Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 805 of 1993
PETITIONER:
T.N.SESHAN CHIEF ELECTION COMMISSIONER OF INDIA ETC.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/07/1995
BENCH:
A.M.AHMADI CJI & JAGDISH SARAN VERMA & N.P.SINGH & S.P.BHARUCHA & M.K.MUKHERJEE
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
W I T H
WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO.791 OF 1993
Cho S. Ramaswamy
versus
Union of India & others
W I T H
WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO.825 OF 1993
B.K. Rai & Another
versus
Union of India & Others
W I T H
WRIT PETITION NO.268 OF 1994
Common Cause
A Registered Society
versus
Union of India & Others
DELIVERED BY:
A.M. AHMADI, J.
AHMADI, CJI
The President of India, in exercise of powers conferred
upon him by clause (1) of Arlicle 123 of the Conslilution of
India, promulgated an Ordinance (No.32 of 1993) entitled
"The Chief Election Commissioner and other Election
Commissioners (Condition of Service) Amendment Ordinance,
1993" (hereinafter called ’the Ordinance’) to amend "The
Chief Election Commissioner and other Commissioners
(Condition of Service) Act, 1991" (hereinafter called "the
Act’). This Ordinance was published in the Gazette of India
on October 1, 1993. Before we notice the amendments made in
the 1991 Act, by the said Ordinance it may be appropriate to
notice the provisions of the 1991 Act. As the long title of
the Act suggests it lays down the conditions of service of
the Chief Election Commissioner (hereinafter called ’the
CEC’) and Election Commissioners (hereinafter called ’the
ECs’) appointed under Article 324 of the Constitution of
India. Section 3(1) provides that the CEC shall be paid a
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salary which is equal to the salary of a Judge of the
Supreme Court of India. Section 3(2) says that an EC shall
be paid a salary which is equal to the salary of a Judge of
a High Court Section 4 lays down the term of office of the
CEC and ECs to be six years from the date on which the
incumbent assumes charge of his office provided that the
incumbent shall vacate his office on his attaining, in the
case of the CEC, the age of 65 years and the EC the age of
62 years, notwithtanding the fact that the term of office is
for a period of six years. Section 8 extends the benefit of
travelling allowance, rent free residence, exemption from
payment of income-tax on the value of such rent free
residence, conveyance facility, sumptuary allowance, medical
facitilies, etc., as applicable to a Judge of the Supreme
Court or a Judge of the High Court to the CEC and the EC,
respectively, By the Ordinance the title of the Act was
sought to be amended by substituting the words "and to
provide for the procedure for transaction of business by the
Election Commission and for matters" for the words "and for
matters". By the substitution of these words the long title
to the Act. got, further elongaled as an Act, to delermine
the conditions of service of the CEC and other ECs and to
provide for the procedure for transaction of business by the
Election Commission and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto. In section 1 of the Principal Act for
the words and brackets "the Chief Election Commissioner and
other Election Commissioners (Condition of Service)" the
words and brackets "the Election Commission (Conditions of
Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of
Business)" came to be substituted with the result that the
amended provision read as the Election Commission (Condition
of Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of
Business) Act, 1991. The definition clause in section 2 also
underwent a change, in that, the extant clause (b) came to
be renumbered as clause (c) and a new clause (b) came to be
substituted by which the expression "Election Commission"
came to be defined as Election Commission referred to in
Article 324 of the Constitution of India. Consequent.
Changes were also made elsewhere. In sub-section (1) of
section 3, after the words "Chief Election Commissioner",
the words "and other Election Commissioners" came to be
inserted with the result they came to be placed at par in
regard to salary payable to them and sub-section (2) came to
be omitted. In section 4 the first proviso came to be
substituted as under :
"Provided that where the Chief Election
Commissioner or an Election Commissioner
affains the age of 65 years before the
expiry of the said term of six years, he
shall vacate his office on the date on
which he attains the said age."
Thus the age of superannuation of both the CEC and the ECs
was fixed at 65 years. If they attain the age of 65 years
before completing their tenure of six years they would in
view of the proviso have to vacate office on attaining the
age of 65 years. In Section 6, sub-section (2), after the
words "Chief Election Commissioner" the words "or an
Election Commissioner" came to be inserted and for the words
"sub-section (4)" the words "sub-section (3)" came to be
substituted. It further provided for the deletion of sub-
section (3) and for renumbering sub-section (4) as sub-
section (3) and provided that in clause (b) the words "or as
the case may be, 62 years" shall be omitted. After section 8
in the Principal Act, by the Ordinance a new Chapter came to
be inserted comprising of two provisions, namely, Sections 9
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and 10. The new Chapter so inserted is relevant for our
purpose and may be reproduced at this stage:
"CHAPTER III
TRANSACTION OF BUSINESS OF ELECTION
COMMISSION
9. The business of the Election
Commission shall be transacted in
accordance with the provisions of this
Act.
10(1) The Election Commission may, by
unanimous decision, regulate the
procedure for transaction of the
business as also allocation of the
business amongst the Chief Election
Commissioner and other Election
Commissioners
(2) Save as provided in sub section (1)
all business of the Election Commission
shall, as far as possible, be transacted
unanimously.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-
section (2), if the Chief Election
Commissioner differ in opinion on any
matter, such matter shall be decided
according to the opinion of the
majority."
On the day of publication of the Ordinance, 1st
October, 1993, the President of India, in exercise of powers
conferred by clause 2 of Article 324 of the constitution of
India, fixed, until further orders, the number of Election
Commissioners (other than the CEC) at two. By a further
notification of even date the President was pleased to
appoint Mr.M.S.Gill and Mr.G.V.G. Krishnamurthy as Election
Commissioners with effect from 1st October, 1993.
The first salvo was fired by Cho. S. Ramaswamy, a
journalist, on 13th October, 1993. By a Writ Petition
(Civil) No.791 of 1993 he prayed for a declaration that the
Ordinance was arbitrary, unconstitutional and void and for
issuance of a writ of certiorari to quash the notifications
fixing the number of Election Commissioners at two and the
appointment of Mr.M.S.Gill and Mr.G.V.G.Krishnamurthy made
thereunder. This was followed by Writ Petition No.805 of
1993 by the incumbent CEC himself claiming similar reliefs
on 26th October, 1993, Two other writ petitions were also
filed questioning the validity of the Ordinance and the
notifications referred to earlier. Three of these writ
petitions came up for preliminary hearing on November 15,
1993. While admitting the writ petitions and directing rule
to issue in all of them, in the writ petition filed by the
CEC notice on the application for interim stay as well as
for production of documents was ordered to issue and an ad-
interim order to the following effect was passed:
"Until further orders, to ensure
smooth and effective working of the
Commission and also to avoid confusion
both in the administration as well as in
the electoral process, we direct that
the Chief Election Commissioner shall
remain in complete overall control of
the Commission’s work. He may asoertain
the views of other Commissioners or such
of them as he chooses, on the issues
that may come up before the Commission
from time to time. However, he will not
be bound their views. It is also made
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clear that the Chief Election
Commissioner alone will be entitled to
issue instructions to the Commission’s
staff as well as to the outside agencies
and that no other Commissioner will
issue such instructions."
