Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6908 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Mahendra Singh
RESPONDENT:
Gulab
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/05/2005
BENCH:
CJI R.C. LAHOTI, G.P. MATHUR & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
This is an appeal under Section 116A of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). The appellant was
the petitioner in the election petition filed before the High Court. The
appellant and the respondent contested from 94 \026 Erandol Assembly
Constituency in Maharashtra in the general elections held on 5.9.1999.
The respondent was declared elected. The appellant, so to say, was the
runner up. The appellant filed the election petition before the High Court of
Bombay, Aurangabad Bench, under Section 80 of the Act seeking a
declaration that the election of the respondent was vitiated since the
respondent was guilty of corrupt practices as defined in Section 123 (4) of
the Act. Various statements said to have been made by the respondent
during the election campaign were put forward as amounting to corrupt
practices, before the High Court. The respondent denied some of the
statements, pleaded that none of them amounted to corrupt practice within
the meaning of the Act and that there was not even adequate pleading of
corrupt practices so as to justify the election petition even going to trial.
The High Court rejected the preliminary objection raised by the respondent
and proceeded to try the election petition. The High Court found that the
appellant has not established the corrupt practices imputed to the respondent
and has not been able to successfully challenge the election of the
respondent. Thus, the election petition was dismissed. It is this dismissal
that is challenged in this appeal.
2. Though as noticed above, various statements allegedly made by the
respondent or his supporters were put forward as constituting corrupt
practices, before us, only four instances and statements were urged as
constituting corrupt practice. The first was, the statement made by one
Subhash Deorao Patil to the effect that the appellant had taken money while
voting for the Rajya Sabha elections. The said allegation was made by
Subhash Deorao Patil in the presence of the respondent and it was urged
that it must be taken to have been made with the consent of the respondent.
The other three statements were attributed to the respondent himself and
according to the appellant the respondent had alleged that the appellant had
distributed money to voters for securing their votes; that the appellant was
drunkard and that he had indulged in unfair practices to pass his
examinations in his earlier days. These statements were false to the
knowledge of the respondent and they related to the personal character of
the appellant and these statements were reasonably calculated to prejudice
the prospects of the appellant’s selection. It may be stated that the Court
which tried the election petition, came to the conclusion that the appellant
had not established his case based on these aspects and dismissed the
election petition. Learned counsel for the appellant attacked the findings of
the trial court and learned counsel for the respondent defended the findings
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and sought dismissal of the appeal.
3. Section 123 of the Act describes what are corrupt practices. Sub-
section (4) thereof says that the publication by a candidate or his agent or by
any other person with the consent of a candidate or his election agent, of
any statement or fact which is false, and which he either believes to be false
or does not believe to be true, in relation to the personal character or
conduct of any candidate, or in relation to the candidature, or withdrawal of
any candidate, being a statement reasonably calculated to prejudice the
prospects of the election of that candidate, amounts to a corrupt practice. In
the light of this position, we shall now deal with the effect of the four
statements, one attributed to a supporter of the respondent and the other
three to the respondent himself.
i. The statement attributed to Subhash Deorao Patil
In the election petition it was averred that Subhash Deorao Patil who
was a leader of the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), spoke at an election
meeting held on 31.8.1999 at the instance of the respondent, a Shivsena
candidate, at Village Salva, Taluka Dhargaon, District Jalgaon. The
meeting was attended by approximately 2500 voters. It is alleged that
Subhash Deorao Patil made a speech lasting 3 to 4 minutes. The
respondent, the winning candidate, came to the dais while Subhash Deorao
Patil was in the midst of his speech. After the respondent had taken his seat
on the dais, Subhash Deorao Patil made the following statement:,
"Money, when he remained with alliance in Zila Parishad, he
took money, Money. This is very important thing. I am telling
the citizens who are going. Money from the elections to Rajya
Sabha is there. He has taken money for voting as a voter. This
money belongs to us. It is ours. He has not earned it from
home."
