Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRIJ MOHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SAT PAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/03/1985
BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1985 AIR 847 1985 SCR (3) 321
1985 SCC (2) 652 1985 SCALE (1)427
CITATOR INFO :
F 1985 SC1073 (16)
ACT:
The Representation of People Act 1951, Section 33
Assembly Election-Nomination Paper of Candidate-Mistakes-
Regarding serial number, part number, house number-
nomination paper rejected on scrutiny by Returning Officer-
Rejection whether valid-Mistakes whether of a substantial
character.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent in the appeal an election, filed an
election petition challenging the election of the appellant
to the Assembly. He contended in the petition that in the
election to the Haryana Legislative Assembly from Jind
constituency one Dog Ram filed nomination paper. His name
was proposed by Ram Pratap, an elector of the constituency.
Dog Ram Candidate was registered as an elector at serial No.
177 and house No. 57 in part 39 of the electoral roll of the
constituency whereas the proposer was registered as elector
at serial No. 313 and house No. 6 in part 39 of the same
constituency. The name and postal address of Dog Ram were
correctly given in the nomination paper but the part of the
electoral roll was mentioned as 57 instead of 39 by an
inadvertent mistake committed by the person who filed the
nomination paper. Similarly, in the case of the proposer,
the serial number of the elector and the number of the
constituency were given correctly but the number of his
house was wrongly entered in the column meant for the part
of the electoral roll. At the time of scrutiny no other
candidate or proposer objected to the acceptance of the
nomination paper of Dog Ram but the Returning Officer on his
own rejected the nomination paper on the ground that
particulars of the candidate and the proposer have been
wrongly entered in the nomination paper.
The appellant contested the election petition
contending that the Returning Officer had compared the
admittedly inaccurate particulars given in the nomination
paper with those entered in the part of the voters’ list
mentioned in the nomination paper and found them to be
incorrect and asked candidate Dog Ram-to show the names of
himself and his proposer in the electoral roll and that as
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the candidate was unable to do so he rejected the nomination
paper and was right in doing so.
In the nomination paper the serial numbers in the
voters’ list of the candidate and his proposer have been
correctly given as 177 and 313 respec-
322
tively but the part numbers have been given wrongly as 57
and 6 respectively which are their respective house numbers
instead of the correct part No. 39.
In the appeal to the High Court the question was as to
whether the nomination paper of Dog Ram was improperly
rejected. On the evidence led by the parties the Single
Judge found that the candidate Dog Ram and his proposer were
registered as voters in the constituency and were qualified
to contest the election and propose the candidate
respectively. It was further found that errors in regard to
electoral roll numbers of the candidate and the proposer in
the electoral roll and the nomination paper do not
constitute defects of a substantial character as mentioned
in the proviso to Section 33(4) of the Act. The Single Judge
accepted the evidence of P.W. 2 that when he and the
candidate presented the nomination paper the Returning
Officer told them that it was in order and held that the
Returning Officer had thus tripped them into an error and
’observed that had he told them that there were some
discrepancies in the nomination paper they would have either
made the corrections then and there and would have gone more
fully prepared to meet objections at the time of the
scrutiny. Accordingly the election petition was allowed and
appellant’s election was declared as void. On the ground
that the nomination paper of Dog Ram was improperly
rejected.
The elected candidate appealed to this Court,
Allowing the Appeal,
^
HELD: l. The Returning Officer in the instant case
could not be said to have improperly rejected the nomination
paper of Dog Ram. [340G]
2. It is not possible to say generally and in the
abstract that all errors in regard to electoral roll numbers
of the candidate and the proposer in the electoral rolls or
nomination papers do not constitute defects of a substantial
character. They would not be defects of a substantial
character only if at the time of the scrutiny the Returning
Officer either by himself with the materials placed before
him during the scrutiny or with the assistance of the
candidate For his proposer or any other person is able to
find out the correct serial number of the candidate and the
proposer in the electoral roll. If that is not the case, he
would be committing a grave error by accepting the
nomination paper without verifying whether the candidate is
a voter in that or any other constituency of the State and
whether the proposer is a voter in that constituency
[334G-H: 335Al
3. No amount of evidence can be looked into upon a plea
which was never put forward in the pleadings. In the instant
case, there is no allegation in the election petition that
there was any assurance by the Returning Officer at the time
of receipt of the nomination paper that there was nothing
wrong in it. In the absence of any such allegation in the
election petition, the evidence of proposer P.W. 2, which is
not even corroborated by the evidence of any other witness
that he and the candidate presented the nomination paper to
the Returning Officer and showed him the voters’ list and
that he told them
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323
then that the nomination paper was in order, is not
acceptable. In the circumstances the Single Judge was not
justified in accepting the evidence of P.W. 2 and holding
that the Returning Officer was guilty of tripping the
candidate and the proposer by any assertion on his part into
any one believing that there was nothing wrong in the
nomination paper. [335B; C-E]