By a subsequent order dated 15.12.1993, after hearing the
learned Allorney General for the Union of India and the
learned Advocates General for the States of Maharashtra and
West Bengal, the Court directed that all the State
Governments who want to be heard will be heard through their
counsel and further directed that the interim order shall
continue till further orders. iastly, it observed that since
questions involved related to the interpretation of Article
324 in particular, the matters should be placed before a
Constitution Bench.
During the pendency of the aforesaid Writ Petitions,
the Ordinance became an Act (Act No.4 of 1994) on 4th
January, 1994 without any change.
Before we proceed further it would be proper to notice
Article 324 of the Constitution. It reads as under:
"324. Superintendence, direction and
control of elections to be vested in an
Election Commission.-- (1) The
superintendence, direction and control
of the preparation of the electoral
rolls for, and the conduct of, all
elections to Parliament and to the
Iegislature of every state and of
elections to the offices of President
and Vice-President held under this
Constitution shall be vested in a
Commission (referred to in this
Constitution as the Election
Commission).
(2) The Election Commission shall
consist of the Chief Election
Commissioner and such number of other
Election Commissioner and such number of
other Election Commissioners, if any, as
the President may from time to time fix
and the appointment of the Chief
Election Commissioner and other Election
Commissioners shall, subject to the
provisions of any law made in that
behalf by Parliament, be made by the
President.
(3) When any other Election Commissioner
is so appointed the Chief Election
Commissioner shall act, as the Chairman
of the Election Commission.
(4) Before each general election to the
House of the People and to the
legislative Assembly of each State, and
before the first general election and
thereafter before each biennial election
to the Legislative Council of each State
having such Council, the President may
also appoint after consulation with the
Election Commission such Regional
Commissioners as he may consider
necessary to assist the Election
Commission in the performance of the
functions conferred on the Commission by
clause (1).
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(5) Subject to the provisions of any law
made by Parliament, the conditions of
service and tenure of office of the
Election Commissioners and the Regional
Commissioners shall be such as the
President may by rule determine:
Provided that the Chief Election
Commissioner shall not be removed from
his office except in like manner and on
the like grounds as a Judge of the
Supreme Court and the conditions of
service of the Chief Election
Commissioner shall not be varied to his
disadvantage after his appointment:
Provided further that any other Election
Commissioner or a Regional Commissioner
shall not be removed from office except
on the recommendation of the Chief
Election Commissioner.
(6) The President, or the Governor of a
State, shall, when so requested by the
Election Commission, make available to
the Election Commission or to a Regional
Commissioner such staff as may be
necessary for the discharge of the
functions conferred on the Election
Commission by clause (1)."
The abridged factual matrix on which the constitutional
validily of the Ordinance (now Act) and the consequential
orders and appointments of the ECs have been questioned in
the above petitions may be broadly indicated at this stage
as follows:
The present ECE claims that after his appointment on
12.12.1990 he insisted on strict compliance with the model
Code of Conduct by all political parties and candidates for
election and look stern action against infractions thereof
regardless of the political party or candidate involved. The
ruling party at the centre was irked as a few of the bye-
elections of the ruling party leaders/cabinet, ministers
were put off for the Government’s failure to deploy
sufficient staff and police force for the elections and the
ruling party lost the elections in Tripura on account of
strict action taken by the CEC against erring officials &
consequent postponement of elections. The ruling party made
attempts to influence the CEC but could not do so as he did
not allow the emissaries of the party to meet him. The CEC
also filed a writ petition in the Supreme Court for
enforcing the constitutional right of the Election
Commission for staff and force. The CEC declined to postpone
elections for four State assemblies despite requests from
the ruling party,including the Prime Minister, got irritated
with such unbending attitude of the CEC. The ruling party,
therefore, with a view to freeze the powers of the CEC and
to prevent him from taking any action against violation of
code of conduct chose to amend the law and misused the power
of the President under Article 324(2) of the Constitution by
issuing the notification dated 1st October, 1993 fixing the
number of ECs at two and simultaneously appointing Mr. M.S.
Gill & Mr. G.V.G. Krishnamurthy as the other two ECs.
The CEC not only impotes malafides for the issuance of
the aforesaid notifications & appointments but also alleges
that the intention behind issuing the Ordinance was to
sideline the CEC and to erode his authority so that the
ruling party at the centre could extract favourable orders
by using the services of the newly appointed ECs.
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Sections 9 & 10 of the Ordinance (now Act) are
challenged as ultra vires the Constitution on the plea that
they are inconsistent with the scheme underlying Article 324
of the Constitution, in that, the said Article 324 did not
give any power to the Parliament to frame rules for
transaction of business of the Election Commission. Section
10 is also challenged on the ground that it is arbitrary and
unworkable, So also the notification fixing the number of
other ECs at two is challenged as arbitrary and violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution.
The writ petitions are resisted by the respondents,
viz., the Union of India and the two other ECs, Mr. M.S.
Gill & Mr. G.V.G. Krishnamurthy as wholly misconceived. It
is contended on behalf of the Union Government that various
advisory bodies had from time to time called for a multi-
member body had any connection with the alleged discomfiture
of the ruling party at the centre on account of the stiff
attitude of the CEC. It is further stated that the multi-
member body would not have been able to function without a
supporting statute providing for dealing with different
situations likely to arise in the course of transaction of
business. The Ordinance was framed keeping in view the
observations made in this regard by this Court in the case
of S.S. Dhanoa Vs. U.O.T. & Ors. (1991) 3 SCC 567. It is
strongly denied that the changes in the law were made
malafide with a view to laming the CEC into submission or to
erode his authority by providing that, in the event of a
difference of opinion, the majority view would prevail. It
is contended that the plain language of Article 324(2)
envisages a multi-member Commission and, therefore, any
exercise undertaken to achieve that objective would be
consistent with the scheme of the said constitutional
provision and could, therefore, never be branded as malafide
or ultravires the Constitution. A provision to the
effect that, in the event of a difference of opinion between
the three members of the Election Commission, the majority
view should prevail is consistent with democratic principles
and can never be described as arbitrary or ultravires
Article 14 of the Constitution. The Union of India, has,
therefore, contended that the writ petitions are wholly
misconceived and deserve to be dismissed with costs.
The Preamble of our Constitution proclaims that we are
a Democratic Republic. Democracy being the basic feature of
our constitutional set up, there can be no two opinion that
free and fair elections to our legislative bodies alone
would guarantee the growth of a healthy democracy in the
country. In order to ensure the purity of the election
process it was thought by our Constitution-makers that the
responsibility to hold free and fair elections in the
country should be entrusted to an independent body which
would be insulated from political and/or executive
interference. It is inherent in a democratic set up that the
agency which is entrusted the task of holding elections to
the legislatures should be fully insulated so that it can
function as an independent agency free from external
pressures from the party in power or executive of the day.
