Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S. M. BANERJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SRI KRISHNA AGARWAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/11/1959
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 368 1960 SCR (2) 289
ACT:
Election Petition- Amendment of-Petition alleging improper
acceptance of nomination--Amendment introducing ground of
noncompliance with Provisions--Whether can be allowed-
Discretion of Election Tribunal-lnterference by High Court
in appeal-Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of
1951), ss. 33(3) and 100
HEADNOTE:
The appellant held an office under the Government and was
dismissed from service on January 24, 1956, for a reason
other than corruption or disloyalty to the State. He filed
his nomination paper for election to Parliament which did
not disclose any disqualifications. No objection was taken
to the nomination and it was accepted without making any
enquiry. After the poll the appellant was declared duly
elected. The respondent filed an election petition
challenging the election of the appellant on the ground,
inter alia, that the nomination of the appellant had been
improperly accepted as he was dismissed from Government
service and he had failed to obtain a certificate from the
Election Commission that he had not been dismissed for
corruption or disloyalty to the State. After limitation for
filing the petition had expired, the respondent applied to
the Election Tribunal for amendment of the petition seeking
to add to this ground the statement that the nomination
paper was not accompanied by the prescribed certificate.
The Tribunal disallowed the amendment on the ground that the
amendment sought to introduce a
290
new ground after the period of limitation and then dismissed
the election petition holding that the appellant was
qualified to stand for the election and his nomination was
not improperly accepted. On appeal, the High Court held that
the amendment should have been allowed as it merely asked
for a clarification and not the introduction of a new ground
and consequently it set aside tile order of the Tribunal and
directed a retrial of the issue involving. The appellant
obtained special leave and appealed.
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Held, that the amendment could not be allowed as it sought
to introduce a new ground in the petition after the period
of limitation. The ground taken in the petition was that
there was an improper acceptance of the nomination covered
by s. 100(1)(d)(1) of the Representation of the People Act,
1951. But there was no improper acceptance of the
nomination for the nomination paper ex facie did not
disclose any defect or disqualification. There being no
subsisting prayer seeking to raise the ground under s.
100(1)(d)(iv) for non-compliance with the Provisions of s.
33(3) of the Act, the amendment was foreign to the scope of
the, enquiry under the ground covered by s. 100(1)(d)(1).
Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghuraj Singh, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 267 and Harish Chandra Bajpai v. Triloki Singh [1957]
S.C.R. 370, followed.
Veluswami v. Raja Nainay, A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 422, referred to.
There was no jurisdiction in the High Court to interfere
with the discretion of the Election Tribunal refusing to
allow the amendment after the entire petition had -been
disposed of. It is undesirable for an appellate Court to
interfere with the order of a subordinate Tribunal made in
the exercise of its discretion without exceeding the limits
of its powers, unless it has acted perversely or has taken a
view which is clearly wrong.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 301 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 10, 1958, of the Allahabad High Court, in First
Appeal No. 382 of 1958, arising out of the judgment and
order dated August 6, 1958, of the Election Tribunal,
Kanpur, in Election Petition No. 284 of 1957.
N. C. Chatterjee, R. K. Garg, S. C. Agarwal, D. P. Singh, V.
A. Sayid Muhammad Janardan Sharma and M. K. Ramamurthi,
for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and K. P. Gupta, for the
respondent.
291
1959. November 20. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SUBBA RAO J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the High Court of Judicature at
Allahabad, setting aside that of the Election Tribunal,
Kanpur, dismissing the petition filed by the respondent for
setting aside the election of, the appellant as a member of
the Parliament from the Kanpur constituency.
In February-March 1957, elections were held to fill up a
parliamentary seat from the single-member constituency No.
331, Kanpur. Sri S. M. Banerji, Sri Suraj Prasad and four
others were candidates for the said election. The said
persons filed their nomination papers between 19th and 29th
January, 1957. The appellant was employed as Supervisor’A’
Grade at the Government Ammunition Factory, Kirkee, and was
dismissed from service on January 24, 1956, for a reason
other than corruption or disloyalty to the state; and he was
duly qualified to stand for the election. He also filed his
nomination paper within the prescribed time and ex facie it
complied with all the provisions of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951), as amended by Act XXVII
of 1956, (hereinafter called the Act), and did not disclose
any disqualifications. The Returning Officer held scrutiny
of the nomination papers on February 1, 1957. As no
objection was taken to the appellant’s nomination, the
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Returning Officer accepted it under s. 36 of the Act without
making any enquiry. The polling took place on March 6,
1957, and the result was declared on March 13, 1957. The
appellant having secured the largest member of votes, was
declared duly -elected. On April 24, 1957, the respondent,
who is one of the voters in the said constituency, presented
a petition before the Election Commission, New Delhi,
praying that the election of the appellant be declared void.
