Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DR. P. NALLA THAMPY TERAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/05/1985
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
DESAI, D.A.
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1133 1985 SCR Supl. (1) 622
1985 SCC Supl. 189 1985 SCALE (1)1148
CITATOR INFO :
R 1987 SC1577 (21)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950, Art. 14 & Representation of
People Act 1951, S. 77 (1), Explanation 1-Scope of-
Explained-Political parties spending unlimited money in
election of their party candidates-conferment of power-
Whether violative of Art. 14 and unconstitutional.
Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, Rule 90. Election-
Expenditure-Incurrence of-Applicability of ceiling-whether
prevalent.
HEADNOTE:
Section 77(1) of the Representation of the People Act,
1951 provides that every candidate at an election shall,
either by himself or by his election agent, keep a separate
and correct account of all expenditure in connection with
the election incurred or authorised by him or by his
election agent, between the date of publication of the
notification calling the election and the date of
declaration of the result thereof, both dates inclusive.
Section 77(3) provides that the total of the said
expenditure shall not exceed such amount as may be
prescribed by the Rules framed under the Act. In Kanwarlal
Gupta [1975] 2 SCR 259 the Court observed that when the
political party sponsoring a candidate incurs expenditure in
connection with his election, as distinguished from
expenditure on general party propaganda, and the candidate
knowingly takes advantage of it or participates in the
programme or activity or fails to disavow the expenditure or
consents to it or acquiesces in it, it would be reasonable
to infer, save in special circumstances, that he impliedly
authorised the political party to incur such expenditure and
he cannot escape the rigour of the ceiling by saying that he
has not incurred the expenditure, but his political party
has done so. In order to get over the judgment in Kanwarlal
Gupta, the Representation of the People(Amendment)
Ordinance, 1974 was issued which was replaced by the
Representation of the People (Amendment) Act, 1974. Section
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2 of the Amending Act added two Explanations to section
77(1). Explanation 1 provides that notwithstanding any
judgment, order or decision of any court to the contrary,
any expenditure incurred or authorised in connection with
the election of a candidate by a political party or by any
individual (other than the candidate or his election agent)
shall not be deemed to be, and shall not ever be deemed to
have been, expenditure in connection with the election
incurred or authorised by the candidate or by his election
agent for the purpose of sub-Section (1) of Section 77.
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In the writ petition under Art. 32 the petitioner
challenged the validity of Explanation 1 to section 77(1) of
the Representation of the People Act, 1951 on the grounds:
(i) that it enables political parties to spend unlimited
monies for the election of the candidates sponsored by them,
(ii) that this is arbitrary and violative of Art. 14 because
it sanctions serious discrimination between one political
party or individual and another on the basis of money
power,(iii) that it not only permits but encourages and
legitimises the influence of big money in the electoral
process and thus militates against the fairness and purity
of the electoral process, (iv) that it denies to the citizen
right to have full and effective participation in the
electoral process and (v) that it nullifies the salutary
object of imposing a ceiling on a candidate’s expenditure.
On behalf of the respondent-Union of India it was
contended: (i) that Explanation 1 to section 77(1) of the
Act was introduced to restore the law as expounded in the
decisions of this Court prior to the decision in Kanwarlal
Gupta, (ii) that the expenditure incurred by political
parties in connection with the election of their candidates
do not fall within the mischief of section 77(1) read with
section 123(6) of the Act, (iii) that Explanation 1 is not
violative of Art. 14 and (iv) that legislative policies
bearing upon matters governing elections are not open to
judicial review.
Dismissing the Writ Petition and C.M.Ps.,
^
HELD: 1. Explanation 1 to section 77(1) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 neither suffers from
any constitutional infirmity nor it violates Art. 14.
Explanation 1 classifies all political parties or
associations in one group and confers upon them the same or
similar advantage. Political parties or, politically
motivated associations or bodies of persons or, individuals
interested in political happenings, are characterised by
common attributes, the dominant attribute being that they
engage themselves in activities of a political nature.
Elections constitute the core of such activities. A
classification of this nature bears reasonable relationship
with the object of the statute that expenses incurred by
those who fall within the particular group should not be
regarded as expenditure incurred or authorised by the
candidates or his election agent. Classification has to be
broadly reasonable in order to sustain the challenge of
unconstitutionality. One cannot dissect that process and
discover shades within shades to nullify it on the ground of
inequality. [636 G-H; 637 A;C]
2. Explanation 1 to section 77(1) of the Act says that
a political party or any other association or any
individual, other than the candidate or his election agent,
can incur expenses, without any limitation whatsoever, in
connection with the election of a candidate. Such expenses
are not deemed to be expenditure in connection with the
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election incurred or authorised by the candidate or by his
election agent for the purpose of section 77(1). [636 E-F]
3. As independent candidate who contests an election
without the support of a political party, is at a
considerable disadvantage as compared with candidates
supported by political parties. But, that does not violate
the rule of equality. It is not the election law which
creates such inequalities. Inequalities
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exist apart from that law and are implicit in the unequal
positions in which the citizens find themselves. What the
law does is to allow, in an equal measure, all political
parties, associations or bodies or persons or individuals
(other than the candidate or his election agent) to incur
expenses in connection with the election of candidate, which
need not be included in the return of election expenses
which the candidate is required to file. [637 C-E]
4. Preferring political parties for exclusion from the
sweep of monetary limits on election expenses, is not so
unreasonable or arbitrary as to justify the preference being
struck down upon that ground because the statute neither
makes the affluence of a political party and electoral
standard for acquiring eligibility prescribed by the
Explanation nor is it an unwise policy to ensure reasonable
reduction in the number of contesting candidates, which can
be done by conferring special privileges upon political
parties. In any democratic system of government political
parties occupy a distinct and unique place. It is through
them that the people attempt to voice or ventilate their
grievances. Considering the power which they wield in the
administration of governmental affairs, a special conferment
of benefits on them in the matter of modalities governing
the election process cannot be regarded as unreasonable or
arbitrary. [637 G-H; 638 B-C]
5. In Kanwarlal Gupta the Court drew a distinction
between the expenses incurred by a political party
specifically in connection with the election of a particular
candidate and the expenditure incurred by it on general
party propaganda, the latter not being includible in the
return of election expenses which the candidate has to file.
