Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
D. R. GURUSHANTAPPA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ABDUL KHUDDUS ANWAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/01/1969
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 744 1969 SCR (3) 425
1969 SCC (1) 466
CITATOR INFO :
R 1975 SC1053 (7)
MV 1975 SC1331 (125)
RF 1976 SC2283 (40)
RF 1981 SC 658 (10)
C 1984 SC 161 (27)
D 1984 SC 385 (9,19)
R 1985 SC 211 (15,17)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act (43 of 1951), s. 10-
Candidate elected employed in a company owned by Government-
If disqualified-Constitution of India Arts. 102(1) and
191(1)-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent was appointed in a undertaking started
and managed by the State Government, as its own concern.
Later a company was registered and it took over the
undertaking. All the shares in the company were held by the
Government though some were in the name of its officers.
The Directors of the Company were appointed by the
Government a Minister was one of the first Directors of the
Company; the appointment of the Secretary of the Company was
subject to approval of the Government; and, even in the
general working of the company, Government had the power to
issue directions to the Directors which were to be carried
out by them. When the concern was taken over from the
Government by the Company, the services of the first
respondent were not terminated and he was continued in the
same post by the company which he was holding when the
concern was being run by the Government, and there was no
fresh contract entered into between him and the company. He
was later promoted to the post of Superintendent in the
Company, and he successfully contested a seat to the State
Legislature. The appellant an unsuccessful candidate,
challenged the election contending : (i) that the first
respondent when initially appointed to the post was a
government servant arid, even after that concern was taken
over by the company, he continued to be in the service of
the Government and (ii) alternatively, that ever if the
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first respondent ceased to be Government servant, he still
continued to hold an office of profit under the State
Government, though technically he was in the employment of
the company.
HELD : The first respondent was not holding an office of
profit under the State Government.
(i) When the undertaking was taken over by the company as a
going concern, the employees working in the undertaking were
also taken over and since, in law, the company had to be
treated as an entity distinct and separate from the
Government, the employees, as a result of the transfer of
the undertaking, became employees of the company and ceased
to be employees of the Government. The first respondent was
a workman at the time of the transfer of the undertaking and
as a workman, he had, under s. 25FF of the Industrial
Disputes Act, become an employee of the new employer, viz.
the company. In view of this provision of law, there was no
need for any specific contract being entered into between
the Government and the first respondent terminating his
Government service; nor was there any need for a fresh
contract being entered into between the company and the
first respondent to make him an employee of the company.
Further, after the undertaking was taken over by the
company, the employees, who were workmen, were no longer
governed by the State’s Civil Service Regulations. Their
conditions of service were determined by the Standing Orders
of the Company which were certified under
426
the Industrial Employment (Standing Order) Act, 1946. The
mere inclusion in the Civil List of the name of a person
could not prove that that person was in the service of the
Government, unless evidence was tendered to show the
circumstances under which the name was included in the Civil
List and to exclude the possibility of names of persons
other than those in government service being included in the
Civil List. No such evidence was given in this case.
Finally the post, which he was holding while the concern was
being run by the Government, ceased to be a Government post
in the transfer of the undertaking to the company and became
a post under the company, so that the first respondent
ceased to be in Government service by continuing in that
post. [429E, G; 430B, E-H],
(ii) The fact that the Government had control over the
Managing Director and other Directors as well as the power
of issuing directions relating to the working of the company
could not lead to the inference that every employee of the
company was under the control of the Government. The power
to appoint and dismiss first respondent did not vest in the
Government or in any Government servant, The power to con-
trol and give directions as to the manner in which the
duties of the office were to be performed by the first
respondent also did not vest in the Government but in an
officer of the company. Even the power to determine the
question of remuneration payable to the first respondent was
not vested in the Government which could only lay down rules
relating to the conditions of service of the employees of
the company. In the case of election as, President or Vice-
President, the disqualification arises even if the candidate
is holding an office of profit under the local or any other
authority under the control of the Central Government or the
State Government, whereas, in the case of a candidate for
election as a Member of any of the Legislatures, no such
disqualification is laid down by the Constitution if the
office of profit is held under the local or any other
authority under the control of the Government and not
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directly under any of the Government. This clearly
indicates that in the case of eligibility for election as a
member of a Legislature, the holding of an office of profit
under a corporate body like a local authority does not bring
about disqualification even if the local authority be under.