This objective is achieved by the setting up of an Election
Commission, a permanent body, under Article 324(1) of the
Constitution. The superintendence, direction and control of
the entire election process in the country has been vested
under the said clause in a commission called the Election
Commission. Clause (2) of the said article then provides for
the constitution of the Election Commission by providing
that it shall consist of the CEC and such number of ECs, if
any, as the President, may from time to time fix. It is thus
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obvious from the plain language of this clause that the
Election Commission is composed of the CEC and, when they
have been appointed, the ECs. The office of the CEC is
envisaged to be a permanent fixture but that cannot be said
of the ECs as is made manifest from the use of the words "if
any". Dr. Ambedkar while explaining the purport of this
clause during the debate in the Constituent Assembly said:
"Sub-clause (2) says that there shall be
a Chief Election Commissioner and such
other Election Commissioners as the
President may, from time to time
appoint. There were two alternatives
before the Drafting Committee, namely,
either to have a permanent, body
consisting of four or five members of
the Election Commission who would
continue in office throughout without
any break, or to permit the President to
have an ad hoc body appointed at the
time when there is an election on the
anvil. The Committee has steered a
middle course. What the Drafting
Committee Proposes by sub-clause (2) is
to have permanently in office one man
called the Chief Election Commissioner,
so that the skeleton machinery would
always be available."
It is crystal clear from the plain language of the said
clause (2) that our Constitution-makers realised the need to
set up an independent body or commission which would be
permanently in session with atleast one officer, namely, the
CEC, and left it to the President to further add to the
Commission such number of ECs as he may consider appropriate
from time to time. Clause (3) of the said article makes it
clear that when the Election Commission is a multi-member
body the CEC shall act as its Chairman. What will be his
role as a Chairman has not been specifically spell out by
the said article and we will deal with this question
hereafter. Clause (4) of the said article further provides
for the appointment of RCs to assist the Election Commission
in the performance of its functions set out in clause (1).
This, in brief, is the scheme of Article 324 insofar as the
constitution of the Election Commission is concerned.
We may now briefly notice the position of each
functionary of the Election Commission. In the first place,
clause (2) states that the appointment of the CEC and other
ECs shall, subject to any law made in that behalf by
Parliament, be made by the President. Thus the President
shall be the appointing authority. Clause (5) provides that
subject to any law made by Parliament, The conditions of
service and the lenure of office of the RCs shall be such as
may be determined by rule made by the president. of course
the RCs do not form part of the Election Commission but. are
appointed merely to help the commission, that is to say, the
CEC and the ECs if any. As we have pointed out earlier the
lenure, salaries, allowances and other perquisites of the
CEC and ECs had been fixed under the Act as equivalent to a
Judge of the Supreme Court and the High Court, respectively.
This has undergone a change after the ordinance which has so
amended the Act as to place them on par. However,the proviso
to clause (4) of Article 324 says (i) the CEC shall not be
removed from his office except in like manner and on the
like grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court and (ii) the
condition of service of the CEC shall not be varied to his
disadvantage after his appointment. These two limitations on
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the power of Parliament are intended to protect the
independence of the CEC from political and/or executive
interference. In the case of Ecs as well as Rcs the second
proviso to clause(5) provides that they shall not be removed
from office except on the recommendation of the CEC. It may
also be noticed that while under clause (4), before the
appointment of the RCs, consultation with the Election
Commission (not CEC) is necessary, there is no such
requirement in the case of appointments of ECs. The
provision that the ECs and the RCs once appointed cannot be
removed from office before the expiry of their tenure except
on the recommendation of the CEC ensures their independence.
The scheme of Article 324 in this behalf is that after
insulating the CEC by the first proviso to clause (5), the
ECs and the RCs have been assured independence of
functioning by providing that they cannot be removed except
on the recommendation of the CEC. of course, the
recommendation for removal must be based on intelligible,
and cogent considerations which would have relation to
efficient functioning of the Election Commission. That is so
because this privilege has been conferred on the CEC to
ensure that the ECs as well as the RCs are not at the mercy
of political or executive bosses of the day. It is necessary
to relise that this check on the executive’s power to remove
is built into the second proviso to clause (5) to safeguard
the independence of not only these functionaries but the
Election Commission as a body. If, therefore, the power were
to be exercisable by the CEC as per his whim and caprice,
the CEC himself would become an instrument of oppression and
would destroy the independence of the ECs and the RCs if
they are required to function under the threat of the CEC
recommending their removal. It is, therefore, needless to
emphasise that the CEC must exercise this power only when
there exist valid reasons which are conducive to efficient
functioning of the Election Commission. This, briefly
stated, indicates the status of the various functionaries
constituting the Election Commission.
The concept of plurality is writ large on the face of
Article 324, clause (2) whereof clearly envisages a multi-
member Election Commission comprising the CEC and one or
more ECs. Visualising such a situation, clause (3) provides
that in the case of a multi-member body the CEC will be its
Chairman. If a multi-member Election Commission was not
contemplated where was the need to provide in clause (3) for
the CEC to act as its Chairman? There is, therefore, no room
for doubt that the Election Commission could be a multi-
member body. If Article 324 does contemplate a multi-member
body, the impugned notifications providing for the other two
ECs cannot be faulted solely on that ground. We may here
quote, with approval, the observations of a two-Judge Bench
of this Court in S.S.Dhanoa v. Union of India and Others
(1991) 3 SCC 567, vide paragraph 26:
"There is no doubt that two heads are
better than one, and particularly when
an institution like the Election
Commission is entrusted with vital
functions, and is armed with exclusive
uncontrolled powers to execute them, it
is both necessary and desirable that the
powers are not exercised by one
individual, however, all-wise he may be.
It ill conforms the tenets of the
democratic rule. It is true that the
independence of an institution depends
upon the persons who main it and not on
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their number. A single individual may
sometimes prove capable of withstanding
all the pulls and pressures, which many
may not. However, when vast powers are
exercised by an institution which is
accountable to none, it is politic to
entrust its affairs to more hands than
one. It helps to assure judiciousness
and want of arbitrariness. The fact,
however, remains that where more
individuals than one, man an
institution, their roles have to be
clearly defined, if the functioning of
the institution is not to come to a
naught."
It must be realised that these observations were made,
notwithstanding the fact that the learned judges were alive
to and aware of the circumstances in which the Persident was
required in that case to rescind the notifications creating
two posts of ECs and appointing the petitioner Dhanoa and
another to them.
There can be no dispute, and indeed there never was,
that the Election Commission must be an independent body. It
is also clear from the scheme of Article 324 that the said
body shall have the CEC as a permanent incumbent and under
clause (2) such number of other ECs, if any, as the
President may deem appropriate to appoint. The scheme of
Article 324, therefore, is that there shall be a permanent
body to be called the Election Commission with a permanent
incumbent to be called the CEC. The Election Commission can
therefore be a single-member body or a multi-member body if
the President considers it necessary to appoint one or more
ECs. Upto this point there is no difficulty. The argument
that a multi-member Election Commission would be unworkable
and should not, therefore, be appointed must be stated to be
rejected. Our Constitution-makers have provided for a multi-
member body. They saw the need to provide for such a body.
If the submission that a multi-member body would be
unworkable is accepted it would tantamount to destroying or
nullifying clauses (2) and (3) of Article 324 of the
Constitution. Strong reliance was, however, placed on
Dhanoa’s case to buttress the argument. The facts of that
case were just the reverse of the facts of the present case.
In that case the President by a notification issued in
pursuance of clause (2) of Article 324 fixed the number of
ECs, besides the CEC, at two and a few days thereafter by a
separate notification appointed the petitioner and one
another as ECs. By yet another notification issued under
clause (5) of Article 324 the President made rules to
regulate their lenure and conditions of service. After
watching the functioning of the multi-member body for about
a couple of months, the President issued two notifications
rescinding with immediate effect the notification by which
the two posts of ECs were created and the notification by
which the petitioner and one another were appointed thereto.
