Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NAIN SUKH DAS AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/05/1953
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 384 1953 SCR 1184
CITATOR INFO :
D 1973 SC1041 (16)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 14,15(1),32-Municipal
election -Election on the basis of communal electorates
-Validity-Application under Art. 32 for writ to prevent
elected candidates from sitting on the
Board-Maintainability-Remedy of ratepayers.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners, who were residents of a municipality,
alleging that they had been deprived of their rights to
exercise their votes and to seek their election as
candidates in certain by elections to the Municipal Board,
as those by-elections were held on communal lines on the
basis of separate electorates contrary to the provisions of
the Constitution, applied for writs tinder art. 32 of the
Constitution for preventing the elected candidates from
acting as members of the Board, and the District Magistrate
and Civil Judge from holding any meetings of the Board:
Held, that, though a law which provides for elections
on the basis of separate electorates for members of
different religious communities offends against art. 15(1)
of the Constitution and an election held after the
Constitution in pursuance of such a law subject to el. 4
would be void, the right which the petitioners claimed as
rate-payers in the municipality to insist that the Board
should be legally constituted and that persons who have not
been properly elected should not be allowed to take part in
the proceedings of the Board was outside the purview of art.
32 of the Constitution inasmuch as such a right, even if it
existed, was not a fundamental right conferred by Part III
of the Constitution.
Held further, that the alleged infringement of the
fundamental rights of the petitioners under art. 15(1) and
art. 14, that is, the discrimination practised against them
related to rights which they in fact never sought to
exercise and took no steps to assert while there was
occasion for doing so and the petitioners were therefore
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entitled to no relief under art. 32 of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 69 of 1953.
Petition under article 32 of the, Constitution for
enforcement of fundamental rights.
1185
S. C. Isaacs (Jai Prasad Agarwal, with him) for, the
appellant.
K. B. Asthana for respondent No. 1.
S. P. Sinha (R. Patnaik, with him) for respondent
No. 4.
1953. May 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
PATANJALI SASTRI C. J.-This is an application under article
32 of the Constitution seeking protection of the
petitioners’ fundamental right under article 15 (1) against
alleged violation thereof by the respondents.
The petitioners are three residents of Etah in Uttar
Pradesh. They complain that at the by election to the
Municipal Board of Etah held on November 2, 1951, December
8, 1951, and March 17, 1952, at which respondents 4, 11 and
12 were respectively elected, the Petitioners were deprived
of their rights to exercise their votes and to seek their
election as candidates, as those by-elections were held on
communal lines on the basis of separate electorates contrary
to the provisions of the Constitution. They also allege
that the nomination of respondent 3 as a member of the Board
by the Government was an illegal exercise of its powers, as
the interest which that respondent was nominated to
represent in the Board was already sufficiently represented.
The petition ners accordingly pray for the issue of writs of
quo warranto, mandamus and other appropriate writs or
directions to respondents 3, 4, 11 and 12 to show under what
authority they are acting as members of the Board and to
prevent them from acting assuchmembers. Tbe petitioners
also ask for wkits on the District Magistrate and the Civil
Judge of Etah, respondents 2 and 13 respectively, directing
them not to hold or permit the holding of any meeting of the
Board which is said to be illegally constituted.
Now, it cannot be seriously disputed that any law
providing for elections on the basis of separate electo-
rates for members of different religious communities offends
against article 15 (1) of the Constitution which runs thus
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"15 (1) The State shall not discriminate against any citizen
on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of
birth or any of them."
This constitutional mandate to the State not to diis-
criminate against any citizen on the ground, inter- alia, of
religion clearly extends to political as.well as to other
rights, and any election held after the Constitution in
,pursuance of such a law subject to clause (4) must be held
void as being repugnant to the Constitution. But the
question is whether the petitioners are now entitled to the
relief they seek in this application under article 32.
It is true, as pointed out in the Cross Roads case(1), that
article 32 provides, in some respects, for a more effective
remedy through this court than article 226 does through the
High Courts. But the scope of the remedy is clearly
narrower in that it is restricted solely to enforcement of
fundamental rights conferred by Part III of the
Constitution. Any right, for instance, which the
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petitioners may have as rate-payers in the Municipality to
insist that the Board should be legally constituted and that
respondents 3, 4, 11 and 12, who are not properly elected or
nominated members, should not be permitted to take part in
the proceedings of the Board, is outside the purview of
article 32, as such right, even if it exists, is not a
fundamental right conferred by Part 111.
Petitioners’ learned counsel, however, contended that
the fundamental right conferred by article 15 (1) on the
petitioners as citizens of India was violated by the
elections in question having been held on a basis which
discriminated against the petitioners on the ground of their
religion in that it precluded them from exercising their
franchise in relation to all the candidates and from
contesting the elections without regard to the reservation
of seats on communal basis. Learned counsel,also submitted
that the delimitation of the constituencies on communal
lines was a denial of equality to the petitioners in the
matter of their political rights and in that respect also
infringed their
(1) [1950] S.C.R 594
1187
fundamental right under article 14. We are unable to accede
to these contentions.
It is plain that the fundamental right conferred by
article 15(1) is conferred on a citizen as an individual and
is a guarantee against his being subjected to discrimination
in the matter of the rights, privileges and immunities
pertaining to him as a citizen generally. It is not the
petitioners’ case that any discrimination is now being
practised or threatened against them. Their grievance is
that the mode of election by separate electorates formed on
communal lines involved discrimination against them in
relation to seats other than those reserved for their
respective communities as to which they could not exercise
their right to vote or their right to stand as candidates.
There is no suggestion that the petitioners actually sought
to assert those rights by taking appropriate proceedings to
have the bar removed and the election conducted in
accordance with the Constitution. In fact, the petitioners
acquiesced in the elections being conducted under the old
system of separate electorates and felt no discrimination
having been practised against them until a no-confidence
motion was tabled recently against the former Chairman who
has since lost his seat as a result of that motion having
been carried. Thus, the infringement of their fundamental
rights under article 15(1) and art 61 14, that is, the
discrimination practised against them, of which they now
complain, related to rights which they in fact never sought
to exercise and took no steps to assert, while there was
still room for doing so, and for the exercise of which the
opportunity is now lost. But, argues Mr. Isaacs, the
election of the respondents 4 11 and 12 being void, they are
no better than usurpers, and the petitioners are entitled to
prevent them from functioning as members of the Municipal
Board. It may be, as we have already remarked, that the
petitioners could claim such relief as ratepayers of the
Municipality in appropriately framed proceedings, but there
is no question of enforcing petitioners’ funda mental right
under article 15(1) or article 14 in such claim, There is
still less ground for seeking relief on
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that basis aoainst respondent 3 who is only a nominated
member.
The petitioners appear to have misconceived their remedy and
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their application under article 32 must fail. The petition
is dismissed with costs, one sot.
Petition dismissed.
Agent for the petitioners: K. L. Mehta.
Agent for respondent No. I : C. P. Lal.
Agent for respondent No. 4: S. P. Varma.