Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. RAMAPPA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANGAPPA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/08/1958
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 937 1959 SCR 1167
ACT:
Election Dispute-Disqualification for being chosen as member
of State Assembly-Hereditary village office-Whether office
of Profit under the Government-Mysore Village Offices Act,
1908 (Mysore 4 of 1908), ss. 6, 7, 8-Representation of the
People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951) s. 100(1)(c)-Constitution of
India, Art. 191.
HEADNOTE:
The nomination papers of three candidates for election as
members of the State Assembly were rejected by the Returning
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Officer on the ground that the first two of them were Patels
and the third, a Shanbhog, of their villages and as such
they were holders of offices of profit under the Government
and consequentlydisqualified from membership of the
State Assembly underArt. 191 of the Constitution of
India. The validity of the election was challenged by some
of the electors of the constituency by an election petition
under s. 100(1)(c) of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, on the ground that the nomination papers of the three
candidates were wrongly rejected. It was contended for the
petitioners that the candidates in question were not holders
of offices of profit under the Government because (1) they
were holding their offices by hereditary right and not under
the Government, and (2) there was no direct payment of their
dues by the Government. It was not disputed that village
offices are governed by the Mysore Village Offices Act,
1908, and it was found that Patels and Shanbhogs were
holding their offices by reason of the appointment by the
Government, though in certain cases the statute gave the
heir of the last holder a right to be appointed if the
statutory requirements were fulfilled, that they worked
under the control and supervision of the Government and were
removable by it, and that their remuneration was paid by it
out of its funds and assets :
Held, that the holder of a village office though he may have
a hereditary right, does not get the office till he is
appointed by the Government under whom the office is held.
Accordingly, Patels and Shanbhogs are holders of offices of
profit under the Government and their nomination papers were
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rightly rejected by the Returning Officer.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION’ Civil Appeal No. 251 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 26, 1958,
of the Mysore High Court in Misc. Appeal No. 142 of 1957.
R. Patnaik, for the appellant.
S. K. Venkatranga Iyengar and N. Keshava Iyengar, for the
respondents.
1958. August 21. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SARKAR J.-The question for decision in this appeal is
whether certain persons were holders of offices of profit
under the Government and were therefore disqualified under
Art. 191 of the Constitution, for being chosen as members of
a legislative assembly. It
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arises out of a petition presented under the Representation
of the People Act, 1951, for a declaration that the election
of the appellant was void.
The election with which the case is concerned, was held on
March 8, 1957, for choosing members for the Mysore State
Legislative Assembly. One of the constituencies for the
purposes of election to that Assembly was known as Harihar.
The nomination papers filed by three persons, namely,
Hanumanthappa, Siddappa and Guru Rao for election from that
constituency were rejected by the Returning Officer on the
ground that the first two of them were Patels and the third
a Shanbhog of certain villages in Mysore and as such they
were all holders of offices of’ profit under the Mysore
Government and consequently disqualified from membership of
the Assembly’ under Art. 191. As a result of this rejection
two candidates were left to contest the election and the
appellant, who was one of them, was declared elected as he
obtained the larger number of votes at the poll. Six
electors of the Haribar constituency then filed the election
petition for a declaration under s. 100 (1)(c) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951, that the election of
the appellant was void on the ground that the nomination
papers of Hanumanthappa, Siddappa and Guru Rao had been
improperly rejected. If the rejection was improper the
petition would have to be allowed. The appellant was the
sole respondent to that petition. It was alleged in the
petition that Patels and Shanbhogs were hereditary village
officers and therefore were not holders of offices of profit
under the Government. It was said that they were really
representatives of the village community, and only acted as
agents of that community or as liaisons between it and the
Government, and that in any event they were not holders of
offices of profit because the amount of money receivable by
them in respect of their offices was very small and out of
all proportion to the work done by them. The petition was
dismissed by the Election Tribunal by its order dated
September 10, 1957. It held that the conditions of service
of Patels and Shanbhogs were regulated by
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the Mysore Village Offices Act, 1908, and that the mere fact
that offices of Patels and Shanbhogs were hereditary was not
by itself sufficient to establish that they were not offices
under the Government. It also held that Hanumanthappa,
Siddappa and Guru Rao were in receipt of considerable
remuneration and were, therefore, holding offices of profit.