The election petition after setting out the above, proceeded to say that
this statement was made in the presence of the respondent and with his
consent. The respondent in the speech he subsequently delivered, did not
disassociate himself from the above statement and did not protest against it
in any manner. According to the election petition, it was clearly stated that
the petitioner had accepted money for voting for the candidates in the
election to the Legislative Council. He was a sitting Member of the
Legislative Assembly. The Members of the Legislative Assembly are also
voters for the election to the Rajya Sabha. It was a clear statement that the
appellant had accepted money for voting in those elections. The statements
made by Subhash Deorao Patil with the consent of the respondent were
clearly false and the maker of the statement as well as the respondent
believed it to be false and never believed it to be true. The statement was in
relation to the personal character or conduct of the appellant and it was a
statement reasonably calculated to prejudice the prospects of election of the
appellant. It cast a reflection on the appellant as a person who takes bribe
for voting and for supporting alliance in Zila Parishad, Jalgaon. In support
of this allegation, a certified copy of the video cassette of the speech
delivered by Subhash Deorao Patil delivered in Marathi, along with the
English translation was produced.
4. The respondent in his written statement denied that the meeting at
Salva was attended by 2500 voters. He denied that Subhash Deorao Patil
had addressed the meeting with the consent of the respondent. He pleaded
that he was not present on the dais when Subhash Deorao Patil was
addressing the meeting. The contents of the election petition in that regard
and the statement attributed to Subhash Deorao Patil were denied. It was
pleaded that the statements made by Subhash Deorao Patil were not with
the consent of the respondent. The cassette produced in support of the
election petition was not a certified copy of the video recording. The
respondent was not guilty of any corrupt practice in that regard.
5. The trial Court had framed a omnibus issue as issue No.1 reading
"Whether the petitioner proves that the respondent has committed corrupt
practices under Section 123(4) of the Representation of the People Act,
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1951 on the grounds mentioned in paragraph Nos. 5, 9, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21
and 23 of the petition?" It was subsequently split up into nine issues so as
to enable the Court to specifically consider the allegations meeting-wise.
The relevant issue regarding the allegation in paragraph 23 of the election
petition with which we are concerned here, was considered as issue No.1/9.
Though a number of witnesses were examined in support of the election
petition, learned counsel for the appellant referred only to the deposition of
the appellant examined as PW 1 in support of his submission. Of course, he
also referred to the deposition of the respondent. It appears that no other
witness was examined specifically in support of this allegation in the
election petition. The High Court, after discussing the speech and the
evidence, recorded a finding that this part of the speech attributed to
Subhash Deorao Patil must be taken to be a statement regarding the
personal character of the appellant. But the High Court found that there
was neither pleading nor evidence that the speech delivered by Subhash
Deorao Patil materially affected the election in question. It also found that
the appellant has not discharged the onus cast on him, to prove that
concerned statement was made by Subhash Deorao Patil with the consent of
the respondent. As a fact, the High Court found that the respondent was no
doubt occupying a seat in the dais at the moment the particular statement
was made by Subhash Deorao Patil, but then, the respondent had arrived on
to the scene while Subhash Deorao Patil was midway through his speech.
There was, therefore, no sufficient material to infer that the respondent had
consented to the above statement being made by Subhash Deorao Patil or
that the respondent had induced Subhash Deorao Patil to make such an
allegation. The Court found that though the respondent was a candidate of
the BJP-Shivsena alliance, the fact remained that the respondent was a
member of the Shivsena whereas Subhash Deorao Patil was a member of
the BJP. According to the High Court, the appellant did not have the
needed control over Subhash Deorao Patil. The High Court thereafter relied
on the relevant decisions of this Court referred to in the judgment under
appeal and came to the conclusion that the statement attributed could not be
said to be a corrupt practice indulged in by the respondent. The High Court
noticed that the respondent had delivered his speech after conclusion of the
speech of Subhash Deorao Patil but had not specifically repudiated the
statement. But even then, the Court held that there was no adequate
material to find that this amounted a corrupt practice. The Court also did
not enter a finding that the statement was a false statement made to the
knowledge of the respondent or his agent. It noticed that there was not even
a plea that the prospects of the appellant in the election was materially
affected by the above statement.
