whether a person with cerebral palsy can be a doctor?
(b) Whether the 40-70% disability criteria set by MCI for admission to MBBS courses is constitutionally valid ?
(c) Whether a team of ophthalmologist, a pathologist, an orthopaedic, a general physician and a surgeon can assess the disability of a person with cerebral palsy in absence of a neuro specialist?