Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P.K.K. SHAMSUDEEN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K.A.M. MAPPILLAI MOHINDEEN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/11/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 640 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 950
1989 SCC (1) 526 JT 1988 (4) 473
1988 SCALE (2)1445
CITATOR INFO :
D 1989 SC2023 (16)
ACT:
Tamilnadu Panchayats Act, 1958: Sections 30 and 178--
Panchayat election--Recount of votes--When to be ordered--
Preservation of secrecy of ballot---Sacrosanct principle.
HEADNOTE:
At an election held on 23rd February, 1986, for the
post of Panchayat President, the votes were counted on the
25th February, 1986, and the first respondent was declared
elected having secured 649 votes. The petitioner and the
second respondent who were the other contestants were
declared to have secured only 556 votes and X votes
respectively, and 55 votes were declared to be invalid
votes.
Two days after the results were declared i.e. on 27th
February. 1986, the petitioner sent telegrams and registered
notices alleging irregularities in the counting of the
votes, and thereafter he filed an election petition under
section 178 of the Tamil Nadu Panchayat Act, 1958. The
reliefs claimed in the petition were that the Election
Tribunal should set aside the election of the first
respondent as the President of the Panchayat, order
recounting of votes, and a declaration that the petitioner
has been duly elected. The first respondent opposed the
election petition and filed a counter statement denying all
the allegations contained in the election petition.
The Tribunal after recording the evidence of the
candidates and the Assistant Returning Officer came to the
conclusion that the petitioner was entitled to ask for re-
count of votes and ordered recounting and called for the
ballot papers. In the recount of votes, it was found that
there was no difference in the number of votes secured by
the petitioner, namely, 556 votes but in so far as the first
respondent was concerned he had secured only 528 votes as
against the 649 votes, he was originally held to have
secured. The excess of 121 votes were found to be invalid
votes and consequently the total number of invalid votes
came to 126 (sic) as against 55 votes originally held to be
invalid. There was no difference in the number of 8 votes
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secured by the third contestant. Based on these figures of
the recounting, the Tribunal declined to order re-election
and instead declared the petitioner to have been duly
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elected because the recount clearly proved that the
petitioner has secured 28 votes more than the first
respondent.
Aggrieved by the aforesaid order of the Election
Tribunal, the first respondent filed a Civil Revision
Petition in the High Court. A Single Judge allowed the
revision petition holding that the Tribunal had erred in
ordering a recount of the votes when the petitioner had not
made out a prima facie case for an order of recount, and
observed that the secrecy of the ballot was sacrosanct and
should not be violated unless a prima facie case of a
complusive nature had been made out by the defeated
candidates. The High Court set aside the order of the
Tribunal and restored the election result in favour of the
first respondent.
Dismissing the Special Leave Petition,
HELD: 1. The right of a defeated candidate to assail
the validity of an election result and seek recounting of
votes has to be subject to the basic principle that the
secrecy of the ballot is sacrosanct in a democracy and hence
unless the affected candidate is able to allege and
substantiate in acceptable measure by means of evidence that
a prima facie case of a high degree of probability existed
for the recount of votes being ordered by the Election
Tribunal in the interests of justice, a Tribunal or Court
should not order the recount of votes. [957D-E]
2. The salutary rule is that the preservation of the
secrecy of the ballot is a sacrosanct principle which cannot
he lightly or hastily broken unless there is prima-facie
genuine need for it. [957D]
3. The justification for an order for examination of
ballot papers and recount of votes is not to be derived from
high sight and by the result of the recount of votes. On the
contrary, the justification for an order of recount of votes
should be provided by the material placed by an election
petitioner on the threshold before an order for recount of
votes is actually made. [957C-D]
4. An order or recount of votes must stand or fall on
the nature of the averments made and the evidence adduced
before the order of recount is made and not from the results
emanating from the recount of votes. [958C]
In the instant case, the petitioner has neither made
such averments in the petition nor adduced evidence of such
a compulsive nature as could have made the Tribunal reach a
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prima facie satisfaction that there was adequate
justification for the secrecy of ballot being breached.
[957F]
Ram Sewak Yadav v. Russain Kamil Kidwai & Ors., [1964]
6 SCR 238; Dr. Jagjit Singh v. Giani Kartar Singh, [1967]1
SCJ 762; R. Narayanan v. Sommalai, [1980] 1 SCR 571 and N.