The rationale of that decision is that by reason of the
important position which political parties occupy they are
entitled to incur expenditure for projecting their
programmes and popularising their policies. Explanation I
obliterates the dividing line drawn in Kanwarlal Gupta
between expenses incurred "in connection with’ the election
of a particular candidate and expenses incurred on ’general
party propaganda’. All persons, except the candidate and his
election agent, are now free to incur expenditure of the
former kind too, without the constraints of ceiling imposed
upon election expenditure by section 77(3) read with Rule 90
of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961. [638 C-E]
6. Whether Explanation I restores the law as it was
understood before Kanwarlal Gupta or, it makes an innovation
is irrelevant for deciding upon its validity. Every law,
whether restorative or innovative, has to be tested on the
touchstone of the Constitution. [638 G]
7. Election laws are not designed to produce economic
equality amongst citizens. They can, at best, provide an
equal opportunity to all sections of society to project
their respective points of view on the occasion of
elections. [639 B]
8. If it is correct that different political parties
have been treated equally though they are situated
unequally, or that individuals have been discriminated
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against either inter se or in relation to political parties
and associations, the only method which would measure up to
the required constitutional standard is
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the one in which the State would have to allocate funds from
its own exchequer in order to enable the various candidates
to contest elections. That would be the fairest form of
fairness. [639 D-E]
9. Explanation I would not become unconstitutional for
the reason that it allegedly renders the main provisions in
section 77(1) nugatory by taking away with one hand what is
given by the other. The Explanation does not denude the
section of its meaning and make it purposeless. Section
77(1) deals with the expenditure incurred or authorised by’
a candidate or his election agent, in connection with the
election. It is obligatory to keep a separate and correct
account of such expenditure. Explanation I deals with the
expenditure incurred or authorised by a political party or
any other association or body of persons or by an individual
other than the candidate or his election agent. It is not
obligatory for the candidate or his election agent to keep a
separate and correct account of such expenditure, because
such expenditure is not incurred or authorised by the
candidate or his election agent and that such expenditure
cannot be deemed to be incurred or authorised by the
candidate or his election agent. Section 77(1) on the one
hand and Explanation 1 on the other, deal with two different
situations wherefore, the latter cannot render the former
meaningless. [639 F-H; 640 A-B]
10. If an expenditure which purports to have been
incurred, for example, by a political party has in fact been
incurred by the candidate or his election agent, Explanation
I will not be attracted. It is only if the expenditure is in
fact incurred or authorised by a political party or any
other association or body of persons or by an individual,
(other than the candidate or his election agent) that the
Explanation will come into play. For seeking protection
under Explanation I it must be shown that the source of the
expenditure incurred was not the candidate or his election
agent. Explanation I does not create a fiction. It deals
with the realities of political situations. It does not
provide that expenditure in fact incurred or authorised by a
candidate or his election agent, shall not be deemed to be
incurred or authorised by them, if the amount is defrayed by
a political party. The object of the Explanation is to
ensure that the expenditure incurred, by a political party
on its own, without using the funds provided by the
candidate or his election agent shall not be deemed to be
expenditure incurred or authorised by the candidate or his
election agent. If the expenditure is incurred from out of
the funds provided by the candidate or his election agent
section 77(1) and not Explanation 1 would apply. [640 C-H]
11. The reason why the expression ’shall not be deemed
to be’ is used in Explanation 1 is that Parliament wanted to
get over the effect of the judgment of this Court in
Kanwarlal Gupta’s case. Similarly, the expression ’shall not
ever be deemed to have been’ is used in the Explanation, to
get over the effect of that judgment retrospectively, except
to the extent mentioned in clauses (a) and (b) of the
Proviso to the Explanation. [641 B-C]
12. The limited range of Explanation I ought not to be
enlarged. The ceiling placed on election expenses is a basic
commandment of the Act, not a
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pious edict. Its object is to keep a check on the
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expenditure incurred by candidates on their own elections,
directly or through their election agents. They cannot be
permitted to resort to subterfuges in order to evade the
restraint imposed by section 77(1) and 77(3) of the Act.
