Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MITHILESH KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SRI R. VENKATARAMAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/10/1987
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
OZA, G.L. (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
SINGH, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 2371 1988 SCR (1) 525
1987 SCC Supl. 692 JT 1987 (4) 111
1987 SCALE (2)780
ACT:
The Presidential and Vice-Presidential Ekctions Act,
1952-s. 18(1)(a)-Read with r. 34, OXXXIX, and r.6, O.XXIII,
of the Supreme Court Rules, 1966 Plea for setting aside an
election on the ground of commission of offence of ’undue
influence’-Petition liable to be rejected if it does not
contain a specific averment that either the returned
candidate himself had committed any act of ’undue influence’
or any other person had committed any act of ’undue
influence’ with his consent.
HEADNOTE:
%
Part III of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential
Elections Act, 1952 sets out the provisions relating to the
settlement of disputes regarding elections to the offices of
the President and the Vice-President of India. Section 14(3)
thereof requires that an ekction petition should be
presented in accordance with the provisions of that Part and
of the rules made by this Court under Art. 145 of the
Constitution. The rules so made are contained in O.XXXIX of
the Supreme Court Rules, 1966. Rule 34 thereof provides that
subject to the provisions of that order or any Special order
or directions of the Court, the procedure on an election
petition shall follow, as nearly as may be, the procedure in
proceedings before the Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction, which procedure is set out in O.XXIII. Rule 6
of o.XXIII states inter alia that the plaint shall be
rejected where it does not disclose a cause of action.
Respondent No. 1 was declared elected as the President
of India at an election held in July, 1987. The petitioner
who had contested in the said election as a candidate filed
this petition questioning the validity of the election of
respondent No. 1 and praying for a declaration that he was
the successful candidate at that election.
Rejecting the petition,
^
HELD: In the circumstances of this case the Court has
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no choice except to reject the petition as required under r.
6 of O.XXIII of
526
the Supreme Court Rules, 1966 as it does not disclose any
cause of A action. [537B]
(i) Section 18 of the Presidential and Vice-
Presidential Elections Act, 1952 is exhaustive of the
grounds on which the election of the President or the Vice-
President can be declared void. An election may be set aside
under cl.(a) of s. 18(1) if it is established that the
offence of bribery or undue influence, as explained in
Chapter IXA of the Indian Penal Code had been committed by
the returned candidate or by any person with the consent of
the returned candidate. In order to succeed on the grounds
mentioned in s. 18(1)(a) it has to be established that the
offence of bribery or undue influence had been committed at
the election by the returned candidate himself; or by any
person with his consent. [530G-H: 531A-R]
(ii) The manner in which the present petition has been
drafted is not in accordance with the Rules. Ordinarily the
petition should state in a narrative form succinctly and
clearly all the facts as-may be necessary to enable the
respondents and the Court to understand the case of the
petitioner. This is not the case here. The first part of the
petition contains 13 questions and the answers given by the
petitioner to those questions. A reading of all these 13
questions and answers given there to be the petitioner shows
that the only ground on which the petitioner wished to call
in question the election of the 1st respondent is that the
issue of a whip by the Congress (I) Party to its legislators
on the eve of the ekction asking them to cast their votes in
favour of the 1st respondent was in the nature of a threat
amounting to undue influence which is one of the two grounds
set out in s. 18(1)(a). The allegations made in this part of
the petition suggest that the specific case of the
petitioner is that the said act of the influence had been
committed by the members of the Congress(I) Party. There is
no allegation that any act amounting to undue influence was
committed either by respondent No. 1 himself or by any other
person with his consent. Even in the second part of the
petition which is entitled ’Notable points’ and the third
part of the petition containing grounds to declare the
election of the returned candidate as void there is no
averment that either the returned candidate himself had
committed any act of undue influence or any other person had
committed any act of undue influence with his consent.
[532A-E]
(iii) At the hearing after getting the entire petition
read out the Court asked the petitioner to point out whether
there was any allegation that the lst respondent had himself
committed any undue influence or
527
any other person with the consent of the 1st respondent had
committed such an act or any allegation which required to be
tried and the petitioner was not able to point out any part
of the petition in which such an allegation had been made.
