While one judge of the bench held the state's methodology for giving incentive marks to the in-service candidates as 'not in conflict' with the MCI's, the other judge quashed some of the state government norms on the issue terming them as "inconsistent and repugnant" to the MCI 2000 regulations.
Justice K K Sasidharan of the bench said the state government's policy of reserving seats for its in-service doctors and awarding incentive marks to them were not in consonance with the Medical Council of India regulations.
The other judge on the bench, Justice S M Subramanian, however, in a separate order quashed some of the clauses of the admission prospectus issued by the state government, terming them as "inconsistent, repugnant to 'Regulation of the Post Graduate Medical Regulation rules 2000" issued by MCI.'
Observing that the prayer in the petition could be moulded and the government may be asked to sync its admission policy with that of the MCI, Justice Subramanian directed the state government to formulate the procedure for admission process in accordance with the MCI 9 and 9(IV) regulations.
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As per the procedure, the case will now be referred to a third judge, whose view will decide the date of the cases.
The bench concurred with the submissions of senior counsel P Wilson, who appeared for various in-service candidates, that the writ petition on which the single judge passed the order, itself was not maintainable when the prospectus and policy adopted by the state had not been challenged.
The single judge ought to have dismissed the petition, in which it was directed by the judge to adopt only the MCI regulations in awarding marks "without there being a challenge to the policy adopted by the state and indicated in the prospectus of the state," the bench said.
The bench was set up by Chief Justice Indira Banerjee in view of the urgency of the matter.
The appellants had challenged the single judge's April 17 order upholding the MCI norms that the incentive marks for in-service candidates should be awarded only as per the MCI's Post Graduate Medical Education Regulations 2000 and not on the basis of the state government's norms.
But the MCI regulations earmarked 10 per cent of an in-service candidate's National Eligibility Entrance Test (NEET) PG mark as incentive per year of service with a maximum of 30 per cent.
The government had yesterday submitted that the award of the incentive marks to the in-service candidates was being made for the past 35 years to encourage doctors to serve people in remote, hilly and difficult areas and was not violative of the MCI norms.
It had submitted that the state prospectus was approved by the MCI and the Central government and they can't take a U-turn now and say it was not as per the MCI regulations.
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