4. The candidate and the proposer are always expected
to go fully pre- pared to meet any objection that may be
raised by any candidate or even by Returning Officer himself
suo moto at the time of the scrutiny and they cannot be
expected to go any the less prepared merely because the
Returning Officer had received the nomination paper without
raising any objection. It is at the time of scrutiny which
is done in the presence of all concerned that the nomination
papers come up for more detailed consideration at the hands
of the Returning Officer against whom there is no estoppel
in regard to the statutory duty of scrutiny. [335F-G]
5(i) The evidence of P.W. I is largely corroborated by
the Returning Officer’s order. R.W. I is an advocate and was
himself a candidate but retired at a later stage. He stated
that the electoral rolls were lying on the table of the
Returning Officer at the time of the scrutiny. There is no
reason for not accepting this evidence of R.W. 1. [336D-E]
5(ii) The electoral rolls were lying on the Returning
Officer’s table at the time of the scrutiny and therefore,
there would have been no necessity for Dog Ram and P.W. 2 to
ask the Returning Officer to give them the electoral roll
relating to their village for clearing his doubt. The
evidence of P.W. 2 is therefore not acceptable. [336F]
5(iii). The evidence of P.W.3 that the Returning
Officer did not ask Dog Ram to show the names of himself and
his proposer in the electoral roll is inconsistent with the
allegations in the election petition as also the evidence of
P.W. 2 that the Returning Officer said so. Therefore, the
evidence of P.W. 3 is not acceptable. The evidence of R.W. 1
is accepted. The Returning Officer found discrepancy in the
names, serial number and part number mentioned in the
nomination paper on the one hand and those found in the
electoral roll with reference to those numbers on the other
and that on account of his in ability to ascertain with the
particulars made available before him whether the candidate
Dog Ram and his proposer P.W. 2 were electors in the
constituency he asked the candidate Dog Ram to point out the
names of himself and his proposer in the electoral roll to
satisfy him that they are electors in the constituency and
that as he was unable to do so, he rejected the nomination
paper by his order Ex. P.W. l/B. [337G-H; 338A]
Hira Singh Pal v. Madan Lal [1968] 2 SCR 778, Ram
Awadesh Singh v Sumitra Devi & Ors [1972] 2 S.C.R. 674 and
Viveka Nand Giri v. Nawal Kishore Sahi A.I.R. 1984 S.C. 856;
not applicable.
324
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2650 of
1984
Appeal U/s 116 A of the R.P. Act 1951 from the Judgment
and Order dt. 30.5.84 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court at
Chandigarh in E.P. No. 7 of 1982.
H.L. Sibal, Kapil Sibal. Mrs. Madhu Tewatia Singh and
N.M. Popli for the Appellant.
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S.N. Kacker and Ravinder Bana for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VARADARJAN. J. This appeal by the respondent in
Election petition No. 7 of 1982 of the file of the Punjab
and Haryana High Court is directed against the judgment of a
learned Single Judge declaring the appellant’s election from
the Jind constituency of the Haryana Legislative Assembly as
void on the ground that the nomination paper of a candidate
Dog Ram was improperly rejected. The last date for filing
nomination papers was 24.4.1982, and in the scrutiny made on
26.4.1982 nomination papers of two candidates including Dog
Ram were rejected by the Returning Officer. The principal
contest was between one Mange Ram, a Congress (I) candidate
and the appellant, an independent candidate who had been set
up by the Lok Dal party. The polling was on 19.5.1982 and
after the counting was made on 20.5.1982 the appellant was
declared elected from the Jind constituency.
The election petition was filed by the respondent Sat
Pal, an elector in the Jind constituency. His case in the
election was that Dog Ram was registered as an elector at
Serial No. 177 and house No. 57 in part 39 of the electoral
roll of the Jind constituency. Ram Partap who proposed Dog
Ram as a candidate, was registered as elector at Serial No.
313 and house No. 6 in part 39 of the same constituency. The
name of Dog Ram and his postal address were correctly given
in the nomination paper. But the part of the electoral roll
was mentioned as 57 instead of 39 by an inadvertant mistake
committed by the person who filled the nomination paper.
Similarly, in the case of the proposer Ram Partap, the
serial number of the elector and the number of the
constituency were given correctly but the number of his
house was wrongly entered
325
in the column meant for the part of the electoral roll.
These inaccuracies in the nomination paper were technical
in nature and should have been rectified by the Returning
Officer at the time of scrutiny. No other candidate or
proposer objected to the acceptance of the nomination paper
of Dog Ram but the Returning Officer on his own rejected the
nomination paper by the following order:
"Particulars of the candidate and the proposer have
been wrongly entered in the nomination paper. The
candidate who is present in person failed to show me
the voters’ list where his and the proposer’s names are
entered. Hence rejected."
The appellant contested the election petition
contending that the Returning Officer compared the
admittedly inaccurate particulars given in the nomination
paper with those entered in the para of the voters’ list
mentioned in the nomination paper and found them to be
incorrect and asked Dog Ram to show the names of himself and
his proposer Ram Partap in the electoral rolls and that as
the candidate was unable to do so he rejected the nomination
paper and was right in doing so.
In the first part of the nomination paper, Annexure R-6
Ram Partap, P.W. 2 has stated thus under his signature: E
"I nominate as a candidate for election to the
Legislative Assembly from the 48 Jind constituent
assembly:
Candidate’s name : Dog Ram s/o Mohan Lal
Postal Address : Village Amar Heri, Post Office
Ahirka (Jind)
His name is entered at Sl. No. 177 in Part No. 57 of
the electoral roll for the 48 Jind Assembly Constituency.