In view of this infirmity we have not found it necessary to
examine whether the issuing of the whip by any political
party amounts to undue influence vitiating an election even
when such an act is committed by the returned candidate or
with his consent by some other person. [536G-H; 537A]
(iv) The petitioner did not appear to be quite serious
about his case. At one stage he contended having himself
filed the petition before the Court that this Court had no
competence to hear the case and at another stage he wanted
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51 Judges to hear his petition when the maximum permissible
strength of this Court is about one-half of tha number and
the existing strength of this Court is less than one-third
of that number. While we expect every conscientious citizen
eligible to file an election petition to question an
election on the grounds prescribed by the Act, we do not
wish that any petitioner should make use of this Court as a
forum to file a petition without giving adequate thought to
its contents and also to the provisions of law governing the
case merely to seek some cheap publicity. [537C-E]
Charan Lal Sahu v. Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy, l1978] 3
S.C.R. 1 and Charan Lal SaJlu & O.R.S. v. Giani Zail Singh &
Anr., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 6; relied on.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Election Petition No. 1 of 1987.
Election Petition under Section 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20
of Part III of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential
Elections Act 1952
Petitioner-in-person (Mithilesh Kumar).
K. Parasaran, Attorney General T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer,
Krishnamurthy Swami and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. The above petition is filed by the
petitioner, Shri Mithilesh Kumar under the provisions of the
Presidential and Vice-Presidential Elections Act, 1952 (Act
No. 31 of 1952) (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’)
calling in question the validity of the election of Shri R.
Venkataraman, the 1st respondent herein as the
528
President of India at the election held in July, 1987 for
electing the President of India and praying for a
declaration that he is the successful candidate at that
election. There were three candidates at the election,
namely, Shri R. Venkataraman-respondent No. 1, Shri V.R.
Krishna Iyer-respondent No. 2 and Shri Mithilcsh Kumar-the
petitioner. The result of the election was declared on
16.7.1987 by the Returning officer for Presidential Election
1987-respondent No. 4, declaring Shri R. Venkataraman-
respondent No. 1 as the President of India.
The Act was passed in the year 1952 for the purpose of
regulating certain matters relating to or connected with the
elections to the offices of the President and the Vice-
President of India. Part II of the Act contains the
provisions relating to the conduct of Presidential and Vice-
Presidential elections and Part III of the Act sets out the
provisions relating to the settlement of disputes regarding
elections to the offices of the President and the Vice-
President of India. Section 14 of the Act provides that no
election should be called in question except by presenting
an election petition to the authority specified in
subsection (2) and the authority having jurisdiction to try
an election petition under the Act is specified as the
Supreme Court of India by sub-section (2). Sub-section (3)
of section 14 of the Act requires that an election petition
should be presented to the Supreme Court of India in
accordance with the provisions of Part III of the Act and of
the rules made by the Supreme Court of India under Article
145 of the Constitution of India. Order XXXIX of the Supreme
Court Rules, 1966 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Rules’)
made under Article 145 of the Constitution of India and all
other powers enabling it in this behalf by the Supreme Court
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of India contains the provisions relating to the election
petitions filed under Part III of the Act. Section 14-A of
the Act provides that an election petition calling in
question an election may be presented on one or more of the
grounds specified in Sub/section (1) of section 18 and
section 19 to the Supreme Court by any f candidate at such
election or in the case of Presidential election, by twenty
or more electors joined together as petitioners and in the
case of Vice-Presidential election, by ten or more electors
joined as petitioners. Such petition may be presented at any
time after the date of the publication of the declaration
containing the name of the elected candidate at the election
under section 12 of the Act but not later than thirty days
from the date of such publication. Section is of the Act
provides that subject to the provisions of Part III of the
Act rules made by the Supreme Court of India under Article
