Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7306 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Meera Kanwaria
RESPONDENT:
Sunita & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/12/2005
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & P.K. Balasubramanyan
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.2106 of 2005]
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
Background fact :
The First Respondent herein was Rajput by caste. She married one
Ghanshyam on 09.12.2000, who was a member of Scheduled Caste. The
marriage was performed as per Vedic Hindu Rites. She applied for and
granted a certificate of being belonging to Scheduled Caste by birth by the
Sub Divisional Magistrate (S.D.M.), Rajouri Garden, New Delhi, describing
her as a daughter of Ramaye, who in fact was her husband’s elder brother’s
father-in-law.
An inquiry was caused to be made by the Sub Divisional Magistrate
upon receiving a complaint that the said certificate contained wrong
declaration as she was daughter of one Chinna Singh and not of Ramaye.
The said allegations were found to be correct. It was also found that the
First Respondent’s Jethani’s name was also co-incidentally Sunita. On the
said premise, the certificate granted in her favour was cancelled by an order
dated 10.07.2002 and a criminal case under Sections 406, 420, 469 and 471
of the Indian Penal Code was registered. The said criminal case is still
pending.
Election Proceedings :
The First Respondent herein contested an election for the Municipal
Councilor from Ward No.20, Subhash Nagar Ward of Municipal
Corporation of Delhi, Assembly Constituency No.13, a seat reserved for a
Scheduled Caste woman. She was declared elected. The Appellant herein
was also a candidate. Whereas the First Respondent got 14,757 votes, the
Appellant herein got 13,755 votes.
One Krishan Lal filed an election petition before the District Judge,
Delhi in terms of the provisions of the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act,
1957, wherein, inter alia a prayer was made to the effect that the Appellant
herein be declared elected. The contention of the election petitioner in the
said proceedings was that as the First Respondent herein was born in an
upper caste family, she could not have been considered to be belonging to
Scheduled Caste by reason of her marriage only. The Appellant
indisputably was arrayed as Respondent No.2. In the said proceedings, the
learned judge, inter alia, framed the following issues :
"4. Whether the respondent No.1 belongs to a
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scheduled caste category ?
5. Whether the respondent No.1 acquired the status of
scheduled caste by virtue of her marriage with a
Jatav notified as scheduled caste category for the
purpose of her eligibility to contest municipal
election in Delhi ?
6. Whether the election of respondent No.1 as a
municipal councilor from Ward No.20 is liable to
be declared void on facts mentioned to the
petition ?
7. If issue No.6 is decided in affirmative whether
respondent No.2 is entitled to be declared elected
from Ward No. 20 as municipal councilor ?"
Issue Nos. 4 and 5 were taken up for consideration together. Relying,
inter alia, upon a decision of this Court in Mrs. Valsamma Paul v. Cochin
University and Others [AIR 1996 SC 1011], the learned Judge opined :
"25. In view of the above testimony of
respondent No.1 in her cross-examination, no manner of
doubt is left in my mind except to hold that respondent
No.1 has manipulated a scheduled caste certificate by
hoodwinking the legal process. By no means she can be
said to have acquired the status of scheduled caste merely
because of her marriage with scheduled caste person.
Hence, both these issues are decided against respondent
No.1"
Having regard to the aforementioned findings, the election of the First
Respondent herein was held to be void and of no effect and was
consequently set aside. Issue No.7 was, however, not pressed.
High Court Proceedings :
A writ petition was filed there-against by the First Respondent before
the Delhi High Court. The High Court in its judgment noticed several
decisions of this Court and opined that as the First Respondent was
accepted by her husband’s family and biradari, the judgment of the learned
District Judge was unsustainable. The High Court distinguished Valsamma
Paul (supra) on the premise that ’principle of reservation contained in
Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution of India would be different in a
case wherein individual claims entitlement to other benefits that may be due
to a person belonging to Scheduled Caste’. It was furthermore opined that
the learned District Judge committed an error in not accepting the contention
of the First Respondent that she had not been accepted by the community of
her husband. Subsequent cancellation of the Scheduled Caste Certificate by
the S.D.M. was held to be irrelevant.
Maintainability of the Appeal :
Mr. R.K. Jain, the learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the
First Respondent, at the outset, would take a preliminary objection as regard
the Appellant’s locus standi to maintain this appeal drawing our attention to
the findings of the learned Trial Judge that the Appellant herein did not file
any written statement nor any oral arguments were advanced on her behalf.
