Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
KALYA SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GENDA LAL AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/02/1975
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1634 1975 SCR (3) 783
1976 SCC (1) 304
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC 27 (12)
APR 1976 SC 271 (6)
RF 1978 SC1162 (5)
R 1979 SC 734 (25)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act, 1951, S.
123(1)(A)(b)--Payment of money to a person to retire from
contest--Whether amounts to corrupt practice.
HEADNOTE:
Section 123(1)(A)(b) of the Representation of the People
Act, 1951 defines bribery as ’any gift, offer or promise by
a candidate or his agent or by any other person with the
consent of a candidate or his election agent of any
gratification, to any person, whomsoever. with the object,
directly or indirectly of inducing an elector to vote or
refrain from, voting at an election’. Respondent No. 1
filed an election petition challenging the election of the
appellant that he had committed corrupt practice under s.
123(1)(A)(b) of the Act. The. High Court declared the
election void on the ground that the appellant, by paying a
big sum in cash and promising payment of a similar sum by
execution of a promissory note, made Respondent No. 3 to
retire from the contest and publish a pamphlet that the
electors should vote for the appellant and not for himself.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
HELD: 1 (a) It is not possible to sustain the judgment of
the High Court holding the appellant guilty of corrupt
practices within the meaning of. 123(1)(A)(b) of the Act.
[790B]
(b) Mere payment of any gratification to a third person for
securing or procuring some votes in favour of a particular
candidate, without the establishment of any nexus between
the money and the inducement to the voter, will of be
sufficient to prove that the voter is indirectly induced on
account of the payment of gratification to the third person.
The gratification must have some connection or reflection,
direct or indirect, in persuading the, voter to vote or
refrain from voting atan election. If the inducement to
the voter is not caused by the paymentof the gratification
to a third person but by the persuasion or influence ofsuch
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
third person it will not be possible to say that the
gratification had any indirect inducement to the voter.
[787F-11]
(c) Payment of any gratification to any person to work or
canvass at an election is outside the ambit of the
definition. [787H]
(d) If the inducement to the voter is free from the shade or
colour of he gratification paid to the third person it will
not be bribery. If, however, he inducement in a given case
is Coloured or shaded by the payment of the ,ratification to
a third person it would be an indirect inducement to the
voter himself within the frame of the definition. In other
words it is the fact of payment to the third person that
must induce the voter. It is not enough that the third
person induces the voter. The frame of any definition more
often than not is capable of being made flexible. But the
precision and certainty in law requires that it should not
be made loose and kept tight as far s possible. [788A-B]
Ghashi Ram v. Dal Singh and others [1968] 3 S.C.R. 102 and
Om Prabha in v. Abnash Chand & anr. [1968] 3 S.C.R. 111,
followed.
Abdull Hussain mir v. Shamsul Huda & Anr. [1975] 3 S.C.R.
106 referred
784
in the instant case money was not paid to the respondent as
consideration for votes promised or as a bargain for getting
votes but it was money paid to him to retire from the
contest and to do propaganda and persuade the voters to vote
for the appellant. In spite of the propaganda and the
appeal of the respondent no. 3 the voters were left free not
to respond to his persuation. [790A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 16(NCE) of
1973.
From the Judgment and order dated the 11th December, 1972 of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Election Petition No. 22 of
1972.
G. L. Sanghi and D. N. Misra, for the appellant.
S. S. Khanduja, for Respondent No. 1.
S. K. Gambhir, for Respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J. There were three candidates to contest the
election to the Legislative Assembly of Madhya Pradesh from
the Bhainsdeshi Assembly (Reserved) Constituency in the last
general elections. The appellant in this appeal under
section 116A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951
hereinafter referred to as the Act, was declared elected to
the seat defeating the other two candidates who are respon-
dents 2 and 3. Respondent No. 1 filed an Election Petition
in tile Madhya Pradesh High Court challenging the election
of the appellant on serveral grounds. The election of the
appellant has been declared void by a learned single Judge
of the High Court on one ground only. It has been held that
he indulged in a corrupt practice within the meaning of
Section 123 (1) (A) (b) of the Act. We shall confine the
statement of facts in this case to the only ground on which
the appellant’s election has been set aside.
Respondent No. 1 stated in paragraph 6 of his election
petition
"(iv) That after the date of withdrawal the
respondent no.1 himself and through his
aforesaid agents and workers with his consent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
was vehemently trying to induce the respondent
no.3 to support the candidature of the
respondent no. 1, and declare that the
electors, should not vote for the respondent
no.3, but should vote for the respondent no.l.
