Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SATYA DEV BUSHAHRI*
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PADAM DEV AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/05/1954
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1954 AIR 587 1955 SCR 549
CITATOR INFO :
F 1956 SC 315 (2)
F 1956 SC 335 (1)
RF 1962 SC 145 (8,9)
RF 1975 SC2299 (412)
D 1985 SC 357 (15)
ACT:
Government of Part C States Act (XLIX of 1951), ss. 8 and 17
-- Whether exclude the application of s. 7(d) of the
Representation of the People Act 1951 to the elections
relating to Part C States -Representation of the People Act
(XLIII of 1951), ss. 33(2), 123 (8)-Proposing or seconding a
candidate by a person under s. 33(2) -Whether prohibited by
s. 123(8)-Mere Appointment of Government servant as polling
agent--Whether infringes s. 123(8).
HEADNOTE:
Section 17 of Act XLIX of 1951 enacts that a person who
would be disqualified to be chosen to either House under an
Act of Parliament would be disqualified to be chosen for the
State Assembly. Accordingly adopting the test that what
would be a disqualification for being a member of either
House of Parliament under Art. 102 would under s. 17 be a
disqualification for being chosen to the State Assembly, a
person who had entered into contracts for the supply of
goods not with the Central Government but with the State
Government (in the present case Himachal Pradesh) would not
be disqualified for being elected to either House of
Parliament and would in consequence not be disqualified for
being elected to the State Legislative Assembly of Part C
State.
Section 7(d) of the Representation of the People Act (XLIII
of 1951) was not in terms extended to elections in Part C
States and came in only with the qualifications mentioned in
s. 17 of Act XLIX of 1951.
Section 17 of Act XLIX of 1951 read in conjunction with s. 8
of the same Act cannot be construed as excluding the appli-
cation of s. 7 of Act XLIII of 1951 to elections hold under
the Act because in view of the general scheme underlying Act
XLIX of 1961 envisaged by ss. 6, 7, 8, 17 thereof it is not
possible to read into the omission of Part II of Act XLIII
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of 1951 under s. 8 of Act XLIX of 1951 an intention that the
disqualifications mentioned in s. 7 of Act XLIII of 1951
should not apply to elections held under the Act and
therefore the disqualifications laid down in s. 7 of Act
XLIII of 1951 must be held to be comprised within s. 17 of
Act XLIX of 1951.
Section 33(2) of the Representation of the People Act (XLIII
of 1951) conferred the privilege of proposing or seconding a
candidate on any person who was registered in the electoral
roll and s. 123(8) of the said Act could not be construed as
taking away that privilege.
*Against the decision in this case, a review application was
filed (Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 641 Of 1954). The
decision on the said review application is reported
immediately after this case.
550
Held, that as an abstract proposition of law the mere
appointment of a Government servant as a polling agent is
not in itself and without more, an infringement of s.
123(8).
There is nothing in the Representation of the People Act,
1951 or Representation of the People (Conduct of Elections
and Election Petitions) ’Rules, 1951 barring the appointment
of a Government servant as a polling agent and such
appointment does not per se contravene s. 123(8).
There is nothing in the nature of the duties of a polling
agent which necessarily brings him within the prohibition
enacted in that section.
Raj Krushna Bose v. Binod Kanugo (1954 S.C.J. 286) followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION.: Civil Appeal No. 52 of 1954.
Appeal by Special Leave granted by this Court on the 25th
January, 1954, from Judgment and Order dated the 23rd May,
1953, of the Election Tribunal, Himachal Pradesh, Simla, in
Election Petition No. 14 of 1952.
Hardayal Hardy and R. C. Prasad for the appellant’.
Ved Vyas (S. K. Kapur and Naunit Lal, with him) for
respondent No. 1.
1954. May 25. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-This is an appeal against the order of
the Election Tribunal, Himachal Pradesh, dismissing Election
Petition No. 14 of 1952. On 12th October, 1951, five
candidates (respondents 1 to 5 herein) were duly nominated
for election to the Legislative Assembly of the State of
Himachal Pradesh for the Rohru Constituency in Mahasu
District. The polling took place on 23rd November, 1951,
and on 30th November, 195 1, the first respondent was
declared elected, he having secured the largest number of
votes. The result was published in the Official Gazette on
20th December, 1951. On 14th February, 1952, one of the
unsuccessful candidates, Gyan Singh, (fifth respondent
herein) filed Election Petition No. 14 of 1952 challenging
the validity of the election of the first respondent. On
4th August, 1952, he applied to withdraw from the petition,
and that was permitted by an
551
order of the Tribunal dated 20th September, 1952. The
appellant, who is one of the electors in the Rohru
Constituency, then applied to be brought on record as the
petitioner, and that was ordered on 21st November, 1952.
