Civil Court Jurisdiction in Cases of Student Expulsion and Disciplinary Action by Educational Institutions
Introduction
This timeless principle captures the essence of any legal system: it must act as a shield against arbitrary exercise of power. In the context of educational institutions, this becomes especially significant, as disciplinary actions directly affect a student’s future, dignity, and access to education. Educational institutions are entrusted with maintaining discipline and academic standards. However, this authority is not absolute. When disciplinary powers are exercised without fairness, transparency, or adherence to principles of natural justice, they raise serious legal concerns.
The right to education, recognized as a facet of Article 21 of the Constitution of India, is frequently imperilled when educational institutions exercise disciplinary powers – particularly through expulsion, rustication, or suspension of students. The critical legal question that arises is:
When a student is expelled or subjected to disciplinary action by an educational institution, does a civil court have jurisdiction to entertain a suit challenging such action, or is such jurisdiction ousted by the availability of statutory remedies under university acts, UGC regulations, or writ jurisdiction under Article 226?
This question sits at the intersection of three competing legal principles:
- The presumption of civil court jurisdiction under Section 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC).
- The doctrine of ouster – that statutory remedies, when adequate and exclusive, impliedly bar civil suits.
- The constitutional guarantee of natural justice and non-arbitrariness under Articles 14 and 21, which civil courts are duty bound to protect.
The Legal Issue
This article frames the specific issue:
Whether the jurisdiction of civil courts under Section 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 is barred either expressly or by necessary implication in cases involving student expulsion or disciplinary action by educational institutions, in light of existing statutory grievance mechanisms such as university regulations and UGC frameworks.
Statutory Framework
Section 9 CPC – The Presumption of Jurisdiction
What Is the Scope of Section 9 CPC in Relation to Educational Disciplinary Matters?
The Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 under Section 9 provides:
“The Courts shall (subject to the provisions herein contained) have jurisdiction to try all suits of a civil nature excepting suits of which their cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred.”
Explanation I further clarifies that a suit in which the right to property or to an office is contested is a suit of a civil nature, notwithstanding that such right may depend entirely on the decision of questions as to religious rites or ceremonies.
The operative principle is a presumption in favour of jurisdiction. The burden of establishing ouster lies squarely on the party asserting the bar. A student’s challenge to expulsion contesting the right to continue education, seeking declaration that the expulsion order is void, or claiming damages for breach of contractual obligations under the admission agreement is indisputably a suit of a “civil nature”.
Dhulabhai Principles – The Definitive Test for Ouster
When Does the Existence of an Alternative Statutory Remedy Operate as an Implied Bar to Civil Court Jurisdiction?
The seven-judge bench of the Supreme Court in Dhulabhai and Others v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and Another laid down the foundational principles governing the exclusion of civil court jurisdiction. These principles, though formulated in the context of taxation, are of universal application and constitute the controlling authority on this question:
Key Dhulabhai Principles
| Principle | Description |
|---|---|
| Principle 1 – Adequacy of Remedy | Where a statute gives finality to the orders of a special tribunal, the civil court’s jurisdiction is impliedly barred if there is an adequate remedy to do what the civil court would normally do in a suit. |
| Principle 2 – Express Bar Not Conclusive | Even where there is an express bar, the examination of whether the civil court’s jurisdiction is truly ousted depends on the nature and scheme of the legislative provision. |
| Principle 3 – Jurisdictional Errors Preserve Civil Court Power | Where the statutory tribunal acts without jurisdiction, or in violation of the provisions of the statute, or in breach of the principles of natural justice, the civil court’s jurisdiction is not ousted. |
| Principle 4 – Constitutional Questions | Questions of constitutionality of the parent statute can always be raised before civil courts, as a tribunal constituted under a statute cannot be the judge of the vires of its own parent enactment. |
| Principle 5 – Burden of Proof | The burden of establishing ouster lies on the party claiming it. Any ambiguity must be resolved in favour of retaining civil court jurisdiction. |
The application of these principles to educational disputes is decisive: civil court jurisdiction is ousted only if the statutory framework provides a complete, adequate, and efficacious alternative remedy that covers the specific grievance raised by the student.
UGC (Redressal of Grievances of Students) Regulations, 2023
The University Grants Commission (Redressal of Grievances of Students) Regulations, 2023 notified on 11th April 2023 under Section 26(1)(g) of the UGC Act, 1956, establish a mandatory institutional framework for student grievance resolution.
Key Features
- Student Grievance Redressal Committees (SGRCs): Every Higher Educational Institution (HEI) must constitute an SGRC to address complaints including admission irregularities, academic delays, unfair evaluation, financial disputes, and violations of UGC guidelines.
- Ombudsperson: An appellate mechanism through the appointment of an Ombudsperson for appeals against SGRC decisions.