The six petitioners then appealed to the High Court of
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Mysore. The High Court by its judgment, dated February 26,
1958, allowed the appeal and held that the offices of Patels
and Shanbhogs were not offices under the Government. The
election of the appellant was thereupon declared void. It
is from this judgment that the present appeal to this Court
has been taken with a certificate granted under Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution. One of the six petitioners
being dead, the remaining five are the respondents in this
appeal.
There is no dispute that Hantimanthappa and Siddappa held
the offices of Patels and as remuneration for their services
lands had been allotted to them and provision for cash
allowances made. Likewise it is not disputed that Guru Rao
was a Shanbbog and had cash remuneration provided to him for
his services. It is also clear and not challenged that
Patels and Shanbhogs have specific duties to perform and are
holders of offices. The only point for determination in
this appeal is whether they are holders of offices under the
Mysore Government.
The contention of the learned Advocate for the respondents
is that Patels and Shanbhogs are not holders of offices
under the Government. He said that their offices were
recognised by the old customary law and devolved by
hereditary succession. According to him under that law
these offices were held under the village community and the
officers acted as agents of that community to pay the
revenue of the village to the authority entitled to it and
formed the liaisons between that community and the
authority. He contended that under the Mysore Land Revenue
Code, 1888, the Government could appoint Patels and
Shanbhogs only where there were no hereditary Patels and
Shanbhogs. He said that as Hanumanthappa and
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Siddappa were admittedly hereditary Patels and Guru Rao, a
hereditary Shanbhog, they could not have been holding
offices under the Government. He contended that the Mysore
Village Offices Act was a consolidating Act and it did not
alter the hereditary right to the offices but maintained the
old law. According to him being hereditary, these offices
were not held under the Government.
Village Offices are now governed by the Mysore Village
Offices Act, 1908. The election petition proceeds on this
basis and both the Courts below have so held and the
contrary has indeed not been contended in this Court. The
Act itself mentions the offices of Patels and Shanbhogs as "
Village Offices " within it and puts the matter beyond all
doubt. The Act, no doubt, recognises a hereditary right to
village offices to some extent and a larger hereditary right
to the offices is not claimed for Hanumanthappa, Siddappa or
Guru Rao. A consideration of the customary law of the
Madras Land Revenue Code is, therefore, unnecessary.
The question then is, what is the effect of the provisions
of the Mysore Village Offices Act dealing with the
hereditary right to the offices ? First, there is s. 6 under
which when two or more villages or portions thereof are
grouped together or amalgamated to form a new village, or
one village is divided into 2 or more villages, the old
village offices cease to exist and new offices have to be
created. In choosing persons to fill such new offices the
Government has to select the best qualified from among the
last holders of the offices which have ceased to exist or
the members of their families. In these -cases obviously no
full hereditary right to the office is recognised, for the
offices which have ceased to exist may have been held by
members of different families. All that s. 6 says is that
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the new appointment shall be made from amongst these
families. So it is possible under this section to appoint
to an office a person who is not the heir of the last holder
of the office abolished. The important section, however,
for the purpose of a hereditary right to the
149
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office is s. 8 which provides for filling up a vacancy
occurring in the office of a Patel or a Shanbhog. Sub-
section (1) states that certain persons shall not be
eligible for the office. It is there provided that a person
who has not attained majority or does not possess requisite
physical or mental capability, or the prescribed educational
qualification, or has been convicted by a criminal court for
an offence which, in the opinion of the prescribed officer,
disqualifies him for holding the office, or has been
adjudged by that officer after an enquiry as prescribed, to
be of general bad character, shall not be eligible for
appointment. Sub-section (2) provides that succession in
the case of a permanent vacancy shall be regulated by the
ordinary provisions of the personal law applicable to the
last bolder, provided that it shall devolve on a single heir
and that where there are more persons than one who would
under the ordinary provisions of that law be entitled to
succeed to the last holder of the office, preference shall
be given to the eldest member of the eldest branch among
those persons. This would seem to create a right in the
heir of the deceased holder of an office to succeed to him.
