Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4105 of 1999
PETITIONER:
MAKHAN LAL BANGAL
RESPONDENT:
MANAS BHUNIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/01/2001
BENCH:
DR. A.S. ANAND CJ & R.C. LAHOTI & SHIVA RAJ V. PATIL
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2001 (1) SCR 17
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
R.C. LAHOTI, J. This appeal under Section 116-A of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951 (hereinafter ’the RPA’, for short) has been preferred
by a candidate who won at the election but has lost in the election
petition.
Elections for the legislative seat of No. 216, Sabang Legislative Assembly
Constituency in the district of Midnapore, West Bengal were held in May,
1996. There were four candidates in the fray. The appellant secured 60453
votes. The respondent no. 1 secured 59628 votes. The other two candidates
received 594 and 453 votes respectively. On 12.5.1996 the appellant was
declared elected by a margin of 825 votes over his nearest rival, the
respondent no. .1.
On 17.6.1996, the respondent no.l filed an election petition laying
challenge to the election of the appellant and seeking a declaration that
the result of the election was void. A declaration that the respondent no.
1 was duly elected was also sought for. On trial the High Court has allowed
the election petition and set aside the election of the appellant declaring
the same to be void. No other direction has been made. The appellant and
two other candidates who had contested the election were only arrayed as
the respondents in the election petition filed before the High Court.
It is not necessary to set out the pleadings, evidence and other details of
the case in view of our having formed an opinion that the judgment under
appeal suffers from a serious lacuna going to the root of the matter and
therefore deserves to be set aside followed by a remand to the High Court
with a direction to Comply with the provisions of Section 99 of the RPA and
thereafter decide the election petition afresh. The fact insofar as
necessary to demonstrate the need for remand are stated in brief
hereinafter.
The principal ground on which the election of the appellant was sought to
be set aside was that the result of the election, insofar as it concerns
the returned candidate was materially affected by corrupt practices
committed in the interests of the returned candidate by the agent other
than his election agent within the meaning of Section 100(l)(d) (ii) of the
RPA. The election petition alleged commission of corrupt practices as
defined in sub-sections (2) (4) and (7) of Section 123 of the RPA. For the
purpose of this appeal it would suffice to note the issues framed by the
High Court, the answers given and the findings recorded by the High Court.
ISSUES
(1) Is the election petition maintainable in the present form?
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(2) Is the respondent no.l, his election agent and/or his election agent
is/are guilty of corrupt practices as alleged in paragraph 11 and sub-
paragraphs thereunder of the election petition?
(3) Is the respondent no. 1, his election agents, the Returning Officer,
Assistant returning Officer, counting Supervisors, counting Assistants
acting as agent of the respondent no. 1 resorted to corrupt practices as
alleged in paragraph 27 and sub-paragraphs thereunder of the said election
petition?
(4) Is the election petitioner entitled to a declaration that the
election of the respondent no.l from the said 216, Sabang Legislative
Assembly Constituency void?
(5) Was the Returning Officer of the said Assembly Constituency biased
in favour of the respondent no. 1?
(6) Is the election petitioner entitled to a declaration that the
petitioner had been duly elected to the said constituency having received
majority of valid votes?
(7) Is the election petitioner entitled to recounting of votes under
the supervision of this court as prayed for in the petition?
(8) What relief, if any, the election petitioner is entitled to?
Findings
"Issues settled are answered in the manner following:-Issue No.-1 The
election petition is maintainable.
Issue No. 2-The respondent no.l, election agent and agents are guilty of
corrupt practices.
Issue No. 3-The respondent no. l, the Returning Officer, the Assistant
Returning Officer, the Counting Supervisor, Counting Assistant acting as
agent of the respondent no. l and resorted to corrupt practices.
I am not, however, inclined to declare the petitioner as elected or secured
majority of votes. There is no question of recounting in the instant case
inasmuch as the election is vitiated by corrupt practices since the
election is declared void.
So far Issue Nos. 2 and 3 are concerned, they are decided in the
affirmative. I am of the view that the petitioner cannot be declared as
elected.
For all the aforesaid reasons, in view, it is proved that corrupt practices
had been committed under Section 123(2), 123(4) and 123(7) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 by the returned candidate and/or his
agents and the election of 216 Sabang Legislative Assembly constituency
declaring the respondent no. 1 should be declared void. (Sic)
Considering all aspects of the matter I am of the view that corrupt
practice under Section 123(2), 123(4) and 123(7) of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951 by the respondent no. 1 and/or his agents has been
proved in this case. Accordingly it is declared that the election of the
respondent no. 1 being the returned candidate from 216-Sabang Legislative
Assembly constituency is void."
