Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHYAM SUNDER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SATYA KETU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/10/1966
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHELAT, J.M.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 923 1967 SCR (1) 752
ACT:
Representation of the People Act, ss. 98, 116-A, 120, 122-
Whether appeal under s. 116-A required to be accompanied by
’decree of election tribunal-whether tribunal to pass
’decree’ or memorandum of costs.
Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, r. 73(2)-First, preference
in ballot paper indicated by Roman numeral 1 instead of
Arabic numeral-Whether ballot paper valid-Whether use of
words ’1’ or ’one’ after numeral ’1’ invalidates vote.
HEADNOTE:
In an election to a seat to the U.P. Legislative Council in
accordance with the system of proportional representation by
means of single transferable vote, the respondent was
declared elected. The appellant, who was also a candidate
challenged the election by an election petition. He
alleged that certain ballot papers counted in favour of the
respondent were invalid, because in violation of r. 73(2) of
the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, they bore the Roman
numeral I instead of the Arabic numeral 1. The Election
Tribunal upheld the contention. The respondent appealed to
the High Court and in that appeal the appellant took a
preliminary objection that the appeal should be dismissed as
it was not accompanied by a copy of a decree containing
details of cost directed to be prepared by the Tribunal.
The High Court dismissed the preliminary objection and
allowed the appeal.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (i) The High Court rightly dismissed the preliminary
objection; in an appeal to the High Court under s. 116-A of
the Representation of the People Act, 1951, -all that is
necessary to be filed is a copy of judgment of the Tribunal
and no more. [758 E]
There is no provision in Part VI of the Act for the passing
of a decree: by the Election Tribunal. Section 98 which
refers to the decision of the Tribunal provides in specific
terms that the Tribunal shall make an order at the
conclusion of the trial and indicates the three types of
orders that the Tribunal is entitled to make. Section 116-A
provides for an appeal not from a decree of the tribunal but
from an order passed by it, under s. 98. What may be
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prepared on the basis of an order for costs passed by a
tribunal would be a memorandum of costs and not a ’decree’.
The fact that under s. 90(1) an election has to be tried as
nearly as may be in accordance with the procedure applicable
under the Code of Civil Procedure to the trial of suits does
not mean that a decree should be prepared by the Tribunal in
the same manner as a decree is prepared by a civil court at
the end of the trial of a suit. [756 B, H; 757 C]
Rule 2 in Chapter XIV-A of the Rules of the Allahabad High
Court with respect to appeals from orders of election
tribunal is also in accordance with the scheme of the Act
and does not require a copy of any decree to be filed with
the appeal. [758 B]
(ii)Rule 73(2) of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961 does
not require that the figure 1 must be marked in the Arabic
form. Where figure 1 is marked on the ballot paper, whether
it be in one form or other including the Roman form, that is
in full compliance with the rule, and the ballot paper would
not be invalid in the circumstances. [758 H; 759 G]
753
Any other word like "st" after the Roman figure I or the
word "one’ in brackets thereafter would not invalidate the
vote for the figure "I" would show the first preference.
[759 H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 204 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated March 10, 1965 of
the Allahabad High Court in F.A. No. 213 of 1964.
G. N. Dikshit, for the appellant.
R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwal, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, J. This is an appeal on a certificate granted by
the Allahabad High Court and arises in the following
circumstances. An election was held for one seat to the U.
P. Legislative Council from the Rohilkhand Graduates
Constituency on April 22, 1962. There were 14 candidates,
and election was held in accordance with the system of
proportional representation by means of single transferable
vote. Total number of votes cast were 4412 and 2207 first
preference votes were required to secure the return of any
candidate at the first count. As no candidate secured the
minimum votes at the first count, subsequent counts had to
be made excluding the candidate who had received the lowest
number of votes on each count. Eventually, Satya Ketu,
respondent, got the highest number of votes after the last
count and he was declared elected by a margin of 47 votes.