This right, however, is not an absolute right for he cannot
be appointed if he is not eligible under sub-s. (1) nor
where the prescribed officer has declared under s. 7 (v) in
dismissing any holder of office, that the dismissal would
entail a forefeiture of the right of succession of all the
undivided members of his family. This is all the hereditary
right to an office that is provided by the Act.
Let us, however, ignore the restriction,,; on the hereditary
right to the office mentioned in the Act and assume that the
eldest heir in the eldest branch of the last holder of it,
is entitled to succeed to the office when he vacates it.
The question is, does this make the office one not under the
Government ? The learned Advocate for the respondent
contended that it did and this contention has been accepted
by the High Court. The learned Chief Justice in his
judgment said " can the Government prevent him from succeed-
ing to the permanent vacancy ? Such a person gets to
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that post not because he is appointed by the Government but
by his own rights." He also supported his view by referring
to Mangal Sain v. State of Punjab (1) where it had been held
that the mere fact that the Government has under a statute a
hand in the appointment and dismissal of the Executive
Officer of a Municipality, does not make him its servant.
We think this view is untenable. It overlooks the fact that
the heir of the last holder does not get the office till lie
is appointed to it by the Government. The statute, no
doubt, gives him a right to be appointed by the Government
in certain cases. None the less, it is the appointment by
the Government that perfects his right to the office and
makes him the officer; without such appointment he does not
hold the office. The Government makes the appointment to
the office though it may be that it has under the statute no
option but to appoint the heir to the office if he has
fulfilled the statutory requirements. The office is,
therefore, held by reason of the appointment by the
Government and not simply because of a hereditary right to
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it. The fact that the Government cannot refuse to make the
appointment does not alter the situation.
If this were not so, the result would be curious. Ail
office has to be held under someone for it is impossible to
conceive of an office held under no one. The appointment
being by the Government, the office to which it is made must
be held under it for there is no one else under whom it can
be held. The learned Advocate said that the office was held
under the village community. But such a thing is ail impos-
sibility for village communities have since a very long
time, ceased to have any corporate existence. The case of
Mangal Sain v. The State of Punjab (1) does not assist for
there, there was the Municipality under which the office
could be held though appointment to it was made by the
Government.
The learned Advocate for the respondent contended that there
are certain other sections of the Act which support his
contention. First, we were referred to
(1) A.I.R. 1952 Punj. 58.
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s.11 which gives a person entitled to an office under s.8 of
the Act a right to sue before the prescribed authority for
it or for the recovery of its emoluments. We are unable to
see that this section advances the matter further. It only
shows that a person has a right to be appointed. That,
however, as we have earlier stated, is not enough. The
right alone does not make him the officer. He must actually
be appointed to the office and upon such appointment he
comes to hold it under the Government. We were also
referred to s. 8, sub-s. (4) which provides that when the
heir of the last holder of an office who would otherwise be
entitled to succeed to it is a minor, the prescribed officer
shall register him as a successor of the last holder and
appoint some other qualified person to discharge the duties
of the office during his minority. This provision is
equally unhelpful. The minor is only registered as a
successor and on attainment of majority or within three
years thereafter if lie is qualified under the Act, he can
be appointed to the office. In the meantime lie is not
appointed to the office nor does lie hold it. Here again it
is only on appointment after attainment of majority that the
erstwhile minor heir comes to hold the office. We,
therefore, come to the conclusion that though there may be a
hereditary right to hold an office, it is not held till an
appointment to it is made by the Government and that there
is no one except the Government under whom the office can be
held.
We have so far dealt with the provisions of the Act
concerning appointments. We will now turn to those dealing
with dismissal from office and other forms of punishment.
Section 7 of the Act gives the prescribed officer of the
Government, power to suspend, dismiss or remove any holder
of a village office on any of the grounds mentioned in it.
There is no other power of dismissal given by the Act. It
is said that this shows that the office is not held under
the Government for if it were so, the officer would be
liable to dismissal at the pleasure of the Governor under
Art. 310 of the Constitution. This argument was accepted by
the High Court but it seems to us to lack in substance.