(v) That the respondent no.1, and his
aforesaid agents and workers having failed in
their attempt in inducing the respondent no.3
from either standing withdrawing or declaring
to support the candidature of the respondent
no.1, and the respondent no. 3, having started
his election campaign in full swing. The
respondent no.1 apprehended that if respondent
no.3, remains in contest then, he had no
chance of success. Therefore
he made
determined efforts, to see that the respondent
no.3 makes an appeal to the electors of the
constituency to the effect that the electors
should
785
vote for the respondent no. 1 and should from:
voting in favour of the respondent No. 3, and
withdraws from the contest.........."
(vii) That on 22-2-1972 at Paratwara
respondent no.1 himself in the company of his
agents and workers Shri N. K. P. Salve, Shive
Bux Singh and Baboolal Pathak induced the
respondent no.3 to support the candidature of
the respondent no.1 and offered to pay
compensation to respondent no.3 The respondent
no.3 agreed to support the candidature of the
respondent no.1, and to publish a pamphlet to
the effect that the electors should vote for
the respondent no.1 and should refrain from
voting the respondent no.3. The respondent
no.1 offered a sum of Rs. 8,000/- to the
respondent ao.3 as compensation, which he had
incurred in his election campaign.
On appreciation of evidence adduced before the High Court,
on the relevant issues it recorded the following findings
"ISSUE NO.1 (a)
The respondent no.1 (Kalya Singh) asked respondent no.3
(Patiram) on the night intervening 22nd and 23rd February
1972 at Paratwara to withdraw from the contest and to
support respondent no.l. Respondent no.1 also offered to pay
Rs. 8,000/- as compensation to respondent no. 3 for the
election experoes fill then incurred by him.
ISSUE NO. 1 (b)
The respondent no.3 agreed to support respondent no.1 and to
issue a pamphlet requesting the voters to vote for res-
pondent no. 1.
ISSUE NO. 1 (c)
A sum of Rs. 4,000/- was paid in cash on 23rd February, 1972
by respondent no.1 to respondent no.3. A pronote for Rs.
4,000/- (Ex. P-3) executed by respondent No. 1 in favour of
Shiv Darshan Singh wits also handed over by respondent no.
I to respondent no. 3. It was also agreed that in case the
balance amount of Rs. 4,000/- was not paid by respondent no.
1, respondent no. 3 will hand over the pronote to Shiv
Darshan Singh who will recover the amount from Respondent
no. I and pay to respondent no. 3.
ISSUE NO. 1 (d)
In the meeting held at Bhainsdeshi on 23rd February, 1972 it
was announced by respondent no. 3 that he now supports the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
Congress. The said meeting was also addressed by respondent
no.1, Shivbux Singh and Kawadkar. They also announced the
withdrawal from the contest of respondent no.3, and asked
the electors to vote for respondent no.1 ISSUE NO. 1 (e)
706
The pamphlet (Ex. P-11) was distributed in the meeting of
23rd February, 1972."
Mr. G. L. Sanghi, learned counsel for the appellant in the
first instance submitted that on the face of the peladings
in the Election Petition as also on the findings of fact
recorded by the High Court it has gone wrong in law in
holding that the appellant was guilty of having indulged in
corrupt practice within the meaning of section 123 ( I) (a)
(b) of the Act. He reserved his right to assail the
findings by taking us through the evidence in case his
contention in law were not found to be sound. Mr. S. S.
Khanduja combated the argument put forward on behalf of the
appellant and relied upon a decision of this Court in Abdul
Husain Mir v. Shamsul Huda & Anr.(1) decided on 20th
December 1974 to which one of us (A. Alagiriswami, J) was
party. Mr. S. K. Ghambir appearing for respondent no.3
asked us, in the event of the appellant’s success in the
appeal to exonerate the said respondent of the charge of
having indulged in a corrupt practice within the meaning of
section 123(1)(B)(b) of the Act as found by the High Court.
Since the point of law urged on behalf of the appellant was
found to be sound, we did not proceed to examine the
evidence in the case.
We may state in condensed form the findings recorded by the
High Court against the appellant in the background of what
was pleaded in the Election Petition. The appellant by
paying a sum of Rs. 4,000/in cash and promising payment of
another sum of Rs. 4,000/- by execution of a promissory note
made respondent no. 3 to retire from the contest, support,
the candidature of the appellant find publish a pamphlet to
the effect that the electors should vote for him and not for
respondent no.3 Accordingly a pamphlet to that effect was
published and distributed in a meeting held on 23rd
February, 1972 at Bhainsdeshi in which meeting the
withdrawal from contest of respondent no. 3 was announced
and the voters were asked to vote for respondent no. 1. The
question for consideration is whether the findings aforesaid
fit in the frame of definition of "Bribery" in section 123
(1) (A) (b) of the Act. The High Court has rightly pointed
out that the case was not covered by sub-clause (a) of
Clause (A) as respondent no. 3 was not made to withdraw from
being a candidate at the election.