My name is Ram Partap and it is entered at Sl. No. 313
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in part No. 6 of the electoral roll for the 48 Jind
assembly Constituency."
In Part No. 39 of the voters’ list relating to Amar
Heri village, Dog Ram is entered at Sl. No. 177 and House
No. 57 and Ram
326
Partap, P.W. 2 is entered at Sl. No. 313 and house number 6.
Thus it is seen that in the nomination paper, Serial Nos of
Dog Ram and Ram Partap, P.W. 2 have been correctly given as
177 and 313 respectively, but the part numbers have been
given wrongly as 51 and 6 respectively which are their
respective house numbers instead of the correct part No. 39.
The learned Single Judge who tried the election
petition framed the issue as to whether the nomination paper
of Dog Ram was improperly rejected. On the side of the
respondent three witnesses were examined and they are: the
election Kanungo Jai Singh, P.W. 1 the proposer Ram Pratap
P.W. 2 and the Congress (I) candidate Mange Ram, P.W. 3. The
appellant relied upon the evidence of his sole witness Gulab
Singh, R.W.1.
P.W. 1 has stated in his evidence that Dog Ram son of
Mohan Lal was registered as voter at Sl. No. 177 in house
No. 57 and that the proposer Ram Partap, P.W. 2 was
registered as voter at Sl. No. 313 in part 39 of the
electoral roll of Amar Heri village. In his cross
examination, P.W. 1 has admitted that in Jind constituency
there were 77000 voters entered in 97 parts of the electoral
roll and that the voter at Sl. No. 177 in part No. 57 is one
Krishan son of Ami Lal of Jalalpura Khurd village while the
voter at Sl. No. 313 in Part No. 6 is one Premo wife of
Satbir of Barsana village. P.W. 2 has stated in his evidence
that he and Dog Ram presented the nomination paper to the
Returning Officer on 24.4.1982 and he told them that it w as
in order and that at the time of the scrutiny he told them
it that there were some mistakes in the nomination paper. He
has further stated that he and Dog Ram volunteered to show
the actual voters’ list but he declined to have a look at
the voters’ list relating into Amar Heri village and
insisted that the particulars mentioned in the nomination
paper alone could be seen by him. P.W. 3 has stated in his
evidence that nobody raised any objection to the nomination
paper filed by Dog Ram but the Returning Officer him self
raised an objection saying that the particulars are not
properly filled in. He has further stated that Dog Ram and
P.W. 2 were present at that time and they told the Returning
Officer that if the voters’ list was supplied to them they
would be in a position to show the correct particulars and
he did not comply with their request. On the other hand,
R.W. 1 who had filed a recrimination petition
327
against Mange Ram in Election Petition No. 8 of 1982, has
stated in his evidence that the Returning Officer asked Dog
Ram to show the relevant part and the serial number in the
voters’ list where his name is entered and Dog Ram failed to
do so though the voters’ list was lying on the Returning
Officer’s table at that time and an opportunity was given to
Dog Ram for seeing the same and that the Returning Officer,
therefore, rejected the nomination paper of Dog Ram after
raising an objection suo moto.
The learned Single Judge found that the candidate Dog
Ram and the proposer Ram Partap were registered as voters in
the Jind constituency and were qualified to contest in the
election and propose the candidate respectively. This fact
was not disputed before the learned Judge. He found that
errors in regard to electoral roll numbers of the candidate
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and the proposer in the electoral rolls and the nomination
paper do not constitute defects of a substantial character
as mentioned in the proviso to s. 33(4) of the
Representation of People Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to
as the ’Act’) which reads:
"33(4) On the presentation of a nomination paper, the
returning officer shall satisfy himself that the names
and electoral roll numbers of the candidate and his
proposer as entered in the nomination paper are the
same as those entered in the electoral, rolls: E
Provided that on misnomer or inaccurate description or
clerical, technical or printing error in regard to the
name of the candidate or his proposer or any other
person, or in regard to any place mentioned in the
electoral roll or the nomination paper and no clerical,
technical or 1 printing error in regard to the
electoral roll numbers of any such person in the
electoral roll or the nomination paper, shall affect
the full operation of the electoral roll or the
nomination paper with respect to such person or place
in any case where the description in regard to the name
of the person or place is such as to be commonly
understood; and the returning officer shall permit any
such misnomer, inaccurate description or clerical,
technical or printing error to be corrected and where
necessary, direct that any such misnomer, inaccurate
description, clerical, technical or printing error in
the electoral roll or in the 1 nomination paper shall
be over-looked",
328
Though there is no allegation in the election petition
that the Returning Officer assured the candidate Dog Ram and
the proposer Ram Partap, P.W. 2 that the nomination paper
was in order, the learned Single Judge accepted evidence of
P.W. 2 that when he and the candidate Dog R am presented the
nomination paper on 24.4.1982, the Returning Officer told
them that it was in order, and he held that the Returning
Officer had thus tripped them into an error and observed
that had he told them that there were some discrepancies in
the nomination paper they would have either made the
corrections then and there or would have gone more fully
prepared to meet objections at the time of scrutiny. In that
view he has observed in his judgment:
"If an act or omission on his part is shown to have
tripped into an error an otherwise competent person to
offer himself as a candidate, who inspite of being
desirous of fighting election is unable to do so
because of the error committed by the Returning Officer
then such a candidate will be allowed to urge that
because of the non compliance by the Returning Officer
with the provisions of the Act the people of the
constituency have not been able to make a choice in
accordance with law. In my considered opinion it would
be a fit case to hold that the result of the election
has been materially affected. This in effect is the law
and spirit of s. 100(1) (d) (iv) of the Act. The
scrutiny was held in Jind which is a district town and
the Returning Officer is normally expected to have the
assistance of the election staff including the Election
Kanungo at the time of the scrutiny. If he had put a
few questions to Dog Ram and Ram Partap, P.W. 2 about
their residence and numbers of their house, the Kanungo
would have at once brought out the relevant electoral
rolls containing the names of these two persons. For
reasons aforementioned I am of the opinion that the
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nomination paper of Dog Ram candidate had been wrongly
rejected",
He accordingly allowed the election petition with costs
assessed at Rs. 2500 and declared the appellant’s election
as void.
