Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DR. P. NALLA THAMPY THERA.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
B.L. SHANKER & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/10/1983
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BHAGWATI, P.N.
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 135 1984 SCR (1) 687
1983 SCALE (2)717
ACT:
Representation of the People Act 1951 Sections 87 & 109
(1)
Election Petition-Trial of-Applicability of the
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure-When arises.
Omission of a prayer from an election petition-Whether
amounts to with drawn of an election petition.
Petitioner failing to prosecute election petition-
Whether election petition could be dismissed-Restoration of
a dismissed election petition-Whether could be at the
instance of any person other than the election petition.
Code of Civil Procedure 1908 Order IX Rule 9
Election Petition dismissed for default-Restoration of
petition-Whether permissible at instance of a person other
than election petition.
Procedure
Election Petition-Trial of-Default of appearance or
non-prosecution whether can be treated on par with
withdrawal of abatement.
Interpretation of Statutes.
Presumption that legislature takes notice of court
decisions-Court not to fill up lacuna in legislation.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 2 who was one of 28 candidates
participating in an election to a Lok Subha seat was
declared elected. One of the contenders, (Respondent No. 1)
filed an Election Petition for setting aside the election of
Respondent No. 2, under section 100 (1) (b) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951, and declaring
Respondent No. 5 of the Election Petition as the duly
elected candidate, and also for an order declaring
Respondent Nos. 2, 3 and 4 as been quilty of corrupt
practices under sections 123. The returned candidate as also
all other contesting candidates and 3 outsiders were
impleaded as
688
respondents. Respondent No. 29 of the Election Petition
filed his written statement as also a petition of
recrimination under section 97 against Respondent No. 5.
Respondent No. 19 in the Election Petition (Appellant in the
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appeal) filed his written statement. The Election Petitioner
(Respondent No. 1 in the appeal) applied to the court for
deleting prayer (c) in the election petition regarding the
declaration of Respondent No. 5 as the returned candidate,
and the court allowed the deletion. Later Respondent No. 29
filed a memorandum for withdrawal of the prayer of
recrimination against Respondent No. 5. After the court
allowed withdrawal of the recrimination petition the
appellant objected to the request. Written statement was
filed on behalf of Respondent No. 1, issues were settled,
documents directed to be filed and the case adjourned for
trial. The election petitioner wanted an adjournment on the
date the case was posted for trial. The court gave a last
chance and fixed the trial peremptorily having regard to the
statutory mandate under section 86 (7) requiring an election
petition to be disposed of within 6 months from the date of
presentation. On the date when the case was fixed for trial
the election petitioner neither filed his list of witnesses
nor list of documents and prayed for an adjournment. The
court refused the adjournment and dismissed the Election
Petition.
On the same day, Respondent No. 19 made an application
praying for recall of the order of dismissal and also for
permission to prosecute the election petition, submit his
evidence, and that he may be substituted to continue the
proceedings of the Election Petition. The original
Respondent No. 1 objected and contended that the application
was not maintainable and that Respondent No. 19 had no locus
standi to ask for restoration. It was further contended that
there was no provision for transposition when an election
petition was dismissed and Respondent No. 19 who could have
filed an independent Election petition within the time
admissible under the Act, and not having done so, could not
ask for transposition.
The High Court rejected the application.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the appellant that: (1) the earlier order of the High
Court by which prayer (c) was allowed to be deleted and the
order by which Respondent No. 29 was allowed to withdraw his
prayer for recrimination as against original Respondent No.
5 were in the nature of partial withdrawal of the election
petition and the statutory provision for withdrawal having
not been followed, the order was a nullity and no party
would be entitled to rely on them; (2) an election petition
once filed does not mean a contest only between the parties
there to but continues for the benefit of the whole
constituency and cannot come to an end merely by withdrawn
by the petitioner or by his death or by the death or
withdrawal of opposition of the respondent, but is liable to
be continued by any person who might have been a petitioner.
An election petition cannot be dismissed for default and
when the appellant applied for permission to continue the
case, the High Court should have given the opportunity to
continue the election petition; and (3) that the view taken
in some cases by this Court that except in cases of
withdrawal and abatement, the special provision contained in
the Act for
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notifying to the constituency so that any other person may
apply for being allowed to continue the election petition,
are not applicable.
Dismissing the appeal:
^
HELD: 1 (i) An election petition is liable to be
dismissed for default in situations covered by Order IX or
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Order XVII of the Code of Civil Procedure and for its
restoration an application under Rule 9, Order IX of the
Code would be maintainable but such application for
restoration can be filed only by the election petitioner and
not by any respondent. [705 E-F]
In the instant case, at the instance of the appellant
the application for restoration was not maintainable. [708
B]
(ii) Elections and election disputes are a matter of
special nature and though the right to franchise and right
to office are involved in an election dispute, it is not a
lis at common law nor an action in equity. Election disputes
are strictly statutory proceedings. [694 H, 697 A]
N.P. Ponnususami v. Returning Officer Nanmakkal
Constituency & Ors.[1952] S.C.R. 218; Jagan Nath v. Jaswant
Singh & Ors. [1954] S.C.R. 892 at 895; Charan Lal Sahu v.