This view of the High Court is now squarely supported by the
decision of this Court in Shri Umed v. Rai Singh and
others(2) which had over-turned a contrary view taken in the
case of Mohd. Yunus saleem v. Shiv kumar Shastri and
others(3). We now proceed to read in full section 123 (1)
(A) of the Act.
(1) Bribery’, that is to say-
(A) any gift, offer or promise by a candidate or his agent
or by any other person with the consent of a candidate or
his election agent of any gratification, to any person
whomsoever, with the object, directly or indirectly of
inducing-
(1) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 106. (2) A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 43.
(3) A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 1218.
787
(a) a person to stand or not to stand as, or to withdraw or
not to withdraw from being a candidate at an election, or
(b)an elector to vote or refrain from voting at an elec-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
tion or as a reward to
(i) a person for having so stood or not stood, or for having
withdrawn or not having withdrawn his candidature; or
(ii) an elector for having voted or refrained from voting;"
We shall discuss the relevant law shorn of the addenda and
the qualifying words in the above extract. Payment of any
gratification by a candidate to any person not necessarily a
person mentioned in sub-clause (a) or an elector mentioned
in sub-clause (b) with the object of directly or indirectly
inducing the person or an elector mentioned in those sub-
clauses will make it a bribery within the meaning of the
said word. It is significant to note from sub-clauses (i)
and (ii) of clause (A) that post-facto payment-of any
gratification as a reward will be bribery only if it is paid
to the person or the elector mentioned in these sub-clauses.
But does it lead to the conclusion that payment of any
gratification to any person other than an elector in all
circumstances would be deemed to be with the object of
indirectly inducing an elector to vote or refrain from
voting at an election ? If money is paid to an elector to
vote for a particular candidate undoubtedly it is a direct
inducement to him to vote at an election. If money is paid
to a third person in which payment of money an elector has
got any direct or indirect interest and which induces him to
vote at an election in favour of a particular candidate then
also the inducement is brought about as a result of the
payment of the gratification. But the point of difficulty
may arise where any gratification is paid by or on behalf of
a candidate to a third person for procuring some votes of
some electors who may be under his (third person’s)
influence. Whether in such a case the payment has got any
indirect inducement to an elector to vote at an election ?
We are inclined to think that mere payment of any
gratification to a third person for securing or procuring
some votes in favour of a particular candidate without the
establishment of any nexus between the money arid the
inducement to the voter will not be sufficient to prove that
the voter is indirectly induced on account of the payment of
gratification to the third person. The dictionary meaning
of the word "induce"is to "prevail on, persuade." The
gratification must have some connection or reflection,
direct or indirect, in persuading the voter to vote or
refrain from voting at an election. If the inducement to
the voter is not caused by the payment of the gratification
to a third person but by the persuasion or influence (not
undue influence) of such third person it will not be
possible to say that the gratification had any indirect
inducement to the voter. Payment of any gratification to
any person to work or canvass at an election is outside the
ambit of the definition. It will make little difference if
the worker or the canvasser on payment of gratification
promises or indulges in tall-talk of securing or procuring
some
788
votes for a particular candidate. If the inducement to the
voter is free from the shade or colour of the gratification
paid to the third person, then it will not be bribery. If,
however, the inducement in a given case is coloured or
shaded by the payment of the gratification to a third person
then it would be an indirect inducement to the voter himself
within the frame of the definition. In other words it is
the fact of payment to the third person that must induce the
voter. It is not enough that the third person induces the
voter. The frame of any definition, more often than not, is
capable of being made flexible. But the precision and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
certainty in law requires that it should not be made louse
and kept tight as far as possible.
On the facts found in this case respondent no. 3 after
having retired from the contest merely canvassed to the
voters some of whom may be his so called voters, to vote for
the appellant Distribution ’on of the pamphlet and
announcement in the meeting held on the 23rd February, 1972
to that and did not transgress the limit and made the act an
indirect inducement to the voters to cast vote for the
appellant on account of payment of the gratification by him
to the third respondent.
