
A division bench comprising Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela will pronounce the order today. The court had concluded hearings on April 9, after considering arguments from lawyers representing both the petitioners—aspiring law students who appeared for the exam in December 2024—and the Consortium of National Law Universities (CNLUs). Read further to know more.
The Delhi High Court is set to deliver its verdict on Wednesday, April 23 at 2:30 PM on a batch of petitions challenging alleged errors in the Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) UG 2025. The announcement comes per the cause list posted on the court's official website.
Latest Update: CLAT Result 2025 LIVE Updates: CLAT UG/PG Revised Result, Counselling Dates, Steps to Download & Latest Updates
A division bench comprising Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tushar Rao Gedela will pronounce the order. The court had concluded hearings on April 9, after considering arguments from lawyers representing both the petitioners—aspiring law students who appeared for the exam in December 2024—and the Consortium of National Law Universities (CNLUs).
The petitions under consideration specifically question the validity of certain questions in the CLAT UG 2025 paper, while a separate set of pleas challenging the CLAT PG 2025 paper is yet to be heard.
Originally, multiple petitions were filed in high courts across the country, alleging discrepancies in the exam. To avoid inconsistent rulings, the Supreme Court, on February 6, transferred all such petitions to the Delhi High Court for unified adjudication.
The urgency in resolving the UG-related pleas was emphasised by the Delhi High Court, which earlier stated that "suspense and anxiety" were detrimental to aspirants and aimed to conclude the matter promptly to facilitate timely declaration of results.
The controversy gained traction after a single judge bench of the Delhi High Court, on December 20, 2024, ordered the consortium to revise the CLAT 2025 results, acknowledging that at least two questions in the exam had demonstrably incorrect answers. While the consortium and the aspirant both appealed this ruling—one seeking broader relief, the other challenging the court’s refusal to rectify more questions—a division bench on December 24 upheld the single judge's decision on the two questions, allowing the revised results to stand.
The CLAT 2025 was conducted on December 1, 2024, with the initial results published on December 7. The outcome of the upcoming verdict is expected to have significant implications for thousands of candidates seeking admission to the five-year LLB courses offered by National Law Universities (NLUs) across the country.
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