The petitioner S.S. Dhanoa challenged the notifications
rescinding the earlier notification firstly on the ground
that once appointed an EC continues in office for the full
term determined by rules made under clause (5) of Article
324 and, in any event, the petitioner could not be removed
except on the recommendation of the CEC. At the same time it
was also contended that the notifications were issued
malafide under the advise of the CEC to get rid of the
petitioner and his colleague because the CEC was from the
very begining ill-disposed or opposed to the ceration of the
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posts of ECs. According to the petitioner, there were
differences of opinion between the CEC on the one hand and
the ECs on the other and since the CEC desired that he
should have the sole power to decide the did not like the
association of the ECs.
The principal question which the Division Bench of this
Court was called upon to decide was whether the President
was justified in rescinding the earlier notifications
creating two posts of ECs and the subsequent appointments of
the petitioner and his colleague as ECs. The Court found as
a fact that there was no imminent need to create two posts
of ECs and fill them up by appointing the petitioner and his
colleague. The additional work likely to be generated on
account of the lowering of the voling age from 21 years to
18 years could have been handled by increasing the staff
rather than appoint two ECs. So the Court look the view that
from the inception the Government had committed an error in
creating two posts of ECs and filling them up. We do not at
the present desire to comment on the question whether this
aspect of the matter was justiciable. It was further found
as a fact that the petitioner’s and his colleaque’s attitude
was not cooperative and had it not been for the sagacity and
restraint shown by the CEC, the work of the Commission would
have come to a standstill and the Commission would have been
rendered inactive. It is for this reason that the court
observed that no one need shed tears on the posts being
abolished (vide paragraphs 20, 23, 24 and 25 of the
judgment.). The Court, therefore, upheld the Presidential
notifications rescinding the creation of the two posts of
ECs and the appointments of the petitioner and his colleague
thereon. Notwithstanding this bitter experience, the
Division Bench made the observations in paragraph 26
extracted hereinbefore, with which we are in respectful
agreement. We cannot overlook the fact that when the
Constitution-makers provided for a multi-member Election
Commission they were not oblivious of the fact that there
may not be agreement on all points,but they must have
expected such high ranking functionaries to resolve their
differences in a dignified manner. It is the constitutional
duty of all those who are required to carry out certain
constitutional functions to ensure the smooth functioning of
the machinery without the clash of egos. This should have
put an end to the matter, but the Division Bench proceeded
to make certain observations touching on the status of the
CEC vis-a-vis the ECs, the procedure to be followed by a
multi-member body in decision making in the absence of rules
in that behalf etc., on which considerable reliance was
placed by counsel for the petitioners.
We have already highlighted the salient features
regarding the composition of the Election Commission. We
have pointed out the provisions regarding the tenure,
conditions of service, salary, allowances, removability,
etc., of the CEC the ECs and the RCs. The CEC and the ECs
alone constitute the Election Commission whereas the RCs are
appointed merely to assist the Commission. The appointment
of the RCs can be made after consulting the Election
Commission since they are supposed to assist that body in
the performance of the functions assigned to it by clause
(1) of Article 324. If that be so there can be no doubt that
they would rank next to the CEC and the ECs. That brings us
to the question regarding the status of the CEC vis-a-vis
the ECs. It was contended by the learned counsel for the
petitioners that the CEC enjoyed a status superior to the
ECs for the obvious reason that (i) the CEC has been granted
conditions of service on par with a Judge of the Supreme
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Court which was not the case with the conditions of service
of ECs before the Ordinance, (ii) the CEC has been given the
same protection against removal from service as available to
a Judge of the Supreme Court whereas the ECs can be removed
on the CEC’s recommendation, (iii) the CEC’s conditions of
service cannot be altered or varied to his disadvantage
after his appointment, (iv) the CEC has been conferred the
privilege to act as Chairman of the multi-member Commission
and (v) the CEC alone is the permanent incumbent whereas the
ECs could be removed, as happened in the case of Dhanoa.
Strong reliance was placed on the observations in paragraphs
10 and 11 of Dhanoa’s case in support of the argument that
the CEC enjoys a higher status vis-a-vis the ECs while
functioning as the Chairman of the Election Commission. The
observations relied upon read thus:
"10 However, in the matter of the
conditions of service and tenure of
office of the Election Commissioners, a
distinction is made between the Chief
Election Commissioner on the one hand
and Election Commissioners and Regional
Commissioners on the other. Whereas the
conditions of service and tenure of
office of all are to be such as the
President may, by rule determine, a
protection is given to the Chief
Election Commissioner in that his
conditions of service shall not be
varied to his disadvantage after his
appointment, and he shall not be removed
from his office except in like manner
and on the like grounds as a Judge of
the Supreme Court. These protections are
not available either to the Election
Commissioners or to the Regional
Commissioners. Their conditions of
service can be varied even to their
disadvantage after their appointment and
they can be removed on the
recommendation of the Chief Election
Commissioner, although not otherwise. It
would thus appear that in these two
respects not only the Election
Commissioners are not on par with the
Chief Election Commissioner, but they
are placed on par with the Regional
Commissioners although the former
constitute the Commission and the latter
do not and are only appointed to assist
the Commission.
11. It is necessary to bear these
features in mind because although clause
(2) of the article states that the
Commission will consist of both the
Chief Election Commissioner and the
Election Commissioners if and when
appointed, it does not appear that the
framers of the Constitution desired to
give the same status to the Election
Commissioners as that of the Chief
Election Commissioner. The Chief
Election Commissioner does not,
therefore, appear to be primus inter
partes, i.e., first among the equals,
but is intended to be placed in a
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distinctly higher position. The
conditions that the President may
increase or decrease the number of
Election Commissioners according to the
needs of the time, that their service
conditions may be varied to their
disadvantage and that they may be
removed on the recommendation of the
Chief Election Commissioner militate
against their being of the same status
as that of the Chief Election
Commissioner."
While it is true that under the scheme of Article 324
the conditions of service and tenure of office of all the
functionaries of the Election Commission have to be
determined by the President unless determined by law made by
Parliament, it is only in the case of the CEC that the first
proviso to clause (5) lays down that they cannot be varied
to the disadvantage of the CEC after his appointment. Such a
protection is not extended to the ECs. But it must be
remembered that by virtue of the Ordinance the CEC and the
ECs placed on par in the matter of salary, etc. Does the
absence of such provision for ECs make the CEC superior to
the ECs? The second ground relates to removability. In the
case of the CEC he can be removed from office in like manner
and on the like ground as a judge of the Supreme Court
whereas the ECs can be removed on the recommendation of the
CEC. That, however, is not an indicia for conferring a
higher status on the CEC. To so hold is to overlook the
scheme of Article 324 of the Constitution. It must be
remembered that the CEC is intended to be a permanent
incumbent and, therefore, in order to preserve and safeguard
his independence, he had to be treated differently. That is
because there cannot be an Election Commission without a
CEC. That is not the case with other ECs. They are not
intended to be permanent incumbents. Clause (2) of Article
324 itself suggests that the number of ECs can vary from
time to time. In the very nature of things, therefore, they
could not be conferred the type of irremovability that is
bestowed on the CEC. If that were to be done, the entire
scheme of Article 324 would have to undergo a change. In the
scheme of things, therefore, the power to remove in certain
cases had to be retained. Having insulated the CEC from
external political or executive pressures, confidence was
reposed in this independent functionary to safeguard the
independence of his ECs and even RCs by enjoining that they
cannot be removed except on the recommendation of the CEC.
