Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JUMUNA PRASAD MUKHARIYA AND OTHERS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LACHHI RAM AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/09/1954
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1954 AIR 686 1955 SCR 608
CITATOR INFO :
D 1955 SC 756 (6)
D 1965 SC 183 (26)
RF 1975 SC 349 (29)
RF 1975 SC2299 (140)
R 1980 SC 354 (5)
RF 1990 SC1023 (12)
C 1991 SC2001 (5)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 19(1) (a)-Representation of
the People Act (XLIII of 1951). ss. 123(5) and 124(5)-
Whether ultra vires the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Held, that sections 123(5) and 124(5) of the
Representation of the People Act (XLIII of 1951) are not
ultra vires article 19(1) (a) of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 156 of 1954.
Appeals by Special Leave against the Judgment and Order
dated the 24th December, 1953, of the Election Tribunal,
Gwalior, Madhya Bharat, in Election Petition No. 263 of
1952.
N.C. Chatterjee, (S. K. Kapur and Ganpat Rai, with him)
for the appellants.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (S. P. Varma,
with him) for the respondents Nos. I and 5.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (C. P. Lal,
with him) for respondent No. 4.
1954. September 28. The Judgment of, the Court was
delivered by
BOSE J.-This is an appeal from a decision of the
Election Tribunal of Gwalior in which the petitioner, an
elector, sought to set aside the elections of the appellants
(respondents 1 and 2 to the petition) who were the
successful candidates. The constituency is Bhilsa, a double
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member constituency in Madhya Bharat. The petitioner seems
to have been fighting on behalf of the 6th and 7th
respondents to the petition because one of his prayers is
that they be declared to have been duly elected in place ’of
the appellants (respondents 1 and 2). The petitioner
succeeded and the Tribunal declared the elections of the two
appellants to be void and further declared that the 6th and
7th respondents had boon duly elected,
609
We will first consider that part of the decision which
declares the election of the two appellants to be void.
The Tribunal finds, among other things, that the’
appellant No. 1 (1st respondent) published certain pamphlets
which contain statements listed as (a), (b), (c), (e), (f)
and (g) by the Tribunal. The Tribunal holds that these
statements are false and that the 1st appellant (1st
respondent) did not believe them to be true. It also holds
that these statements reflect on the personal character and
conduct of the 6th respondent and are reasonably calculated
to prejudice his prospects in the election. These findings
were contested and the learned counsel for the appellants
contended that the attack was on the public and political
character of the 6th respondent and was a legitimate attack.
We do not intend to examine this as a Court of appeal
because this is a special appeal and all we are concerned to
see is whether a Tribunal of reasonable and unbiased men
could judicially reach such a conclusion. We have had some
of these pamphlets read out to us and we are of opinion that
the conclusion of the Tribunal is one which judicial minds
could reasonably reach. We decline to examine the matter
further in special appeal. Under the law the decision of
the Tribunal is meant to be final. That does not take away
our jurisdiction but we will only interfere when there is
some glaring error which has resulted in a substantial
miscarriage of justice. On those findings a major corrupt
practice on the part of the 1st respondent (1st appellant
here) under section 123(5) of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951, is established.
The next finding concerns the 2nd respondent (appellant
No. 2). The Tribunal finds that he made a systematic appeal
to Chamhar voters to vote for him on the basis of his caste.
There is evidence to support this finding. The leaflets
marked N and 0 place that beyond doubt. This constitutes a
minor corrupt practice under section 124(5) of the Act.
Both these provisions, namely sections 123(5) and
124(5), were challenged as ultra vires article 19(1)(a) of
the Constitution, It was contended that article 245(1)
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prohibits the making of laws which violate the Constitution
and that the impugned sections interfere with a citizen’s
fundamental right to freedom of speech. There is nothing in
this contention. These laws do not stop a man from
speaking. They merely prescribe conditions which must be
observed if he wants to enter Parliament. The right to
stand as a candidate and contest an election is not a common
law right. It is a special right created by statute and can
only be exercised on the conditions laid down by the
statute. The Fundamental Rights Chapter has no bearing on a
right like this created by statute. The appellants have no
fundamental right to be elected members of Parliament. If.
they want that they must observe the rules. If they prefer
to exercise their right of free speech outside these rules,
the impugned sections do not stop them. We hold that these
sections are intra vires.