In addition to the findings arrived at (extracted and reproduced as
hereinabove from the operative part of the judgment of the High Court), a
few other findings from the body of the judgment, not all but only a few by
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way of illustration, are extracted and reproduced, so as to demonstrate
how, in the light of its own findings, the High Court has failed in
discharging its statutory obligation cast by Section 99 of the RPA
resulting in vitiating the judgment. Those findings are;
".....it can be safely concluded from a careful reading of the written
statement that (a) Hem Bhattacharya, Dipak Sarkar, Debasis Bose, Nilanjan
Chatterjee, Returning officer, Aniandya kar, Block Development Officer and
Assistant Returning Officer, Kushal Mitra, Officer -in-charge of Sabang
Police Station, Pradip Das, Joint BDO, Sabang, Hare Krishna Jana,
Sabhapati, Sabang Panchayat Samity; Chitta Bera, election agent of
respondent no.) and Basudep Bag. Addl. S.P. Burdwan, all acted as agents of
respondent no.1 being the part of the election machinery of CPI(M). It is
further proved by admission that the political machinery of CPI(M) actively
engaged itself not only to propagate for the respondent no.1 but also
ensured win of the respondent no. 1 by commission of several corrupt
practices mentioned in the petition as agent of respondent no. 1."
xxx xxx
xxx
It is clearly established from his evidence and also from several exhibits
that the machinery of the GPI(M) its nuemerous workers, cadres activists
and supporters were all working for respondent no.l as his agents and that
the said corrupt practices committed by CPI(M) workers and leaders are no
more than the works of the agent of respondent no. 1 and for each such
corrupt practice and/or act of the agents of respondent no. 1 and as such
the respondent no.1 is vicariously liable and is guilty of corrupt
practices."
Thus, the high Court has clearly recorded a finding of corrupt practices
having been committed at the election. The names of person who have been
proved at the trial to have been guilty of commission of the alleged
corrupt practices and the nature of such practices has also been recorded.
The applicability of sub-clauses (i) & (ii) of clause (a) of sub-section
(1) of Section 99 (quoted supra) is clearly attracted. The High Court did
not issue any notice to any person found and named in its judgment as
having committed corrupt practice.
I.A. No. 3 of 2000 has been filed by Shri Basudeb Bag, Superintendent of
Police, Bankura, West Bengal and I.A. No. 4 of 2000 has been filed by Shri
Nilanjan Chatterjee presently Secretary, Women Development Undertaking,
Department of Social Welfare, Government of West Bengal who was appointed
as returning officer for the election in question by the Election
Commission of India. Both the officers have sought for being impleaded as
party-respondents or as intervenors in the appeal so as to lay challenge to
the findings recorded and adverse remarks and observations made in the
judgment under appeal which if not expunged may adversely affect service
carriers of the applicants. Their grievance is that they were not joined as
parties to the election petition, they had no opportunity of hearing as
they were never put on notice by the High Court and they have been
condemned unheard.
Section 9? of the RPA provides for an order at the conclusion of the trial
of an election petition being made by the High Court whereby (a) the
election petition may be dismissed, (b) the election of all or any of the
returned candidates may be declared to be void, (c) in addition to the
preceding relief, the election petitioner or any other candidated may be
declared to have been duly elected. Section 99 provides as under :-
"99. Other orders to be made by the High Court-(l) At the time of making an
order under Section 98 [the High Court] shall also make an order-
[(a) where any charge is make in the petition of any corrupt practice
having been committed at the election, recording-
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(i) a finding whether any corrupt practice has or has not been proved to
have been committed at the election, and the nature of that corrupt
practice; and
(ii) the names of all persons, if any, who have been proved at the trial to
have been guilty of any corrupt practice and the nature of that practice;
and]
(b) fixing the total amount of costs payable arid specify the persons by
and to whom, costs shall be paid;
Provided that [a person who is not a party to the petition shall not be
named] in the order under sub-clause (ii) of clause (a) unless-
(a) he as been given notice to appear before [the High Court] and to
show cause why he should not be so named; and
(b) if he appears in pursuance of the notice, he has been given an
opportunity of cross-examining any witness who has already been examined by
[the High Court] and has given evidence against him, of calling evidence in
his defence and of being heard.