Gopal Reddy v. Bonala Krishnamurthy & Ors., JT 1987 1 SC
406, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 12662 of 1988.
From the Judgment and Order dated 7.10.1988 of the
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Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 704 of ]988.
M.N. Padmanabhan and K.K. Mani for the Petitioner.
R.K. Garg, V. Balachandran and V. Krishnamurthy for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. This special leave petition to seek leave
to appeal under Article 136 of the Constitution has been
filed against the order of the Madras High Court in Civil
Revision Petition No. 704 of 1988 filed by the 1st
respondent herein. After hearing the arguments of the
counsel for the petitioner and the 1st respondent (Caveator)
we are not persuaded to grant special leave and are
dimissing the petition for the reasons given below.
For an election held on 23.2.1986, the votes were
counted on 25.2.1986 and the 1st respondent was declared
elected, having secured 649 votes for the post of the
President of the Keelpaguthi Panchayat, Kulithalai Taluk
Tamil Nadu. The petitioner and the 2nd respondent who were
the other contestants were declared to have secured only.
556 votes and 8 votes respectively. Besides the voles
secured by the contestants, 55 votes were declared to be
invalid votes.
Two days after the results were declared i.e. On
27.2.1986, the petitioner sent telegrams and registered
notices alleging irregularities in the counting of the
votes. Thereafter, he filed an election petition O.P. No.
7/86 under Section 178 of the Tamil Nadu Panchayats Act
before the Election Tribunal (District Munsif), Kulithalai
for setting aside the election of the 1st respondent as the
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President of Keelpaguthi Panchayat. He alleged in the
petition that the Returning Officer (3rd respondent) had
wrongly treated some valid votes cast in his favour as
invalid votes and a certain number of invalid votes as votes
validly cast in favour of the 1st respondent and that the
third respondent had failed to permit him and his agents to
have scrutiny of the ballot papers at the time of counting.
He, therefore, sought the reliefs of (a) setting aside the
election of the first respondent, (b) ordering of re-count
of votes and (c) a declaration that he had been duly
elected.
The first respondent opposed the election petition and
filed a counter statement denying all the allegations
contained in the election petition .
The Tribunal, after recording the evidence of all the
candidates and the Assistant Returning Officer came to the
conclusion that "the petitioner is entitled to ask for
recount of votes" and ordered recounting and called for the
ballot papers. In para 7 of the order wherein the Tribunal
has accepted the plea of the petitioner for recounting of
votes, the Tribunal has merely set out the evidence adduced
by the petitioner on the one hand and respondents 1 and 2
and the Assistant Returning Officer on the other and without
any discussion whatever upon the merits and demerits of the
evidence of the parties, has given a cryptic finding as
follows: "I accept the evidence given by the petitioner that
he (Returning Officer) has sided the first respondent in the
election." The Tribunal has then stated as follows
immediately after the election-results were announced on
25.2.86 he has sent notice Ex. A1 on 27.2.86 stating that
the counting is not correct. Further he has deposed that on
the date of counting he objected to he counting and
requested for recounting. Even though the petitioner has not
given ,any petition in writing for recounting on the
counting date, he has right to approach the Tribunal for
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recounting. The petitioner has filed this petition within
the stipulated time. the petitioner prays for recounting of
votes and he petition may be admitted on the basis of
recounting. If recounting ordered, no prejudice will be
caused to the respondents Because their arguments is that
the votes were counted according to law. Therefore I decide
that the petitioner is entitled to ask for recounting.
Recounting is ordered."
In the recount of of votes it was found that there was
no difference in the number of votes secured by the
petitioner viz. 556 votes but in so far as the first
respondent is concerned he had secured only 528 votes as
against 649 votes he was originally held to have secured.
The excess of 121 votes were found to be invalid votes and
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therefore the total number of invalid votes came to 126 as
against 55 votes originally held to be invalid votes. There
was no difference in the number of 8 votes secured by the
third contestant viz. the second respondent.