Thereupon the appellant filed an election petition claiming
that a declaration be made that the election of Satya Ketu
was void and that the appellant was duly elected from this
constituency. The basis of the appellant’s claim was that
invalid votes had been counted in favour of Satya Ketu
inasmuch ballot papers on which figure I was not marked were
counted as valid when they should have been counted as
invalid in view of r. 73(2) of the Conduct of Elections
Rules, 1961, (hereinafter referred to as the Rules). Satya
Ketu contended in reply that all the votes counted in his
favour were valid votes and therefore prayed that the
petition should be dismissed.
Thus the main question for decision before the Election Tri-
bunal (hereinafter referred to as the Tribunal) was whether
votes which should have been declared invalid in view of the
provision of r. 73(2) of the Rules had been counted as valid
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in favour of Satya Ketu. The Tribunal scrutinised the
ballot papers and divided them into a number of categories.
It held that certain ballot papers bore the Roman numeral I
instead of the Arabic numeral 1. It therefore held that
ballot papers marked with the Roman numeral I were invalid
under r. 73(2) of the Rules as they did not bear the Arabic
figure 1. It thus came to the conclusion that 491 votes cast
in favour of Satya Ketu were invalid. It therefore allowed
the peti-
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tion and declared the election of Satya Ketu, respondent,
void and further declared the appellant to be duly elected
from that constituency.
Satya Ketu then went in appeal to the High Court, and
his .Contention was that the Tribunal was wrong in holding
that ballot papers which had been marked by Roman numeral I
were invalid. He therefore contended that 491 votes
rejected by the Tribunal were validly cast and the petition
should have been dismissed. The appellant on the other hand
contended that the Tribunal’s view was correct. In
addition, the appellant raised a preliminary objection,
namely, that the appeal should be dismissed as it was not
accompanied by a copy of the decree. The High Court over-
ruled the preliminary objection and held that no copy of
decree was .necessary in view of the provisions of s. 98 and
s. 11 6-A of the Representation of the People Act, No. 43 of
1951, (hereinafter referred to as the Act). On the merits
it held that r. 73(2) did not mean that preference expressed
by writing down the Roman numeral I in place ,of the Arabic
numeral I would make the ballot paper on which the ’Roman
numeral I was written invalid. It therefore counted as
valid votes which bore the Roman numeral 1. Thus out of 491
votes which were declared invalid by the Tribunal, the High
Court was of the view that 460 votes were valid and as Satya
Ketu had won by 47 votes and would still win by 16 votes, it
allowed the appeal and dismissed the petition. The present
appeal has been filed by the -appellant with a certificate
granted by the High Court.
The first contention on behalf of the appellant is that the
appeal before the High Court was not maintainable as a copy
of the decree was not filed along with the judgment of the
Tribunal. It appears that a direction was given by the
Tribunal to the effect that a decree containing the details
of cost should be prepared, though no such decree was
actually prepared at any time. The question that falls for
decision therefore is whether a decree is required to be
prepared in accordance with the judgment of the tribunal in
an election petition, and if so, whether it is necessary to
file a copy of such decree along with a copy of the judgment
of the tribunal when -filing on appeal under s. II 6-A of
the Act.
It is necessary for this purpose to examine briefly the
scheme of the Act with respect to election petitions
contained in Part VI thereof. That part begins with s. 79
which defines certain words in -the context of Parts VI, VII
and VIII. Section 80 provides that no ,election shall be
called in question except by an election petition presented
in accordance with the provisions of Part VI. Section 81
provides for presentation of petitions before the Election
Commission, s. 82 for parties to the petition and s. 83 for
contents of the petition. Section 84 provides for relief to
be claimed by the petitioner, s. 85 for procedure by the
Election Commission on receipt of an
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election petition and s. 86 for appointment of election
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tribunals and reference of election petitions to the
tribunal. Section 88 provides for the place of trial, and
then comes s. 90 which provides for the procedure for trial.