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In addition to these findings, the Tribunal found that
both the appellants committed an illegal practice within the
meaning of section 125(3) in that they issued a leaflet and
a poster which did not have the name of the printer on them.
This is a pure question of fact.
The result of committing any corrupt practice is that
the election of the candidate is void under section
100(2)(b). It is not necessary to prove that the result of
the election was materially affected thereby because clause
(b) is an alternative that stands by itself. All that need
be proved is that a corrupt practice has been committed, and
that the Tribunal finds to be the fact. The Tribunal was
accordingly justified in declaring the election of the first
appellant to be void.
In addition to this the Tribunal found that the corrupt
practice committed by the second appellant respondent No. 2)
also materially affected the result of the election. This
was challenged but we need not go into that because the
finding that the second appellant committed a minor corrupt
practice and also an illegal practice is clear and so his
case falls under clause (a) of sub-section (2) of section
100.
Sub-section (2)(a), so far as it is material here,
runs........................ if the Tribunal is of opinion-
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(a)that the election of a returned candidate has been
procured or induced or the result of the election has been
materially affected, by any corrupt or -illegal practice
the Tribunal shall declare the election of the returned
candidate to be void."
The Tribunal finds as a fact that the second appellant’s
election was procured by a corrupt practice. His case
therefore falls within the first of the three alternatives
envisaged by clause (a), so it is not necessary to enquire
whether it also falls under the third. We hold that this
election was also rightly declared to be void. That
disposes of the first and second appellants (respondents 1
and 2).
We now turn to respondents 6 and 7 to the petition.
They are the 4th and 5th respondents before us, Ramsahai and
Sunnu La]. The Tribunal, acting under section 101 (b),
declared them to be duly elected. Here, we are of opinion
that the Tribunal was wrong. Before this can be done, it
must be proved that
" but for the votes obtained by the returned candidate by
corrupt or illegal practices...... such other candidate
would have obtained a majority of the valid votes. "
The Constituency was a double member constituency. The
following stood for the General Constituency and obtained
the votes shown against them:
Jamuna Prasad Mukhariya (Respt. No. 1) 13,669
Keshav Shastri (Respt. No. 3) 1,999
V. N. Sheode (Respt. No. 4) 1,350
Ram Sabai (Respt. No. 6) 12,750
The Tribunal says that the difference invotes
between respondents I and 6 is 919. We presume that this is
meant to show that the voting between them was close. From
that the Tribunal jumps to the following conclusion:
" Considering the scandalous nature of the false statement
regarding respondent No. 6 and the mode
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of systematic appeal on the basis of caste made by
respondent No. 2 we have no doubt in our minds that......
respondent No. 1 got more votes simply because of corrupt
practices and if these. corrupt practices had not been there
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respondent No. 6 undoubtedly would have obtained a majority
of valid votes."
This, in our opinion, is pure speculation and is not a
conclusion which any reasonable mind could judicially reach
on the data set out above. There is nothing to show why the
majority of the 1st respondent’s voters would have preferred
the 6th respondent and ignored the 3rd and 4th respondents.
An exactly similar process of reasoning was followed in
the case of the 7th respondent. He was a Scheduled Caste
candidate and the voting there was as follows:
Chaturbhuj Jatav (Respt. No. 2) 12,452
Hira Khusla Chamar (Respt. 5) 601
Sunnulal (Respt. 7) 10,889
Here, again, there is no basis for concluding that those
who voted for the 2nd respondent would, if they had not done
so, have preferred the 7th respondent to the 5th.
We set aside this part of the order.
The result is that the appeal fails in so far as it
attacks the Tribunal’s declaration voiding the election of
the two appellants but succeeds against that part of the
order which declares the 6th and 7th respondents to have
been elected. In the circumstances there will be no order
about costs in either Court.
Order accordingly.
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