The only issue framed by the learned Single Judge as
stated earlier is: "Whether the nomination paper of Shri Dog
Ram contesting candidate has been improperly rejected", From
this it does not
329
follow as Mr. Sibal, learned counsel appearing for the
appellant contends, that the first respondent had not
challenged the rejection of the particulars in the
nomination paper so far as they relate to the proposer Ram
Partap, P.W.2 for they too form an integral part of the
nomination paper and the consequence would be the same,
namely, rejection of the nomination paper of the candidate
even if it be for the defect in the particulars relating to
the proposer.
According to r. 4 of the Conduct of Election Rules,
1961 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Rules’) every
nomination paper presented under sub-s. (I) of s. 33 of the
Act may be completed in such one of the forms 2A to 2E as
may be appropriate. Section 33(i) relating to representation
of nomination papers and requirements for a valid nomination
says that the nomination paper shall be completed in the
prescribed form and signed by the candidate and an elector
of the constituency. It is clear from this sub-section that
the proposer of the candidate must be elector of the
constituency. Section 32 of the Act relating to nomination
of a candidate for election says that any person may be
nominated as a candidate for election to fill a seat if he
is qualified to be chosen to fill that seat under the
provisions of the Constitution and the Act or under the
provisions of the Government of Union Territories Act, 1963,
as the case may be. Section 5 of the Act relating to
qualifications for membership Of a Legislative Assembly says
that "a person shall not be qualified to be chosen to fill a
seat in the Legislative Assembly of a State unless-
(a) in the case of a seat reserved for the Scheduled
Castes or for the Scheduled Tribes of that State,
he is a member of any of those castes or of those
tribes, as the case may be, and is an elector for
any Assembly Constituency in that State;
(b) in the case of a seat reserved for an autonomous
district of Assam, he is a member of a Scheduled
Tribe of any autonomous district and is an elector
for the Assembly Constituency in which such seat
or any other seat is reserved for that district;
and
(c) in the case of any other seat, he is an elector
for any Assembly Constituency in the State".
We are concerned in the present case with clause (c) of
s. 5 of the Act. Therefore, the candidate nominated must be
an elector for
330
any Assembly Constituency in the State concerned. Form 2B is
the appropriate form in the present case. It is found at
page 239 of the Manual of Election Law corrected upto
December 1982. It consists of four parts, the first relating
to the candidate and the proposer, the second relating to
delivery of the nomination paper to the Returning Officer,
the third relating to the decision of the Returning Officer
accepting or rejecting the nomination paper and the fourth
relating to the receipt of the nomination paper and notice
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of scrutiny. The first part has to be signed by the
candidate and the proposer and the other three parts have to
be signed by the Returning Officer. The first part is
extracted for easy reference:
"Election to the Legislative Assembly of---- State
I nominate as a candidate for election to the -----
Legislative Assembly from the -assembly constituency.
Candidate’s name-_
His postal address-
His name is entered at S. No.-in part No.-of the
electoral roll for the- assembly constituency.
My name is----and it is entered at S. No.-in Part No.-
of the electoral roll for the-z -assembly constituency.
Date- (Signature of proposer)
I, the above-mentioned candidate assent to this
nomination and hereby declare-
(a) that I have completed---years of age;
(b) that I am set up at this election by the-party;
(c) that the symbols I have chosen are, in order of
reference (i) (ii) and (iii)
331
I further declare that l am a member of the-
caste/tribe which is a scheduled caste/tribe of the State
of-in relation to -(area) in that State.
Date- (Signature of candidate)
In the first part the proposer must mention the name of
the candidate and his own name and the serial numbers and
part numbers of the electoral roll of the Assembly
Constituency concerned where the name of the candidate and
his own name are entered and he is also required to furnish
the postal address of the candidate. It may be stated that
there is no specific provision in the Rules for furnishing
the postal address of the candidate in the nomination paper
though in Form 2B it is required to be given by the
proposer. It is obvious that the serial number and the part
number of the electoral rolls of the constituency concerned
relating to a candidate and the proposer are required to be
given in the nomination form in order to enable the
Returning Officer to verify whether the candidate and the
proposer are registered as electors and qualified to be
nominated as a candidate and to propose the candidate as a
candidate for filling a seat in the Legislative Assembly.