Nand kishore Bhatt & Ors. [1974] 1 S.C.R. 294 at 296; Jyoti
Basu & Ors v. Debi Ghosal & Ors [1982] 3 S.C.R. 318 at 326-
327; Arun Kumar Bose v. Mohl. Furkan Ansari & Ors. [1984] 1
SCR 118 referred to.
(iii) An election petition once filed does not remain a
contest only between the parties there to but becomes a
dispute in which the whole constituency is interested. The
Representation of People Act makes provisions to meet
certain eventualities in the course of trial of election
petitions in Chapter IV of Part VI. Two situations which
have been covered by the statute are withdrawal and
abatement of election petitions. Sections 109 and 110 deal
with withdrawal of election petitions, and Sections 112 and
116 deal with the eventuality of death and non-substitution
leading to abatement. Even in the case of death and non-
substitution, the Court is required to publish a notice, in
the official gazette. [693 C-698 E, 699 F]
(iv) Sub-section (1 of s. 109 provides that an election
petition can be withdrawn only by leave of the High Court.
Omitting a prayer from the election petition strictly would
not amount to withdrawal of the election petition. [700 B]
In the instant case, prayer (c) in the election
petition was concerned with the declaration of Respondent
No. 5 as duly elected from the constituency. This relief was
asked to be deleted. No objection was raised to its deletion
and in due course the Court allowed this prayer to be
omitted. In opposition to the claim made in this prayer,
recrimination was filed by one of the respondents in the
election petition. But once prayer (c) was dropped, the
relief of recrimination could no more stand. [799 G-700 A]
690
2(i) Non-prosecution or abandonment is certainly not
withdrawal Withdrawal is a positive and voluntary act while
non-prosecution or abandonment may not necessarily be an act
of volition. It may spring from negligence, indifference,
inaction or even incapacity or inability to prosecute. In
the case of withdrawal steps are envisaged to be taken
before the Court in accordance with the prescribed
procedure. In the case of non-prosecution or abandonment,
the election petitioner does not appear before the court and
obtain any orders. [701 H-702 A]
(ii) The Act is a self-contained statute strictly
laying down its own procedure and nothing can be read in it
which is not there nor can its provisions be enlarged or
extended by analogy. The terms of sec. 87 clearly prescribe
that if there by no provision in the Act to the contrary,
the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure would apply
and that would include Order IX Rule 8, under which an
election petition would be liable to be dismissed if the
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election petitioner does not appear to prosecute the
election petition. [702 B]
(iii) Dismissal of an election petition for default of
appearance of the petitioner under the provisions of Order
IX or Order XVII of the Code would be valid and would not be
open to challenge on the ground that these provisions do not
apply. [704 D]
Jugal Kishore v. Dr. Baldev Parkash. AIR 1968 Punjab &
Haryana 152 at 158-159; Duryodhan v. Sitaram & Ors. AIR 1970
All. 1. approved.
Sunderlal Mannalal v. Nandramdas Dwarkadas & Ors.
A.I.R. 1958 M.P. 260 Rajendra Kumari Bajpai v. Ram Adhar
Yadav & Ors [1976] 1 S.C.R. 255 at 260; referred to.
(iv) Order IX, Rule 9 (and not Rule 13 relied upon by
the appellant) would be the relevant provision for
restoration of an election petition, and it can be invoked
in an appropriate case by the election petitioner only and
not by a respondent. [704 E]
In the instant case the election petitioner and not the
appellant could have asked for the relief of restoration.
[704 G]
3. The consensus of judicial opinion in this Court has
always been that the law in regard to elections has to be
strictly applied and to the extent provision has not been
made, the Code would be applicable. The Court had occasion
to point out that the Legislature had not thought it fit to
make any provision in the Act permitting intervention of an
elector of the constituency in all contingencies of failures
of the election petition either due to the collusion or
fraud of the original election petitioner or otherwise. The
legislature could have removed the lacuna by amending the
Act, particularly when many amendments have been made. The
fact that has been done leaves an impression that the Court
had not misread the situation. It is not for the Court to
fill up any lacuna in the legislation. [707 B-C; F-G]
Dhoom Singh v. Prakash Chandra Sethi & Ors. [1975] 3
S.C.R. 595 at 599; Sheodhan Singh v. Monan Lal Gautam.[1969]
3 S.C.R 416 at 421. referred to.
691
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2922 of
1981.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 23rd June, 1981 of the Karnataka High Court in
Misc. Petition No. 1 of 1981 in Election Petition No. 76 of
1978.
Petitioner in person.
P.R. Mridul, H.R. Bhardwaj, N. Nettar, G.S. Narayana,
S.N. Bhatt and Hemant Sharma for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. This appeal by special leave is
directed against the order dated June 23, 1981 passed by the
Karnataka High Court in Miscellaneous No. 1/81 arising out
of Election Petition No. 76 of 1978.