This is evident from the following statement found in the
speech of Shri K.M. Munshi in the Constituent Assembly when
he supported the amended draft submitted by Dr. Ambedkar:
"We cannot have an Election Commission
sitting all the time during those five
years doing nothing. The Chief Election
Commissioner will continue to be a
whole-time officer performing the duties
of his office and looking after the work
from day to day but when major elections
take place in the country, either
Provincial or Central, the Commission
must be enlarged to cope with the work.
More members therefore have to be added
to the Commission. They are no doubt to
be appointed by the President.
Therefore, to that extent their
independence is ensured. So there is no
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reason to believe that these temporary
Election Commissioners will not have the
necessary measure of independence."
Since the other ECs were not intended to be permanent
appointees they could not be granted the irremovability
protection of the CEC, a permanent incumbent, and,
therefore, they were placed under the protective umbrella of
an independent CEC. This aspect of the matter escaped the
attention of the learned Judges who decided Dhanoa’s case.
We are also of the view that the comparison with the
functioning of the executive under Articles 74 and 163 of
the Constitution in paragraph 17 of the judgment, with
respect, cannot be said to be apposite.
Under clause (3) of Article 324, in the case of a
multi-member Election Commission, the CEC ’shall act’ as the
Chairman of the Commission. As we have pointed out earlier,
Article 324 envisages a permanent body to be headed by a
permanent incumbent, namely, the CEC. The fact that the CEC
is a permanent incumbent cannot confer on him a higher
status than the ECs for the simple reason that the latter
are not intended to be permanent appointees. Since the
Election Commission would have a staff of its own dealing
with matters concerning the superintendence, direction and
control of the preparation of electoral rolls, etc., that
staff would have to function under the direction and
guidance of the CEC and hence it was in the fitness of
things for the Constitution-makers to provide that where the
Election Commission is a multi-member body, the CEC shall
act as its Chairman. That would also ensure continuity and
smooth functioning of the Commission.
That brings us to the question: what role has the CEC
to play as the Chairman of a multi-member Election
Commission? Article 324 does not throw any light on this
point. the debates of the Constituent Assembly also do not
help. Although there had been a multi-member Commission in
the past no convention or procedural arrangement had been
worked out then. It is this situation which compelled the
Division Bench of this Court in Dhanoa’s case to inter alia
observe that in the absence of rules to the contrary, the
members of a multi-member body are not and need not always
be on par with each other in the matter of their rights,
authority and powers. Proceeding further in paragraph 18 it
was said:
"18. It is further an acknowledged rule
of transacting business in a multi-
member body that when there is no
express provision to the contrary, the
business has to be carried on
unanimously. The rule to the contrary
such as the decision by majority, has to
be laid down specifically by spelling
out the kind of majority -- whether
simple, special, of all the members or
of the members present and voting etc.
In a case such as that of the Election
Commission which is not merely an
advisory body but an executive one, it
is difficult to carry on its affairs by
insisting on undnlmous decisions in all
matters. Hence, a realistic approach
demands that either the procedure for
transacting business is spelt out by a
statute or a rule either prior to or
simultaneously with the appointment of
the Election Commissioners or that no
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appointment of Election Commissioners is
made in the absence of such procedure.
In the present case, admittedly, no such
procedure has been laid down.
We must hasten to add that the accuracy of the statement
that in a multi-member body the rule of unanimity would
prevail in the absence of express provision to the contrary
was doubted by counsel for the respondents-ECs. At the same
time, counsel for the Union of India and the contesting ECs
contended that the Ordinance was promulgated by the
President strictly in conformity with the view expressed in
Dhanoa’s case.
From the discussion upto this point what emerges is
that by clause (1) of Article 324, the Constitution-makers
entrusted the task of conducting all elections in the
country to a Commission referred to as the Election
Commission and not to an individual. It may be that if it is
a single-member body the decisions may have to be taken by
the CEC but still they will be the decisions of the Election
Commission. They will go down as respondents of the Election
Commission and not the individual. It would be wrong to
project the individual and eclipse the Election Commission.
Nobody can be above the institution which he is supposed to
serve. He is merely the creature of the institution, he can
exist only if the institution exists. To project the
individual as mightier than the institution would be a grave
mistake. Therefore, even if the Election Commission is a
single-member body, the CEC is merely a functionary of that
body; to put it differently, the alter ego of the Commission
and no more. And if it is a multi-member body the CEC is
obliged to act as its Chairman. ’Chairman’ according to the
Concise Oxford Dictionary means a person chosen to preside
over meetings, e.g., one who presides over the meetings of
the Board of Directors. In Black’s law Dictionary, 6th
Edition, page 230, the same expression is defined as a name
given to a Presiding Officer of an assembly, public meeting,
convention, deliberative or legislative body, board of
directors, committee, etc. Similar meanings have been
attributed to that expression in Ballentine’s law
Dictionary, 3rd Edition, pages 189-190, Webster’s New
Twentieth Century Dictionary, Unabridged, 2nd Edition, page
299, and Aiyer’s Judicial Dictionary, 11th Edition, page
238. The function of the Chairman would, therefore, be to
preside over meetings, preserve order, conduct the business
of the day, ensure that precise decisions are taken and
correctly recorded and do all that is necessary for smooth
transaction of business. The nature and duties of this
office may very depending on the nature of business to be
transacted but by and large these would be the functions of
a Chairman. He must so conduct himself at the meetings
chaired by him that he is able to win the confidence of his
colleagues on the Commission and carry them with him. This a
Chairman may find difficult to achieve if he thinks that
others who are members of the Commission are his
subordinates. The functions of the Election Commission are
essentially administrative but there are certain
adjudicative and legislative functions as well. The Election
Commission has to lay down certain policies, decide on
certain administrative matters of importance as
distinguished from routine matters of administration and
also adjudicate certain disputes, e.g., disputes relating to
allotment of symbols. Therefore, besides administrative
functions it may be called upon to perform quasi-judicial
duties and undertake subordinate legislation making
functions as well. See M.S. Gill vs. Chief Elecction
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Commissioner (1978) 2 SCR 272. We need say no more on this
aspect of the matter.
There can be no doubt that the Election Commission
discharges a public function. As pointed out earlier, the
scheme of Article 324 clearly envisages a multi-member body
comprising the CEC and the ECs. The RCs may be appointed to
assist the Commission. If that be so the ECs cannot be put
on par with the RCs. As already pointed out, ECs form part
of the Election Commission unlike the RCs. Their role is,
therefore, higher than that of RCs. If they form part of the
Commission it stands to reason to hold that they must have a
say in decision-making. If the CEC is considered to be a
superior in the sense that his word is final, he would
render the ECs non-functional or ornamental. Such an
intention is difficult to cull out from Article 324 nor can
we attribute it to the Constitution-makers. We must reject
the argument that the ECs’ function is only to tender advise
to the CEC.