Homage to the principle of free and fair elections has to be
real, not formal. [641 C-D]
13. The Court is not to lay down policies in matters
pertaining to elections. The Court cannot negate a law on
the ground that it does not approve of the policy which
underlies it. The Court might have its own preferences and
perceptions but, they cannot be used for invalidating laws.
[641 E-F]
14. The right to contest an election or to vote at it
is not a Common Law right. [641 G]
15. The question as regards the constitutional validity
of Explanation 1 has to be determined regardless of the
consideration as to whether the said Explanation restores
the law as it stood before the decision of this Court in
Kanwarlal Gupta or whether it introduces a new provision
altogether. [642 E]
16. Influence of big money on the election process is
regarded universally as an evil of great magnitude.
Kanwar Lal Gupta v. Amar Nath Chawla [1975] 2 SCR 259
explained.
Rananjaya Singh v. Baijnath Singh [1955] 1 SCR 671; Ram
Dayal v. Brijraj Singh [1970] 1 SCR 530; Magraj Patolia v.
R.K. Birla [1971] 2 SCR 118; Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj
Narain [1976] 2 SCR 347; Lok Sabha Debates Vol. XLVII, Nos.
21-27, 12-20 December, 1974 page 279; Vatal Nagaraj v. R.
Dayanand Sagar [1975] 2 SCR 384, 399; Tata Iron & Steel Co.
Ltd. AIR 1958 Bombay 155; Indian Iron and Steel Co. Ltd AIR
1958 Calcutta 234; Report of the Santhanam Committee on
Prevention of Corruption 1962, Section 11, ’Social Climate’
Paragraph 11.5; Report of the Expert Committee on ’Companies
and MRTP Acts’ 1978, Chapter XIII pages 99-104; Jyoti Basu
v. Debi Ghosal [1982] 3 SCR 318, 326, 327; Halbury’s Law of
England, Fourth Edition, Volume 15, Paragraph 721, referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 1177 of 1979.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Harish N. Salve and Laxmi Kant Pandey
for the Petitioner.
K. Parasaran, Attorney General, T.S. Krishnamurty Iyer
and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondents.
627
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD C.J. The petitioner, Dr. P. Nalla Thampy
Thera, is not an intermeddler or busy body. He is a public-
spirited citizen whose motives in filing this petition are
to be admired even if his contentions may not merit
acceptance. By this petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution, he challenges the validity of Explanation I to
section 77(1) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act") which gives a carte
blanche to political parties to spend unlimited monies for
the election of the candidates sponsored by them. In
practice, insofar as our little knowledge of political
affairs goes, sky is the limit for such expenditure: Some
call it millions, some call it billions.
The particular provision of the statute which is under
consideration here, has a short, though significant history.
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A judgment of this Court led to its enactment. That
judgment, to which one of us, Bhagwati J, was a party, was
delivered on October 3, 1974 in Kanwar Lal Gupta v. Amar
Nath Chawla. Section 77(1) of the Act, as it stood then,
read thus:
"Every candidate at an election shall, either by
him self or by his election agent, keep a separate and
correct account of all expenditure in connection with
the election incurred or authorised by him or by his
election agent, between the date of publication of the
notification calling the election and the date of
declaration of the result thereof, both dates
inclusive."
Section 77(3) provides that the total of the said
expenditure shall not exceed such amount as may be
prescribed, that is to say, the amount prescribed by the
Rules framed under the Act. The expenditure prescribed for a
Parliamentary constituency in the Union Territory of Delhi
was Rs. 10,000. The question before the Court in Kanwar Lal
Gupta was whether the successful candidate, Amar Nath
Chawla, had incurred or authorised expenditure in connection
with his election exceeding the ceiling of Rs. 10,000.
Noting that what section 77(1) prohibited was not only the
incurring but also the authorising of excessive expenditure
and that such authorising may be implied or express, the
Court observed:
628
"When the political party sponsoring a candidate
incurs expenditure in connection with his election, as
distinguished from expenditure on general party
propaganda, and the candidate knowingly takes advantage
of it or participates in the programme or activity or
fails to disavow the expenditure or consents to it or
acquiesces in it, it would be reasonable to infer, save
in special circumstances, that he impliedly authorised
the political party to incur such expenditure and he
cannot escape the rigour of the ceiling by saying that
he has not incurred the expenditure, but his political
party has done so. A party candidate does not stand
apart from his political party and if the political
party does not want the candidate to incur the
disqualification, it must exercise control over the
expenditure which may be incurred by it directly to
promote the poll prospects of the candidate. The same
proposition must also held good in case of expenditure
incurred by friends and supporters directly in
connection with the election of the candidate. This is
the only reasonable interpretation of the provision
which would carry out its object and intendment and
suppress the mischief and advance the remedy by
purifying our election process and ridding it of the
pernicious and baneful influence of big money."