the control of the Government. The mete control of the
Government over the authority having the power to appoint,
dismiss, or control the working of the officer employed by
such authority does not disqualify the officer from being a
candidate for election as a member of the Legislature in the
manner in which such disqualification comes into existence
for being elected as the President or the Vice-President.
[433F; 434H; 435 A-C]
By s. 10 of the Representation of the People Act, the
disqualification is limited to a person holding the office
of a managing agent, manager or secretary of a company in
the capital of which the Government has not less than 25%
share, and the disqualification does not apply to other
employees of the company. This gives two indications as to
the scope of the disqualification laid down in Arts. 102(1)
(a) and 191 (1) (a) of the Constitution. One is that the
holding of an office in a company, in the capital of which
the Government has not less than 25% share, is not covered
by the disqualifications laid down in Arts. 102(1)(a) and
191(1) (a), as, otherwise, this provision would be
redundant. The second is that even Parliament, when passing
the Act, did not consider it necessary to disqualify every
person holding an office of profit under a Government
company, but limited the disqualification to persons holding
the office of managing agent,, manager or secretary of the
company. The fact that the entire share capital in the
company in this case is owned by the Government does not,
make any difference. [435 D-H]
427
Gurugobinda Basu v. Sankari Prasad Ghosal & Ors. [1964] 4
S.C.R. 311 and Maulana Abdul Shakur v. Rikhab Chand, [1958]
S.C.R. 387, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 718 of 1968.
Appeal under s. 116-A of the Representation of the People
Act, 1951 from the judgment and order dated November 17,
1967 of the Mysore High Court in Election Petition No. 7 of
1967.
S. V. Gupte, Shyamala Pappu, S. S. Javali and Vineet
Kumar, for the appellant.
Lily Thomas, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. This appeal under section II 6A of the Repre-
sentation of the Peoples’ Act No. 43 of 1951 (hereinafter
referred to as "the Act") has been filed by one of the
unsuccessful candidates for election to the Mysore
Legislative Assembly from No. 152, Bhadravati Constituency,
against the judgment of the High Court of Mysore dismissing
his election petition for setting aside the election of the
successful candidate, respondent No. 1. After the nomination
papers had been filed, the scrutiny of the nomination papers
took place on the 21st January, 1967 and five nomination
papers were declared as valid. They were the nomination
papers of the appellant, respondent No. 1 and respondents
Nos. 2 to 4. The polling for the Constituency took place on
15th February, 1967, and after the counting of votes, the
results were declared on 22nd February, 1967. Respondent
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No. 1 received 15,862 votes, while the appellant received
13,380 votes. The other three candidates, respondents 2 to
4, were also unsuccessful having received much smaller
number of votes. On 5th April, 1957, the appellant filed
the election petition challenging the election of respondent
No. 1 on a number of grounds, out of which we need mention
only one single ground, as the appeal in this Court is
confined to that ground alone. It was pleaded that
respondent No. 1 Was disqualified under Article 191 (1) (a)
of the Constitution from being chosen as a member of the
Legislative Assembly, because he was holding an office of
profit under the Government of the State of Mysore on the
date of scrutiny. This ground, as well as other grounds
taken by the appellant for challenging the validity of the
election of respondent No. 1 were all rejected by the High
Court and the election petition was dismissed.’ Conse-
quently, the appellant has come up in this appeal to this
Court. Though, in this appeal, a number of grounds were
raised, Mr. S. V. Gupte, counsel for the appellant, confined
the case to this sole ground of disqualification of
respondent No. 1 on the date of scrutiny.
428
The facts relevant for deciding this issue may now be
stated. On the date of scrutiny, respondent No. 1 was
employed as Superintendent, Safety Engineering Department in
the Factory run by the Mysore Iron & Steel Works Ltd.,
Bhadravati. His salary was more than Rs. 500 per mensem.