145 of the Constitution of India may regulate the form of
election petitions, the manner in which
529
they are to be presented, the persons who are to be made
parties thereto, the procedure to be adopted in connection
therewith and the circumstances in which petitions are to
abate and to be withdrawn and in which new petitioners may
be substituted and may require security to be given for
costs. Rule 3 of order XXXIX of the Rules prescribes that a
court-fee stamp of the value of rupees two hundred and fifty
shall be paid on the election petition and the election
petition will be signed by the petitioner or petitioners, if
they are more than one, or a duly authorised advocate-on-
record on his or their behalf. Rule 4 of order XXXIX of the
Rules provides that the petition shall be divided into
paragraphs, numbered consecutively, each paragraph being
confined to a distinct portion of the subject, and shall be
printed or typed legibly on one side of standard petition-
paper, demy-foolscap size or of the size of 29.7 cm. x 21
cm. Or on paper of equally superior quality. Rule 5 of order
XXXIX of the Rules requires that the petition shall state
the right of the petitioner under the Act to petition the
Court and briefly set forth the facts and grounds relied on
by him to sustain the reliefs claimed by him. The
allegations of fact contained in the petition shall be
verified by an affidavit to be made personally by the
petitioner or by one of the petitioners, if there are more
than one as provided under rule 6 of order XXXIX of the
Rules. The grounds on which the election of the returned
candidate at the Presidential or the Vice Presidential
election can be declared void are set out in section 18 of
the Act Section 18 of the Act reads thus:-
" 18(1). If the Supreme Court is of opinion,-
(a) that the offence of bribery or undue
influence at the election has been committed by
the returned candidate or by any person with the
consent of the returned candidate; or
(b) that the result of the election has been
materially affected-
(ii) by the improper reception or refusal of
a vote; or
(ii) by any non-compliance with the
provisions of the Constitution or of this Act or
of any rules or orders made under this Act; or
(iii) by reason of the fact that the
nomination of any
530
candidate (other than the successful candidate),
who has not withdrawn his candidature, has been
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wrongly accepted; or
(c) that the nomination of any candidate has
been wrongly rejected or the nomination of the
successful candidate has been wrongly accepted;
the Supreme Court shall declare the election of
the returned candidate to be void.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the
offences of bribery and undue influence at an
election have the same meaning as in Chapter IXA
of the Indian Penal Code."
Section 19 of the Act sets out the grounds for which a
candidate other than the returned candidate may be declared
to have been elected. Section 19 of the Act reads thus.
"19. Grounds for which a candidate other than the
re turned candidate may be declared to have been
elected. If any person who has lodged an election
petition has, in addition to calling in question
the election of the returned candidate, claimed a
declaration that he himself or any other candidate
has been duly elected and the Supreme Court is of
opinion that in fact the petitioner or such other
candidate received a majority of the valid votes,
the Supreme Court shall, after declaring the
election of the returned candidate to be void,
declare the petitioner or such other candidate, as
the case may be, to have been duly elected:
Provided that the petitioner or such other
candidate shall not be declared to be duly elected
if it is proved that the election of such
candidate would have been void if he had been the
returned candidate and a petition had been
presented calling in question his election."
Section 18 of the Act is exhaustive of the grounds on
which the election of the President or the Vice-President
can be declared void. Under section 18(1)(a) an election of
the President or of the Vice-President may be set aside if
it is established that the offence of bribery or undue
influence, as explained in Chapter IXA of the Indian Penal
531
Code had been committed by the returned candidate or by
any person with the consent of the returned candidate. In
order to succeed on the grounds mentioned in section
18(1)(a) of the Act it has to be established that the
offence of bribery or undue influence had been committed at
the election by the returned candidate himself; or by any
person with his consent. Originally when the Act was enacted
section 18(1)(a) of the Act read thus:-
" 18(1). If the Supreme Court is of opinion-
(a) that the offence of bribery or undue
influence at the election has been committed by
the returned candidate or by any person with the
connivance of the returned candidate: or
................................................."