We have pointed out the distinguishing features from
Article 324 between the position of the CEC and the ECs. It
is essentially on account of their tenure in the Election
Commission that certain differences exist. We have explained
why in the case of ECs the removability clause had to be
different. The variation in the salary, etc., cannot be a
determinative factor otherwise that would oscillate having
regard to the fact that the executive or the legislature has
to fix the conditions of service under clause (5) of Article
324. The only distinguishing feature that survives for
consideration is that in the case of the CEC his conditions
of service cannot be varied to his disadvantage after his
appointment whereas there is no such safeguard in the case
of ECs. That is presumbly because the posts are lemporary in
character. But even if it is not so, that feature alone
cannot lead us to the conclusion that the final word in all
matters lies with the CEC. Such a view would render the
position of the ECs to that of mere advisers which does not
emerge from the scheme of Article 324.
As pointed out earlier, neither Article 324 nor any
other provision in the Constitution expressly states how a
multi-member Election Commission will transact its business
nor has any convention developed in this behalf. That is why
in Dhanoa’s case this Court thought the gap could be filled
by an appropriate statutory provision. Taking a clue from
the observations in that connection in the said decision,
the President promulgated the Ordinance whereby a new
chapter comprising sections 9 and 10 was added to the Act
indicating how the Election Commission will transact its
business. Section 9 merely states that the business of the
Commission shall be transacted in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. Section 10 has three sub-sections.
Sub-section (1) says that the Election Commission may, by
unanimous decision, regulate the procedure for transaction
of its business and for allocation of its business among the
CEC and the ECs. It will thus be seen that the legislature
has left it to the Election Commission to finalise both the
matters by a unanimous decision. Sub-section (2) says that
all other business, save as provided in sub-section (1),
shall also be transacted unanimously, as far as is possible.
It is only when the CEC and the ECs cannot reach a unanimous
decision in regard to its business that the decision has to
be by majority. It must be realised that the Constitution-
makers preferred to remain silent as to the manner in which
the Election Commission will transact its business,
presumably because they thought it unnecessary and perhaps
even improper to provide for the same having regard to the
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level of personnel it had in mind to man the Commission.
They must have depended on the sagacity and wisdom of the
CEC and his colleagues. The bitter experience of the past,
to which a reference is made in Dhanoa’s case, made
legislative interference necessary once it was also realised
that a multi-member body was necessary. It has yet
manifested the hope in sub-sections (1) and (2) that the
Commission will be able to take decisions with one voice.
But just in case that hope is belied the rule of majority
must come into play. That is the purport of section 10 of
the Act. The submission that the said two sections are
inconsistent with the scheme of Article 324 inasmuch as they
virtually destroy the two safeguards, namely (i) the
irremovability of the CEC and (ii) prohibition against
variation in service conditions to his disadvantage after
his appointment, does not cut ice. In the first place, the
submission proceeds on the basis that the other two ECs will
join hands to render the CEC non-functional, a premise which
is not warranted. It betrays the CEC’s lack of confidence in
himself to carry his colleagues with him. In every multi-
member commission it is the quality of leadership of the
person heading the body that matters. Secondly the argument
necessarily implies that the CEC alone should have the power
to take decisions which, as pointed out earlier, cannot be
accepted because that renders the ECs’ existence ornamental.
Besides, there is no valid nexus between the two safeguards
and Section 9 and 10; in fact the submission is a repetition
of the argument that a multi-member commission cannot
function, that it would be wholly unworkable and that the
Constitution-makers had erred in providing for it. Tersely
put, the argument boils down to this: erase the idea of a
multi-member Election Commission from your minds or else
give exclusive decision making power to the CEC. We are
afraid such an attitude is not condusive to democratic
principles. Foot Note 6 at page 657 of Halsbury’s Laws of
England, 4th Edition (Re-issue), Vol. 7(1) posits:
"The principle has long been established
that the will of a Corporation or body
can only be expressed by the whole or a
majority of its principles, and the act
of a majority is regarded as the act of
the whole. (See Shakelton on the Law and
Practice of Meetings, eight Edition,
Compilation of AG, page 116)"
The same priniple was reiterated in Grindley vs. Barker 126
English Reporter 875 at 879 & 882. We do not consider it
necessary to go through various decisions on this point.
The argument that the impugned provisions constitute a
fraud on the Constitution inasmuch as they are designed and
calculated to defeat the very purpose of having an Election
Commission is begging the question. While in a democracy
every right thinking citizen should be concerned about the
purity of the election process - this Court is no less
concerned about the same as would be evident from a series
of decisions - it is difficult to share the inherent
suggestion that the ECs would not be as concerned about it.
And to say that the CEC would have to suffer the humiliation
of being overridden by two civil servants is to ignore the
fact that the present CEC was himself a civil servant before
his appointment as CEC.
The Election Commission is not the only body which is a
multi-member body. The Constitution also provides for other
public institutions to be multi-member bodies. For example,
the Public Service Commission. Article 315 provides for the
setting up of a Public Service Commission for the Union and
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every State and Article 316 contemplates a multi-member body
with a Chairman. Article 338 provides for a multi-member
national Commission for SC/ST comprising a Chairman, Vice-
Chairman and other members. So also there are provisions for
the setting up of certain other multi-member Commissions or
Parliamentary Committees under the Constitution. These also
function by the rule of majority and so we find it difficult
to accept the broad contention that a multi-member
Commission is unworkable. It all depends on the attitude of
the Chairman and its members. If they work in co-operation,
appreciate and respect each other’s point of view, there
would be no difficulty, but if they decide from the outset
to pull in opposite directions, they would by their conduct
make the Commission unworkable and thus fail the system.
That takes us to the question of mala fides. It is in
two parts. The first part relates to events which preceded
the Ordinance and the second part to post-Ordinance and
notification events. On the first part the CEC contends that
since, after his appointment, he had taken various steps
with a view to ensuring free and fair elections and was
constrained to postpone certain elections which were to
decide the fale of certain leaders belonging to the ruling
party at the Centre, i.e., the National Congress (i), he had
caused considerable discomfiture to them. His insistence on
strict observance of the model Code of Conduct had also
disturbed the calculations of the ruling party. According to
him, he had postponed the elections in Kalka Assembly
constituency, Haryana, because the Chief Minister of
Haryana, belonging to the ruling party at the Centre, had
flouted the guidelines. So also he had postponed the
elections in the State of Tripura which ultimately led to
the dismissal of the Government headed by the Chief Minister
belonging to the ruling party at the Centre. The
postponement of the bye-elections involving Shri Sharad
Pawar and Shri Pranab Mukherjee also upset the calculations
of the said party. He had also postponed the election in
Anipet Assembly constituency, Tamil Nadu, as the Chief
Minister of the State had flouted the model Code of Conduct
by announcing certain projects on the eye of the elections.
Shri Santosh Mohan Deb, Union Minister, belonging to the
ruling party, was also upset because the CEC look
disciplinary action against officials who were found present
at his election meetings. The ruling party was also unhappy
with his decision to announce general elections for the
State Assemblies for Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh and the National Capital
Territory of Delhi as the party was not ready for the same.
According to the CEC he had also spurned the request made
through the Ieieutenant Governor of Delhi by the said party
for postponement of the Delhi elections. According to him,
emissaries were sent by the said party at the Centre to him
but he did not oblige and he even look serious exception
regarding the conduct of the Governor of Uttar Pradesh, Shri
Moti Lal Vohra, for violating the model Code of Conduct.
