Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R.M. SESHADRI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
G. VASANTHA PAI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/11/1968
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 692 1969 SCR (2)1019
1969 SCC (1) 27
CITATOR INFO :
E 1969 SC1034 (14,15)
R 1970 SC 61 (5)
R 1974 SC 66 (77)
R 1975 SC 290 (47)
RF 1977 SC1724 (55)
R 1979 SC 234 (40)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act, 1951 s. 123(5)-Employment
of cars for conveyance of voters-If adequately pleaded and
proved.
Election law-Trial Judge calling witnesses and examining
documents suo motu-If empowered to do so.
Code of Civil Procedure O. XVI r. 14-Applicability and scope
of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was elected to the Madras Legislative Council
from the Madras District Graduates Constituency. His
election was challenged by the Respondent, his nearest rival
candidate by an election petition alleging, mainly, that a
large number of cars had been employed for the conveyance
of voters to the polling booths in violation of s. 123(5) of
the Representation of the People Act, 1951. The High Court
held that the corrupt practice was established and set aside
the appellant’s election. It also declared the respondent
elected in his place. The original order passed by the High
Court did not :name the appellant as guilty of corrupt
practice but the Court, by a subsequent order reviewing its
previous order, gave a declaration to that effect.
In the appeal to this Court, it was contended by the
appellant that the plea in the petition regarding violation
of s. 123(5) was vague and not sufficiently defined so as to
give him notice of the charge he had to meet, and
furthermore, that the learned Judge who tried the case
improved both the pleading on the subject and the evidence
led by the election petitioner by calling certain witnesses
and looking into documents which he had no power to do.
It was therefore contended that all the evidence which
the learned Judge collected suo motu should not be looked at
and if the case of the petitioner was confined to the bare
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plea raised, the petition would deserve to be dismissed
because it was not clear in the plea and was lacking in
proof.
HELD: dismissing the appeal: On the facts, the High
Court had rightly found that many cars were employed for
the conveyance of voters in the constituency. The
circumstantial chain of evidence was sufficient to show the
connection between the appellant and the use of the cars for
the conveyance of voters. The corrupt practice under s.
123(5) was therefore brought home. [1031 F; 1032 A--B]
(i) The plea in the petition in essence was that cars
were used for the purpose of conveying voters contrary to
the prohibition contained in the Election Law. The names of
the booths and the divisions in which the booths were
situated together with the particulars of the cars and the
persons primarily concerned with cars at the polling booths
had been mentioned. The connection of the appellant with
the use of the cars had been specifically pleaded.
Sufficient particulars of the allegation had therefore been
given and the rest were matters of evidence which did not
require to be pleaded.
(ii) The power of a Civil Court to summon court
witnesses is contained in O. XVI r. 14 of the Co& of Civil
Procedure. The Representation of People Act enjoins that
all the powers under the Code can be exercised and all the
procedure as far as may be ,applicable to the trial
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of civil suits may be followed in the trial of
election petitions. The court trying an
election petition therefore has the power to summon a Court
witness if it thinks that the ends of justice require or
that the case before it needs that kind of evidence. The
policy of election law seem to be that for the establishment
of purity of elections, investigation into to be that for
the nasal factices including corrupt practices at elections
all allegations of malpractices include corrupt practices at
elections should be thoroughly made. In the present case a
large number of cars were obviously used presumably for the
purpose of carrying voters to the booths. In the face of
this voluminous evidence it was open to the judge, if
evidence was available to establish who had procured or
hired judge, summon witnesses who could depose to the
same. Such a vehicles, to exercised by the learned judge .
[1028 B--F]
(iii) In the present case it was not possible to reach the
conclusion the voters were brought to the polling
booths in violation of that 23(5), the result de the
election had been materially affected. In a single
transferable vote, it is very difficult to say how the
voting would have gone, because if all the votes which the
appellant had got, had gone to one of the other candidates
who were eliminated at the earlier counts, those candidates
could have won. The declaration of the respondent’s
election would be merely a guess or surmise as to the nature
of the voting which would have taken place if the corrupt
practice had not been perpetrated and the High Court’s
direction declaring him elected must therefore be set
aside. [1032 B--D]
(iv) The appellant was properly named as guilty of
corrupt practice although the order was incorporated by the
learned Judge through a review. It was his duty to have
named persons who had been guilty of corrupt practice and he
made this up later. There is no need ’for any specific
power for review since the power to name any person guilty
of corrupt Practice is already contained in the Act.
