Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DR. (SMT.) SHIPRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI SHANTI LAL KHOIWAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/03/1996
BENCH:
K.S. PARIPOORNAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
W I T H
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 8080 OF 1994 & 6635 OF 1995
AND
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 200 OF 1993
Jhammak Lal
V.
Laxminarayan Pande & Ors.
J U D G M E N T
PARIPOORNAN, J.
I respectful agree with my learned Brethren that the
appeals should be dismissed.
The relevant facts in the appeals are stated in the
judgment of my learned Brother Ramaswamy, j. In view of the
importance of the question, I would add the following:
Sections 81, 83 and 86 of the Representation of People
Act (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’), call for
interpretation in this batch of appeals. The said statutory
provisions may be usefully quoted.
Section 81
"81. Presentation of petitions.--
(1) An election petition calling in
question any election may be
presented on one or more of the
grounds specified in sub-section
(1) of section 100 and section 101
to the High court by any candidate
at such election or any elector
within forty five days from, but no
earlier than, the date of election
of the returned candidate, or if
there are more than one returned
candidate at the election or
different, the later of those two
dates.
Explanation.--- In this sub-
section, "elector" mean a person
who was entitled to vote at the
election to which the election
petition relates, whether he has
voted at such election or not.
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(3) Every election petition shall
be accompanied by as many copies
thereof as there are respondents
mentioned in the petition, and
every such copy shall be attested
by the petitioner under his own
signature to be a true copy of the
petition."
(emphasis supplied)
Section 83.
"83. Contents of petition.-- (1) An
election petition--
(a) shall contain a concise
statement of the material
facts on which the petitioner
relies;
(b) shall set fourth full
particulars of any corrupt
practice that the petitioner
alleges, including as full a
statement as possible of the
names of the parties alleged
to have committed such corrupt
practice and the date and
place of the commission of
each such practice; and
(c) shall be signed by the
petitioner and verified in the
manner laid down in the Code
of Civil Procedure 1908, for
the verification of pleadings:
Provided that where the petitioner
alleges any corrupt practice, the
petition shall also be accompanied
by an affidavit in the prescribed
form in support of the allegation
of such corrupt practice and the
particulars thereof.
(2) Any schedule or annexure to the
petition shall also be signed by
the petitioner and verified in the
same manner as the petition.
(emphasis supplied)
Section - 86 (1)
"86. Trial of election petition---
(1) The High Court shall dismiss an
election petition which does not
comply with the provisions of
section 81 of section 82 or section
117."
There are innumerable decisions of this Court which
have construed the above statutory provisions. It is hardly
necessary to refer to all of them One of the latest
decisions is F.A. Spa & Ors. V. Singora & Ors. (1991 (3) SCC
375). A mere look of the proviso to Section 83(1) along with
Section 83(2) will show that the affidavit referred to in
the proviso to Section 83(1) also forms part of the election
petition. The election petitions is in truth and reality one
document, consisting of two part-- one being the election
petition proper and the other being the affidavit referred
to in proviso to section 83(1) of the Act. So, the copy of
the election petition required to be file under Section
83(3) read along with Section 83 will include a copy of the
affidavit. See: M. Kamalam v. Dr. V.A. Syed Mohammed. [AIR
1978 SC 840 (844)]
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Qazi, j. In Purushottam v. Returning Officer, Mravati
and Ors. (AIR 1992 Bombay 227) has, after referring to the
above decision of this Court along with the other decision
and an unreported decision of the Bombay High Court in
Election petition petition No. 2 or 1990, held that the
absence of the endorsement of the Notary on the copy of the
affidavit accompanying the election petition renders the
copy as not conforming to Section is liable to be dismissed
for the said omission.
In my opinion, the above decision lays dow the law
correctly and is squarely applicable herein. In particular,
the following observations in the unreported decision of the
Bombay High Court in Election petition No. 2 or 1990 quoted
in paragraph No. 12 of the judgment of Qazi, j. are
instructive and furnish sufficient basis to reach the said
conclusion. The observations are to the following effect:
"50. That, however, leaves one
question to be considered and it is
whether the copy of the endorsement
"Affirmed and signed before me" by
the Notary, designation of the
Notary and the stamped endorsement
regarding the affirmation which he
made at the time of the making of
the affidavit, were necessary and
essential parts of the document and
if these are omitted from the copy
furnished, that would render the
copy, which is furnished,
incomplete, and the defect would be
so glaring as to negative the
inference that the copy was
furnished. When Form No. 25
prescribes a particular form and
the copy of the affidavit is to be
furnished, it seems to me that the
endorsement the authority before
whom the affirmation was made,
together with his official
designation and the stamped
endorsement, are also essential and
without them the copy cannot be
regarded as true copy. It is not
merely the contents of the
affidavit which brings sanctity to
the document by the affirmation
that has been made, and without the
affirmation, it can be no affidavit
at all. I am not impressed by the
submission of Shri Bobde that these
endorsements were merely formal,
because what is required under the
proviso to sub-section(1) of S. 83
is an affidavit, and it should be
possible for the respondent to
ascertain whether, infact, the
contents were sworn, affirmed and
signed before the Magistrate or the
Notary or the person in whose
presence the affirmation was made,
had authority to administer oath.
The respondent will no be in
position to point out that the
person, who is said to have
administered the oath, was not in
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existence or had no authority to
administer the oath or that the
signature and the endorsement on
the document purported to have been
made by the alleged authority were
fake. If the copies of the
affidavit are no faithful and do
not include these endorsements, a
valuable right of the respondent is
taken away and considering the
purpose which the copy of the
endorsement would serve, it cannot
be said that this portion would not
be integral part of the affidavit.
Since these details form an
integral part of the affidavit,
furnishing a copy without that
portion would not be furnishing a
complete copy, and in that event,
merely because the returned
candidate made and endorsement that
it was a true copy, it cannot be
regarded as a true copy.
Considering the purpose that is to
be served, I do not think that the
lapse can be regarded as
inconsequential."
(emphasis supplied)
With respect, I would adopt the said observations as
may own. The appeals deserve to be dismissed.