In the petition he alleged ten grounds to sustain his
petition. The Election Commission constituted an Election
Tribunal in the manner prescribed by the Act and referred
the petition to the said Tribunal for trial. On July 17,
1957, i.e., after the prescribed period
292
of limitation of 45 days had expired, the respondent filed
an application for amendment of the election petition. The
amendments sought to be made in the election petition
were as follows:
"(a) In paragraph No. 5 clause ’i’, figure ’9’ between the
words ’under section’ and ’clause’ is a typing mistake for
figure ’33’. In place of figure
(9) figure ’33’ be substituted.
(b) In paragraph No. 5(d) at the end of the paragraph, the
following sentence be added:
"The nomination paper of the respondent presented before the
Returning Officer was not accompanied by a certificate of
the Election Commission to the effect that he has not been
dismissed for disloyalty or corruption. The improper
acceptance of the nomination paper being that of the
returned candidate, there is a presumption that the result
of the election has been materially affected".
On August 3, 1957, the respondent filed another application
for amendment seeking the second amendment, in an
abbreviated form. The proposed amendment was as follows:
" (b) In paragraph No. 5(d) at the end of paragraph, the
following sentence be added in the petition :
" and such a certificate did not accompany the nomination
paper of the respondent and the acceptance of his nomination
paper materially affected the result of the election."
By an order dated August 12, 1957, the Election Tribunal
dismissed the petition on the -round that the amendments
sought to introduce a new ground after the prescribed period
of limitation, and therefore it had no power to allow the
same. After dismissing the application, the Tribunal took
up the main petition for disposal and, after recording the
findings on the issues raised, dismissed the same with
costs. Against the said judgment the respondent preferred
an appeal under s. 116A of the Act to the High Court.
Before the High Court the learned Counsel for the
respondent, withdrew the prayer for amendment of
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sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph (5) of the election petition
and confined his relief only to the amendment asked for in
paragraph 5(d) of the election petition, i.e., he sought to
bring in the amendment under the head "improper acceptance
of the nomination paper". The High Court found, on the
construction of the pleadings, that the allegations found in
the original petition were sufficient to bring in the case
under s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act i.e., under the head
"improper acceptance", and, therefore, the amendment asked
for was only a clarification but not an introduction of a
new ground: in the result, the High Court set aside the
order of the Tribunal and directed it to decide the issues
that arose out of the averment made in the amended para.
5(d) of the election petition. The present appeal was filed
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by special leave against the said judgment of the High
Court.
The contentions of the learned Counsel, Mr. N. C.
Chatterjee, for the appellant may be briefly put thus: The
ground for relief in the election petition was based on
improper acceptance of the appellant’s nomination within the
meaning of s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act and no alternative
ground tinder sub-cl.(iv) of cl.(d) s. 100(1) was alleged.
There was proper acceptance of the nomination paper and,
therefore, the High Court or the Tribunal had no power to
introduce by amendment a new ground, namely, that the result
of the election had been materially affected by the non-
compliance with the provisions of the Act, and particularly
when the ground based upon s. 33 of the Act. was given up by
the respondent.
He relies upon for the first proposition on the decision of
this Court in Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghuraj Singh
(1) and for the second on the decision of this Court in
Harish Chandra Bajpai v. Triloki Singh (2).
Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastry, the learned Counsel for the
respondent, contends that the said two decisions were
wrongly decided and require reconsideration, and that, in
any event, the amendment asked for clearly falls within the
scope of the later decision. He
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 267.
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 370.
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294
further contends that, on a fair reading of the relevant
allegations in the petition as originally presented, it
would be clear that the respondent stated all the necessary
facts to sustain the ground he had taken in the amendment
petition, and that by the amendment he was only seeking to
clarify the said ground. In any view, he argues that the
appellate Court on a careful construction of the pleadings
has held that the petition in substance disclosed the said
ground; and the question of correctness of the said decision
does not legitimately fall within the discretionary
jurisdiction of this Court under Art. 136 of the
Constitution.
At the outset the relevant provisions of the Act may be
noticed. The said provisions read:
S. 9 (3) : " If any question is raised as to whether a
person who, having held any office referred to in clause (f
)of section 7, has been dismissed is disqualified under that
clause for being chosen as a member of either House of
Parliament or of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative
Council of a State, the production of a certificate issued
in the prescribed manner by the Election Commission to the
effect that such person has not been dismissed for
corruption or disloyalty to the State shall be conclusive
proof that -he is not disqualified under that clause."
S. 33 (3): " Where the candidate is a person who, having
held any office referred-to in clause (f) of section 7, has
been dismissed and a period of five years has not elapsed
since the dismissal, such person shall not be deemed to be
duly nominated as a candidate unless his nomination paper is
accompanied by a certificate issued in the prescribed manner
by the Election Commission to the effect that he has not
been dismissed for corruption or disloyalty to the State."
