Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RANJIT SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRITAM SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/02/1966
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1626 1966 SCR (3) 543
CITATOR INFO :
R 1970 SC2097 (229)
F 1988 SC1796 (8)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act (43 of 1950), s. 33(5)-
Requirements of section-Copy of electoral roll whether to be
filed by candidate with each nomination paper-Copy of
electoral roll of assembly constituency whether can be filed
in election for Parliament-’Part’, of electoral roll to be
filed-Filing of incomplete copy of ’part’ whether defect of
substantial character for the purpose of s. 36(4).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s election to Parliament was challenged by the
first respondent on the ground that the nomination papers of
the third candidate, W, had been wrongly rejected by the
returning officer and this had materially affected the
result of the election. We had filed three nomination
papers with one only of which he had filed a copy of the
electoral roll of the assembly constituency in purported
compliance with s. 33(5) of the Representation of the People
Act, 1950. The nomination paper with which W had filed the
said copy was rejected on account of technical defects; the
other two were rejected because no such copy was filed with
them. The Election Tribunal dismissed the first
respondent’s petition holding that the returning officer had
rightly rejected the nomination papers of W. The High Court
took the opposite view and set aside the election. The
appellant came to this Court by certificate and contended
that W had not complied with s. 33(5) because (i) under that
section a copy of the electoral roll must be produced with
every nomination paper, (ii) W had filed a copy of the
electoral roll of the assembly constituency and not of the
Parliamentary constituency, (iii) the copy produced was not
a complete copy of the relevant ’part’ of the electoral
roll.
HELD : (i) The returning officer was wrong in not looking at
the copy of the electoral roll filed with one of the
nomination papers filed by W when dealing with the other
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nomination papers filed by him. Section 33(5) does not
require that a copy must be filed with each nomination paper
or that any copy should be filed at all, for the candidate
is given the alternative to produce before the returning
officer such copy at the time of scrutiny. The purpose of
filing the copy is to ensure that the returning officer is
able to check whether the candidate concerned is qualified
or not and that purpose would be effectively served even if
only one copy is filed with one nomination paper and no
copies are filed with the other nomination papers by the
said candidate. [547 F-548 D]
(ii) The electoral roll for a parliamentary constituency is
made up by stitching together the electoral rolls of the
assembly constituencies comprised therein. Therefore if a
candidate files a copy of the electoral roll of an assembly
constituency that copy is sufficient to show that he is an
elector in the parliamentary constituency in which that
assembly constituency is included. W had filed copy of the
assembly constituency in which he was recorded as an elector
and the High Court was right in rejecting the contention
based on the fact that the copy of the roll of the
parliamentary constituency was not filed. [548 G, H]
544
(iii) Under r. 5 of the Registration of Electors Rules,
1960 it is provided that "the roll shall be divided into
convenient parts which shall be numbered consecutively".
When a. 33(5) refers to a copy of the relevant parts of the
electoral roll it means a part as defined in r. 5. In
producing not the full part but only a portion of the
electoral roll in which he was recorded as an elector W did
fail to comply with the requirements of s. 33(5). A
complete copy would carry the various amendments made in the
roll and enable the returning officer to see whether the
name of the candidate continued in the roll for the whole of
the relevant period. The High Court was not right in its
view that the production of an incomplete copy was not a
defect of substantial character which would make the
nomination paper liable to be rejected. The nomination
papers of W were rightly rejected by the returning officer
though for different reasons. [549 D; 551 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 459 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July 14, 1964 of the Punjab High Court in First Appeal from
Order No.1 E of 1964.
Bishan Narain, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the appellants.
S. S. Shukla, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo,J. This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the Punjab High Court. In the general election
held in 1962 for Parliament (House of the People), the
appellant was elected from the Sangrur parliamentary.
