Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 765 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Rajendra Singh Rana and Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Swami Prasad Maurya and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/02/2007
BENCH:
K.G.Balakrishnan CJI & H.K.Sema & AR.Lakshmanan & P.K.Balasubramanyan &
D.K. Jain
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
(Arising out of SLP(C) No. 4664 of 2006) and Civil Appeal Nos. 766, 767,
768, 769, 770 and 771 of 2007 (Arising out of S.L.P.(C) Nos. 4669, 4671,
4677, 6323, 10497 and 10498 of 2006)
DELIVERED BY:
P.K. Balasubramanyan, J.
P.K. Balasubramanyan, J.
Leave granted.
The elections for the constitution of the 14th Legislative Assembly of the
State of Uttar Pradesh were held in February 2002. Since, none of the
political parties secured the requisite majority, a coalition Government
was formed, headed by Ms. Mayawati, leader of the Bahujan Samaj Party
(hereinafter referred to as, ’B.S.P.’). B.S.P was admittedly a recognised
national party. The ministry was formed in May, 2002. On 25.8.2003, the
cabinet is said to have taken a unanimous decision for recommending the
dissolution of the Assembly. Based on it, on 26.8.2003, Ms. Mayawati
submitted the resignation of her cabinet. Apparently, after the cabinet
decision to recommend the dissolution of the Assembly and before Ms.
Mayawati cabinet actually resigned, the leader of the Samajwadi Party
staked his claim before the Governor for forming a Government. On
27.8.2003, 13 Members of the Legislative Assembly (hereinafter referred to
as, ’M.L.As.’) elected to the Assembly on tickets of B.S.P., met the
Governor and requested him to invite the leader of the Samajwadi Party to
form the Government. Originally, 8 M.L.As. had met the Governor and 5
others joined them later in the day, making up the 13.
The Governor did not accept the recommendation of Mayawati cabinet for
dissolution of the Assembly. On 29.8.2003, the Governor invited the leader
of the Samajwadi Party, Mr. Mulayam Singh Yadav to form the Government and
gave him a time of two weeks to prove his majority in the Assembly. On
4.9.2003, Mr. Swami Prasad Maurya, leader of the Legislature B.S.P filed a
petition before the Speaker in terms of Article 191 read with the Tenth
Schedule to the Constitution of India, praying that the 13 B.S.P. M.L.As.
who had proclaimed support to Mulayam Singh Yadav before the Governor on
27.8.2003, be disqualified in terms of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule to
the Constitution on the basis that they had voluntarily given up their
membership of B.S.P., their original political party. On 05.09.2003, a
caveat was also filed on behalf of the B.S.P. before the Speaker of the
Legislative Assembly requesting the Speaker to hear the representative of
B.S.P. in case any claim of split is made by the members who had left the
Party. On 06.09.2003, a request was made by 37 M.L.As., said to be on
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behalf of 40 M.L.As. elected on B.S.P. tickets, requesting Page 0999 the
Speaker to recognise a split in B.S.P. on the basis that one third of the
Members of the B.S.P. legislature party consisting of 109 legislators, had
in a body separated from the Party pursuant to a meeting held in the
M.L.A.’s hostel, Darulshafa, Lucknow on 26.8.2003. The Speaker took up the
said application for recognition of a split, the same evening. He verified
that the 37 Members who had signed the application presented to him had in
fact signed it since they were physically present before him. Overruling
the objections of Maurya, the leader of the legislature B.S.P., the Speaker
passed an order accepting the split in B.S.P. on the arithmetic that 37 out
of 109 comprises one third of the Members of the legislature Party. This
group came to be known as the Lok Tantrik Bahujan Dal. But, the said Dal
was short lived. For, the Speaker, a little later, on 6.9.2003 itself,
accepted that the said Dal had merged with the Samajwadi Party. It is
relevant to note that in the order dated 6.9.2003, the Speaker did not
decide the application made by B.S.P. seeking disqualification of 13 of its
M.L.As. who were part of the 37 that appeared before the Speaker and
postponed the decision on that application. It appears that on 8.9.2003,
three more M.L.As. appeared before the Speaker stating that they supported
the 37 M.L.As. who had appeared before him on 6.9.2003 and were part of
that group. The Speaker accepted their claim as well.
