Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ELECTION COMMISSION OF INDIA THROUGH SECRETARY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASHOK KUMAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/08/2000
BENCH:
CJI , R.C. Lahoti & K G Balakrishnan
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
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An interim order passed by the High Court in exercise of
its writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution,
during the currency of the process of election, whereby the
High Court has stayed the Notification issued by the
Election Commission of India containing direction as to the
manner of counting votes and has made directions of its own
on the subject, has been put in issue by the Election
Commission of India filing these appeals by special leave
under Article 136 of the Constitution.
The facts in brief. The 12th Lok Sabha having been
dissolved by the President of India on 26.4.1999, the
Election Commission of India announced the programme for the
General Election to constitute the 13th Lok Sabha. Pursuant
thereof, the polling in the State of Kerala took place on
11.9.1999. The counting of votes was scheduled to take
place on 6.10.1999.
In exercise of the powers conferred by Rule 59A of the
Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, the Election Commission of
India issued a notification published in Kerala Gazette
Extra-ordinary dt. 1st October, 1999 which reads as under:-
NOTIFICATION
No.470/99/JUD-II(H.P.) -- WHEREAS, rule 59A of the
Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961 provides that where the
Election Commission apprehends intimidation and
victimisation of electors in any constituency and it is of
the opinion that it is absolutely necessary that ballot
papers taken out of all ballot boxes used in that
constituency should be mixed before counting, instead of
being counted polling stationwise, it may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, specify such constituency;
2. AND WHEREAS, on such specification under the said
rule 59A of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, the ballot
papers of the specified constituency shall be counted by
being mixed instead of being counted polling stationwise.
3. AND WHEREAS, the Election Commission has carefully
considered the matter and has decided that in the light of
the prevailing situation in the State of Kerala, and in the
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interests of free and fair election and also for safety and
security of electors and with a view to preventing
intimidation and victimisation of electors in that State,
each of the Parliamentary Constituencies in the State except
11-Ernakulam and 20-Trivandrum Parliamentary Constituencies,
may be specified under the said rule 59A for the purposes of
counting votes at the General Election to the House of the
People, 1999 now in progress;
4. NOW, THEREFORE, the Election Commission hereby
specifies each of the said Parliamentary Constituencies
except 11-Ernakulam and 20-Trivandrum Parliamentary
Constituencies in the State of Kerala, as the constituencies
to which the provisions of rule 59A of the Conduct of
Elections Rules, 1961 shall apply for the purposes of
counting of votes at the current General Election to the
House of the People.
BY ORDER
Sd/- (K.J. RAO) Secretary, Election Commission of
India
In Ernakulam and Trivandrum constituencies electronic
voting machines were employed for polling. In all other
constituencies of Kerala voting was through ballot papers.
On 4.10.1999, two writ petitions were filed respectively
by the respondents No.1 & 2 herein, laying challenge to the
validity of the above notification. In O.P. No.24444/1999
filed by respondent No.2, who was a candidate in the
election and has been a member of the dissolved Lok Sabha
having also held the office of a Minister in the Cabinet, it
was alleged that large scale booth capturing had taken place
in the Lok Sabha election at Kannur, Allappuzha and
Kasaragod constituencies. Similar allegations of both
capturing were made as to polling stations throughout the
State. At such polling stations, the polling agents of
Congress party and their allies were not allowed to sit in
the polling booths. In 70 booths polling was above 90%, in
25 booths the percentage of polling was more than 92% and in
5 booths it was 95% and above. The presiding officers and
the electoral officers did not take any action on the
complaints made to them and they were siding with the ruling
party (Left Democratic Front or the LDF). At some places
the representatives of the Congress party were ordered to be
given police protection by the Court but no effective police
protection was given. There are other polling booths where
the percentage of polling has been very low, as less as 7.8%
in booth No.21 at Manivara Government School. No polling
was recorded in booth No.182. In 27 booths polling was 26%.
Complaints were also made to the Chief Election
Commissioner. Under Section 135A of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951, booth capturing is an offence.
O.P. No.24516/1999 was filed by respondent No.1, who
contested from the Allapuzha constituency as an independent
candidate, alleging more or less similar facts as were
alleged in O.P. No.24444/1999.