On November 7, 1974, Bill No. 104 of 1974 was
introduced in the Lok Sabha in order to get over the
judgment in Kanwar Lal Gupta. The Statement of Objects and
Reasons of that Bill reads thus:
"STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS
Section 77 of the Representation of the People
Act, 1951 provides that the total of the expenditure in
connection with an election incurred or authorized by
the candidate or his election agent between the date of
publication of the notification calling the election
and the date of declaration of the result thereof shall
not exceed such amount as may be prescribed. Rule 90 of
the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961, seeks to lay down
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the maximum election expenses for a parliamentary
constituency and an Assembly constituency in respect of
629
various States and the Union territories. Clause (6) of
section 123 of the Representation of the People Act has
specifically included the incurring or authorizing of
expenditure in contravention of section 77 as a corrupt
practice, which, if established, would not only vitiate
the election, but also result in disqualifying the
candidate for a period of six years under section 8A of
the said Act.
In the Election Law, the emphasis has been on
imposing a curb on an individual incurring expenditure
in connection with his election in excess of the
prescribed limit. The provision contained in section 77
of the Act is very specific in this respect and the
intention that the curb is on the expenditure incurred
or authorized by the candidate has found support in the
judicial pronouncements on the point. The expression
"incurred or authorized" had not been construed so as
to bring within its purview the expenditure incurred by
a political party in its campaign or by any person
other than the candidate unless incurred by such third
person as the candidate’s agent. In other words, the
provisions of section 77 and clause (6) of section 123
have been intended and understood to be restraints on
the candidate’s election expenditure and not on the
expenditure of a political party.
However, in the recent case of Kanwar Lal Gupta v.
A.N. Chawla and Others (Civil Appeal No. 1549 of 1972
decided on 3rd October, 1974), the Supreme Court has
interpreted the aforementioned expression "incurred or
authorized" as including within its scope expenses
incurred by a political party or other person referred
to above. In view of the effect which such
interpretation might have particularly with reference
to the candidates against whom election petitions are
pending, it became urgently necessary to clarify the
intention underlying the provisions contained in
section 77 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, namely, that in computing the maximum amount
under that section any expenditure incurred or
authorized by any other person or body of persons or
political parties should not be taken into account. As
Parliament was not in session, the President
630
promulgated on 19th October, 1974, the Representation
of the People (Amendment) Ordinance, 1974.
The Bill seeks to replace this Ordinance."
By section 2 of the Amending Act, which is called. The
Representation of the People (Amendment) Act, 1974, two
Explanations were added to section 77(1), out of which
Explanation 1 is directly relevant for our purpose. Those
Explanations read thus:
"Explanation 1.- Notwithstanding any judgment,
order or decision of any court to the contrary, any
expenditure incurred or authorized in connection with
the election of a candidate by a political party or by
any other association or body of persons or by any
individual (other than the candidate or his election
agent) shall not be deemed to be, and shall not ever be
deemed to have been, expenditure in connection with the
election incurred or authorized by the candidate or by
his election agent for the purposes of this subsection:
Provided that nothing contained in the Explanation
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shall affect-
(a) any judgment, order or decision of the Supreme
Court whereby the election of a candidate to the House
of the People or to the Legislative Assembly of a State
has been declared void or set aside before the
commencement of the Representation of the People
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1974;
(b) any judgment, order or decision of a High
Court whereby the election of any such candidate has
been declared void or set aside before the commencement
of the said Ordinance if no appeal has been preferred
to the Supreme Court against such judgment, order or
decision of the High Court before such commencement and
the period of limitation for filing such appeal has
expired before such commencement.
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Explanation 2.- For the purposes of Explanation
1, "political party" shall have the same meaning as in
the Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order,
1968, as for the time being in force."
The argument of Mr. Sorabjee, who appears on behalf of
the petitioner, may be summed up thus: (1) It is the essence
of fair elections that any individual or any political
party, howsoever small, should be able to contest an
election on a footing of equality with any other individual
or political party, howsoever rich and well financed it may
be, and no individual or political party should be able to
secure an advantage over others by reason of its superior
financial strength. (2) The rationale of imposing a limit on
expenditure incurred or authorised by a candidate in an
election is to eliminate, as far as possible, the pernicious
influence of big money in the electoral process which leads
to the worst form of political corruption. Limitation on
election expenditure is imperative for ensuring the purity
of the electoral process. (3) It is indisputable that
availability of large funds and resources to an individual
backed by a political party supporting him would confer
greater and undue advantage on him over an individual who is
without any links with affluence or wealth. (4) Such a
consequence is anti-democratic because it denies to the
citizen the right to have full and effective participation
in the electoral process. (5) Explanation 1 to section 77(1)
strikes at the very heart of democracy inasmuch as is not
only permits but encourages and legitimises the influence of
big money in the electoral process and thus militates
against the fairness and purity of the electoral process.
Furthermore, it makes a mockery of and nullifies the
salutary object of imposing a ceiling on a candidate’s
expenditure, which provision is a beneficent provision
enacted in the interests of purity and genuineness of the
democratic process. The impugned provision, far from
suppressing the mischief of baneful influence of big money
directly promotes it and thereby sullies the purity of the
electoral process. Consequently, it goes against the ’basic
requirement of the Constitution’ and violates a basic and
essential feature of the Constitution and, consequently, is
arbitrary. (6) The impugned provision is further violative
of article 14, because it sanctions serious discrimination
between one political party or individual and another on the
basis of money power. It makes the wealth of affluence of
the political party supporting the candidate the decisive
factor in the outcome of elections. It introduces wealth and
affluence as a measure of a candidate’s qualifications or
prospects of
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success, which is to ’introduce a capricious or irrelevant
factor’. (7) Once the franchise is granted to the
electorate, provisions may not be made nor conditions
imposed which are inconsistent with article 14 of the
Constitution, irrespective of the fact that the right of
franchise is not a fundamental right guaranteed in Part III
of the Constitution.