On 29.9.2003, Writ Petition No. 5085 of 2003 was filed in the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad before the Lucknow Bench challenging the said order
of the Speaker. On 1.10.2003, it came up before a Division Bench of the
High Court, and it is seen from the Order Sheet maintained by the High
Court that the Writ Petition was directed to be listed on 8.10.2003 for
further hearing. It was adjourned to 13.10.2003 and then again to
22.10.2003 and to 29.10.2003 and further to 5.11.2003. It is recorded in
the Order Sheet that on 5.11.2003, learned Counsel for the writ petitioner
was heard in detail. No order was passed, but the matter was adjourned to
the next day at the request of counsel, who was apparently representing the
Advocate General of the State. From 6.11.2003, the matter was adjourned to
10.11.2003 and on the request of the learned Advocate General, it was
directed to be listed on 14.11.2003. The same day, the Speaker before whom
the petition filed by the writ petitioner Maurya seeking disqualification
of 13 of the members of the B.S.P. was pending, after noticing what he had
done earlier on 6.9.2003 and 8.9.2003, passed an order adjourning the
petition seeking disqualification, on the ground that it would be in the
interests of justice to await the decision of the High Court in the pending
Writ Petition since the decision therein on some of the issues, would be
relevant for his consideration. It was therefore ordered that the petition
for disqualification may be placed before him for disposal and necessary
action after the High Court had decided the Writ Petition.
In the High Court, the Writ Petition had a chequered career. On
14.12.2003, when it came up, it was directed to be listed the next week
before the appropriate Bench. On 16.4.2004, it was directed to be put up on
22.4.2004. On 22.4.2004, it was dismissed for default with an observation
that neither any counsel on behalf of the writ petitioner Page 1000 nor on
behalf of the Speaker was present. It may be noted that on 5.11.2003, the
High Court had recorded that it had heard counsel for the writ petitioner
in full and the adjournment for further hearing was at the behest of the
Advocate General. Even then, on 22.4.2004, the High Court chose to dismiss
the Writ Petition for default on the ground that counsel on both sides were
not present. An application for restoration was filed on 27.4.2004 and this
application was kept pending for about 8 months until on 20.12.2004, an
order was passed recalling the order dated 22.4.2004 dismissing the Writ
Petition for default and restoring it to its original number with a further
direction to list the Writ Petition before the appropriate Bench on
4.1.2005. On 4.1.2005, the Writ Petition was adjourned at the request of
the Advocate General to the next day. On 5.1.2005, it was noticed by the
Bench that the matter appeared to have been heard in detail at the
admission stage and the Writ Petition had neither been admitted nor any
notice ordered to the respondents and counsel for the writ petitioner was
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again heard on the question of admission and the application for interim
relief he had filed and it was recorded that he had concluded his arguments
with the further direction to put up the Writ Petition the next day. On
6.1.2005, it was recorded that counsel for the writ petitioner did not
press for interim relief at that stage and hence the application for
interim relief was being rejected.
On 6.1.2005, the Writ Petition was admitted after hearing counsel for
the writ petitioner and some counsel who appeared for the respondents.
Notices were ordered to be issued to the opposite parties, the group of
M.L.As. who had moved the Speaker for recognition of a split. After some
further postings, on 18.2.2005, orders were passed regarding service of
notice and the Writ Petition was directed to be posted for hearing on
10.3.2005. On 10.3.2005, finding that there was some attempt at evasion of
notices, the court ordered substituted service of notices and directed the
listing of the Writ Petition on 11.4.2005. On 11.4.2005, service of notice
was declared sufficient and the matter was directed to be posted on
2.5.2005 for hearing. After a number of adjournments mainly at the instance
of the respondents in the Writ Petition, arguments were commenced. On
12.5.2005, counsel for the writ petitioner concluded his arguments and the
case was further adjourned to 25.5.2005 for further hearing after taking
certain counter affidavits on record. Ultimately, the argument of one of
the counsel for the respondents was started and the matter was adjourned to
6.7.2005 for completion of his arguments and for arguments by other counsel
for the respondents in the Writ Petition.
Meanwhile, on 7.9.2005, the Speaker passed an order rejecting the
petition filed by Maurya for disqualification of 13 M.L.As. of B.S.P. It
may be noted that the Speaker had earlier adjourned that application for
being taken up after the Writ Petition was decided. Meanwhile, the
arguments went on in the High Court and the Writ Petition was directed to
be put up on 17.8.2005 for further arguments. The matter was adjourned to
the next day and again to subsequent dates.