In both the writ petitions it is alleged that in the
matter of counting the Election Commission of India issued
guidelines on 22nd September, 1999 which directed ___ All
the ballot boxes of one Polling Station will be distributed
to one table for counting the ballot papers. There was no
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change in the circumstances ever since the date of the
above-said guidelines and yet on 28.9.1999 the Election
Commission of India issued the impugned notification.
According to both the writ petitioners, if counting took
place in accordance with the directions issued on 28.9.1999,
valuable piece of evidence would be lost as the allegations
as to booth capturing could best be substantiated if the
counting of votes took place polling stationwise and not by
mixing of votes from the various booths. An interim relief
was sought for by both the writ petitioners seeking
suspension of the notification dated 28.9.1999.
Notice of the writ petition and applications seeking
interim relief was served on the standing counsel for the
State Government and the Government Pleader who represented
the Chief Electoral Officer. Paucity of time and the
urgency required for hearing the matter did not allow time
enough for service of notice on the parties individually.
The prayer for the grant of interim relief was opposed
by the learned counsel appearing for the respondents before
the High Court by placing reliance on Article 329(b) of the
Constitution. According to the writ petitioners before the
High Court, the normal rule was to count votes boothwise
unless exceptional circumstances were shown to exist
whereupon Rule 59A could be invoked. According to the
learned counsel for the respondents before the High Court,
in Ernakulam and Trivandrum parliamentary constituencies,
polling was done with the aid of voting machines and hence
excepting these two constituencies the Election Commission
of India formed an opinion for invoking Rule 59A which the
Election Commission of India was justified, well within its
power to do. In the opinion of the High Court, in view of
large number of allegations of booth capturing (without
saying that such allegations were correct) it was necessary
to have the votes counted boothwise so that the correctness
of the allegations could be found out in an election
petition which would be filed later, on declaration of the
results. The High Court also believed the averment made in
the affidavits filed in support of the stay petitions
wherein it was stated that training was given to the
officers for counting the votes boothwise, i.e. with mixing
or without mixing. Mixing of votes of all booths will take
more time in counting and require engagement of more
officers. The learned Government Pleader was not able to
demonstrate before the High Court if the notification dated
28.9.1999 was published in the official gazette. On a
cumulative effect of the availability of such circumstances,
the High Court by its impugned order dated 4th October, 1999
directed the Election Commission and Chief Electoral Officer
to make directions in such a way that counting was conducted
boothwise consistently with the guidelines dated 22.9.1999.
On 5.10.1999 the Election Commission of India filed the
special leave petitions before this court which were taken
up for hearing upon motion made on behalf of the
petitioner-appellant. A copy of the official gazette dated
1st October, 1999 wherein the notification dated 28.9.1999
was published, was also produced for the perusal of this
court on the affidavit of Shri K.J. Rao, Secretary,
Election Commission of India. This court directed notices
to be issued and in the meanwhile operation of the order of
the Kerala High Court was also directed to be stayed.
When the matter came up for hearing after notice, leave
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was granted for filing the appeals and interim direction
dated 5.10.1999 was confirmed to remain in operation till
the disposal of appeals. At the final hearing it was
admitted at the Bar that in view of the impugned order of
the High Court having been stayed by this court, the
counting had taken place in accordance with the Notification
dated 28.9.1999 made by the Election Commission of India.
In view of these subsequent events, the appeals could be
said to have been rendered infructuous. However, the
learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the issue
arising for decision in these appeals is of wide
significance in as much as several writ petitions are filed
before the High Courts seeking interim directions
interfering with the election proceedings and therefore it
would be in public interest if this court may pronounce upon
the merits of the issue arising for decision in these
appeals. We have found substance in the submission so made
and, therefore, the appeals have been heard on merits.
The issue arising for decision in these appeals is the
jurisdiction of the High Court to entertain petitions under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India and to issue
interim directions after commencement of the electoral
process.
Article 324 of the Constitution contemplates
constitution of the Election Commission in which shall vest
the superintendence, direction and control of the
preparation of the electoral rolls for, and the conduct of,
all elections to Parliament and to the Legislature of every
State and of elections to the offices of President and
Vice-President held under the Constitution. The words
superintendence, direction and control have a wide
connotation so as to include therein such powers which
though not specifically provided but are necessary to be
exercised for effectively accomplishing the task of holding
the elections to their completion. Article 329 of the
Constitution provides as under:-
329. Bar to interference by courts in electoral
matters.- Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution
(a) the validity of any law relating to the delimitation
of constituencies or the allotment of seats to such
constituencies, made or purporting to be made under article
327 or article 328, shall not be called in question in any
court;
(b) no election to either House of Parliament or to the
House or either House of the Legislature of a State shall be
called in question except by an election petition presented
by such authority and in such manner as may be provided for
by or under any law made by the appropriate Legislature.