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Whether it comes in the original judgment or by a
supplementary or complementary order, is not much to the
purpose that order was correctly made. [1032 E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL, APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1519 of
1968.
Appeal under s. 116A of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951 from the judgment and order dated May 28,
1968 of the Madras High Court in Election Petition 11 of
1967.
R.M. Seshadri and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
S. V. Gupte, A. C. Muthanna, S.S. JavaIi, Anjali K.
Verma and O.C. Mathur, for respondent No. 1.
G. Ramanujam and A. V. Rangam, for intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah. C.J., This appeal is directed against the
judgment of the High Court of Madras, 28th May 1968, by
which the election of the appellant Seshadri has been set
aside. The election in question was to the Madras
Legislative Council from the Madras District Graduates
Constituency. That constituency consisted of 19,498 votes
and the total votes polled were 12,153. Since the voting
was by a single transferable vote, three
1029
out of the five candidates were eliminated at different
counts with the result that their votes were transferred to
the second person named by the elector on the ballot. At the
final count the appellant Seshadri received 5643 votes and
G. Vasantha Pai (his nearest rival) who is the first
respondent in ’the appeal received 5388 votes. Seshadri
was, therefore, elected by a majority of 255 votes.
The election petition was filed by G. Vasantha Pai to
question the election of Seshadri on many grounds. Only one
ground prevailed, namely, that he had employed cars which
had been hired or procured for the conveyance of the voters
to the polling booths which numbered 73 in this
constituency. The other charges were numerous but they
need not be mentioned here because in our opinion this
charge has been substantiated. It may be mentioned that
Seshadri filed a petition of recrimination but it was
dismissed because he failed to furnish security required
under the Act. Later he corrected this mistake but the
petition was not accepted because it was held to be delayed.
The learned Judge who’ heard the case held that instead
of Seshadri, Vasantha Pai deserved to be declared elected
under the law. In this appeal, therefore, Seshadri contends
that the decision in his respect was erroneous and in the
alternative that in any event Vasantha Pal could not be
declared as the successful candidate. We shall deal with
these two points separately. It may further be mentioned
that in the original order passed by the learned Judge he
had not named Seshadri as guilty of corrupt practice. By a
subsequent order he reviewed his previous order and gave a
declaration. This point also will require to be considered
in this judgment.
The allegation in the election petition was that a large
number of motor cars were hired or procured from various
sources for the conveyance of the voters to the polling
booths. These were sometimes occupied by persons wearing
badges which bore the name of Seshadri and sometimes were
received at the polling booths by persons who wore the same
badges. From this, it is inferred that the motor cars were
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used for the conveyance of voters by Seshadri as one of the
contesting candidates. Such conduct, if it is established,
amounts to a corrupt practice under s. 123(5) of the
Representation of People Act. The short question,
therefore, on the first point is whether Seshadri was guilty
of this corrupt practice.
The appeal has been fought by Seshadri on the grounds
that the plea which was included on this head in the
election petition was vague and not sufficiently definite so
as to give him notice of the charge he had to meet, that a
charge of corrupt practice is of the nature of a criminal
charge and must therefore be
1022
proved by the election petitioner himself beyond all
reasonable doubt, that there exists some room for doubt and
therefore he should have the benefit of it and that the
learned Judge who tried the case improved both the pleading
on the subject and the evidence led by the election
petitioner by calling certain witnesses and looking into
documents which he had procured on his own behalf. It is
therefore contended that all the evidence which the learned
Judge collected suo motu should not be locked at and the
case of the petitioner should be confined to the bare plea
which was raised in this case. If this is so, says
Seshadri, the election petition deserves to be dismissed
because the case as found was not clear in the plea and was
certainly lacking in the proof as required by law.