Since the ruling party at the Centre failed in all its
attempts to prevail upon to him, it decided to convert the
Election Commission into a multi-member body and, after
having the Ordinance issued by the President, the impugned
notifications appointing the two ECs were issued. The
extraodinary haste with which all this was done while the
CEC was at Pune and the urgency with which one of the
appointees Shri M.S. Gill was called to Delhi by a special
aircraft betrayed the keenness on the part of the ruling
party to install the two newly appointed ECs. The CEC
describes in detail the post-appointment events which took
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place at the meeting of 11th October, 1993 in paragraphs 18
(c) to (f) and (g) of the writ petition. According to him,
by the issuance of the Ordinance and the notifications the
ruling party is trying to achieve indirectly that which it
could not achieve directly. These, in brief, are the broad
counts on the basis whereof he contends that the ruling
party at the Centre was keen to dislodge him.
On behalf of the union of India it is contended that
the allegation that the power to issue an Ordinance was
misused for collateral purpose, namely, to impinge on the
independence of the Election Commission, is wholly
misconceived since it is a known fact that the demand for a
multi-member Commission had been raised from time to time by
different political parties. The Joint Committee of both
Houses of Parliament had submitted a report in 1972
recommending a multi-member body and the Tarkunde Committee
appointed on behalf of the Citizens for Democracy also
favoured a multi-member Election Commission in its report
submitted in August 1974. Similarly, the Committee on
electoral reforms appointed by the Janata Dal Government, in
its report in May, 1990, favoured a three member Election
Commission. Various Members of Parliament belonging to
different political shades had also raised a similar demand
from time to time. The Advocates General of various States
in their meeting held on 26th September, 1993 at New Delhi
had made a similar demand. It was, therefore, not correct to
contend that the decision to constitute a multi-member
Election Commission was abruptly taken with a mala fide
intention, to curb the activities of the present CEC. The
allegation that the decision was taken because the ruling
party at the Centre was irked by the attitude of the CEC in
postponing elections on one ground or the other is denied.
The issue regarding the constitution of a multi-member
Election Commission was a live issue and the same was
discussed at various fora and even the Supreme Court in
Dhanoa’s case had indicated that vast discretionary powers,
with virtually no checks and balances, should not be left in
the hands of a single individual and it was desirable that
more than one person should be associated with the exercise
of such discretionary powers. It was, therefore, in public
interest that the Ordinance in question was issued and two
ECs were appointed to associate with the CEC. The deponent
contends that this was a bona fide exercise and it was
unfortunate that a high ranking official like the CEC had
alleged that one of the ECs had been appointed because he
was a close friend of the Prime Minister, an allegation
which was unfounded. It is therefore denied that the
Ordinance and the subsequent notifications appointing the
two ECs were intended to sideline the CEC and erode his
authority. The Government bona fide followed the earlier
reports and the observations made in Dhanoa’s case to which
a reference has already been made. It is, therefore,
contended that Sections 9 and 10 do not suffer from any vice
as alleged by the CEC. The two ECs have also filed their
counter affidavits denying these allegations. Shri G.V.G.
Krishnamurthy, Respondent No.3 in the CEC’s petition, has
pointed out that the CEC had made unprecedented demands, for
example, (i) to be equated with Supreme Court Judges, and
had pressurised the Government that he be ranked along with
Supreme Court Judge in the Warrant of Precedence, (ii) the
powers of contempt of court be conferred upon the Election
Commission, (iii) the CEC had refused to participate in
meetings as ex-officio member of the delimitation Commission
headed by Mr. Justice A.M. Mir, Judge of the High Court of J
& K, on the ground that his position was higher, he having
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been equated with judges of the Supreme Court, (iv) the CEC
be exempted from personal appearance in court, (v) the
Election Commission be exempted from the purview of the UPSC
so far as its staff was concerned, etc.
The learned Allorney General pointed out that no mala
fides can be attributed to the exercise of legislative power
by the President of India under Article 123 of the
Constitution. He further pointed out. that having regard to
the express language of Article 324(2) of the Constitution,
it was perfectly proper to expand the Election Commission by
making appropriate changes in the extant law. The question
whether it is necessary to appoint other ECs besides the CEC
is for the Government to decide and that is not a
justiciable matter. The demand for a multi-member Commission
was being voiced for the last several years and merely
because it was decided to make an amendment in the statute
through an Ordinance, it is not permissible to infer that
the decision was actuated by malice. It was lastly contended
that Article 324 nowhere stipulates that before ECs are
appointed, the CEC will be consulted. In the absence of an
express provision in that behalf, it cannot be said that the
failure to consult the CEC before the appointments of the
two ECs viliates the appointment.
One of the interveners, the petitioner of SLP No.16940
of 1993, has filed written submissions through his counsel
wherein, while supporting the action to constitute the
multi-member Commission, he has criticised the style of
functioning of the CEC and has contended that his actions
have, far from advancing the cause of free and fair
elections, resulted in hardships to the people as well as
the system. It has been pointed out that several rash
decisions were taken by the CEC on the off-chance that they
would pass muster but when challenged in court he failed to
support them and agreed to withdraw his orders. It is,
therefore, contended that the style of functioning of the
present CEC itself is sufficient reason to constitute a
multi-member Commission so that the check and balance
mechanism that the Constitution provides for different
institutions may ensure proper decision-making.
There is no doubt that when the Constitution was framed
the Constitution-makers considered it necessary to have a
permanent body headed by the CEC. Perhaps the volume of work
and the complexity thereof could be managed by a single-
member body. At the same time it was realised that with the
passage of time it may become necessary to have a multi-
member body. That is why express provision was made in that
behalf in clause (2) of Article 324. It seems that for about
two decades the need for a multi-member body was not felt.
But the issue was raised and considered by the Joint
Committee which submitted a report in 1972. Since no action
was taken on that report the Citizens for Democracy, a non-
governmental organisation, appointed a committee headed by
Shri Tarkunde, a former Judge of the Bombay High Court,
which submitted its report in August 1974. Both these bodies
favoured a multi-member Commission but no action was taken
and, after a full, when the Janata Dal came to power, a
committee was appointed which submitted a report in May
1990. That committee also favoured a multi-member body.
Prior to that, in 1989 a multi-member Commission was
constituted but we know its fale (see Dhanoa’s case). But
the issue was not given up and demands continued to pour in
from Members of Parliament of different hues. These have
been mentioned in the counter of the union of India. It
cannot, therefore, be said that this idea was suddenly
pulled out of a bag. Assuming the present CEC had taken
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certain decisions not palatable to the ruling party at the
Centre as alleged by him, it is not permissible to jump to
the conclusion that that was cause for the Ordinance and the
appointments of the ECs. If such a nexus is to weigh, the
CEC would continue to act against the ruling party to keep
the move for a multi-member Commission at bay. We find it
difficult to hold that the decision to constitute a multi-
member Commission was actuated by malice. Therefore, even
though it is not permissible to plead malice, we have
examined the contention and see no merit in it. It is wrong
to think that the two ECs were pliable persons who were
being appointed with the sole object of eroding the
independence of the CEC.
