Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4056 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Jayrajbhai Jayantibhai Patel
RESPONDENT:
Anilbhai Jayantibhai Patel and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/09/2006
BENCH:
K.G. BALAKRISHNAN & D.K. JAIN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of S.L.P.(Civil) No.4663 of 2006)
D.K. JAIN, J.:
Leave granted.
2. The Appellant, arrayed as the first Respondent in
three writ petitions (Special Civil Applications No. 22379,
22385 and 22391 of 2005 with Civil Applications No.
12966 and 12967 of 2005), questions the legality of a
common judgment and order dated 23rd February, 2006
rendered by a Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court.
By the impugned Judgment, election of the Appellant as
President of Anand Municipality has been set aside and
Respondent No. 1, namely, Vijaybhai Haribhai Patel has
been declared as the elected President of the said
Municipality.
3. General elections to the office of the councillors to
constitute Anand Municipality in the State of Gujarat
were held on 25th October, 2005. Out of total 42
councillors, 19 were elected as candidates sponsored by
Bhartiya Janta Party (for short "the B.J.P") and the other
23 candidates were elected as independent candidates.
On 29th October, 2005, the Collector of Anand District
issued a notice in terms of Section 32 of the Gujarat
Municipalities Act, 1963 (hereinafter referred to as "the
Act") read with Rules 3 and 4 of the Gujarat
Municipalities (President and Vice-President) Election
Rules, 1964 (hereinafter referred to as "the Election
Rules"), notifying the programme for election to the posts
of President and Vice-President of the said Municipality
on 8th November, 2005 at 1.00 P.M. in the Municipality
Meeting Hall. At the meeting, conducted and presided
over by the Resident Deputy Collector, nominated by the
Collector and hereafter referred to as the Presiding
Officer, out of 42 elected councillors, 38 were present.
Two B.J.P. councillors did not attend the meeting on
account of some resentment with the party leadership
and two independent councillors, namely, Anilbhai Patel
and Meenaben Gohil were unable to attend the meeting
as they had been arrested by the police at about 12.30
P.M. on the date of meeting.
4. As per the Election Rules, after the term of the
President and Vice-President is determined at the
meeting, the Presiding Officer is required to invite
nominations for elections to the said posts. Accordingly,
the Presiding Officer invited nominations. Two councillors
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offered their candidature for the office of President.
Election was held for the said post wherein 19 councillors
cast their votes in favour of the appellant and the
remaining 19 councillors cast their votes in favour of the
said Vijaybhai Haribhai Patel. In view of equality of votes,
following the procedure laid down in Section 32 (4) of the
Act, the Presiding Officer drew lots and declared the
Appellant elected as President of the Municipality with
effect from 8th November, 2005 for a term of 2= years.
5. Being aggrieved, three councillors challenged the
election of the Appellant by means of the aforementioned
three Special Civil Applications under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India, inter-alia, on the grounds that
councillors Anilbhai Nathubhai Patel and Meenaben
Pratapbhai Gohil were respectively arrested in relation to
an offence under the Copyrights Act and for an offence
under the Bombay Prohibition Act just a few minutes
before the election meeting at 1.00 P.M. on 8th November,
2005 with the sole object to somehow prevent both of
them from casting their vote at the elections for the posts
of the President and Vice-President as the B.J.P.
leadership was unable to win over any of the 21
independent candidates, who had formed a group under
the banner of "Anand Shaher Vikas Manch" (for short
"the Vikas Manch") and had sponsored two independent
councillors for the said posts; the B.J.P. resorted to
unfair means as well as abuse of the government
machinery by getting false F.I.Rs. registered on 5th
November, 2005. It was alleged that when the said two
councillors were about to enter the meeting hall at about
12.30 P.M. on 8th November, 2005, the police officers,
arrayed as respondents in the writ petitions, and their
staff arrested the said councillors; prevented them from
entering the meeting hall; they were not produced before
the Judicial Magistrate till 5.00 P.M. with the malafide
intention to see that they were released on bail only after
the General Meeting was over and the election results
were declared and that their absence tilted the election
results in favour of the candidates sponsored by the
B.J.P. because both the said councillors were to vote for
the candidate sponsored by the Vikas Manch and two of
the B.J.P. councillors had already aired their grievances
and had decided not to attend the meeting. It was
averred that the police officials acted in a high handed
and arbitrary manner at the behest of two local B.J.P.
