Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DURGA SHANKAR MEHTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THAKUR RAGHURAJ SINGH AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/05/1954
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1954 AIR 520 1955 SCR 287
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 233 (8)
F 1955 SC 425 (12)
R 1959 SC 422 (11,16)
E&D 1960 SC 368 (4,8,9,17)
E&D 1960 SC1049 (17)
RF 1963 SC 677 (18)
R 1963 SC 874 (9)
R 1965 SC1595 (9,19,40)
D 1971 SC1348 (8,10)
R 1973 SC2362 (4,6)
R 1975 SC1843 (35)
RF 1975 SC2299 (273)
R 1976 SC1207 (565)
RF 1977 SC2155 (23)
E&R 1978 SC 851 (24,30,83,124)
R 1979 SC1284 (5)
E 1980 SC 856 (21)
E 1981 SC 547 (17,20,25)
R 1986 SC 103 (5)
D 1987 SC1629 (13)
RF 1991 SC2176 (16)
R 1992 SC 248 (34)
RF 1992 SC2219 (53,135)
ACT:
Constitution of India, articles 136, 173, 329-Supreme Court
-Power to grant special leave to appeal-Decisioin of
Election Tribunal-Represeiztation of the People Act (XLIII
of; 1951), ss. 36, 100(1) (c) and (2) (c), 105-Non-
compliance with the provisions of article 173-Constitutional
disability-Election void - Whether under s. 100(1) (c) or s.
100 (2) (c) of the Act-Non-compliance with the provisions of
Constitution in s. 100(2) (c)-scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Article 136 of the Constitution is worded in the widest
terms possible. It vests in the Supreme Court a plenary
jurisdiction in the matter of entertaining and hearing
appeals by granting special leave against any kind of
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judgment or order made by a Court or’ Tribunal in any cause
or matter and the powers can be exercised in spite of the
specific provisions for appeal contained in the Consti-
tution’or other laws. The powers given by the article are,
however, in the nature of special or residuary powers which
are exercisable outside the purview of ordinary law, in
cases where the needs of justice demand interference by the
Supreme Court.
The non obstante clause in article 329 of the Constitution
which debars the Supreme Court as well as any other Court in
India from entertaining a suit or a proceeding calling in
question any election to Parliament or the State Legislature
and section 105 of the Representation of the People Act
which gives finality to the decision of the Election
Tribunal so far as that Act is
268
concerned and does not provide for any further appeal, do
not cut down or affect the overriding powers which the
Supreme,Court can exercise in the matter of granting special
leave under article 136 of the Constitution.
The overriding power vested in the Supreme Court under
article 136 of the Constitution is wider than the
prerogative right of entertaining an appeal exercised by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in England because
the prerogative right of the Grown can be taken away or
curtailed by express legislation but the Constitutional
provision in article 136 cannot be limited or taken away by
any Parliamentary legislation and this Constitutional
provision overrides ordinary laws and no presumption can
arise from words and expressions declaring an adjudication
of a particular Tribunal to be final and conclusive that
there was an intention to exclude the exercise of the
special power.
Where on the finding of the Tribunal there has been a viola-
tion of or non-compliance with the provision of article 173
of the Constitution because the candidate suffers from a
Constitutional disability by reason of his under-age the
case falls under sub-section (2) (c) of section 100 of the
Representation of the People Act and not under sub-section
(1) (c) of section 100 of the Act and election should be
held to be void on the ground of the Constitutional
disqualification of the candidate and not on the ground that
his nomination was improperly accepted by the Returning
Officer and therefore the ’election of that candidate only
should be declared void and not the whole election.
The expression " non-compliance with the provisions of the
Constitution " in clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section
100 of the Act is sufficiently wide to cover such cases
where the question is not one of improper acceptance or
rejection of the nomination by the Returning Officer but
there is a fundamental disability in the candidate to stand
for election at all.
Bharat Bank Ltd., v. Employees of the Bharat Bank Ltd.
([1950] S.C.R. 459), Theberge v. Laudry ( [1876-771 2 A.C.
102), Stowe v. Jolliffe (9 C.P. 734) and Ponnuswami v.
Returning Officer, Namakkal Constituency and Others ( [1952]
S.C.R. 218) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPFLLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 150 of 1953.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 30th April, 1953, of the Election Tribunal, Jabalpur, at
Nagpur in Election Petition No. I of 1952.
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B. Sen, T. P. Naik and I. N. Shroff for the appellant.