All the three contestants accepted the correctness of
the recounting of votes and signed a memo to that effect
before the Tribunal. Based on the figures of the recount the
petitioner pressed for a declaration that he had been duly
elected to the post of the President of the Panchayat. On
the other hand, the first respondent prayed that the
Tribunal should direct a fresh election to be held for the
post of President. The tribunal declined to order re-
election and instead declared the petitioner to have been
duly elected because the recount clearly proved "that the
petitioner has secured 28 votes more than the first
respondent" .
Against the order of the Tribunal the first respondent
filed Civil Revision Petition No. 704/88 to the High Court.
A learned single judge of the High Court allowed the
revision holding that the Tribunal had erred in ordering a
recount of the votes when the petitioner had not made out a
prima facie case for an order of recount of votes being
made. The High Court has pointed out that the secrecy of the
ballot is sacrosanct and as such the secrecy of the ballot
should not be violated by any Tribunal unless a prima facie
case of a compulsive nature had been made out by the
defeated candidate for the rule of secrecy being broken and
the ballot papers being inspected and counted afresh.
Consequently the High Court set aside the order of the
Tribunal and restored the election result in favour of the
first respondent. It is against the said order of the High
Court the petitioner has filed this special leave petition.
Mr. M.N. Padamanabhan and Mr. Garg, learned counsel
appearing for the petitioner and the first re pondent
respectively presented the case of their respective parties
before us with all the persuasiveness at their command.
While Mr. Padmanabhan’s contention was that the petitioner
had placed sufficient materials before the Tribunal to make
out a prima facie case for a recount of votes being ordered
and that the result of the recount of votes amply
established the truth of the petitioner contentions, Mr.
Garg argued that the allegations made by the petitioner in
the petition were of a very general and vague nature and
such vague averments can by no stretch of imagination be
considered adequate material by the Tribunal to conclude
that there was compulsive need for the secrecy of the ballot
being violated and a recount of votes being ordered.
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Before examining the contentions of the parties we may
set out the position in law as regards the need for the
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secrecy of the ballot being maintained and as to when the
well established rule can be departed from. Since the
principle of law has already been enunciated by this Court
in several cases, we may refer to three of those decisions.
In Dr. Jagjit Singh v. Giani Kartar Singh, [1967] 1 SCJ 762,
the appellant had challenged the election of the first
respondent to the Punjab Legislative Assembly. In the
recount of votes ordered by the Tribunal it was found that
the appellant had secured 22,491 votes and the first
respondent had secured 22,412 votes. The Tribunal allowed
the election petition and declared the appellant to have
been duly elected. The High Court set aside the order of the
Tribunal and the judgment of the High Court was confirmed by
this Court. In doing so this Court observed as follows:
"Therefore,in a proper case, the Tribunal can order the
inspection of the ballot boxes and may proceed to examine
the objections raised by the parties in relation to the
improper acceptance or reject of the voting papers. But in
exercising this power, the Tribunal has to bear in mind
certain important considerations. Section 83(1)(a) of the
Act requires that an election petition shall contain a
concise statement of the material facts on which the
petitioner relies; and in every case, where a prayer is made
by a petitioner for the inspection of the ballot boxes, the
Tribunal must enquire whether the application made by the
petitioner in that behalf contains a concise statement of
the material facts on which he relies. Vague or general
allegations that valid votes were improperly rejected, or
invalid votes were improperly accepted, would not serve the
purpose which section 83(I)(a) has in mind. An application
made for the inspection of ballot boxes must give material
facts which would enable the Tribunal to consider whether in
the interests of justice, the ballot boxes should be
inspected or not. In dealing with this question, the
importance of the secrecy of the ballot papers cannot be
ignored, and it is always to be borne in mind that the
statutory Rules framed under the Act are intended to provide
adequate safeguard for the examination of the validity or
invalidity of votes and for their proper counting. It may be
that in some cases. the ends of justice would make it
necessary for the Tribunal to allow a party to inspect the
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ballot boxes and consider his objections about the improper
acceptance or improper rejection of votes tendered by voters
at any given election; but in considering the requirements
of justice, care must be taken to see that election
petitioners do not get a chance to make a roving or fishing
enquiry in the ballot boxes so as to justify their claim
that the returned candidate’s election is void."