The word ’connivance’ in section 18(1)(a) of the Act
was substituted later on by Parliament when the former Part
III of the Act was substituted by the present Part III of
the Act by the Presidential and the Vice-Presidential
Elections (Amendment) Act, 1977 to bring it in line with the
provisions of section 123(1) and (2) of the Representation
of the People Act, 1951, which contain the grounds of
bribery and undue influence which would vitiate the election
to either House of Parliament or to the Houses or House of
the State Legislatures as the case may be. Clause (b) of
section 18(1) of the Act contains three grounds the proof of
any of which would result in the election being declared
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void provided it is established that the result of the
election has been materially affected thereby, namely, (i)
the improper reception or refusal of a vote; or (ii) any
non-compliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of
the Act or of any rules or orders made under the Act; or
(iii) wrongful acceptance of the nomination of any candidate
(other than the successful candidate), who has not withdrawn
his candidature. Clause (c) of section 18(1) of the Act
provides that if the nomination of any candidate has been
wrongly rejected or the nomination of the successful
candidate has been wrongly accepted, the election of the
returned candidate is to be declared void. These are the
only grounds on which the election of the returned candidate
can be declared void under the Act. Section 19 of the Act as
stated already contains grounds for declaring a candidate
other than the returned candidate as duly elected.
It should he stated at the outset that the manner in
which the
532
present petition has been drafted is not in accordance
with the Rules. Ordinarily the petition should state in a
narrative form succinctly and clearly all the facts as may
be necessary to enable the respondents and the Court to
understand the case of the petitioner. This is not the case
here. The first part of the petition contains 13 questions
and the answers given by the petitioner to those questions.
A reading of all these 13 questions and answers given
thereto by the petitioner shows that the only ground on
which the petitioner wished to call in question the election
of the 1st respondent is that the issue of a whip by the
Congress (I) Party to its legislators on the eve of the
election asking them to cast their votes in favour of the
1st respondent was in the nature of a threat amounting to
undue influence which is one of the two grounds set out in
section 18( I)(a) of the Act. The allegations made in this
part of the petition suggest that the specific case of the
petitioner is that the said act of undue influence had been
committed by the members of the Congress (I) Party. There is
no allegation that any act amounting to undue influence was
committed either by respondent No. ] himself, or by any
other person with his consent. Even in the second part of
the petition which is entitled ’Notable points’ and the
third part of the petition containing grounds to declare the
election of the returned candidate as void, there is no
averment that either the returned candidate himself had
committed any act of undue influence or any other person had
committed any act of undue influence with his consent. The
fourth part of the petition contains grounds to declare the
petitioner as duly elected. It is alleged in this part that
by reason of the issue of the whip by the Congress (I) Party
and/or by other parties the votes which would have been cast
in his favour had been grabbed by the other candidates. The
fifth part of the petition contains the reliefs sought by
the petitioner and the last part contains the prayer for an
interim order directing the staying of the oath ceremony of
the returned candidate which had been fixed to take place on
the 25th of July, 1987. There is no reference to any other
ground mentioned in section 18 of the Act on the basis of
which the election can be set aside.
After the petition was presented to this Court notice
was issued to the respondents and also to the Attorney-
General of India as pro-
533
tion is liable to be rejected at this stage itself since it
does not disclose any cause of action. Rule 34 of order
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XXXIX of the Rules provides that subject to the provisions
of order XXXIX of the Rules or any special order or
directions of the Court, the procedure on an election
petition shall follow, as nearly as may be, the procedure in
proceedings before the Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction. Order XXIIl of the rules contains the rules of
pleadings in cases filed under the original jurisdiction of
this Court. Rule 6 of order XXIII of the Rules states that
the plaint shall be rejected where it does not disclose a
cause of action or where the suit appears from the statement
in the plaint to be barred by any law. It is stated in the
preliminary objections of the 1st respondent and the
preliminary submissions of the Attorney General of lndia
that since no where in the election petition the petitioner
has stated that the offence of undue influence had been
committed by the 1st respondent or by any other person with
his consent and since no other ground specified in section
18 of the Act has been pleaded, the petition is liable to be
rejected under rule 6 of order XXIII of the rules even
assuming that all that the petitioner has stated in his
petition is true.
After the preliminary objections of the 1st respondent
and the preliminary submissions of the Attorney-General of
India were filed, the case was taken up for hearing on the
said preliminary objections and preliminary submissions. The
petitioner Shri Mithilesh Kumar (in person), Shri T.S.
Krishnamurthy Iyer, learned counsel for respondent No. 1 and
Shri K. Parasaran, learned Attorney-General of India were
heard.