R. M. Hajarnavis, J. B. Dadachanji and Rajinder Narain for
respondent No. 1.
269
1954. May 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUKERJEA J.-This appeal, which has come before us on special
leave, is directed against the judgment and order of the
Election Tribunal, Jabalpur, at Nagpur dated the 30th April,
1953, whereby the Tribunal declared the election held on the
29th December, 1951, for the double member Lakhnadon
Legislative Assembly Constituency, to be wholly void under
section 100(1)(c) of the Representation of the People Act
(hereinafter called "the Act").
To appreciate the contentions that have been raised by the
parties to this appeal, it would be necessary to state
briefly the material facts. The Lakhnadon Legistive
Assembly Constituency in Madhya Pradesh is a double member
constituency, one of the seats in which is reserved for
Scheduled Tribes. The appellant and respondents Nos. 1, 3,
5 and 7 were duly nominated candidates for the general 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,
Vasant Rao. Out of these eight candidates, respondents Nos.
5, 6 and 7 withdrew their candidature within the prescribed
period under section 37 of the Act and the actual contest at
the election was between the remaining five candidates,
namely, the appellant and respondents Nos. I to 4. The
votes secured by these five candidates at the polling were
found to be as follows :-
(1) The Appellant (General)...18,627
(2) Respondent No. I (General)7,811
(3) Respondent No. 2 (Reserved)14,442
(4) Respondent No. 3 (Reserved)7,877
(5) Respondent No. 4 (General)6,604
Accordingly the appellant and respondentNo. - 2
were declared elected to the general and reserved seat
respectively, under section 66 of the Act, and the results
were duly published in the Madhya Pradesh Gazette on 8th of
February, 1952. On the 14th of May, 1952, the
270
respondent No. 1, Raghuraj Singh, filed an election petition
against the appellant and the other respondents, under
section 81 of the Act, praying that the said election to the
Lakhnadon Legislative Assembly Constituency be declared
wholly void or in the alternative the election of Vasant Rao
and/or that of the appellant, Durga Shankar Mehta, be
declared void. There was a string of allegations made in
the petition accusing the appellant of various corrupt
practices in the matter of securing votes but none of these
are material for our present purpose, as the Tribunal, by a
majority, held these allegations to be unfounded and not
supported by proper evidence. The substantial ground upon
which the petitioner sought to assail the validity of the
election was, that the respondent No. 2, Vasant Rao, who was
declared duly elected to the reserved seat in the said
constituency 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 article
173 of the Constitution. This allegation was found to be
true by the majority of the Tribunal and by its judgment
dated the 30th of April, 1953, the Tribunal came to the
conclusion that the act of the Returning Officer in
accepting the nomination of Vasant Rao, who was disqualified
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to be elected a member of the State Legislature under the
Constitution, amounted to an improper acceptance of
nomination within the meaning of section 100(1)(c) of the
Act and as the result of the election was materially
affected thereby, the whole election must be pronounced to
be void. It is the propriety of this decision that has been
challenged before us in this appeal.
Mr. Hazarnavis, appearing for the respondent No. I before
us, took a preliminary point challenging the competency of
the appeal. It is contended by the learned counsel, that
article 329(b) of the Constitution ousts the jurisdiction of
all ordinary Courts in election disputes and provides
expressly that no election to either House of Parliament or
to either House of the Legislature of a State shall be
called in question, except by and an election petition
presented to such authority a in such manner as may be
provided for by or
271
under any law made by the appropriate Legislature. It is
urged that there can be no challenge to the validity of an
election except by way of an election petition, and the
authority to which, and the manner in which, such petition
is to be presented, have been embodied in the Representation
of the People Act which has been enacted by the Parliament
under article 327 of the Constitution. Section 80 of the
Act, which is worded almost in the same manner as article
329(b), provides that "no election shall be called in
question except by an election petition presented in
accordance with the provisions of this Part"; and section
105 says that "every order of the Tribunal made under this
Act shall be final and conclusive." It is contended by the
learned counsel that the jurisdiction that is created in the
Election Tribunal is a special jurisdiction which can be
invoked by an aggrieved party only by means of an election
petition and the decision of the Tribunal is final and
conclusive.