constituency. Pritam Singh respondent was also one of the
contesting candidates but lost in the election. Thereupon
he filed an election petition against the appellant
challenging his election on a number of grounds. In the
present appeal we are only concerned with one ground, and
that was that the nomination papers of one of the candidates
for the ,election, namely, Wazir Singh, had been rejected
improperly by the returning officer. Wazir Singh had filed
three nomination papers; with one of them he had attached a
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copy of a part of the electoral roll. He attached no such
copy with the other two nomination papers. When the
nomination papers were being scrutinised, an objection was
taken to the validity of the nomination papers. The
returning officer first took up the nomination paper with
which a copy of part of the roll had been filed and rejected
it on the ground that the name of the parliamentary
constituency and the name of the village and the assembly
constituency and the part number of the electoral roll of
the candidate was not mentioned also because the name of the
parliamentary constituency (House of the People) of proposer
was not given. After rejecting this nomination paper, the
returning offices took up the other two nomination papers
and rejected them on the ground that a copy of the electoral
roll of the constituency concerned or of the relevant part
thereof or a certified
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copy of the relevant entries had not been filed along with
these nomination papers. It may be added that the
returning officer refused to look into the copy of the part
of the roll which Wazir Singh had filed along with his
nomination paper which the returning officer had already
rejected before-he took up the other nomination papers.
The main contention of respondent Pritam Singh in the
election petition was that the returning officer was wrong
in not looking into the copy of the part of the roll which
had been filed with the first nomination paper of Wazir
Singh and that merely because that nomination paper had been
rejected, the returning officer was not precluded from
looking into the copy of the part of the roll which had been
produced with that nomination paper for the purpose of
scrutiny of the other two nomination papers. The appellant
on the other hand contended that the nomination papers had
been rightly rejected, and this contention was based on
three points raised on his behalf, namely-(i) that a copy of
the electoral roll of that constituency or a relevant part
thereof or a certified copy of the relevant entries of such
roll should have been produced with each nomination paper
separately; (ii) in any case the copy produced should have
been of the parliamentary constituency and not of the
assembly constituency; and (iii) that the copy produced of
the part of the roll was not a complete copy of the part and
therefore was not a compliance with the requirements of s.
33 (5) of the Representation of the People Act, No. 43 of
1950, (hereinafter referred to as the Act).
The Election Tribunal seems to have taken the view that the
copy filed along with the first nomination paper could not
be looked into when the returning officer came to scrutinise
the other nomination papers, even if it might be assumed to
be a copy of the parliamentary electoral roll. It further
held that even if the copy could be looked into, it was not
a complete copy and therefore there was no compliance with
s. 33 (5) of the Act and in consequence the Tribunal held
that the returning officer was justified in rejecting the
nomination papers notwithstanding the provisions of s. 36
(4) of the Act.
Pritam Singh then went in appeal to the High Court. The
High Court held that the returning officer was wrong in not
looking into the copy which had been produced along with the
first nomination paper, and that the copy produced, though
it was apparently of an assembly constituency, could also be
taken to be a copy of the parliamentary roll. Lastly on the
question whether the copy produced was a complete copy or
not, the High Court held that the copy actually produced,
though it admittedly did not contain certain pages, was
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sufficient for the purposes of s. 33 (5) of the Act. In
this view, the High Court held that one of the nomination
papers of
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Wazir Singh was improperly rejected and in consequence of
that the result of the election was materially affected. It
therefore set aside the election. The High Court having
refused to grant a certificate, the appellant applied to
this Court for special leave which was granted; and that is
how the matter has come before us.
The same three points which were urged before the Tribunal
on behalf of the appellant have been raised before us. In
the first place it is urged that the necessary copy required
under s. 33 (5) of the Act must be produced with every
nomination paper, and that it is not enough where more
nomination papers than one are filed that a copy should have
been filed with only one of them. Secondly it is urged that
the copy produced was of the assembly constituency while it
should have been of the parliamentary (House of the People)
constituency. Lastly the argument is that in any case the
copy produced was not complete and therefore there was no
compliance with S. 33 (5) of the Act. The returning officer
therefore was justified in rejecting the nomination paper
under S. 36 (2) (b) of the Act and that s. 36 (4) did not
apply in the circumstances of the case. We shall deal with
these points seriatim.
Section 32 at the relevant time provided that "any person
may be nominated as a candidate for election to fill a seat
if he is qualified to be chosen to fill that seat under the
provisions of the Constitution and this Act."-Section 4 (d)
of the Act requires that in the case of any other seat for
the House of the People besides those mentioned in cls. (a),
(b) and (c) of that section, a person has to be an elector
for any parliamentary constituency (House of the People) to
be entitled to stand for election to the House of the
People. It is with this qualification alone that we are
concerned in the present appeal. "Elector" is defined in s.