Sub-section (1) thereof lays down that-
"Subject to the provisions of this Act and of any rules made
thereunder every election petition shall be tried by the
tribunal, as nearly as may be, in accordance with the pro-
cedure applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure,1908 (5
of 1908) to the trial of suits."
Sections 91 to 97 provide for certain other matters to which
reference is unnecessary. Section 98 provides for the
decision of the tribunal, and lays down that-
"At the conclusion of the trial of an election petition the
tribunal shall make an order-
(a) dismissing the election petition; or
(b) declaring the election of all or any of the returned
candidates to be void or
(c) declaring the election of all or any of the returned
candidates to be void and the petitioner or any other candi-
date to have been duly elected;"
It is unnecessary to refer to ss. 99 to 116 which provide
for certain matters. Then comes S. II 6-A which provides
for appeals against orders of election tribunals. Sub-
section (1) thereof lays down-
An appeal shall lie from every order made by a tribunal
under section 98 or section 99 to the High Court of the
State in which the Tribunal is situated." Subsection (2)
thereof provides that-
"The High Court shall, subject to the provisions of this
Act, have the same powers, jurisdiction and authority, and
follow the same procedure, with respect to an appeal under
this Chapter as if the appeal were an appeal from an
original decree. passed by a civil court situated within the
local limits of its civil appellate jurisdiction."
Section 120 provides for costs and lays down that costs
including pleaders’ fees shall be in the discretion of the
tribunal. Section 122 provides for execution of orders as
to costs and lays down that "any order as to costs under the
provisions of this Part may be produced before the principal
civil court of original jurisdiction within the, local
limits of whose jurisdiction any person directed by such
order to pay any sum of money has a place of residence or
business, or where such place is within a presidency town,
before the court of small causes having jurisdiction there,
and such court
756
shall execute the order or cause the same to be executed in
the same manner and by the same procedure as if it were a
decree for the payment of money made by itself in a suit."
It will be seen from this brief review of the provisions of
Part VI of the Act that there is no provision therein for
passing a decree by the election tribunal. Section 98 which
refers to the decision of the tribunal says in specific
terms that the tribunal shall make an order at the
conclusion of the trial and indicates the three types of
orders that the tribunal is entitled to make. If the Act
intended that tribunals shall pass a decree, there was
nothing to prevent the legislature from saying so in terms
in s. 98. Further s. 120 lays down that costs will be in
the discretion of the tribunal, and s. 122 shows that any
order as to costs shall be executed as if it were a money
decree. Now if the Act intended that there should be a
decree following the judgment of an election tribunal it
would not have been necessary to say in s. 122 that an order
passed by the tribunal with respect to costs shall be
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executed as if it were a money decree of a civil court. It
may be that the Tribunal in this case passed an order to the
effect that a decree for costs be prepared; but the use of
the word "decree" by the Tribunal was in our opinion an
error and what may be prepared on the basis of an order for
costs passed by a tribunal would be a memorandum of costs
which can be executed, if necessary, under s. 122 of the
Act. Therefore, when the Tribunal ordered that a decree
containing the details of costs should be prepared all that
it means is that a memorandum of costs should be prepared in
case any party wanted it for purposes of execution under s
122 of the Act. Further it is not disputed that there is no
provision in any rule framed under the Act for the
preparation of a decree by the election tribunal. What is
urged is that under s. 90(1), an election petition has to be
tried as nearly as may be in accordance with the procedure
applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure to the trial of
suits and that, it is urged, necessarily means that a decree
should be prepared by the tribunal in the same manner as a
decree prepared by a civil court at the end of the trial of
a suit. We are of opinion that this conclusion does not
follow from the language of s. 90. In the first place, s. 90
begins with the words "subject to the provisions of this Act
and of any rules made thereunder", and in the next place, it
enjoins that the procedure for the trial of suits should be
followed as nearly as may be. Therefore the scheme of Part
VI with respect to election petitions and their trial shows
that it is not necessary to draw up a decree at all, and
that is undoubtedly so as we have already indicated above.
