Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
KONAPPA RUDRAPPA NADGOUDA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VISHWANATH REDDY & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/09/1968
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 447 1969 SCR (1) 395
CITATOR INFO :
AFR 1969 SC 604 (12,14)
D 1981 SC1177 (14,17)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act (43 of 1951), ss. 53, 84
and 101-Two candidates contesting for one seat-Court finds
successful candidate to be under statutory disqualification-
Whether the other can be declared elected.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant and respondent were the contesting candidates
for a seat in the State Legislative Assembly. The appellant
challenged the respondent’s nomination before the Returning
Officer on the ground that the respondent was disqualified
under s. 9A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951.
No general notice was given to the electorate about the
disqualification. The Returning Officer overruled the
objection and accepted the respondent’s nomination. After
the respondent was elected, the appellant flied an election
petition in the: High Court, on the same ground, but the
petition was rejected.
In appeal, this Court declared the election of the
respondent void, and on the question whether the appellant
could, under law, be declared elected,
HELD: The decision in Keshav Laxman Borkar v. Dr. Devrao
Laxman Anande, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 902 that votes cast in favour
of the disqualified candidate would be deemed to be thrown
away only when the, voters had notice of the
disqualification, and that in the absence of such notice,
there can only be fresh election is wrong. That rule. was
adopted from English decisions but it is not consistent with
the Indian statute. law and is inappropriate for Indian
conditions. [95 A-B; 96 E]
(a) Section 53 of the Act renders a poll necessary only
if there ’are more candidates contesting the election than
the number of seats contested. If the number of candidates
is equal to the number of seats to be filled, the Returning
Officer shall forthwith declare all such candidate’s to be
dully elected to fill those seats. [92 D]
(b) In cases falling under s. 101(b), the Act requires
merely proof of corrupt practice and obtaining votes by the
corrupt practice: it does not require proof that voters
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
had notice of the corrupt practice. Therefore, in cases
falling under cl. (a) when there are only two candidates for
one seat and the returned candidate is found to be under a
statutory disqualification the other may be declared elected
under s. 84 read with s. 101 (’a), even though the voters
had no notice of the disqualification of the successful
candidate. [96 BE]
(c) It would be almost impossible to give notice of the
disqualification to the electorate in view of the immense
cost involved and the general illiteracy of a large section
of voters. [95 E-F]
(d) There is no logic in the assumption that votes,
cast in favour of
person whose nomination was accepted by the Returning
Officer but who was really disqualified, could still be:
treated as valid votes for deter-
91
mining whether a fresh election should be held. While
notice to voters may have significance when there are more
than two candidates in the field for a single seat, where
there are only two contesting candidates and one of them is
under a statutory disqualification, votes cast in his favour
may be regarded as thrown away irrespective of whether the
voters were aware of the disqualification. [95 F-H]
Therefore, where by an erroneous order of the Returning
Officer poll is held which, but for that order, was not
necessary, the Court would be justified in declaring the
contesting candidate elected, who, but for
the order of the Returning Officer would have been declared
elected.
[19 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Review Petition No. 54 of
1968. (For the review of this Court’s judgment dated July
19, 1968 in Civil Appeal No. 1705 of 1967).
B.S. Patil, M. K. Ramamurthi, Vineet Kumar and Shyamala
Pappu, for the petitioner.
S.V. Gupte, S.S. Javali and B. Datta, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. Vishwanath Reddy was declared elected to the
Mysore Legislative Assembly from the Yadgiri constituency at
the poll held in February 1967. Nadgouda who was a
contesting candidate filed a petition before the High Court
of Mysore for an order setting aside the election of Reddy
on the ground that Reddy was disqualified from standing as
a candidate for election and for an order declaring that
he--Nadgouda--be declared elected. The High Court rejected
the petition. In appeal, this Court held that at the date
of nomination Reddy was disqualified from standing as a
candidate and passed an order on July 19, 1968 that--
" .... the appeal is therefore
allowed, the election of the first respondent
is declared void. In this view of the matter
the votes cast in favour’ of the first
respondent be treated as thrown away. As
there was no other contesting candidate we
declare the appellant (election petitioner)
elected to the seat from the Yadgiri
constituency."
Reddy then applied for review of judgment and claimed,
relying upon the decision of this Court in Keshav Laxman
Borkar v. Dr. Devrao Laxman Anande(1), that in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
circumstances of the case no order declaring Nadgouda could
be made by this Court. This Court granted review of judgment
by order dated August 27, 1968, and the appeal is now before
us for consideration of the question whether it is open to
this Court on the finding recorded’ about the
disqualification of Reddy to declare Nadgouda as duly
elected to the Mysore Legislative Assembly.