(2) (e) of the Act as meaning "in relation to a constituency
a person whose name is entered in the electoral roll of that
constituency for the time being in force and who is not
subject to any of the disqualifications mentioned in section
16 of the Representation of the People Act, 1950." Therefore
if a person is an elector in a parliamentary (House of the
People) constituency and is not subject to any
disqualification he can stand for election to the House of
the People from any constituency.
Then we come to s. 33 (5). The object of this provision
obviously is to enable the returning officer to check
whether the person standing for election is qualified for
the purpose. The electoral roll of the constituency for
which the returning officer is making scrutiny would be with
him, and it is not necessary for a candidate to produce the
copy of the roll of that constituency. But where the
candidate belongs to another constituency the returning
officer would not have the roll of that other constituency
with him and therefore the provision contained in S. 33 (5)
has been made by the legislature to enable the returning
officer to check that the candidate is qualified
547
for standing for election. For that purpose the candidate
is given the choice either to produce a copy of the
electoral roll of that other constituency, or of the
relevant part thereof or of a certified copy of the relevant
entries in such roll before the returning officer at the
time of the scrutiny, if he has not already filed such copy
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with the nomination paper. Naturally where the candidate is
standing for a parliamentary constituency (House of the
People) he will have to file a copy of the roll of some
parliamentary constituency. The argument on behalf of the
appellant is that under the proviso to s. 33(6) a candidate
is entitled to file upto four nomination papers and
therefore when s. 33(5) says that a copy would be filed with
the nomination paper it requires that one copy should be
filed with each nomination paper and if that has not been
done there is no compliance with s. 33(5). Section 33(5)
does not require that a copy must be filed with each
nomination paper for, the candidates is given the
alternative to produce before the returning officer such
copy at the time of the scrutiny. So the candidate need not
file any copy with the nomination paper and it is enough if
he has a copy in his possession which he produces before the
returning officer at the time of the scrutiny. Further
there is nothing in s. 33(5) which requires that if a
candidate has (say) filed four nomination papers he should
have four copies with him to produce before the returning
officer at the time of the scrutiny. It would in our
opinion be enough if he has one copy with him at the time of
the scrutiny and shows it again and again as each nomination
paper is taken up for scrutiny by the returning officer. We
see no sense in holding that. in such a situation the
candidate should arm himself with four copies for the
purpose of showing the copy to the returning officer at the
time of scrutiny. The same copy in our opinion can be
produced again and again before the returning officer as he
takes up the scrutiny of each of the nomination papers filed
on behalf of a candidate. If that is so we see no
difficulty in holding that where a number of nomination
papers have been filed and a copy has been filed with one of
them, that is enough. Again we see nothing in s. 33(5)
which prevents a returning officer from looking at the copy
filed with one nomination paper, even after that nomination
paper has been rejected or with a nomination paper which is
vending before him for scrutiny, when he comes to deal with
other nomination papers. As we have said before, the
purpose of filing the copy is to ensure that the returning
officer is able to check whether the candidate concerned is
qualified or not and that purpose would be effectively
served even if only one copy is filed with one nomination
paper and no copies are filed with the other nomination
papers. It may be that for certain purposes each nomination
paper stands by itself, but so far as filing of a copy with
a nomination paper under S. 33(5) is concerned, we must look
at the object behind the provision, and if that object is
served by filing a copy with one nomi-
548
nation paper, we see no sense in requiring that where a
number of nomination papers are filed there should be a copy
with each, nomination paper. There is nothing in s. 33(5)
which prevents, them returning officer from looking at a
copy filed with a nomination paper which has been rejected,
or which is still to be scrutinised for the purpose of
satisfying himself when he takes up the other. nomination
papers that the candidate is qualified to stand. Nor has
any rule been shown to us which in terms prevents the
returning officers from looking into a copy which has been
filed with a nomination paper (which might have already been
rejected) for the purpose of scrutinising other nomination
papers of the same candidate. If the purpose of s. 33(5)
can be served by the production of one copy at the time of
scrutiny when it has not been filed with the nomination
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paper, we do not see why that purpose could not be served by
filing a copy with one nomination paper where more
nomination papers than one have been filed by the same
candidate. We therefore agree with the High Court that the
returning officer was wrong in not looking at the copy filed
with one nomination paper when he was dealing with other
nomination papers of Wazir Singh.