S. 36: " (1) On the date fixed for the scrutiny of
nominations under section 30, the candidates, their election
agents, one proposer of each candidate, and one other person
duly authorized in writing by each candidate, but no other
person , may attend at such
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295
time and place as the returning officer may appoint; and the
returning officer shall give them all reasonable facilities
for examining the nomination papers of all candidates which
have been delivered within the time and in the manner laid
down in section 33.
(2) The returning officer shall then examine the nomination
papers and shall decide all objections which may be made to
any nomination, and may, either on such objection or on his
own motion, after such summary inquiry, if any, as he thinks
necessary, reject any nomination on any of the following
grounds:-
(a) *
(b) that there has been a failure to comply with any of the
provisions of section 33 or section 34; or
(c) *
S. 100: (1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2),
if the Tribunal is of opinion-
*
(d) that the result of the election, in so far as it
concerns a returned candidate, has been materially affected-
(i) by the improper acceptance of any nomination, or
(iv) by any non-compliance with the provisions of the
Constitution or of this Act or of any other rules or orders
under this Act,
the Tribunal shall declare the election of the returned
candidate to be void.
The foregoing provisions, so far relevent to the present
enquiry, may be summarised thus: If a candidate has been
dismissed from Government service and a period of five years
has not elapsed since dismissal-, he will have to file along
with the nomination paper a certificate issued in the
prescribed manner by the Election Commission to the effect
that he has not been dismissed for corruption or disloyalty
to the State. If it has not been done, the Returning
Officer, either suo motu or on objections raised by the
opposite party, has to reject the nomination. If the
nomination paper does not disclose any such defect and if
the
296
Returning Officer has no knowledge of that fact, he has no
option but to accept the nomination. The Returning Officer
may improperly accept a nomination paper though it
discloses the said defect and though an objection is
raised to its reception on that ground. Section
100(1)(d)(i) of the Act deals with improper acceptance of
any nomination and s. 100(1)(d)(iv) permits an attack on the
ground, among others, of non-compliance with the provisions
of the Act.
Before we consider the contentions of the parties, it would
be convenient to appreciate the true scope of the two
decisions of this court in the light of the arguments
advanced by the learned Counsel. The first -decision is in
Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghuraj Singh (1). This
decision turns upon the provisions of sub-s. (1)(c) and sub-
s. (2)(c) of s. 100 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951 before it was amended by Act XXVII of 1956. Sub-s.
(1)(c) and sub-s. (2)(c), in so far as they are material to
the present discussion correspond to s. 100(1)(d)(i) and s.
100(1)(d)(iv) respectively of the amended Act. This case
arose out of an election held in December, 1951, for the
double member Lakhnadon Legislative Assembly Constituency in
Madhya Pradesh, one of the seats being reserved for
Scheduled Tribes. The appellant and respondents 1, 3,5 and
7 therein were duly nominated candidates for the general
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seat in the said constituency, while respondents Nos. 2, 4
and 6 were nominated for the reserved seat. No objection
was taken before the Returning Officer in respect _of the
nomination of either the appellant or respondent No. 2. The
appellant and respondent No. 2 were declared elected to the
general and reserved seat respectively. The respondent No.
1 filed an election petition against the appellant and the
other respondents for setting aside the election as wholly
void. One of the allegations was that the respondent No. 2,
was, at all material times, under 25 years of age and was
consequently not qualified to be chosen to fill a seat in
the Legislative Assembly of a State under Art. 173 of the
Constitution. The Election Tribunal held that the
(1) (1955) 1 S.C.R. 267.
297
acceptance by the Returning Officer of the nomination of
respondent No. 2 amounted to an improper acceptance of
nomination within the meaning of s. 100(1)(c) of the Act,
and on that ground declared that the entire election was
void. The candidate, who was elected to the general seat
preferred an appeal to this Court and contended that his
nomination had been properly accepted by the Returning
Officer and, therefore, if respondent No. 2 was not duly
qualified to be elected, his election alone should be
declared void on the ground that such disqualification shall
fall under sub-s., (2)(c) of s. 100 and not under sub-s.
(1)(c) thereof This Court accepted the contention and in
that context defined the import of " improper acceptance "
within the meaning of s. 100(1)(c) of the Act. Mukherjea,
J., as he then was, delivering the judgment of the Court
observed at p. 277:
" If the want of qualification of a candidate does not
appear on the face of the nomination paper or of the
electoral roll, but is a matter which could be established
only by evidence, an enquiry at the stage of scrutiny of the
nomination papers is required under the Act only if there is
any objection to the nomination. The Returning-Officer is
then bound to make such enquiry as he thinks proper on the
result of which he can either accept or reject the
nomination. But when the candidate appears to be properly
qualified on the face of the electoral roll and the
nomination paper and no objection is raised to the
nomination, the Returning Officer has no other alternative
but to accept the nomination. ’This would be apparent from
section 36, subsection (7) of the Act . . .".