The past history of the service of respondent No. 1 was that
he was appointed in the year 1936 in the Mysore Iron & Steel
Works, Bhadravati, which was started by the Government of
Mysore and was being managed by the Government as its own
concern. He continued to be a servant of the Government of
Mysore when, in the year 1962, a private limited Company was
registered under the name of Mysore Iron & Steel Limited,
Bhadravati (hereinafter referred to as "the Company") under
the Indian Companies Act, 1956, and this Company took over
the Mysore Iron & Steel Works from the Government. Res-
pondent No. 1 had first joined service as a daily worker in
1936, but was promoted as Chargeman, Asstt. Foreman,
Foreman and thereafter as Assistant Superintendent which was
the post held by him in the year 1962 at the time when the
concern was taken over by the Company. Subsequently, he was
promoted as Superintendent in the year 1964 and was working
on that post at the time of the election in 1967. It was
also the common case of the parties that the shares of the
Company were held cent per cent by the Mysore Government,
though some of the shares were shown in the names of some of
the Officers in the service of the Mysore Government. Under
the Articles of Association of the Company, the first
Directors of the Company were the Minister-in-charge of the
Industries Portfolio in the Mysore Government, the Secre-
taries to the Mysore Government in the Finance Department,
and in the Commerce and Industries Department, the Managing
Director of the Mysore Iron & Steel Ltd., and the Chief
Conservator of Forests of the Mysore Government. The
Governor of Mysore was entitled to appoint all or a majority
of the members of the Board of Directors so long as the
Government of Mysore held not less than 51 per cent of the
total paid-up capital of the Company or so long as the
Governor continued to be interested in any fiduciary
capacity. The Board of Directors could also co-opt one or
more individuals as Directors. Thus, the State Government
had considerable control in appointment of Directors of the
Company as well as in the appointment of the Managing
Director who was to be appointed by the Governor from
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amongst the Directors nominated by him. The Governor was
also entitled to appoint from amongst the nominated
Directors a Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the Board of
Directors. Even the Secretary of the Company had to be
appointed by the Board of Directors after obtaining approval
of the Governor. In respect of other employees of the
Company, recruitment and service conditions had to be in
accordance with the rules which may be prescribed by the
Governor from time to time. When the concern was taken over
from
429
the Government by the Company,, the services of respondent
No. 1 were not terminated and he was continued in the same
post by the Company which he was holding when the concern
was being run by the Government. There was no fresh
contract entered into between him and the Company. On these
facts, two alternative contentions were raised by Mr. Gupte
to urge that respondent No. 1 was disqualified under Art.
191 (1 ) (a) of the Constitution. The first argument was
that respondent No. 1, when initially appointed to a post in
the Mysore Iron & Steel Works in 1936, was a government
servant and, even after that concern was taken over by the
Company, he continued to be in the service of the Mysore
Government. In the alternative, the second contention was
that, even if respondent No. 1 ceased to be a government
servant, he still continued to hold an office of profit
under the Government of Mysore though, technically, he was
in the employment of the Company.
So far as the first point is concerned, reliance is placed
primarily on the circumstance that then the concern was
taken over by the Company from the Government, there were no
specific agreements terminating the government service of
respondent No. 1, or bringing into existence a relationship
of master and servant between the Company and respondent No.
1. That circumstance,, by itself, cannot lead to the
conclusion that respondent No. 1 continued to be in
government service. When the undertaking was taken over by
the Company as a going concern, the employees working in the
undertaking were also taken over and since, in law, the
Company has to be treated as an entity distinct and separate
from the Government, the employees, as a result of the
transfer of the undertaking, became employees of the Company
and ceased to be employees of the Government. This position
is very clear at least in the case of those employees who
were covered by the definition of workmen under the
Industrial Disputes Act in whose-cases, on the transfer of
the undertaking, the provisions of section 25FF of that Act
would apply. Respondent No. 1 was a workman at the time of
the transfer of the undertaking in the year 1962, because he
was holding the post of an Assistant Superintendent and was
drawing a salary below Rs. 500 per mensem. As a workman, he
would, under s. 25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act, become
an employee of the new employer, viz., the Company, which
took over the undertaking from the Mysore Government which
was the previous employer. In view of this provision of
law, there was, in fact,, no need for any specific contract
being entered into between the Mysore Government and
respondent No. 1 terminating his government service, nor was
there any need for a fresh contract being entered into
between the Company and respondent No. 1 to make him an
employee of the Company.