This brings us to the second point raised before us, namely,
that the copy filed was not of the parliamentary (House of
the People) constituency but of the assembly constituency.
This contention also has no force. If we look at the
Representation of the People Act, 1950 we find that Part III
thereof provides for the preparation of electoral rolls for
assembly constituencies. So far as parliamentary
constituencies (House of the People) are concerned, s. 13D
provides inter alia that the electoral roll for every
parliamentary constituency shall consist of the electoral
rolls of so much of the assembly constituencies as are
comprised within that parliamentary constituency; and it
shall not be necessary to prepare or revise separately the
electoral roll for any such parliamentary constituency. It
is clear therefore that the electoral roll for a
parliamentary constituency is no other than the electoral
roll for the assembly constituencies comprised within that
parliamentary constituency. It is not in dispute that the
electoral roll for a parliamentary constituency is made up
by stitching together the electoral rolls of the assembly
constituencies comprised therein. Therefore if a candidate
files a copy of the electoral roll of an assembly
constituency, that copy is sufficient to show that he is an
elector in the parliamentary constituency, in which that
assembly constituency is included. The argument that the
copy filed in the present case did not comply with s. 33(5)
as it was not a copy of the parliamentary constituency must
therefore fail. The copy was of an assembly constituency in
this case; and if the candidate was an elector in the
assembly constituency he would be an elector in the
parliamentary (House of the People) constituency which
includes
549
that assembly constituency. The High Court therefore was
right in rejecting the contention that the copy of the roll
of the parliamentary (House of the People) constituency was
not filed.
This brings us to the last point raised on behalf of the
appellant, namely, that the copy filed was not a complete
copy and therefore there was no compliance with s. 33(5) of
the Act. It is not in dispute that the copy filed was not a
complete copy. The appellant produced a complete copy of
that part of the roll and that showed that pages 19 to 22
and page 25 of that part of the roll were not filed by Wazir
Singh. Now s. 33 (5) gives three options to a candidate in
the matter of filing a copy. He may file either a copy of
the electoral roll which means a copy of the entire electo-
ral roll of the parliamentary (House of the People)
constituency, or a copy of the relevant parts thereof, which
means the whole of the parts concerned. Under the
Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 (hereinafter referred
to as the Rules), it is provided by r. 5 that "the roll
shall be divided into convenient parts which shall be
numbered consecutively". Therefore when s. 33(5) refers to
a copy of the relevant parts thereof, it means a part as
defined in r. 5 above. Besides these two alternatives, a
candidate has a third alternative, namely, the production of
certified copies of the entries of his name and the name of
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the proposer from any roll. In the present case, the
candidate Wazir Singh chose the second alternative, namely,
he produced a copy of the relevant part thereof. The part in
question produced in this case was part IV of the Simla
legislative assembly electoral roll. Section 33(5)
therefore required the candidate (namely, Wazir Singh) to
produce the whole of this part. It is not in despute that
he did not produce the whole of this part and the question
is whether his failure to do so would result in the
rejection of his nomination paper.
To decide this question it is necessary to refer to the
Rules. Rule 10 requires that "as soon as the Roll for a
constituency is ready, the registration officer shall
publish it in draft by making a copy thereof available for
inspection and displaying a notice in form 5." Under r. II,
the registration officer is required to give further
publicity to the roll and to the notice in form 5. There-
after r. 12 provides for claims for the inclusion of a name
in the roll and objections to an entry therein. After such
claims and objections have been made, the registration
officer has to consider them under r. 18. Under r. 19, he
gives a hearing if necessary and thereafter he orders the
inclusion of names in the roll or exclusion of’ names from
the roll under r. 20. Then under r. 22, the registration
officer has to prepare a list of amendments to carry out his
decisions under ff. 18, 20 and 21 and he may correct any
clerical or printing errors or other inaccuracies
subsequently discovered in the roll. He then publishes the
roll together with the list of
550
amendments by making a complete copy thereof available for
inspection, and displaying a notice in form 16. On such
publication the roll together with the list of amendments
shall be the electoral roll of the constituency.
