Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4681 of 2000
PETITIONER:
V.S. ACHUTHANANDAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.J. FRANCIS & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/01/2001
BENCH:
R.C.Lahoti, S.V.Patil
JUDGMENT:
L.....I.........T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The general election to the Legislative Assembly of
the State of Kerala was held on 27th April, 1996. The
appellant, the respondent No.1 and the respondent No.2,
contested election from No.99 Mararikulam Legislative
Assembly Constituency (Alappuzha District). Counting took
place on 8.5.1996 and continued upto the wee hours of
9.5.1996. The respondent No.1 was declared elected
defeating his nearest rival candidate, the petitioner, by a
margin of 1965 votes. The distribution of votes was as
under:- Total number of electors 1,68,873 Total number of
valid votes polled 1,38,452 Total number of rejected votes
2,107 Total number of tendered votes 14
Votes secured by candidates :- 1. V.S. Achuthanandan
(appellant) 66337 2. Peter Markose (respondent No.2) 3813
3. P.J. Francis (respondent No.1) 68302
On 22.6.1996 the appellant filed an election petition
before the High Court of Kerala putting in issue the
election of the respondent No.1 mainly on three grounds,
namely, (i) corrupt practice committed in the interest of
returned candidate by his agents, election agents or the
returned candidate himself; (ii) the improper reception of
votes which were void, and (iii) non compliance with the
provisions of the Constitution and the provisions of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951. It was also alleged
that the result of the election, in so far as it concerns
the returned candidate, was materially affected on account
of the grounds alleged in the petition, as abovesaid. The
reliefs sought for were __ declaring the election of
respondent No.1 as void and declaring the appellant as
elected.
All the material averments made in the petition were
denied in the written statement filed by respondent No.1
wherein preliminary objections to the maintainability of the
petition were also raised. The learned designated election
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Judge heard the parties on the preliminary objections. Vide
order dated 8.1.1997, the High Court directed the election
petition to be dismissed on the ground that the allegations
in the petition did not disclose a cause of action
warranting trial of the election petition and also that the
averments made in the petition were not sufficient to grant
the relief of recount of ballots. This order was put in
issue by the appellant in Civil Appeal No.1808 of 1997 filed
before this court which was allowed on 22nd March, 1999.
The order of the High Court dated 8.1.1997 was set aside and
the case was remitted back to the High Court for trial of
the same on merits and affording the parties an opportunity
of leading evidence. In its order, reported as V.S.
Achuthanandan Vs. P.J. Francis & Anr., (1999) 3 SCC 737,
this court held that the election petition was not liable to
be rejected under Section 83 of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951 read with Order 7 Rule 11(a) of the Code of
Civil Procedure. This court further held:- Similarly, the
learned trial Judge was not justified in rejecting the
election petition without affording the appellant
opportunity to place on record the circumstances justifying
the re-count as prayed for by him. It is true that on vague
and ambiguous evidence no court can direct re-count. But it
is equally true that the doors of justice cannot be shut for
a person seeking re-count without affording him an
opportunity of proving the circumstances justifying a
re-count. In his petition the appellant had given details
of the alleged illegalities and irregularities committed by
Respondent 1 which according to him justified the holding of
a re-count. The learned trial Judge relied upon some
judgments where re-count was not allowed after trial and
wrongly dismissed the election petition filed by the
appellant without affording him the opportunity to
substantiate the allegations made in the petition or to
bring on record the evidences justifying a re-count. It is
a settled position of law that the court trying an election
petition can direct inspection and re-count of votes if the
material facts and particulars are pleaded and proved for
directing such re-count in the interest of justice. In
doing so, the provisions of Section 94 of the Act have to be
kept in mind and given due weight before directing
inspection and re-count.
xxx xxx xxx xxx Xxx xxx xxx xxx
Without commenting upon the merits of the case, lest
it may prejudice the rights of the parties, we feel that the
trial Judge was not justified in rejecting the election
petition at the initial stage without affording the
appellant an opportunity to prove the existence of
circumstances prima facie justifying the existence of
grounds requiring re- count.
[underlining by us]
On remand, the issues framed by the learned designated
election Judge were put up for trial. The petitioner
examined 13 witnesses including himself and exhibited 35
documents. The respondent No.1 examined 2 witnesses
including himself and exhibited 6 documents. After hearing
the learned counsel for the parties once again the learned
designated election Judge has directed the election petition
to be dismissed forming an opinion that no case for re-count
of the ballot papers was made out. The aggrieved petitioner
has filed this appeal under Section 116A of the
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Representation of the People Act, 1951 (hereinafter RPA, for
short).