Strong reliance, in this behalf, has been placed on Thammanna v. K. Veera
Reddy and Others [(1980) 4 SCC 62]. We are not persuaded to accept the
said contention.
In Thammanna (supra), this Court found that at no stage of the
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proceedings, the Appellant before it took any part in the proceedings.
Having regard to Section 116-C of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, it was held that the person would be entitled to maintain an appeal if
the following conditions are satisfied :
"(1) that the subject-matter of the appeal is a conclusive
determination by the High Court of the rights with
regard to all or any of the matters in controversy,
between the parties in the election petition,
(2) that the person seeking to appeal has been a party
in the election petition, and
(3) that he is a "person aggrieved", that is a party who
has been adversely affected by the determination."
As of fact it was found that condition nos.1 and 3 had not been
satisfied holding :
"\005Before the High Court the appellant did not, at any
stage join the contest. He did not file any written
statement or affidavit. He did not engage any counsel. He
did not cross-examine the witnesses produced by the
election-petitioner and the contesting Respondent 1. He
did not appear in the witness-box. He did not address any
arguments. In short, he did nothing tangible to participate
in the proceedings before the High Court."
It was further noticed therein that the Appellant was not a necessary party to
the election petition and, thus, it was not obligatory for the election
petitioner to join him as a respondent.
The said decision has no application in the instant case, as the
Appellant herein took part in the election petition through her counsel,.
although she might not have filed a written statement. She was a necessary
party. A prayer was made in the election petition that she be declared to
have been elected. We have noticed hereinbefore that the election petition
succeeded in part. In the appeal preferred there-against by the First
Respondent, the Appellant alone was the contesting respondent. Prayer (b)
made in the Election Petition, was to her benefit. She filed the present
appeal only because she is aggrieved by the decision of the High Court.
Contentions :
On merits Ms. Pinky Anand, the learned counsel appearing on behalf
of the Appellant, submitted that the judgment of the High Court is
unsustainable as the same runs counter to a three-Judge Bench decision of
this Court in Sobha Hymavathi Devi v. Setti Gangadhara Swamy and Others
[(2005) 2 SCC 244] wherein one of us (Balasubramanyan, J.) was a
member.
It was urged that the certificate obtained by the First Respondent was
a fraud on the Constitution. Reliance, in this behalf, has been placed on
Lillykutty v. Scrutiny Committee, S.C. & S.T. and Others [JT 2005 (12) SC
569].
Mr. Jain, on the other hand, would submit that in the facts and
circumstances of this case, the alleged fraud committed by the First
Respondent would not be deterrent for the purpose of holding that she
became a member of the Scheduled Caste as her marriage was accepted by
the community. Placing strong reliance on the decisions of this Court in
C.M. Arumugam v. S. Rajgopal and Others [(1976) 1 SCC 863], The
Principal, Guntur Medical College, Guntur and Others v. Y. Mohan Rao
[(1976) 3 SCC 411] and Kailash Sonkar v. Smt. Maya Devi [(1984) 2 SCC
91], it was argued that in view of the finding of fact arrived at by the High
Court that she had been accepted by the community, the impugned judgment
should not be interfered with.
It was submitted that even in the decisions of this Court in Sobha
Hymavathi Devi (supra) and Lillykutty (supra), the question which fell for
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consideration was as to whether upon marriage by a girl belonging to a
forward class with a boy who belongs to Scheduled Caste or Scheduled
Tribe, the caste will change as thereby she stands transplanted in her
husband’s family.
Findings of the District Judge :
Before adverting to the questions of law raised before us, we would
notice the findings of fact arrived at by the learned District Judge. The
learned District Judge relied upon a circular letter of the Central Government
wherein it was stated :
"The guiding principle is that no person who was
not a scheduled caste/tribes by birth will be deemed to be
member of scheduled caste or scheduled tribe merely
because he or she married person belonging to scheduled
or scheduled tribes.
