Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RANJEET, SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARMOHINDER S-INGH PRADHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/05/1999
BENCH:
M. JAGANNADHA RAO.
JUDGMENT:
Dr. Anand.CJI :
This appeal calls in question the judgment and order
of the High Court of Punjab & Haryana in Flection Petition
No. 7 of 1997 decided on 29th September, 1997, The appeal
arises in the following circurmstances.
The appellant contested the election to 54 Raikot
Assembly Constituency in the .general elections to the
Punjab Legislative Assembly held on 7th February, 1997, The
respondent; a candidate of the Indian National Congress,
was declared elected. After the declaration of the result
of the elections on 10th February- 1997. the appellant
filed an election petition in the High Court alleging that
the respondent was disqualified from contesting the election
to the Punjab Legislative Assembly under Section 9-A of the
Representation of People Act; 1951 (hereinafter referred to
as
"the Act") as on the date of the filing of the
nomination paper aswell as on the date of the scrutiny of
the nomination paper, the respondent had a subsisting
contract, for the sale of liquor, with the Punjab
Government, which he had obtained in partnership with others
at the auction held for the year 1996-97. The petition was
resisted by the respondent, who in the written statement
denied the allegations concerning his disqualification. A
preliminary objection was raised that the election petition
was not maintainable as the same did not disclose any
factual basis to establish violation of Section 9-A of the
Act. It was asserted that the election petition did not
contain any allegation to the effect that the respondent had
entered into a contract with the Government either for ’the
supply of goods or for the execution of the works undertaken
by the Government’ and as such the respondent could not be
said to have incurred any disqualification under Section 9-A
of the Act. The respondent Further pleaded that the
contract for sale of liquor was not such a contract to which
the provisions of Section 9-A. of the Act could be
attracted. Replication was filed and from the pleadings of
the parties, the fol lowing issues were raised :
"1, whether the respondent had subsistinci contract
for the sale of the liquor from the Punjab Government
obtained in partnership for the year 1996-97 at the time of
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the filling of the nomination papers and on the date
of the scrutiny of the nomination papers as alleged in Para
No. 3 of the election petition, and if so, to what effect ?
OPP
2. Whether the election petition "is not maintainable
in view of the objections raised in Para Nos. 1 and 2 of
the preliminary objections? OPR.
3. Whether the election of the respondent to the
Punjab) Assembly from 54 - Raikot Assembly Constituency - is
valid for the reasons stated in the petition ? OPP.
4. Relief."
The parties led evidence and after hearing their
arguments, the High Court dismissed the election petition.
Since, the challenge in the election petition to the
election of the respondent, as canvassed before the High
Court and before us, is based on Section 9-A of the Act, it
would be desirable to first notice the provisions of that
Section. Section, 9-A reads :
"9-A. Disqualification for Goverrnment contracts,
etc.
A person shall be disqualified if, and for so long as,
there subsists a contract entered into ’by him in the cnurse
of his trade or business with the appropriate Government for
the supply of goods to, or for the execution of any works
undertaken by. that Government.
Explanation :- For the purposes of this section, where
a contract has been fully performed by the person by whom it
has been entered into with the appropriate Government, the
contract shall be
deemed not to subsist by reason only of the fact that
the Governrnent ha.s not performed its parts of the contract
either wholly or in part."
On its plain reading, Sect-ion 9-A of the Act requires
(i) that there must be a subsisting contract which has been
entered into by the person whose candidature is sought to be
disqualified with the Government; (ii) that contract is for
the supply of goods to the Government, or (iii) that the
contract is for the execution of any works undertaken by the
Government.
The High Court held that Section 9-A. of the Act was
not attracted in the fact situation of the case. In taking
this view, the High Court relied upon a judgment given by
the Andhra Pradesh High Court in B. LakshmikanthaRao vs. P
Chinna Mallaiah, AIR 1979 AP 132, which has been approved by
this Court in Dewan Joynal Abed in vs. Abdul Wazed alias
,Abdul Wazad Miah and Others, 1988 (Suppl.)SCC 580.
According to both these judgments, merely becoming a
licensee with the State Government, cannot amount to either
supplying the goods to the Government or engaging in
execution of any work undertaken by the Government. Learned
counsel for the appellant fairly conceded that it was not a
case of ’supply of goods to the Government’ but maintained
that the subsisting contract between the respondent and the
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Government amounted to ’execution of any work undertaken by
the Government’.
In Dewar) Joynal (supra), this Court interpret.ed the
word ’works’ as used in Section 9-A of the Act and opined :
"........, The word ’worms’ In the express i on in
’execution of any works’ appearing in Section 9-A of the Act
is used Jn the sense of ’projects’, ’.schemes’, ’plants’,
such as bilding works, irrigation works, defence works etc.
Respondent 1 in this case had not undertaken to carry on any
such work. According to the Shorter Oxford Dictionary the
’expression ’work’ means a structure or anparatus of some
kind: an architectural or engineering structure, a
bulldi’ng edifice. When it is used in plural, i.e., as
’works’ it means ’architectural or engineering operations:
a fortified building; a defensive structure, fortification;
any of the several parts of such structure". The word
’works’ used in entry 35 of List II of the Seventh Schedule
of the Constitution of India which reads as "works, lands
and buildings vested in or in the possession of the .Statft"
is used in the same sense. The runn"ng of boats across in
land waterways is a topic which falls under entry 32 of List
III of the Seventh Schedule which reads thus : "Shipping
and navigation on inland waterways as regards mechanically
propelled vessels, and the ru^e of the road on such
waterways, and the carriage of passengers and goods on
inland waterways subject to the provisions of List I with
respect to national waterways". It is, therefore, difficult
to hold that when a person acquires the right to collect
toll at a public ferrv under Section 8 of the Ferries Act he
is performing a contract of execution of works undertaken by
the government. It may have been perhaps different if the
words ’in performance of any services’ which were present in
Section 7Cd) of the Act. as it stood prior to its amendment
in 1958 had been there in Section 9-A of the Act."
We find ourselves unable to agree with the learned
counsel for the appellant that keeping in view the purpose
for which Section 9-A of the Act was enacted, namely, to
avoid any conflict between private interest and public duty,
a broad interpretation should be placed on Section 9-A.
Section 9-A i? a statutory orovision which imposes a
disqualification on a citizen. It would, therefore, be
unreasonable to take a general or broad view, ignoring the
essentials of the Section and the intention of the
legislature. Purposive interpretation is necessary. In
Dewan JoynaVs case ( supra). Section 9-A of the Act has
been correctly interpreted in the following words :
"An analysis of Section9-A of the Act shows that only
in two cases a person would be disqualified if he has
entered into a contract with the approoriate government in
the course of his trade or business which is subsisting on
the date of scrutiny of nomination. They are (1) when the
contract is one for supply off goods to the appropriate
government and (ii) where the contract is for the execution
of any works undertaken by that doverment. ........
....... The Andhra Pradesh High Court held that since
the contracts entered into by the successful candidate with
the State Government to sell arrack and toddy did not come
within the mischief of Section 9-A of the Act as thev were
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neither for supply of goods to the government nor for the
execution of any works undertaken he did not suffer from any
disqulification for being chosen as a member of the
Ledislative Assembly,
We have gone through the above decision carefully. We
are of the view that. the High Court was right in the said
case in holding that the returned candidate had not suffered
from any disqualification by reason of the fact that he was
an excise contractor"
We agree with the aforesaid view. No other point has
been urged.
For what we have said a.bove, we find that there is no
merit in this appeal. Tt is, accordingly) dismissed, but
without any order as to costs.