8SUP.C.1/69-9
430
This position is further clarified by the circumstance that,
after the undertaking was taken over by the Company, the em-
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ployees, who were workmen, were no longer governed by the
Mysore Civil Service Regulations. Their conditions of
service were determined by the Standing Orders of the
Company which were certified under the Industrial Employment
(Standing Orders) Act, 1946. These Standing Orders even
referred to certain employees as "lent Officers". The
reference was obviously to persons who continued to be in
the Government service, but whose services were lent to the
Company. It was conceded in the present case that
respondent No. 1 was not a lent officer as envisaged by that
expression used in the Standing Orders.
Respondent No. 1 further came to be governed by the Works
Service Rules. It is true that, under the Articles of
Association, the Governor had the power to lay down
conditions of service of the employees of the Company; but
that cannot mean that the employees of the Company continued
to be in the service of the Government. Reliance in this
connection was also placed on behalf of the appellant on the
fact that the name of respondent No. 1’ appeared in the
Mysore Civil List under the heading "Iron and Steel. Ltd.,
Bhadravati" from which an inference was sought to be drawn
that respondent No. 1 must have continued in government
service, as, otherwise, his name would not have been
included in the Civil List. The mere inclusion in the Civil
List of the name of a person cannot be held to prove that
that person is in the service of the Government, unless
evidence is tendered to show the circumstances under which
the name was included in the Civil List and to exclude the
possibility of names of persons other than those in
government service being included in the Civil List. No
such evidence was given in this case. On the other hand,
the same Civil List shows that even the names of certain
employees of the Universities in the State are also included
in it,, and, on the face of it, University employees could
not be held to be in government service. The Civil List
relied upon clearly is not confined to names of persons in
Mysore Government service only, so that this piece of
evidence relied on by the appellant also does not establish
that respondent No. 1 continued to be in government service
after the undertaking was taken over by the Company.
Finally, there is the circumstance that it is not shown
that, after the undertaking was taken over by the Company,
respondent No. 1 continued to hold a lien on any Government
post. In fact, the post, which he was holding while the
concern was being run by the Mysore Government, ceased to be
a Government post on the transfer of the undertaking to the
Company and became a post under the Company, so that
respondent No., 1 ceased to be in government service by
continuing in that post. The first contention raised on
behalf of the appellant, therefore, fails.
431
On the second contention that, even if respondent No. 1 was
not holding a government post, he must be held to be holding
an office of profit under the Government, Mr. Gupte relied
on the principles laid down by this Court in Gurugobinda
Basu v. Sankari Prasad Ghosal and others(1). The Court in
that case brought out the distinction between an office of
profit under the Government and a post in the service of the
Government by stating
"We agree with the High Court that for holding
an office of profit under the Government, one
need not be in the service of Government and
there need be no. relationship of master and
servant between them. The Constitution itself
makes a distinction between ’the holder of an
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office of profit under the Government’ and
’the holder of a post or service under the
Government’ see Arts. 309 and 314. The
Constitution has also made a distinction
between ’the holder of an office of profit
under the Government’ and ’the holder of an
office of profit under a local or other
authority subject to the control of
Government’; see Art. 58(2) and 66-(4)."
The Court then proceeded to consider the earlier decision in
the case of Maulana Abdul Shakur v. Rikhab Chand and Anr.(1)
and held :-
"it is clear from the aforesaid observations
that in Maulana Abdul Shakur’s case(2) the
factors which were held to be decisive were :
(a) the power of the Government to appoint a
person to an office of profit or to continue
him in that office or revoke his appointment
at their discretion, and (b) payment from out
of Government revenues, though it was pointed
out that payment from a source other than
Government revenues was not always a decisive
factor."