The scheme of these Rules therefore, is that a draft is
first prepared. Thereafter claims and objections are
disposed of. If any claim is admitted, the name is included
in the roll, if any objection is allowed the name already in
the draft roll (or may be in an earlier amendment) is
deleted. This inclusion or deletion is made by publishing
amendments to the roll and thereafter the draft roll along
with one or more amendments becomes the electoral roll of
the constituency. It will be seen from this that where a
name is excluded on an objection being allowed, the name is
not scored out. What the rule provides is that deletion of
a name from a draft or even from an earlier amendment made
by inclusion by the registration officer, is included in
the list of amendments published Under r. 23, an appeal is
allowed from any decision of the registration officer
including a name or excluding a name, so that where the
registration officer includes a name after hearing a claim
that is subject to an appeal and the appellate officer may
reject the claim whereupon the amendment made by the
registration officer by including a name may fall through.
Under sub r. (5) of r. 23 of the Rules, the registration
officer is given power to cause such amendments to be made
in the roll as may be necessary to give effect to the
decisions of the appellate officer. This shows that when S.
33 (5) requires that a copy of the relevant part of the roll
may be filed or produced the copy is to be a complete copy
along with all amendments, for it may be that even though a
name may be included in the first amendment by the
registration officer it may be excluded in the second
amendment if the appellate officer has rejected the claim.
We have already said that the object of producing the copy
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under s. 33(5) is to enable the returning officer to check
whether the candidate and the proposer are qualified or not,
one for the purpose of standing and the other for the
purpose of proposing. In order to check this, the returning
officer must have a complete copy of the relevant part. If
the copy is not a complete copy it is possible that a name
which may have been included in the draft or in the first
amendment may have been excluded in the second amendment
made on the basis of an order of the appellate officer.
Therefore to enable the returning officer to decide whether,
a candidate,date is qualified to stand or whether a proposer
is qualified to propose he must have a complete copy of the
relevant part of the. roll. If he has not a complete copy
he will not be able to decide whether the candidate or the
proposer has the necessary qualification. In the present
case it is not in dispute that Wazir Singh did not produce a
complete copy of Part IV of the roll. Part IV consisted
551
of 25 pages; of these Wazir Singh did not produce pages 19
to 22 and page 25. Page 25 as appears from the complete
copy of the roll filed by the appellant contained a second
list of amendments. It is true that Wazir Singh’s name did
appear in the first amendment at No. 1853; but that as we
have already shown was not conclusive for the second
amendment which was not produced might have deleted that
name. Therefore the copy produced by Wazir Singh not being
complete was not sufficient to enable the returning officer
to decide whether he was qualified to stand or not for his
name might have been deleted in the second list of
amendments in which case he would not have been qualified.
It is true that in actual fact it appears from the copy
which was produced by the appellant before the Tribunal that
Wazir Singh’s name was not deleted in the second list of
amendments; but that appears from the copy produced by the
appellant before the Tribunal and not from the copy produced
by Wazir Singh before the returning officer. Section 33(5)
requires that it is the copy produced by the candidate which
should show whether he is qualified or not and for that pur-
pose a copy produced by the candidate should be complete
whether it is of the roll or of the relevant part thereof.
To such a case S. 36(4) has no application. That provision
is to the effect that the returning officer shall not reject
any nomination paper on the ground of any defect which is
not of a substantial character. But the non-production of a
complete copy of the relevant part in our opinion is a
defect of a substantial character for it makes it impossible
for the returning officer to decide whether the candidate s
qualified or not. Qualification for standing for election
is a matter of substantial character. We are therefore of
opinion that the High Court was not right in the view it
took that the production of an incomplete copy of the
relevant part was not a defect of a substantial character
which would make the nomination paper liable to be rejected.
The fact that the returning officer rejected the nomination
paper on some other ground is of no consequence. If there
was in truth a defect of a substantial character in the
matter of compliance with s. 33 of the Act, the nomination
paper was liable to be rejected, and if it was so rejected,
rejection would be proper whatever may have been the reason
given by the returning officer. In the present case we are
of the opinion that the production of a copy of the
electoral roll which is incomplete is a defect of a
substantial character. This defect will invalidate all the
nomination papers.The nomination papers of Wazir Singh were
rightly rejected by the returning officer, though he gave
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different reasons for doing so.
The appeal therefore succeeds and is hereby allowed with
costs. The election petition is dismissed. Pritam Singh,
respondent, will pay the costs.
Appeal allowed.
552