6. Learned counsel for the appellant relied on the decision in
Chandrakanta Goyal v. Sohan Singh Jodh Singh Kohli , (1996) 1 SCC
378 and read to us paragraph 9 of that decision. He placed emphasize on
the observation,
"It is a different matter that the consent may be implied more
readily from circumstances such as conduct of the candidate
evident from his personal presence at that time and place
without any protest."
He submitted that since Subhash Deorao Patil was not a leader of the
BJP, the inference of consent was readily available in this case. Learned
counsel for the respondent relying on the very same judgment pointed out
that the circumstances clearly show that there was neither express or
implied consent on the part of the respondent to the statement so made by
Subhash Deorao Patil as it is established that the respondent himself arrived
on the dais only when Subhash Deorao Patil was midway through his
speech, though of course the particular statement was made after the
respondent had seated himself on the dais. He pointed out that this was a
case where a consent could not be implied, not only because of the reasons
mentioned above but also because of the fact that Subhash Deorao Patil
belonged to another party, though in alliance with the party of the
respondent and it was not a case where consent could be readily inferred. It
was a case where consent had to be established positively and there was
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hardly any evidence on the basis of which such an inference could be
drawn. He also pointed out that this was not part of any sustained campaign
on the part of the respondent or his agents and it was a solitary statement
attributed to the leader of a supporting party during the course of the entire
election campaign and this also negatived any presumption of consent. He
also pointed out that there was no finding that the statement was false and
made so knowingly. He further submitted that there is no pleading or
evidence that the prospects of the election of the appellant was in any
manner affected by the above sporadic statement attributed to Subhash
Deorao Patil.
7. The burden to prove the corrupt practice is on the election petitioner,
the appellant before us. Considering the materials made available and the
arguments raised before us, it cannot be said that the High Court was in
error in finding that the appellant has not established a corrupt practice as
contemplated by Section 123 (4) of the Act by the making of the above
statement by Subhash Deorao Patil. The statement is seen to be vague and
not very precise. It is seen that it was a sporadic statement made by the
leader of a party which was in alliance with the party of the returned
candidate. The statement was one made by that leader during the course of
his speech in a meeting for which the respondent, the returned candidate,
arrived in the middle of that speech. There is no evidence attempted by the
appellant to show that any of the listeners at the meeting formed an adverse
impression about the appellant and the statement had caused harm to the
prospects of the appellant at the hustings. In such a situation, it is not
possible to disagree with the High Court, when it held that the appellant has
failed to establish that the above statement made by the Subhash Deorao
Patil can be taken to be a statement made with the consent of the
respondent, the returned candidate, knowing it to be false and that it has
affected the election prospects of the appellant. Thus, on the whole, this
aspect urged by the learned counsel for the appellant is seen to be not
acceptable to upset the finding of the High Court in that regard. We feel
that there is no adequate pleading or evidence to find the respondent guilty
of corrupt practice on this score.
8. The allegation regarding distributing of money to voters
It was pleaded in the election petition that at a meeting on 1.9.1999 at
village Bhavarkhede, the respondent made the following statement:
"They have now only one capital. Shopping with money has
begun. You all know how motorcycles are going to the
bungalow. Daily couple of people are being picked up on the
motorcycle, pay money, administer oath and then send him out.
How much will be paid per vote? Rs.500/-"
According to the appellant, this part of the speech delivered by the
respondent amounted to an allegation of a personal character made with the
knowledge that it was false and making of such an allegation amounted to
corrupt practice within the meaning of Section 123(4) of the Act. This
speech, said to have been made by the respondent, was the subject matter of
issue No.1/7 in the trial court. The trial court took the view that the
statement attributed could not be treated as a positive allegation aimed at
the appellant. It found that the respondent had not named the appellant in
the speech and had used the expression "they". In the circumstances, it was
difficult to say that it was an accusation that the appellant was distributing
money for votes. It was not a statement regarding personal character or
conduct of the appellant and the statement was also ambiguous. In such a
situation, especially when on a question of corrupt practice, proof beyond
reasonable doubt was needed, the issue could not be found in favour of the
appellant, the election petitioner.
