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Lawyer's Arc > Editorials > SUPREME COURT REFUSES TO INTERFERE IN RAJASTHAN HC ORDER ON JUDGE’S RECUSAL, EMPHASIZES JUDICIAL IMPARTIALITY
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SUPREME COURT REFUSES TO INTERFERE IN RAJASTHAN HC ORDER ON JUDGE’S RECUSAL, EMPHASIZES JUDICIAL IMPARTIALITY

Pankaj Pandey
Last updated: 12/04/2025 9:29 PM
Pankaj Pandey
Published 12/04/2025
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NEW DELHI, APRIL 12, 2025 – The Supreme Court of India has declined to interfere with an interim order passed by the Rajasthan High Court, where a Single Judge had refused to recuse himself from hearing a case despite the Petitioner alleging possible bias due to the Judge’s prior role as Senior Standing Counsel for the Income Tax Department in a similar matter.

Contents
STUDENTS DENIED MBBS PROVISIONAL DEGREESRECUSAL PLEA BASED ON PRIOR REPRESENTATIONSUPREME COURT UPHOLDS HC REASONING BUT REITERATES JUDICIAL SENSITIVITYCASE DETAILSLEGAL REPRESENTATIONFOR THE PETITIONERFOR THE RESPONDENTS

A Bench of Justice B.R. Gavai and Justice Augustine George Masih upheld the Division Bench’s ruling, which had found the recusal request unwarranted, while simultaneously reiterating the importance of maintaining public confidence in judicial impartiality.

“We do not find any error in the approach taken either by the learned Single Judge or the Division Bench of the High Court. However, it is always said that justice should not only be done but also seen to be done,” the top court remarked.“If any of the parties has an apprehension, normally the Courts themselves should recuse from hearing of the said matters.”

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STUDENTS DENIED MBBS PROVISIONAL DEGREES

The case arose when students who had passed the MBBS course from the Appellant University (Singhania University) approached the Rajasthan High Court alleging that they were denied provisional degrees, thereby preventing them from registering with the Rajasthan Medical Council.

The students sought a declaration that the University’s actions were illegal and arbitrary, along with a writ of mandamus to enable registration and permit them to practice.

The University defended itself by asserting that it was an autonomous institution recognized under an Act of Legislature and Section 2(f) of the UGC Act, 1956, with authority to award medical degrees.

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RECUSAL PLEA BASED ON PRIOR REPRESENTATION

During the hearing, the Petitioner sought the recusal of the Single Judge, stating that the Judge had previously represented the Income Tax Department in cases involving charitable exemptions, which were allegedly relevant to the present matter.

However, the High Court rejected the recusal plea, stating:

“…we have no hesitation to hold that the plea for recusal at the fag end of hearing of the case was wholly unwarranted and uncalled for.”

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The Court concluded that the earlier case and the present case were not similar and that the Judge had rightly decided not to recuse.

SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS HC REASONING BUT REITERATES JUDICIAL SENSITIVITY

The Supreme Court, while upholding the High Court’s approach, emphasized judicial conduct and sensitivity towards perceptions of fairness:

“Justice should not only be done but also seen to be done… if any of the parties has an apprehension, normally the Courts themselves should recuse from hearing of the said matters.”

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The apex court did not find any procedural or legal error and vacated the interim order it had previously passed, directing that the matter be decided expeditiously as it had already faced delays.

CASE DETAILS

  • Cause Title: Singhania University v. State of Rajasthan & Ors.
  • Case No: Special Leave Petition (Civil) Diary No(s). 36197/2024

LEGAL REPRESENTATION

FOR THE PETITIONER

Senior Advocate: Parag P. Tripathi

AOR: E.C. Agarwala

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Advocates: Mahesh Agarwal, Madhavi Agarwal, Arshit Anand, Aslam Ahamed, Rohit Jain, Harilal S, Aayushi

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

Senior Advocates: Gaurav Sharma, Rekha Palli, Rahul Kaushik

AORs: Prateek Bhatia, Chitrarth Palli, S. Udaya Kumar Sagar, Bhuvneshwari Pathak, Mrigank Prabhakar

Advocates: Paranjay Tripathi, Rajesh Raj, Vishal Agrawal, Siddharth Sahu, Shivam Parashar


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