In Ram Sewak Yadav v. Hussain Kamil Kidwai & Ors.,
[1964] 6 SCR 238, this Court has set out the circumstances
when an order for inspection of ballot papers can be ordered
in the following terms:
"An order for inspection may not be granted as a matter
of course; having regard to the insistence upon the secrecy
of the ballot papers, the Court would be justified in
granting an order for inspection provided two conditions are
fulfilled:
(i) that the petition for setting aside an election
contains an adequate statement of the material facts on
which the petitioner relies in support of his case; and
(ii) The tribunal is prima facie satisfied that in
order to decide the dispute and to do complete justice
between the parties inspection of the ballot papers is
necessary.
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But an order for inspection of ballot papers cannot be
granted to support vague pleas made in the petition not
supported by material facts or to fish out evidence to
support such pleas. The case of the petitioner must be set
out with precision supported by averments of material
facts. To establish a case so pleaded an order for
inspection may undoubtedly, if the interests of justice
require, be granted. But a mere allegation that the
petitioner suspects or believes that there has been an
improper reception, refusal or rejection of votes will not
be sufficient to support an order for inspection."
In R. Narayanan v. Semmalai, [1980] SCR 571, the same
principle has been reiterated. That was a case where the
difference of votes between the candidates declared elected
and his nearest rival, who filed an election petition was
only 19 votes and which figure would have come down to 9
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votes only if the postal ballots were included. Even so this
Court after referring to a number of decisions and
Halsbury’s Laws of England and Fraser on Law of
Parliamentary Elections and Election Petitions held that
without their being an adequate statement of all the
material facts on which the allegations of irregularity or
illegality in counting of votes are founded and such
averments being backed by acceptable evidence and the Court
trying the petition being prima facie satisfied that an
order for recount of votes is imperatively necessary to
decide the dispute and do complete justice between the
parties, an order of recount of votes cannot be passed.
Thus the settled position of law is that the
justification for an order for examination of ballot papers
and recount of votes is not to be derived from high sight
and by the result of the recount of votes. On the contrary,
the justification for an order of recount of votes should be
provided by the material placed by an election petitioner on
the threshold before an order for recount of votes is
actually made. The reason for this salutary rule is that the
preservation of the secrecy of the ballot is a sacrosanct
principle which cannot be lightly or hastily broken unless
there is prima facie genuine need for it. The right of a
defeated candidate to assail the validity of an election
result and seek recounting of votes has to be subject to the
basic principle that the secrecy of the ballot is sacrosanct
in a democracy and hence unless the affected candidate is
able to allege and substantiate in acceptable measure by
means of evidence that a prima facie case of a high degree
of probability existed for the recount of votes being
ordered by the Election Tribunal in the interests of
justice, a Tribunal or court should not order the recount of
votes.
Viewed in the light of these well enunciated
principles, we find that the petitioner has neither made
such averments in the petition nor adduced evidence of such
a compulsive nature as could have made the Tribunal reach a
prima facie satisfaction that there was adequate
justification for the secrecy of ballot being breached in
the petitioner’s case. Factors urged before us by Mr.
Padamanabhan such as that the first respondent had accepted
the correctness of the recount. and that he had conceded his
defeat and wanted a re-election to be held cannot constitute
justifying materials in law for the initial order of recount
of votes made by the Tribunal.
Mr. Padamanabhan also contended that the purpose and
object of the election law is to ensure that only that
person should represent the constituency who is chosen by
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the majority of the electors and that is the essence of
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democratic process, and this position has been observed by a
Bench of this Court in their order of reference of the case
of N. Gopal Reddy v. Bonala Krishnamurty & Ors., CA No.
3730(NCE) of 1986 reported in JT 1987(1) SC-406 and hence it
would be a travesty of justice and opposed to all democratic
canons to allow the first respondent to continue to hold the
post of the President of the Panchayat when the recount
disclosed that he had secured 28 votes less than the
petitioner. We are unable to sustain this contention because
as we have stated earlier an order of recount of votes must
stand or fall on the nature of the averments made and the
evidence adduced before the order of recount is made and not
from the results emanating from the recount of votes.
It was also brought to our notice that the first
respondent has resumed charge of the post of the President
from the petitioner, although with unseemly hurry with the
aid of police after the High Court’s order, and that the
term of office of President is to come to a close in about
ten weeks time.
In the light of our conclusions we do not find any
merit in the special leave petition and accordingly dismiss
the same.
N . V . K . Petition dismissed .