These arguments, though apparently attractive, appear to us
on closer examination to be untenable. We agree with the
learned counsel that the right of seeking election and
sitting in Parliament or in a State Legislature is a
creature of the Constitution and when the Constitution
provides a special remedy for enforcing that right, no other
remedy by ordinary action in a Court of law is available to
a person in regard to election disputes. The jurisdiction
with which the Election Tribunal is endowed is undoubtedly a
special jurisdiction ; but once it is held that it is a
judicial Tribunal empowered and obliged to deal judicially
with disputes arising out of or in connection with election,
the overriding power of this Court to grant special leave,
in proper cases, would certainly be attracted and this power
cannot be excluded by any Parliamentary legislation. The
non obstante clause with which article 329 of the
Constitution begins and upon which the respondent’s counsel
lays so much stress debars us, as it debars any other Court
in the land, to entertain a suit or a’ proceeding calling in
question any election to the Parliament or the State
Legislature. It is the Election Tribunal alone that can
decide such disputes, and the proceeding has to be initiated
by an election petition
272
and in such manner as may be provided by a statute. But
once that Tribunal has made any determination or
adjudication on the matter, the powers of this Court to
interfere by way of special leave can always be exercised.
It is now well settled by the majority decision of this
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Court in the case of Bharat Bank Ltd. v. Employees of the
Bharat Bank Ltd. (1) that the expression "Tribunal" as used
in article 136 does not mean the same thing as "Court" but
includes, within its ambit, all adjudicating bodies,
provided they are constituted by the State and are invested
with judicial as distinguished from purely administrative or
executive functions. The only Courts or Tribunals, which
are expressly exempted from the purview of article 136, are
those which are established by or under any law relating to
the Armed Forces as laid down in clause (2) of the article.
It is well known that an appeal is a creature of statute and
there can be no inherent right of appeal from any judgment
or determination unless an appeal is expressly provided for
by the law itself. The powers given by article 136 of the
Constitution however are in the nature of special or
residuary powers which are exercisable outside the purview
of ordinary law, in cases where the needs of justice demand
interference by the Supreme Court of the land. The article
itself is worded in the widest terms possible. It vests in
the Supreme Court a plenary jurisdiction in the matter of
entertaining and hearing appeals, by granting of special
leave, against any kind of judgment or order made by a Court
or Tribunal in any cause or matter and the powers could be
exercised in spite of the specific provisions for appeal
contained in the Constitution or other laws. The
Constitution for the best of reasons did not choose to
fetter or circumscribe the powers exercisable under this
article in any way. Section 105 of the Representation of
the People Act certainly gives finality to the decision of
the Election Tribunal so far as that Act is concerned and
does not provide for any further appeal but that cannot in
any way cut down or affect the overriding powers which this
Court can exercise in the matter of granting special leave
under article of the Constitution.
(i) [195o] S.C.R. 459,
273
This overriding power, which has been vested in the Supreme
Court under article 136 of the Constitution, is in a sense
wider than the prerogative right of entertaining an appeal
exercised by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in
England. The prerogative of the Crown can be taken away or
curtailed by express legislation and even when there are no
clear words in a particular statute expressly taking away
the Crown’s prerogative of entertaining an appeal but the
scheme and purpose of the Act show unmistakably that there
was never any’ intention of creating a Tribunal with the
ordinary incident of an appeal to the Crown annexed to it,
the Privy Council would not admit an appeal from the
decision of such Tribunal. This is illustrated by the
decision of the Privy Council in The berge v. Laudry(1) upon
which Mr. Hozarnavis places considerable reliance. In that
case the petitioner having been declared duly elected a
member to represent the electoral district of Montmanier, in
the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec, his
election was afterwards, on petition, declared null and
void, by judgment of the superior Court under the Quebec
Controverted Elections Act, 1875, and he himself was
declared guilty of corrupt practices. He applied for
special leave to appeal to His Majesty in Council. The
application was refused and Lord Cairns in delivering the
judgment of the Board held, that although the prerogative of
the Crown could not be take in away or limited except by
express words and the relevant section of the Quebec
Controverted Elections Act of 1875 providing that "such
judgment shall not be susceptible of appeal" did not mention
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either the Crown or its prerogative, yet the fair
construction of the above Act as also of the previous Act
of/1872 was that it was the intention of the Legislature to
create a Tribunal for the purpose of trying election
petitions in a manner which would make its decision final
for all purposes and should not annex to it the incident of
its judgment being reviewed by the Grown under its
prerogative.
This decision in our opinion does not assist Mr. Hazamavis.
In the first place article 136 is a
(I) (1876-77) 2 App.Cas. 102.
