Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3633 of 2001
PETITIONER:
M.V. RAJASHEKARAN & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VATAL NAGARAJ & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/01/2002
BENCH:
G.B. Pattanaik & R.P. Sethi
JUDGMENT:
WithCivil Appeal No.3714 of 2001 and
Civil Appeal No.3844 of 2001
JUDGMENT
PATTANAIK, J.
These three appeals are directed against one and the
same Judgment of the Karnataka High Court. An Election
Petition was filed under Section 81 of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951, challenging the election of the present
appellants as Members of the Karnataka Legislative Council
and for declaring the said election as null and void inter alia
on the ground that the nomination of Vatal Nagaraj,
respondent No. 1 had been improperly rejected. Said Vatal
Nagaraj was an ex M.L.A. and had been appointed as a One
Man Commission by the Government of Karnataka by Order
dated 18.4.2000 to study the problems of the Kannadigas in
the Border areas of Kerala, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh,
Goa and Tamil Nadu. By a subsequent order, the Chairman
of the Commission was accorded the status of a Minister of
Cabinet rank and thereafter by a Government Order dated
24.5.2000, for defraying the expenses of pay and day to day
expenditure of the Chairman of the Commission, a sum of
Rs. 5 lacs was provided in the Budget estimate for the year
2000-2001. When election to the Karnataka Legislative
Council was held for filling up 11 vacancies and said Vatal
Nagaraj filed his nomination paper, on an objection being
filed for accepting the nomination, the Returning Officer took
up the scrutiny and rejected the nomination of said Vatal
Nagaraj on a finding that he was holding an office of profit
and as such was disqualified from being elected. Said
Nagaraj, therefore, filed the election petition, alleging inter
alia that his nomination has been improperly rejected within
the ambit of Section 100[1][c] of the Representation of the
People Act and, therefore, the election of all the Members
must be declared void. By the impugned Judgment, the High
Court having come to the conclusion that the post of
Chairman of the Commission which said Nagaraj was
holding, cannot be held to be an office and, therefore, the
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Returning Officer illegally rejected the nomination paper of
said Shri Nagaraj. The High Court ultimately held that the
position held by Nagaraj, not being an office much less an
office of profit, did not incur any disqualification under
Article 191 of the Constitution and consequently, rejection
of his nomination was improper. The High Court ultimately
having allowed the election petition and declaring the
election of the elected candidates to the Karnataka
Legislative Council to be null and void and further directing
the Returning Officer to accept the nomination of Nagaraj
and proceed with the election in accordance with law, the
present appeals have been preferred.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan and Mr. Venugopal, the learned
senior counsel appearing for appellants in two different
appeals, and Mr. Javali, learned senior counsel appearing for
the appellant in third appeal contended, that having regard to
the circumstances under which the post of One Man
Commission was created and an ex M.L.A. was appointed to
that post, and having regard to the fact that the government
sanctioned money to defray the expenses of the pay and other
allowances of the said Commission, the conclusion is
irresistible that the post of One Man Commission was an
office of profit and, therefore, the Returning Officer rightly
rejected the nomination of respondent Vatal Nagaraj and the
High Court committed error in holding that the post does not
constitute an office much less an office of profit. In support
of this contention reliance was placed on the decisions of this
Court in Mahadeo vs. Shantibhai & Ors. - (1969) 2 SCR
422, Kanta Kathuria vs. Manak Chand Surana - (1970) 2
SCR 835 and Shibu Soren vs. Dayanand Sahay and
Others (2001) 7 SCC 425. Mr. Bobde, the learned senior
counsel appearing for respondent no. 1, on the other hand
contended, that the word ’office’ not having been defined
either in the Constitution or in the Representation of People
Act, and the definition given to the said expression by Justice
Rowlatt in the case of Great Western Railway Co. vs.