- Timeline Mandates: SGRCs must resolve grievances within 15 days; appeals to the Ombudsperson must be disposed of within 30 days.
- Binding Nature: According to the Supreme Court’s ruling in University of Kerala v. Council of Principals’ Colleges (AIR 2010 SC 2523), UGC Regulations are binding on both Central and State HEIs.
Critical Gap
The 2023 Regulations do not prescribe specific penalties for non-compliance with timelines, nor do they explicitly address the enforceability of SGRC/Ombudsperson orders against the institution. This lacuna becomes significant in the jurisdictional analysis, as an inadequate remedy cannot oust civil court jurisdiction.
Analysis: When Is Civil Court Jurisdiction Ousted?
The General Rule – Ouster Requires Express or Implied Bar
Applying the Dhulabhai principles to educational disciplinary matters, the analysis proceeds as follows:
Step 1: Is There an Express Statutory Bar?
Most university acts (e.g., the Delhi University Act, 1922; state university acts) do not contain an express provision barring civil court jurisdiction in student disciplinary matters. The UGC Regulations 2023 similarly do not contain a “finality” clause or an express ouster of civil court jurisdiction. In the absence of an express bar, the presumption under Section 9 CPC remains undisturbed.
Step 2: Is There an Implied Bar Through an Adequate Alternative Remedy?
An implied bar arises only when the statutory scheme provides a complete and adequate alternative remedy.
In educational disciplinary matters, the available statutory remedies typically include:
- Internal appeal to the Vice-Chancellor or Governing Body;
- SGRC under UGC Regulations 2023;
- Ombudsperson appeal;
- Writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution.
The key issue is whether this system of remedies is actually sufficient. In several critical situations it falls short.
- Enforcement Gap: SGRC and Ombudsperson orders lack statutory teeth. There is no provision for contempt, penalty, or coercive enforcement if the institution refuses to comply.
- Scope Limitation: If a student’s grievance involves a claim for damages (e.g., loss of academic year, mental trauma, consequential financial loss), the SGRC mechanism is not equipped to grant monetary relief. Only a civil court can award damages under the Specific Relief Act, 1963, or general civil law.
- Contractual Claims: In private unaided institutions, the student-institution relationship is substantially contractual. Breach of admission agreements, prospectus representations, or fee refund disputes are quintessentially civil in nature and fall outside the scope of UGC Regulations.
The Exceptions – When Civil Courts Retain Jurisdiction Despite Statutory Remedies
Drawing from the Dhulabhai principles and the general framework under Section 9 CPC, civil courts retain jurisdiction in the following circumstances:
- Violation of Natural Justice: Where the expulsion or disciplinary action was passed without affording the student an opportunity of hearing (audi alteram partem), the action is void ab initio. The civil court retains jurisdiction to declare such an order a nullity.
- Ultra Vires Action: Where the disciplinary authority acted beyond its powers under the institutional statutes, ordinances, or regulations, the civil court can declare the action ultra vires.
- Mala Fide Exercise of Power: Where the expulsion is motivated by extraneous considerations (personal vendetta, caste or gender discrimination, retaliation for whistleblowing), the civil court retains jurisdiction to examine mala fides.
- Absence of Statutory Remedy: Where the institution is not covered by any university act or UGC Regulations (e.g., certain unaffiliated private coaching institutes or schools), there is no statutory remedy to exhaust, and Section 9 CPC operates in full force.
- Constitutional Challenge: Where the student challenges the vires of the regulation or ordinance under which the expulsion was ordered, such a question can always be raised before a civil court, as the disciplinary authority cannot be the judge of the validity of its own rules.
The Nature of the Institution – A Critical Variable
Does the Nature of the Institution Affect the Availability of Civil Remedies?
| Type of Institution | Jurisdictional Position |
|---|---|
| Government and Government-Aided Institutions | These are “State” within the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution. Disciplinary actions are amenable to judicial review under Article 226. |
| Private Unaided Institutions | Generally not “State” under Article 12. Civil courts often become the primary forum because the relationship is substantially contractual. |
| Deemed Universities and AICTE-Regulated Institutions | Fall under the UGC and AICTE framework. Availability and adequacy of statutory remedies must be examined on a case-by-case basis. |
Government and Government-Aided Institutions: These are “State” within the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution. Disciplinary actions by such institutions are amenable to judicial review under Article 226 (writ jurisdiction). The availability of writ remedy may operate as an implied bar to civil suits in most cases, though the civil court’s jurisdiction is not technically ousted; it merely becomes a less preferred forum.
Private Unaided Institutions: These are generally not “State” under Article 12. A student expelled from a private institution may not have access to writ jurisdiction (though this position is evolving). In such cases, the civil court becomes the primary forum for challenging arbitrary disciplinary action, as the relationship is substantially contractual.