After this reference to Maulana Abdul Shakur’s case (2) the
Court proceeded, to apply the principles to the facts of the
case before it. In that case, the question was whether the
appellant was holding an office of profit under the
Government of India. It was pointed out that the
appointment of the appellant as also his continuance in
office rested solely with the Government of India in respect
of the two Companies for which he was employed as an
Auditor. His remuneration was also fixed by the Government.
The Court assumed for the purposes of the appeal that the
two Companies were statutory bodies distinct from
Government, but noted the fact that, at the same time, they
were Government Companies within the meaning of the Indian
Companies Act. Emphasis was laid on the circumstance that,
in the performance of his functions, the appellant was
controlled by the Comptroller
(1) [ 1 964] 4 S.C.R. 31 1.
(2) [1958] S.C.R, 387,
432
and Auditor-General who himself was undoubtedly holder of an
office of profit under the Government, though there were
safeguards in the Constitution as to the tenure of his
office and removability therefrom. Under Art. 148 of the
Constitution, the Comptroller & Auditor-General was
appointed by the President and he could be removed from
office in like manner and on the like grounds as a Judge of
the Supreme Court. ’Me salary and other conditions of
service of the Comptroller & Auditor-General were to be such
as might be determined by Parliament by law and, until they
were so determined, they were to be as ’specified in the
Second Schedule to the Constitution. Other provisions
relating to the Controller and Auditor-General were also
taken notice of and an inference was drawn from these
provisions that the Comptroller and Auditor-General is
himself a holder of an office of profit under the Government of I
ndia, being appointed by the President, and his
administrative powers are such as may be prescribed by the
rules, made by the President, subject to the provisions of
the Constitution and of any law made by Parliament. The
Court then held:-
"Therefore, if we look at the matter from the
point of view of substance rather than of
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form, it appears to us that the appellant, as
the holder of an office of profit in the two
Government companies, the Durgapur Projects
Ltd., and the Hindustan Steel Ltd., is really
under the Government of India; he is appointed
by the Government of India; he is removable
from office by the Government of, India; he
performs functions for two Government
companies under the control of the Comptroller
and Auditor-General who himself is appointed
by the President and whose administrative
powers may be controlled by rules made by the
President."
Thereafter, the Court proceeded to hold:-
"In view of these decisions, we cannot accede
to the submission of Mr. Chaudhury that the
several factors which enter into the
determination of this question-the appointing
authority, the authority vested with power to
terminate the appointment, the authority which
determines the remuneration, the source from
which the remuneration is paid, and the
authority vested with power to control the
manner in which the duties of the office are
discharged and to give directions in that
behalf must all co-exist and each must show
subordination to Government and that it must
necessarily follow that if one of the elements
is absent, the test of a person holding an
office under the Government, Central or State,
is not satisfied. ’Me cases we have referred
to specifically point out that the
circumstance that the source
433
from which the remuneration is paid is not
from public revenue is a neutral factor not
decisive of the question. As we have said
earlier, whether stress will be laid on one
factor or the other will depend on the facts
of each case. However, we have no hesitation
in saying that where the several elements, the
power to appoint, the power to dismiss, the
power to control and give directions as to the
manner in which the duties of the office are
to be performed, and the power to determine
the question of remuneration are all present
in a given case, then the officer in question
holds the office under the authority so
empowered."
Mr., Gupte, from these views expressed by the Court,, sought
to draw the inference that the primary consideration for
determining whether a person holds an office of profit under
a Government is the amount of control which the Government
exercises over that officer. In the present case, he relied
on the circumstance that all the shares of the Company are
not only owned by the Mysore Government, but the Directors
of the Company are appointed by the Government a Minister
was one of the first Directors of the Company; the
appointment of the Secretary to the Company is subject to
approval of the Government; and, even in the general working
of the Company, Government has the power to issue directions
to the Directors which must be carried out by them. It was
urged that respondent No. 1 was directly under the control
of the Managing Director who is himself appointed by the
Government and may even be a ’lent officer’ holding a
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permanent. post under the Government. Respondent No. 1,
thus, must. be held to be working under the control of the
Government exercised through the Managing Director.