Bater 8 Tax Cases 231 having been accepted by this Court
in Kanta Kathuria’s case (supra) the test to be applied is
whether it was subsisting, permanent, substantive which had
an existence independent of the person who filled it, and on
the other hand in the present case for a limited purpose a
person was appointed to discharge certain obligations which
came to an end on submission of the report by the person
concerned. According to Mr. Bobde the test of permanency
or substantive does not apply at all. In this view of the
matter the High Court was fully justified in recording the
finding that there was no office much less an office of profit,
that was held by respondent no. 1 Vatal Nagaraj, and
consequently the order of the rejection of his nomination was
rightly held to be illegal. Mr. Bobde placed strong reliance
on the self same decision of Kanta Kathuria’s case on
which the counsel for the appellant had relied upon, as well
as the decision in Rabindra Kumar Nayak vs. Collector
(1999) 2 SCC 627 wherein the dictum of Rowlatt,J. had been
approved. Mr. Bobde also relied upon the decision of this
Court in Ashok Kumar Bhattacharyya vs. Ajoy Biswas
and others - (1985) 1 SCC 151, and also the decision in
Satrucharla Chandrasekhar Raju vs. Vyricherla Pradeep
Kumar Dev (1992) 4 SCC 404. The entire controversy,
therefore, centers round the question whether the creation or
constitution of a One Man Commission for the purpose of
holding certain enquiry and appointment of an individual as
the said Commission, and providing the money necessary for
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disbursement of salary and other allowances of such
Commission would make the Commission an office of profit
within the ambit of Article 191 of the Constitution read with
Section 100 (2) of the Representation of People Act, or it
would not constitute an office and as such, the
disqualification for being elected, as engrafted in the
Constitution as well as in the Representation of People Act
will not be attracted. Under Article 191 (1) of the
Constitution a person would be disqualified being chosen as
and for being a member of the Legislative Assembly or
Legislative Council of State, if he holds any office of profit
under the Government of India or Government of any State
other than the office declared by the Legislature of the State
by law not to disqualify its holder. In order to attract the
aforesaid disqualification, therefore, the person concerned
must hold an office and that office must be an office of profit
under the Government of India or under the Government of
any State. The very object of providing the disqualification
under Article 191 of the Constitution is that the person
elected to the Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council
should be free to carry on his duty fearlessly without being
subjected to any kind of governmental pressure. The Court,
therefore is required to find out as to whether there exists
any nexus between the duties discharged by the candidate
and the government, and that a conflict is bound to arise
between impartial discharge of such duties in course of his
employment with the duties which he is required to discharge
as a member of legislature, on being elected. While
examining the aforesaid question the Court has to look the
substance and not the form and, further it is not necessary
that all factors and tests laid down in various cases must be
conjointly present so as to constitute the holding of an office
of profit under the government. Section 100 provides the
grounds for declaring an election to be void and clause (1)
{c} stipulates that improper rejection of nomination is one of
the ground for declaring an election to be void. Since
nomination of Vatal Nagaraj was rejected by the Returning
Officer on the ground that he held an office of profit, and as
such, was inelligible to contest an election under Article
191(a) of the Constitution, the sole question for consideration
would be whether that order of rejection was improper as
held by the High Court? The answer to the question would
depend upon a finding as to whether the post of One Man
Commission constituted by the Government of Karnataka to
study the problems of Kannadigas in the border areas is an
office of profit or not. As has been stated earlier, the
expression ’office’ has not been defined in the Constitution
but this Court has interpreted the said word in different cases
and it would, therefore, be necessary to examine some of the
case laws on the point. In the case of Mahadeo vs.
Shantibhai and ors. (1969) 2 SCR 422, the question for
consideration was whether appointment of a person on the
panel of lawyers by Railway Administration can be held to
be an office and is that office is one for profit? The Court, in
that case referred to observation of Lord Wright of the House
of Lords in the case of Mcmillon vs. Guest (1942) Appeal
Cases 561, where Lord Wright has opined "The word
’office’ is of indefinite content. Its various meanings cover
four columns of the New English Dictionary, but I take as the
most relevant for purposes of this case the following; a
position or place to which certain duties are attached,
especially one of a more or less public character."
In the aforesaid case this Court while considering the
appointment of the person concerned and all terms and
conditions came to the conclusion that it is difficult to hold
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that he held any office of profit under the Government.