On 8.9.2005, an application was made on behalf of the respondents
seeking dismissal of the Writ Petition in view of the order of the Page
1001 Speaker dated 7.9.2005 dismissing the application seeking
disqualification of 13 M.L.As. filed by the writ petitioner. The said
application was dismissed the same day. On 9.9.2005, arguments were heard
and the matter was adjourned for further hearing.
On 21.10.2005, an application was made on behalf of the writ petitioner
praying for an amendment of the Writ Petition. It was directed to be listed
granting time to the respondents in the Writ Petition to file objections.
On 22.11.2005, the Order Sheet records an order by one of the judges as
follows:
The matter was listed today only for consideration and disposal of the
amendment application together with application for further hearing and by
4.00 PM arguments with respect to amendment application could be concluded.
As indicated in the order passed on the application brother M.A. Khan (J)
took out a typed and signed ’order’ rejecting the application for
amendment. Like previous order, brother Hon’ble M.A. Khan again took out a
duly typed and signed judgment/ his opinion and directed the bench
Secretary to place the same on record as his "judgment" in the main writ
petition. The draft of the said judgment was also not circulated to me nor
was I ever been consulted by him. It is further pointed out that brother
Hon’ble M.A. Khan (J) did not indicate at any time that he had already
written out the judgment. Further at no point of time, I had indicated to
brother M.A. Khan (J) that the judgment in the writ petition may be
prepared by him. It goes without saying that neither the orders passed on
the application nor the so called judgment on the merits of the writ
petition have been dictated in the open court by brother Hon’ble M.A.
Khan(J).
Apparently, in view of these happenings, the learned Chief Justice
constituted a Full Bench for hearing the Writ Petition. The amendment
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prayed for was allowed and the Writ Petition ultimately heard finally and
disposed of by the judgment under appeal. As per the judgment under appeal,
the Writ Petition was dismissed by the learned Chief Justice while the
other two learned Judges quashed the orders of the Speaker and directed the
Speaker to reconsider the matter with particular reference to the petition
for disqualification of 13 M.L.As. filed by the writ petitioner and pass
appropriate orders. Feeling aggrieved, these appeals have been filed.
Whatever may be our ultimate decision on the merits of the case, we
must express our unhappiness at the tardy manner in which a matter of some
consequence and constitutional propriety was dealt with by the High Court.
More promptitude was expected of that court and it should have ensured that
the unfortunates happenings (from the point of view of just and due
administration of justice) were avoided. Though we are normally reluctant
to comment on the happenings in the High Court, we are constrained to make
the above observations to emphasis the need to ensure that no room is given
for criticism of the manner of working of the institution.
The respondents in the Writ Petition, the M.L.As. constituting 37
B.S.P. members who left the party, are the appellants in all the appeals
except the appeal arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 6323 of
2006 filed by the Page 1002 writ petitioner - Maurya. Whereas, the
respondents in the Writ Petition challenge the decision of the majority of
the Bench remitting the matter to the Speaker, the writ petitioner, in his
appeal challenges the order of remand made by the majority on a plea that
on the pleadings and the materials available, the High Court ought to have
straightaway allowed the petition filed by the writ petitioner for
disqualification of the 13 M.L.As. According to him, a remand was
unnecessary and considering the circumstances, a final order ought to have
been passed by the High Court.
Article 191 of the Constitution of India deals with the
disqualification for membership of legislative assemblies just like Article
102 deals with disqualification for membership to the Houses of Parliament.
Article 102 and Article 191 came to be amended by the Constitution (Fifty-
second Amendment) Act, 1985 with effect from 1.3.1985 providing that a
person shall be disqualified for being a member of either Houses of
Parliament or of Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council of a State if
he is so disqualified under the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution of
India. The Tenth Schedule was also added containing provisions as to
disqualification on ground of defection. The constitutional validity of
this amendment was challenged before this Court in Kihoto Hollohan v.
Zachillhu and Ors. This Court upheld the validity of the amendment subject
to the finding that paragraph 7 of the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution
of India required ratification in terms of Article 368(2) of the
Constitution of India and it had not come into force, so that there was no
need to pronounce on the validity of paragraph 7 to the extent it precluded
a judicial review of the decision of the Speaker. But it held that judicial
review could not be kept out, though such review might not be of a wide
nature. We are proceeding to examine the relevant aspects in the light of
that decision.
