Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
SUCHETA KRIPALANI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI S. S. DULAT, I.C.S., CHAIRMAN OF THE ELECTION TRIBUNAL,
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/09/1955
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1955 AIR 758 1955 SCR (2) 450
ACT:
Election Dispute-Election petition by unsuccess ful rival-
Allegations of major corrupt practices and falsity in the
return of election expenses against the returned candidate-
Return of election expenses found defective and returned
candidate disqualified by the Election Commission-Removal of
such disqualification on lodging of fresh return-
Jurisdiction of Election Tribunal-If competent to inquire
into identical allegations of falsity against the second
return-Bepresentation of the People Act (XLIII of 1951), s.
143-The Representation of the People (Conduct of Elections
and Election Petitions) Rules, 1951, rule, 114(4), (5) and
(6).
HEADNOTE:
The provisions of the Representation of the People Act and
the Rules framed thereunder assign distinct and different
jurisdictions to the Election Commission and an Election
Tribunal so far as a Return of election expenses is
concerned.
Where there are allegations of major corrupt practices and a
Tribunal constituted is in lawful seisin of the dispute, s.
143 of the Act gives it the sole jurisdiction and makes it
incumbent on it to inquire into the falsity of any
particulars mentioned in the return where such falsity is
alleged and brought into issue and is reasonably connected
with the major corrupt practices.
What the Election Commission has to do under Rule 114(4) is
to satisfy itself that the return is in the prescribed form.
It is no part of its function to inquire into the
correctness of any particulars mentioned therein. That
question can only arise when some one raises a dispute and
brings the matter into issue.
Consequently, in a case where, as in the present, the
Election Commission removed the disqualification it had
imposed on the returned candidate for lodging a defective
return of election expenses on the lodging of a fresh
return; Held, that the decision of the Election Commission
removing the disqualification attaching to the first return
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
in no way precluded the Tribunal from inquiring into the
falsity of the particulars in the second return although
they were identical with those challenged in the first
return;
that the removal of the disqualification only meant that the
accepted return was the only valid return, being the first
to be correct in form, and the Tribunal had only that return
before it,
451
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 139 of
1955.
Appeal under Articles 132 and 133 of the Constitution of
India against the Judgment and Order dated the 23rd December
1953 of the High Court of Judicature for the State of Punjab
in Civil Writ Application No. 24 of 1953.
N.C. Chatterjee, (B. S. Narula, with him) for the
appellant.
G.S. Pathak and Veda Vyas, (Ganpat Rai, with them), for
respondent No. 5
1955. September 6. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
BOSE J.-The proceedings that have given rise to this appeal
arise out of an election petition before the Election
Tribunal, Delhi.
The appellant Shrimati Sucheta Kripalani together with the
contesting respondent Shrimati Manmohini Sahgal and others
were candidates for election to the House of the People from
the Parliamentary Constituency of New Delhi. The polling
took place on 14th January, 1952, and when the votes were
counted on 18th January, 1952, it was found that the appel-
lant had secured the largest number of votes and that the
contesting respondent Manmohini came next. The appellant
was accordingly notified as the returned candidate on 24th
January, 1952.
On 6th March, 1952, the appellant filed her return of
election expenses. This was found to be defective, and on
17th April, 1952, the Election Commission published a
notification in the Gazette of India disqualifying the
appellant under Rule 114(5) of the Representation of the
People (Conduct of Elections and Election Petitions) Rules,
1951, on the ground that she bad
"failed to lodge the return of election expenses in the
manner required" and that she had thereby "incurred the
disqualifications under clause (c) of section 7 and section
143 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951".
452
In view of this the appellant submitted a fresh return with
an explanation under Rule 114(6) on 30th April, 1952. This
was accepted by the Commission and on 7th May, 1952, it
published a notification in the Gazette of India under Rule
114(7) stating that the disqualification had been removed.
In the meanwhile, on 7th April, 1952, the contesting
respondent Manmohini filed an election petition praying that
the appellant’s election be declared void and that she (the
petitioner) be declared to have been duly elected. It will
be noticed that this was before 17th April, 1952, the date
on which the Election Commission disqualified the appellant.
The validity of the election was attacked on many grounds.
A number of major corrupt practices were alleged and the
return which the appellant had filed on 6th March,1952, of
her election expenses was challenged as a minor corrupt
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
practice on two grounds:
(1) that the return was false in material particulars
and (2) that it was not in accordance with the rules and so
was no return at all in the eye of the law. Particulars of
the instances in which the return was challenged as false
were then set out.
The appellant filed her written statement in reply on 7th
October, 1952. It will be noticed that this was after she
had put in her second return and after the Election
Commission had removed the disqualification due to the first
return. Her reply was as follows:
(1) That as the disqualification with respect to the return
of her election expenses had been removed by the Election
Commission under section 144 of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951, this question could not be reopened;
(2) That a minor corrupt practice which cannot vitiate an
election and which is not capable of materially affecting an
election is wholly outside the scope of a proper election
petition and so no cognisance of it can be taken by the
Election Tribunal;
(3) That only such matters can be put in issue as are
necessary to decide whether the election of the returned
candidate is liable to be set aside within the meaning of
section 100(2) of the Act,
453
The contesting respondent Manmohini filed a replication on
15th October, 1952. In it she said:-
(1)that the Election Commission did not and could not
decide whether the return was or was not false in material
particulars and so the question was still open. (This had
reference to the first return dated 6th March., 1952.);
(2) that in any event
"even the revised return is false in material particulars
and the objections with regard to the original return also
apply exactly with regard to the revised return".
The broad propositions of law raised by points (2) and (3)
in the appellant’s written statement were also denied. Then
followed an item by item reply to the allegations made by
the appellant in the list which she had appended to her
written statement. That list was a reply to the particulars
of false return and corrupt practices furnished by the
contesting respondent Manmohini. It is evident then that
Manmohini attacked the second return on exactly the same
grounds as the first and, furnished the same particulars.
