LBS Convent School & Ors. v/s CBSE & Ors.
LBS Convent School & Ors. v/s CBSE & Ors.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE FOR RAJASTHAN

AT JAIPUR BENCH, JAIPUR

LBS Convent School & Ors. v/s CBSE & Ors.

Brief Facts

  • Multiple schools in Kota (LBS Convent School & The Lord Buddha Public School) were de-affiliated and downgraded by CBSE for one year, with liberty to reapply later.
  • Students of these schools (Class X & XII) were ordered to be shifted mid-session.
  • Earlier, Shiv Jyoti Convent Sr. Sec. School faced identical action but later got relief from CBSE upon representation, being only fined ₹5,00,000/-.
  • Petitioners alleged discrimination, as they too had submitted compliance certificates but were treated differently.

Petitioners’ Arguments

  • Action was arbitrary and discriminatory vis-à-vis Shiv Jyoti School.
  • Hygiene, fire, and safety certificates were submitted but ignored.
  • Students’ academic year was at stake; shifting mid-session would cause grave prejudice.

Respondent’s Arguments

  • Distinction drawn:
    • Shiv Jyoti School: only deficiencies (rectifiable).
    • Petitioner-schools: serious bye-law violations, including:
      1. Sponsoring dummy/non-attending students.
      2. Manipulating records to mislead CBSE.
      3. Severe infrastructural gaps.
      4. Improper teacher–student ratio.
      5. Irregularities in attendance/staff registers.
      6. Teachers not attending mandatory CBSE training.

Therefore, harsher action was justified.

Court’s Analysis

  • All three schools earlier faced identical orders (29/30.10.2024).
  • In April 2025, High Court had directed CBSE to reconsider their representations.
  • CBSE gave different treatment—relief to Shiv Jyoti but rejection for petitioners.
  • Court observed that CBSE must uniformly assess all three cases.
  • Matter remitted back to CBSE to re-examine petitioners’ cases vis-à-vis Shiv Jyoti School and pass fresh orders within 4 weeks.
  • Till then, students shall not be shifted mid-session; they must be allowed to file exam forms and appear in exams if otherwise eligible.
  • CBSE may conduct random inspections of these schools.
  • Schools restrained from taking new admissions in Classes IX–XII until further CBSE decision.
  • Petitioners free to challenge any fresh adverse order before appropriate forum.

Parting Remarks by Court

  • Took judicial notice of the menace of “dummy schools” in Rajasthan, particularly in Kota (linked with coaching institutes).
  • Strongly criticized commercialization of education and parental pressure for JEE/NEET.
  • Emphasized adverse mental health impact and career risks for students enrolled in dummy schools.
  • Urged CBSE, RBSE and other boards to enforce strict bye-laws:
    • Mandatory 75% attendance in Classes IX–XII.
    • Random inspections.
    • Strict action against schools and staff involved in dummy admissions.

 The Court protected students’ interests mid-session, directed CBSE to reconsider schools’ cases on parity with Shiv Jyoti School, and issued broader observations against the dummy school system in Kota.

Cookie Consent with Real Cookie Banner