The application by writ petitioner - Maurya to the Speaker, in the
present case, was made under paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule to the
Constitution on the ground that the 13 Members who met the Governor on
27.8.2003 had voluntarily given up their membership of B.S.P., their
original political party as defined in the Tenth Schedule. The claim on
behalf of the M.L.As. sought to be disqualified and those who claimed to
have gone out with them from B.S.P. is that the disqualification at the
relevant time is subject to the provisions of paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of the
Tenth Schedule and since there has been a split in B.S.P in terms of
paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule and a subsequent merger of the 40 M.L.As.
with the Samajwadi Party in terms of paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule,
they could not be held to be disqualified on the ground of defection in
terms of paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Tenth Schedule. The Speaker, as noticed,
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did not pass any order on the application for disqualification of 13
M.L.As. made by Maurya, the leader of the B.S.P. Legislature Party in terms
of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule but proceeded to pass an order on the
petition filed by 37 M.L.As. before him, claiming that there has been a
split in B.S.P. and they constituted one third of the Legislature Party
which had 109 members. When he passed the order Page 1003 on the claim of
the M.L.As. who had left B.S.P., the then Speaker postponed the decision on
the petition for disqualification filed by Maurya, later adjourned it to
await the decision in the Writ Petition, but still later, the successor
Speaker went back on that order and proceeded to dismiss it after
entertaining an alleged preliminary objection even while the Writ Petition
was still pending and it was being argued, on the ground that he had
already recognised the split.
It was thereafter that the writ petitioner sought for an amendment of
the Writ Petition which was subsequently allowed.
We will now revert to the action that triggered the controversy. Eight
of the M.L.As. of B.S.P. followed by five other members of B.S.P. handed
over identically worded letters to the Governor on 27.8.2003. A running
translation of the letters is as under:
We under mentioned M.L.As. whose signatures are marked below humbly request
you that Shri Mulayam Singh Yadav Ji be invited to form Government because
the public of Uttar Pradesh neither want election nor want President Rule.
These members were the members who belonged to B.S.P. and they were
requesting the Governor to invite the leader of the opposition to form the
Government. It is based on this action, that Maurya, the leader of the
Legislature B.S.P., had filed the petition before the Speaker seeking
disqualification of these 13 members on the ground that they had
voluntarily left B.S.P., recognised by the Election Commission as a
national party. It was while this proceeding was pending that on 6.9.2003,
an application for recognition of a split was moved by the 37 M.L.As.
before the Speaker. Since the leader of B.S.P. had filed a caveat before
the Speaker, the Speaker chose to hear the caveator while passing the
order. Considering the nature of the controversy involved, it appears to be
proper to quote the said representation or application made by the 37
M.L.As. before the Speaker. The running translation of the same reads:
We, the following Members of the Legislative Assembly, are notified as
Members belonging to Bahujan Samaj Party. There is dissatisfaction
prevalent among the members of BSP on account of dictatorial approach,
wrong policies and misbehavior towards the Members as practiced by the BSP
Leader Km. Mayawati. Being aggrieved on account of the aforesaid reasons,
Members, office bearers and workers of the Bahujan Samaj Party held a
meeting in Darulsafa on 26.08.2003. All present unanimously stated that Km.
Mayawati is occupied with fulfilment of her personal interests alone at the
cost of interests of the State of U.P. and society.
Hence, it was unanimously resolved that the Bahujan Samaj Party be split up
and a new faction in the name of Loktantrik Bahujan Dal be constituted
under the Leadership of Shri Rajendra Singh Rana, Member Legislative
Assembly. We, the undersigned Members of Legislative Assembly have
constituted a separate group which represents the new faction arising out
of the split. Our number is more than one third of the total number of
Members of the erstwhile Bahujan Samaj Party of the Legislative Assembly.
Page 1004
It is, therefore, requested that the aforesaid Loktantrik Bahujan Dal be
recognised as a separate group within the Legislative Assembly and a
separate arrangement for their seating inside the Assembly be made.
It was signed by 37 M.L.As.