The petition was then heard on the merits.
Though a number of charges were pressed -at the trial, only
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two of them are material for the purpose of the present
appeal: (1) that Sri Padam Dev was interested in contracts
for the supply of Ayurvedic medicines to the Government, and
was therefore disqualified for being chosen to the Assembly
under section 7(d) of Act No. XLIII of 1951; and (2) that he
had procured the assistance of Government servants for the
furtherance of his election prospects, and had thereby
contravened section 123(8) of that Act. The facts giving
rise to this contention were that one Daulataram had
subscribed in the nomination paper of Sri Padam Dev as
proposer and one Motiram as seconder, both of them being
Government servants employed in the post office, and,that
one Sital Singh, an extra-departmental agent, was appointed
by Sri Padam Dev as one of his polling agents at a booth at
Arhal.
By its judgment dated 25th September, 1953, the Election
Tribunal held firstly that section 7(d) of Act No. XLIII of
1951 had not been made applicable to elections in Part C
States, and that further there was no proof that on 12th
October, 1951, the date of nomination, there were contracts
subsisting between Sri Padam Dev and the Government. With
reference to the charge under section 123(8), the Tribunal
held by a majority that the section did not prohibit
Government servants from merely proposing or seconding
nomination papers, and that it had not been proved that
Daulataram and Motiram did anything beyond that. As regards
Sital Singh, while two of the members took the view that
section 123(8) did not prohibit the appointment of a
Government servant as polling agent, the third member was of
a different opinion. But all of them concurred in holding
that this point was not open to the petitioner, as it had
not been specifically raised in the petition. In the
result, the petition was dismissed. It is against this
judgment that the present appeal has been brought by special
leave,
552
The first question that arises for determination is whether
Sri Padam Dev was disqualified for being chosen to the
Legislative Assembly by reason of his having held at the
material dates contracts for the supply of Ayurvedic
medicines to the Himachal Pradesh State Government. The
answer to it must depend on the interpretation of the
relevant provisions of Act No. XLIX of 1951, which governs
elections to the Legislative Assemblies in Part C States.
Section 17 which deals with disqualifications runs as
follows:
"A person shall be disqualified for being chosen as, and for
being, a member of the Legislative Assembly of a State, if
he is for the time being disqualified for being chosen as,
and for being, a member of either House of Parliament under
any of the provisions of article 102."
Article 102 of the Constitution which becomes incorporated
in the section by reference is as follows:
102.(1) "A person shall be disqualified for being chosen as,
and for being, a member of either House of Parliament--
(a)if he holds any office of profit under the Government of
India or the Government of any State, other than an office
declared by Parliament by law not to disqualify its holder;
(b)if he is of unsound mind and stands so declared by a
competent court;
(c) if he is an undischarged insolvent;
(d) if he is not a citizen of India, or has voluntarily
acquired the citizenship of a foreign State, or is under any
acknowledgment of allegiance or adherence to a foreign
State; -
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(e) if he is so disqualified by or under any law made by
Parliament."
We are concerned in this appeal only with article 102(1)(e).
The contention of the appellant is that Act No. XLIII of
1951 being a law made by Parliament, the disqualifications
laid down under section 7 therein would fall within article
102(1)(e)’ and would under section 17 of Act No. XLIX Of
1951 be attracted to elections held under that Act,
553
The respondent attempted several answers to this contention.
He firstly contended that as Act No. XLIII of 1951 did not
proprio vigore apply to elections in Part C States, he was
not a person disqualified by or under the terms of that law
as required by article 102(1)(e), and that therefore he was
not hit by section 17. Though this contention might, at
first thought, sound plausible, a closer examination of the
language of section 17 shows that this is not its true
import. The section does not enact that persons who are
disqualified under a law made by Parliament shall be
disqualified to be chosen under the Act. What it does enact
is that if a person would be disqualified to be chosen to
either House under an Act of Parliament, he would be dis-
qualified to be chosen for the State Assembly. In other
words, what would be a disqualification for a candidate
being chosen to either House would be a disqualification to
be chosen to the State Legislature. In this view, it is of
no consequence that the candidate was not disqualified under
section 7(d) by its own force.