The learned Judge proceeded to state at p. 278:
" It would have been an improper acceptance, if the want of
qulification was apparent on the electoral roll itself or on
the face of the nomination paper and the Returning Officer
overlooked that defect or if any objection was raised and
enquiry made as to the absence of qualification in the
candidate and the Returning Officer came to a wrong
conclusion on the materials placed before him. When neither
298
of these things happened, the acceptance of the
nomination by the Returning Officer must be deemed to be a
proper acceptance."
This judgment, therefore, is a clear authority for the
proposition that if the want of qualification does not
appear on the face of the nomination paper and if no
objection is raised on that ground before the Returning
Officer, the acceptance of the nomination must be deemed to
be a proper acceptance.
Mr. A.V. Viswanatha Sastry, the learned Counsel for the
respondent, attacks the correctness of this decision.
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Broadly stated, his criticism is that the proceedings before
the Returning Officer are summary proceeding,, and that the
election petition is not an appeal from the order of the
Returning Officer, but is an original petition seeking to
set aside the election and that in such a petition the
aggrieved party has the right to seek to set aside the
election on all or any of the grounds mentioned in s. 100 of
the Act and that, as one of the grounds is the improper
acceptance of the nomination paper, he could establish by
evidence that the acceptance of the nomination by the
Returning Officer was in the derogation of the statutory
provisions, such as those relating to the absence of
qualification in the candidate or the filing of his
nomination paper unaccompanied by a certificate within the
meaning of s. 33(3) of the Act. In support of this
contention reliance is placed upon another decision of this
Court in Veluswami v. Raja Nainar (1). The point raised and
decided in that case was whether an enquiry before the
Election Tribunal was not restricted to the material placed
before the Returning Officer relating to a ground, but all
evidence bearing on that ground could be adduced before that
Tribunal. There unlike here, at the time of scrutiny of the
nominations objection was taken to the nomination of the
candidate on the ground that he was the Head Master of the
National Training School, Tiruchendur, which was a Govern-
ment-aided school, and therefore be was disqualified under
s. 7, cls. (d) and (e) of the Act. The Returning
(1) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 422.
299
Officer upheld the objection. In a petition to set aside
the election, the returned candidate pleaded that the
candidate whose nomination was rejected was not qualified to
be chosen not merely on the ground put forward before the
Returning Officer but also on other grounds. This Court
held that. it is open to a party to put forward all grounds
in support or negation of the claim subject only to such
limitations as may be found in the Act, notwithstanding that
some of the grounds were not taken before the Returning
Officer. The reason for the decision is found at p. 426 and
it reads :
" An election petition is an original proceeding instituted
by the presentation of a petition under s. 81 of the
Act........... All the parties have the right to adduce
evidence and that is of the essence of an original
proceeding as contrasted with a proceeding, by way of
appeal. That being the character of the proceedings, the
rule applicable is that which governs the trial of all
original proceedings; that is, it is open to a party to put
forward all grounds in support of or negation of the claim,
subject only to such limitations as may be found in the
Act."
The learned Judge elaborated the point at a subsequent stage
of the judgment thus:
" The enquiry which a returning officer has to make under S.
36 is summary in character. He may make " such summary
enquiry, if any, as he thinks necessary "; be can act suo
motu. Such being the nature of the enquiry, the right which
is given to a party under S. 100(1)(c) and S. 100(1)(d)(i)
to challenge the propriety of an order of rejection or
acceptance of a nomination paper would become illusory, if
the Tribunal is to base its decision only on the materials
placed before the returning officer."
When the attention of the Court was invited to the decision
in Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghuraj Singh(1), the
Court distinguished that decision in the following manner:
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" This is not a direct pronouncement on the point now in
controversy, and that is conceded."
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 267.
300
The two decisions can stand together and they deal with two
different situations : in the former, no objection was
raised at all to the nomination, while in the
latter an objection was raised on the ground of
disqualification; but in the election petition additional
grounds of disqualification were alleged and sought to be
proved: one is concerned with a case of improper acceptance
and the other with a case of improper rejection. Though
some of the observations in the later decision may well have
been advanced to come to a contrary conclusion in the
earlier decision, Venkatarama Ayyar, J., who was party to
both the decisions, distinguished the earlier one on the
ground that it was not a direct pronouncement on the
question raised in the later. The earlier decision is that
of five Judges but the later is of three Judges. The
learned Judges, who decided the later case, did not see any
conflict between their decision and that of the earlier one.