In Kanta Kathura vs. Manak Chand Surana (1970) 2
SCR 835 a Constitution Bench of this Court considered the
question as to whether a Special Government Pleader can be
held to be an office of profit within the ambit of Article
191(1) of the Constitution. The majority view expressed
through Justice Sikri held that before a person becomes
subject to the disqualification in Article 191(1) there must be
an office which exists independently of his being the holder
of the office., and the word ’office’ means an office or
employment which was a subsisting, permanent, substantive
position which had an existence independent of the person
who filled it, which went on and was filled in succession by
successive holders. In the majority judgment it was held that
it is not necessary to give a wider meaning to the word
’office’ because if Parliament thinks that a legal practitioner
who is being paid fees in a case by the Government should
not be qualified to stand for an election as a member of
Legislative Assembly, it can make that provision under
Article 191(1)(e) of the Constitution. The majority judgment
in the aforesaid case accepted justice Rowlatt’s definition of
the word ’office’ in Great Western Railway co. vs. Bater, 8
Tax Cases 231, and applying the said test to the case came to
hold that a Special Government Pleader would not come
within the meaning of Article 191(1) of the Constitution.
The minority judgment expressed by Hidayatullah, C.J. came
to hold that an office going under the names of ’Additional
Government Pleader’, ’Assistant Government Pleader’,
’Special Government Pleader’ will equally be an office
properly so-called as government is always at liberty to
create offices of special duties, and further held that the said
office was an office of profit. While coming to the said
conclusion Their Lordships relied upon the earlier decision of
the Court in Mahadeo’s case (supra) as well as Lord
Wright’s enunciation of the word ’office’ in McMillon’s
case.
In Shibu Soren vs. Dayanand Sahay and Others (2001) 7
SCC 425, a Three Judge Bench of this Court considered
several earlier judgments of this Court and preferred to
follow the earlier judgment in Ashok Kumar
Bhattacharyya vs. Ajoy Biswas and Others (1985) 1
SCC 151, wherein the Court had observed, "for
determination of the question whether a person holds an
office of profit under the Government, each case must be
measured and judged in the light of the relevant provisions of
the Act". In paragraph 36 the Court held thus
"The question whether a person holds an office of
profit, as already noticed, is required to be
interpreted in a realistic manner having regard to
the facts and circumstances of each case and
relevant statutory provisions. While ’a strict and
narrow construction’ may not be adopted which
may have the effect of ’shutting off many
prominent and other eligible persons to contest the
elections’ but at the same time ’in dealing with a
statutory provision which imposes a
disqualification on a citizen it would be
unreasonable to take merely a broad and general
view and ignore the essential points’. The
approach which appeals to us to interpret the
expression ’office of profit’ is that it should be
interpreted with the flavour of reality bearing in
mind the object for enactment of Article
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102(1)(a), namely, to eliminate or in any event to
reduce the risk of conflict between the duty and
interest amongst members of the legislature by
ensuring that the legislature does not have persons
who receive benefits from the executive and may
thus be amenable to its influence."
In our considered opinion this appears to be the right
approach to be adopted, particularly when the word ’office’
has not been defined in the Constitution.
Mr. Bobde, the learned senior counsel, on the other hand
relying upon the judgment of this Court in the case of
Rabindra Kumar Nayak vs. Collector, Mayurbhanj,
Orissa and others (1999) 2 SCC 627, contended that the
enunciation of word ’office’ by Rowlatt in Great Western
Railway Co. vs. Bater, indicating that it should be
subsisting, permanent, substantive position which had an
existence independent from the person who filled it, which
went on and was filled in succession by successive holders,
was approved by this Court in the aforesaid case as well as in
Kanta Kathuria’s case by the Constitution Bench, and
therefore, that test should be applied to the case in hand. It
may be noticed at this stage, the decision of this Court in
Madhukar G.E. Pankakar vs. Jaswant Chobbildas
Rajani and others (1977) 1 SCC 70, where this Court held
that for deciding the question whether it was an office of
profit under the Government or not it is the circumstances
that has to be looked at and not the form and further all the
several factors stated by the Court, as determinative of the
holding of an office under Government, need not be
conjointly present. It was held that the practical view, not
pedantic basket of tests, should guide in arriving at a sensible
conclusion. A conspectus of the aforesaid decisions of this
Court unequivocally therefore, indicate that the question has
to be answered depending upon the facts peculiar to the case
in hand with the object of finding out whether in fact the
Government retain some control over the post which the
incumbent was holding at the time of filing of nomination
and was there any profit attached to the post in question. The
underlined idea obviously is, that it should be free from any
pressure from the Government so that there can be no
conflict in discharge of his independent duties as a member
of the Legislative Assembly or the Legislative Council. Mr.