[(2) In this section and in Section 100, the expression "agent" has the
same meaning as in Section 123.]"
The ambit and scope of Sections 98 and 99 of the Act was considered in Dr.
Ramesh Yeshwant Prabhoo v. Prabhakar Kashinath Kunte & Ors. [1996] 1 SCC
130, wherein this court held:-
"While deciding the election petition at the conclusion of the trial and
making an order under Section 98 disposing of the election petition in one
of the ways specified therein, the High Court under Section 99 is required
to record the names of all persons guilty of any corrupt practice which has
been proved at the trial. Proviso to sub-section (1) then prescribes that a
person who is not a party to the petition shall not be so named unless the
condition specified in the proviso is fulfilled. The requirement of the
proviso is only in respect of a person who is not a party to the petition
and is to be named so that he too has the same opportunity which was
available to a party to the petition.......The opportunity which a party to
the petition had at the trial to defend against the allegation of corrupt
practice is to be given by such a notice to that person of defending
himself if he was not already a party to the petition. In other words the
notice has to be equated with a party to the petition for this purpose and
is to be given the same opportunity which he would get if he was made a
party to the petition." (Para 49).
Again in Manohar Joshi v. Nitin Bhaurao Patil & Anr., [1996] 1 SCC 169,
this court laid down the procedure which should be followed by the High
Courts while disposing of such an election petition pointing out the fatal
effect, which non-compliance would have, on the judgment of the High Court
declaring void an election of the returned candidate. It was held:-
"Section 98 contemplates the making of an order thereunder in the decision
of the High Court rendered "at the conclusion of the trial of an election
petition"......There is nothing in Section 98 to permit the High Court to
decide the election petition piecemeal and to declare the election of any
returned candidated to be void at an intermediate stage of the trial when
any part of the trial remains to be concluded, (Para 54)
Sub-section (1) of Section 99 begins with the words "At the time of making
an order under Section 98 the High Court shall also make an order" of the
kind mentioned in clauses (a) and (b) therein......There can be no doubt
that the order which can be made under sub-section (1) of Section 99 has,
therefore, to be made only at the conclusion of the trial of an election
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petition in the decision of the High Court made by an order disposing of
the election petition in one of the modes prescribed in clauses (a), (b)
and (c) of Section 98. This alone is sufficient to indicate that the
requirement of Section 99 is to be completed during the trial of the
election petition and the final order under Section 99 has to be made in
the decision of the High Court rendered under Section 98 at the conclusion
of the trial of the election petition. (Para 55)
The High Court cannot make an order under Section 98 recording a finding of
proof of corrupt practice against the returned candidate alone and on that
basis declare the election of the returned candidate to be void and then
proceed to comply with the requirement of Section 99 in the manner stated
therein with a view to decide at a later stage whether any other person
also is guilty of that corrupt practice for the purpose of naming him then
under Section 99 of the R.P. Act. The High Court has no option in the
matter to decide whether it will proceed under Section 99 against other
persons alleged to be guilty of that corrupt practice along with the
returned candidate inasmuch as the requirement of Section 99 is mandatory
since the finding recorded by the High Court requires it to name all
persons proved at the trial to have been guilty of the corrupt practice.
The expression "the names of all persons, if any, who have been proved at
the trial to have been guilty of any corrupt practice" in sub-clause (i) of
clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section 99 clearly provides for such proof
being required "at the trial" which means "the trial of an election
petition" mentioned in Section 98, at the conclusion of which alone the
order contemplated under Section 98 can be made. (Para 57).
Therefore, the election of the appellant in the present case could not be
declared void by making an order under Section 98 on the ground contained
in Section 100(1)(b) of the R.P. Act without prior compliance of Section
99. Absence of notice under Section 99 of the R.P. Act vitiates the final
order made under Section 98 by the High Court declaring the election to be
void." (Para 60)
[Emphasis supplied]
In Chandrakanta Goyal v. Sohan Singh Jodh Sing Kohil, [1996] 1 SCC 378,
this court again emphasised the procedure to be followed by the Supreme
Court when non-compliance by the High Court with Section 99 was brought to
its notice in appeal, in these words:-
"Ordinarily in such a situation after setting aside the impugned judgment
the matter is to be remitted to the High Court for deciding the election
petition afresh after complying with the requirements of Section 99 of the
Act by giving notice to the makers of the speeches and holding the
requisite enquiry." the same view has been reiterated in Moreshwar Save v.