The term election as occurring in Article 329 has been
held to mean and include the entire process from the issue
of the Notification under Section 14 of the Representation
of the People Act, 1951 to the declaration of the result
under Section 66 of the Act.
The constitutional status of the High Courts and the
nature of the jurisdiction exercised by them came up for the
consideration of this Court in M.V. Elisabeth and Ors. Vs.
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Harwan Investment and Trading Pvt.Ltd., Goa - 1993 Supp (2)
SCC 433. It was held that the High Courts in India are
superior courts of record. They have original and appellate
jurisdiction. They have inherent and supplementary powers.
Unless expressly or impliedly barred and subject to the
appellate or discretionary jurisdiction of Supreme Court,
the High Courts have unlimited jurisdiction including the
jurisdiction to determine their own powers. The following
statement of law from Halsburys Laws of England, [4th Edn.,
Vol.10, para 713] was quoted with approval:- Prima facie,
no matter is deemed to be beyond the jurisdiction of a
superior court unless it is expressly shown to be so, while
nothing is within the jurisdiction of an inferior court
unless it is expressly shown on the face of the proceedings
that the particular matter is within the cognisance of the
particular court.
This Court observed that the jurisdiction of courts is
carved out of sovereign power of the State. People of free
India are the sovereign and the exercise of judicial power
is articulated in the provisions of the Constitution to be
exercised by courts under the Constitution and the laws
thereunder. It cannot be confined to the provisions of
imperial statutes of a bygone age. Access to court which is
an important right vested in every citizen implies the
existence of the power of the Court to render justice
according to law. Where Statute is silent and judicial
intervention is required, Courts strive to redress
grievances according to what is perceived to be principles
of justice, equity and good conscience.
That the power of judicial review is a basic structure
of Constitution ___ is a concept which is no longer in@@
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issue.@@
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Is there any conflict between the jurisdiction conferred
on the High Courts by Article 226 of the Constitution and
the embargoes created by Article 329 and if so how would
they co-exist came up for the consideration of a
Constitution Bench of this Court in N.P.Ponnuswami Vs. The
Returning Officer, Namakkal Constituency & Ors. - AIR 1952
SC 64. The law enunciated in Ponnuswami was extensively
dealt with, also amplified, by another Constitution Bench in
Mohinder Singh Gill and Anr. Vs. The Chief Election
Commissioner, New Delhi and Ors. - AIR 1978 SC 851. The
plenary power of Article 329 has been stated by the
Constitution Bench to be founded on two principles : (1)
The peremptory urgency of prompt engineering of the whole
election process without intermediate interruptions by way
of legal proceedings challenging the steps and stages in
between the commencement and the conclusion; (2) The
provision of a special jurisdiction which can be invoked by
an aggrieved party at the end of the election excludes other
form, the right and remedy being creatures of statutes and
controlled by the Constitution. On these principles the
conclusions arrived at in Ponnuswamis case were so stated
in Mohinder Singh Gills case:-
(1) Having regard to the important functions which the
legislatures have to perform in democratic countries, it has
always been recognised to be a matter of first importance
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that elections should be concluded as early as possible
according to time schedule and all controversial matters and
all disputes arising out of elections should be postponed
till after the elections are over, so that the election
proceedings may not be unduly retarded or protracted.
(2) In conformity with this principle, the scheme of the
election law in this country as well as in England is that
no sigificance should be attached to anything which does not
affect the election; and if any irregularities are
committed while it is in progress and they belong to the
category or class which under the law by which elections are
governed, would have the effect of vitiating the election
and enable the person affected to call it in question, they
should be brought up before a special tribunal by means of
an election petition and not be made the subject of a
dispute before any court while the election is in progress.
However, the Constitution Bench in Mohinder Singh Gills
case could not resist commenting on Ponnuswamis case by@@
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observing (vide para 25) that the non-obstante clause in
Article 329 pushes out Article 226 where the dispute takes
the form of calling in question an election, except in
special situations pointed out at, but left unexplored in
Ponnuswami.