MLAs with the malafide intention to help B.J.P., the party
in power in the state, and their official candidate to win
the election. The stand of the writ petitioners was that all
these facts were brought to the notice of the Presiding
Officer, who, ignoring their protest, drew the lots and
declared the result.
6. At this juncture we may note that subsequently the
writ petitioners were permitted to amend their petitions to
incorporate the prayer for declaring respondent No. 1 as
having been elected as the President.
7. Taking into consideration about a dozen
circumstances, culled out in the impugned judgment, the
High Court has come to the conclusion that the two
councillors were detained with the sole intention of
preventing them from attending the meeting convened for
election of President and Vice-President of the
Municipality and has, thus, set aside the election of the
Appellant. Accepting the stand of the two councillors, as
projected in the affidavits filed by them that they wanted
to vote in favour of the presidential candidate sponsored
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by the Vikas Manch, the Court has directed that the votes
of the said councillors be treated as having been cast in
favour of the first Respondent and has consequently
declared him as having been elected as President of
Anand Municipality.
8. The appellant is, thus, before us.
9. Mr. Shyam Diwan, learned senior counsel appearing
for the appellant, whose election as President has been
set aside by the High Court, in the first place, submitted
that the Presiding Officer having acted strictly as per the
procedure prescribed in Section 32 of the Act for the
election of the President, the High Court ought not to
have exercised its extra ordinary jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India. Referring to the
procedure laid down in sub-section 4 of Section 32 of the
Act, learned counsel would submit that the two
candidates having got equal number of votes in their
favour the Presiding Officer had no option but to resort to
draw of lots and declare the result accordingly. It is,
thus, urged that under the given circumstances his
decision to declare the election result cannot be
categorised as arbitrary or irrational, warranting
interference and therefore, the High Court was not
justified in entertaining the writ petition and setting aside
the election of a duly elected President. On merits,
learned counsel would submit that being primarily in the
nature of hearsay evidence, the High Court committed a
manifest error of law in relying upon the press reports
and video recordings to return a finding that the two
councillors were detained with malafide intention to
prevent them from casting their vote, particularly when
there was neither any specific pleading or allegation nor
any evidence to the effect that either the appellant or his
party was instrumental in getting the two councillors
arrested. Placing reliance on Quamarul Islam Vs. S.K.
Kanta and Ors. , learned counsel contended that the
High Court has lost sight of the salutary principle of the
election law that the one who brings forth the charge of
"corrupt practices" is under an obligation to discharge the
onus of proof in this behalf by leading cogent, specific,
reliable, trust-worthy and satisfactory evidence, which
was wanting in the instant case. It is asserted that the
election of the appellant having been set aside by the
High Court on a mere probability that the two
independent councillors would have voted in favour of the
first Respondent, the impugned decision cannot be
sustained on the touchstone of the dictum of this Court
in Jamuna Prasad Mukhariya & Ors. Vs. Lachhi Ram
& Ors. . Drawing support from the observations made
by this Court in The Regional Manager & Anr. Vs.
Pawan Kumar Dubey , and Ajit Kumar Nag Vs.
General Manager (PJ), Indian Oil Corporation Ltd.,
Haldia & Ors. to the effect that the allegation of malice
of fact demands proof of a high degree of credibility,
learned counsel contends that in the absence of any
cogent material, the High Court committed a manifest
error of law in returning a finding of malafide against the
police officials on the basis of a bare bald allegation of
malafides.
10. Mr. Vakil, learned senior counsel appearing for the
first Respondent, while supporting the decision of the
High Court, has submitted that in the light of the
overwhelming evidence brought on record by the writ
petitioners, the decision of the High Court cannot be
termed as perverse warranting interference by this Court.