Dwarkadas Yashwantrao Pathrikar, [1996] 1 SCC 394, wherein this court has
pointed but an alternative to be followed by the Supreme Court avoiding the
necessity to remand by deferring the decision in appeal and in the meantime
issuing notice under Section 99 to those persons and after the requisite
enquiry by the High Court, its finding in respect of those persons being
called for, deciding the case against the candidate and the notices at one
time while deciding the appeal in the Supreme Court and then opined that in
the case such second course did not appear to be appropriate one.
All the decisions of this Court referred to hereinbefore are 3 judges Bench
decisions. A2-judges Bench has also taken the same view in Dr. Vimal (Mrs.)
v. Bhaguji & Ors., [1996] 9 SCC 351.
We too are of the opinion that the fatal defect as noticed by us in the
present case vitiates the judgment under appeal and in appropriate course
in the facts and circumstances of the case would be to set aside the
judgment under appeal and remand the case to the High Court for deciding
the election petition afresh after compliance with the provisions of
Section 99 of R.P. Act. In view of the above said remand, I.A. Nos. 3 and 4
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are rendered redundant. The applicants in the two applications seeking
intervention before us shall obviously be now noticed by the High Court and
they would have a right of hearing in accordance with Section 99 of the RPA
before the High Court.
Accordingly the appeal is allowed. The judgment under appeal is set aside.
The election petition is remanded to the High Court for deciding afresh
after compliance with Section 99 of the RPA and in accordance with law, No
order as to costs in this appeal.
With the inevitable remand in the terms as above said, the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction of ours under Section 116-A of the RPA comes to an
end. There are a few aspects of the case which have caused us concern and
before parting with the case we would like to place on record our views in
that regard. The manner in which the election petition has been tried
defeats the very purpose of entrusting jurisdiction to try an election
petition to the High Court by Representation of People (Amendment) Act,
1966, Out of several, we propose to deal with only two aspects: (i) framing
of issues, and (ii) recording of evidence.
In para 11, sub-paragraphs (a) to (q) (in all 17 sub-paragraphs) of the
election petition there are about 11 corrupt practices, all of serious
nature, alleged by the petitioner. On all these corrupt practices, one
sweeping issue was framed issue- No.2, reproduced in the earlier part of
this judgment. So is the case with regard to the incidents alleged in sub-
paragraphs (i) to (xii) of para 27 of the election petition whereon the
petitioner sought to build up a case of corrupt practice having been
committed by the appellant by obtaining or procuring or abetting or
attempting to obtain or procure the Services from the Gazetted officer and
persons in the service of Government in committing corrupt practice by
improper reception of invalid votes and, refusal or rejection of valid
votes materially affecting the result of election. As regards various
instances of corrupt practice as alleged in these sub-paragraphs also an
omnibus issue no.3, has been framed.
An election petition is like a civil trial. The stage of framing the issues
is an important one inasmuch as oh that day the scope of the trial is
determined by laying the path on which the trial shall proceed excluding
diversions and departures therefrom. The date fixed for settlement of
issues is, therefore, a date fixed for hearing. The real dispute between
the parties is determined, the area of conflict is narrowed and the concave
mirror held by the court reflecting the pleadings of the parties pinpoints
into issues the disputes on which the ’two sides differ. The correct
decision of civil lis largely depends on correct framing of issues,
correctly determining the real points in controversy which need to be
decided. The scheme of order XIV of the Code of Civil Procedure dealing
with settlement of issues shows that an issue arises when a material
proposition of fact or law is affirmed by one party and denied by the
other. Each material proposition affirmed by one party and denied by o(her
should form the subject of distinct issue. An obligation is cast on the
court to read the plaint/petition and the written statement/counter, if
any, and then determine with the assistance of the learned counsel for the
parties, the material propositions of fact or of law on which the parties
are at variance. The issues shall be framed and recorded on which the
decision of the case shall depend. The parties and their counsel are bound
to assist the court in the process of framing of issues. Duty of the
counsel does not belittle the primary obligation cast on the court. It is
for the Presiding Judge to exert himself so as to frame sufficiently
expressive issues. An omission to frame proper issues may be a ground for
remanding the case for retrial subject to prejudice having been shown to
have resulted by the omission. The petition may be disposed of at the first
hearing if it appears that the parties are not at issue on any material
question of law or of fact and the court may at once pronounce the
judgment. If the parties are at issue on some questions of law or of fact,
the suit or petition shall be fixed for trial calling upon the parties to
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adduce evidence on issues of fact. The evidence shall be confined to issues
and the pleadings. No evidence on controversies not covered by issues and
the pleadings, shall normally be admitted, for each party leads evidence in
support of issues the burden of proving which lies on him. The object of an
issue is to tie down the evidence and arguments and decision to a
particular question so that there may be no doubt on what the dispute is.