Deemed Universities and AICTE-Regulated Institutions: These fall under the UGC and AICTE regulatory framework. The availability of SGRC and Ombudsperson mechanisms creates a statutory remedy, but its adequacy must be assessed on the facts of each case.
Judicial Trends and Observations
The Shift Towards Writ Jurisdiction
The judicial trend in India overwhelmingly favours writ petitions under Article 226 as the preferred remedy for challenging educational disciplinary actions, rather than civil suits.
This is because:
- Writ courts can grant interim relief (stay of expulsion) expeditiously;
- The scope of review encompasses natural justice, proportionality, and arbitrariness;
- The remedy is available against both government and, increasingly, private institutions performing “public functions.”
The High Court for the State of Telangana in Vyshnav Dinesh Agencies v. Telangana Residential Educational Institution (AIR 2025 25) and the High Court of Kerala in Sujith K.S. v. Oriental Group of Educational Institution [2024 Ker HC (WP(C) 18081/2023)] entertained writ petitions concerning educational institutions, reflecting the judicial preference for constitutional remedies over civil suits in educational matters.
Similarly, the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in Medicos Legal Action Group v. Union of India & Ors. (2022 (2) CPR 128) issued a writ of mandamus directing compliance with judicial directions in the educational regulatory context, demonstrating the efficacy of writ jurisdiction in enforcing rights against educational bodies.
The Persistence of Civil Court Jurisdiction
What Are the Residual Circumstances Under Which Civil Courts Retain Jurisdiction Despite the Availability of Statutory Remedies?
Despite the trend towards writ jurisdiction, civil courts have not been entirely displaced. The Supreme Court’s emphasis in Dwarka Prasad Agarwal v. Ramesh Chandra Agarwal [(2003) 6 SCC 220] that exclusion of civil court jurisdiction must be explicit or necessarily implied ensures that civil suits remain maintainable where:
- The writ remedy is unavailable (private institutions not amenable to Article 226);
- The claim involves damages or monetary compensation;
- The dispute is essentially contractual;
- The statutory remedy is inadequate or non-functional.
The “Pure Academic Judgment” Limitation
Courts, whether exercising civil or writ jurisdiction, usually defer to the expertise of academic institution in matters of “pure academic judgment” unless the decision is perverse or arbitrary.
This means that while a court will readily review the procedure of a disciplinary inquiry, it will be slow to substitute its own judgment on the merits of an academic evaluation or the quantum of punishment, unless it is grossly disproportionate.
Identified Gaps and Problems
The Enforcement Deficit in UGC Regulations 2023
The UGC (Redressal of Grievances of Students) Regulations, 2023, while a welcome step, suffer from a critical enforcement deficit:
| Issue | Description |
|---|---|
| No Penalty for Timeline Breaches | The 15 day and 30 day timelines are directory, not mandatory, in the absence of consequences for non-compliance. |
| No Coercive Enforcement | SGRC and Ombudsperson orders are not backed by statutory contempt powers. |
| Institutional Bias Risk | Where the SGRC is constituted by the very institution that passed the disciplinary order, the impartiality of the remedy is structurally compromised. |
| Jurisdictional Overlap | Conflicts with the POSH Act, 2013 and UGC Anti-Ragging Regulations, 2009 create forum-shopping risks. |
These gaps mean that the UGC Regulations 2023, standing alone, do not constitute an “adequate alternative remedy” sufficient to oust civil court jurisdiction.
The Private Institution Lacuna
Students in private unaided institutions occupy a particularly vulnerable position.
If the institution is not “State” under Article 12, writ jurisdiction may be unavailable. If the institution is not affiliated to a university or covered by UGC Regulations, the statutory remedy may also be absent.
In such cases, the civil court under Section 9 CPC becomes the only available forum – yet the student faces the challenges of delay, cost, and the absence of interim relief mechanisms comparable to writ courts.
The Proportionality Gap
Indian jurisprudence on educational disciplinary action lacks a robust, codified proportionality framework.
While courts have applied proportionality as a constitutional principle, there is no statutory guidance on:
- When expulsion (as opposed to suspension, fine, or warning) is appropriate;
- Mandatory consideration of mitigating circumstances (first offence, academic record, mental health);
- Graduated penalty structures.
Summary of Key Judicial Trends
| Judicial Trend | Position Adopted by Courts |
|---|---|
| Preferred Remedy | Writ petitions under Article 226 |
| Interim Protection | Readily available through writ jurisdiction |
| Civil Court Jurisdiction | Retained unless expressly or impliedly excluded |
| Review of Academic Decisions | Limited in matters of pure academic judgment |
| Private Institution Cases | Civil suits remain important where writ remedy is unavailable |
| UGC Regulations 2023 | Useful but affected by enforcement and structural deficiencies |
| Proportionality Review | Recognized judicially but lacks codified statutory standards |
Suggestions and Recommendations
The following suggestions and recommendations aim to strengthen the legal framework governing student disciplinary proceedings, improve grievance redressal mechanisms, and ensure fairness, transparency, and accountability in higher educational institutions.