Shri Krishnamoorthy Iyer, who appears on behalf of the
Union of India, contends that Explanation 1 to section 77(1)
of the Act was introduced in order to restore the law as
expounded in the decisions of this Court, prior to the
decision in Kanwar Lal Gupta. Those decisions, according to
learned counsel, are: Rananjaya Singh v. Baijnath Singh, Ram
Dayal v. Brijraj Singh and Magraj Patolia v. R.K. Birla. It
is urged that though these decisions have been considered in
Kanwar Lal Gupta, the Court was not right in holding that
the view taken in those decisions was not at variance with
the view taken by it. In support of this argument, our
attention was drawn to the observations made by Beg J. in
Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj Narain to the following effect:
"After examining the catena of cases, I think,
with great respect, that the decision of this Court in
Kanwar Lal Gupta’s case could be understood to point in
a direction contrary to that in which the previous
cases were decided. Hence, it appears to me that the
amendment made by Act 58 of 1974 by adding the
Explanation 1 to Section 77 of the Act could be
justified as merely an attempt to restore the law as it
had been understood to be previous to the decision of
the Court in Kanwar Lal Gupta’s case."
Counsel also relies on various decisions of the High Courts
in which it was held, prior to the introduction of
Explanation 1 to section 77(1), that the expenses incurred
by political parties in connection with the election of
their candidates do not fall within the mischief of section
77(1) read with section 123(6) of the Act. The provision
contained in Explanation 1 is attempted to be justified by
the respondents on the ground that political parties have
come to stay in our
633
country, that they are indispensable for the proper
functioning of democracy and, therefore, no exception can be
taken if a political party incurs expenditure to ensure the
success of the candidates sponsored by it. Explanation 1
treats all political parties equally and no violation of
Article 14 is involved. Counsel contended finally that
legislative policies bearing upon matters governing
elections are not open to judicial review.
The principal theme of the petitioner’s argument is
’purity of the election process’. All other arguments
converge upon that theme and are intended to give strength
and succour to it. There is a vast amount of literature on
the need to preserve the purity of elections. There is a
perceptible awareness amongst political observers, if not
amongst active politicians, that one of the ways to ensure
that elections are free and fair is to weed out the
influence of big money which, to use an expression which has
become a household word, is more black than white. The Lok
Sabha Debates, while Explanation 1 was being added to
section 77(1) of the Act, show that there was a consensus
amongst the Members of the House that election expenses must
be effectively controlled, which was also reflected in the
fact that in almost all countries of the world where
representative form of Government prevails, provisions as to
election expenses are invariably made. On October 18, 1979,
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the Election Commission of India circulated a letter to all
recognised national and State parties, proposing revision of
the maximum limits of election expenses. In the ’Notes’
appended to that letter, the Commission says that the
election "expenditure should be at such reasonably low level
as not to defeat the very purpose of fixing a ceiling on
election expenses, i.e. curbing the influence of ’money
power’ on elections". While the Janata Government was in
power, it had introduced Bill No. 153 of 1977 to amend the
Act by deleting, inter alia, Explanation 1 which was
introduced in Section 77(1) by Amending Act 58 of 1974. The
Statement of Objects and Reasons of that Bill, insofar as it
relates to the proposed deletion of Explanation 1 says: "It
is considered that the amendments made in the Representation
of People Act, 1951 far from ensuring free and fair
elections may have the effect of increasing money power. It
is, therefore, proposed to amend the Act to restore the
position that obtained earlier". The Bill eventually lapsed.
In Kanwar Lal Gupta one of us, Bhagwati J., observed:
634
"The other objective of limiting expenditure is to
eliminate, as far as possible, the influence of big
money in the electoral process. If there were no limit
on expenditure, political parties would go all out for
collecting contributions and obviously the largest
contributions would be from the rich and affluent who
constitute but a fraction of the electorate. The
pernicious influence of big money would then play a
decisive role in controlling the democratic process in
the country. This would inevitably lead to the worst
form of political corruption and that in its wake is
bound to produce other vices at all levels." (P. 266)
In Vatal Nagaraj v. R. Dayanand Sagar Krishna Iyer J,
speaking for the Court, observed:
"Money power casts a sinister shadow on our
elections and the political payoff of undue expenditure
in the various constituencies is too alluring for
parties to resist temptation. ........ The likely
evasion of the law by using big money through political
parties is a source of pollution of the Indian
political process. To channel funds into the campaign
for specific candidates getting around the requirements
of the law by establishing party committees is all too
familiar in this and some other countries."
