Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LACHHMAN DAS ARORA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GANESHI LAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/09/1999
BENCH:
S. RAJENDRA BABU, R.C. LAHOTI.
JUDGMENT:
DR. A.S. ANAND. CJI :
The appellant herein is aggrieved by the dismissal of
his Election Petition by the learned Election Judge of the
High Court of Punjab & Haryana on the preliminary issue of
limitation without trial.
The first respondent was declared elected to the
Haryana Legislative Assembly from Sirsa Assembly
Constituency on 10.5.1996. The appellant, defeated
candidate, called in question his election on various
grounds by presenting an election petition on 1.7.1996 at
3.00 P.M. in the Registry of the High Court of Punjab &
Haryana. The election petition was resisted and a
preliminary objection was raised by respondent No. I
to the effect that the election petition had not been filed
within the period of 45 days as prescribed by Section 81(1)
of the Representation of the People Act. 1951 (hereinafter
"the Act") and was as such liable to be dismissed. The
learned Election Judge on the basis of the preliminary
objection, raised the following issue:-
"Whether the election petition has been filed within
the period of limitation?"
Vide judgment dated 16th July, 1997, the issue was
decided against the election petitioner and consequently the
election petition was dismissed. In holding that the
petition had been filed beyond the period of limitation of
45 days, the learned Election Judge relied upon a
Notification issued by the Punjab & Haryana High Court dated
27.11.1995. by which calendar of summer vacations tor the
year commencing 1.1.1996 to 31.12.1996 had been settled by
the High Court.
Learned counsel for the appellant, in challenging the
impugned judgment of the High Court, submitted that since
the High Court was closed for summer vacations between June
I and June 30, 1996 (botii days inclusive) the election
petition presented in the Registry on the reopening day of
the High Court on July 1. 1996. was within the period of
limitation. Reliance in this behalf was placed on Section
10 of the General Clauses Act. 1897 and upon
the judgments of this Court in Hari Shanker Trpathi v.
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Shiv Harsh and others, (1976) I SCO 897 and Simhadri Satya
Narayana Rao v. M. Budda Prasad and others, (1994) Supp
(1) SCC 449, to urge that where the High Court is closed on
account of vacations, presentation of an election petition
on the next day following the vacations, would render the
election petition to have been filed during the prescribed
period, if that period fell during the vacations.
On behalf of the returned candidate, on the other
hand. it was asserted that since the Notification dated
27.11.1995 issued by the High Court itself provided that
though the High Court was to remain closed for civil
business during the summer vacations, it was to remain open
for the purpose of hearing an election petition, therefore
Section 10 of the General Clauses Act was not attracted.
Reliance in support of the submission was placed on the
judgment of this Court in Satbir v. Smt. Parsanni Devi &
others, 1987 (73) Election Law Reports 201, wherein a
three-Judge Bench of this Court had considered a
Notification issued by the Punjab & Haryana High Court on
20th November, 1981, in almost identical terms and held that
since for the purpose of hearing of election petitions and
filing of other matters under the Representation of the
People Act, the Notification had provided an except :.
benefit of Section 10 of the General Clauses Act was not
available to an election petitioner to file the election
petition on the next day following the summer vacations.
We have given our thoughtful consideration to
submissions made at the bar.
Section 81(1) of the Act deals with the presentation
of election petitions and provide:
"81. Presentation of petitions.-(l) An election
called in question any election may be presented on one or
more of the grounds specified in sub-section (1) of section
100 and section 101 to the High Court by any candidate at
such election or any elector within forty-five days from.
but not earlier than the date o. ’lection of the returned
candidate or if there are more than one returned candidate
at the election and dates of their election are different,
the later of those two dates"
On its plain reading. Section 81(1) Says down that an
election petition calling in question any election may be
presented on one or more of the grounds specified in
sub-section (1) of Section 100 and Section 101 of the Act to
the High Court by any candidate at such election or by an
elector within forty-five davs from. but not earlier than.
the date of election of the returned candidate, or if there
are more than one returned Candida.. at the election and
the dates of their election are different, the later of
those two dates. The Act is a special code providing a
period of limitation for filing of an election petition. No
period for filing of an election petition is prescribed
under the Indian Limitation Act. The Act insofar as it
relates to presentation and trial of election
disputes is a complete code and a special law. The
scheme of the special law shows that the provisions of
Sections 4 to 24 of the Indian Limitation Act do not apply.
If an election petition is not filed within the prescribed
period of fortv-five days. Section 86(1) of the Act. which
provides that the High Court shall dismiss an election
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petition which does not comply with the provisions of
Section 81 or Section 82 or Section 117. is straightaway
attracted.
The next question, however, which arises for
consideration is whether Section 10 of the General Clauses
Act. 1897 can apply in a case where the prescribed period
of limitation expires during the vacations of the High
Court? Section 10 of the General Clauses Act reads :
S.I 0- Computation of time. (1) Where, by any Central
Act or Regulation made after the commencement of this Act,
any act or proceeding is directed or allowed to be done or
taken in any Court or office on a certain day or within a
prescribed period, then, if the Court or office is closed on
that day or the last day of the prescribed period, the act
or proceeding shall be considered as done or taken in due
time if it is done or taken : the next day afterwards on
which the Court or office is open :
Provided that nothing in this section shall apply to
any act or proceeding to which the Indian Limitation Act,
1877 (XV of 1887) applies:
The proviso to Section 10 makes the provisions of
Section 10 inapplicable to cases where the Indian Limitation
Act applies and since Indian 5
Limitation Act does not apply to election petitions
filed under the Act Section 10 of the General Clauses Act in
term would apply to the filing of election petitions also.