It was next contended that whatever interpretation section
17 might be susceptible of if it had. stood alone, read in
conjunction with section 8 of Act No. XLIX of 1951 it must
be construed as excluding section 7(d) of Act No. XLIII of
1951. Section 8 of Act No. XLIX of 1951 enacts that Parts I
and III to XI of Act No. XLIII of 1951 and the rules made
thereunder apply to all elections under the Act, subject to
such modifications as the President might direct. Section 7
occurs in Part II of Act No. XLIII of 1951, and that is not
one of the parts extended under section 8. The argument is
that section 7 having been omitted by design from the
sections made applicable, the Legislature must be taken to
have intended that it should not apply to elections held
under the Act, and that section 17 should accordingly be so
construed as not to defeat that intention. Reliance was
placed on the well-known rules of construction that the
provisions of a statute should be read in such manner as to
give effect to all of them, and so as to avoid inconsistency
and repugnancy. Both the sections can be given their full
effect, it was argued, by holding that by reason of
71
554
the non-inclusion of Part II under section 8, section 7 of
Act No. XLIII of 1951 was inapplicable, and that, subject to
that, the other provisions enacted by Parliament would apply
under section 17. But this argument fails to take into
account the scheme underlying Act No. XLIX of 1951. The
framers of that Act wanted to enact a comprehensive code of
election law for Part C States. They had before them Act
No. XLIII of 1951, and they had to decide how much of it
they would adopt. Part I of Act No. XLIII of 1951 consists
only of short title and the interpretation section, and that
was adopted in Act No. XLIX of 195 1. Part II of Act No.
XLIII of 1951 deals with qualifications and
disqualifications for membership. That subject is dealt
with in sections 7 and 17 of Act No. XLIX of 1951. Section
7 sets out the qualifications and section 17, the
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disqualifications. It may also be noted that while
disqualification for being chosen to either House of
Parliament is laid down as a disqualification under section
17 the electoral roll for Parliament is to be taken under
section 6 as the electoral roll for election to the State
Assembly for the concerned area. These. provisions cover
the very ground covered by Part 11, and therefore there was
no need to extend any portion of it under section 8. Parts
III to XI deal with the actual election from the
commencement of the notification through all its stages and
matters connected therewith, and they have been adopted en
bloc in Act No. XLIX of 195 1. That being the general
scheme, it is not possible to read into the omission of Part
11 under section 8, an intention that the disqualifications
mentioned in section 7 should not apply to elections held
under the Act. Nor is there any inconsistency between
section 8 which passively omits Part II, and section 17
which positively enacts that what would be a disquali-
fication under article 102 would be a disqualification for
the purpose of this Act.
A good deal of argument was addressed to us based on the
substantial identity of the language of section 17 with that
of section 1 1 of Act No. XLIII of 195 1, which also occurs
in Part II, which contains section 7. The contention is that
if section 7 of Act No. XLIII of 1951 could be construed as
comprised in section 17 of Act
555
No. XLIX of 1951, it should also be held to have been
comprised in section 1 1 of Act No. XLIII of 195 1, in which
case, there was no need to enact two provisions in the same
Act, one overlapping the other. The simpler thing, it was
argued, would have been to. include section 1 1 in section 7
or vice versa. All this difficulty could be avoided,
according to the respondent, if the reference to article 102
in section 11 is interpreted as limited to article 102(1)
clauses (a) to (d) and not as including article 102(1) (e),
in which case the same construction should logically be
adopted for section 17. But this reasoning is inconclusive,
because the scope of section 7 and that of article 102 which
is incorporated by reference in section 11 are different.
It must further be noted that section 1 1 occurs in a
Chapter which deals exclusively with qualifications and
disqualifications for membership to electoral college in
Part C States. It is therefore not possible to draw any
inference from the non-inclusion of section 7 in section 11
or vice versa. On the. other hand, the construction
contended for by the respondent would give no meaning to the
words " disqualified for being chosen as a member of either
House of Parliament " in section 17. The result is that the
qualifications laid down in section 7 of Act No. XLIII of
1951 must be held to be comprised within section 17 of the
Act.
It was then contended that even on the footing that section
7 of Act No. XLIII of 1951 was comprised in section 17 of
Act No. XLIX of 195 1, the respondent was not disqualified
because under section 7(d) it would be a disqualification
only if the candidate had entered into contracts with the
appropriate Government, and under section 9(1) (a) "
appropriate Government " would mean, in relation to any
disqualification for being chosen to either House of
Parliament, II the. Central Government," and in relation to
any disqualification for being chosen to the Legislative
Assembly or Legislative Council, " the State Government." It
was argued that adopting the test that what would be a
disqualification for being a member of either House of
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Parliament under article 102 would under section 17 be a
disqualification for being chosen to the State Assembly,
556
to operate as a disqualification the contract must be with
the Central Government, that in the present case, the
contracts, if any, were with the Himachal Pradesh State
Government, and that therefore the respondent was not a
person who would be disqualified for being elected to either
House, and would in consequence be not disqualified for
being elected to the State Legislative Assembly.