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Learned counsel has contended that in the light of the
depositions of the two councillors in their affidavits,
affirming that they would have voted in favour of the first
Respondent, the findings recorded by the High Court in
favour of the Respondent cannot be said to
presumptuous or without any basis. Defending the
decision of the High Court in declaring the said
respondent as the elected President, learned counsel has
urged that the Court is fully competent to rectify the
electoral process and grant full redressal for the injustice
meted out to the said respondent.
11. Thus, the first question requiring consideration is
as to whether on the facts of the instant case, the High
Court was justified in exercising its power of judicial
review and setting aside the election of the appellant?
12. Article 226 of the Constitution is designed to ensure
that each and every authority in the State, including the
State, acts bonafide and within the limits of its power.
However, the scope of judicial review in Administrative
matters has always been a subject matter of debate
despite a plethora of case law on the issue. Time and
again attempts have been made by the Courts to devise
or craft some norms, which may be employed to assess
whether an administrative action is justiciable or not.
But no uniform rule has been or can be evolved to test
the validity of an administrative action or decision
because the extent and scope of judicial scrutiny depends
upon host of factors, like the nature of the subject
matter, the nature of the right affected, the character of
the legal and constitutional provisions applicable etc.
While appreciating the inherent limitations in exercise of
power of judicial review, the judicial quest has been to
find and maintain a right and delicate balance between
the administrative discretion and the need to remedy
alleged unfairness in the exercise of such discretion.
13. Having said so, we may now refer to a few decisions
wherein some broad principles of judicial review in the
field of administrative law have been evolved.
14. In Council of Civil Service Unions Vs. Minister
for the Civil Service , Lord Diplock enunciated three
grounds upon which an administrative action is subject
to control by judicial review, viz. (i) illegality (ii)
irrationality and (iii) procedural impropriety. While
opining that "further development on a case by case basis
may not in course of time add further grounds" he added
that principle of "proportionality" may be a possible
ground for judicial review for adoption in future.
Explaining the said three grounds, Lord Diplock said:
By "illegality" he means that the decision-
maker must understand correctly the law
that regulates his decision-making power
and must give effect to it, and whether he
has or has not, is a justiciable question;
by "irrationality" he means "Wednesbury
unreasonableness". It applies to a
decision which is so outrageous in its
defiance of logic or of accepted moral
standards that no sensible person who
had applied his mind to the question to
be decided, could have arrived at it; and
by "procedural impropriety" he means not
only failure to observe the basic rules of
natural justice or failure to act with
procedural fairness, but also failure to
observe procedural rules that are
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expressly laid down in the legislative
instrument by which the tribunal’s
jurisdiction is conferred, even where such
failure does not involve any denial of
natural justice.
15. The principle of "Wednesbury unreasonableness" or
irrationality, classified by Lord Diplock as one of the
grounds’ for intervention in judicial review, was lucidly
summarised by Lord Greene M.R. in Associated
Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. Vs. Wednesbury
Corpn. as follows:
"\005the court is entitled to investigate the
action of the local authority with a view of
seeing whether it has taken into account
matters which it ought not to take into
account, or conversely, has refused to
take into account or neglected to take
into account matters which it ought to
take into account. Once that question is
answered in favour of the local authority,
it may still be possible to say that the
local authority, nevertheless, have come
to a conclusion so unreasonable that no
reasonable authority could ever have
come to it. In such a case, again, I think
the court can interfere."
16. In State of U.P. & Anr. Vs. Johri Mal , this Court
has observed thus:
"The scope and extent of power of the
judicial review of the High Court
contained in Article 226 of the
Constitution of India would vary from
case to case, the nature of the order, the
relevant statute as also the other relevant
factors including the nature of power
exercised by the public authorities,
namely, whether the power is statutory,
quasi-judicial or administrative. The
power of judicial review is not intended to
assume a supervisory role or don the
robes of the omnipresent. The power is
not intended either to review governance
under the rule of law or do the courts
step into the areas exclusively reserved
by the suprema lex to the other organs of
the State. Decisions and actions which
do not have adjudicative disposition may
not strictly fall for consideration before a
judicial review court."