Since the matter is one fought primarily with regard to
pleadings in the case, we shall begin by setting out the
pleas which have been advanced by the election petitioner.
The plea consists of several parts. The election
petitioner states that the Swatantra Party and its agents
conveyed the voters to and from the polling booths in
certain cars hired or procured from M/s Kumarswamy
Automobiles and T.S. Narayanan, Authorised Tourist Taxi
Operators. The petitioner goes on to say that the detailed
analysis of the use of the cars and particulars of the user
are given in a schedule attached to his petition. That
schedule names a large number of cars which were used and at
many polling booths in different divisions for the purpose
of carrying the voters to the polling booths. Some of these
cars came admittedly from the garage of Messrs.
Kumarswamy Automobiles and some others from the other motor
garage named by us or were loaned for the day by certain
private owners including companies. The essence of this
plea is that cars were procured or hired for the conveyance
of the voters. There is, however, no mention in the plea as
to who had hired the vehicles or caused them to be procured
and it is this fact which has been made much of by Seshadri
in the appeal before. us. His contention is that without
the particulars being sufficiently full and precise, it was
not possible for him to controvert the case set up against
him, particularly as the case of the election petitioner was
supplemented by the learned Judge by calling at a later
stage court witnesses who deposed to the connection between
the cars and Seshadri. We have, therefore, to determine
first whether the plea which was raised was sufficient for
the purpose of investigation before we go to see whether the
plea has received adequate support through evidence.
Seshadri personally argued his appeal on two separate
occasions. On the first occasion he confined himself
entirely to the pleas he expounded it and urged in support
that the plea in the election petition did not allege
anything nor did the evidence in
1023
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support establish anything further. But before the case
concluded, Seshadri made a request to us that as he had
misunderstood his own position with regard to the appeal,
regard being had to certain observations of the Court, he
had not argued the case fully on the first occasion and he
should be allowed an opportunity to supplement his arguments
by urging the points de novo. Since Seshadri was conducting
his case in person and appeared to be under some emotional
stress, we felt that the ends of justice would be satisfied
if we accorded him a second opportunity and this is how the
case was set down again for hearing. On the second occasion
Seshadri supplemented his arguments with numerous
citations from the law reports in support of two
propositions, namely, that the particulars should be
complete before the evidence could be looked into and
secondly that amendment of the pleadings through evidence is
not permissible.
It may be mentioned here that the evidence in the case
discloses that not one, two or three cars were used but as
many as 63 cars were employed. This evidence has been
weighed by the learned Judge. He has gone critically into
every aspect of it and come. to the conclusion that many
cars in fact were used. The learned counsel for Vasantha
Pai placed in our hands a tabulated statement of the
evidence bearing upon the use of the cars and having looked
into the judgment of the learned Judge as also the evidence
with the aid of the tabulated statement, we are satisfied
and it is sufficient to say for us that we entirely agree
with the conclusion of the learned Judge that many cars
were, in fact, used for conveyance of voters in this
constituency. The alternative suggestion that on some of
the days an election from the Teachers’ Constituency was
going on and that since the polling booths were sometimes
located for the two constituencies in the same building, it
is possible that the cars were used for that election and
not this, does not merit any consideration. The suggestion
is extremely vague and the evidence even more tenuous. It is
said that one Varadachari was responsible for the hiring of
the cars and that in our opinion does not stand either
substantiated or any scrutiny. We are therefore satisfied
with the finding of the learned Judge in the High Court that
cars that were employed for conveyance of voters and that
they were in fact used in this constituency and none other.
The question then remains as to who was responsible for
this?
Now the plea on this subject, as we have said, is
contained in several parts of the election petition. One
part we have summarised above. The second part was that
the Swatantra Party_ was supporting Seshadri and that the
workers of the Swatantra Party were working strenously for
his success. From this it has been reasoned in the High
Court that the Swatantra Party was an agent of Seshadri.