The appellant did not dispute the correctness of this
position. He contended that, as a matter of law, the
contracts of Sri Padam Dev were with the Central Government,
and that therefore he would be disqualified under the terms
of section 7(d) read with section 9. The basis for this
contention is article 239 of the Constitution, which enacts
that the States specified in Part C shall be administered by
the President through a Chief Commissioner or Lieutenant-
Governor to be appointed by him. Reference was also made to
article 77, which provides that all executive action of the
Government of India shall be expressed to be taken in the
name of the President. The argument is that the executive
action of the Central Government is vested in the President,
that the President is also the executive head of Part C
States, and that, therefore, the contracts entered into with
Part C States, are, in law, contracts entered into with the
Central Government. The fallacy of this reasoning is
obvious. The President who is the executive head of the
Part C States is not functioning as the executive head of
the Central Government, but as the head of the State under
powers specifically vested in him under article 239. The
authority conferred under article 239 to administer Part C
States has not the effect of converting those States into
the Central Government. Under article 239, the President
occupies in regard to Part C States, a position analogous to
that of a Governor in Part A States and of a Rajpramukh in
Part B States. Though the Part C States are centrally
administered under the provisions of article 239, they do
not cease to be States and become merged with the Central
Government. Articles 240 and 241 provide for Parliament
enacting laws for establishing legislative, executive and
judicial authorities for
557
those States, and Act No. XLIX of 1951 was itself enacted
under the power conferred under article 240. Section 38(2)-
of that Act provides that all executive action of the State
shall be expressed to be taken in the name of the Chief
Commissioner. It will be seen that while the executive
action of the Central Government is to be taken under
article 77 in the name of the President, that of Part C
States is to be taken under section 38(2), in the name of
the Chief Commissioner. Thus, there is no basis for the
contention that contracts with Part C States are to be
construed as contracts with the Central Government. Nor has
the appellant established as a fact that there were any
contracts between Sri Padam Dev and the Central Government.
The records only show that the dealings were with the Chief
Commissioner, who was in charge of the administration of the
State of Himachal Pradesh. The contention of the appellant
that the contracts of Sri Padam Dev were with the Central
Government cannot be supported either in law or on facts.
It may seem anomalous that while under sections 7(d) and
9(1) of Act No. XLIII of 1951 a contract with the State
would operate as a disqualification for being chosen to the
State Legislature and a contract with the Central Government
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would operate as a disqualification for being chosen to
either House of Parliament, the respondent should be held to
be not disqualified for election to the State Legislature
when he holds a contract with the State Government. But
that is- because section 7(d) was not in terms extended to
elections in Part C States, and came in only with the
qualifications mentioned in section 17.
In this view, the further question whether Sri Padam Dev
held contracts with the Government at the material dates is
only of academic interest. Counsel for the appellant argued
that the statements of law by the Election Tribunal forming
the foundation of its conclusion were in many respects
erroneous, and that its findings must therefore be rejected.
Thus, it is stated by the Tribunal that a contract could not
be held to be subsisting if goods had been delivered
thereunder, even though the price there for remained due and
payable. This is opposed to the view taken by this Court
since,
558
in Chatturbhuj Vithaldas v. Moreshwar Parashram Then again,
the Tribunal proceeds on the view that a candidate would be
disqualified only if there was a contract subsisting at the
date of the nomination. But it was observed in Chatturbhuj
Vithaldas v. Moreshwar Parashram(1) that the
disqualifications would apply during the whole of the period
commencing with the nomination and ending with the
declaration of the election. But these errors have not, in
fact, affected the correctness of the conclusions. With
reference to the Mandi contract the finding is that goods
had been supplied and price received in September, 1951. As
regards the Mahasu contract, the Government placed the order
with the respondent on 19th November, 195 1, and the goods
were supplied in December, 1951, and January, 1952. It must
be mentioned that the stand taken by the appellant himself
before the Tribunal was that the crucial date for
determining whether there was a subsisting contract was 12th
October, 1951, the date of nomination, and if the evidence
is not precise as to when the goods were supplied, it was a
situation for which he himself was responsible.