Though there is some force in the argument advanced by Mr.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastry, and, if it were res integra, some
of us might be inclined not to agree with the reasoning and
the conclusion of the earlier judgment, this Court is bound
by its earlier decision and we do not see any justification
to refer the question to a larger bench, particularly as we
have come to the conclusion that the High Court was not
justified in interfering with the order passed by the
Tribunal in its discretion disallowing the material
amendment.
The second case is a decision of four Judges and it defines
the powers of the Election Tribunal in the matter of
amendment of pleadings. This decision also turns upon the
relevant provisions of Act 43 of 1951 before it was amended
by Act 27 of 1956. Section 83(3) of the Act before the
amendment corresponds to s. 90(5) of the amended Act. In
other respects, so far, as it is material to the question
raised, no change has been introduced in the other relevant
sections. In this case, the respondent in the appeal filed
an election petition challenging the election of the
appellants to the U.P. Legislative Assembly on the ground
that they had committed corrupt practices, the material
301
allegations being, (i) that the appellants " could in the
furtherance of their election enlist the support of certain
Government servants ", and (ii) that the appellant No. 1 had
employed two persons in excess of the prescribed number for
his election purposes. No list of particulars of corrupt
practices was attached to the petition. Long after the
period of limitation prescribed for the filing of election
petitions, the respondent applied for amendment of his
petition by adding the names of certain village Headmen
(Mukhias) as having worked for the appellants and later on
becoming their polling agents. The Election Tribunal
allowed the amendment on the ground that the allegations
sought to be introduced by the amendment were mere
particulars of the charge already made. Holding that
corrupt practice had been committed by the appellants, it
declared their election void under s. 100(2)(b) of the Act.
The appellants preferred an appeal against that order to
this Court and contended that the Election Tribunal had no
power either under s. 83(3) of the Act or under Order VI,
rule 17 of the Code of Civil Procedure to allow the
amendment. In that context, this Court elaborately
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considered the scope of the power of the Election Tribunal
to amend the pleadings in an election dispute and summarized
its views in the following two propositions, at p. 392:
" (1) Under s. 83(3) the Tribunal has power to allow
particulars in respect of illegal or corrupt practices to be
amended, provided the petition itself specifies the grounds
or charges, and this power extends to permitting new
instances to be given.
(2) The Tribunal has power under 0. VI, r. 17 to order
amendment of a petition, but that power cannot be exercised
so as to permit new grounds or charges to be raised or to so
alter its character as to make it in substance a new
petition, if a fresh petition on those allegations will then
be barred."
On the basis of those propositions this Court held that the
petition as originally presented did not allege that the
appellants had committed corrupt practices and, therefore,
that the allegations sought to be introduced
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302
by the amendment, namely, that two village Headmen s. worked
for the appellants and later on became their polling agents,
so radically altered the character of the petition as
originally framed as to make it practically a new petition,
and so it was not within the power of the Tribunal to allow
amendments of that kind. Even if the Tribunal had the power
under 0. VI, r. 17 of the Code of Civil Procedure to permit
an amendment raising a new charge, the Court held that it
did not under the circumstances exercise a sound and
judicial discretion in permitting the amendment in question.
It may be noticed that in that case the question turned upon
the construction of s. 83, sub-ss. (2) and (3), of the Act.
Though in that case this Court was concerned with the powers
of an Election Tribunal to amend the petition beyond the
period of limitation, the discussion of the Court covered a
wider field, presumably, because the Court intended to
settle the principles governing the power of Election
Tribunals to amend pleadings with a view to prevent
confusion and to stabilize the procedure. This Court
rejected the argument that 0. VI, r. 17 of the Civil
Procedure Code, does not apply to election petitions. It was
observed at p. 389:
" We are accordingly of opinion that the application of 0.
VI, r. 17, Civil Procedure Code to the proceedings before
the Tribunal is not excluded by s. 83(3)."
It was contended for the appellant in that case that even if
s. 83(3) of the Act did not exclude the application of 0.