The decision of the Bombay High Court in Tata Iron &
Steel Co. Ltd. exhibiting "considerable uneasiness of mind
and a sinking feeling in the heart", expressed the view that
any attempt on the part of any business house to finance a
political party is likely to contaminate the very spring of
democracy. In Indian Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., the Calcutta
High Court pointed out the dangers involved in political
parties being financed for election purposes by large
business houses. The High Court observed: "in the bid for
political favouritism by the bait of money, the company who
will be the highest bidder may secure the most unfair
advantage over the rival trade companies". The Court
lamented that such a state of affairs
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will mark the advent of the voice of the big business in
politics and pollute the political life of the country.
The Report of the Santhanam Committee on Prevention of
Corruption says:
"The public belief in the prevalence of corruption
at high political levels has been strengthened by the
manner in which funds are collected by political
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parties, especially at the time of elections. Such
suspicions attach not only to the ruling party but to
all parties, as often the opposition can also support
private vested interests as well members of the
Government party. It is, therefore, essential that the
conduct of political parties should be regulated in
this matter by strict principles in relation to
collection of funds and electioneering. It has to be
frankly recognised that political parties cannot be run
and elections be fought without large funds. But these
funds should come openly from the supporters or
sympathisers of the parties concerned.
If even one family in three pays one rupee a year
to a political party, the total annual contribution
will be more than what is needed for all legitimate
purposes of all political parties in India. It is the
reluctance and inability of these parties to make small
collections on a wide basis and the desire to resort to
short cuts through large donations that constitutes the
major source of corruption and even more of suspicion
of corruption."
The Report of the Expert Committee headed by Justice
Sacher on ’Companies and MRTP Acts’ deals extensively with
the evils flowing out of the donations made to political
parties by big business houses and points out the dangers
involved in allowing the money power to play a role in the
electoral process of our country. (paragraph 13.12). The
Committee recommended that section 293A of the Companies Act
which prohibited contribution by companies to political
parties should be further strengthened in the manner
indicated by it in paragraph 13.18.
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In England, before the passing of the Representation of
the People Act, 1949, the view had been expressed that
expenses incurred without the authority of the candidate or
election agent for promoting or procuring the election of a
candidate might not require to be returned as election
expenses, provided the expenses were incurred by persons who
were outsiders not agents, and accordingly did not have any
part in the conduct or management of the election. It is now
provided by the aforesaid Act that certain expenses with a
view to promoting or procuring the election of a candidate
at an election must not be incurred by any person other than
the candidate, his election agent and persons authorised in
writing by the election agent. If any person incurs, or
aids, abets, counsels or procures any other person to incur,
any expenses in contravention of this provision, he is
guilty of a corrupt practice. (See Halsbury’s Laws of
England, Fourth Edition, Volume 15, paragraph 721).
We have referred to this large data in order to show
that the influence of big money on the election process is
regarded universally as an evil of great magnitude. But
then, the question which we, as Judges, have to consider is
whether the provision contained in Explanation 1 suffers
from any constitutional infirmity and, particularly, whether
it violates Article 14. On that question we find it
difficult, reluctantly though, to accept the contention that
Explanation 1 offends against the right to equality. Under
that provision, (i) a political party or (ii) any other
association or body of persons or (iii) any individual,
other than the candidate or his election agent, can incur
expenses, without any limitation whatsoever, in connection
with the election of a candidate. Such expenses are not
deemed to be expenditure in connection with the election,
incurred or authorised by the candidate or by his election
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agent for the purposes of section 77(1). It is urged that,
by reason of this provision, affluent political parties get
an unequal and unfair advantage over other parties or
associations which do not command the same money power and
therefore, the guarantee of equality is violated. The answer
to this contention is that Explanation 1 classifies all
political parties or associations in one group and confers
upon them the same or similar advantage. Political parties
or, politically motivated associations or bodies of persons
or, individuals interested in political happenings, are
characterised by common attributes, the dominant attribute
being that they engage themselves in activities of a
political nature. Elections constitute the core of such
activities. A classification of this nature bears reasonable
relationship with the
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object of the statute that expenses incurred by those who
fall within the particular group should not be regarded as
expenditure incurred or authorised by the candidate or his
election agent. It is then no answer to say that all
political parties are not equally situated in the wealth
which they command. Were such an argument open, the limit
set upon election expenses by Rule 90 shall also have to be
regarded as violative of the guarantee of equality because,
a fairly large number of contesting candidates, particularly
the independents, would not be in a position to spend as
large an amount as rupees one lakh, which is the permissible
limit in large constituencies. Classification has to be
broadly reasonable in order to sustain the challenge of
unconstitutionally. One cannot dissect that process and
discover shades within shades to nullify it on the ground of
inequality. It is a stark fact of life that an independent
who contests an election on his own, that is, without the
support of a political party, is at a considerable
disadvantage as compared with candidates supported by
political parties. But, that does not violate the rule of
equality. It is not the election law which creates such
inequalities. Inequalities exist apart from that law and
are, unfortunately, implicit in the unequal positions in
which the citizens find themselves. What the law does is to
allow, in an equal measure, all political parties,
associations or bodies of persons or individuals (other than
the candidate or his election agent) to incur expenses in
connection with the election of a candidate, which need not
be included in the return of election expenses which the
candidate is required to file.