It was on the Sirmur contract that the appellant laid the
greatest emphasis. In this case, the order was placed by
the Government on 25th September, 1951, and the goods were
actually supplied on 1st December, 1951. The appellant
relied on certain, letters and a telegram which were sent on
behalf of the respondent on 31st October, 1951, 27th
November, 1951, and 30th November, 1951, as amounting to an
acceptance of the contract. But no such point was taken
before the Tribunal where it was admitted that the material
date was 12th October, 1951. As the question is one of
fact, the appellant cannot be permitted at this stage to
start a new and inconsistent. case, and contend that there
was an acceptance of the contract in October or November,
1951. It was further argued that even on the footing that
there was acceptance of the contract when the goods were
dispatched on 1st December, 1951, that was sufficient to
disqualify the respondent, as the terminus ad quo of the
period during which the
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 236.
559
disqualification was operative was not the date of dec-
laration which was 30th November, 1951, but the date of the
publication thereof in the Gazette, which was 20th December,
1951. It may be conceded in favour of the appellant that
the observation of this Court in Chatturbhuj Vithaldas v.
Moreshwar Parashram (1) that the material period starts with
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the nomination and ends with the announcement was not a
decision on the’ point. as it proceeded on an agreed
statement of counsel on both sides. But as the appellant
conceded before the Tribunal that the material date was the
date of nomination and the entire trial proceeded on that
basis, it is too late for him now to change his front and
contend that the material date is 20th December, 1951.
It remains to consider the contention that Sri Padam Dev had
procured the assistance of Government servants, and had
thereby brought himself within the mischief of section
123(8). The main objection before ’the Tribunal under this
heading related to the subscribing of the nomination paper
by Daulataram as proposer and Motiram as seconder. This
question has since been decided adversely to the appellant
in a recent decision of this Court reported in Rai Krushna
Bose v. Binod Kanungo (2), where it was held that section
33(2) conferred the privilege of proposing or seconding a
candidate on any person who was registered in the electoral
roll, and that section 123 (8) could not be construed as
taking away that privilege. This objection must, therefore,
be overruled.
Then there is the question whether the appointment of Sital
Singh as polling agent contravened section 123(8). The
majority of the Tribunal was of the opinion that the
appointment of a Government servant as polling agent was not
by itself objectionable, but the third member thought
otherwise. They, however, agreed in deciding the point
against the appellant on the ground that it had not been
expressly raised in the petition. It was argued for the
appellant that as it was admitted at the trial that Sital
Singh was appointed polling agent, the point was open to him
as it was a
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 236.
(2) 1954 S.C.J. 286,
560
pure question of law. As the facts are admitted, and the
question itself has been considered by the Tribunal, and as
the point is one of considerable practical importance, we
have heard arguments on it.
Section 46 of Act No. XLIII of 1951 empowers a candidate
to"appoint in the prescribed manner such number of agents
and relief agents as may be prescribed to act as polling
agents of such candidate at each polling station". Rule 12
of the Representation of the People (Con duct of Elections
and Election Petitions) Rules, 1951, prescribes the
formalities to be observed in the appointment of such
agents, and Form 6 framed thereunder provides for the
polling agent signing a declaration that he would do nothing
forbidden by section 128. That -section enjoins that every
agent shall maintain and aid in maintaining the secrecy of
the voting. Thus, there is nothing in the Act or in the
rules barring the appointment of a Government servant as a
polling agent. And on the reasoning adopted in Raj Krushna
Bose v. Binod Kanungo (1) with reference to section 33 (2),
the conclusion must follow that such appointment does not
per se contravene section 123(8). Nor is there anything in
the nature of the duties of a polling agent, which
necessarily brings him within the prohibition enacted in
that section. The duty of a polling agent is merely to
identify the voter, and that could not by itself and without
more, be said to further the election prospects of the
candidate. So long as the polling agent confines himself to
his work as such agent of merely identifying the voters, it
cannot be said that section 123(8) has, in any manner, been
infringed.
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It is argued for the appellant that leaving aside the world
of theories and entering into the realm of practical
politics, the appointment of a Government servant as polling
agent by one of the candidates must result in the dice being
loaded heavily against the other candidate, and that
situations might be conceived in which the presence of a
Government servant of rank and importance as polling agent
of one of the candidates might prove to be a source of
unfair election practices. But if that is established, and
if it is made out that the
(1) 1954 S.C.J. 286.
561
candidate or his agent had abused the right to appoint a
Government servant as polling agent by exploiting the
situation for furthering his election prospects, then the
matter can be dealt with as an infringement of section
123(8). But the question which we have got to decide is
whether as an abstract proposition of law the mere
appointment of a Government servant as a polling agent is in
itself and without more an infringement of section 123(8).
Our answer is in the negative. In the present case, the
finding is that beyond acting as polling agent Sital Singh
did nothing. Nor is there any finding that the respondent
in any manner availed himself of his presence at the polling
booth to further his own election prospects. Thus there are
no grounds for holding that section 123(8) had been
contravened.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.