High Courts cannot order conduct of counselling beyond admission deadline even if medical seats go vacant: Madras HC
The Hindu
Madras HC rules High Courts can't order medical counselling beyond admission deadlines, emphasising only the Supreme Court can make exceptions.
Even if medical seats go vacant, either because of arbitrary inaction on the part of the officials concerned or on account of any other reason, a High Court cannot issue a direction for conduct of counselling to fill up those seats beyond the cut-off date fixed for admissions every year, the Madras High Court has held.
The first Division Bench of Chief Justice Manindra Mohan Shrivastava and Justice G. Arul Murugan held so while setting aside a September 18, 2025 order passed by a judge who had directed the central medical counselling committee to conduct a mop up counselling to fill up vacant super specialty seats in Tamil Nadu.
Allowing a writ appeal preferred by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, the Bench agreed with Additional Solicitor General AR.L. Sundaresan that the judge ought not to have issued such a direction after the cut-off date for admissions in super specialty courses had ended on August 31, 2025.
The single judge had passed the orders while allowing a joint writ petition filed by three doctors holding post graduate degrees. They had contended many valuable super specialty course seats had remained vacant in Tamil Nadu because of lack of proper coordination between central and State officials to fill them up.
However, the Division Bench pointed out the Supreme Court in Ashish Ranjan versus Others (2021) had clearly stated medical admission regulations, which lay down strict timelines for holding various rounds of counselling and making the admissions, bear the imprimatur (authoritative approval) of the top court.
“If that be the observation of the apex court, we are of the view that, irrespective of whether the seats remain unfilled on account of arbitrary inaction on the part of the official respondents or not, once the last date of admission, i.e. August 31, 2025 was over, the writ petitioners could not be granted relief by this court and the writ petition was liable to be dismissed,” the Chief Justice wrote for the Bench.