Its actions therefore would be his actions L6Sup. C.I/69--14
1024
if he was a Consenting party. In this connection it is also
stated that Seshadri was being supported by some persons
connected with him who helped him by procuring these
vehicles for the conveyance of the voters. In the schedule
which is filed with the plaint a large number of cars is
mentioned and the schedule shows in one of its columns to
which polling booths were the voters carried. It is too
detailed to be reproduced here. Suffice it to say that it
contains names of six divisions and 17 polling booths. It
also mentions over two dozen cars which were so used. In
the body of the election petition, the petitioner further
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stated as follows:
"Besides Tourist Taxis, the petitioner
understands the Private Commercial Firms and
Cinema Producers placed at the disposal of the
first respondent their cars for conveying
voters. The persons who were conveying the
voters were members of the Swatantra Party,
who were acting as the Agents of the first
respondent under the guidance in particular of
Mr. H.V. Hande. The Agents of the first
respondent wore a distinctive badge with R.M.
Seshadri printed in bold letters attached to a
blue ribbon and pinned to their shirts. They
were either escorting the voters or receiving
them at the polling stations specified above.
In Booth Nos. 60 to 65, prominent among the
persons so escorting was Violin Mahadevan who
had a badge pinned to his shirt and who the
petitioner understands is a member of the
Swatantra Party. In Saidapet South, the
petitioner states, the car MSS 3336 conveying
the voters was in charge of an Advocate’s
Clerk by name T.K. Vinayagam of No. 16, Karani
Garden II Street, Saidapet, Madras-15. The
said Vinayagam was wearing a badge of Mr.
Seshadri. At Raja Annamalaipuram the
petitioner learns that a green-coloured
Station Wagon MSP 5398 was in charge of Mr.
Venkataraman, member of the Swatanthra Party
and residing at 30, IV Main Road, Raja
Annamalaipuram, Madras-28.
The petitioner states that in almost every
polling booth, Tourist Taxis and cars engaged
by the first respondent were being used by
the Swatanthra Party Agents for conveying
voters."
Seshadri contends that in this plea only four names
are mentioned, namely, H.V. Hande, Violin Mahadevan, T.K.
Vinayagam and Venkatraman. He starts therefore by analysing
whether the connection between these persons and him had
been successfully established and further whether they were
responsible for
1025
conveying voters to the polling booths in the cars. He
examines critically the evidence of these witnesses before
us and also the other evidence bearing upon the subject and
contends that the evidence taken as a whole does not
establish their connection with him or with the voters or
with the cars. We shall, therefore, begin by considering
what was said about these persons by Seshadri.
In regard to Hande, Seshadri’s contention is that no
other person had spoken about Hande excepting the petitioner
(P.W. 33) and he spoke about him only in one place. He
therefore states that the evidence on this part is
extremely insufficient because it depends upon the
interested word of the petitioner himself. He refers us to
his deposition contained in pages 419 to 531 of the Paper
Book, but he draws our attention in particular to certain
passages where only one car was mentioned by him in
connection with Hande. That car was MSR 7065. The
evidence of the election petitioner was that as he was
emerging from Doraiswamy Road he found that this car was
going past him with a gentleman with a blue upper cloth.
The gentleman looked at him and he found that it was Hande.
According to Seshadri this evidence was not sufficient to
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show that Hande was conveying voters to the polling booth.
On this part of the case Seshadri is right because the
evidence of the complicity of Hande with the hiring or
procuring of the cars was not established nor his complicity
with regard to the carriage of voters to the polling booths.
With regard to Vinayagam, Seshadri’s argument is that the
fact is deposed to by the election petitioner himself who
said that he had seen a car with a lady and a gentleman
arriving at the polling booth and that a lawyer’s clerk
opened the door and received them. This car bore the number
MSS 3336. Support for this evidence is sought by the
election petitioner through the evidence of Laxshaman Hegde
(P.W. 15) who said that he had seen an Ambassador car
carrying two voters just halting at the polling booth. Two
voters whom he knew from before came down from the car. A
’short gentleman’ directed them to the polling booth.
