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    <title>2010 (2) TMI 1278 - PUNJAB AND HARYANA HIGH COURT</title>
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    <description>Degrees awarded by a university established under a valid statute were treated as capable of registration under Section 14 of the Punjab Nurses Registration Act, 1932, where compliance with any one of the prescribed routes was sufficient. The later invalidation of the university&#039;s enabling statute did not automatically destroy the legal validity of degrees already issued, and separate recognition by the State or Nursing Council was not required on those facts. The reasoning also relied on the principle that students should not suffer for defects not attributable to them, especially where the course had been completed before the adverse judgment. The refusal to register such degrees was therefore unsustainable.</description>
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      <description>Degrees awarded by a university established under a valid statute were treated as capable of registration under Section 14 of the Punjab Nurses Registration Act, 1932, where compliance with any one of the prescribed routes was sufficient. The later invalidation of the university&#039;s enabling statute did not automatically destroy the legal validity of degrees already issued, and separate recognition by the State or Nursing Council was not required on those facts. The reasoning also relied on the principle that students should not suffer for defects not attributable to them, especially where the course had been completed before the adverse judgment. The refusal to register such degrees was therefore unsustainable.</description>
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