Though Explanation 1 clubs associations, bodies of
persons and certain individuals together with political
parties, it is plain that the benefit conferred by that
provision goes largely, though not exclusively to political
parties. It is the political parties which sponsor
candidates, that are in a position to incur large election
expenses which often run into astronomical figures. We do
not consider that preferring political parties for exclusion
from the sweep of monetary limits on election expenses, is
so unreasonable or arbitrary as to justify the preference
being struck down upon that ground. In the first place, the
statute does not make the affluence of a political party an
electoral standard for acquiring eligibility prescribed by
the Explanation. Secondly, it is not an unwise policy, to
the extent that we can examine the wisdom of legislative
policies, to ensure reasonable reduction in the number of
contesting candidates, which can be done by conferring
special privileges upon political parties. It is a matter of
common knowledge that in the
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recent elections to the Lok Sabha and the Legislative
Assemblies, the printing of the ballot papers posed a
serious problem to the Election Commission since, the number
of contesting candidates in certain constituencies was
absurdly large. In any democratic system of Government,
political parties occupy a distinct and unique place. They
are looked upon as guardian angels by their members though,
occasionally, they fail to discharge the benign role of a
guardian, leave alone the angelic part of it. It is through
them that the generality of people attempt to voice or
ventilate their grievances. Considering, also, the power
which they wield in the administration of Governmental
affairs, a special conferment of benefits on them in the
matter of modalities governing the election process cannot
be regarded as unreasonable or arbitrary. That may, perhaps,
help explain why in Kanwarlal Gupta the Court drew a
distinction between the expenses incurred by a political
party specifically in connection with the election of a
particular candidate and the expenditure incurred by it on
general party propaganda, the latter not being includible in
the return of election expenses which the candidate has to
file. The rationale of that decision, though not expressed
in so many words, is that by reason of the important
position which political parties occupy in the democratic
set up, they are entitled to incur expenditure for
projecting their programmes and popularising their policies.
Explanation 1 only takes one step ahead, important though.
It obliterates the dividing line drawn in Kanwarlal Gupta,
between expenses incurred ’in connection with’ the election
of a particular candidate and expenses incurred on ’general
party propaganda’. All persons, except the candidate and his
election agent, are now free to incur expenditure of the
former kind too, without the constraints of ceiling imposed
upon election expenditure by section 77(3) read with Rule 90
of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961. Whether Explanation
I restores the law as it was understood before Kanwarlal
Gupta or, it makes an innovation is irrelevant for deciding
upon its validity. Every law, whether restorative or
innovative, has to be tested on the touchstone of the
Constitution.
It is evident that a certain class of individuals has
been included in Explanation 1 out of abundant caution, so
as to avoid the challenge that they have been discriminated
against in comparison with political parties and
associations or bodies of persons. It is true that
individuals cannot match their spending ability with the
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financial prowess of political parties or trade unions. But,
that takes one back to the same point, though in a different
garb: All political parties are not equally affluent and
therefore those that command big money get an unfair
advantage over the others. Election laws are not designed to
produce economic equality amongst citizens. They can, at
best, provide an equal opportunity to all sections of
society to project their respective points of view on the
occasion of elections. The method, somewhat unfortunate, by
which law has achieved that purpose, is by freeing all
others except the candidate and his election agent from the
restriction on spending, so long as the expenditure is
incurred or authorised by those others. The argument, that
individuals are not able to reap the benefit of Explanation
1 effectively by reason of the paucity funds at their
command, has the same answer as the argument that every
contesting candidate cannot afford to spend as large a sum
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as rupees one lakh and, therefore, those who can spend that
much have an unfair advantage over those who cannot. If the
argument that different political parties have been treated
equally though they are situated unequally, or that
individuals have been discriminated against either inter se
or in relation to political parties and associations to
correct, the only method which would measure up to the
required constitutional standard is the one in which the
State would have to allocate funds from its own exchequer in
order to enable the various candidates to contest elections.
That would be the fairest form of fairness. But, that is a
far cry.
Counsel for the petitioners urged that Explanation 1
renders the main provision in section 77(1) nugatory, by
taking away with one hand what is given by the other.
Assuming that this is so, the Explanation would not become
unconstitutional for that reason. The argument really hears
upon the interpretation of the section and the Explanation,
and not upon the validity of the Explanation. We do not
agree that the Explanation denudes the section of its
meaning and makes it purposeless. Section 77(1) deals with
the expenditure ’incurred or authorised by’ a candidate or
his election agent, in connection with the election. It is
obligatory to keep a separate and correct account of such
expenditure. Explanation 1 deals with the expenditure
incurred or authorised by a political party or any other
association or body of persons or by an individual other
than the candidate or his election agent. It is not
obligatory for the candidate or his election agent to keep a
separate and correct account of such expenditure. That is
because of two reasons. In the first
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place, such expenditure is not incurred or authorised by the
candidate or his election agent and therefore, in the very
nature of things, they cannot keep an account of that
expenditure. Secondly, the argument that expenditure of the
kind described in Explanation 1 must be deemed to be
incurred or authorised by the candidate or his election
agent, is met by the provision in the Explanation that it
shall not be so deemed. Section 77(1) on the one hand and
Explanation 1 on the other, deal with two different
situations wherefore, the latter cannot render the former
meaningless.