N.E. Horo (supra) was also distinguished on the ground that therein
the lady who married a person belonging to Munda tribe had proved the
custom by which she was admitted in tribunal community after her marriage,
which fact is absent in the instant case, stating :
"\005It shall be significant to mention that respondent No.1
in her cross-examination has admitted that her marriage
had taken place as per Vaidic Hindu Rites and no special
ceremony was held either before or at the time of
marriage or after her marriage for conversion of her caste
from Rajput to Jatav. She further testified that no
panchayat or Jatav Community was held to accept her as
a member of Jatav caste. However, the respondent No.1
has testified in para 3 of the affidavit Ex.R-1 filed in her
evidence-in-chief that she was fully accepted by the
Biradari/Community of Jatavs as its member. In order to
prove her said point the respondent No.1 has examined
her father-in \026law, husband and three more releatives of
her husband who all have testified that they had accepted
the marriage of respondent No.1 with a Jatav husband
and that they had attended that wedding. Confronted
with this situation, the counsel for the petitioner asked
respondent No.1 in her cross-examination to explain the
word "Biradari" used in her affidavit Ex.P1. Since
clarified the meaning of word "Biradari" employed by
her in para 3 of her affidavit R1 by saying that by the
word "Biradari" she means elders of her husband’s
family. This position taken by respondent No.1 in her
cross-examination does not vindicate her point that she
was admitted into Jatav Community by any custom or
any other Hindu Tradition."
Caste issue :
It is not disputed that the marriage took place as per Vedic Hindu
Rites. The marriage was attended by her father-in-law, husband and three
more relatives, who stated that they had accepted the marriage with her Jatav
husband and they had attended that wedding. The term "Biradari" has also
been explained by the First Respondent stating that the same denotes elders
of her husband’s family. It is one thing to say that a lady belonging to a
forward caste has been accepted by the community to which her husband
belongs; but it is another thing to say that her marriage has been accepted
only by her husband’s family. The question as regard change of caste in
view of her marriage although may be relevant in relation to Hindus, but
when the question of change of caste is referable to the category belonging
to a special class of citizens who require protective discrimination and
affirmative action, a different rule will apply. The burden of proof therefor
indisputably would be on the person who affirms the same.,
In Punit Rai v. Dinesh Chaudhary [(2003) 8 SCC 204], wherein one of
us was a member, this Court opined :
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"On behalf of the respondent, the citation of certain
decisions has also been furnished but those decisions
would be of no help to the respondent. Reliance has been
placed upon Jeet Mohinder Singh v. Harminder Singh
Jassi7 where it has been held that a party upon whom the
burden lies to prove a fact, but fails to discharge his onus,
it is not open for him to bank upon the plea of non-
examination of witness by the other party. The appellant,
it was held, cannot be permitted to derive strength from
the weakness of the case of the other party. We feel that
this case would not be applicable in the facts and
circumstances of the case in hand. On the other hand, the
onus to prove facts within the special knowledge of
Respondent 1, would lie upon him alone to prove those
facts. We have already held that best evidence of the
respondent’s case that his mother was a Pasi has been
withheld. In this connection, we may peruse Section 106
of the Evidence Act also which reads as under:
"106. When any fact is especially within the
knowledge of any person, the burden of proving that fact
is upon him.""
It was further opined :
"Determination of caste of a person is governed by the
customary laws. A person under the customary Hindu
law would be inheriting his caste from his father. In this
case, it is not denied or disputed that the respondent’s
father belonged to a "Kurmi" caste. He was, therefore,
not a member of the Scheduled Caste. The caste of the
father, therefore, will be the determinative factor in
absence of any law.
This Court held that the State will have no jurisdiction to reserve a
constituency for a person who does not belong to the reserved category for
whose benefit it was constituted except by way of a legislation, stating :
"If a customary law is to be given a go-by for any
purpose whatsoever and particularly for the purpose of
enlarging the scope of a notification issued by the
President of India under clause (1) of Article 341 of the
Constitution of India, the same must be done in terms of
a statute and not otherwise."
Reference, in this connection, may be made to a Constitution Bench
decision of this Court in E.V. Chinnaiah etc. v. State of A.P. and Others
[(2005) 1 SCC 394], wherein it was held :
"Reservation must be considered from the social
objective angle, having regard to the constitutional
scheme, and not as a political issue and, thus, adequate
representation must be given to the members of the
Scheduled Castes as a group and not to two or more
groups of persons or members of castes.
The very fact that the members of the Scheduled
Castes are most backward amongst the backward classes
and the impugned legislation having already proceeded
on the basis that they are not adequately represented both
in terms of clause (4) of Article 15 and clause (4) of
Article 16 of the Constitution, a further classification by
way of micro-classification is not permissible. Such
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classification of the members of different classes of
people based on their respective castes would also be
violative of the doctrine of reasonableness. Article 341
provides that exclusion even of a part or a group of castes
from the Presidential List can be done only by
Parliament. The logical corollary thereof would be that
the State Legislatures are forbidden from doing that. A
uniform yardstick must be adopted for giving benefits to
the members of the Scheduled Castes for the purpose of
the Constitution. The impugned legislation being
contrary to the above constitutional scheme cannot,
therefore, be sustained."