At the hearing, Dr. A.M. Singhvi, the learned senior
counsel for the appellant submitted, while attacking the
judgment of the High Court, that in order to make out a case
for re-count a prima facie case was required to be shown
leaving the issue as to material affect on the result of the
election to be determined when the result of the re-count
was available but the High Court has committed a grave error
of law in insisting on the election petitioner making out a
good case for re-count. In other words, the High Court
has insisted on demanding a higher degree of proof for
claiming a re-count, which error has resulted in vitiating
the judgment of the High Court. In the submission of the
learned senior counsel for the appellant the following three
circumstances were shown to exist prima facie by the
election petitioner on the evidence adduced by him:- (i)
that 2100 excess ballot papers were got printed and retained
by Shri Ayyappan Pillai, the Taluk Tehsildar, who was also
the Election Registration Officer and was shown to have an
affiliation or intimacy with the political party to which
the respondent No.1 belongs, raising a high degree of
probability of such excess ballot papers having been
misutilised to the advantage of the respondent No.1; (ii)
that on opening the ballot boxes it was found that the
number of ballots polled were in excess of the ballot papers
issued to different polling stations __ a strong pointer to
the fact of gross irregularity having been committed at the
polling; and (iii) that a number of ballot papers issued
and used for election of parliamentary candidates were found
to have been mixed up with legislative assembly ballot
papers. In the submission of the learned senior counsel for
the election petitioner/appellant, the abovesaid facts made
out a sufficient ground for directing a re-count of ballot
papers and if only a re-count would have been directed the
election petitioner/appellant would have been found to have
secured the highest number of votes and should have been
declared elected. The learned counsel for the respondent
No.1 has disputed the correctness of the submissions so made
and submitted, supporting the judgment under appeal, that
the appellant was not entitled to any relief and the appeal
was liable to be dismissed. We will examine the worth of
the contention so advanced by testing if any of the three
circumstances have been shown to the satisfaction of court
to so exist as to enable a finding of prima facie case for
ordering re-count being recorded.
Circumstance (i) :- It is not disputed that the total
number of voters in the constituency was 1,68,873. There
were in all 194 polling stations. The actual number of
ballot papers distributed was 1,69,900, though the total
number of ballot papers got printed was 1,73,000. It was
also not disputed before this court that on the evidence
adduced by the parties it was proved that the ballot papers
were got printed under the instructions of the Chief
Electoral Officer who was the District Collector and Shri
Ayyappan Pillai, P.W.11 had no role to play either in the
printing of the ballot papers or in appointing the total
number of ballot papers to be printed. Any rules or
instructions relevant to fixing the number of ballot papers
to be printed for any constituency were neither brought to
the notice of the learned designated election Judge nor
placed before this court. We have, therefore, no reason to
disbelieve the statement of Ayyappan Pillai, P.W.11, as has
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been done by the learned designated election Judge that some
number of excess ballot papers are required to be printed as
some ballot papers may be defective and may have to be
rejected and provision has to be made for unforeseen myriad
contingencies by keeping a few ballot papers in reserve. In
fact, the learned senior counsel for the appellant did not
raise any serious grievance about printing of marginally
excessive ballot papers than required. The evidence adduced
by the parties goes to show that 2100 excess ballot papers
were kept in the custody of the Taluk Tehsildar. 1,69,900
ballot papers were issued to different polling station
officers by rounding up the odd number of exact requirement
of any polling station to the next higher ten. 1000 ballot
papers issued earlier to P.W.2 Mini Antony, who was Deputy
Collector (Revenue Recovery), Alappuzha and Returning
Officer for Mararikulam Legislative Assembly Election
Constituency for being used as postal ballots, were found to
be deficient and therefore another 200 ballot papers were
issued to her. Ayyappan Pillai, P.W.11 was transferred
after the elections were over and subsequently he has
retired also. At the time of transfer he handed over the
envelope containing 1900 unused ballot papers to his
successor R.D. Subrahmanyam, R.W.1, while handing over
charge of Tehsil. The envelope then remained in his custody
and he produced the same in the High Court. He deposed that
the envelope which was being produced by him before the High
Court was sealed and was in the same position as it was when
he had received the envelope in his charge. The envelope
bore a superscription certifying the contents of the
envelope to be ballot papers 2100 in number bearing serial
numbers 169901 to 172000. Just below, it was noted that
ballot papers serial numbers 171801 to 172000 were issued to
the Returning Officer, Mararikulam and the balance in the
envelope was 1900.
