Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURENDRA NATH KHOSLA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DALIP SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/11/1956
BENCH:
ACT:
Election-Improper rejection of nomination Paper-Whether
result of the election materially affected Presumption-
Double member constituency -Whether election wholly void-
Attestation Thumb impression of Proposer and seconder-
Whether Properly attested-The Representation of the People
Act, 1951 XLIII of 1951), s. 100(I)(c)-The Representations
of the People (Conduct of Elections and Election Petitions)
Rules, 1951, r. 2(2).
HEADNOTE:
Twelve candidates filed nomination papers for election from
a double member constituency for the State Assembly, one of
the seats being reserved for the Schedule Castes. The thumb
impressions of the proposer and seconder of a candidate were
attested by a magistrate specified in this behalf by the
Election Commission. But there had been a mistake of
omission of the name of the magistrate in the communication
sent by the Election Commission to the local authorities.
The returning officer rejected the nomination paper on the
ground that there was no proper attestation of the thumb
impressions of the proposer and seconder. An election
petition was filed to set aside the election on the ground
that the nomination paper had been rejected improperly and
that this had materially affected the result of the
election. The Election Tribunal set aside the entire
election:
Held, (1) that the magistrate having in fact been specified
by the Election Commission, the attestation by him was good
attestation, and the rejection of the nomination paper was
improper,(2)that in the case of an improper rejection of a
nomination paper there was a presumption that the result of
the election had -been materially affected, and (3) that the
whole election, including that of the Schedule Caste
candidate, was void.
Vasisht Narain Sharma v. Dev Chandra, (1955) 1 S.C.R. 509,
Hari Yishnu Katnath v. Syed Ahmad Ishaque, (1955) 1 S.C.R.
104, distinguished.
Chatturbhuj Vithaldas jasani v. Moreshwar Parashram, (1954)
S.C.R. 817, and Karnail Singh v. Election Tribunal, Hissar,
10 Elec. Law Reports, 189, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 23 of 1956.
Appeal against the judgment and order dated August 26, 1955,
of the Election Tribunal, Patiala, in Election Petition No.
12 of 1954.
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Gopal Singh, for the Appellants.
Jagan Nath Kaushal and Naunit Lal, for respondent No. 6.
1956. November 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SINHA J.-This appeal by special leave is directed against
the majority judgment and order of the Election Tribunal of
Patiala, dated August 26, 1955, declaring the two
appellants’ election to be void on account of the improper
rejection of the nomination paper of Buta Singh, respondent
18.
In order to appreciate the arguments raised on behalf of the
appellant,% it is necessary to state the following facts :
The appellants and respondents 2 to 18 filed their
nomination papers on January 9,1954, for election from a
double member constituency of Samana to the Pepsu
Legislative Assembly. Of the two seats, one was reserved
for the Schedule Caste and the other was a general
constituency. Scrutiny of the nomination papers by the
Returning Officer took place on January 13, 1954. The
Returning Officer accepted all the nomination papers except
that of Buta Singh aforesaid on the ground that the thumb
impressions of the proposer and the seconder had not been
attested by an officer in accordance with the Election
Rules. Polling took place on February 24, 1954, and the
results announced in the Pepsu Gazette on March 4, 1954.
The results thus announced showed that the first appellant,
Suren Ara Nath Khosla, had obtained 13,853 votes in the
general constituency and the second appellant, Pritam Singh,
had polled 13,663 votes for the reserved seat. They having
secured the largest number of votes from their respective
’constituencies were declared to have been duly elected.
The other candidates got smaller number of votes which it is
not necessary to set out here. Buta Singh aforsaid, whose
nomination paper had been rejected by the Returning Officer,
did not take any further steps, But Dalip Singh, the first
respondent, filed an election petition with the Election
Commission, respondent 19. The election petition was
enquired into by the Election Tribunal
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consisting, of three persons, one of them being the
Chairman. A number of issues were joined between the
parties. The Chairman and another member of the Tribunal
decided the material issues 1 and 4 in favour of the first
respondent to the effect that the 18th respondent had been
duly proposed and seconded, that the Returning Officer had
wrongly rejected his nomination paper and that as a result
of that rejection the result of the election as a whole had
been materially affected. On those findings they declared
the election void as a whole and set aside the election of
the appellants. The third member of the Tribunal, while
agreeing with the majority in their judgment on the other
issues, disagreed with them on the most material issue in
the case, namely, issue 4, and held that the first
respondent had failed to prove, that the wrong rejection of
the nomination paper of the 18th respondent had materially
affected the result of the election. The appellants moved
this Court and obtained special leave to appeal from the
majority judgment declaring the election to be void as a
whole.