We are unable to accept the proposition that the mere fact
that the Government had control over the Managing Director
and other Directors as well as the power of issuing
directions relating to the working of the Company can lead
to the inference that every employee of the- Company is
under the control of the Government. The power of
appointment and dismissal of respondent No. 1 vested in the
Managing Director of the Company and not in the Government.
Even the directions for the day-to-day work to be performed
by respondent No. 1 could only be issued by the Managing
Director of the Company and not by the Government. The
indirect control of the Government which might arise because
of the power of the Government to appoint the Managing
Director and to issue directions to the Company in its
general working does not bring respondent No. 1 directly
under the control of the Government. In Gurugobinda Basu’s
case(1), the position was quite different. In that case,
the appellant was appointed by
(1) [1964]4S.C.311,
434
the Government and was liable to be dismissed by the Govern-
ment. His day-to-day working was controlled by the
Comptroller and Auditor-General who was a servant of the
Government and was not in any way an office-bearer of the
two Companies concerned. In fact, the Court had no
hesitation in holding that the appellant in that case was
holding an office of profit ’under the Government, because
the Court found that the several elements which existed were
the power to appoint, the power to dismiss, the power to
control and give directions as to the manner in which the
duties of the office are to be performed, arid the power to
determine the question of remuneration. AR these elements
being present, the Court did not find any difficulty in
finding that the appellant was holding an office of profit
under the Government. In the case before us, the position
is quite different. The power to appoint and dismiss
respondent No. 1 does not vest in the Government or in any
government servant. The power to control and give
directions as to the manner in which the duties of the
office are to be performed by respondent No. 1 also does not
vest in the Government, but in an officer of the Company.
Even the power to determine the question of remuneration
payable to respondent No. 1 is not vested in the Government
which can only lay down rules relating to the conditions of
service of the employees of the Company. We are unable to
agree that, in these circumstances, the indirect control
exercisable by the Government because of its power to
appoint, the Directors and to give general directions to the
Company can be held to make the post of Superintendent,
Safety Engineering Department, an office of profit under the
Government.
In this connection, a comparison between Arts. 58(2) and
66(4), and Arts. 102(1) and 191(1)(a) of the Constitution is
of significant help. In Arts. 58(2) and 66(4) dealing with
eligibility for election as President or Vice-President of
India, the Constitution lays down that a person shall not be
eligible for election if he holds any office of profit under
the Government of India or the Government of any State or
under any local or other authority subject to the control of
any of the said Governments. In Articles 102 (1 )(a) and
191 (1) (a) dealing with membership of either House of
Parliament or State Legislature, the disqualification arises
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only if the person holds any office of profit under the
Government of India or the Government of any State other
than an office declared by Parliament or State Legislature
by law not to disqualify its holder. Thus, in the case of
election as President or Vice-President, the
disqualification arises even if the candidate is holding an
office of profit under a local or any other authority under
the control of the Central Government or the State
Government, whereas, in the case of a candidate for election
as a Member of any of the Legislatures, no such
disqualification
435
is laid down by the Constitution if the office of profit is
held under a local or any other authority under the control
of the, Governments and not directly under any of the
Governments. This clearly indicates that in the case of
eligibility for election as a member of a Legislature, the
holding of an office of profit under a corporate body like a
local authority does not bring about disqualification even
if that local authority be under the control of the Govern-
ment. The mere control of the Government over the authority
having the power to appoint, dismiss, or control the working
of the officer employed by such authority does not
disqualify that officer from being a candidate for election
as a member of the Legislature in the manner in which such
disqualification comes into existence for being elected as
the President or the Vice-President. The Company, in the
present case, no doubt did come under the control of the
Government and respondent No. 1 was holding an office of
profit under the Company; but, in view of the distinction
indicated above, it is clear that the disqualification laid
down under Art. 191 (1) (a) of the Constitution was not
intended to apply to the holder of such an office of profit.