According to Section 10 (supra) an act should be considered
to have been done within the prescribed period, if it is
done on the next day on which the Court or office is open.
The applicability of Section 10 (supra) would, however,
depend upon the facts of each case and the manner in which
the High Court transacts its business during the period of
-^cations.
The Rules and Orders of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court do not settle the calendar of summer vacations. It is
an admitted case of the parties that settlement of summer
vacations is done by issuance of a Notification; which
contains all matters connected therewith. The Punjab and
Haryana High Court had. as in the previous years, issued a
Notification on 27.11.1995. settling the summer vacations
and providing therein the manner in which the High Court
would function during the summer vacations.
Whether the benefit of Section 10 of the Genera
Clauses Act can be availed of to save the period of
limitation in the present case would therefore, depend upon
the terms of the Notification issued by the Punjab & Haryana
High Court on 27.11.1995. That Notification inter alia
provides :
"It is hereby notified for general information that
the Court of Punjab & Haryana at Chandigarh will be closed
for Civil
business except for hearing Election petitions or any
other matter arising out of the Representation of People
Act, 1951 urgent Civil Appeals’’Petinons etc. including
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petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India on
account of long vacations in the year 1996 from June I to
June 30, 1996 (both days .inclusive). The court will resume
sitting on July 1. 1996 (Monday).
During this period except on Sundays and Holidays
Appeals/Petitions etc. will be received at the Court at
Chandigarh from such persons as may choose to present them".
(Emphasis ours)
The above Notification unambiguously provides that
during the summer vacations i.e. period between June I to
June 30, 1996 (both days inclusive) while the High Court of
Punjab & Haryana at Chandigarh would remain closed for civil
business, it would be open for "hearing of election
petitions or any other matter arising out of the
Representation of the People Act’. The learned Election
Judge of tlie High Court was, under the circumstances,
justified in holding that benefit of Section 10 of the
General Clauses Act was not available to the election
petitioner to save the period of limitation as undisputedly
the election petition had been filed, on reopening day of
the High Court after summer vacations, but after the expiry
of the period of forty-five days prescribed under Section
81(1) of tlie Act. which period had expired during the
period of summer vacations. In view of the clear language
of the notification, there was no impediment in the way of
the appellant to present the
election petition during the summer vacations. The
judgments in Hari Shanker Tripathi v. Shiv Harsh and others
and Simhadri Satya Narayana Rao v. M, Budda Prasad and
others (supra) relied upon by learned counsel for the
appellant are clearly distinguishable. In the notifications
issued in those cases by the High Court of Judicature at
Allahabad and the Andhra Pradesh High Court, respectively,
the entire period of summer vacation was declared as "closed
holidays" in the case of the High Court of Allahabad, and
for the entire period of Sankranthi vacation, the Andhra
Pradesh High Court was also to remain closed. Unlike the
notification of Punjab & Haryana High Court dated
27.11.1995. in none of the Notifications settling the
vacations in the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad and
tlie Andhra Pradesh High Court, was any exception made with
respect to the hearing of election petitions or any oilier
matter arising out of the Representation of the People Act.
Section 10 of the General Clauses Act was. in tliose cases,
clearly attracted to save the period of limitation by filing
an election petition, on the first reopening day of the High
Court, since the prescribed period of limitation had expired
during the "closed holidays’ or ’Sankranthi vacations’. It
was in tills fact situation that the cases of Hari Shanker
Tripathi and Simhadri Safya Narayana Rao were decided.
Those judgements, therefore, cannot advance the case of the
appellant. On the other hand, the judgment of this Court in
Satbir v. Pmt Parsanni Devi &
others (supra) which considered a Notification issued
by Punjab and Haryana High Court on an earlier occasion, in
identical terms as the Notification dated 27.11.1995,
applies with all force to the facts and circumstances of the
present case. In Satbir’s case (supra) the benefit of
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Section 10 of the General Clauses Act was denied to the
election petitioner and the election petition, not filed
within the period of forty-live days which expired during
the summer vacations, but filed on the reopening day of the
High Court after the summer vacations, was held as barred by
time because of the exc ion contained in the Notification
regarding the hearing of election petitiotts etc. during
the period of summer vacations.
We are not impressed by the argument of learned
counsel for the appellant that in view of the serious
charges which had been levelled against the returned
candidate in the election petition, the same ought not to
have been dismissed on the ground of limitation, as the
purity of election process is required to be maintained.
There is no quarrel with the proposition that it is the duty
of the Courts to maintain the purity of election promess but
at the same time there is no gainsaying that the law of
limitation may harshly effect a particular party, but it has
to be applied with all its vigour when the statute so
prescribes. The Courts cannot extend the period of
limitation on equitable grounds more particularly in the
matter of filing of election petitions under the
Act. Since, it is a common ground that the election
petition in the instant case had been filed one week after
the expiry of the period of forty five days, it was clearly
barred by time. The High Court was, under the
circumstances, fully justified in dismissing the election
petition on that ground. We do not find any merit in this
appeal which accordingly fails and is dismissed but with no
order as to costs.