Vasantha Pai then asked the witness if the person was known
to the witness. As he did not know the name of the
gentleman he could not tell him but Vasantha Pai noted the
number of the car. This person who received the voters at
the polling booth was later identified by the witness as
Vinayakam. The way in which he obtained this information has
been given by him in his deposition. He appears to have
obtained it from the person concerned. Whatever it may be,
there is nothing incriminating in a worker of the party
receiving a voter at the polling booth. Polling agents
cannot canvass within 100 meters but there is nothing to
show in the law that they cannot open the door of a car in
which a voter has arrived. The gravamen of the charge, as
Seshadri correctly points out was that Vinaya-
1026
kam was wearing a badge such as we have described and that
of course is a different matter and we are not concerned
with it here. On the whole, therefore, this evidence does
not show that the cars were hired by Seshadri. It only
furnishes some link in the circumstantial chain to which we
shall later refer and that in our opinion is the only use to
which this evidence can be put.
The next person connected with the use of the car is
Venkatraman. Three persons deposed to his connection. of
these one is the election petitioner himself; the others are
P.Ws. 23 and 27. Seshadri argues that we should not
believe these witnesses; one because he is himself a party
and the other two because they were connected intimately
with the prospects of Vasantha Pal. K.V. Padmanabha Rao
(P.W. 23) is said to be the junior of Vasantha Pal and was
canvassing for him. He was standing near the vehicle with
a list, presumably of the voters, and at that time several
vehicles arrived there. He stated that he connected
Venkataraman with Seshadri because he was moving about in
the company of one Sivasankaran (Junior of Seshadri) in
the IInd Main Road. He had also seen him with Sivasankaran
going with lists in his hand from house to house. Later he
found out from some of his friends what was the purpose of
this visit and was told that they were asking the voters
whether they needed any conveyance for the next day’s
polling, as they had command over a large number of
vehicles. The latter part of the evidence is hearsay and
Seshadri is perfectly right in claiming that it should
not be accepted. The fact remains that the witness did see
Venkataraman moving with the clerk of Seshadri and therefore
there is room for thinking that they were connected
together. T.L. Ram mohan (P.W. 27), it is said, was
assisting Vasantha Pai. He wrote a letter Ext. P-109 and
his evidence is also described as hearsay. We need not
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therefore go by his evidence to reach the conclusion that
the cars were hired by Seshadri or some one on his behalf.
We can only use this evidence if there were some other
evidence to which it can be read as corroborative, because
by itself it does not furnish proof of the hiring of
vehicles by Seshadri. it only shows that the vehicles were
in fact used and that the vehicles were bringing voters to
the polling booth.
The connection of Violin Mahadevan was deposed to by
four witnesses. V. Murali (P.W. 5) who works in the chamber
of two lawyers Rao and Reddy admitted that he.was working
for Vasantha Pai. He also said that he saw Violin
Mahadevan wearing the badge and standing near the polling
booth. He stated this to Vasantha Pai and communicated to
him his own observation. He admitted that he did not know
Violin Maha-. devan from before but somebody had told him
about him. He could not name the voters who had been
brought. He saw that Violin Mahadevan was wearing the same
badge which we have
1027
described and the voters were accosted by persons wearing
the same badge and were received at the polling booth. S.
Ramamurthy (P.W. 10) saw Venkataraman. He admitted that
he had not seen anybody brought by Venkataraman and he also
did not know the names of the voters who were brought. But
the evidence of S. Ramamurthy (P.W. 10) is sufficient to
show that the voters did in fact come by cars to the polling
booth. Therefore to that extent, his evidence is
material in determining whether the alleged corrupt
practice was committed or not. A. Sankaran (P.W. 20) also
saw Violin Mahadevan receiving voters at the polling
booths. Seshadri contends that as the plea was limited to
the naming of these four persons, it is clear that the plea
as made was insufficient to bring home the charge which is
now brought to his door, namely, that he had hired or
procured these vehicles. As has been said above, the hiring
and procuring of the vehicles is a totally different matter.
These witnesses only speak to what they saw at the polling
booths and their evidence is believable that voters were
brought to the polling booth. The question is by whom?