Now we have spoken of these returns as the first and the
second. But counsel on both sides agreed before us that the
first return was in fact no return at all in the eye of the
law and that therefore the contesting respondent’s real
attack was on the second return which must be regarded as
the only return which the law will recognise as a valid
return. It was agreed that there cannot be two returns of
expenses: either the one originally filed is amended or it
is treated as a nullity so far as it purports to be a
return. In view of this agreement, it is not necessary for
us to express any opinion on the matter and we will
concentrate our attention on what, for convenience, we will
continue to call the second return.
The first point that now arises is whether the decision of
the Election Commission to remove the disqualification
attaching to the first return precludes an enquiry into the
falsity of the second return simply because the respondent
Manmohini alleged that the
454
particulars of the falsity are exactly the same as before.
Our answer to that is No. If the first return is no return
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
in the eye of the law, then the only return we are concerned
with is the second and that must be treated in the same way
as it would have been if it had been the only return made.
If there had been no other return and this return had been
challenged on the grounds now raised, it is clear that the
truth of the allegations made would have to be enquired
into. That enquiry cannot be shut out simply because the
allegations against the second return happen to be exactly
the same in the matter of its falsity as in the case of the
first return. We are therefore of opinion that the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal to enquire into these matters
was not ousted on that account. Our reasons for this are
these.
Section 76 of the Act requires every candidate to file a
return of election expenses in a particular form containing
certain prescribed particulars. The form and particulars
are set out in the Rules. Section 143 prescribes the
penalty for failure to observe those requirements. It is
disqualification. This ensues if there is a "default" in
making the return. It also ensues:-
"if such a return is found............ upon the trial of an
election petition under Part VI............ to be false in
any material particular".
That places the matter beyond doubt. The trial of an
election petition is conducted by an Election Tribunal and
this section makes it incumbent on the Tribunal to enquire
into the falsity of a return when that is a matter raised
and placed in issue and the allegations are reasonably
connected with other allegations about a major corrupt
practice. The jurisdiction is that of the Tribunal and not
of the Election Commission. The duty of the Election
Commission is merely to decide under Rule 114(4) whether any
candidate has, among other things,
"failed to lodge the return of election expenses.... in the
manner required by the Act and these rules".
It is a question of form and not of substance. If
455
0
the return is in proper form no question of falsity can
arise unless somebody raises the issue. If it is raised,
the allegations will be made in some other document by some
other person and the charges so preferred will be enquired
into by the Tribunal.
If the return is not in proper form, disqualification
ensues but the Election Commission is invested with the
power to remove the disqualification under Rule 114(6). If
it does, the position becomes the same as it would have been
had the Election Commission decided that the form was proper
in the first instance. That would still leave the question
of falsity for determination by the Tribunal in cases where
the issue is properly raised.
Mr. Chatterjee contended on behalf of the appellant that we
were not concerned with the second return in this appeal and
0strongly protested against Mr. Pathak being allowed to
argue this point. But that has been the main bone of
contention almost from the start. When the election
petition was filed, there was only one return to attack.
The second had not been put in. Later, when it was put in,
the contesting respondent, Manmohini, attacked, both and the
appellant herself said that questions about the falsity of
the return could not be gone into because of the Election
Commission’s order removing the disqualification. That
argument applies as much to the second as to the first
return and raises an issue about the respective
jurisdictions of the Election Commission and the Election
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
Tribunal on this point. The Tribunal decided against the
appellant on this point and held, as we do, that the
Election Commission was not concerned with the issue of fact
about the falsity of the return. The appellant then filed a
petition under article 226 to the High Court and questioned
the Tribunal’s jurisdiction to enquire into the issue of
falsity. The High Court upheld the Tribunal’s decision and
the appellant pursued the matter here both in her grounds of
appeal and in her statement of the case. She cannot at this
stage ask us to leave
456
the matter open so that she can come here again and re-
agitate this question. We accordingly overrule Mr.
Chatterjee’s objection.
The next question argued was whether an Election Tribunal
can enquire into a minor corrupt practice if it is of such a
nature that, standing by itself, it could not have been made
the basis of an election petition because it could not
materially affect the result of the election. We need not
go into that because the question is purely academic in this
case. The allegation about the minor corrupt practice does
not stand by itself. There are also allegations about major
corrupt practices which require investigation and the minor
corrupt practices alleged are reasonably connected with
them. Section 143 of the Act is a complete answer to the
question of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction on this point when
it is properly seised of the trial of an election petition
on other grounds. Whether it could be properly seised of
such a trial if this had been the only allegation, or if the
minor corrupt practice alleged was not reasonably connected
with the other allegations about major corrupt practices,
does not therefore arise. As the trial is proceeding on the
other matters the Tribunal is bound under section 143, now
that the issue has been raised, also to enquire into the
question of the falsity of the return. Without such an
enquiry it cannot reach the finding which section 143
contemplates. We need not look into the other sections
which were touched upon in the arguments and in the Courts
below because section 143 is clear and confers the requisite
jurisdiction when a trial is properly in progress.
The appellant has failed on every question of substance
that she raised. There was some vagueness in the Election
Tribunal’s order about which of the two returns formed the
basis of the enquiry on this point but even if the Tribunal
intended to treat the first return as the basis, that did
not really affect the substance because exactly the same
allegations are made about the second return and the issue
of fact would therefore have to be tried in any event. The
appel-
457
lant’s whole endeavour was to circumvent such an enquiry and
oust the Tribunal’s jurisdiction. In that she has failed,
so she will pay the contesting respondent’s costs
throughout.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs all through.