Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
HAR SHARAN VERMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/01/1985
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1985 AIR 282 1985 SCR (2) 547
1985 SCC (2) 48 1985 SCALE (1)15
ACT:
Constitution of India, Article 164 and Article
173(a) (as amended by Constitution (Sixteenth) Amendment
Act, (1963)- Effect of amended Article 173(a)- A person
not a member of State Legislature-Whether can be
appointed as a Minister in a State even after amendment of
Article 173(a).Held: Yes
HEADNOTE:
Through this petition filed under Article 32 of
the Constitution the petitioner prayed for the issue of a
writ in the nature of quo worranto to the respondent K.P.
Tewari who had been appointed in November, 1984 as a
Minister of the Government of Uttar Pradesh under Article
164(1) of the Constitution by the Governor of the State of
Uttar Pradesh even though Shri Tewari was not a member of
either House of the State Legislature. The petitioner
contended (i) that in the judgment of Har Sharan Verma
v. Shri Tribhuvan Narain Singh, Chief Minister of U.P. and
Anr., (AIR 1971 S.C. 1331) where it had been held that
the appointment of a person as Chief Minister could not be
challenged on the ground that he was not a member of the
Legislature of a State at the time of appointment, this
Court had not considered the effect of the amendment of
Article 173 (a) of the Constitution by the Constitution
(Sixteenth) Amendment Act, 1963; (ii) that after the
amendment of Article 173 of the Constitution by the
Constitution (Sixteenth) Amendment Act, 1963 it was not
open to the Governor to appoint a person who was not a
member of the Legislature of the State as a Minister and
that Article 164(4) of the Constitution would only be
applicable to a person who had been a Minister but who
ceased to be a member of the Legislature for some reason
such as the setting aside of his election in any election
petition; and (iii) that the debates of the Constituent
Assembly suggested that a person should be a member of the
Legislature at the time of his being chosen as a Minister.
Dismissing the petition,
^
HELD: (I) By the Sixteenth Amendment clause (a)
of Article 173 of the Constitution is amended by the
addition of a clause which requires a candidate at an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
election to the Legislature to make and subscribe before
some person authorised in that behalf by the Election
Commission an oath or affirmation
548
according to the form set out for the purpose in the Third
Schedule to the Constitution. Earlier it was only after a
person was elected or nominated as a member of the
Legislature of a State that he was required by Article
188 of the Constitution to make and subscribe an oath or
affirmation before taking his seat as such member in the
form mentioned in the Third Schedule to the Constitution.
The above requirement has to be complied with by an elected
or nominated member of the State Legislature even after the
Sixteenth Amendment. [550H; 551A; E;H]
(2) The object of introducing the amendment in
clause (a) of Article 173 of the Constitution was to
provide that not only before taking his seat shall a
member of the Legislature take the oath prescribed by
the Third Schedule as required by Article 188 of the
Constitution but that even before standing for election, a
candidate must take the same oath. This is to ensure that
only a person having allegiance to India shall be eligible
for membership of the Legislature. [552C-D]
(3) Article 177, ensures the implementation of
the constitutional principle contained in clause (2) of
Article 164 of the Constitution which provides that the
Council of Ministers shall be collectively responsible to
the Legislative Assembly of the State. A Minister in a
State under our Constitution discharges that
responsibility by virtue of the provisions contained in
Article 177 of the Constitution which enables him to
participate in the proceedings of the Legislative Assembly
even though he may not be its member with the right to
vote.[553F;G]
(4) It does not appear that the debates of the
constituent Assembly suggest that a person shall be a member
of the Legislature at the time of his being chosen as a
Minister. An amendment was proposed to that effect in the
Constituent Assembly to the draft Constitution but was not
accepted:
[553H; 554A-C]
(5) The fear expressed by the petitioner that a
person who does not owe his allegiance to the Constitution
and is not willing to uphold the sovereignty and
integrity of India would have an opportunity to become a
Minister if he is not required to become a member of the
Legislature after having made and subscribed an oath or
affirmation as prescribed by Article 173(a) of the
Constitution is not well founded because under clause (3)
of Article 164 of the Constitution a Minister for a State
is required to take an oath of allegiance to the
Constitution and to undertake to uphold his office in the
from prescribed in the Third Schedule.