On November 5, 1978, polling took place for electing a
member to the Lok Sabha from No. 20 Chikmaglur Constituency
and the result of the election was declared on November 8,
1978. Respondent No. 2 was declared elected. In all 28
candidates had participated in the election. One of the
contenders for the seat filed Election Petition No. 76 of
1978 before the Karnataka High Court on December 20, 1978
impleading the returned candidate as all other contesting
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candidates and three outsiders asking for setting aside the
election of respondent 2 under s. 100(1)(b) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 (’Act’ for short),
declaring Shri Virendra Patil, respondent 5 of the election
petition, as the duly elected candidate from the
constituency and for an order declaring respondents 2, 3 and
4 of the election petition to have been guilty of corrupt
practices within the meaning of s. 123 of the Act. In view
of the reliefs claimed it became necessary to implead all
the contesting candidates as required under s. 82 of the
Act. On March 26, 1979, respondent 29 of the election
petition filed his written statement as also a petition of
recrimination within the meaning of s. 97 of the Act as
against respondent 5 whom the election petitioner wanted to
be declared as the duly elected candidate. On October 4,
1979 the present appellant who was respondent 19 in the
election petition filed his written statement. The election
petitioner who is respondent 1 in the appeal applied to the
Court for deleting the
692
prayer in regard to the declaration of Shri Virendra Patil
as the returned candidate. On November 16, 1979, the court
allowed the application and prayer (c) of the election
petition under which the declaration of Shri Virendra Patil
as the returned candidate was asked for was deleted. The
order of the High Court shows that there was no opposition
to the request for deletion. On November 23, 1979, a
memorandum was filed for the deletion of respondents 5 to
31. On July 23, 1980, on his own prayer respondent 2 of the
election petition was deleted. Simultaneously the names of
the two other outsiders to the election petition being
respondents 3 and 4 of the election petition were also
deleted. Respondent 29 filed a memorandum on August 1, 1980
for withdrawal of the prayer for recrimination as against
Shri Virendra Patil. This was a necessary sequel of the
deletion of prayer (c) of the election petition. On
September 12, 1980 the High Court directed that names of
respondents 5 to 31 excepting respondents 13 and 19 to the
election petition would stand dropped. Thus, in all three
respondents were left in the election petition being
original respondents 1, 13 and 19. On September 30, 1980 the
Court directed withdrawal of the recrimination petition as
against Shri Virendra Patil by allowing the memorandum dated
August 1, 1980. The present appellant had objected to the
request for withdrawal of the recriminatory petition.
Separate orders, viz., the order dated November 16, 1979
allowing deletion of prayer (c) of the election petition,
the order dated September 12, 1980 deleting all the
respondents excepting respondents 1, 13 and 19 of the
election petition from the record, and the order dated
September 30, 1980, permitting withdrawal of the
recrimination petition, were all allowed to become final in
the absence of any challenge.
On November 23, 1980 written statement was filed on
behalf of original respondent 1 and issues were settled on
January 5, 1981. The Court indicated a trial schedule by
requiring the documents to be filed on February 16, 1981 and
recording of evidence was also directed to begin from the
date and the trial was to proceed day to day. On February
16, 1981, the election petitioner wanted adjournment. The
High Court was justified in giving only one adjournment as a
last chance and fixing the trial on March 9, 1981, in view
of the statutory mandate that an election petition shall be
disposed of as far as practicable within six months from the
date of presentation of the election petition as required by
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s. 86 (7) of the Act. On March 9, 1981, the election
petitioner again asked for adjournment. The High Court
declined the prayer for adjournment and said: "On
693
the previous occasion, i.e. February 16, 1981, it was posted
for commencement of evidence but neither the petitioner nor
his witnesses were present. However, at the request of the
petitioners counsel the matter was adjourned to today as a
last chance. The list of witnesses and list of documents
were also at the request of the petitioner’s counsel
permitted to be filed before February 2, 1981 with notice to
respondents. This has not been done. However, when the
matter was called today the petitioner is absent; none of
his witnesses is also present. Shri K. Channabasappa,
learned counsel for petitioner wanted to file the list of
documents and witnesses today in Court and stated that the
matter may be adjourned for trial to some other date. In
view of the circumstances that petitioner is absent in spite
of the fact that this is the second date fixed for trial of
the petition, I have no option except to dismiss this
petition for non-prosecution. This election petition is
accordingly dismissed. There are three contesting
respondents in this election petition viz., R-1, R-13 and R-
19 Respondent 1 and R-13 are represented by Shri G. V.
Shanta Raju, and Sri Vyas Rao respectively. R-19 who appears
in person is however absent..."
On the same day respondent 19 to the election petition
made an application praying for "recall of the order dated
9th March 1981 with reference to Election Petition No. 76 of
1978, and this respondent no. 19 may please be permitted to
prosecute this election petition, and to submit his
evidence, and this respondent may please be permitted to be
substituted and to continue the proceedings of this election
petition". Respondent 19 amended this application and asked
for restoration of the election petition. The original
respondent 1 filed objection to the request for restoration
contending that the application for restoration was not
maintainable and that respondent 19 had no locus standi to
ask for restoration of the case. There was no provision for
transposition when an election petition was dismissed and,
therefore, respondent 19 who could have filed an independent
election petition within the time admissible under the Act
could not ask for transposition. On June 23, 1981, the High
Court rejected the application after negativing the stand of
respondent 19 that an election petition could not be
dismissed for default and that a case of abandonment should
be treated at par with abatement and withdrawal of the
election petition. On September 14, 1981, a petition for
special leave was filed and upon leave being granted, this
appeal by respondent 19 has come before us for final
hearing.