The judgment, then proceeding issue-wise would be able to tell precisely
how the dispute was decided.
In the case at hand, each one of the corrupt practices alleged by the
petitioner and denied by the defendant, should have formed the subject
matter of a distinct issue sufficiently expressive of the material
proposition of fact and of law arising from the pleadings. Failure to do so
has resulted in an utter confusion prevailing throughout the trial and also
in the judgment of the High Court as was demonstrated by the learned
counsel for the appellant during the hearing of the appeal attacking the
findings arrived at by High Court. On some of the points in dispute the
High Court has observed that no proof of the said fact (alleged in the
petition) was necessary so far as the petitioner is concerned because there
was no specific denial Of the allegations made or as there was no answer by
the defendant to the allegations of the petitioner on points of substance.
The contradiction with which the trial and the judgment suffer is writ
large. If a material proposition of fact or law alleged in the petition was
not denied or was hot specifically denied in the written statement within
the meaning of Rule 5 of order 8 of C.P.C. and such tenor of the written
statement had persuaded the learned designated Election Judge in forming an
opinion (belatedly while writing the judgment) that there was an admission
by necessary implication for want of denial or specific denial then there
was no need of framing an issue and there was no need for recording of
evidence on those issues. Valuable time of the court would have been saved
from being wasted in recording evidence on such averments in pleadings as
were not in issue for want of traverse, if it was so!
However, in the facts of the present case, we are of the opinion that the
defective framing of the issues though material, has not vitiated the trial
inasmuch as we are satisfied that the parties have gone to the trial with
full knowledge of the allegations and counter allegations made in the
pleadings. None of the parties has complained of prejudice. None had made a
prayer to the High Court, before going for trial, for amending or striking
down any of the issues. We need say no more about the issues.
Now as the recording of evidence. During the hearing of appeal the learned
counsel for the parties took us through several statements of witnesses and
read out many a passages while assailing for supporting the findings
arrived at by the learned Designated Election Judge. A few aspects as to
the examination of the witnesses and the manner of recording statements
need to be adverted to. The record of evidence shows:
1. The statements of the witnesses are recorded hot in narrative but in
question-answer form. During the course of hearing in appeal we asked the
learned counsel for the parties about this feature. We were told that such
is the practice prevalent on the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court.
2. The witnesses are named but not numbered.
3. Some of the witnesses are asked a few preliminary questions the
relevance whereof we have not been able to appreciate. Many a witness has
been asked whether he has appearing in the Court on sub-poena and then
asked to produce the sub-poena in the Court for perusal of the presiding
judge.
4. A host of such questions have been asked, both in examination-in-chief
and in cross-examination, as are not permitted by the provisions of the
Evidence Act. To wit, witnesses (other than the parties) have been
confronted With the contents of the election petition or the written
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statement and asked to make comments or offer explanation as to passages
therefrom, overlooking that Section 145 of the Evidence Act permits a
witness being cross-examinded as to previous statement made by him and not
by a third person. How can a witness be confronted or asked to explain the
contents of or averments made in writing or document to which he is not a
party? Same or similar questions have been allowed to be asked again and
again. At places the witnesses have been ’grilled’ and compelled to answer
embarrassing questions.
The statements of 18 witnesses examined by the parties have been placed
before us in 18 volumes some of which run into about a hundred or even
hundreds of pages each. We are told that 120 days were consumed in
recording the evidence. The learned counsel were agreeable that if only the
conducting of examination -in-chief and cross-examination would have been
effectively controlled, the recording of evidence could have been concluded
in less than half of the time what has been consumed and the bulk of the
evidence could have been reduced to one-third or one-fourth of what it is.
The reason behind giving such a long rope in examining and cross examining
the witnesses, surprisingly enough what we were told is that in the trial
of an election petition, the atmosphere is surcharged, conducting counsel
get over-zealous and it is not considered advisable by the Court to
interrupt the conducting of examination and cross-examination of the
witnesses by the counsel. We are not amused at all, Curtailing delays is
essential to expeditious disposal of the case. Speedy disposal is the cry
of the day. Courts cannot act as silent spectators when evidence is being
recorded. Judges must have full control over the file and effectively
conduct proceedings keeping in view that no litigant has any such right as
to waste the precious time of the court.