Rule 2(f) of the Rules says that the "Electoral roll number
of a person means; (i) the serial number of the entry in the
electoral roll in respect of that person; (ii) the serial
number of the part of the electoral roll in which such entry
occurs and (iii) the name of the constituency to which the
electoral roll relates." These particulars have to be
furnished in the nomination paper.
Section 33(4) of the Act says; "On the presentation of
a nomination paper, the returning officer shall satisfy
himself that the names and electoral roll numbers of the
candidate and his proposer as entered in the nomination
paper are the same as those entered in the electoral rolls:
Provided that no misnomer or inaccurate description or
clerical, technical or printing error in regard to the
name of the candidate or his proposer or any other
person, or in regard to any place mentioned in the
electoral roll or the nomination paper and no clerical,
technical or printing error in regard to the electoral
roll numbers of any such person in the electoral roll
or the nomination paper, shall affect the full
operation of the electoral roll or the nomination paper
332
with respect to such person or place in any case where
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the description in regard to the name of the person or
place is such as to be commonly understood; and the
returning officer shall permit any such misnomer or
inaccurate description or clerical, technical or
printing error to be corrected and where necessary,
direct that any such misnomer, inaccurate description,
clerical, technical or printing error in the electoral
roll or in the nomination paper shall be overlooked."
The Hand Book for Returning Officer, issued by the
Election Commission of India, says what the Returning
Officer and the Specified Assistant Returning Officer should
do as each nomination paper is filed. It says that the
Returning Officer or Specified Assistant Returning Officer
is not to hold a formal scrutiny of any nomination paper at
this stage. If the candidate is an elector in the
constituency concerned, the Returning Officer or the
Specified Assistant Returning Officer should compare the
entries in the nomination papers with the entries in the
electoral roll relating to the serial number and the name of
the candidate and the proposer. If he comes from any other
constituency, the officer should compare the entries in the
nomination paper with the entries relating to the
candidate’s name in the electoral roll of that constituency
or of the relevant part thereof or a certified copy of such
entry. The candidate is required by law to produce before
the officer such electoral roll or relevant part thereof or
a certified copy of the relevant entries thereof as per s.
33(5) of the Act. Legally, the responsibility for producing
documentary evidence of registration as elector in a
different constituency rests entirely on the candidate. The
instruction reiterates what is contained in the proviso to
s. 33(4) of the Act and further states that the points which
the Returning Officer or Specified Assistant Returning
Officer are required by s. 33(4) to be disposed of should be
invariably disposed of at time of the receipt of the
nomination paper and that it will be improper for the
officer at the time of scrutiny to reject the nomination
paper for defects which could have been cured at the
earlier stage of presentation of the nomination paper. It
was conceded by Mr. Kacker, learned Senior Advocate
appearing for the respondent, that the enquiry at the stage
of receipt Of nomination paper is what he called a
peripheral one and that no legal consequence flow from the
omission on the part of the Returning Officer or specified
Assistant Returning Officer to carry out his responsibility
at the stage of receipt of the nomination paper.
333
Section 36 of the Act relating to scrutiny of nomination
paper reads:
"36(1) On the date fixed for the scrutiny of
nominations under section 30), the candidates, their
election agents, one proposer of each candidate, and
one other person duly authorized in writing by each
candidate, but no other per son, may attend at such
time and place as the returning officer may appoint;
and the returning officer shall give them all
reasonable facilities for examining the nomination
papers of all candidates which have been delivered
within the time and in the manner laid down in section
33.
(2) The returning officer shall then examine the
nomination papers and shall decide all objections which
may be made to any nomination and may either on such
objection or on his own motion, after such summary
inquiry, if any, as he thinks necessary, reject any
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nomination on any of the following grounds:
(a) that on the date fixed for the scrutiny of
nominations the candidate either is not qualified
or is disqualified for being chosen, to fill the
seat under any of the following provisions that
may be applicable, namely:-
Articles 84,102,173 and 191, Part II of this Act
and section 4 and 17 of the Government of Union
Territories Act, 1963;
(b) that there has been a failure to comply with any
of the provisions of Section 33 or section 34; or
(c) that the signature of the candidate or the
proposer on nomination paper is not genuine.
Sub-section 6 of s. 36 requires that the Returning
Officer shall endorse on each nomination paper his decision
accepting or rejecting the same and says that if the
nomination paper is rejected he shall record in writing a
brief statement of his reasons for such rejection.
334
In the present case the proposer P.W.2 had mentioned
the names of himself and the candidate Dog Ram correctly in
the nomination paper. He had also mentioned their serial
numbers as 177 and 313 which would tally with their names if
the correct part No. 39 of the electoral roll had been
mentioned in the nomination paper. But, unfortunately
instead of entering that correct part No. 39 in the
nomination paper, P.W.2, who claims to have got the
nomination paper filled in by an Advocate of Jind whose name
he does not know, had mentioned the part No. as 57 in regard
to the candidate Dog Ram and as 6 in regard to himself which
are really their house numbers. The Returning Officer has,
therefore, passed the order, Ex. P.W.1/B, extracted earlier
in this judgment, rejecting the nomination paper. What
happened before he passed that order is established b y the
evidence which would be considered hereafter.