[554C-E]
(6) No material change has been brought about by
reason of the amendment of Article 173(a) of the
Constitution in the legal position that a person who is
not a member of the State Legislature may be appointed as
a Minister subject, of course, to clause (4) of Article 164
of the Constitution according to which a Minister who for
any period of six consecutive months is not a member of
the Legislature of the State shall at the expiration of
that period cease to be a Minister. [554H; 555A]
(7) By enacting Article 164(4) of the Constitution
the makers of the Constitution provided for a situation
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
where a Minister may lose a seat in the
549
Legislature after appointment-as the result of an election
petition for example- A Or may not be a member when he is
appointed.[555B-C]
Har Sharan Verma v. Shri Tribhuvan Narain Singh, Chief
Minister of U.P. and Anr., A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 1331,
Constitution Assembly Debates dated June 1 1949, Vol. VIII
at p. 521 and Har Sharan Verma v. Chandra Bhan Gupta & Ors.,
A.l.R. 1962 Allahabad 30], referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No.
17135 of 1984.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Har Sharan Verma: Petitioner in person.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATRAMIAH, J. The petitioner has filed this
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution praying for
the issue of a writ in the nature of quo warranto to the
respondent K.P. Tewari who has been appointed in
November, 1984 as a Minister of the Government of Uttar
Pradesh under Article 164 (1) of the Constitution by the
Governor of the State of Uttar Pradesh even though he
(K.P. Tewari) is not a member of either House of the
State Legislature.
The petitioner who claims to be a votary of
pristine democracy and constitutionalism and crusader
against any person who has not been elected to the State
Legislature assuming the office of a Minister has argued
this case in person with unabated enthusiasm. It is stated
that this is the ninth in the series of cases filed by
him over a period of twenty-five years in his attempt to
prevent erosion of the Executive responsibility to the
Legislature.
In Har Sharan Verma v. Shri Tribhuvan Narain
Singh, Chief Minister of U.P. & Anr.(l) which had been
filed by the petitioner himself, a Constitution Bench of
this Court has held that the appointment of a person as
Chief Minister cannot be challenged on the ground that he
was not a member of the Legislature of a State at the time
of appointment. The grievance of the petitioner against
that Judgment is that this Court had not considered the
effect of the amendment of Article 173 (a) of the
constitution by the Constitution (Sixteenth) Amendment Act,
1963.
(1) A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 1331.
550
The petitioner contends more pointedly in this case
that after the amendment of Article 173 of the
Constitution by the Constitution (Sixteenth) Amendment
Act, 1963, it is not open to the Governor to appoint a
person who is not a member of the Legislature of the
State as a Minister and that Article 164 (4) of the
Constitution would only be applicable to a person who has
been a Minister but who ceases to be a member of the
Legislature for some reason such as the setting aside of his
election in any election petition.
Article 173 before it was amended by the
Constitution (Sixteenth) Amendment Act, 1963 read as:
"173. A person shall not be qualified to be
chosen to fill a seat in the Legislature of a State
unless he-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
(a) is a citizen of India;
(b) is, in the case of a seat in the Legislative
Assembly, not less than twenty-five years of age and,
in the case of a seat in the Legislative Council, not
less than thirty years of age; and
(c) possesses such other qualifications as may be
prescribed in that behalf by or under any law made by
Parliament."
After its amendment clause (a) of Article 173 of
the Constitution now reads thus:
"173. A person shall not be Qualified to be
chosen to fill a seat in the Legislature of a State
unless he-
(a) is a citizen of India, and makes and subscribes
before some person authorised in that behalf by the
Election Commission an oath or affirmation according to
the form set out for the purpose in the Third Schedule;
..... .. .. ".