In Ghasi Ram v. Dal Singh and others(1) followed in Om
Prabha Jain v. Abnash Chand & Anr. (2) another decision in
the same volume at page III, it was pointed out by
Hidayatullah J., as he then was, at page 110 "The money was
not distributed among the voters directly but was given to
Panchayats and the public at large. It was to be used for
the good of those for and those against the candidate. No
doubt they had the effect of pushing forward his claims but
that was inevitable even if no money was spent, but good
administration changed the people’s condition. We cannot,
therefore, hold that there was any corrupt practice. If
there was good evidence that the Minister bargained directly
or indirectly for votes, the result might have been
different but there was no such evidence." It would thus be
noticed that there must be a bargain for votes either
directly with the voters or indirectly through some-one
else., The voter may not be a direct party in the bargain
but must be shown to have an indirect interest, in it.
In Abdul Hussain Mir v. Shamsul Huda & Anr.(3) Krishna lyer
J. in his judgment delivered on his and on behalf of
Sarkaria J. did not find the fact proved in that case to
bring it within the ambit of section 123(1) (A) (b). The
third learned Judge (A. Alagiriswami J.) did not record any
finding to the contrary. Even so while interpreting the
scope and ambit of section 123(1) of the Act certain
observations were made in the majority judgment which were
pressed into service by respondent No. 1 while the others
were relied on by the appellant. Accepting the argument of
Mr. Garg (vide page 1995 of the cyclostyled copy issued by
the Supreme Court Bar Association) it was said "what the law
aims at is a blow on the purchase of the franchise by direct
or indirect methods. You may buy influence of important
persons which is bad in morality but not yet in law."
Another passage (vide page 1996 of the cyclostyled copy)
which
(1) [1968] (3) S.C.R. 102.
(3) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 106.
(2) [1968] (3) S.C.R. 111.
789
occurs in that judgment runs thus : "The crucial point is
the nexus between the gratification and the voters, one
being the consideration for the other, direct or indirect.’
The two passages extracted above squarely supported the
contention of the appellant. While a few others which are
being quoted below were pressed into service by learned
counsel for respondent No. 1. The said passages at page 1995
are
"If the candidate pays money to a V.I.P. of the locality to
use, his good offices and canvass votes for him, it is a
borderline case, but if the money is paid as consideration
for votes promised to be secured by him using his sway, it
is bribery even though indirectly exercised. If the Mulla
had been paid the money striking a bargain for getting the
votes-in his ambit of influence, it is electoral corruption.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
On the other hand, if it is money received for the purpose
of organising effectively the election campaign by hiring
workers, going round the places in car, meeting people and
persuading them to vote for the candidate, it is proper
election expense. In between these two extremes lies the
case of a man who just receives a large sum of money,
pockets it himself and promises to use his good offices to
secure votes. This is a gray area. We are not called upon
to pronounce on it in this case .................. The
touchstone in all these cases of payment of gratification is
to find out whether the money is paid in reasonable measure
for work to be done or services to be rendered. Secondly,
whether the services as offered amount to a bargain for
getting votes or merely to do propaganda or to persuade
voters to vote for the candidate, it being left to the
voters not to respond to the suasion. It is a plain case if
a voter is paid for his vote. It is; direct. It is equally
plain if the payment is made to a close relation as
inducement for the vote. The same is the case if it is paid
to local chief on the under.standing that be will get plead
the votes in his pocket borough, in consideration for the
payment." The third learned Judge in his separate note did
not join in the views expressed in the passages just
extracted above from the majority decision and said "I
consider it, therefore, unnecessary to discuss whether if
money is paid or offered as consideration for votes promised
to be secured by a person using his influence it is bribery
or not. It is a good policy not to discuss in a judgment
questions which do not arise out of the facts of the case."
The observations of Krishna Iyer J., which were relied on
behalf of respondent No. I may occasion a debate or dispute
if in a given case the facts so warrant. But it will be a
futile exercise to do so in this case as the findings
recorded against the appellant by the High Court are clearly
outside the observations relied on by respondent No. 1. It
was not a case where money was paid to respondent No. 3 as
consideration for
790
votes promised or as a bargain for getting votes. It was a
money paid to him to retire from the contest and to do
propaganda and persuade the voters to vote for the
appellant. In spite of the propaganda and the appeal of
respondent No. 3 the voters were left free not to respond to
his persuasion. In no view of the matter, therefore, it is
possible to sustain the judgment of the High Court holding
the appellant guilty of corrupt practice within the meaning
of section 123 (1) (A) (b) of the Act. That being so, it is
plain that respondent No. 3 also must be exonerated of the
charge levelled and found against him of bribery within the
meaning of section 123 (1) (B) (b).
In the result the appeal is allowed with costs payable by
respondent No. 1 and the judgment. and order of the High
Court are set aside.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
791