Vide para 29 in Mohinder Singh Gills case, the
Constitution Bench noticed two types of decisions and two
types of challenges : The first relating to proceedings
which interfere with the progress of the election and the
second which accelerate the completion of the election and
acts in furtherance of an election. A reading of Mohinder
Singh Gills case points out that there may be a few
controversies which may not attract the wrath of Article 329
(b). To wit : (i) power vested in a functionary like the
Election Commission is a trust and in view of the same
having been vested in high functionary can be expected to be
discharged reasonably, with objectivity and independence and
in accordance with law. The possibility however cannot be
ruled out where the repository of power may act in breach of
law or arbitrarily or malafide. (ii) A dispute raised may
not amount to calling in question an election if it
subserves the progress of the election and facilitates the
completion of the election. The Election Commission may
pass an order which far from accomplishing and completing
the process of election may thwart the course of the
election and such a step may be wholly unwarranted by the
Constitution and wholly unsustainable under the law. In
Mohinder Singh Gills case, this Court gives an example
(vide para 34). Say after the President notifies the nation
on the holding of elections under Section 15 and the
Commissioner publishes the calendar for the poll under
Section 30 if the latter orders returning officers to accept
only one nomination or only those which come from one party
as distinguished from other parties or independents, which
order would have the effect of preventing an election and
not promoting it, the Courts intervention in such a case
will facilitate the flow and not stop the election stream.
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A third category is not far to visualise. Under Section
81 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 an election
petition cannot be filed before the date of election, i.e.,
the date on which the returned candidate is declared
elected. During the process of election something may have
happened which would provide a good ground for the election
being set aside. Purity of election process has to be
preserved. One of the means for achieving this end is to
deprive a returned candidate of the success secured by him
by resorting to means and methods falling foul of the law of
elections. But by the time the election petition may be
filed and judicial assistance secured material evidence may
be lost. Before the result of the election is declared
assistance of Court may be urgently and immediately needed
to preserve the evidence without in any manner intermeddling
with or thwarting the progress of election. So also there
may be cases where the relief sought for may not interfere
or intermeddle with the process of the election but the
jurisdiction of the Court is sought to be invoked for
correcting the process of election taking care of such
aberrations as can be taken care of only at that moment
failing which the flowing stream of election process may
either stop or break its bounds and spill over. The relief
sought for is to let the election process proceed in
conformity with law and the facts and circumstances be such
that the wrong done shall not be undone after the result of
the election has been announced subject to overriding
consideration that the Courts intervention shall not
interrupt, delay or postpone the ongoing election
proceedings. The facts of the case at hand provide one such
illustration with which we shall deal with a little later.
We proceed to refer a few other decided cases of this court
cited at the Bar.
In Lakshmi Charan Sen Vs. A.K.M. Hassan Uzzaman (AIR
1985 SC 1233) writ petitions under Article 226 of the
Constitution were filed before the High Court asking for the
writs of mandamus and certiorari, directing that the
instructions issued by the Election Commission should not be
implemented by the Chief Electoral Officer and others; that
the revision of electoral rolls be undertaken de novo; that
claims, objections and appeals in regard to the electoral
roll be heard and disposed of in accordance with the rules;
and that, no notification be issued under S.15(2) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 calling for election
to the West Bengal Legislative Assembly, until the rolls
were duly revised. The High Court entertained the petitions
and gave interim orders. The writ petitioners had also laid
challenge to validity of several provisions of Acts and
Rules, which challenge was given up before the Supreme
Court. The Constitution Bench held though the High Court
was justified in entertaining the writ petition and issuing
a rule therein since, the writ petition apparently contained
a challenge to several provisions of Election Laws, it was
not justified in passing any order which would have the
effect of postponing the elections which were then imminent.
Even assuming, therefore, that the preparation and
publication of electoral rolls are not a part of the process
of election within the meaning of Article 329(b), we must
reiterate our view that the High Court ought not to have
passed the impugned interim orders, whereby it not only
assumed control over the election process but, as a result
of which, the election to the Legislative Assembly stood the
risk of being postponed indefinitely.
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In Election Commission of India Vs. State of Haryana -
AIR 1984 SC 1406 the Election Commission fixed the date of
election and proposed to issue the requisite notification.