The fact that the trial has to be in accordance with the
procedure laid down for the trial of suits would not bring
in those provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, which
require the preparation of a decree at the conclusion of
trial of a suit, for s. 90(1) itself indicates that the
procedure should be as nearly as may be of the Code of Civil
Procedure. We
757
are therefore of opinion that in view of the provisions of
the Act it is unnecessary to prepare a decree after the
conclusion of the trial of an election petition; section
90(1) would not make those provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure which require the preparation of a decree
applicable to the trial of an election petition, for the
Code of Civil Procedure has to be applied to such trial as
nearly as may be and subject to the provisions of the Act.
Further we have no doubt that preparation of a decree is not
necessary after the conclusion of the trial of an election
petition.
Let us then turn to s. I 16-A of the Act to see if there is
anything in that section which requires the filing of a
decree along with copy of the judgment of the tribunal.
Section 116-A inter alia provides for appeals against orders
made by a tribunal, under s. 98, We have already referred to
the fact that s. 98 does not speak of a decree. Section
116-A provides for an appeal not from a decree of the tri-
bunal but from an order passed by it inter alia under s. 98.
It is true that sub-s. (2) of s. II 6-A lays down that the
High Court shall follow the same procedure with respect to
such an appeal as if the appeal were an appeal from an
original decree passed by a civil court. But that in our
opinion does not mean that a copy of decree is necessary
before an appeal under s. 116-A is maintainable, for the
simple reason that the scheme of the Act shows that no
decree is necessary to be prepared by the tribunal at all
and the appeal under s. 116-A (1) is also from an order and
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not from a decree. In this connection we may refer to s. 96
of the Code of Civil Procedure which provides for an appeal
from an original decree. That section inter alia provides
that an appeal shall lie from every decree passed by any
court exercising original jurisdiction to the court
authorised to hear appeals from the decisions of such court.
It will be seen that s. 96 of the Code of Civil Procedure
provides for appeal from a decree in a suit, and that is why
it is necessary to prepare a decree; the same is also
provided in s. 33 of the Code of Civil Procedure which in
terms lays down that "the court, after the case has been
heard, shall pronounce judgment, and on such judgment a
decree shall follow". We have no corresponding words in ss.
98 and 116-A of the Act, and that shows that it is not
necessary to prepare a decree at the conclusion of the trial
of an election petition and in consequence no copy of decree
is necessary to be filed when an appeal is filed under s.
116-A of the Act.
In this connection our attention is drawn to the rules of
the Court, 1952, framed by the Allahabad High Court under
Art. 225 of the Constitution, relating to appeals. Rule 8
of Chap. IX inter alia lays down that the memorandum of
appeal shall be accompanied by a copy of the decree against
which the appeal is directed and a copy of the judgment upon
which such decree is founded. This rule is in accordance
with what the Code of Civil Procedure requires. But Chapter
XIV-A of the Rules of the Court was framed
758
by the Allahabad High Court specifically with respect to
appeals from orders of election tribunals, and r. 2 thereof
lays down that every memorandum of appeal shall be
accompanied by a certified copy of the order against which
the appeal is directed, This is in accordance with the
scheme of the Act, for the Act contemplates an appeal
against an order of the election tribunal under s. 116-A of
the Act. Further r. 14 of Chap. XIV-A makes it clear that
other rules relating to first appeals contained in Chapters
IX, X, XI, XII and XIII will apply subject to the provisions
of Chap. XIV-A. Therefore so far as the Rules of Court are
concerned, they do not provide for filing of a copy of the
decree and rightly so, for no decree is required to be
prepared at the conclusion of the trial of an election
petition by the tribunal.
