"How can the Bar Council of India (BCI) issue such a letter? How can you (BCI) ask the Delhi University (DU) to relax attendance rules? Explain your act," a bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal said.
It also issued notice to the BCI, a statutory body that regulates the legal practice and legal education in India and the DU, while directing them to explain their stand.
Over 500 law students did not fulfil the minimum attendance requirement prescribed by the BCI for academic year 2015-16 but were allowed to take semester examinations on the basis of a letter dated December 17, 2016, sent by the BCI Secretary to the university, asking it to consider the matter "sympathetically for relaxation of attendance rules".
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He told the court that the BCI had "no legal authority" to send any communication to DU for relaxing the attendance requirements.
The plea claimed that some of these LLB students did not attend even a single class but were allowed to take the exam.
The petition has sought directions to call for the entire records pertaining to this case for academic years 2015-16 and 2016-17 and an enquiry into the alleged illegalities committed by the university by allegedly flouting attendance rules.