The burden must be fully discharged beyond all reasonable doubts. In
N.E. Horo (supra), this Court held :
"Even if a female is not a member of tribe by
virtue of birth. She having been married to a tribal after
due observance of all formalities and after obtaining the
approval of the elders of the tribe would belong to the
tribal community to which her husband belongs on the
analogy of the wife taking the husband domicile."
Yet again in Valsamma Paul (supra), it was held :
"A candidate who had the advantageous start in
life being born in forward caste and had march of
advantageous life but is transplanted in backward caste
by adoption or marriage or conversion, does not become
eligible to the benefit or reservation either under Article
15(4) or 16(4), as the case may be. Acquisition of the
status of Scheduled Caste etc. by voluntary mobility into
these categories would play fraud on the Constitution,
and would frustrate the benign constitutional policy
under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of the Constitution\005"
It is, therefore, beyond any doubt or dispute that a person who is a
high caste Hindu and not subjected to any social or educational or
backwardness in his life; by reason of marriage alone cannot ipso facto
become a member of Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe. In absence of
any strict proof he cannot be allowed to defeat the very provisions made by
the State for reserving certain seats for disadvantaged people.
The High Court may or may not be right in holding that no special
ceremony was required for conversion from upper caste to Jatav, but the
finding of fact arrived at by the learned District Judge that her marriage had
taken place as per Vedic Hindu Rites and her marriage has been accepted by
her Biradari meaning thereby elders of her husband’s family only cannot be
held to be the same as that she had been accepted by the community of her
husband.
We may notice that in State of Kerala and Another v. Chandra
Mohanan [(2004) 3 SCC 429], a three-Judge Bench after noticing the said
decisions opined :
"The customary laws of a tribe not only govern his
culture, but also succession, inheritance, marriage,
worship of Gods etc. The characteristics of different
tribes despite the fact that they have been living in the
same area for a long time are different. They indisputably
follow different Gods. They have different cultures. Their
customs are also different."
It was further observed :
"Before a person can be brought within the purview
of the Constitution (Scheduled Tribes) Order, 1950, he
must belong to a tribe. A person for the purpose of
obtaining the benefits of the Presidential Order must
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fulfil the condition of being a member of a tribe and
continue to be a member of the tribe. If by reason of
conversion to a different religion a long time back, he/his
ancestors have not been following the customs, rituals
and other traits, which are required to be followed by the
members of the tribe and even had not been following the
customary laws of succession, inheritance, marriage etc.
he may not be accepted to be a member of a tribe. In this
case, it has been contended that the family of the victim
had been converted about 200 years back and in fact the
father of the victim married a woman belonging to a
Roman Catholic, wherefrom he again became a Roman
Catholic. The question, therefore, which may have to be
gone into is as to whether the family continued to be a
member of a Scheduled Tribe or not. Such a question can
be gone into only during trial."
.
In Lillykutty (supra), Thakker, J., speaking for the Division Bench
clearly held that once a certificate is cancelled, the election is also liable to
be cancelled. It may be true that in terms of the rules framed under the Delhi
Municipal Corporation Act, it was not necessary for the First Respondent
herein to produce the caste certificate at the time of filing of nomination as a
declaration in that behalf subserve the purpose. But such a caste certificate
was necessary having regard to the fact that in the event a dispute or doubt
arises as regard the question as to whether the conditions precedent for filing
the nomination are fulfilled or not. The Returning Officer was required to
arrive at a prima facie finding that the candidate belonged to Scheduled
Caste. She applied for grant of a Scheduled Caste Certificate on the basis
that she was Scheduled Caste by birth. Her claim has been found to be
incorrect. Unless it is established as of fact that she had been accepted as a
member of Scheduled Caste by the community as contra-distinguished from
acceptance of her marriage by her husband’s family, in our opinion, she
cannot claim the benefit of her reservation.
We, therefore, with respect, express our disapproval to the findings of
the High Court.
In Sobha Hymayathi Devi (supra), it was held
"\005First of all, we must point out that the High Court,
in our view, has rightly held that there was nothing to
show that the marriage of the appellant with Appala Raju
took place in the customary mode followed by the
Bhagatha community. On the other hand, as noticed by
the High Court, the available evidence tends to indicate
that the marriage was more in the form followed by Sistu
Karnams, the community to which her father belonged.