The Government of Haryana filed a writ petition in the High
Court and secured an ex-parte order staying the issuance and
publication of the notification by the Election Commission
of India under Sections 30, 56 and 150 of the Representation
of the People Act, 1951. This Court deprecated granting of
such ex-parte orders. During the course of its judgment
(vide para 8) the majority speaking through the Chief
Justice observed that it was not suggested that the Election
Commission could exercise its discretion in an arbitrary or
mala fide manner; arbitrariness and mala fide destroy the
validity and efficacy of all orders passed by public
authorities. The minority view was recorded by M.P.
Thakkar, J. quoting the following extract from A.K.M.
Hassan Uzzaman (1982) 2 SCC 218 :- The imminence of the
electoral process is a factor which must guide and govern
the passing of orders in the exercise of the High Courts
writ jurisdiction. The more imminent such process, the
greater ought to be the reluctance of the High Court to do
anything, or direct anything to be done, which will postpone
that process indefinitely by creating a situation in which,
the Government of a State cannot be carried on in accordance
with the provisions of the Constitution.
and held that even according to Hassans case the Court
has the power to issue an interim order which has the effect
of postponing an election but it must be exercised sparingly
(with reluctance) particularly when the result of the order
would be to postpone the installation of a democractic
elected popular Government.
In Digvijay Mote Vs. Union of India & Ors. - (1993) 4
SCC 175 this Court has held that the powers conferred on the
Election Commission are not unbridled; judicial review will
be permissible over the statutory body, i.e., the Election
Commission exercising its functions affecting public law
rights though the review will depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case; the power conferred on the
Election Commission by Article 324 has to be exercised not
mindlessly nor mala fide nor arbitrarily nor with partiality
but in keeping with the guidelines of the rule of law and
not stultifying the Presidential notification nor existing
legislation.
Anugrah Narain Singh and Anr. Vs. State of U.P. &
Ors. - 1996 (6) SCC 303 is a case relating to municipal
elections in the State of Uttar Pradesh. Barely one week
before the voting was scheduled to commence, in the writ
petitions complaining of defects in the electoral rolls and
de-limitation of constituencies and arbitrary reservation of
constituencies for scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and
backward classes the High Court passed interim order
stopping the election process. This Court quashed such
interim orders and observed that if the election is imminent
or well under way, the Court should not intervene to stop
the election process. If this is allowed to be done, no
election will ever take place because some one or the other
will always find some excuse to move the Court and stall the
elections. The importance of holding elections at regular
intervals cannot be over- emphasised. If holding of
elections is allowed to stall on the complaint of a few
individuals, then grave injustice will be done to crores of
other voters who have a right to elect their representatives
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to the democratic bodies.
In C. Subrahmanyam Vs. K. Ramanjaneyullu and Ors. -
(1998) 8 SCC 703 this Court has held that non-compliance of
a provision of the Act governing the elections being a
ground for an election petition, the writ petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India should not have
been entertained.
In Mohinder Singh Gills case (supra) the Election
Commission had cancelled a poll and directed a re-polling.
The Constitution Bench held that a writ petition challenging
the cancellation coupled with repoll amounted to calling in
question a step in election and is therefore barred by
Article 329 (b). However, vide para 32, it has been
observed that had it been a case of mere cancellation
without an order for repoll, the course of election would
have been thwarted (by the Election Commission itself) and
different considerations would have come into play.
Election disputes are not just private civil disputes
between two parties. Though there is an individual or a few
individuals arrayed as parties before the Court but the
stakes of the constituency as a whole are on trial.
Whichever way the lis terminates it affects the fate of the
constituency and the citizens generally. A conscientious
approach with overriding consideration for welfare of the
constituency and strengthening the democracy is called for.
Neither turning a blind eye to the controversies which have
arisen nor assuming a role of over- enthusiastic activist
would do. The two extremes have to be avoided in dealing
with election disputes.
Section 100 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951 needs to be read with Article 329 (b), the former being
a product of the later. The sweep of Section 100 spelling
out the legislative intent would assist us in determining
the span of Article 329 (b) though the fact remains that any
legislative enactment cannot curtail or override the
operation of a provision contained in the Constitution.