Bobde, the learned senior counsel appearing for the
respondent strongly urged that One Man Commission, which
Shri Vatal Nagaraj was holding had been created for a
specific tenure which does not last after the tenure is over
and, therefore, if the test of Rowlatt, J. is applied which has
been approved by this Court, it cannot be held to be an office
of profit within the ambit of Article 191(1) of the
Constitution. We are, however, unable to persuade ourselves
to agree with this submission as in our view, taking into
account the order of the Government constituting the
Commission, to study the problems of Kannadigas in the
Border areas of Kerala, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Goa
and Tamil Nadu and to submit a report to the Government
and the appointment of Shri Vatal Nagaraj as a Chairman of
that Commission and thereafter conferring the status of the
Minister of Cabinet rank to that post and finally making a
Budgetary provision in order to a new head of account to
defray the expenses of pay and day to day expenses of the
Chairman of the Commission it must be held that the office
was office of profit within the ambit of Article 191(1) of the
Constitution and the rejection of nomination on that score
was not improper and High Court committed error in holding
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that the nomination had been improperly rejected. Our
aforesaid conclusion is further strengthened by the provisions
of the Karnataka Legislature (Prevention of
Disqualification) Act, 1956. The said Act had been enacted
by the Karnataka Legislature on 15th January, 1957 declaring
certain offices not to be the office of profit and stating that
the holders thereof are not inelligible for being chosen as, or
for being members of the Karnataka Legislative Assembly
and Karnataka Legislative Council. Under Article 191 (1)(a)
a person who is disqualified for being chosen as and for
being a member of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative
Council, if he holds any office of profit under the
Government of India or the Government of a State other than
an office declared by the legislature of the State by law not to
disqualify its holder. The aforesaid Karnataka Act appears to
have been enacted, as contemplated under Article 191(1)(a)
of the Constitution. Section 2(a) defines a ’Committee’ to
mean any Committee, Commission, Council, Board or any
other body of one or more persons whether statutory or not,
set up by the Government of India or the government of any
State. Section 3 (d) includes the office of the Chairman or
Member of a committee, and therefore, by application of
Section 3, the office of the Chairman or member of a
Committee would stand excluded from the disqualification
ordinarily. But the proviso to the said clause further indicate
that the holder of any such office is not in receipt of or
entitled to, any remuneration other than the compensatory
allowance. The expression ’compensatory allowance’ has
been defined in Section 2(b). The Chairman or a member of
a Committee, therefore it is in receipt of or is entitled to any
remuneration other than compensatory allowance then the
removal of disqualification clause would not apply and the
person concerned would stand disqualified. The fact that the
office of the Chairman or a member of a Committee is
brought within the purview of this Act implies that the office
concerned must necessarily be regarded as an office of profit,
but for the exclusion under the clause by the legislature, the
holder of such office could not have been eligible for being
chosen as member of the legislature. The object of this
provision is to grant exemption to holders of office of certain
description and the provision in substance is that they will
enjoy the exemption even though otherwise they might be
regarded as holders of offices of profit. A conjoint reading of
Section 2(a), 2(b), and 3(d) together with its proviso of the
Karnataka Legislature (Prevention of Disqualification) Act,
1956 unequivocally supports our conclusion earlier that the
post of Chairman of a Commission is an office of profit and
in the case in hand, in view of the Government order dated
24.5.2000, the remuneration which said Vatal Nagaraj was
getting cannot be held to be compensatory allowance within
the ambit of Section 2(b) of the Act, and therefore, he was
holder of an office of profit and consequently the
disqualification attached under Article 191 of the
Constitution would apply.
Mr. Venugopal is also right in his submission that the second
direction of the High Court is not sustainable in law, but we
need not further delve into the question, in view of our
finding on the other question.
In the aforesaid premises, we have no hesitation in
coming to the conclusion that the respondent Vatal Nagaraj
was holder of an office of profit and, therefore, his
nomination had rightly been rejected and the High Court
committed error in holding that it was an improper rejection.
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Necessarily, therefore, the election of the elected candidates
could not have been held to be null and void. We, therefore,
set aside the impugned judgment of the High Court of
Karnataka and allow this appeal and hold that the appellants
were duly elected to the Karnataka Legislative Council and
their election cannot be held to be null and void.
..........................................J.
(G.B. PATTANAIK)
.........................................J.
(R.P. SETHI)
January 23, 2002.