Legislative Reforms
Statutory Codification of Disciplinary Procedures
Parliament or State Legislatures should enact a comprehensive Student Disciplinary Proceedings Act or amend the UGC Act to include:
- Mandatory show-cause notice with specific charges;
- Right to representation (by a fellow student or advocate);
- Independent inquiry committee with at least one external member;
- Graduated penalty scale with proportionality guidelines;
- Mandatory recording of reasons for the quantum of punishment.
Strengthening the UGC Grievance Mechanism
The UGC Regulations 2023 should be amended to:
- Prescribe mandatory penalties for non-compliance with timelines (e.g., deemed decision in favour of the student if SGRC fails to act within 15 days);
- Provide for an independent external Ombudsperson (not appointed by the institution);
- Grant the Ombudsperson power to award interim relief (reinstatement pending final decision);
- Include explicit provisions on enforceability, with consequences under Section 12B of the UGC Act (funding cuts) for non-compliance.
Express Preservation of Civil Court Jurisdiction
University acts and UGC Regulations should include a savings clause expressly preserving civil court jurisdiction for claims involving:
- Damages and monetary compensation;
- Contractual disputes;
- Constitutional challenges to institutional regulations.
Judicial Reforms
Establishment of Education Tribunals
On the model of consumer forums under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, dedicated Education Tribunals at the district and state levels could provide a specialized, expeditious, and cost-effective forum for student grievances, reducing the burden on civil courts and writ courts alike.
Expansion of Writ Jurisdiction to Private Institutions
The judiciary should continue the trend of extending Article 226 jurisdiction to private educational institutions performing “public functions” (imparting education, granting degrees recognized by the State), ensuring that no student is left without a remedy merely because the institution is privately managed.
Development of Proportionality Doctrine
Courts should develop a structured proportionality test for educational disciplinary actions, requiring institutions to demonstrate that:
- The punishment is rationally connected to the misconduct;
- No lesser punishment would achieve the disciplinary objective;
- The impact on the student’s future is not grossly disproportionate to the gravity of the offence.
Institutional Reforms
Model Disciplinary Code
The UGC should issue a Model Code of Student Discipline that institutions must adopt or adapt, ensuring minimum procedural safeguards across all HEIs.
Transparency and Record-Keeping
All disciplinary proceedings should be recorded (audio/video), with copies of the inquiry report and the decision provided to the student, enabling effective judicial review.
Mandatory Legal Awareness
Institutions should be required to inform students, at the time of admission, of:
- The disciplinary code applicable to them;
- The grievance redressal mechanism available;
- The right to appeal and the forums available (SGRC, Ombudsperson, civil court, writ court).
Summary of Key Reforms
| Reform Area | Key Recommendation | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Legislative Reform | Codification of disciplinary procedures | Uniformity and procedural fairness |
| UGC Framework | Stronger grievance redressal mechanisms | Effective student remedies |
| Judicial Reform | Creation of Education Tribunals | Faster dispute resolution |
| Constitutional Protection | Expanded writ jurisdiction | Broader access to justice |
| Institutional Governance | Model disciplinary codes and transparency | Greater accountability |
| Student Rights | Mandatory legal awareness initiatives | Informed and empowered students |
Conclusion
The jurisdiction of civil courts in matters of student expulsion and disciplinary action is not a binary question. It exists on a spectrum determined by the nature of the institution, the availability and adequacy of statutory remedies, and the specific nature of the grievance. Section 9 CPC creates a powerful presumption in favour of jurisdiction and the Dhulabhai principles ensure that this presumption is not lightly displaced.
The UGC (Redressal of Grievances of Students) Regulations, 2023 represent a significant step towards creating a structured internal remedy, but their current enforcement deficits prevent them from operating as a complete ouster of civil court jurisdiction. Until these gaps are addressed through legislative reform and judicial development, the civil court remains an essential if underutilised forum for students seeking to vindicate their rights against arbitrary disciplinary action.
The path forward requires a three-pronged approach:
- Legislative codification of disciplinary procedures with proportionality safeguards;
- Strengthening of the UGC grievance mechanism with enforceable timelines and independent oversight;
- Judicial development of proportionality doctrine that balances institutional autonomy with the fundamental right to education.
Ultimately, a system that shapes a student’s future must operate within the bounds of fairness, reason, and accountability.
When discipline becomes arbitrary, it ceases to be discipline and becomes injustice.