694
At the hearing the appellant appeared in person.
Respondent 1 who was the election petitioner and respondent
3 who was respondent 13 before the High Court did not
appear. Thus the appellant has been heard in person and
respondent 2 has been heard through counsel.
The appellant contended: (1) the earlier orders passed
by the High Court, namely, the order dated November 16, 1979
by which prayer (c) was allowed to be deleted and the order
dated September 30, 1980 by which respondent 29 was allowed
to withdraw his prayer for recrimination as against original
respondent 5, are in the nature of partial withdrawal of the
election petition and the statutory provision for withdrawal
having not been followed, it must be held that the orders
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are a nullity and no party would be entitled to rely on
them. The appellant is, therefore, free to contend that
these orders must be ignored and the High Court should be
called upon to comply with the statutory provision relating
to withdrawal of election petition before such permission
can be granted; (2) an election petition once filed does not
mean a contest only between the parties thereto but
continues for the benefit of the whole constituency and
cannot come to an end merely by the withdrawal thereof by
the petitioner or even by his death or by the death or
withdrawal of opposition of the respondent but is liable to
be continued by any person who might have been a petitioner.
Therefore, an election petition cannot be dismissed for
default and when the appellant who was himself entitled to
file an election petition applied for permission to continue
the case, the High Court should have given him the
opportunity to continue the election petition; (3) the view
taken by this Court in some cases that except in cases of
withdrawal and abatement, the special provisions contained
in the Act for notifying to the constituency so that any
other person may apply for being allowed to continue the
election petition, are not applicable.
Apart from these contentions which we propose to
examine, it is also necessary to consider whether the
appellant, not being the election petitioner, could ask for
the restoration within the ambit of Order IX, Rule 9 of the
Code of Civil Procedure (’Code’ for short).
This Court has consistently taken the view that
elections and election pisputes are a matter of special
nature and that though the right to franchise and right to
office are involved in an election dispute, it is not a lis
at common law nor an action in equity. As
695
early as 1952 when the first election under the Constitution
took place, a Constitution Bench of this Court in N.P.
Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer, Namakkal Constituency &
Ors., (1) observed:
"The right to vote or stand as a candidate for
election is not a civil right but is a creature of
statute or special law and must be subject to the
limitations imposed by it."
while dealing with an appeal in an election dispute arising
out of the first series of elections under the Constitution,
Mahajan, C.J., speaking for a Constitution Bench of this
Court stated in Jagan Nath v. Jaswant Singh & Ors.(2):
"The general rule is well settled that the
statutory requirements of election law must be strictly
observed and that an election contest is not an action
at law or a suit in equity but is a purely statutory
proceeding unknown to the common law and the Court
possesses no common law power. It is also well settled
that it is a sound principle of natural justice that
the success of a candidate who has won at an election
should not be lightly interfered with and any petition
seeking such interference must strictly conform to the
requirements of the law."
In Charan Lal Sahu v. Nandkishore Bhatt & Ors.,(3) this
Court observed:
"The right conferred being a statutory right, the
terms of that statute had to be complied with. There is
no question of any common law right to challenge an
election, Any discretion to condone the delay in
presentation of the petition or to absolve the
petitioner from payment of security for costs can only
be provided under the statute governing election
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disputes. If no discretion is conferred in respect of
any of these matters, none can be exercised under any
general law or on any principle of equity. This Court
has held that the right to
696
vote or stand as a candidate for election is not a
civil right but is a creature of statute or special law
and must be subject to the limitations imposed by it."
In N.P. Ponnuswami’s case it was pointed out that strictly
speaking it is the sole right of the Legislature to examine
and determine all matters relating to the election of its
own members and if the legislature takes it out of its own
hands and vests in a special tribunal an entirely new and
unknown jurisdiction, that special jurisdiction should be
exercised in accordance with the law which creates it. In
Jyoti Basu & Ors. v. Debi Ghosal & Ors.,(1) this Court said:
"A right to elect, fundamental though it is to
democracy. is, anomalously enough, neither a
fundamental right nor a Common Law Right. It is pure
and simple, a statutory right. So is the right to be
elected. So is the right to dispute an election.
Outside of statute, there is no right to elect, no
right to be elected and no right to dispute an
election. Statutory creations they are, and therefore,
subject to statutory limitation. An election petition
is not an action at Common Law, nor in equity. It is a
statutory proceeding to which neither the common law
nor the principles of equity apply but only those rules
which the statute makes and applies. It is a special
jurisdiction, and a special jurisdiction has always to
be exercised in accordance with the statute creating
it. Concepts familiar to Common Law and Equity must
remain strangers to Election Law unless statutorily
embodied. A Court has no right to resort to them on
considerations of alleged policy because policy in such
matters, as those, relating to the trial of election
disputes, is what the statute lays down. In the trial
of election disputes, Court is put in a straight jacket
Thus the entire election process commencing from the
issuance of the notification calling upon a
constituency to elect a member or members right up to
the final resolution of the dispute, if any, concerning
the election is regulated by the Representation of the
People Act, 1951, different stages of the process being
dealt with by different provisions of the Act."