9. Learned counsel for the appellant relied on Sheopat Singh v. Ram
Pratap, [1965 (1) SCR 175] in support of his contention that the statement
indicated above is one relating to the personal character or conduct of the
appellant. On going through the said decision, it is seen that their Lordships
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have stated that it is a question of fact in each case, under what category a
particular statement falls. Therefore, it is really a question of assessing the
scope and the effect of the statement quoted above, in the circumstances of
the case. As we have noticed in relation to the statement dealt with earlier,
the appellant did not adduce enough evidence at least to make out how the
statement attributed to the respondent was understood by the audience at the
meeting. The statement is also not definite. No doubt, learned counsel for
the appellant rightly pointed out that the respondent, when examined, has
admitted that the residence of the appellant was known as the bungalow,
which was the expression used in the quoted speech. But then, we find that
the respondent has also stated that the house he was residing in, was also
called a bungalow. Therefore, the so called admission of the respondent
relied on by learned counsel for the appellant is not sufficient to justify
interference with the finding of the trial Court that the above statement
attributed to the respondent would not amount to a corrupt practice within
the meaning of Section 123 (4) of the Act. On the whole, we find it not
possible to disagree with that finding of the trial Court.
10. Allegation regarding drunkenness
The third allegation, according to the appellant, is that the respondent
had characterized him as a drunkard and this amounts to character
assassination especially since the respondent knew it to be false and the
making of such a statement amounts to a corrupt practice. The issue in that
behalf was dealt with by the trial Court as issue No. 1/8. The translation of
that part of the speech read as follows :
"Hotel Surya was inaugurated by Mahendra Babu. He is
answerable for this. If this man inaugurated the hotel, why did
he? Open a beer bar at home, and criticize others. Both the
brothers consume by common glass. Whole the town will
confirm this. Jaiveer, as also Mahendra Babu."
The respondent denied that he had described the appellant as a drunkard.
The trial Court found that the appellant had himself in a campaign meeting
at Kasoda on 3.9.1999, suggested that the respondent was a visitor to bars.
The statement at best was only a retaliation, while defending himself. Even
if the statement could be treated as not true, the general allegation as above,
would not amount to an allegation which could be treated as amounting to a
corrupt practice especially these days when drinking alcohol as such is not
taboo and in society, people generally consume alcohol. The High Court
took the view that in the speech concerned, the respondent had only
suggested in a manner, that the appellant has encouraged drinking by
inaugurating a beer bar and that the appellant also consumes liquor. This
was not, according to that Court, calculated to prejudice the election
prospects of the appellant. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
in a rural society \026 the constituency here, according to him, was rural \026
charging a person with drinking alcohol, itself brings that person down in
the estimation of the people and it can and does prejudicially affect his
election prospects. Learned counsel for the respondent submitted that there
was no plea or evidence on this aspect on the side of the appellant. On a
scrutiny of the evidence available in the light of the reasons given by the
High Court, it is not possible to say that that Court was in error in holding
that the appellant has not been able to establish this ground as well. It
appears to us that the argument on behalf of the appellant, does not have the
necessary factual foundation in the pleadings and evidence to support it.
We are, therefore, constrained to reject this submission as well.
11. Allegation of unfair practice at examinations in college days.
The particular statement attributed to the respondent as relied upon
by the appellant, was that in a speech made at Erandol, the respondent had
stated:
"I have learnt that he has indulged into unfair practice at college
examination and, therefore, he is raw in his studies."
On reading that sentence in the context of the speech made, it could
not be said that it was any specific allegation against the appellant that
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he had indulged in unfair practices in his examinations in his college
days. On going through the statement as a whole, we are not satisfied
that there is any justification in interfering with the conclusion of the
trial court that the said allegation also does not amount to a corrupt
practice. Learned counsel for the appellant also could not bring to our
notice any material on the basis of which we could disagree with the
conclusion arrived at by the trial court.
12. On an anxious consideration of all the four aspects thus urged
before us in the light of the pleadings, the evidence and the findings
recorded by the High Court, we are satisfied that no ground is made
out for interference with the dismissal of the election petition filed by
the appellant on the ground that he had failed to establish any corrupt
practice by the respondent in terms of Section 123 (4) of the Act.
Consequently, we confirm the decision of the High Court and dismiss this
appeal. In the facts and circumstances of the case, we direct the parties to
suffer their respective costs in this Court.