Section 100 is the only provision within the scope of which
an attack on the validity of the election must fall so as to
be a ground available for avoiding an election and depriving
the successful candidate of his victory at the polls. The
Constitution Bench in Mohinder Singh Gills case (vide para
33) asks us to read Section 100 widely as covering the
whole basket of grievances of the candidates. Sub-clause
(iv) of clause (d) of sub-section (1) of Section 100 is a
residual catch-all clause. Whenever there has been
non-compliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of
the Representation of the People Act, 1951 or of any rules
or orders made thereunder if not specifically covered by any
other preceding clause or sub-clause of the Section it shall
be covered by sub-clause (iv). The result of the election
insofar as it concerns a returned candidate shall be set
aside for any such non-compliance as abovesaid subject to
such non-compliance also satisfying the requirement of the
result of the election having been shown to have been
materially affected insofar as a returned candidate is
concerned. The conclusions which inevitably follow are: in
the field of election jurisprudence, ignore such things as
do not materially affect the result of the election unless
the requirement of satisfying the test of material effect
has been dispensed with by the law; even if the law has
been breached and such breach satisfies the test of material
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effect on the result of the election of the returned
candidate yet postpone the adjudication of such dispute till
the election proceedings are over so as to achieve, in
larger public interest, the goal of constituting a
democratic body without interruption or delay on account of
any controversy confined to an individual or group of
individuals or single constituency having arisen and
demanding judicial determination.
To what extent Article 329 (b) has an overriding effect
on Article 226 of the Constitution? The two Constitution
Benches have held that Representation of the People Act,
1951 provides for only one remedy; that remedy being by an
election petition to be presented after the election is over
and there is no remedy provided at any intermediate stage.
The non-obstante clause with which Article 329 opens pushes
out Article 226 where the dispute takes the form of calling
in question an election (see para 25 of Mohinder Singh
Gills case, supra). The provisions of the Constitution and
the Act read together do not totally exclude the right of a
citizen to approach the Court so as to have the wrong done
remedied by invoking the judicial forum; nevertheless the
lesson is that the election rights and remedies are
statutory, ignore the trifles even if there are
irregularities or illegalities, and knock the doors of the
courts when the election proceedings in question are over.
Two-pronged attack on anything done during the election
proceedings is to be avoided ___ one during the course of
the proceedings and the other at its termination, for such
two-pronged attack, if allowed, would unduly protract or
obstruct the functioning of democracy.
The founding fathers of the Constitution have
consciously employed use of the words no election shall be
called in question in the body of Section 329 (b) and these
words provide the determinative test for attracting
applicability of Article 329 (b). If the petition presented
to the Court calls in question an election the bar of
Article 329 (b) is attracted. Else it is not.
For convenience sake we would now generally sum up our
conclusions by partly restating what the two Constitution
Benches have already said and then adding by clarifying what
follows therefrom in view of the analysis made by us
hereinabove:-
1) If an election, (the term election being widely
interpreted so as to include all steps and entire
proceedings commencing from the date of notification of
election till the date of declaration of result) is to be
called in question and which questioning may have the effect
of interrupting, obstructing or protracting the election
proceedings in any manner, the invoking of judicial remedy
has to be postponed till after the completing of proceedings
in elections.
2) Any decision sought and rendered will not amount to
calling in question an election if it subserves the
progress of the election and facilitates the completion of
the election. Anything done towards completing or in
furtherance of the election proceedings cannot be described
as questioning the election.
3) Subject to the above, the action taken or orders
issued by Election Commission are open to judicial review on
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the well-settled parameters which enable judicial review of
decisions of statutory bodies such as on a case of mala fide
or arbitrary exercise of power being made out or the
statutory body being shown to have acted in breach of law.
4) Without interrupting, obstructing or delaying the
progress of the election proceedings, judicial intervention
is available if assistance of the Court has been sought for
merely to correct or smoothen the progress of the election
proceedings, to remove the obstacles therein, or to preserve
a vital piece of evidence if the same would be lost or
destroyed or rendered irretrievable by the time the results
are declared and stage is set for invoking the jurisdiction
of the Court.
5) The Court must be very circumspect and act with
caution while entertaining any election dispute though not
hit by the bar of Article 329(b) but brought to it during
the pendency of election proceedings. The Court must guard
against any attempt at retarding, interrupting, protracting
or stalling of the election proceedings. Care has to be
taken to see that there is no attempt to utilise the courts
indulgence by filing a petition outwardly innocuous but
essentially a subterfuge or pretext for achieving an
ulterior or hidden end. Needless to say that in the very
nature of the things the Court would act with reluctance and
shall not act except on a clear and strong case for its
intervention having been made out by raising the pleas with
particulars and precision and supporting the same by
necessary material.