The case then goes on to another point and that is:
Where did the cars come from? Neither side had examined
either Kumarswamy or the owner of the other garage or any
other person. The learned Judge then felt that he should
examine some court witnesses and he summoned three, namely,
Kumarswamy (C.W. 2), Krishnaswamy (C.W. 3) and one Ganesan
(C.W. 1). He also called for a report from the police as
to whom the cars belonged and he perused the evidence of
these three witnesses as also the report sent by the police
and come to the conclusion that the hiring or procuring was
by Seshadri himself. A great deal of argument is therefore
directed by Seshadri to exclude the evidence of these
witnesses and the reference to the police to find out to
whom the cars belonged. In this connection Seshadri cites a
number of ruling which he says show quite clearly that a
plea cannot be allowed to be magnified particularly by
evidence not brought by the parties, but at the instance of
the Court. This requires an examination closely.
The first contention of Seshadri is that the Court
trying the election petition is limited by the law which is
contained in the Representation of the People Act and the
Rules made thereunder. This law, according to him, confers
no power upon the Presiding Judge to enter the arena-to
summon witnesses on his-own behalf. The learned Judge who
summoned witnesses passed a very short order while doing so.
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He did not refer to any law on the subject but extracted a
passage from the trial of Warren Hastings in which it was
stated that a Judge ’is not to be a dummy but is to take an
active interest in the case. Seshadri contends therefore
that the action of the Judge in summoning the court
1028
witnesses was entirely erroneous and that this evidence
should be excluded.
The Vower of a Civil Court to summon court witnesses is
contained in O. XVI r. 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Now the Representation of People Act enjoins that all the
powers under the Code can be exercised and all the procedure
as far as may be applicable to the trial of civil suits may
be followed in the trial of election petitions. It would
appear therefore that in the absence of any prohibition
contained in the law, the Court has the power to summon a
court witness if it thinks that the ends of justice require
or that the case before it needs that kind of evidence. It
must be remembered that an election petition is not an
action at law or a suit in equity. It is a special
proceeding. The law even requires that an election
petitioner should not be allowed to withdraw an election
petition which he has once made and that the election
petition may be continued by another person, so long as
another person is available. The policy of election law
seems to be that for the establishment of purity of
elections, investigation into all allegations of
real practices including corrupt practices at elections
should be thoroughly made. Here was a case where a large
number of cars were used presumably for the purpose of
carrying voters to the booths. The question is: in the face
of this voluminous evidence was it not open to the judge if
evidence was available to establish who had procured or
hired vehicles, to summon witnesses who could depose to the
same ? In our opinion, such a power was properly exercised
by the learned judge. Although we would say that the trial
should be at arms length and the Court should not really
enter into the dispute as a third party, but it is not to be
understood that the Court never has the power to summon a
witness or to call for a document which would throw light
upon the matter, particularly of corrupt practice which is
alleged and is being sought to be proved. If the Court was
satisfied that a corrupt practice had in fact been
perpetrated, may be by one side or the other, it was
absolutely necessary to find out who was the author of that
corrupt practice. Section 98 of the Act itself allows the
Court to name a person who is guilty of corrupt practice
after giving him notice and this would be more so in the
case of a candidate whose name. appears to be connected with
the corrupt practice, the proof whereof is not before the
Court but can be so brought. In such a ease we think that
the court would be acting within its jurisdiction in using
O. XVI r. 14 to summon witnesses who can throw light upon
the matter..
Having disposed of this preliminarg objection, we are
now in a position to consider the evidence which was
brought; but before doing so, we must show its relevance to
the pleas which had been raised in the case, because much
discussion was made
1029
of the law of pleadings in the case. We have pointed out
above that the plea in essence was that cars were used for
the purpose of conveying voters contrary to the prohibition
contained in the Election Law. The names of the booths and
the divisions in which the booths were situated together
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with the particulars of the cars and the persons primarily
concerned with cars at the polling booths have been
mentioned. It is true that the drivers of the cars or the
voters themselves have not been examined. But it has been
sufficiently pleaded and proved that the cars were in fact
used. The connection of Seshadri with the use of the cars
has been specifically pleaded. In our opinion, the rest
were matters of evidence which did not require to be pleaded
and that plea could always be supported by evidence to show
the source from where the cars were obtained, who hired or
procured them and who used them for the conveyance of
voters. This is exactly what has happened in this case.