Before we proceed to consider the evidence we wish to
state that the learned Single judge has been stayed by two
things in reaching the conclusion that the rejection of the
nomination paper of Dog Ram was improper. They are: (1) that
errors in regard to electoral roll numbers of the candidate
and the proposer in the electoral rolls or the nomination
papers do not constitute defects of a substantial character
as noted in the proviso to s. 33 (4) of the Act and (2) that
the Returning Officer had told the candidate Dog Ram and the
proposer P.W.2 when the nomination paper was presented, that
it was alright and thus tripped them into an error, for had
he told them at that time that there were some discrepancies
in the nomination paper in regard to electoral roll numbers
they would have either made the corrections then and there
or would have gone more fully prepared to meet objections at
the time of scrutiny. The serial numbers and part numbers
mentioned in the nomination paper relate to Amit Lal of
Jalalpura Khurd and Premo wife of Satbir of Barsana village
and not to the candidate Dog Ram and the proposer P.W.2. It
is not possible to say generally and in the abstract that
all errors in regard to electoral roll numbers of the
candidate and the proposer in the electoral rolls or
nomination paper do not constitute defects of a substantial
character. They would not be defects of a substantial
character only if at The time of the scrutiny the Returning
Officer either by himself with the materials placed before
him during the scrutiny or with the assistance of the
candidate or his proposer or any other person is able to
find out the correct serial number of the candidate and the
proposer by reference to the Correct part number of the
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electoral roll. If that is
335
not the case, he would be committing a grave error by
accepting the nomination paper without verifying whether the
candidate is a voter in that or any other constituency of
the State and whether the proposer is a voter in that
constituency. As regards the tripping by the Returning
Officer we find that there is no allegation in the election
petition that there was any assurance by the Returning
Officer at the time of receipt of the nomination paper that
there was nothing wrong in it. Even according to Mr. Kacker
the enquiry by the Returning Officer at the time of delivery
of the nomination paper is only a peripheral enquiry in
which the Returning Officer in the present case seems to
have been satisfied by finding two numbers each given in
regard to the candidate and the proposer that they were the
serial number and part number of the electoral roll which
the proposer was bound to give correctly in regard to the
candidate and himself in the nomination paper. In the
absence of any such allegation oz tripping in the election
petition we think that the evidence of the proposer P.W.2
which is not even corroborated by the evidence of any other
witness that he and the candidate presented the nomination
paper to the Returning Officer and showed him the voters’
list and that he told them then that the nomination paper
was in order. This Court has held over and over again that
no amount of evidence can be looked into upon a plea which
was never put forward in the pleadings. In these
circumstances we think that the learned Single Judge was not
justified in accepting the evidence of P.W.2 and holding
that the Returning Officer was guilty of tripping the
candidate and the ’proposer by any assertion on his part
into any believing that there was nothing wrong in the
nomination paper. The candidate and the proposer are always
expected to go fully prepared to meet any objection that may
be raised by any candidate or even by the Returning Officer
himself suo moto at the time of the scrutiny and they cannot
be expected to go any the less prepared merely because the
Returning Officer had received the nomination paper without
raising any objection. It is at the time of scrutiny which
is done in the presence of all concerned that the nomination
papers come up for more detailed consideration at the hands
of the Returning Officer against whom there is no estoppel
in regard to the statutory duty of scrutiny.
P.W. 1 has deposed merely about the concerned serial
numbers 177 and 313 and part numbers 6, 39 and 57 of the
electoral roll. The proposer P.W.2 has stated in his
evidence that when the Returning Officer told him and his
candidate Dog Ram at the time
336
of the scrutiny that there was some mistake in filling the
nomination paper, both of them volunteered to show the
actual entry in the electoral roll of Amar Heri village but
he declined to have a look at it and insisted that the
particulars mentioned in the nomination paper alone could be
seen by him. The Returning Officer who had to verify the
serial numbers and part numbers etc. given in the nomination
paper with reference to the entries in the electoral roll
could have said that there were mistakes in the nomination
paper only after having looked into the electoral roll and
he would not have stated that he would see only the numbers
mentioned in the nomination paper. In his cross-examination
P.W.2 has admitted that the Returning Officer told them at
the time of the scrutiny that they should show him their
names in the electoral roll. But he has denied that Dog Ram
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replied that he was not in a position to point out his name
or his own name in the electoral roll. He has stated that on
the other hand they asked the Returning Officer to give them
the electoral roll relating to Amar Heri village and he
declined to do so and that they did not protest against that
highhandedness of the Returning Officer. The Returning
Officer must have had the electoral rolls before him at the
time of the scrutiny which could not be done without the
electoral rolls before him. R.W.I, an Advocate who was
himself a candidate and had retired at a later stage, has
stated in his evidence that the electoral rolls were lying
on the table of the Returning Officer at the time of the
scrutiny. There is no reason for not accepting this evidence
of R.W.1. The electoral rolls were lying on the Returning
Officer’s table at the time of the scrutiny and, therefore,
there would have been no necessity for the candidate Dog Ram