(1) [1960] 1 S.c.R. 902
92
Out of seven candidates who. filed their nomination
papers for election, five candidates withdrew their
candidature, and Nadgouda and Reddy were the only two
candidates remaining in the field. Nomination of Reddy was
challenged before the Returning Officer on the plea that
Reddy was disqualified by virtue of s. 9A of the
Representation of the People Act from standing as a
candidate for election to the Mysore .State Legislative
Assembly, but that objection was overruled and his
nomination was accepted. Reddy secured at the poll 4000
more votes than Nadgouda and was declared elected.
This Court has declared the election of Reddy void on
the ground disqualification under s. 9A of the
Representation of the People Act, and the question is no
longer in issue at this stage. The only question which
remains to be determined is whether in the events which have
transpired, Nadgouda could under the law be declared
elected.
Section 53 of the Representation of the People Act
provides that if the number of contesting candidates is more
than the number of seats to be filled, a poll shall be
taken, and if the number of such candidates is equal to the
number of seats to be filled, the Returning Officer shall
forthwith declare all such candidates to be duly elected to
fill those seats. "Disqualified" means "disqualified for
being chosen as, and for being, a member of either House of
Parliament or of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative
Council of a State": s. 7(b). Section 9A of the Act
provides:
"A person shall be disqualified if, and
for so long as, there subsists a contract
entered into by him in the course 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.--
Reddy was on the finding recorded by this Court incompetent
to be chosen as a member of the Legislative Assembly.
Objection was raised before the Returning Officer that Reddy
was disqualified, but no general notice was given to the
electorate about the disqualification. On the view that
Reddy was not disqualified, the Returning Officer accepted
his nomination and at the poll Reddy was declared duly
elected.
Section 84 of the Representation of the People Act
provides that--
petitioner may, in addition to
claiming a declaration that the election of
all or any of the returned candidates is void,
claim a further declaration that he himself or
any other candidate has been duly elected."
93
Nadgouda by his election petition did make a claim that the
election of Reddy be declared void and that he--Nadgouda--be
declared duly elected. Section 100 sets out the grounds on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
which an election may be declared void, and s. 101 sets out
the grounds on which a candidate other than the returned
candidate may be declared to have been elected. That
section provides:
"If any person who has lodged a 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 High
Court is of opinion-
(a) that in fact the petitioner or such
other candidate received a majority of the
valid votes; or
(b) that but for the votes obtained by the
returned candidate by corrupt practices the
petitioner or such other candidate would have
obtained a majority of the valid votes,
the High 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."
The expression "valid votes" used in s. 101 has not been
defined in the Act. But this Court has held in Keshav
Laxman Borkar’s case(1) that a candidate whose nomination
paper is accepted after scrutiny, is a validly nominated
candidate "at least for the purpose of receiving votes at
the election", and that the candidate must be treated as a
person for whom votes could be given. The Court on that
view held that where there are only two candidates. for a
seat and the election of the candidate declared elected is
set aside on the ground that he was disqualified the
defeated candidate cannot be declared elected, and there
must be a fresh election. In the opinion of the Court the
votes cast in favour of the disqualified candidate cannot be
said to be thrown away unless there is a "special pleading"
that certain voters had cast their votes with the knowledge
or notice that the candidate for whom they had voted was not
eligible for election, and they had deliberately thrown away
their votes in favour of the disqualified person: in the
absence of such a plea it cannot be said that the votes cast
in favour of a person who was by law disqualified from
being nominated, but who was in fact nominated, were thrown
away. In the Court’s view a defeated candidate out of the
two who contested the election may be declared elected under
s. 84 read with s. 101 of the Act, if he proves that the
voters had notice of the disqualification of the successful
candidate. Correctness of this view is challenged before
us.
[1960] 1 S.C.R. 902.
94
The rule enunciated by this Court was apparently adopted
from certain cases decided by the Courts in the
United .Kingdom. In Drinkwater v. Deakin(1) it was held that
bribing by a candidate at an election, though it renders his
election void if he be found guilty of it on petition, does
not incapacitate the candidate at that election in the sense
that the votes given for him by voters with knowledge of it
will be thrown away, and that no disqualification arises in
that sense of the term until after the candidate has been
found guilty of bribery on petition, and consequently, the
petitioner was not entitled to the seat.
In Hobbs v. Morey(2) at a municipal election a person
who had an outstanding contract with a municipality was
nominated as a candidate and was declared duly elected. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
defeated candidate then claimed the seat on the plea that
the successful candidate was disqualified.. It was held that
the nomination of the successful candidate was invalid, and
as the defeated candidate did not allege any notice to the
electorate of the disqualification of the successful
candidate, the votes given for him could not be treated as
thrown away, and the defeated candidate was not entitled to
claim the seat.
In Beresford Hope v. Lady Sandhurst(3) it was held by
the Court of Appeal that an ’election of a woman candidate
to a county council under the Local Government Act, 1888,
being void, the defeated candidate could be declared
elected, because it was common knowledge that women are
incapacitated from being elected members of a county council
and the votes given to the woman candidate were thrown away.
In a recent judgment of the Court of Appeal in Re.