274
constitutional provision which no Parliamentary legislation
can limit or take away. In the second place the provision
being one, which overrides ordinary laws, no presumption can
arise from words and expressions declaring an adjudication
of a particular Tribunal to be final and conclusive, that
there was an intention to exclude the exercise of the
special powers. As has been said already, the non obstante
clause in article 329 prohibits challenge to an election
either to Parliament or any State Legislature, except in the
manner laid down in clause (2) of the article. But there is
no pro hibition of the exercise of its powers by the Supreme
Court in proper cases under article 136 of the Constitution
against the decision or determination of an Election
Tribunal which like all other judicial, tribunals comes
within the purview of the article. It is certainly
desirable that the decisions on matters of disputed election
should, as soon as possible, become final and conclusive so
that the constitution of the Legislature may be distinctly
and speedily known. But the powers under article 136 are
exercisable only under exceptional circumstances. The
article does not create any general right of appeal from
decisions of all Tribunals. As regards the decision of this
Court in Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer, Namakkal
Consistituency, and Others (1), to which reference has been
made by the learned counsel, we would only desire to point
out that all that this case decided was that the High Court
bad no jurisdiction, under article 226 of the Constitution,
to interfere by a writ of certiorari, with the order of a
Returning Officer who was alleged to have wrongly rejected
the nomination paper of a particular candidate. It was held
that the word "election" in article 329(b) of the
Constitution had been used in the wide sense to connote the
entire process, culminating in a candidate’s being declared
elected and that the scheme of Part XV of the Constitution
was -that all matters which had the effect of vitiating
election should be brought up only after the election was
over and by. way of an election petition. The particular
point, which arises for considers. tion here, was not
decided in that case and was expressly
(I) [1952] S.C.R. 218.
275
left open. In our opinion therefore the preliminary point
raised by Mr. Hazarnavis cannot succeed.
Coming now to the appellant’s case, Mr. Sen who appeared in
support of the appeal, has pressed only one point for our
consideration. He plainly stated that he could not
challenge the propriety of the finding, arrived at by the
majority of the Tribunal that respondent, Vasant Rao, was
below 25 years of age at all material times. This, he
concedes, is a finding of fact and being based on evidence,
is not open to challenge before us in an appeal by special
leave. His contention in substance is, that there has been
no improper acceptance of nomination in the present case, as
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has been held by the Tribunal and consequently the provision
of section 100(1)(c) of the Act would not be attracted to it
and the entire election could not have been declared void.
It is, true, says the learned counsel, that on the finding
of the Tribunal there has been a violation of or non-
compliance with the provision of article 173 of the
Constitution and as respondent No. 2 suffers from a
constitutional disability by reason of his under-age and is
not qualified to be chosen to fill a seat in the Legislative
Assembly of a State, his election can undoubtedly be
declared void under section 100(2)(c) of the Act, but there
was no justification for pronouncing the whole election,
including that of the appellant, to be void. The whole
controversy thus centres round the point as to whether, upon
the facts admitted and proved, the present case comes within
the -purview of sub-section (1)(c) of section 100 of the Act
or of sub-section (2)(c) of the same section. The relevant
portions of section 100 of the Act so far as are material
for our present purpose may be set out as follows:-
"100. Grounds for declaring election to be void-
(1) If the Tribunal is of opinion---
(a) ......................................................
(b) ............................................
(c) that the result of the election has been materially
affected by the improper acceptance or rejection of any
nomination,
the Tribunal shall declare the election to be wholly void.
276
(2) Subject to the provisions of subsection (3), if the
Tribunal is of opinion-
(a)..............................
(b)..............................
(c) that the result of the election has been materially
affected by the improper reception or refusal of a vote or
by the reception of any vote which is void, or by any non-
compliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of
this Act or of any or orders made under this Act or of any
other Act or rules relating to the election, or by any
mistake in the use of any prescribed form,
the Tribunal shall declare the election of the returned
candidate to be void."