and P.W. 2 to ask the Returning Officer to give them the
electoral roll relating to Amar Heri village for clearing
his doubt. Therefore, we are unable to accept this evidence
of P.W.2. P.W. 3. also has stated in his evidence that both
Dog Ram and P.W.2 told the Returning Officer when he raised
objection sue moto at the time of the scrutiny that they
filled in the nomination papers after looking at the
particulars in the electoral rolls relating to Amar Heri
village and that if the electoral roll of that village was
given to them they would be in a position to show him the
correct particulars, but he declined to oblige them and
insisted that they should show that the serial number and
part number mentioned in the nomination paper tally. He has
stated that he too told the Returning Officer that he should
give them the facility of showing the particulars in the
electoral roll of Amer Heri village but he declined to
comply with his
337
request and stated that he would see only the serial number
and the part mentioned in the nomination paper. He has
stated that he was interested in the acceptance of the
nomination paper of Dog Ram because he belongs to rural part
and was the Lambardar of his village. However, he has
admittedly not made any report to anyone about the alleged
high-handedness of the Returning Officer though he was a
Minister of the State Government at that time and Dog Ram is
stated to have told him that the Returning Officer was not
acting fairly. What is more he has not made this alleged
improper rejection of the nomination paper of Dog Ram as a
ground in Election Petition No. 8 of 1982 which he had filed
for setting aside the election of the appellant on the
ground of corrupt practice etc. and claiming the seat for
himself. P.Ws. 2 and 3 have, no doubt, denied that P.W 2 was
not present during the scrutiny on 26.4. 1982 whereas R.W. 1
has stated that Dog Ram alone was present and P.W. 2 was not
present at that time. R.W. 1 has stated in his evidence that
though nobody objected to the nomination paper of Dog Ram,
the Returning Officer asked Dog Ram during the scrutiny in
his presence to show the serial number and part number where
his name is entered in the electoral roll, that Dog Ram
could not do so though the electoral roll was lying on the
table of the Returning Officer and Dog Ram was given the
opportunity of seeing the same and that thereupon the
Returning Officer wrote out his order Ex. P.W.1/B rejecting
the nomination paper of Dog Ram then and there and read it
out. The evidence of R.W. I is largely corroborated by the
Returning Officer’s order Ex P.W.1/B which has been set out
in the earlier part of this judgment. There is no reference
to the presence of P.W.2 during the scrutiny in that order.
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Therefore, it is probable that P.W.2 was not present during
the scrutiny as stated by R.W.1. The evidence of P.W.3 that
the Returning Officer did not ask Dog Ram to show the names
of himself and his proposer in the electoral roll is
inconsistent with the allegation in the election petition as
also the evidence of P.W. 2 that the Returning Officer said
so. Therefore, we are unable to accept the evidence of
P.W.3. But we accept the evidence of R.W. 1 and find that
that the Returning Officer found the discrepancy in the
names serial number and part number mentioned in the
nomination paper on the one hand and those found in the
electoral roll with reference to those numbers on the other
and that on account of his inability to ascertain with the
particulars made available before him whether the candidate
Dog Ram and his proposer P.W. 2 were electors is
338
the constituency he asked the candidate Dog Ram to point out
the names of himself and his proposer in the electoral roll
to satisfy him that they are electors in the constituency
and that as he was unable to do so he rejected the
nomination paper by his order Ex.P.W. 1/B.
Learned counsel for the parties invited our attention
to certain decisions. We think it necessary to refer to only
three of them. In Hira Singh Pal v. Madan Lal(1) a candidate
had filed two nomination papers and both of them were
rejected by the Returning Officer. In rejecting the
nomination papers the Returning Officer observed as follows;
"Shri Madan Lal, resident of village Parchech, P.O.
Ghanahatti, District Mahasu filed two nomination papers
before me on 20th January, 1967 which bear serial Nos.
5 z 6. According to the entry in the nomination paper
serial No. 5 Shri Anant Ram proposer has been shown to
be entered at serial No. 383 of part 13 of the
electoral rolls for 9-Arki Assembly Constituency. From
the comparison with the final copy of electoral roll
for this constituency, at serial No. 383 of part 13 the
name of Shrimati Phullu wife of Shri Nirjal Singh has
been entered. As such this entry in this nomination
paper is wrong.
As regards nomination paper bearing serial No 6
the candidate has shown his name to be entered at
serial No. 504 of part 2 of the electoral rolls for 9-
Arki Assembly Constituency. From the comparison wit h
the aforesaid entry in the final copy of the electoral
rolls of the aforesaid serial No. Of the aforesaid part
one Shrimati Darshnoo wife of Shri Ghanaya Ram has been
entered. Hence this entry in the nomination paper
bearing serial No. 6 is incorrect.
At the time of scrutiny neither Shri Madan Lal nor
his proposer or election agent nor any one authorised
on his behalf was present so that he could be given an
opportunity for correcting these entries. This
candidate while presenting his nomination papers
claimed to be the substitute
(1) [1968] 2 S.C.R. 778.
339
candidate of the Indian National Congress who have put up
Shri Hari Dass as their only candidate.
In view of the aforesaid circumstances it cannot
be ascertained whether Shri Madan Lal is an elector in
any Assembly Constituency of Himachal Pradesh or that
his proposer Shri Anand Ram is an elector in the 9-Arki
Assembly Constituency. Shri M.R. Gupta, Advocate the
person authorised on behalf of Shri Hari Dass was
informed to convey to Shri Madan Lal that he can
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approach me any time upto 3.00 p m. today for
correcting these entries. Shri Madan Lal has not turned
up as yet. It is now 15 minutes past 3.00 p.m.