697
That view has been endorsed in Arun Kumar Bose v. Mohd.
Furkan Ansari & Ors.,(1) where two of us were parties to the
decision.
The legal position is, therefore, well settled that
election disputes are strictly statutory proceedings.
Chapter VI in Part III of the Act makes provision for
the trial of election petitions. Sub-section (1) of s. 87
provides:
Subject to the provisions of this Act and of any
rules made thereunder, every election petition shall be
tried by the High Court, as nearly as may be, in
accordance with the procedure applicable under the Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) to the trial of
suits."
The same section makes provision for application of the
Indian Evidence Act to trial of election petitions, subject
to the provisions of the Act. Keeping in view the detailed
provisions in the Act for the trial of election petitions, a
three Judge Bench in Inamati Mallappa Basappa v. Desai
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Basavaraj Ayyappa & Ors.,(2) indicated:
"The effect of all these provisions (which
previously were included in certain other sections of
the Act) really is to constitute a self-contained Code
governing the trial of election petitions."
We have already found that an election petition is a
strict statutory proceeding. An appeal lies to this Court
under s. 116A of the Act both on questions of law and/or
fact from every order made by the High Court under ss. 98
and 99 of the Act. No other order is open to appeal under
the statute. When the application of the appellant to
restore the election petition was rejected, an application
under Art. 136 of the Constitution for grant of special
leave was made. In that the petitioner clearly prayed for
leave against the order dated June 23, 1981. Leave has,
therefore, been granted to him to appeal against the order
of the High Court made on that day. The earlier orders dated
November 16, 1979, September 12, 1980, and September 30,
1980, are not open to challenge in this appeal and Mr.
Mridul for the respondent has rightly contended that these
orders
698
have become final and cannot be assailed at this stage
unless they can be shown to be nullity. The appellant has
taken the stand that an election dispute is not one between
two sets of parties who are before the Court, but it is a
dispute concerning the entire constituency. That is the
pronounced view of this Court. In Inamati Mallappa Basappa’s
case this Court observed:
"Once this process has been set in motion (an
election petition has been filed (by the petitioner he
has released certain forces which even he himself would
not be able to recall and he would be bound to pursue
the petition to its logical end....."
This observation goes to show that an election petition once
filed does not remain a contest only between the parties
thereto but becomes a dispute in which the whole
constituency is interested. The Act makes provisions to meet
certain eventualities in the course of the trial in Chapter
IV of Part VI. Two situations which have been covered by the
statute are withdrawal and abatement of election petitions.
Sections 109 and 110 deal with withdrawal of election
petitions, and sections 112 and 116 deal with the
eventuality of death and non-substitution leading to
abatement. Section 109 provides:
"109. Withdrawal of election petitions - (1) An
election petition may be withdrawn only by leave of the
High Court;
(2) where an application for withdrawal is made
under sub-section (1), notice there of fixing a date
for the hearing of the application shall be given to
all other parties to the petition and shall be
published in the official Gazette."
Section 110 reads thus:
"110. Procedure for withdrawal of election
petition (1) If there are more petitioners than one, no
application to withdraw an election petition shall be
made except with the consent of all the petitioners;
699
(2) No application for withdrawal shall be granted
if in the opinion of the High Court, such application
has been induced by any bargain or consideration which
ought not to be allowed;
(3) If the application is granted-
(a) X X
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X
(b) the High Court shall direct that the notice
of withdrawal shall be published in the
Official Gazette and in such other manner as
it may specify and thereupon the notice shall
be published accordingly;
(c) a person who might himself have been a
petitioner may, within fourteen days of such
publication, apply to be substituted as
petitioner in place of the party withdrawing,
and upon compliance with the conditions, if
any, as to security, shall be entitled to be
so substituted and to continue the
proceedings upon such terms as the High Court
may deem fit.
The question of abatement does not arise in this case.
It is, therefore, sufficient to state without extracting the
provisions of ss. 112 and 116 of the Act, that even in the
case of death and non-substitution, the Court is required to
publish the notice in the official gazette.
Two questions become relevant at this stage: firstly,
it has to be decided whether the earlier orders allowing
prayer (c) to be deleted and the relief of recrimination to
be omitted amounted to withdrawal of the election petition
within the meaning of ss. 109 and 100 of the Act; and
secondly, whether on that account the orders are a nullity.
Prayer (c) in the election petition was concerned with the
declaration of respondent 5, Shri Virendra Patil as duly
elected from the constituency in question. This relief was
asked to be deleted. No objection was raised to its deletion
and in due course the Court allowed this prayer to be
omitted. In opposition to the claim made in this prayer
recrimination was filed by one of the respondents in the
election petition. But once prayer (c) was dropped, the
relief
700
of recrimination could no more stand. Consequently on the
prayer of the recriminator that relief was also allowed to
be omitted. In view of the contention of the appellant, it
is necessary to decide whether omission of prayer (c) comes
within the ambit of s. 109 of the Act. Sub-section (1) of s.