While we are on this question, we would like to point
out that if an expenditure which purports to have been
incurred, for example, by a political party, has in fact
been incurred by the candidate or his election agent,
Explanation 1 will not be attracted. It is only if the
expenditure is in fact incurred or authorised by a political
party or any other association or body of persons, or by an
individual (other than the candidate or his election agent)
that the Explanation will come into play. The candidate
cannot place his own funds in the power or possession of a
political party, or a trade union or some other person and
plead for the protection of Explanation 1. The reason is
that, in such a case, the incurring of the expenditure by
those others, is a mere facade. In truth and substance, the
expenditure is incurred by the candidate himself because,
the money is his. What matters for the purpose of
Explanation 1 is not whose hand it is that spends the money.
The essence of the matter is, whose money it is. It is only
if the money expended by a political party, for example, is
not laid at its disposal by the candidate or his election
agent that Explanation 1 would apply. In other words, it
must be shown, in order that Explanation 1 may apply, that
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the source of the expenditure incurred was not the candidate
or his election agent. What is important is to realise that
Explanation 1 does not create a fiction. It deals with the
realities of political situations. It does not provide that
the expenditure in fact incurred or authorised by a
candidate or his election agent, shall not be deemed to be
incurred or authorised by them, if the amount is defrayed by
a political party. That would be tantamount to creating a
fiction. The object of the Explanation is to ensure that the
expenditure incurred, for example, by a political party on
its own, that is, without using the funds provided by the
candidate or his election agent shall not be deemed to be
expenditure incurred or authorised by the candidate or his
election agent. If the expenditure is incurred from out of
the funds provided by the candidate or his election agent
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section 77(1) and not Explanation I would apply. It is
necessary to make this clarification since, the use in
Explanation 1 of expressions which are generally used when
the legislative intent is to create a fiction, is apt to
cause confusion and misunderstanding. The reason why the
expression "shall not be deemed to be" is used in
Explanation 1 is that the Parliament wanted to get over the
effect of the judgment of this Court in Kanwar Lal Gupta.
Similarly, the reason why the expression "shall not ever be
deemed to have been" is used in the Explanation is that the
intention of the Parliament was to get over the effect of
that judgment retrospectively, except to the extent
mentioned in clauses (a) and (b) of the Proviso to the
Explanation.
It is essential that the limited range of Explanation 1
ought not to be enlarged. The ceiling placed on election
expenses is a basic commandment of the Act, not a pious
edict. Its object is to keep a check on the expenditure
incurred by candidates on their own elections, directly or
through their election agents. They cannot be permitted to
resort to subterfuges in order to evade the restraint
imposed by sections 77(1) and 77(3) of the Act. Homage to
the principle of free and fair elections has to be real, not
formal.
The petitioner is not unjustified in criticising the
provision contained in Explanation 1 as diluting the
principle of free and fair elections, which is the
cornerstone of any democratic polity. But, it is not for us
to lay down policies in matters pertaining to elections. If
the provisions of the law violate the Constitution, they
have to be struck down. We cannot, however, negate a law on
the ground that we do not approve of the policy which
underlies it. Can the Court, for example, strike down Rule
90 on the ground that the limit of rupees one lakh is too
high in the Indian context ? We may have our own preferences
and perceptions but, they cannot be used for invalidating
laws.
In so far as election laws are concerned, there is yet
another impediment to contend with. The right to contest and
election or to vote at it is not a Common Law right. As
observed by Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Jyoti Basu v. Debi
Ghosal:
"A right to elect, fundamental though it is to
democracy, is, anomalously enough, neither a funda-
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mental 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
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right to be elected and no right to dispute an
election. Statutory creations they are, and therefore,
subject to statutory limitation. 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... We have already referred to the Scheme of the
Act. We have noticed the necessity to rid ourselves of
notions based on Common Law or Equity. We see that we
must seek an answer to the question within the four
corners of the Statute. What does the Act say ?"
What does the Act say ? It says through Explanation 1 that
persons other than the candidate or his election agent may,
on their own, release their purse strings and never tie them
again.
We have already said that the question as regards the
constitutional validity of Explanation 1 has to be
determined regardless of the consideration as to whether the
said Explanation restores the law as it stood before the
decision of this Court in Kanwar Lal Gupta or whether it
introduces a new provision altogether. We have decided upon
the constitutionality of the Explanation on its own terms.
It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider the pre-
Explanation decisions of this Court in Rananjaya Singh v.
Baijnath Singh, Ram Dayal v. Brijraj Singh and Magraj
Patolia v. R.K. Birla, except to extract a passage from the
last of these three cases, which reads thus:
"Now coming to the corrupt practice of incurring
expenditure beyond the prescribed limit, in several
decisions this Court has ruled that it is not
sufficient for the petitioners to prove merely that the
expenditure more than the prescribed limit had been
incurred in connection with the election,’ he must go
further and prove that the
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excess expenditure was incurred with the consent or
under the authority of the returned candidate or his
election agent."
In the result, the Writ Petition and the Civil
Miscellaneous Petitions are dismissed. There will be no
order as to costs.
A.P.J. Petition dismissed.
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