In almost all the courts in the country holding trials in civil and
criminal cases, the oral examination of the witnesses though conducted in
question-answer form by the counsel, is generally recorded in narrative by
the presiding judges. The court has power to regulate the manner of
recording evidence. In spite of the manner of recording evidence being in
narrative the presiding judge can wherever necessary direct a particular
question or group of questions to be recorded in question-answer form.
Wherever necessary a note as to demeanour of a witness can always be made
by the presiding judge before whom the witness is being examined and such
note on demeanour made in the presence of the witness and counsel for both
the parties would be more useful to the trial court itself while hearing
arguments of the counsel for the parties at the end of the trial and also
for the appellate court rather than a mere record of the statement in
question-answer form. Incidentally and interestingly, it may be noticed
that when the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 was enacted, repealing the
1898 Code, Section 276 was introduced providing for evidence to be
ordinarily taken down in the form of question and answer but vesting a
discretion in the presiding judge to record the evidence in the form of a
narrative. Within three years the Law Commission of the India found this
system causing delay in trial and hence not workable and on its
recommendation, by the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Act (45 of
1978), Section 276 was amended so as to provide that in trial before courts
of session evidence shall ordinarily be taken down in the form of a
narrative but the presiding judge may in his discretion taken down or cause
to be taken down any part of such evidence in the form of question and
answer. Thus recording of evidence in narrative form is the rule. Such mode
of recording evidence is statutorily provided for session trials where life
and liberty of persons is at stake. We fail to understand why the recording
of evidence in narrative cannot be a mode to be followed in the trial of
election petitions. Assigning serial numbers to the witnesses on their
depositions such as PW1 (and so on) for petitioners’ witnesses and RW1 and
DW1 (and so on) for the respondents’ or defendants’ witnesses would provide
a convenient mode of referring to the witnesses during the course of
hearing and while writing the judgment. We hope Calcutta High Court would
consider suitably amending its rules or practice as applicable to Original
Side and/or to trial of election petitions.
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It is not necessary to ask each witness whether he is appearing on subpoena
and to have the sub-poena produced for the perusal of the Court. Whether a
witness is on sub-poena or not is a matter of record known to the parties,
the court and the witness. If a doubt or dispute may arise reference can be
had to the record. Such questions, asked in routine, add only to the length
of the deposition and are avoidable.
An election petition is not a dispute between the petitioner and respondent
merely; the fate of the constituency is on trial. A Judge presiding over
the trial of an election petition, and any trial for the matter of that,
needs to effectively control examination, cross-examination and re-
examination of the witnesses so as to exclude such questions being put to
the witnesses as the law does not permit and to relieve the witnesses from
the need of answering such questions which they are not bound to answer.
Power to disallow questions should be effectively exercised by reference to
Sections 146, 148, 150, 151 and 152 of the Evidence Act by excluding
improper and impermissible questions. The examination of the witnesses
should not be protracted and the witness should not feel harassed. The
cross examiner must not be allowed to bully or take unfair advantage of the
witness. Though the trials in India are adversarial, the power vesting in
the court to ask any question to a witness at any time in the interest of
justice gives the trial a little touch of its being inquisitorial.
Witnesses attend the court to discharge the sacred duty of rendering aid to
justice. They are entitled to be treated with respect and it is the judge
who has to see that they feel confident in the court. In Ram Chander v.
State of Haryana, AIR (1981) SC 1036 this Court observed, ".........to be
an effective instrument in dispensing justice, the presiding judge must
cease to be a spectator and a mere recording machine. He must become a
participant in the trial by evincing intelligent active
interest................". An alert judge actively participating in court
proceedings with a firm grip on oars enables the trial smoothly negotiating
on shorter routes avoiding prolixity and expeditiously attaining the
destination of just decision. The interest of the counsel for the parties
in conducting the trial in such a way as to gain success for their
respective clients is understandable but the obligation of the presiding
judge to hold the proceedings so as to achieve the dual objective - search
for truth and delivering justice expeditiously-cannot be subdued. Howsoever
sensitive the subject matter of trial may be; the court room is no place of
play for passions, emotions and surcharged enthusiasm.