109 provides that an election petition can be withdrawn only
by leave of the High Court. Omitting a prayer from the
election petition strictly would not amount to withdrawal of
the election petition. There would be several instances
where not withstanding the deletion of one relief, the
election petition as such would continue to be alive. In the
cases which were cited before us referring to the
applicability of Order XXIII, rule 1 of the Code, this
aspect was examined with reference to withdrawal of the
election petition. We do not think that if one of the
reliefs claimed in the election petition is asked to be
omitted, it would come within the provisions of sub-s. (1)
of s. 109 of the Act. There is no reason why, if even after
omission of a particular relief the election petition
survives and is available to be tried in accordance with
law, that omission or deletion should be treated as
withdrawal of the election petition. There may be cases
where while asking for one definite relief as the main one
in a lis several other reliefs are prayed for and after the
pleadings are closed instances are not rare when untenable
and unnecessary reliefs are asked to be omitted. Amendment
to omit such a relief does not amount to a prayer for
withdrawal of the lis itself. In this case the main relief
of the election petitioner was setting aside of the election
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of respondent 2. Along with it he had also claimed the
relief that the original respondent 5 be declared to be duly
elected.
Apart from the fact that no objection was raised when
the prayer for deletion was made, the appellant did not
challenge the order of the Court deleting the other parties
and omitting the relief of recrimination and indeed he could
not do so, since to the present appeal the other respondents
are not parties and in their absence the validity of the
Court’s order of deletion of the prayer for declaring
respondent 5 as duly elected and the consequent deletion of
the prayer for recrimination as also the omission of the
other parties from the category of respondent to the
election petition could not be allowed to be agitated as
that would be contrary to rules of natural justice and
likely to prejudice those parties without affording a
reasonable opportunity to them of being heard. Moreover, it
may be noticed that special leave was obtained only against
the subsequent order of June 23, 1981, and no challenge at
all was raised against these previous orders. It is,
therefore, clear that the earlier orders
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of the Court could not possibly be regarded as a nullity and
the appellant is precluded from challenging those orders in
this appeal.
When proceed next to examine whether the election
petition could be dismissed in the absence of the election
petitioner and whether the appellant could apply for its
restoration though he himself was not the election
petitioner, The basis of the appellant’s contention that the
election petition cannot be dismissed for the absence of the
election petitioner is that once an election petition is
filed, it concerns the entire constituency. Purity of the
electoral process in a democracy, it is contended, is of
paramount importance and an election petition cannot be
permitted to be dismissed for default inasmuch as that would
lead to situations brought about by manipulation, undue
influence, fraud or winning over of the election petitioner.
The 2nd respondent’s counsel has not disputed before us and
rightly in our view that purity of the electoral process is
paramount in a democracy and an election petition should not
be permitted to be abandoned by undue influence or pressure
over the election petitioner. It may be pointed out that
there was no allegation of undue influence or pressure over
the election petitioner to justify his conduct in this case.
It is relevant to mention that the 2nd respondent who was
the elected candidate was expelled from the Lok Sabha in
December 1978, and in August 1979, the Lok Sabha to which
respondent 2 had been elected was dissolved. It was after
these supervening events that in October 1979 the request to
delete prayer (c) was made and the other orders followed.
This explanation given by respondent 2’s counsel to justify
the conduct of the election petitioner is a relevant
feature.
There is no support in the statute for the contention
of the appellant that an election petition cannot be
dismissed for default. The appellant contended that default
of appearance or non-prosecution of the election petition
must be treated as on par with withdrawal or abatement and
therefor, through there is no clear provision in the Act,
the same principle should govern and the obligation to
notify as provided in ss. 110 or 116 of the Act should be
made applicable. We see no justification to accept such a
contention. Non-prosecution or abandonment is certainly not
withdrawal. Withdrawal is a positive and voluntary act while
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non-prosecution or abandonment may not necessarily be an act
of volition. It may spring from negligence, indifference,
inaction or even incapacity or inability to prosecute. In
the case of withdrawal steps are envisaged to be taken
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before the Court in accordance with the prescribed
procedure. In the case of non-prosecution or abandonment,
the election petitioner does not appear before the Court and
obtain any orders. We have already indicated that the Act is
a self-contained statute strictly laying down its own
procedure and nothing can be read in it which is not there
nor can its provisions be enlarged or extended by analogy.
In fact, the terms of s. 87 of the Act clearly prescribe
that if there be no provision in the Act to the contrary,
the provisions of the Code would apply and that would
include Order 9, Rule 8 of the Code, under which an election
petition would be liable to be dismissed if the election
petitioner does not appear to prosecute the election
petition.