Bristol South East Parliamentary Election(4) at the
parliamentary election Wedgwood Benn was declared duly
elected member of the Parliament. Prior to that date St.
Clair a contesting candidate had sent out notices to all
persons entitled to vote stating that by reason of his
status as a peer of the United Kingdom Wedgwood Benn was
disqualified from being elected a member of Parliament and
that all votes given for him would be thrown away and, be
null and void. Similar notices were published in the
newspapers circulating in the constituency and were posted
at the entrance to. polling stations. The Court of Queen’s
Bench held in that case that the facts which in law created
the incapacity of Wedgwood Benn to be elected a member of
Parliament were known to the electors before they cast their
votes, and the Court was bound to declare that the votes
cast for the successful candidate had been thrown away. The
petitioner (defeated candidate) was accordingly declared
duly elected.
(1) [1874] L.R. 9 Court of Common Pleas 626. (2)
[1904] 1 K.B. 74.
(3) [1889] 23 Q.B.D. 79. (4) [1961] 3 All
E.R. 354.
95
The cases decided by the Courts in the United Kingdom
appear to have proceeded upon some general rule of election
law that the votes. cast in favour of a person who is found
disqualified for election may be regarded as thrown away
only if the voters had notice before the poll of the
disqualification of the candidate.
But in our judgment the rule which has prevailed in the
British Courts for a long time has no application in our
country. Section 53 of the Representation of the People Act
renders a poll necessary only if there are more candidates
contesting the election man the number of seats contested.
If the number of candidates validly nominated is equal to
the number of seats to be filled, no poll is necessary.
Where by an erroneous order of the Returning Officer poll
is held which, but for that order, was not necessary, the
Court would be justified in declaring those contesting
candidates elected, who, but for the order, would have been
declared elected. The rule enunciated by the Courts in the
United Kingdom has only the merit of antiquity. But the
rule cannot be extended to the trial of disputes under our
election law, for it is not consistent with our statute
law, and in any case the conditions prevailing in our
country do not justify the application of that rule. If the
rule is applied in our country, the provisions of s. 84 read
with s. 101 (a) would practically be nugatory. Apart from
the immense cost of intimating each voter in the vast
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
electorate in the constituencies the rule that a defeated
candidate may be declared elected only if he pleads and
proves that the voters had notice of the disqualification
would render the exception in the context of prevailing
illiteracy and ignorance of large sections of the electorate
in our country, a dead letter. A very large percentage of
the electorate in our country is, unfortunately illiterate
and sections thereof not infrequently speak a language
different from the language of the majority. It would be
well nigh impossible to give .information of the
disqualification of a candidate in a medium which the
illiterate electors understand. We are again unable to see
any logic in the assumption that votes cast in favour of a
person who is regarded by the Returning Officer as validly
nominated, but who is in truth disqualified, could still be
treated as valid votes. for the purpose of determining
whether a fresh election should be held. When there are
only two contesting candidates, and one of them is under a
statutory disqualification, votes cast in favour of the
disqualified candidate may be regarded as thrown away,
irrespective of whether the voters who voted for him were
aware of the disqualification. This is not to say that
where there are more than two candidates in the field for a
single seat, and one alone is disqualified, on proof of
disqualification all the votes cast in his favour will be
discarded and the candidate securing the next highest number
of votes will be declared elected. In such a case, question
of notice to the
96
voters may assume significance, for the voters may not, if
aware of the disqualification have voted for the
disqualified candidate.
The view that we are taking is consistent with the
implication of d. (b) of s. 101. When in an election
petition which complies with s. 84 of the Act it is found at
the hearing that some votes were obtained by the returned
candidate by corrupt practices, the Court is bound to
declare the petitioner or another candidate elected if, but
for the votes obtained by the returned candidate by corrupt
practice, such candidate would have obtained a majority of
votes. In cases falling under cl. (b) of s. 101 the Act
requires merely proof of corrupt practice, and obtaining
votes by corrupt practice: it does not require proof that
the voters whose votes are secured by corrupt practice had
notice of the corrupt practice. If for the application of
the rule contained in cl. (b) notice to, the voters is not a
condition precedent, we see no reason why it should be
insisted upon in all cases under cl. (a). The votes
obtained by corrupt practice by the returned candidate,
proved to be guilty of corrupt practice, are expressly
excluded in the computation of total votes for ascertaining
whether a majority of votes had been obtained by the
defeated candidate, and no fresh poll is necessary. The
same rule should, in our judgment, apply when at an election
there are only two candidates and the returned candidate is
found to be under a statutory disqualification existing at
the date of the filling of the nomination paper.
We are of the view that Keshav Laxamn Borkar’s case(1)
was not correctly decided. We. therefore, restore the
order passed by this Court by judgment dated July 19, 1968.
Reddy will pay the costs of the review petition as well as
of the appeal.
V.P.S. Review petition
dismissed.
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 902
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
97