VI, r. 17, Civil Procedure Code, to the proceedings before
the Tribunal, the exercise of the power under that rule
must, nevertheless, be subject to the conditions prescribed
by s. 81 for presentation of an election petition, that one
of those conditions was that it should be presented within
the time allowed therefor, and that accordingly, no
amendment should be allowed which would have the effect of
defeating that provision. After considering the English
decisions on the statutory provisions which are pari materia
with our enactments, the Court held that the Election
Tribunal had no power to permit a new ground to be
303
raised beyond the time of limitation prescribed by s. 81 of
the Act. Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastry contended that the
learned Judges, having rightly conceded the power of the
Election Tribunal to amend the pleadings under 0. VI, r. 17,
Civil Procedure Code, went wrong in limiting that power in
the way they did, and that the reason advanced by them in
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limiting that power equally applies to the pleadings in a
suit, for, it is said, under the Indian Limitation Act,
every suit filed beyond the prescribed period of limitation
shall be dismissed although limitation has not been set up
as a defence. There is no doubt some force in this
contention, but this argument was presumably advanced before
the learned Judges and was negatived on the following ground
stated at p. 392:
" The Tribunal sought to get over this difficulty by relying
on the principle well-established with reference to
amendments under 0. VI, r. 17 that the fact that a suit on
the claim sought to be raised would be barred on the date of
the application would be a material element in deciding
whether it should be allowed or not but would not affect the
jurisdiction of the court to grant it in exceptional circum-
stances as laid down in Charan Das v. Amir Khan (1). But
this is to ignore the restriction imposed by s. 90(2) that
the procedure of the court under the Code of Civil Procedure
in which 0. VI, r. 17 is comprised, is to apply subject to
the provisions of the Act and the rules, and there being no
power conferred on the Tribunal to extend the period of
limitation prescribed, an order of amendment permitting a
new ground to be raised beyond the time limited by s. 81 and
r. 119 must contravene those provisions and is, in
consequence, beyond the ambit of authority conferred by s.
90(2)."
This passage indicates that the learned Judges were aware of
the argument now advanced and, for the reason mentioned by
them, namely, that unlike a civil suit wherein the Court can
extend the period of limitation in a proper case, the
Tribunal has no such power, rejected the argument. We ,are
bound by this decision,
(1) (1920) L.R. 47 I.A. 255.
304
As this stage, we must guard against one possible
misapprehension. Courts and Tribunals are constituted to do
justice between the parties within the confines of statutory
limitations, and undue emphasis on technicalities or
enlarging their scope would cramp their powers, diminish
their effectiveness and defeat the very purpose
for which they are constituted. We must make it clear that
within the limits prescribed by the decisions of this Court
the discretionary jurisdiction of the Tribunals to amend the
pleadings is as extensive as that of a civil Court. The
same well-settled principles laid down in the matter of
amendments to the pleadings in a suit should also regulate
the exercise of the power of amendment by a Tribunal.. This
aspect has not been ignored by this Court in the aforesaid
decision, and the Court observed, at p. 394:
" It is no doubt true that pleadings should not be too
strictly construed, and that regard should be had to the
substance of the matter and not the form."
The foregoing discussion yelds the following results: (1)
Sub-cls. (i) and (iv-) of s. 100(11)(d) of the Act provide
for two distinct grounds the former for the case of improper
acceptance of any nomination, and the latter for that of
non-compliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of
the Act, or of any rules or orders made under the Act; (2)
when the candidate appears to be properly qualified on the
face of the electoral roll and the nomination paper and no
objection is raised to the nomination, the acceptance of the
said nomination by the Returning Officer must be deemed to
be proper acceptance ; (3) even if there is a proper
acceptance, it is open to the petitioner to question the
validity of the election -under s. 100(1)(d)(iv) on other
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grounds, namely, that the candidate whose nomination was
accepted was not qualified at all or could not be deemed to
be duly nominated as a candidate for the reason that he did
not comply with the provisions of s. 33(3) of the Act; and
(4) if the second ground in substance is not taken in the
petition-substance is more important than form-the Tribunal
has no power after the prescribed period of limitation for
the filing
305
of the petition to allow an amendment introducing the second
ground.
With this background we shall proceed to scrutinize the
pleadings in the light of the rival contentions. The
election petition contains seven paragraphs. The relief
claimed is that the election of the appellant from the
parliamentary constituency No. 331, Kanpur, be declared
void. The first paragraph gives the credentials of the
petitioner to enable him to file the petition. Paragraphs 2
and 3 give the sequence of events which ended in the
declaration of the appellant as duly elected from the
constituency to the Parliament. Paragraph 5 states that the
election of the appellant is void and is liable to be set
aside on the ten grounds, among others, specified therein.
Paragraph 6 states that the cause of action accrued to the
petitioner on or about January 29, 1957, when the nomination
papers were filed for the said election, and subsequent
thereto. Now coming to the grounds in sub-para(a), (b) and
(c) of para 5, it is stated that the ,appellant had been
dismissed by Government from service on charges of
disloyalty and gross misconduct on January 24, 1956, but he
did not submit to the aid order and filed a writ petition in
the High Court at Calcutta questioning the validity of the
said order, that under the circumstances, he should be
deemed to be a Government servant and, therefore, he was not
competent to be nominated as a candidate for election to
Parliament. Sub-paragraph (d) is the most important
paragraph to the present enquiry and therefore it may be
extracted in full. It reads:
" That apart from the above mentioned reasons the nomination
paper of the respondent was also improperly accepted by the
Returning Officer, in-asmuch-as, the respondent having been
dismissed from Government Service did not obtain a
certificate in the prescribed manner from the Election
Commission to the effect that he had not been dismissed for
corruption or disloyalty to the State."