The appeal was first placed for hearing before a Division
Bench of three Judges on March 23,1956. That Bench directed
that the papers be laid before the Hon’ble the Chief Justice
for having the case heard by a larger Bench because in their
view the case raised a difficult and important point about
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election law. They made reference to the full Court
decision in Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmad Ishaque(1),
which upheld the earlier decision of this Court in Vasisht
Narain Sharma v. Dev Chandra(2), as authorities for the
proposition that the burden of proof is on the person who
seeks to challenge the election and that he must prove that
the result of the election has been materially affected by
the improper rejection of the non lination paper. They
indicated the difficulty of discharging such a burden unless
some sort of presumption was called in aid of the petitioner
who sought to have the election set aside.
In this Court learned counsel for the appellants has raised
three questions for our determination:. (1) That
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104,
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 509.
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the first. issue had been wrongly determined by the Election
Tribunal and that it should have been held that the thumb
impressions of the proposer and seconder of the 18th
respondent had not been properly verified according to the
Election Rules and that therefore the rejection of the
nomination paper by the Returning Officer was justified by
law. (2) Assuming that the nomination paper had been wrongly
rejected, the fourth issue had been wrongly decided by the,
majority in so far as it held that there was a presumption
that the wrong rejection of the nomination had the necessary
result of materially affecting the election and that the
evidence led on behalf of the appellants had not-rebutted
that presumption. It was further contended that the
minority judgment on issue No. 4 to the effect that it was
for the first respondent, who ,sought to have the election
set aside, to prove that the result of the election had been
materially affected on account of the wrong rejection of the
nomination paper of the 18th respondent was correct, and
that he had failed to establish that by evidence. (3) That
in any case, the election of the second appellant in respect
of the reserved seat should not have been set aside.
The first issue is in these terms:
" Whether respondent No. 19 (respondent No. 18 in this
Court) was duly proposed and seconded and thumb impressions
of the proposer and the seconder on his nomination paper
were attested in accordance with law?"
The Tribunal took the view that as a matter of fact the
respondent Buta Singh had been duly proposed and seconded’
The learned counsel for the appellants did not challenge
that finding of fact. But he contended that the further
finding of the Tribunal that the thumb impressions of the
proposer and the seconder on the nomination paper had been
attested in accordance with law is erroneous. As to the
regularity of the attestation, the matter depends, upon the
rules framed under the provisions of the Representation’ of
the People Act, XLIII of 1951 (hereinafter referred
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to as the Act), particularly r. 2(2). which is in, these
terms:
" For the purposes of the Act or these rules, a person who
is unable to, Write his name shall,, unless otherwise
expressly provided in these rules,be deemed to have signed
an instrument or other paper if he has placed a mark on such
instrument or other paper in the presence of the Returning
Officer or the presiding officer or such other officer as
may be specified in this, behalf by the Election Commission
and such officer on being satisfied as to his identity has
attested the mark: as being the mark of such person."
In this case the nomination had been attested by a, local
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magistrate and the Tribunal after referring to the relevant
evidence has recorded the finding that magistrate had been
specified by the, Election Commission in that behalf. The
question, therefore, is essentially one of fact. But the
learned counsel for the appellants contended that, as found
by the Tribunal, there had been a mistake of omission in the
communication from, the Election Commission to the local,
election officer and that such a mistake, clerical or.
accidental though it may have been, has the effect of
rendering the act station unacceptable. We are not prepared
to accede to that contention as sound in principle. The
Tribunal having found as a fact that the persons whose thumb
impressions the nomination paper. purported to, bear had
really proposed and seconded the candidate and that those
thumb impressions had -been attested by a magistrate who had
in, fact been authorised in that behalf, there is no room;
for the contention that, the Returning Officer was justified
in rejecting the nomination paper in question. The first
ground of attack therefore fails.
The second ground of attack is based on issue No. 4, which
is in these terms:
" Whether the rejection of the nomination ’paper of,
respondent, No. 19 (respondent No. 18 in this Court) had
materially, affected the result of the election."
On his issue the majority of the Tribunal took the view
that in a case where a nomination, paper had
184
been improperly rejected there is a strong presumption that
the result of the election has been materially affected. It
referred to a large number of decisions of different
Election Tribunals both before and after the enactment of
the Act to show that the view taken in most of the decisions
was that in a case like this there was a presumption in
favour of holding that the result of the election had been
materially affected and that. the burden lay,on the person
seeking to uphold the election to prove the contrary. They
gave effect to, that presumption and held that the evidence:
’Adduced by the appellants (then respondents) did not rebut
that presumption. The learned counsel for the appellants
invited our,attention to the words of the statute.. Section
100(1)(c) is in these terms-:
"If the Tribunal is of opinion
(c) that the result of the election has been materially
affected by the improper acceptance or rejection of any
nomination,
the Tribunal shall declare the election, to be wholly void."