By the Sixteenth Amendment clause (a) of Article 173
of the Constitution is amended by the addition of a
clause which requires a candidate at an election to the
Legislature to make and subscribe before some person
authorised in that behalf by the Election Com
551
mission an oath or affirmation according to the form set out
for the A purpose in the Third Schedule to the Constitution.
The said form of oath or affirmation which a candidate at
an election to the Legislature of State should make and
subscribe (which was also introduced by the Sixteenth
Amendment in the Third Schedule to the Constitution‘ reads:
"Form of oath or affirmation to be made by a
candidate for election to the Legislature of a State:-
"I, A.B., having been nominated a candidate to
fill a seat in the Legislative Assembly (or
Legislative Council), do swear in the name of
God/solemnly affirm that I will bear true faith and
allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law
established and that I will uphold the sovereignty and
integrity of India."
Earlier it was only after a person was elected or
nominated as a member of the Legislature of a State that
he was required by Article 188 of the Constitution to make
and subscribe an oath or affirmation before taking his seat
as such member in the following form mentioned in the Third
Schedule to the Constitution:
"Form of oath or affirmation to be made by a
member of the Legislature of a State:-
"I, A.B., having been elected (or nominated) a
member of the Legislative Assembly (or Legislative
Council),do swear in the name of God/solemnly affirm
that I will bear true faith and
allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law
established and that I will faithfully discharge the duty
upon which I am about to enter."
The above requirement has to be complied with
by an elected or nominated member of the State Legislature
even after the Sixteenth Amendment. The form of oath or
affirmation to be made by a member of the Legislature
under Article 188 of the Constitution now reads thus:
552
"Form of oath or affirmation to be made by a
member of the Legislature of a State:-
"I, A.B., having been elected (or nominated) a
member of the Legislative Assembly (or Legislative
Council), do swear in the name of God that I Will
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
bear true faith solemnly affirm and allegiance to
the Constitution of India as by law established and
that l will uphold the sovereignty and integrity of
India and that I will faithfully discharge the duty
upon which I am about
to enter."
The object of introducing the amendment in clause (a)
of Article 173 of the Constitution was to provide that not
only before taking his seat shall a member of the
Legislature take the oath prescribed by the Third Schedule
as required by Article 188 of the Constitution but that even
before standing for election, a candidate must take the
same oath. This is to ensure that only a person having
allegiance to India shall be eligible for membership of the
Legislature.
Article 163 (1) and Article 164 of the
Constitution which provide for the appointment of the Chief
Minister and other Ministers in a State read thus:
"163. (1) There shall be a Council of Ministers
with the Chief Minister at the head to aid and advise
the Governor in the exercise of this functions,
except in so far as he is by or under this
Constitution required to exercise his functions or any
of them in his discretion.........
"164. (1) The Chief Minister shall be appointed
by the Governor and the other Ministers shall be
appointed by the Governor on the advice of the Chief
Minister, and the Ministers shall hold office during
the pleasure of the Governor:
Provided that in the States of Bihar, Madhya
Pradesh and Orissa, there shall be a Minister in
charge of tribal welfare who may in addition be in
charge of the welfare of the Scheduled Castes and
backward classes or any other work.
(2) The Council of Ministers shall be collectively
responsible to the Legislative Assembly of the
State.
553
(3) Before a Minister enters upon his office, the
Governor shall administer to him the oaths of
office and of secracy according to the forms set
out for the purpose in the Third Schedule.
(4) A Minister who for any period of six consecutive
months is not a member of the Legislature of the
State shall at the expiration of that period cease
to be a Minister.
(5) The salaries and allowances of Ministers shall be
such as the Legislature of the State may from
time to time by law determine and, until the
Legislature of the State so determines, shall be
as specified in the Second Schedule."