The issue which arises for consideration in this case
is whether the election petition is liable to be rejected
under rule 6 of order XXIII of the Rules on the ground that
it does not disclose any cause of action.
The question of law involved in this case is no longer
res integra. In Charan Lal Sahu v. Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy,
[1978] 3 S.C.R. 1 the petitioner in that petition had
questioned the election of Shri Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy as the
President of India. In that decision this Court held that it
was obligatory upon the Court to reject a petition outright
and not to waste any more time upon a plaint or petition if
the provisions of law bar or are shown to bar the
proceedings. The Court proceeded to hold that it was not
even necessary to issue notice to any opposite party or
parties in such a case. The next decision in Charan Lal Sahu
& others v. Giani Zail Singh & Another, [198412 S.C.R. 6
534
deals with facts which are very close to the facts of the
present case. In A the said case two issues arose for
consideration: (i) can the election of a candidate to the of
fice of the President of India be challenged on the ground
that he is not a suitable person for holding that office;
and (ii) whether the averments in that election petition,
assuming them to be true and correct, disclose any cause of
action for setting aside the election of the returned
candidate on the ground stated in section 18(1)(a) of the
Act. This Court observed in that case that the rights
arising out of elections, including the right to contest or
challenge an election, were not common law rights, but they
were creatures of the statutes which created, conferred or
limited those rights. Therefore, for deciding the question
whether an election can be set aside on any alleged ground,
the court has to consult the provisions of law governing the
particular election. The Court has to function within the
framework of that law and cannot travel beyond it. The Court
proceeded to observe in the above decision thus at Pages 22
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to 24:-
"Nor is it alleged that the offence of undue
influence was committed by the returned candidate
himself. The allegation of the petitioners is that
the offence of undue influence was committed by
certain supporters and close associates of
Respondent 1 with his connivance. It is patent
that this allegation, even if it is true, is not
enough to fulfil the requirements of section
18(1)(a). What that section, to the extent
relevant, requires is that the offence of undue
influence must be committed by some other person
with the ’consent’ of the returned candidate.
There is no plea whatsoever in the petition that
undue influence was exercised by those other
persons with the consent of Respondent 1.
It is contended by Shri Shujatullah Khan who
appears on behalf of the petitioners, that
connivance and consent are one and the same thing
and that, there is no legal distinction between
the two concepts. In support of this contention,
learned counsel relies upon the meaning of the
word ’connivance’ as given in Webster’s Dictionary
(Third Edition, Volume 1, p 481); Random House (p.
311); Black’s Law Dictionary (p. 274); Words and
Phrases (Permanent Edition, Volume 8A, p. 173);
and Corpus Juris Secundum (Volume 15A, p. 567).
The reliance on these dictionaries and texts
cannot carry the point at issue any further. The
relevant question for consideration for the
535
decision of the issue is whether there is any
pleading in the petition to the effect that the
offence of undue influence was committed with the
consent of the returned candidate. Admittedly,
there is no pleading of consent. It is then no
answer to say that the petitioners have pleaded
connivance and according to dictionaries,
connivance means consent. The plea of consent is
one thing: the fact that connivance means consent
(assuming that it does) is quite another. It is
not open to a petitioner in an Election Petition
to plead in terms of synonyms. In these petitions,
pleadings have to be precise, specific and
unambiguous so as to put the respondent on notice.
The rule of pleadings that facts constituting the
cause of action must be specifically pleaded is as
fundamental as it is elementary. ’Connivance’ may
in certain situations amount to consent which
explains why the dictionaries give ’consent’ as
one of the meanings of the word ’connivance’. But
it is not true to say that ’connivance’ invariably
and necessarily means or amounts to consent, that
is to say, irrespective of the context of the
given situation. The two cannot, therefore, be
equated. Consent imply that parties ad idem.
Connivance does not necessarily imply that parties
are of one mind. They may or may not be, depending
upon the facts of the situation. That is why, in
the absence of a pleading that the offence of
undue influence as committed with the consent of
the returned candidate, one of the main
ingredients of section 18(1)(a) remains
unsatisfied.