It also appears to us that it was in view of this limited
application of the disqualification laid down in Arts. 102
(1 ) (a) and 191 (1) (a) of the Constitution that Parliament
made an additional provision in section 10 of the Act by
laying down that "a person shall be disqualified if, and for
so long as, he is a managing agent, manager or secretary of
any company or corporation (other than a co-operative
society) in the capital of which the, appropriate Government
has not less than twenty-five per cent share." It is to be
noted that the Parliament, in enacting this section,
limited the disqualification to a person holding the office
of a managing agent, manager or secretary of a company, and
not to other employees of the Company. This provision,
thus, gives two indications as to the scope of the
disqualification laid down in Arts. 102 (1)(a) and 191(1)(a)
of the Constitution. One is that the holding of an office
in a company, in the capital of which the Government has not
less than 25 per cent share, is not covered by the
disqualifications laid down in Arts. 102(1)(a) and 191 (1)
(a), as, otherwise, this provision would be redundant. The
second is that even Parliament, when passing the Act, did
not consider it necessary to disqualify every person holding
an office of profit under a Government Company. but limited
the disqualification to persons holding the office of
managing agent, manager or secretary of the Company. The
fact that the entire share capital in the Company in the
case before us is owned by the Government does not, in our
opinion, make any difference. Under the Articles of
Association, it is clear that, though, initially, all shares
were held by the Government, it is possible that private
citizens may also hold shares in the Company. In fact,
there, are provisions indicating that shares held by certain
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shareholders can pass
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by succession to members of their family or can even be
transferred by gift to them. The Articles of Association
lay down that the Company shall be a private limited company
within the meaning of the Indian Companies Act, 1956, and,
though the shares in the capital of the Company are under
the control of the Board of Directors, they have been given
the liberty to allot, grant option over or otherwise dispose
of the shares at such time and to such persons, and in such
manner and upon such terms as they may think proper. Under
this power, the Directors can allot shares to private
individuals. It is under art. 34 of the Articles of
Association that a shareholder is given the power, by way of
gift or for or without any pecuniary consideration, to
transfer any share in the capital of the Company to the wife
or husband of such member, or to a son, daughter, father,
mother, grandson, grand-daughter, brother, sister, nephew or
niece of such member or the wife or husband of any person
standing in such relationship to the transferring member.
Devolution of shares on sequent to the death of a member, on
his heirs is also recognised by the Articles of Association.
In these circumstances, the principles which will apply to
the Company will be on a par with those applicable to other
Government Companies or Companies in which the Government
holds more than 25 per cent of the share capital. The
Company cannot, therefore, be treated as either being
equivalent to the Government or to be an agent of the
Government, so that the control exercised by its Directors
or the Managing Director over respondent No. 1 cannot be
held to be control exercised by the Government.
Mr. Gupte, in this connection, also urged that we should
Pierce the veil of the Company being a separate juristic and
legal entity,, apart from the Government which owns all the
shares in the Company, and hold that, in fact, the Company
should be equated with the Government of Mysore itself .In
our opinion, in the present case, no question of piercing
the veil can arise in view of the provisions of section 10
of the Act which specifically deals with disqualification
for membership of persons holding offices under a Company in
which a Government holds shares. That section limits the
scone of disqualification to holders of three particular
offices only and in companies in which the share holding of
the Government is not less ’than 25 per cent. This provi-
sion clearly indicates that, for purposes of determining
disqualification for candidature to a Legislature, it would
not be appropriate to attempt to lift the veil and equate a
Company with the Government merely because the share-capital
of the Company is contributed by the Government. The
discussion of the relevant Constitutional provisions above
also supports this view. In the present case, therefore,
respondent No. 1 cannot be held to be holding an office of
profit under the Government of Mysore and was Pot dis-
437
qualified from being chosen as a member of the Assembly of
the State.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
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