17. Recently in Rameshwar Prasad & Ors. (VI) Vs.
Union of India & Anr. , wherein a proclamation issued
under Article 356 was under challenge, Arijit Pasayat, J.
observed thus:
"A person entrusted with discretion must,
so to speak, direct himself properly in
law. He must call his attention to
matters which he is bound to consider.
He must exclude from his consideration
matters which are irrelevant to what he
has to consider. If he does not obey those
rules he may truly be said to be acting
unreasonably. Similarly, there may be
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something so absurd that no sensible
person could ever dream that it lay within
the powers of the authority.
It is an unwritten rule of law,
constitutional and administrative, that
whenever a decision-making function is
entrusted to be subjective satisfaction of
a statutory functionary, there is an
implicit obligation to apply his mind to
pertinent and proximate matters only,
eschewing the irrelevant and the remote."
18. Having regard to it all, it is manifest that the power
of judicial review may not be exercised unless the
administrative decision is illogical or suffers from
procedural impropriety or it shocks the conscience of the
court in the sense that it is in defiance of logic or moral
standards but no standardised formula, universally
applicable to all cases, can be evolved. Each case has to
be considered on its own facts, depending upon the
authority that exercises the power, the source, the nature
or scope of power and the indelible effects it generates in
the operation of law or affects the individual or society.
Though judicial restraint, albeit self-recognised, is the
order of the day, yet an administrative decision or action
which is based on wholly irrelevant considerations or
material; or excludes from consideration the relevant
material; or it is so absurd that no reasonable person
could have arrived at it on the given material, may be
struck down. In other words, when a Court is satisfied
that there is an abuse or misuse of power, and its
jurisdiction is invoked, it is incumbent on the Court to
intervene. It is nevertheless, trite that the scope of
judicial review is limited to the deficiency in the decision-
making process and not the decision.
19. The following passage from Professor Bernard
Schwartz’s book Administrative Law (Third Edition)
aptly echo’s our thoughts on the scope of judicial review:
"Reviewing courts, the cases are now
insisting, may not simply renounce their
responsibility by mumbling an
indiscriminate litany of deference to
expertise. Due deference to the agency
does not mean abdication of the duty of
judicial review and rubber-stamping of
agency action: [W]e must accord the
agency considerable, but not too much
deference; it is entitled to exercise its
discretion, but only so far and no
further."
Quoting Judge Leventhal from Greater Boston
Television Corp. Vs. FCC , he further says:
"\005the reviewing court must intervene if it
"becomes aware\005 that the agency has not
really taken a ’hard look’ at the salient
problems, and has not genuinely engaged
in reasoned decision-making..."
20. Tested on the touchstone of the above principles, we
are of the view that on facts in hand the High Court was
fully justified in exercising its power of judicial review and
set aside the election of the appellant.
21. Chapter III of the Act contains provisions relating to
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the President, Vice-President etc. Section 31 stipulates
that the Municipality shall be presided over by a
President, who shall be elected by the councillors from
among themselves in the manner prescribed by the rules
made by the State Government. Section 32 deals with
the election of President and Vice-President. Sub-section
(4) thereof provides that if in the election of the president
or the vice-president there is an equality of votes, the
result of the election shall be decided by lot to be drawn
in the presence of the Collector or the officer presiding in
such manner as the Collector or as the case may be, the
officer may determine.
22. Election Rules lay down the procedure for election
of President and Vice-President. Rule 10 of the said
Rules, which is of some relevance, reads as follows:-
"Rule 10: Power to call meeting at
postponed date. \026 If at any meeting called for
the election of the President, the election is not
held for any reason whatsoever, the Presiding
Officer shall have power to call the meeting on
any other day."