This sub-paragraph in clear and unambiguous terms raises the
ground of improper acceptance of the nomination paper by the
Returning Officer i.e., the ground
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covered by s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act. The reason for
sustaining the said ground is stated to be that, having been
dismissed from Government service, he did not
obtain a certificate in the prescribed manner from the
Election Commission. Ex facie this sub-paragraph
does not refer to s. 33(3) or to the contents of that sub-
section. A nomination paper may be accepted by the
Returning Officer in spite of one or other of the following
two defects: (i) the candidate who has been dismissed may
have filed the nomination -paper without its being
accompanied by a certificate issued in the prescribed manner
by the Election Commission to the effect that he has not
been dismissed from service for corruption or dis loyalty to
the State: vide s. 33(3); and (ii) the candidate has been
disqualified for being chosen as a member of Parliament:
vide s. 9(3). In this subparagraph in support of the ground
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that the nomination of the appellant was improperly
accepted, reference was made to the second defect and not to
the first. That this must have been the intention of the
respondent is also made clear from the circumstance that in
sub-para (i) reference was made to the latter sub-section
but not to the former. The argument that the opening words
of sub-para (d), " That apart ", indicate that this is a
ground in addition to the ground based on the non-obtaining
of a certificate in the prescribed manner, and, therefore,
should only refer to the non-accompaniment of a certificate,
has no force; for, sub-paras (a), (b) and (c), which precede
sub-para (d) raise a different point altogether, namely,
that notwithstanding the dismissal, as the appellant had
filed a petition in the High Court questioning the validity
of the order of dismissal, he was still a Government servant
on the crucial date. Be it as it may, the important point
to be noticed is that sub-paragraph (d) raises a ground
under sub-cl. (i) and not under subcl. (iv) of s. 100(1)(d)
of the Act, and even if the facts mentioned therein are
disannexed from the ground, they refer only to the
disqualification of the appellant to stand as a candidate
for the election and not to the procedural defect covered by
s. 33(3) of the Act. Subparagraphs (e), (f) and (g) relate
to the objections
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which are not material for the present inquiry. Sub-
paragraph (h) contains a general statement that the
appellant was disqualified to be chosen to fill the parli-
mentary seat. Sub-paragraph (i) specifically refers to s.
9(3) of the Act. We are not also concerned with the
allegations in -sub-para (j).
The foregoing analysis of the allegations in the petition so
far as they are relevant to the question raised, discloses
the following two circumstances : (i) the ground taken in
the petition was that there was an improper acceptance of
the nomination covered by s. 100(1)(d)(i) for the reason
that the appellant, having been dismissed from Government
service, did not obtain a certificate in the prescribed
manner; and (ii) there was no ground which would fall under
sub-cl. (iv) of s. 100(1)(d) of the Act. viz., that the
appellant was not to be deemed to be duly nominated as a
candidate as his nomination paper was not accompanied by a
certificate issued in the prescribed manner by the Election
Commission to the effect that he had not been dismissed for
corruption or disloyalty to the State. In the application
for amendment which was filed after the prescribed period of
limitation, two amendments were asked for-one to sub-para
(i) of para 5 and the other to sub-para (d) thereof. The
former was for substituting the figure " 33 " for the figure
" 9 " and the latter to introduce a statement in that
paragraph to the effect that the nomination paper was not
accompanied by the prescribed certificate. The subsequent
petition, as we have already noticed, sought for the same
amendment to para (5)(d) in an abbreviated form. But what
is important to notice is that even the proposed amendment
sought to bring in the said statement under the ground of
"improper acceptance" and not under s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the
Act. The appellant filed a counter-affidavit opposing both
the amendments. The Tribunal noticed the judgment of this
Court-and applied the principles laid down therein to the
facts before-it. It also considered in detail the
allegations in the petition and arrived at the following
findings: (i) " All what has been urged throughout is that
the respondent was a Government servant or a
308
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dismissed Government servant and no certificate having been
obtained from the Election Commission about his dismissal
not being for corruption or disloyalty, he was not eligible
for election as a candidate to the House of the People ",
and (ii) sub-section (3) of s. 33 which is a provision
laying down a certain procedure was never in the mind of the
petitioner while the petition was being drafted or prepared,
and that is why we find no reference to the certificate not
being filed with the nomination paper." He concludes his
discussion thus :
"It would thus be seen that the amendment sought by the
petitioner offends against the conditions laid down by their
lordships of the Supreme Court in Harish Chandra Bajpai v.
