A five-judge Constitution bench headed by Chief Justice R M Lodha said the 2010 judgement of its three-judge bench which held that the 2009 Act was applicable to aided minority schools was "not correct".
The larger bench also ruled that Article 21A(right to education) and Article 15 (5) (relating to economically weaker sections) does not alter the basic structure or framework of the Constitution and they are "constitutionally valid".
"We also hold that the 2009 Act is not ultra vires Article 19(1)(g) (regarding freedom of speech) of the Constitution. We, however, hold that the 2009 Act insofar as it applies to minority schools, aided or unaided, covered under clause (1) of Article 30 (right of minorities) of the Constitution is ultra vires the Constitution," the bench, also comprising justices A K Patnaik, S J Mukhopadhaya, Dipak Misra and F M I Kalifulla, said.
"We are thus of the view that the majority judgement of this Court in... Insofar as it holds that the 2009 Act is applicable to aided minority schools is not correct," it said, referring to the 2-1 verdict pronounced in 2010.