The importance of a specific pleading in
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these matters can be appreciated only if it is
realised that the absence of a specific plea puts
the respondent at a great disadvantage. He must
know what case he has to meet. He cannot be kept
guessing whether the petitioner means what he
says, ’connivance’ here, or whether the petitioner
has used expression as meaning ’consent’. It is
remarkable that, in their petition, the
petitioners have furnished no particulars of the
alleged consent, if what is meant by the use of
the word connivance is consent. They cannot be
allowed to keep their options open until the trial
and adduce such evidence of consent as seems
convenient and comes handy. That is the importance
of precision in pleadings, particularly in
election petitions. Accordingly, it is
impermissible to substitute the word ’consent’ for
the word ’connivance which
536
occurs in the pleadings of the petitioners.
The legislative history of the statute lends
support to our view that for the purposes of
section 18(1)(a), connivance is not the same thing
as consent. Originally, when the Act was passed in
1952, section 18(1)(a) provided that the Supreme
Court shall declare the election of the re turned
candidate void if it is of opinion that the
offence of bribery or undue influence has been
committed by the re turned candidate or by any
person ’with the connivance’ of the returned
candidate. This sub-section was amended by section
7 of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential Elec
tions (Amendment) Act S of 1974, which came into
force on March 23, 1974. The word ’connivance’ was
substituted by the word ’consent’ by the Amendment
Act. If connivance carried the same meaning as
consent and if one was the same as the other
Parliament would not have taken the deliberate
step of deleting the word ’connivance’ and sub
stituting it by the word ’consent’. The amendment
made by the Amendment Act of 1974 shows that
connivance and consent connote distinct concepts
for the purpose of section 18(1)(a) of the Act.
Since, admittedly, there is no pleading in
the Election Petition that the offence of undue
influence was committed with the consent of the
returned candidate, the petition must be held to
disclose no cause of action for setting aside the
election of the returned candidate under section
18(1) (a) of the Act."
We have given above a fairly long quotation from the
above decision because it contains all the reasons necessary
to decide this case too. We do not propose to repeat them.
They are applicable to this case also. In the petition
before us there is not even an allegation that the act of
undue influence had been committed by some persons with the
connivance of the 1st respondent. The petition is as bald as
it could be. At the hearing after getting the entire
petition read out the Court asked the petitioner to point
out whether there was any allegation that the 1st respondent
had himself committed any undue influence or any other
person with the consent of the 1st respondent had committed
such an act or any allegation which required to be tried and
the petitioner was not able to point out any part of the
petition in which such an allegation had been made. In view
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of this infirmity we
537
have not found it necessary to examine whether the issuing
of the whip by any political party amounts to undue
influence vitiating an election even when such an act is
committed by the returned candidate or with his consent by
some other persons.
In the circumstances, the Court has no choice except to
reject the petition as required under rule 6 of order XXIII
of the Rules as it does not disclose any cause of action.
Before concluding we should observe that the petitioner
did not appear to be quite serious about his case. At one
stage he contended having himself filed the petition before
the Court that this Court had no competence to hear the case
and at another stage he wanted 51 Judges to hear his
petition when the maximum permissible strength of this Court
is about one-half of that number and the existing strength
of this Court is less than one-third of that number. Rule 20
of order XXXIX of the Rules requires that every petition
calling in question an election to the offices of the
President and the Vice-President shall be posted before and
be heard and disposed of by a Bench of this Court consisting
of not less than five Judges. While we expect every
conscientious citizen eligible to file an election petition
to question an election on the grounds prescribed by the
Act, we do not wish that any petitioner should make use of
this Court as a forum to file a petition without giving
adequate thought to its contents and also to the provisions
of law governing the case merely to seek some cheap
publicity. We regret to say that seeing one’s name in
newspapers everyday has lately become the worst intoxicant
and the number of people who have become victims of it is
increasing day by day. We, however, refrain from referring
to some other irrelevant and unwarranted statements made by
him before this Court orally and in writing. Perhaps the
petitioner who desired to become the President of India did
not understand the effect of what he was saying. We shall
leave it at that.
The petition is, therefore, rejected.
H.L.C. Petition dismissed.
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