Triloki Singh (1) relating to the application of Order VI,
rule 17 of the Civil Procedure Code to proceedings before an
Elettion Tribunal. It has been specifically laid down that
an amendment will not be allowed if the effect of it be to
permit a new ground or charge to be raised or to so alter
its character as to make it in substance a new petition.
That would exactly be the effect of the amendment sought by
the petitioner
It will be seen, therefore, that the Tribunal has put before
itself the correct principles governing its powers of
amendment and found, on a construction of the allegations in
the petition, that by the proposed amendment, the respondent
was seeking to introduce a new ground after the period of
limitation. This order was made by the Tribunal in the
exercise of its discretion in strict conformity with the
principles laid down by this Court.
The next question is whether the High Court was justified in
setting aside that order. It was argued before the High
Court that the amendment application was wrongly refused and
that even as the election petition stood without the
amendment it contained sufficient averment of facts to make
out a ground under s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act, and in the
alternative that it made out a ground under s. 100(1)(d)(iv)
of the
(1) (1957) S.C.R.370.
309
Act. Before the High Court the learned Counsel for the
respondent withdrew his prayer for the amendment of sub-
para(1) of para 5 of the election petition; with the result
the only paragraph on which reliance was placed by the
respondent was sub-para (d) of para 5. The High Court also
noticed the judgment of this Court in Harish Chandra
Bajpai’s Case (1) and posed the following question for its
decision:
" The important thing is whether in substance the petition
contains the particular ground of attack or not."
It proceeded to consider whether the original subpara (d) of
para 5 contained any ground and if so, what?: and whether a
new ground was sought to be raised in the garb of an
amendment. After reading the said sub-para, it expressed
the view that the ground, in its opinion, would fall under
s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act; and that conclusion was based on
the allegations in the said sub-para that there was an
improper acceptance of the nomination and that the appellant
had not obtained the necessary certificate from the Election
Commission. It has stated that in the circumstances of the
case the respondent meant to state that, as the certificate
had not been obtained, it could not have accompanied the
nomination paper. The learned Judges of the High Court
concluded their discussion thus:
" We also think that the Tribunal should have permitted the
amendment because the ground of attack had been clearly made
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out and the only mistake committed by the appellant was not
to put it in proper words,"
In short, the view of the High Court was that sub. para (d)
contained the ground under s. 100(1)(d)(i) of the Act and
what was asked for by way of amendment was only a
clarification of that ground.
The High Court, in our view, has missed the real point
raised before it. We have already pointed out that, in view
of the judgment of this Court in Durga Shankar Mehta’s Case
(2)there was no improper
(1) (1957) S.C.R. 370. (2) (1955) 1 S.C.R. 267.
40
310
acceptance of the nomination paper by the Returning Officer.
for, the nomination paper ex facie did’ not disclose any
defect or disqualification. The petition for amendment
asked for inserting a statement in sub-para (d) of para 5
under the ground of improper acceptance of the nomination
paper, viz., that the prescribed certificate did not
accompany the nomination paper of the candidate, and that at
the appellate stage the other proposed amendment based upon
s. 33(3) of the Act was given up. The result was that no
relief for raising the ground under s. 100(1)(d)(iv) had
survived and that the ground under s. 100(1)(d)(i) was not
open to the respondent. In the circumstances, the amendment
would be foreign to the scope of the enquiry under the
ground governed by s. 100(1 )(d)(i) of the Act.
That apart, could it be said that the High Court was
justified in the circumstances of this case to interfere
with the discretion of the Tribunal ? An appellate Court has
no doubt an unquestioned right to review or modify the order
made by a subordinate Court; but it is undesirable to do so
when the subordinate Court made an order in the exercise of
its discretion without exceeding the limits of its power,
unless it acted perversely or unless the view taken by it is
clearly wrong. In this case, the Election Tribunal neither
exceeded its powers nor acted perversely; and indeed its
order advanced the cause of justice in that it helped to
maintain the election of a candidate who was duly qualified
and who secured a large majority of votes over all the rival
candidates. We have carefully considered the ’reasons set
out in the judgment of the High Court in support of its
decision that the amendment should have been allowed by the
Tribunal, and in our opinion the said reasons are
unsatisfactory and on some points farfetched. In the
circumstances, we do not see any justification, after the
entire petition was disposed of, for the High Court to
interfere with the said discretion. We therefore set aside
the order of the High Court.
It is represented to us by the learned counsel for the
appellant that in the High Court the only
311
point argued was that the amendment should have been allowed
and no other point was pressed. The learned counsel for the
respondent does not accept this position. In the
circumstances, we have no other option but to remand the
case to the High Court for disposal in accordance with law.
The respondent will pay the costs to the appellant.
Appeal allowed.