The first point for our consideration is whether the
nomination of Vasant Rao was improperly accepted by the
Returning Officer and that has materially affected the
result of the election. It is not suggested on behalf of
the respondent that the nomination paper filed by Vasant Rao
was in any manner defective. It is admitted that the names
and electoral numbers of the candidate and his proposer and
seconder as entered there were the- same as those entered in
the electoral rolls. It is also not disputed that the
nomination paper was received within proper time as is laid
down in section 33, sub-section (4) of the Act. Section 36
of the Act provides for scrutiny of nominations and under
subsection (2) the Returning Officer has got to examine the
nomination papers and decide all objections that may be made
to any nomination and he may either on such objection or oh
his own, motion, after such summary enquiry, if any, as he
thinks necessary, refuse any nomination on any of the
grounds which are specified in the different clauses of the
sub-section. The ground mentioned in clause (a) of the sub-
section is, that the candidate is not qualified to be chosen
to fill the seat under the Constitution or the Act. The
contention of the respondent No. 1 is that the nomination of
Vasant Rao should have been rejected on this ground and as
the Returning Officer did not do that, his act
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277
amounted to an improper acceptance of nomination within the
meaning of section 100(1)(c) of the Act. We do not think
that this contention is sound. 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 which
runs as follows:
"(7) For the purposes of this section-
(a) the production of any certified copy of an entry made
in the electoral roll of any constituency shall be
conclusive evidence of the right of any elector named in
that entry to stand for election or to subscribe a
nomination paper, as the case may be. unless it is proved
that the candidate is disqualified, under the Constitution
or this Act, or that the proposer or seconder, as the case
may be, is disqualified under sub-section (2) of section
33."
In other words, the electoral roll is conclusive as to the
qualification of the elector except where a disqualification
is expressly alleged or proved. The electoral roll in the
case of Vasant Rao did describe him as having been of proper
age and on the face of it therefore he was fully qualified
to be chosen a member of the State Legislative Assembly. As
no objection was taken to his nomination before the
Returning Officer at the. time of scrutiny, the latter was
bound to take the entry in the electoral roll as conclusive
; and if in these circumstances he did not reject the
nomination of Vasant Rao, it cannot be said that this was an
improper acceptance -of nomination on his part which
278
section 100(1)(c) of the Act contemplates. It would have
been an improper acceptance, if the want of qualification
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 of these things
happened, the acceptance of the nomination by the Returning
Officer must be deemed to be a proper acceptance. It is
certainly not final and the Election Tribunal may, on
evidence placed before it, come to a finding that,* the
candidate was not qualified at all. But the election should
be held to be void on the ground of the constitutional
disqualification of the candidate and not on the ground that
his nomination was improperly accepted by the Returning
Officer. In our opinion Mr. Sen is right that a case of
this description comes under sub-section (2)(c) of section
100 and not under sub-section (1)(c) of the section as it
really amounts to holding an election without complying with
the provisions of the Constitution, and that is one of the
grounds specified in clause (c) of subsection (2). The
expression " non-cgmpliance with the provisions of the
Constitution " is in our opinion sufficiently wide to cover
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such cases where the question is not one of improper
acceptance or rejection of the nomination by the Returning
Officer, but there is a fundamental disability in the
candidate to stand for election at all. The English law,
after the passing of the Ballot Act of 1872, is
substantially the same as has been explained in the case of
Stowe v. Jolliffe(1). The register which corresponds to our
electoral roll is -regarded as conclusive except in cases
where persons are prohibited from voting by any statute or
by the common law of Parliament.
It is argued on behalf of the respondent that the
expression" non-compliance as used in subsection (2)(c)
would suggest the idea of not acting according to any rule
or command and that the expression is not quite appropriate
in describing a mere lack of
(1) 9 C.P. 734.
279
qualification. This, we think, would be a narrow way of
looking at the thing. When a person is incapable of being
chosen as a member of a State Assembly under the provisions
of the Constitution itself but has never. theless been
returned as such at an election, it can be said without
impropriety that there has been noncompliance with the
provisions of the Constitution materially affecting the
result of the election. There is no material difference
between " non-compliance " and " non-observance " or "
breach" and this item in clause (c) of sub-section (2) may
be taken as a residuary provision contemplating cases where
there has been infraction of the provisions of the
Constitution or of the Act but which have not been
specifically enumerated in the other portions of the clause.
When a person is not qualified to be elected a member, there
can be no doubt that the Election Tribunal has got to
declare his election to be void. Under section 98 of the
Act this is one of the orders which the Election Tribunal is
competent to make. If it is said that section 100 of the
Act enumerates exhaustively the grounds on which an election
could be held void either as a whole or with regard to the
returned candidate, we think that it would be a correct view
to take that in the case of a candidate who is
constitutionally incapable of being returned as a member
there is non-compliance with the provisions of the
Constitution in the holding of the election and as such sub-
section (2)(c) of section 100 of the Act applies. The
result therefore is that in our opinion the contention of
the appellant succeeds. We allow the appeal in part and
modify the order of the Election Tribunal to this extent
that the election of respondent No. 2 Vasant Rao only is
declared to be void; the election of the appellant however
will stand. We make no order as to costs of this appeal.
Order accordingly.
280