The learned Judge after reaching the conclusion that a
large number of cars were used for conveying voters to the
polling booths,. felt impelled further to consider who was
responsible for hiring them. The names of the two garages
were already given and there was the allegation that certain
companies and cinema producers were also helping Seshadri by
the loan of cars. Since the name of Kumarswamy’s garage was
mentioned, it was but natural for the Judge to have summoned
the proprietor of the garage. The proprietor of the garage
came and gave the story about the use of the cars by some
other candidate but not Seshadri. lie however brought on
record documents to show that the cars were hired on payment
from his garage by one Krishnaswamy. The next step was
therefore to summon Krishnaswamy and he was therefore
summoned and questioned. Krishnaswamy admitted that he had
hired these cars and paid bills amounting to a few thousand
rupees.
It is obvious that these cars were not employed for any
other purpose that day except for election work. It is
ridiculous to imagine that they were ordered for a picnic or
for a marriage which did not take p1ace. Therefore the
inference was that Krishnaswamy had hired these cars to
convey voters to the polling booths. The question therefore
boils down to this, for whom was Krishnaswamy working?
Here we have the evidence of various types against
Krishnaswamy. Kumarswamy and Krishnaswamv have been
amply proved in the ease to be connected with Seshadri.
Kumarswamv was shown Ex. c-2A. lie stated that it was an
order form filled bV R. Krishnaswamy. He also admitted
that he had received payments and that the trip
sheets of the cars were maintained for that date. Those
trip sheets are C-7 to C-36. Now with regard to these trip
sheets, it may be stated that in some of them there was
mention that the cars were used for election work, but
subsequently it was
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found that someone had rubbed out that entry. We are not
here to find out who was guilty of attempting to create
evidence by rubbing this out. The fact remains that some
of the trip sheets still read clearly that the cars had
been used for election work. Ex. C-6 was the bill which was
issued for these cars, and it was issued to Krishnaswamy.
Therefore the cars were engaged at least from Kumarswamy
garage for conveying voters and they were hired by
Krishnaswamy and he paid for them.
Now Krishnaswamy is connected intimately with Seshadri.
He was employed by two companies in which Seshadri was a
Director. A party was arranged in honour of Seshadri to
celebrate his victory. The arrangement for this was made by
Krishnaswamy although the expenses for the party were paid
by Seshadri by cheque. Seshadri contends that his entire
accounts were. examined but it was not proved from those
accounts that he had paid any money towards the hire of the
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cars. It is not possible for anyone to say how Seshadri, if
he was willing to pay for the cars, would have procured the
money. It would have been the worst thing for him to have
paid the amount by cheque so that it could enter into the
accounts. Obviously such payments would be made in a way
that they could not be traced back to the person actually
paying the amount. The connection, however, of Krishnaswamy
with the hiring of the cars and with the celebration of the
victory of Seshadri furnishes a very important link in the
chain of reasoning.