We may incidentally mention that the decisions taken by
the CEC from time to time postponing elections at the last
moment, of which he has made mention in his petition, have
evoked mixed reactions. This we say because the CEC uses
them to lay the foundation for his contention that the
entire exercise was mala fide. Some of his other decisions
were so unsustainable that he could not support them when
tested in court. His public utterances at times were so
abrasive that this court had to caution him to exercise
restraint on more occasions than one. This gave the
impression that he was keen to project his own image. That
he has very often been in the newspapers and magazines and
on television cannot be denied. In this backdrop, if the
Government thought that a multi-member body was desirable,
the Government certainly was not wrong and its action cannot
be described as malafide. Subsequent events would suggest
that the Government was wholly justified in creating a
multi-member Commission. The CEC has been seen in a
commercial on television and in newspaper advertisements.
The CEC has addressed the Press and is reported to have said
that he would utilise the balance of his tenure to form a
political party to fight corruption and the like [Sunday
Times (Bombay) dated June 25, 1995 page 28]. Serious doubts
may arise regarding his decisions if it is suspected that he
has political ambitions, in the absence of any provision,
such as, Article 319 of the Constitution. The CEC is, it
would appear, totally oblivious to sense of decorum and
discretion that his high office requires even if the cause
is laudable.
That takes us to the question of legislative
competence. The contention is that since Article 324 is
silent, Parliament expected the Commission itself to evolve
its own procedure for transacting its business and since the
CEC was the repository of all power to be exercised by the
Commission falling within the scope of its activity, it did
not see the need to engraft any procedure for transacting
its business. If the Election Commission at any time saw the
need for it, it would itself evolve its procedure but
Parliament cannot do so and hence Sections 9 and 10 are
unconstitutional. Except the legislation specifically
permitted by clauses (2) and (5) of Art. 324 and Articles
327 and 328, Part XV of the Constitution does not conceive
of a law by Parliament on any other matter and hence the
impugned legislation is unconstitutional.
Now it must be noticed at the outset that both clauses
(2) and (5) of Article 324 contemplate a statute for the
appointment of ECs and for their conditions of service. The
impugned law provides for both these matters and provisions
to that effect cannot be challenged as uncontitutional since
they are expressly permitted by the said clauses (2) and
(5). once the provision for the constitution of a multi-
member Commission is unassailable, provisions incidental
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thereto cannot be challenged. It was urged that the
legislation squarely fell within Entry 72 of list I of the
Seventh Schedule. That entry refers to "Elections to
Parliament, to legislatures of States and to the Offices of
President and Vice-President; the Election Commission". If,
as argued, the scope of this entry is relatable and confined
to clauses (2) and (5) of Article 324 and Articles 327 and
328 only, it would be mere tautology. If the contention that
the CEC alone has decisive power is not accepted, and we
have not accepted it, and even if it is assumed that the
normal rule is of unanimily, sub-sections (1) and (2) of
Section 10 provide for unanimity. It is only if there is no
unanimily that the rule of majority comes into play under
sub-section (3). Therefore, even if we were to assume that
the Commission alone was competent to lay down how it would
transact its business, it would be required to follow the
same pattern as is set out in Section 10. We, therefore, see
no merit in this contention also.
We would here like to make it clear that we should not
be understood to approve of the ratin of Dhanoa’s case in
its entirety. We have expressly approved it where required.
One of the matters to which we must advert is the
question of the status of an individual whose conditions of
service are akin to those of the judges of the Supreme
Court. This seems necessary in view of the reliance placed
by the CEC on this aspect to support his case. In the
instant case some of the service conditions of the CEC are
akin to those of the Supreme Court Judges, namely, (i) the
provision that he can be removed from office in like manner
and on like grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court and (ii)
his conditions of service shall not be varied to his
disadvantage after appointment. So far as the first is
concerned instead of repeating the provisions of Article
124(4), the draftsman has incorporated the same by
reference. The second provision is similar to the proviso to
Article 125(2). But does that confer the status of a Supreme
Court Judge on the CEC? It appears from the D.O.
No.193/34/92 dated July 23, 1992 addressed to the then Home
Secretary, Shri Godbole, the CEC had suggested that the
position of the CEC in the Warrant of Precedence needed
reconsideration. This issue he seems to have raised in his
letter to the Prime Minister in December 1991. It becomes
clear from Shri Godbole’s reply dated July 25, 1992, that
the CEC desired that he be placed at No.9 in the Warrant of
Precedence at which position the Judges of the Supreme Court
figured. It appears from Shri Godbole’s reply that the
proposal was considered but it was decided to maintain the
CEC’s position at No.11 along with the Comptroller and
Auditor General of India and the Allorney General of India.
However, during the course of the hearing of these petitions
it was stated that the CEC and the Comptroller and Auditor
General of India were thereafter placed at No.9A. At our
request the learned Allorney General placed before us the
revised Warrant of Precedence which did reveal that the CEC
had climbed to position No.9A along with the Comptroller and
Auditor General of India. Maintenance of the status of
Judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts is highly
desirable in the national interest. We mention this because
of late we find that even personnel belonging to other fora
claim equation with High Court and Supreme Court Judges
merely because certain jurisdictions earlier exercised by
those Courts are transferred to them not realising the
distinction between constitutional and statutory
functionaries. We would like to impress on the Government
that it should not confer equivalence or interfere with the
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Warrant of Precedence, if it is likely to affect the
position of High Court and Supreme Court Judges, however
pressing the demand may be, without first seeking the views
of the Chief Justice of India. We may add that Mr. G.
Ramaswamy, learned counsel for the CEC, frankly conceded
that the CEC could not legitimately claim to be equated with
Supreme Court Judges. We do hope that the Government will
take note of this and do the needful.
We have deliberately avoided going into the unpleasant
exchanges that look place in the chamber of the CEC on 11th
October, 1993, to which reference has been made by the CEC
in paragraph 18 (c to f and g) of his petition. These
allegations have been denied by Shri Krishnamurthy and Shri
Gill does not support the CEC when he says he was abused.
Although these allegations and counter allegations found
their way into the press, we do not think any useful purpose
will be served by washing dirty linen in public except
showing both the CEC and Shri Krishnamurthy in poor light.
The CEC and the ECs are high level functionaries. They have
several years of experience as civil servants behind them.
All of them have served in responsible positions at
different levels. It is a pity they did not try to work as a
leam. The efforts of Shri Gill to persuade the other two to
forget the past and to get going with the job fell on deaf
ears. Unfortunately, suspicion and distrust got the better
of them. We hope they will forget and forgive, start on a
clean state of mutual respect and confidence and get going
with the lask entrusted to them in a sporting spirit always
bearing in mind the fact that the people of this great
country are watching them with expectation. For the sake of
the people and the country we do hope they will eschew their
egos and work in a spirit of camaraderie.
In the result, we uphold the impugned Ordinance (now
Act 4 of 1994) in its entirety. We also uphold the two
impugned notifications dated 1st October, 1993. Hence, the
writ petitions fail and are dismissed. The interim order
dated 15th November, 1993 will stand vacated. If, as is
reported, the incumbent CEC has proceeded on leave, leaving
the office in charge of Shri Bagga, Shri Bagga will
forthwith hand over charge to Shri Gill till the CEC resumes
duty. The TAs will stand disposed of. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, we direct parties to bear their
own costs. If the CEC has incurred the costs of his petition
from the funds of the Election Commission, the other two ECs
will be entitled to the same from the same
source.