In many cases it has been held that an election
petition can be dismissed for default. A full Bench of the
Punjab High Court in Jugal Kishore v. Dr Baldev Prakash. had
occasion to consider this question when Grover, J.
delivering the judgment of the Court spoke thus:
"It has been repeatedly said that an election
petition once filed is not a contest only between the
parties thereto but continues for the benefit of the
whole constituency. It is for that purpose that in the
Representation of the People Act, 1951, provisions have
been made in sections 109 and 110 relating to
withdrawal of an election petition and sections 112 and
116 relating to abatement of such a petition the effect
of which is that the petition cannot come to an end by
the withdrawal there of by the death of the petitioner
or by the death or withdrawal of opposition by the
respondent, but is liable in such cases to be continued
by any person who might have been a petitioner. There
is nothing in the entire Act providing or indicating
that a similar procedure is to be followed in the event
of a petitioner failing to prosecute the petition. such
failure can be due to various causes. The petitioner
can, by force of circumstances, be genuinely rendered
helpless to prosecute the petition. For instance, he
may find that his financial condition has suddenly
worsened and that he can no longer afford the expenses
of litigation. He may even, owing to exigencies of
business or vocation or
703
profession, have to go to such a distant place from the
seat of the High Court where the election petition is
being tried that he may find it impossible to prosecute
the petition in a proper manner. There would be two
courses open to him and that will depend entirely on
his volition. He can either file an application for
withdrawal of the petition disclosing the circumstances
which have brought about such a situation in which case
there would be no difficulty in following the procedure
laid down in sections 109 and 110 of the Act, or he may
choose to simply absent himself from the Court or cease
to give any instructions to the counsel engaged by him
or fail to deposit the process-fee and the diet money
for witnesses or take the necessary steps for summoning
the witnesses in which case the Court will have no
option but to dismiss the election petition under the
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure which would
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be applicable to the election petitions in the absence
of any express provisions in the Act. The dismissal
will have to be under the provisions contained in Order
9 or Order 17 of the Code...It is quite clear that
there is no distinct provision in the Act laying down
any particular or special procedure which is to be
followed when the petitioner chooses to commit default
either in appearance or in production of evidence or
generally in prosecuting the petition. The provisions
of the Code of Civil Procedure would, therefore, be
applicable under section 87 of the Act. I am further of
the opinion that any argument which could be pressed
and was adopted for saying that the inherent powers of
the Court could not be exercised in such circumstances
would be of no avail now as the High Court is a Court
of Record and possesses all the inherent powers of a
Court while trying election petitions."
It is relevant to note the observations of Hidayatullah, CJ
in Sunderlal Mannalal v. Nandramdas Dwarkadas & Ors.. where
he indicated:
"Now the Act does not give any power of dismissal.
But it is axiomatic that no Court or tribunal is
supposed to continue a proceeding before it when the
party who has moved it has not appeared nor cared to
remain
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present. The dismissal, therefore, is an inherent power
which every tribunal possesses......."
Similar view has been expressed by another Full Bench
of the Allahabad High Court in Duryodhan v. Sitaram & Ors. A
four Judge Bench of this Court in Rajendra Kumari Bajpai v.
Ram Adhar Yadav & Ors. referred to the Punjab case. Fazal
Ali, J. speaking on behalf of the Court quoted a portion of
the judgment of Grover, J. which we have cited above and
said:
"We fully approve of the line of reasoning adopted
by the High Court in that case."
It, therefore, follows that the Code is applicable in
disposing of an election petition when the election
petitioner does not appear or take steps to prosecute the
election petition. Dismissal of an election petition for
default of appearance of the petitioner under the provisions
of either Order IX or Order XVII of the Code would,
therefore, be valid and would not be open to challenge on
the ground that these provisions providing for dismissal of
the election petition for default do not apply.
The appellant was not the election petitioner. Order
IX, rule 9 of the Code (and not rule 13 relied upon by the
appellant) would be the relevant provision for restoration
of an election petition. That can be invoked in an
appropriate case by the election petitioner only and not by
a respondent. By its own language, rule 9 provides that
where a suit is wholly or partly dismissed under rule 8, the
plaintiff shall be precluded from bringing a fresh suit but
he may apply for an order to set the dismissal aside. Under
this rule, therefore, an application for restoration can be
made only by the petitioner. Since it is a provision for
restoration, it is logical that the provision should be
applicable only when the party on account of whose default
in appearance the petition was dismissed makes an
application to revive the petition to its former stage prior
to dismissal. In the instant case the election petitioner
and not respondent 19 who is in appeal before us, could have
asked for the relief of restoration. The appellant contended
that the statutory scheme authorises an elector at whose
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instance an election petition could have been filed to get
substituted in the event
705
of withdrawal or abatement and applying that analogy, he
urged that a petition for restoration would also lie at the
instance of a respondent. The ambit of the provisions
relating to withdrawal and abatement cannot be extended to
meet other situations. Specific provisions have been made in
the Act to deal with the two situations withdrawal and
abatement and a person hitherto not a party or one of the
respondents who was entitled to file an election petition
has been permitted to substitute himself in the election
petition and to pursue the same in accordance with law.
These provisions cannot be extended to an application under
order IX, rule 9 of the Code and at the instance of a
respondent or any other elector a dismissed election
petition cannot be restored.