The envelope of unused ballot papers having been
produced in the court, the opportunity should have been
utilised by the election petitioner in making a request to
the learned designated election Judge to open the envelope
in the presence of the witness producing the same in the
Court or at any time thereafter so as to verify if the
envelope did contain the ballot papers in conformity with
the superscribed endorsement appearing on the envelope and
the cat would have been out of the bag if that be so. The
learned designated election Judge has noted in the impugned
judgment that the election- petitioner did not seek for
opening and examining the contents of the envelope marked
Exhibit-XI. After the hearing was concluded, the respondent
No.1 moved an application praying for opening of the
envelope and examining the contents thereof. This
application filed by the respondent No.1 was objected to by
the election-petitioner submitting that the envelope was not
produced from proper custody and therefore it was not to be
opened. We fail to appreciate the stand taken by the
election petitioner. The conduct of the parties in the High
Court clearly suggests that the election petitioner himself
entertained a doubt about the contents of the envelope
Exhibit-XI and apprehended that the envelope, if opened, the
contents thereof would falsify his own plea. There was no
substance in the plea of the election petitioner that the
envelope was not produced from a proper custody. In our
opinion, on the evidence adduced, seen in the light of
conduct of the election petitioner and the respondent No.1,
no fault can be found with the finding arrived at by the
learned designated election Judge that neither the printing
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of the ballot papers in excess of the number of registered
voters was contrary to any statutory provisions, nor the
excess ballot papers were misused as alleged in the election
petition. It is true that during cross-examination Ayyappan
Pillai, P.W.11, candidly admitted that he was a member of
Kerala Gazetted Officers Union, which was a union sponsored
by Congress(I), the political party which had set up
respondent No.1 as candidate. Merely from this admission,
we cannot infer that the officer was helping the respondent
No.1 by misutilising excess ballot papers to the advantage
of respondent No.1. Thus no case of any illegality or
irregularity much less the provisions of the RPA or Rules
made thereunder having been breached was made out by
reference to circumstance (i).
Circumstance (ii) :- The petitioner had counting
agents appointed when the ballot boxes were opened and
subjected to counting. At the end of the counting the
result of voting at polling stations, as specified in Rule
56 of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1951 (hereinafter
Rules, for short) was recorded polling station wise in
Form 16 and the final result sheet was prepared in Form 20
in accordance with Rule 56(7). Copies of such Form 16 and
final result sheets in Form 20 were made available to the
counting agents for the contesting candidates. Based on
such Forms 16 and Form 20 the petitioner compiled the
statement of the ballot papers issued by Presiding Officers
at various polling stations and the total votes found in the
ballot boxes and set out the compilation in a tabular form
in sub-para (c) of Para 11 of the election petition. The
table compiled by the petitioner shows that in almost all
the polling stations (excepting 5) the number of total votes
found in the ballot boxes fell short by 1 or 2 than the
number of ballots issued. In polling station Nos.2 and 30,
the shortage was of 6 and 10 votes respectively. In polling
station Nos.119 and 120, 2 votes each were found in excess.
On these facts, the learned senior counsel for the appellant
very fairly submitted that nothing much turned out in as
much as the possibility of a voter or two not casting the
ballot paper issued to them and taking it away or having
wasted the same could not be ruled out. The excess of 2
ballot papers each in polling station Nos. 119 and 120 also
was not very material. However, according to the learned
senior counsel, it was the excess of 99 ballot papers found
in the ballot box referable to polling station No.79 which
was material and was a positive indicator of unauthentic
ballot papers having been used and cast in the election.
We have very minutely examined this plea of the
learned senior counsel for the appellant and we find that
the submission is based on factually wrong premises. In the
final result sheet (Form 20) figures referable to polling
station No.79 appear at page 118 of the Paper Book (Vol.II).
It appears that the number of total votes found in the
ballot boxes of polling station No.79 was typed as 828 + 1
tendered vote. However, this figure 828 contained a
typing error and therefore the first digit of 8 was
corrected by hand to read as 7 making the figure 728. The
correction so made was initialled by the Returning Officer.