It is quite clear to us that the Swatantra Party was in
favour of Seshadri. Seshadri relies upon finding which has
been given by the Court in which it is stated that the Judge
found that the first respondent, the Swatantra party and
the persons mentioned therein acted as agents of the first
respondent and committed corrupt practices under s. 123(5)
with which we are now dealing. The argument was that this
finding. is somewhat obscure because it shows that the
first respondent was the agent of the first respondent
himself. It seems to us that the learned Judge in recording
this finding gave it unthinkingly taking the words from the
plea in the petition. It is quite clear that the learned
Judge reaches the conclusion that the Swatantra party was
working actively in support of Seshadri. It is of course
not proved, that he was the adopted candidate of the party
nor is it proved that he had appointed any particular person
as his agent, but it is quite clear that the Swatantra party
was actively supporting him. Thus there is the presence of
the workers of the Swatantra party like Hande, Vinavakam,
Violin Mahadevan and Venkatraman on the scene at the polling
booths. It may also be mentioned that in one of the trip
sheets, one Kalyanasundaram had signed in token of the cars
having been used. This Kalyanasundaram was the polling agent
of Seshadri. The circumstantial
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evidence is now complete. There is the hiring of the cars
from the Kumaraswamy Garage by Krishnaswamy, the payment of
money by Krishnaswamy to the garage, Krishnaswamy’s
attachment to Seshadri because of his past connection and
the further proof that he arranged the party on his behalf
after his victory and the trip sheet was signed by
Kalyanasundaram the polling agent of Seshadri. The amount
paid was so large that only a candidate would incur that
expense, and no supporter. If there was any doubt as to who
hired or procured these cars, it is resolved by the
concatenation of circumstances which clearly demonstrate
that it could have been only Seshadri and no one else who
had hired these vehicles. We can infer this
circumstantially even though direct evidence be not
available. In addition, there is the patent fact that
Seshadri did not himself go into the witness box and clear
these facts standing out against him although
opportunity’ was offered. It is true that Seshadri
complained before us that the plea was vague, that it had
been magnified by the evidence brought in this manner and
the Court allowed the election petitioner to take advantage
of the evidence so brought, but we have already held that
the evidence was legitimately brought and that it could be
led in the case. As to the plea, we have already shown that
it was sufficiently cogent to establish the connection
between Seshadri and the hiring and procuring of the cars.
The missing links were supplied by that evidence by showing
the connection of the only person who had hired the cars and
paid several thousand rupees for their hire. If that person
is intimately connected with Seshadri, the conclusion is
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inescapable that it was Seshadri for whose benefit the cars
were hired or procured.
In our opinion, the circumstantial chain of evidence is
sufficient to show the connection between him and the use of
the cars for the conveyance of voters.
As to the rulings which were cited before us, it is
sufficient to say that each case is decided on its own
facts, and circumstances. It is true that better particulars
can only be given by the party, but that is only where
better particulars are required. It was not necessary for
Vasanta Pai to have pleaded his evidence in this behalf. He
made a very full plea by giving the numbers of the cars, by
naming the polling booths at which voters were brought and
by stating quite-categorically that it was Seshadri who had
procured these cars for the conveyance of voters. Rest was
matter of evidence and the facts had to be established by
evidence. It may be that without the evidence of
Kumaraswamy and Krishnaswamy the case might have taken a
different turn but we have already pointed out that the
learned Judge very correctly brought these two persons
intimately connected with the cars into the Case before
him, and to give their version. Their version is partly
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true and partly false and the false evidence was to exclude
Seshadri from the charge. In our opinion, this also
demonstrates the connection between these persons and
Seshadri which had been established in other ways through
their own mouths. We accordingly hold that this corrupt
practice was brought home.
It remains to consider the argument of Mr. Gupte
whether Vasanta Pai could be declared elected. This will
depend on our reaching the conclusion that but for the fact
that voters were brought through this corrupt practice to
the polling booths, the result of the election had been
materially affected. In a ’single transferable vote, it is
very difficult to say how the voting would have gone,
because if all the votes which Seshadri had got, had gone to
one of the other candidate who got eliminated at the earlier
counts, those candidates would have won. We cannot order a
recount because those voters were not free from complicity.
It would be speculating to decide how many of the voters
were brought to the polling booths in the cars. We think
that we are not in a position to declare Vasanta Pai as
elected, because that would be merely a guess or surmise as
to the nature of the voting which would have taken place if
this corrupt practice had not been perpetrated.
In the result therefore, we set aside the direction that
Vasanta Pai is elected to the constituency. There will
inevitably have to be a fresh election in this constituency.
In so far as Seshadri is concerned, we think that he was
properly named as guilty of corrupt practice although that
order was incorporated by the learned Judge through a
review. It was his duty to have named persons who had been
guilty of corrupt practice and he made this up later. There
is no need for any specific power for review since the power
to name any person guilty of corrupt practice is already
contained in the Act. Whether it comes in the original
judgment or by a supplementary or complementary order, is
not much to the purpose; that order was correctly made.
In the result, the appeal fails and it will be dismissed
with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
STATE OF BIHAR
December 2, 1968
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