23. There is no denying the fact that in the light of clear
stipulation in sub-section 4 of Section 32 of the Act,
because of equality of votes the election result had to be
decided by draw of lots and this is what the Presiding
Officer did. But, the moot question is whether the
detention of the two councillors was such a trivial factor
in the subject election, which could be overlooked by the
Presiding Officer? It is manifestly clear from the material
on record that he was made aware of the said
development. In the light of some of the circumstances,
viz., (i) after arresting councillors Anilbhai Patel and
Meenaben Gohil at around 12.30 P.M., just half an hour
before the scheduled time for elections, the police officers
did not produce them before the Magistrate immediately,
but took them around Anand town in the police van and
produced them before the Magistrate only at about 5.00
P.M., by which time the elections were already held and
the results were also declared; (ii) no circumstance
brought on record by the police to show that it would
have been inexpedient to wait till the elections were over
before effecting arrest of Anilbhai Patel and Meenaben
Gohil. Both the councillors are residents of Anand and
their co-accused in the respective offences were released
by the police officers themselves after arresting them on
5.11.2005; and (iii) there was no circumstance to show
that the two councillors would have escaped and avoided
arrest if they were allowed to go inside the meeting hall
for voting at 1.00 P.M. and if they were not arrested till
the meeting for electing President and Vice-President was
over. We have no hesitation in holding that the detention
of the two councillors, a few minutes before the election
meeting was a relevant factor which ought to have been
taken into account by the Presiding Officer to decide
whether to continue with the election or to postpone it
and call the meeting on some other day in terms of Rule
10. Failure to do so not only offends against procedural
propriety, it makes his decision to go ahead with the
election meeting perverse and irrational, a facet of
unreasonableness, warranting interference under Article
226 of the Constitution. In this view of the matter, we are
of the opinion that the High Court has not committed any
error of law and/or jurisdiction in setting aside the
election of the appellant as President of the Anand
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Municipality.
24. Since we feel that the principle Res ipsa Loquitur is
squarely attracted on facts in hand, it is unnecessary to
comment on the conduct of the police officials, which in
any case does not commend us.
25. The next question which remains to be considered
is as to whether, having set aside the election of the
appellant, the High Court was justified in declaring
respondent no.1 as the President?
26. It was strenuously urged by learned counsel for the
appellant that the first respondent having lost in the
draw of lots, the High Court had no jurisdiction to declare
him elected as President of the Municipality. The
submission is that having set aside the election, the High
Court, at best, could have directed the Collector to hold a
fresh election for the said post.
27. There is substance in the submission of the learned
counsel. In Tata Cellular Vs. Union of India , this
Court has observed that the judicial restraint has two
contemporary manifestations, namely, one the ambit of
judicial intervention and the other, the scope of the
Court’s ability to quash an administrative decision on its
merits. Judicial review is not concerned with reviewing
the merits of the decision in support of which the
application for judicial review is made, but the decision-
making process itself. Unless that restriction on the
power of the Court is observed, the Court will, as opined
in Chief Constable of the North Wales Police Vs.
Evans , "under the guise of preventing the abuse of
power, be itself guilty of usurping power", which is the
case here.
28. In the instant case, admittedly both the candidates
had got equal number of votes polled and the appellant
was declared as elected on the basis of draw of lots, held
as per the prescribed procedure. Admittedly, the
controversy did not relate to counting of votes. Under the
circumstances, the direction of the High Court that the
votes of the two arrested councillors be treated as having
been cast in favour of the first respondent, in our view, is
based on pure speculation that they would have definitely
voted for him. In our opinion, the High Court has erred
on this aspect of the matter and therefore, to that extent
the impugned judgment cannot be sustained.
Accordingly, the order of the High Court, declaring the
first respondent as the President of the Anand
Municipality is set aside.
29. In the result, the appeal partly succeeds and is
allowed to the extent indicated above, with a direction to
the Collector to reconvene the general meeting of the
Municipality for the election of the President within two
months of the receipt of copy of this order. In the facts
and circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as
to costs.