He argued that the legislature has placed " improper
acceptance " and " improper rejection " of a nomination
paper on the same footing, and the condition precedent to
the declaration of an election to be void is that the
Tribunal should be satisfied not only that there has been an
improper rejection of a nomination paper but Also that
improper rejection has materially affected the result of the
election, (confining the provisions of the statute to;.the
facts of the present case). Reliance was also placed by him
on the two decisions ’of this Court, namely, Vashisht Narain
Sharma v. Dev Chandra (supra) and -Hari Vishnu Kamath v.
Syed Ahmad Ishaque (supra) in support of the proposition
that the two conditions are cumulative and must -both’ be
established and that the burden of establishing them is on
the person who seeks to have the election set aside. He.
also relied upon the terms of,& 90(3) of the Act to the
effect, that the provisions of the, Evidence Act shall,
subject to the provisions of
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the Act, be deemed to apply in all respects to the trial of
an election petition. The contention further is that ss.
101 and 102 of the Evidence Act must therefore apply and the
burden must be cast on the petitioner before the Tribunal to
establish both the conditions before any relief could be
granted to him. In our opinion, that argument does not
advance the case of the appellants any more than what has
been laid down by this Court in the cases referred to above.
The other provisions of the Evidence Act including the rules
of presumption must also be equally applicable. But neither
of the two cases referred to above directly applies to the
facts of the present case which is one of improper rejection
of a nomination paper. A Division Bench of this Court has
laid down in the law of Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v.
Moreshwar Parashram (1) at p. 842 that the improper
rejection of a nomination paper "affects the whole
election". A similar view was taken in the case of Karnail
Singh v. Election Tribunal, Hissar (2), by a Bench of five
Judges of this Court. But, as pointed out on behalf of the
appellants, in neither of those two cases the relevant
provisions of the Act have been discussed. It appears that
though the words of the section are in general terms with
equal application to the case of improper acceptance, as
also of improper rejection of a nomination paper, case law
has made a distinction between the two classes of cases. So
far as the latter class of cases is concerned, it may be
pointed out that almost all the Election Tribunals in the
country have consistently taken the view that there is a
presumption in the case, of improper rejection of a
nomination paper that it has materially affected the result
of the election. Apart from the practical difficulty,
almost the impossibility, of demonstrating that the electors
would have cast their votes in a particular way, that is to
say, that a substantial number of them would have cast their
votes in favour of the rejected candidate, the fact that one
of several candidates for an election had been kept out of
the arena is by itself a very material
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 817. (2) 10 Elec. Law Reports 189.
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consideration. Cases can easily be imagined where the most
desirable candidates from the point of view of electors and
the most formidable candidate from the point of view of the
other candidates may have been wrongly kept out from seeking
election. By keeping out such a desirable candidate, the
officer rejecting the nomination paper may have prevented
the electors from voting for the best candidate available.
On the other hand, in the case of an improper acceptance of
a nomination paper, proof may easily be forthcoming to
demonstrate that the coming into the arena of an additional
candidate has not had any effect on the election of the best
candidate in the field. The conjecture therefore is
permissible that the legislature realising the difference
between the two classes of cases has given legislative
sanction to the view by amending s. 100 by the
Representation of the People (Second Amendment) Act, XXVII
of 1956, and by going to the length of providing that an
improper rejection of any nomination paper is conclusive
proof of the election being void. For the reasons
aforesaid, in our opinion, the majority decision on the
fourth issue is also correct.
Alternatively, it was argued by the learned counsel for the
appellants that if there was such a presumption, it was a
rebuttable one and the Tribunal should have held that the
evidence adduced by the appellants had rebutted that
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presumption. He proposed to take us through the oral
evidence adduced by them. But we refused to go into that
evidence for the simple reason that this Court in an appeal
by special leave does not ordinarily reopen findings of fact
recorded by a competent Tribunal. It must, therefore, be
held that the Tribunal was justified in coming to the
conclusion that the result of the election had been
materially affected by the improper rejection of the
nomination in question.
Lastly it was urged that assuming that the Tribunal was
justified in declaring the election to be void so far as the
general seat was concerned, there was no reason to set aside
the election as a whole and that, therefore, the election of
the second appellant should not have
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been set aside. But s. 100 in terms provides that if the
Tribunal was of the opinion, as it was in this case, that
the result of the election had been materially affected by
the improper rejection of the nomination paper, "the
Tribunal shall declare the election to be wholly void". The
election in this case was in respect of a double seat
constituency and was one integral whole. If it had to be
declared void, the Tribunal was justified in setting as in
the election as a whole.
As all the contentions raised in support of the appeal
fail, it must be dismissed with costs to the contesting
respondents.
Appeal dismissed.