Secondly, as noticed by the High Court, there is nothing
to show that the appellant was accepted by the Bhagatha
community of Bhimavaram as a member of that
community. As discussed by the High Court based on the
evidence in the case, the indication available was that the
appellant hardly resided in Bhimavaram village to which
her maternal grandfather belonged and there was no
occasion for that community to treat her as a member of
that community. There is also nothing to show that the
appellant followed the way of life of that community."
Overruling N.E. Horo v. Smt. Jahan Ara Jaipal Singh [AIR 1972 SC 1840],
it was held :
"\005 Even otherwise, we have difficulty in accepting the
position that a non-tribal who marries a tribal could claim
to contest a seat reserved for tribals. Article 332 of the
Constitution speaks of reservation of seats for Scheduled
Tribes in Legislative Assemblies. The object is clearly to
give representation in the legislature to Scheduled Tribe
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candidates, considered to be deserving of such special
protection. To permit a non-tribal under cover of a
marriage to contest such a seat would tend to defeat the
very object of such a reservation. The decision of this
Court in Valsamma Paul v. Cochin University supports
this view. Neither the fact that a non-backward female
married a backward male nor the fact that she was
recognised by the community thereafter as a member of
the backward community, was held to enable a non-
backward to claim reservation in terms of Article 15(4)
or 16(4) of the Constitution. Their Lordships after
noticing Bhoobum Moyee Debia v. Ram Kishore Acharj
Chowdhry and Lulloobhoy Bappoobhoy Cassidass
Moolchund v. Cassibai held that a woman on marriage
becomes a member of the family of her husband and
thereby she becomes a member of the caste to which she
has moved. The caste rigidity breaks down and would
stand as no impediment to her becoming a member of the
family to which the husband belongs and to which she
gets herself transplanted. Thereafter, this Court noticed
that recognition by the community was also important.
Even then, this Court categorically laid down that the
recognition of a lady as a member of a backward
community in view of her marriage would not be relevant
for the purpose of entitlement to reservation under
Article 16(4) of the Constitution for the reason that she as
a member of the forward caste, had an advantageous start
in life and a marriage with a male belonging to a
backward class would not entitle her to the facility of
reservation given to a backward community. The High
Court has applied this decision to a seat reserved in an
election in terms of Article 332 of the Constitution. We
see no reason why the principle relating to reservation
under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) laid down by this Court
should not be extended to the constitutional reservation
of a seat for a Scheduled Tribe in the House of the People
or under Article 332 in the Legislative Assembly. The
said reservations are also constitutional reservations
intending to benefit the really underprivileged and not
those who come to the class by way of marriage. To the
extent the decision in Horo6 can be said to run counter to
the above view, it cannot be accepted as correct. Even
otherwise, in the absence of evidence on the relevant
aspects regarding marriage in tribal form and acceptance
by the community, the decision in Horo cannot come to
the rescue of the appellant\005"
In Sandhya Thakur v. Vimla Devi Kushwah and Ors. [JT 2005 (1) SC
556, this Court held :
"In the light of the decision in Valsamma Paul v.
Cochin University and Others (supra) and our decision
rendered today in Sobha Hymavathi Devi v. Setti
Gangadhara Swamy, which were heard along with this
appeal, it must be held that the appellant, who by birth
did not belong to a backward class or community, would
not be entitled to contest a seat reserved for a backward
class or community, merely on the basis of her marriage
to a male of that community\005"
The High Court, thus, committed a manifest error in coming to the
conclusion that the purposes of reservation under Articles 15(4) and 16(4) of
the Constitution, on the one hand, and Articles 330 and 332, on the other,
are different.
Sobha Hymavathi Devi (supra), thus, although recognized that in a
given case acceptance of such a marriage by the community may be held to
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subserve the purpose but in no uncertain terms held that reservation of a seat
for a Scheduled Tribe in the House of the People or under Article 332 in the
Legislative Assembly are constitutional reservations.
In all the decisions relied upon by Mr. Jain, namely, Arumugam
(supra), Mohan Rao (supra) and Kailash Sonkar (supra), this Court was
concerned with conversion and re-conversion having taken place while the
person concerned was minor. In such a case, the doctrine of revival of the
caste was applied. We, however, as at present advised need not dilate
further on the said question as nothing turn out therefrom for the purpose of
this case.
For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained which is set aside accordingly. The Appeal is allowed. No costs.