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The argument assumes that because of s. 7 of the Act, the
holder of a village office is. not liable to be dismissed at
the pleasure of the Governor. We think it unnecessary in
this case to decide whether this assumption is justified or
not and will proceed on the basis that it is the correct
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view of the position. But does it follow that because a
village officer cannot be dismissed at the pleasure of the
Governor, he does not hold office under the Government ? It
has been recognised that a statute may prevent an officer of
the Government from being dismissed at its pleasure. That
is what happened in Gould v. Stuart (1) referred to by the
Judicial Committee in R. Venkata Rao v. Secretary of State
for India (2). In Gould v. Stuart (supra) it was said, that
" It is the law in New South Wales as well as in this
country that in a contract for service under the Crown,
civil as well as military, there is, except in certain cases
where it is otherwise provided by law, imported into the
contract a condition that the Crown has the power to dismiss
at its pleasure: Dunn v. Reg; De Dohse v. Reg (3). The
question then to be determined is, Has the Civil Service
Act, 1884, made an exception to this rule ? ", and it was
held that it had. In the result it was held that the
respondent who had entered the service of the Government of
New South Wales under and in accordance with the, provisions
of the Civil Service Act, 1884, was not liable to be
dismissed at the pleasure of the Goverment because of these
provisions. We do not say anything as to whether the
principle of Gould V. Stuart (1) will apply to our country
in view of the, constitutional provision contained in Art.
310. Such a question has not been argued at the bar and
does not require to be decided in this case. If the prin-
ciple of that case does not apply, then the village officer,
if he is a servant of the Government, is liable to dismissal
it its pleasure, in spite of s. 7 of the Act and if it does,
then the fact that he is not liable to such dismissal does
not prove that he does not hold office under the Government.
It would thus appear
(1) [1896] A.C. 579. (2) (1936) L.R. 64 I.A. 55.
(3) [1896] 1 Q.B. 117, n. (7).
1176
that the fact that an officer is not liable to dismissal at
the pleasure of the Government does not by itself establish
that he does not hold office under the Government.
We now come to the question of the remuneration of a village
officer. The High. Court in its judgment referred to the
rules tinder the Act as to the mode of payment of the
emoluments and held that there was no direct payment of his
dues by the Government to a village officer. That,
according to the High Court, also showed that the officer
did not hold his office under the Government. This view
also is, in our opinion, unfounded. Government lands are
allotted by it to the officers by way of emoluments for
services to be rendered and the cash allowances are also
fixed by the Government. It is true that under the rules
cash allowances are not paid directly by the Government to
the officers but the latter are authorised to deduct the
amounts thereof from the revenue collected by them. This
does not show that the cash remunaration is not paid by the
Government. The revenue collected belongs to the
Government. The Rules provide that where an officer deducts
the cash allowance from the revenue collected by him and
deposits the balance in the Government Treasury, his receipt
for the amount deducted shall be considered equivalent to
the payment into the Treasury of an equal sum in cash: (see
rule 75 XIII of the Rules framed tinder the Act). The
result, therefore, of this rule is as if the entire amount
of the revenue collected had been deposited into the
treasury and part of it paid back to the officer on account
of his cash remuneration. In any event, it seems clear to
us that the cash allowance to the officer concerned is, in
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spite of the procedure laid down in respect of its payment,
a payment by the Government out of its moneys.
Lastly, we find that the duties of the village officers are
fixed by the Government and these officers work under the
direction, control and supervision of the Government. This
is conceded.
We then come to this that Patels and Shanbhogs are officers,
who are appointed to their offices by the
1177
Government though it may be that the Government has no
option in certain cases but to appoint an heir of the last
holder ; that they hold their office by reason of such
appointment only ; that they work under the control and
supervision of the Government that their remuneration is
paid by the Government out of Government funds and assets;
and that they are removable by the Government, and that
there is no one else under whom their offices could be held.
All these clearly establish that Patels and shanbhogs hold
offices of profit under the Government. In this view of the
matter it has to be held that the nomination papers of
Hanumanthappa, Siddappa and Guru Rao were rightly rejected
by the Returning Officer and the election petition is
without substance.
The appeal, therefore, succeeds and is allowed. The
judgment and order of the High Court are set aside, and
those of the Election Tribunal restored. The election
petition is dismissed. The respondents will pay the
appellant’s costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.