These conclusions, however, should not be construed as a
summary of our judgment. These have to be read alongwith
the earlier part of our judgment wherein the conclusions
have been elaborately stated with reasons.
Coming back to the case at hand it is not disputed that
the Election Commission does have power to supervise and
direct the manner of counting of votes. Till 22nd
September, 1999 the Election Commission was of the opinion
that all the ballot boxes of one polling station will be
distributed to one table for counting the ballot papers and
that would be the manner of counting of votes. On 28.9.1999
a notification under Rule 59A came to be issued. It is not
disputed that the Commission does have power to issue such
notification. What is alleged is that the exercise of power
was mala fide as the ruling party was responsible for large
scale booth capturing and it was likely to lose the success
of its candidates secured by committing an election offence
if material piece of evidence was collected and preserved by
holding polling stationwise counting and such date being
then made available to the Election Tribunal. Such a
dispute could have been raised before and decided by the
High Court if the dual test was satisfied : (i) the order
sought from the Court did not have the effect of retarding,
interrupting, protracting or stalling the counting of votes
and the declaration of the results as only that much part of
the election proceedings had remained to be completed at
that stage, (ii) a clear case of mala fides on the part of
Election Commission inviting intervention of the Court was
made out, that being the only ground taken in the petition.
A perusal of the order of the High Court shows that one of
the main factors which prevailed with the High Court for
passing the impugned order was that the learned Government
Advocate who appeared before the High Court on a short
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notice, and without notice to the parties individually, was
unable to tell the High Court if the notification was
published in the Government Gazette. The power vested in
the Election Commission under Rule 59A can be exercised only
by means of issuing notification in the official gazette.
However, the factum of such notification having been
published was brought to the notice of this Court by
producing a copy of the notification. Main pillar of the
foundation of the High Courts order thus collapsed. In the
petitions filed before the High Court there is a bald
assertion of mala fides. The averments made in the petition
do not travel beyond a mere ipsi dixit of the two
petitioners that the Election Commission was motivated to
oblige the ruling party in the State. From such bald
assertion an inference as to mala fides could not have been
drawn even prima facie. On the pleadings and material made
available to the High Court at the hearing held on a short
notice we have no reason to doubt the statement made by the
Election Commission and contained in its impugned
notification that the Election Commission had carefully
considered the matter and then decided that in the light of
the prevailing situation in the State and in the interests
of free and fair election and also for safety and security
of electors and with a view to preventing intimidation and
victimisation of electors in the State, a case for direction
attracting applicability of Rule 59A for counting of votes
in the constituencies of the State, excepting the two
constituencies where electronic voting machines were
employed, was made out. Thus, we find that the two
petitioners before the High Court had failed to make out a
case for intervention by the High Court amidst the progress
of election proceedings and hence the High Court ought not
to have made the interim order under appeal though the
impugned order did not have the effect of retarding,
protracting, delaying or stalling the counting of votes or
the progress of the election proceedings. The High Court
was perhaps inclined to intervene so as to take care of an
alleged aberration and maintain the flow of election stream
within its permissible bounds.
The learned counsel for the Election Commission
submitted that in spite of the ballot papers having been
mixed and counting of votes having taken place in accordance
with Rule 59A it would not be difficult for the learned
Designated Election Judge to order a re-count of polls and
find out polling-wise break-up of the ballots if the
election- petitioner may make out a case for directing a
re-count by the Court. In his submission the grievance
raised before the High Court was fully capable of being
taken care of at the trial of the election petition to be
filed after the declaration of the results and so the bar of
Article 329(b) was attracted. In this connection he invited
our attention to Chaper XIV-B Counting of Votes of
Handbook for Returning Officers (1998) issued by Election
Commission of India. This is an aspect of the case on which
we would not like to express any opinion as the requisite
pleadings and material are not available before us.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeals are allowed. The
impugned orders of the High Court are set aside. No order
as to the costs.
We make it clear that anything said in this order shall
not prejudice any plea raised or any issue arising for
decision in any election petition which has been filed or
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may be filed and the same shall be decided on its own merits
un-obsessed by any observation made herein.