This final result sheet (Form-20) runs into 13 pages, each
page containing the number of ballots relating to 10 to 13
polling stations approximately and totalled up at the bottom
of every page. The total of preceding page has been carried
forward to the next page and then added to the total of that
page. The figure of 728 being the total number of votes
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found in the ballot box referable to polling station No.79
tallies with and fits in with the total of that page and the
grand total at the end. It is pertinent to note that the
figures of total on individual pages or the grand total at
the end does not bear any correction. It is, therefore,
very clear that the total votes found in the ballot box of
polling station No.79 was 728 and not 828. In the table
contained in para 11(c) of the election petition the
petitioner has taken the figures of the votes issued and the
votes found in the ballot box referable to polling station
No.79 as 729 and 828 respectively. The latter figure is
incorrect. The very foundation of the plea that the number
of votes found in that ballot box exceeded the number of
votes issued at the polling station falls to ground. The
factum of two votes found in excess each in the ballot boxes
of polling station Nos. 119 and 120 is immaterial. The
variation is so marginal as not to have any material effect
on the result of the election.
Circumstance (iii) :- The record of ballot paper
account kept in Form 16 [referable to Rules 45, 56(7) and
56A(7)] of the Conduct of Election Rules was summoned by the
election petitioner and produced in the court by P.W.2, Mini
Antony, the Returning Officer. It is an admitted fact that
the elections of the legislative assembly and parliamentary
constituency in Alappuzha District were held on the same
day. Voting of the two was conducted simultaneously. The
same ballot box was used for casting ballots referable to
legislative assembly and parliament both. However, at the
time of counting, on opening the ballot boxes, the ballot
papers were separated and separate bundles of ballot papers
relating to legislative assembly and parliament were made
and then counted. Before the High Court when the bundle of
Forms 16 of legislative assembly election was opened, it was
found to contain a few Form 16 (about four in number)
referable to parliamentary election placed in the bundle
amidst Forms 16 referable to legislative assembly elections.
Such forms have been produced at pages 102, 104, 107 and 109
of the Paper Book (Vol.II). The High Court has found that
when the election process was over and the records were
being sorted out, arranged and consigned to safe custody,
some Forms 16 referable to parliamentary election got mixed
up with the Forms 16 referable to legislative assembly
election and that it was a bonafide mistake. Such mistake
could have been positively identified by summoning the
record of Form 16 referable to parliamentary election.
However, the record of election papers referable to
parliamentary constituency of Alappuzha District was weeded
out and destroyed after the lapse of 6 months from the date
of election as no election petition was filed challenging
the election of parliamentary seat and the election
petitioner did not make a prayer for summoning that record
before the expiry of the said period of 6 months.
There are additional reasons also as to why we find
this ground to be without any merit and substance. Firstly,
the four Form 16 referable to the parliamentary election and
found contained in the bundle of Form 16 referable to
legislative assembly election in question contain the serial
numbers of the ballot papers and those serial numbers are of
the ballot papers used in the parliamentary election and not
of the legislative assembly election. Secondly, the
possibility of ballot papers cast for parliamentary election
having been taken into account and included in the ballot
papers of legislative assembly election is very very remote,
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virtually nil, as the two ballot papers would be of
different size, with names of different candidates and
different election symbols. Even if a single ballot paper
would have been wrongly included at the counting, the
counting agent of any of the political parties would have
taken a strong exception to it then and there. It is
pertinent to note that it is also not the case of the
petitioner in the election petition that the counting was
vitiated on account of ballot papers referable to
parliamentary election having been included in the bundle of
ballot papers referable to legislative assembly election at
the time of counting. It appears that when the bundle of
Form-16 was opened in the court the mistake of about four
Form 16 referable to parliamentary election having been
placed in the bundle of Form 16 referable to legislative
assembly election came to the fore and the election
petitioner sprang up to cash on such discovery. The mistake
appears to be bonafide and inadvertent. The election
petitioner cannot be permitted to make out a case for
re-count of ballot papers on a ground for which there is no
foundation laid by him, not even a whisper, in pleadings and
which does not appear to have a ring of truth, even prima
facie.
That apart admittedly a prayer for re-count in terms
of Rule 63(2) of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1951 was not
made by or on behalf of any of the contesting candidates
including the petitioner before the Returning Officer which
the election petitioner would ordinarily have made if there
was any truth in any of the pleas canvassed by the
petitioner before the High Court or this court.
The power vesting in the court seized of an election
dispute to order for inspection and re-count of the ballot
papers has been subject matter of several decisions of this
Court which have by authoritative exposition settled the law
thereon. Without burdening this judgment with the series of
available decisions, it would suffice to mention a few only,
namely, Constitution Bench decision in Ram Sewak Yadav
Vs.Hussain Kamil Kidwai and Ors. - AIR 1964 SC 1249, three-
Judges bench decision in Suresh Prasad Yadav Vs. Jai
Prakash Mishra & Ors. - AIR 1975 SC 376, Bhabhi Vs. Sheo
Govind and Ors. - AIR 1975 SC 2117 which refers to all the
decisions available till then and a recent decision in M.R.
