Jodhpur, Sept. 13 -- The Rajasthan high court has directed a private school in Jaipur to grant admission to a three-year-old child under the Right to Education (RTE) quota, holding that procedural technicalities cannot override a child's fundamental right to education, a lawyer familiar with the case said on Friday. Justice Anoop Kumar Dhand, while allowing the writ petition filed by master Daivik Rangwani through his father, ordered Vardhman International School in Mansarovar to admit the child within 15 days. The court observed that the petitioner's application for admission under the RTE Act, 2009 was wrongly rejected on the ground that his Aadhaar card did not mention the ward number of residence. The petitioner later submitted an officially attested document confirming residence in Ward No. 70, but the school failed to consider it. Criticizing the rejection, the court said: "A fundamental right, especially when it unequivocally accrues in favour of a citizen, cannot be tossed even on the basis of procedural grounds or technicalities. Once the petitioner has been selected for getting admission in respondent No. 4-private school under a lottery draw, his application cannot be rejected merely on a technical count." The order emphasized that the right to free and compulsory education under Article 21-A of the Constitution and Section 12 of the RTE Act flows directly to every child from economically weaker sections and disadvantaged groups....