In these circumstances there is no alternative but
to reject both these nomination papers as the candidate
does not seem to be interested in correcting these
entries and filing proper and valid nomination papers.
These orders are passed ex-parte since Shri Madan Lal
has not cared to turn up."
This Court has observed in that decision:
".... As mentioned earlier, the errors found in the
nomination papers are purely clerical errors. The
Returning Officer had the duty to scrutinize the
nomination papers when they were presented for finding
out whether there were any clerical mistakes in the
same. Under that provision he was required to find out
whether the names of the candidates as well as their
proposers and seconders were correctly mentioned in the
nomination papers He was also required to see whether
their place in the electoral roll was correctly
mentioned in the nomination papers. Evidently the
Returning Officer failed in his duty. Further, when he
scrutinised the nomination papers on January 21, 1967,
he had before him all the required information. It may
be that while scrutinising the first nomination paper
(marked as No. S) he had no material before him to find
out whether the proposer of the candidate was really an
elector in the constituency or not; but when he came to
the second nomination paper where the proposer’s name
as well as his place in the electoral roll is correctly
mentioned, it was improper on his part to have rejected
that nomina-
340
tion paper. It is true that in that nomination paper,
it had been mentioned that the candidate’s name is
found at serial No. 504 of part 2 of 9-Arki Assembly
Constituency, though in fact is found at serial No. 504
in part 12 of that constituency; but from the first
nomination paper, the Returning Officer could have
easily found out the correct part of the electoral
roll. All the required information was before him.
Obviously he rejected the nomination papers for the
reason that the respondent was only a dummy candidate
but that was not a matter for him to decide. If he was
a dummy candidature there was occassion for him to
withdraw his candidate after the scrutiny of the
nomination papers. Therefore, it is quite clear that
the respondent’s nomination papers were improperly
rejected. Such a rejection was impermissible under s.
36 and the same is a ground for setting aside the
election under s. 100 of the Representation of the
People Act."
That was a case where from a mere look at the two
nomination papers and the electoral rolls the Returning
Officer could have found out the correct part of the
electoral roll and all the required materials were before
him and, therefore, it has been held that the rejection of
the nomination papers was improper. But that is not the case
here. There was no such prima facie material before the
Returning Officer in the present case to find out the
correct part number of the electoral roll in which the
candidate Dog Ram and the proposer P.W. 2 were registered as
electors. There were as many as 77,000 voters in the 97
parts of the electoral roll in Jind constituency and even
Amar Heri village had two part numbers in the electoral
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roll. The postal address of the candidate Dog Ram given in
the nomination paper was not a sure guide for the Returning
Officer to trace the correct part number of the electoral
roll in regard to the candidate Dog Ram and his proposer
P.W. 2. The Returning Officer who is expected to hold only
such summary enquiry as he thinks fit is not expected to
himself find out the correct part number of the electoral
roll by making a roving enquiry and questioning the
candidate or his proposer. In the circumstances, he asked
the candidate, who was present before him, to point out the
entries in the electoral roll where the names of himself and
his proposer are found as electors and as he was not in a
position to do so he rejected the nomination paper.
Therefore, the observations made in that decision do not
help the respondent.
341
In Ram Awadesh Singh v. sumitra Devi & Ors (1) the High
Court set aside the election of the appellant before this
Court on the ground that his nomination paper had been
improperly accepted and the election had been materially
affected thereby. It was proved that the Returning Officer
did look into the nomination paper, but unfortunately he did
not notice that the appellant’s name had been removed from
the Arrah constituency. The appellant had with him a
certified copy of the electoral roll of Sandesh constituency
where his name was enrolled and he showed it to the
Returning Officers. The mistake complained of occurred
because both the appellant as well as the Returning Officer
looked into the main voters’ list of the Arrah constituency
but overlooked the deletion noted in a separate list. In
these circumstances, it has been held by this Court that the
High Court was not justified in allowing the election
petition on the ground that the nomination paper of the
appellant was improperly accepted. This decision will not
apply to the facts of the present case where with the serial
numbers and the numbers given as part numbers of the
candidate and the proposer in the nomination paper D their
names could not be traced in the concerned parts as
registered voters. The Returning Officer, therefore, felt
helpless and asked the candidate to point out the names of
himself and his proposer in the electoral roll which he did
not do.
The decision in Viveka Nand Giri v. Nawal Kishore
Sahi(2) also would not apply to the facts of the present
case as the defect in the nomination paper in that case was
only the difference in the age in the electoral roll and the
nomination paper. It has been held by this Court that it was
a case of inaccurate description mentioned in s. 33(4) of
the Act which ought to have been got corrected or overlooked
by the Returning Officer having regard to the language of
the proviso to that sub-section.
For the reasons mentioned above we are of the opinion
that the Returning Officer in the present case could not be
said to have impropertly rejected the nomination paper Dog
Ram. The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs here as
well as in the High Court.
A.P.J Appeal allowed .
(1) [1972] 2 S.C.R. 674.
(2) A.I.R. 1984 S.C. 856.
342