The fallacy in the logic advanced by the appellant in
this behalf is manifest when we refer to a suit for
partition. In a suit for partition the position of the
plaintiff and that of the defendant is interchangeable. So
long as the suit is pending a defendant can ask the Court to
transpose him as a plaintiff and a plaintiff can also ask
for being transposed as a defendant. The possibility of
transposition during the pendency of the suit would not
permit a defendant to apply for restoration of a suit for
partition which is dismissed for default and the right to
apply for transposition would certainly come to an end when
the suit is no more alive. In our opinion the respondent’s
position in an election petition would not be higher than
that. We therefore, conclude that an election petition is
liable to be dismissed for default in situations covered by
Order IX, or Order XVII of the Code and for its restoration
an application under rule 9, Order IX of the Code would be
maintainable but such application for restoration can be
filed only by the election petitioner and not by any
respondent.
This Court in Dhoom Singh v. Prakash Chandra Sethi &
Ors., held:
"The legislature in its wisdom has chosen to make
special provisions for the continuance of the election
petition only in case of its withdrawal or abatement.
It has yet not thought it fit to make any provision in
the Act permitting intervention of an elector of the
constituency in all contingencies of failures of the
election petition either due to the collusion or fraud
of the original
706
election petitioner or otherwise. It is not necessary
for this Court to express any opinion as to whether the
omission to do so is deliberate or inadvertent. It may
be a case of casus omissus. It is a well-known rule of
construction of statutes that "A statute, even more
than a contract, must be construed, ut res magis valeat
quam pereat, so that the intentions of the legislature
may not be treated as vain or left to operate in the
air". A second consequent of this rule is that "a
statute may not be extended to meet a case for which
provision has clearly and undoubtedly not been made"
(see Craies on Statute Law).
It seems plain that the High Court is enjoined to
dismiss an election petition which does not comply with
the provisions of section 81 or section 82 or section
117 of the Act. In the true cases of non-compliance
with the said provisions of law a question of
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intervention by another person may not arise. But there
may be a case, as the instant one was alleged to be (we
are expressing no opinion of ours in this regard even
by any implication whether this was so or not), where
as a result of the fraud or collusion between the
election petitioner and the returned candidate the High
Court is fraudulently misled to act under section 86
(1). Even in such a situation we find no provision in
the Act under which the High Court could permit a
person like the appellant to intervene in the matter or
to substantiate his allegations of fraud or collusion
between the election petitioner and the returned
candidate. It is difficult to press into service the
general principles of law governing an election
petition as was sought to be done on behalf of the
appellant for his intervention in the matter. If there
be any necessity of avoiding any such situation as the
present one was said to be it is for the legislature to
intervene and make clear and express provision of law
for the purpose."
The ratio of this decision as also the observations in
Basappa’s case, the appellant contends, are wrong in view of
the earlier decisions of this Court taking the view that an
election dispute involves the entire constituency because of
the paramount necessity of having purity of an election in a
democracy safeguarded. We do not think the appellant’s
contention can be accepted The earlier
707
decisions of this Court do not in any way militate against
the view taken in Dhoom Singh’s case (supra) and the
observations made in Basappa’s case (supra). Those decisions
were not concerned with the question as to whether an
election petition can be dismissed for default. The
concensus of judicial opinion in this Court has always been
that the law in regard to elections has to be strictly
applied and to the extent provision has not been made, the
Code would be applicable. About eight years back this Court
had occasion to point out that if the intention of the
legislature was that a case of this type should also be
covered by special provision, this intention was not carried
out and there was a lacuna in the Act. We find that even
earlier in Shcodhan Singh v. Mohan Lal Gautam, this Court
had stated:
"From the above provisions it is seen that in an
election petition, the contest is really between the
constituency on the one side and the person or persons
complained of on the other. Once the machinery of the
Act is moved by a candidate or an elector, the carriage
of the case does not entirely rest with the petitioner.
The reason for the elaborate provisions noticed by us
earlier is to ensure to the extent possible that the
persons who offend the election law are not allowed to
avoid the consequences of their misdeeds."
(underlining is ours)
We must assume that the legislature takes notice of the
decisions of this Court and if it was of the view that its
true intention had not been carried out or that a lacuna
remained in the statute it could have removed the lacuna by
amending the Act making its intention clear and manifest,
particularly when many amendments have subsequently been
made. The fact that nothing has been done leaves an
impression in our mind that this Court had not misread the
situation. At any rate it is not for the Court to fill up
any lacuna in the legislation and as the law stands, the
appellant has no right to contend that the view taken by
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this Court is not tenable in law. We may recall the
observation of Lord Denning in Seaford Estates v. Asher;
708
"A judge must not alter the material of which the
Act is woven, but he can and should iron out the
creases."
All the three contentions advanced on behalf of the
appellant fail. We have already taken the view that at the
instance of the appellant the application for restoration
was not maintainable. Therefore, the appeal cannot be
allowed and we cannot direct restoration of the election
petition. Accordingly the appeal fails and is dismissed and
the order of the High Court is confirmed. We leave the
parties to bear their respective costs.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
709