Reference is also made to O.XLI r. I of the Code of Civil
Procedure, which provides that a memorandum of appeal shall
be accompanied by a copy of the decree appealed from and,
unless the appellate court dispenses therewith, of the
judgment on which it is founded. That rule however cannot
apply in full in the case of an appeal from an order of the
election tribunal in an election petition, for, if the Act
does not contemplate the framing of a decree and does not
provide for an appeal from a decree, that part of O.XLI r. I
which requires the filing of a copy of the decree appealed
from, cannot in the very nature of things apply to an appeal
under s. 116-A of the Act. We are therefore of opinion that
in an appeal under s. 116-A, all that is necessary to be
filed is a copy of the judgment of the tribunal, and no
more. The preliminary objection therefore fails.
Coming now to the merits of the appeal, the whole argument
of the appellant is based on r. 73(2) of the Rules, which is
in these terms :-
"(2) A ballot paper shall be invalid on which-
(a) the figure I is not marked; or
(b) the figure I is set opposite the name of more than one
candidate or is so placed as to render it doubtful to which
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candidate it is intended to apply; or
(c) the figure I and some other figures are set opposite
the name of the same candidate; or
(d) there is any mark or writing by which the elector can
be identified."
What is contended is that r. 73(2)(a) requires that figure I
must be marked on the ballot paper, and if that is not
marked, the ballot paper would be invalid. That is
undoubtedly so. But the rule does not say that figure I
which has to be marked must be marked in what are called
Arabic numerals or the International form of
759
Indian numerals. If that was the intention we should have
found it specifically mentioned in the rule. It is true
that in r. 73(2) (a), the figure I is shown in the form of
Arabic numeral, but that does not mean that the rule
intended that figure 1 on the ballot paper can only be
marked in the Arabic form and in no other. It would in our
opinion not be right to read cl. (a) as laying down that
figure I has to be marked in Arabic notation and if that is
not so, the ballot paper would be invalid. It seems to us
that what the rule provides is that the ballot paper has to
be marked with figure I to show first preference.
Therefore, if there is figure 1, first preference would be
shown irrespective of whether the figure was put down in the
form of Arabic numerals or in any other form. So long as it
is clear that figure I is marked on the ballot paper, the
ballot paper would be valid and it is only when figure I is
not marked at all in any form whatsoever that it can be said
that the ballot paper is invalid. We may mention that the
view we are taking has, now been made clear beyond doubt by
the addition of an Explanation to s. 73(2), which reads thus
:-
"The figures referred to in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of this
sub-rule may be marked in the international form of Indian
numerals or in Roman form or in the form used in any Indian
language, but shall not be indicated in words."
We are of opinion that this must have been the intention of
the rule as it stood before the Explanation was added, for
the marking of figure I on the ballot paper was necessary to
indicate the first preference without which the ballot paper
would be invalid. If first preference is indicated by
marking the figure I in one form or other, that would in our
opinion be in full compliance with r. 73(2) (a), and the
ballot paper would not be invalid. It is only if figure I
is not marked at all in any form that the ballot paper would
be invalid under r. 73(2)(a). We agree with the High Court
that marking of figure I in Roman form is in full compliance
with r. 73(2) (a). To say that Roman figures are composed
of letters of the alphabet is in our opinion no answer to
the argument, for it is well known how figures are marked in
Roman form, and there is no dispute as to the Roman form of
the figure 1. We are therefore of opinion, where figure I is
marked on the ballot paper, whether it be in one form or
other including the Roman form, that is in full compliance
with the rule, and the ballot paper would not be invalid in
the circumstances.
Then it is urged that besides the Roman figure 1, some other
words were added in some cases. Even if that were so, we
are of opinion that r. 73(2) (a) would not justify
declaration of a ballot paper as invalid so long as the
figure I is marked. If any other word is put down, like
"st", after the Roman figure I or the word "one"’
760
in brackets thereafter, that would not invalidate the vote
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for the figure "I" would be there to show the first
preference, and those words can be ignored. We are
therefore of opinion that the view taken by the High Court
is correct.
The appeal fails and is hereby dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
761