Reaffirming Limited Judicial Interference in Re-Evaluation: Patna High Court on Multiple Expert Reviews
1. Introduction
This lengthy litigation involves the Bihar Public Service Commission (“the Commission”) and a candidate, Dr. Eena Bahan, arising out of a recruitment process for the post of Assistant Professor (Physics) in Government Engineering Colleges in Bihar. The dispute centers on whether a fresh re-evaluation of certain questions was permissible under judicial order, especially after the Commission had already published multiple provisional answer keys and engaged expert committees on four separate occasions to review candidate objections. The Letters Patent Appeal (“LPA”) was filed by the Commission challenging the learned Single Judge’s direction to constitute a new set of experts to re-evaluate the petitioner’s answer sheet on four specific questions.
The key issue placed before the Honorable Patna High Court in this appeal was whether multiple comprehensive expert reviews of the answer key sufficiently safeguarded accuracy and fairness, or whether further fresh re-evaluation of one candidate’s answers could be judicially mandated. The Court addressed the tension between ensuring a fair selection process—honoring merit and transparency—and preventing open-ended re-examinations alien to the governing rules.
2. Summary of the Judgment
In the impugned judgment, the learned Single Judge had directed the constitution of a new committee of five subject experts drawn from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Patna and National Institute of Technology (NIT), Patna to re-evaluate four disputed questions in the Set “B” paper attempted by the petitioner, Dr. Bahan. The Single Judge ordered that if there was no unanimity among the experts, the majority opinion would prevail. Further, if the revised marking qualified the petitioner, she was to be called for an interview.
The Division Bench, upon analyzing the facts and legal principles, set aside the Single Judge’s direction. It reiterated that re-evaluation or scrutiny of an answer sheet is generally not a matter of right unless specifically sanctioned by statute, rules, or notifications governing the examination. Finding that the Commission had fairly and comprehensively addressed objections multiple times, the High Court concluded that there was no need for fresh re-evaluation of the petitioner’s answers alone. Consequently, the Court allowed the Commission’s appeal and permitted it to proceed with the final stages of the appointment.
3. Analysis
A. Precedents Cited
The Court referred to significant Supreme Court and High Court decisions to clarify the scope of judicial review in matters relating to the correctness of answer keys and the possibility of re-evaluation:
- Rajesh Kumar v. State of Bihar, (2013) 3 SCC 690: The Supreme Court upheld re-evaluation of a set of answer sheets when a highly significant number of questions (around 40%) were demonstrably erroneous in an exam key. However, the Court’s directive in that case emerged from extreme factual circumstances and was intended to safeguard merit.
- Manish Ujwal v. Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati University, (2005) 13 SCC 744 and Guru Nanak Dev University v. Saumil Garg, (2005) 13 SCC 749: Both emphasized the importance of avoiding harm to students’ careers when examiners commit manifest errors in question papers or key answers that could impact results.
- Rishal v. Rajasthan Public Service Commission, (2018) 8 SCC 81: Reinforced the principle that if the initial evaluation is found to be demonstrably erroneous, courts can direct the constitution of expert committees to rectify errors, but only in exceptional circumstances.
- Ran Vijay Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (2018) 2 SCC 357: Provided the comprehensive framework for courts reviewing answer keys and cautioned against a complete “hands-off” policy. However, it also stressed that courts should permit re-evaluation only if there is a clear, material error that is not simply inferred or rationalized.
- Ashish Ranjan v. The State of Bihar & Ors. (Division Bench of Patna High Court, CWJC No. 14828 of 2023 dated 12.03.2024): Though mentioned by counsel, it served to underscore that absent manifest error or permissible statutory basis, re-evaluation may not be ordered.
B. Legal Reasoning
The Court’s reasoning hinged on the “multiple layers of expert scrutiny” already applied to the disputed answers. The Commission had convened committees of subject experts four times to review objections, correcting errors whenever they discovered them. The Court observed that each provisional answer key was published publicly, objections were invited, and all serious or potentially valid objections were considered in detail. The composition of these committees overlapped to some extent, ensuring continuity and knowledge retention of previous reviews, while occasionally including new experts to mitigate bias.
Given these repeated revisions, the Court concluded there was no strong legal or factual basis to single out the petitioner for one more round of re-evaluation, especially as no “material error” was established that the committees had ignored. Furthermore, no rule or statute authorized individual-based re-checking. Absent a specifically demonstrated grave error, the Court determined that ordering re-evaluation would undermine the finality of the examination and potentially open the floodgates for numerous similar requests.
C. Impact on Future Cases and Relevant Area of Law
This judgment reaffirms the principle that, unless explicitly authorized by statutes or regulations, courts will generally defer to the technical expertise of multiple expert reviews of answer keys. While cases of manifest and demonstrable error remain open to judicial scrutiny, the threshold for re-evaluation is high, safeguarding finality and practicality in public recruitment. The decision underlines the courts’ guiding principle that “merit should not be a casualty” but also that an endless cycle of re-checking must not entangle substantial selection processes without compelling reason. Thus, it helps shape administrative fairness by balancing the rights of candidates to accurate evaluation with the system’s need for closure and certainty.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
Several legal and procedural concepts are central to understanding this judgment:
- Re-Evaluation vs. Reviewing an Answer Key: “Re-evaluation” typically involves re-marking an individual candidate’s paper. In contrast, a “review of the answer key” is a broader process examining the correctness of the solutions provided for the entire examination. Courts usually allow the latter if there are systemic errors; individual re-evaluation is rarely granted absent a legally mandated provision.
- Provisional Answer Key and Expert Committee: A provisional answer key is published for feedback to address possible errors. Expert committees then analyze all objections and correct mistakes before finalizing the key. This fosters transparency and fairness.
- Judicial Deference to Academic Experts: Courts adopt a deferential stance towards academic or technical experts since judges are typically not subject specialists. They intervene only if it is proven that the experts’ approach is unreasonable or demonstrably flawed.
- Material Error: A significant, obvious mistake in the evaluation process that can alter the result. Courts insist on clear evidence of such an error before ordering re-checking.
5. Conclusion
The Patna High Court’s decision highlights the crucial distinction between rectifying clear, widespread, or egregious errors in answer keys—and repetitively re-checking an individual candidate’s results after multiple expert reviews have already been undertaken. By quashing the learned Single Judge’s directive for a new committee to re-evaluate the petitioner’s paper, the Court underscored the principle that repeated expert scrutiny effectively ensures correctness and fairness, and absent a statutory or regulatory mandate for further re-checking, courts will not lightly step in.
This judgment serves as valuable precedent, reminding that standards of merit, fairness, and finality must be balanced in large-scale recruitment examinations, and that judicial interference must be sparing—reserved for cases where a manifest lack of due diligence, procedural impropriety, or substantive error is conclusively shown.
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