Clause (4) of Article 164 of the Constitution says
that a Minister (which includes a Chief Minister also) who
for any period of six consecutive months is not a member of
the Legislature of a State shall at the expiration of that
period cease to be a Minister. By virtue of Article 177
of the Constitution a Minister has a right to speak in,
and otherwise to take part in the proceedings of, the
Legislative Assembly of the State on in the case of a
State having a Legislative Council, both Houses, and to
speak in, and otherwise to take part in the proceedings
of, any Committee of the Legislature of which he may be
named member, but would not, by virtue of that Article, be
entitled to vote. Article 177, therefore, ensures the
implementation of the constitutional principle contained
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
in clause (2) of Article 164 the Constitution which
provides that the Council of Ministers shall be
collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly of the
State. Ministerial responsibility to the Legislative
Assembly is the means of assuring that the Government is
in line with popular opinion, "It is also necessary to
emphasis" says Sir Ivor Jennings in his book entitled
’The British Constitution’ "that ministerial
responsibility means only that a politician must be able
to answer in the House of Commons for every act of
administration." A Minister in a State under our
Constitution discharges that responsibility by virtue of
the provisions contained in Article 177 of the
Constitution which enables him to participate in the
proceedings of the Legislative Assembly even though he
may not be its member with the right to vote. The
petitioner, however, contends that the debates of the
Constituent Assembly suggest that a person shall be a member
of the Legislature
554
at the time of his being chosen as a Minister. It does not
appear to be so. In fact, as was pointed out in Har Sharan
Verma v. Shri Tribhuvan Narain Singh, Chief Minister of
U.P. and Shri. (supra) an amendment was proposed in the
Constituent Assembly to the draft Constitution as
follows:
"A Minister shall, at the time of being chosen
as such, be a member of the Legislative Assembly or
the Legislative Council of the States, as the case may
be."
That amendment was not accepted. (See
Constituent Assembly Debates dated June 1, 1949, Vol. VIII
at p. 521).
The fear expressed by the petitioner that a person
who does not owe his allegiance to the Constitution and if
not willing to uphold the sovereignty and integrity of
India would have an opportunity to become a Minister if
he is not required to become a member of the Legislature
after having made and subscribed an oath or affirmation
as prescribed by Article 173 (a) of the Constitution is
not well founded because under clause (3) of Article 164
of the Constitution a Minister for a State is required to
take an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and to
undertake to uphold the sovereignty and integrity of India
before entering upon his office in the form prescribed in
the Third Schedule to the Constitution which reads thus:
"Form of oath, of office for a Minister for a
State:
"I,A.B., do swear in the name of God "I,A.B.,
do that I will bear solemnly affirm true faith and
allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law
established, that I will uphold the sovereignty and
integrity of India, that I will faithfully and
conscientiously discharge my duties as a Minister for
the State of.. and that I will do right to all manner
of people in accordance with the Constitution and the
law without fear or favour, affection or ill will "
It is thus seen that there is no material change
brought about by reason of the amendment of Article 173 (a)
of the Constitution in the legal position that a person who
is not a member of the State Legislature may be appointed as
a Minister subject, of course, to clause (4) of Article
164 of the Constitution which says that a Minis
555
ter who for any period of six consecutive months is not a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
member of A the Legislature of the State shall at the
expiration of that period cease to be a Minister.
The decision of the Allahabad High Court in Har
Sharan Varma v. Chandra Bhan Gupta and Ors.(1) which was
again a case filed by the petitioner, on which the
petitioner relies also lays down that by enacting Article
16414) of the Constitution the makers of the Constitution
provided for a situation where a Minister may lose a seat
in the Legislature after appointment-as the result of an
election petition for example-or may not be a member when
he is appointed.
We do not, therefore, find any merit in the
petition. The petition is accordingly dismissed.
A.P.J. Petition dismissed.
(1) A l.R 1962 Allahabad 301.
556