Gopalkrishnan Vs. Thachady Prabhakaran & Ors. - 1995
Suppl. (2) SCC 101 to which one of us (Dr. A.S. Anand,
J., as his Lordship then was) is a party. We may briefly
restate the principles as under:-
1. The secrecy of the ballot is sacrosanct and shall
not be permitted to be violated lightly and merely for
asking or on vague and indefinite allegations or averments
of general nature. At the same time purity of election
process has to be preserved and therefore inspection and
re-count shall be permitted but only on a case being
properly made out in that regard.
2. A petition seeking inspection and re-count of
ballot-papers must contain averments adequate, clear and
specific making out a case of improper acceptance or
rejection of votes or non-compliance with statutory
provisions in counting. Vague or general allegations that
valid votes were improperly rejected, or invalid votes were
improperly accepted would not serve the purpose.
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3. The scheme of the rules prescribed in Part V of
the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961 emphasises the point
that the election petitioner who is a defeated candidate,
has ample opportunity to examine the voting papers before
they are counted, and in case the objections raised by him
or his election agent have been improperly over-ruled, he
knows precisely the nature of the objections raised by him
and the voting papers to which those objections related. It
is in the light of this background that S.83 (1) of the Act
has to be applied to the petitions made for inspection of
ballot boxes. Such an application must contain a concise
statement of the material facts.
4. The election-petitioner must produce trustworthy
material in support of the allegations made for a re-count
enabling the Court to record a satisfaction of a prima-facie
case having been made out for grant of the prayer. The
Court must come to the conclusion that it was necessary and
imperative to grant the prayer for inspection to do full
justice between the parties so as to completely and
effectually adjudicate upon the dispute.
5. The power to direct inspection and re-count shall
not be exercised by the Court to show indulgence to a
petitioner who was indulging in a roving enquiry with a view
to fish out material for declaring the election to be void.
6. By mere production of the sealed boxes of
ballot-papers or the documents forming part of record of the
election proceedings before the Court the ballot papers do
not become a part of the court record and they are not
liable to be inspected unless the court is satisfied in
accordance with the principles stated hereinabove to direct
the inspection and re-count.
7. In the peculiar facts of a given case the court
may exercise its power to permit a sample inspection to lend
further assurance to the prima-facie satisfaction of the
court regarding the truth of the allegations made in support
of a prayer for re-count and not for the purpose of fishing
out materials.
Once a re-count is validly ordered the statistics
revealed by the re-count shall be available to be used for
deciding the election dispute. However, if the validity of
an order passed by High Court permitting inspection of
ballot papers and directing a recount is brought in issue
before the Supreme Court, the facts revealed by re-count
cannot be relied upon by the election-petitioner to support
the prayer and sustain the order for re-count if the
pleadings and material available on record anterior to
actual re-count did not justify grant of the prayer for
inspection and re-count.
On the facts as set out hereinabove we are clearly of
the opinion that the averments made in the petition and the
material brought on record by the election-petitioner did
not make out a case for re-count. The petitioner has
indulged into a roving enquiry and has tried to fish out
materials in the hope that the re-count if allowed may
probably twist the balance of votes in his favour which in
the facts and circmstances of the case is nothing beyond a
wishful thinking of the petitioner.
We also do not agree with the submission of the
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learned senior counsel for the appellant that this court had
directed the High Court to permit an inspection and re-count
if a prima facie case was made out for such relief but the
High Court has unreasonably insisted on availability of
’good grounds before allowing the relief of recount. In
Suresh Prasad Yadavs case (supra) the law stated by this
Court is that the order for recount of ballot papers would
be justified if, inter alia, on the basis of evidence
adduced the requisite allegations are prima facie
established, affording a good ground for believing that
there has been a mistake in counting. This answers the
submission which is more a play on jugglery of words. What
was needed was proof of prima facie case of availability of
good grounds wherein the election petitioner/appellant has
failed.
For the foregoing reasons we find ourselves entirely
in agreement with the view taken by the learned designated
election Judge declining the prayer for re-count and finding
the election petitioner not entitled to such relief. The
appeal is devoid of any merit and is liable to be dismissed.
It is dismissed accordingly, though, without any order as to
the costs in the facts and circumstances of the case.