It is on this application that the Speaker passed an order the same
evening and it is that order that is the subject matter of challenge in the
Writ Petition filed before the High Court. The order of the Speaker records
that as per the contents of the application, a meeting of members, office
bearers and Members of Legislative Assembly belonging to B.S.P. was held on
26.8.2003 in the Darulshafa and in this meeting, it was unanimously
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resolved that a new faction in the name of Loktantrik Bahujan Dal under the
leadership of Rajendra Singh Rana be constituted. The Speaker proceeded to
reason that the number of members who have constituted the group are seen
to be 37 out of 109 and that would constitute one-third of the total number
of Legislators belonging to B.S.P. In view of the objections raised by
Maurya, who had filed the caveat before him, the Speaker verified whether
37 members had signed the representation or application. Since they were
present before him and were identified, he proceeded on the footing that 37
M.L.As. of B.S.P. had appeared before him with the claim. The Speaker
noticed the contention of the caveator that the burden of proving any split
in the original political party lay on the 37 M.L.As. and that unless they
establish a split in the original political party, they could not resort to
paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution and claim that there
has been a split in the political Party and consequently they have not
incurred disqualification under paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule. Further,
overruling the contention of the caveator that the decision relating to the
split could be taken only by the Election Commission and overruling the
contention that the original 13 members who had left the Party or
voluntarily given up their membership of the Party did not constitute one-
third of the total number of the Legislators belonging to B.S.P. and hence
they are disqualified, the Speaker proceeded to say that the first
condition to satisfy the requirement of paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule
was only that the members must have made a claim that the original
legislature Party had split and they should show that as a consequence, the
legislature Party has also split and that the split group had one-third of
the members of the legislature Party. Therefore, the Speaker taking note of
the one-third legislators before him proceeded on the basis that it would
be sufficient if a claim is made of a split in the original political
Party. The Speaker formulated the position thus:
Under para 3 following conditions have to be fulfilled:
1. The making of a claim by any Member of a House that he and some other
members of his legislature party have constituted a group representing a
faction which has arisen as a consequence of split in his original
political party.
2. The newly constituted group has at least one third of the total number
of members of such legislature party.
Page 1005
If in a case the aforesaid two conditions are fulfilled, the person making
such a claim and the other members will not be disqualified from the
membership of the Legislative Assembly on the grounds mentioned in para 2
of the 10th Schedule.
The Speaker also overruled the argument that only 13 M.L.As. had originally
quit the original political party and they should be disqualified and the
others subsequently joining them would not improve the position. The
Speaker proceeded to observe that he had to decide the question of
disqualification of the 13 M.L.As. raised by Maurya functioning as a
Tribunal and he would be taking a decision thereon at the appropriate time.
It was thus that the claim of 37 members of a split, was recognised by the
Speaker. The Speaker thus did not decide whether there was a split in the
original political party, even prima facie.
The same day, the Speaker also entertained another application from the
37 M.L.As. and ordered that he was recognising the merger of the Lok
Tantrik Bahujan Dal in the Samajwadi Party.
The Speaker had relied on an observation in Ravi S. Naik v. Union of
India to justify the acceptance of the position adopted by the 37 M.L.As.
for recognition of a split that it was enough if they made a claim of split
in the original political party. In paragraph 36 of that judgment, after
setting down the two requirements as:
(i) The member of a House should make a claim that he and other members of
his legislature party constitute the group representing a faction which has
arisen as a result of a split in his original party; and
(ii) Such group must consist of not less than one-third of the members of
such legislature party.
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This Court observed:
In the present case the first requirement was satisfied because Naik has
made such a claim. The only question is whether the second requirement was
fulfilled.
But the Speaker failed to notice the following sentence in paragraph 38 of
the same judgment wherein it was stated:
As to whether there was a split or not has to be determined by the Speaker
on the basis of the material placed before him.
Thus, there was no finding by the Speaker that there was a split in the
original political party, a condition for application of paragraph 3 of the
Tenth Schedule.
Now we may notice the position adopted by the High Court in the
judgment under Appeal while dealing with the Writ Petition filed by Maurya
challenging the order of the Speaker. The learned Chief Justice took the
view that the Speaker was justified in finding a split on the basis of a
claim of split in the original political party and one-third members of the
legislature party separating by taking into account all events upto the
time of his taking a Page 1006 decision on the question of split. The
learned Chief Justice held that the snowballing effect of a split could be
taken note of and that the Speaker had not committed any illegality in not
considering and deciding the petition filed by Maurya seeking
disqualification of 13 M.L.As. in the first instance and in keeping it
pending. He thus upheld the decision of the Speaker. But the other two
learned judges, though they gave separate reasons, basically took the view
that the Speaker was in error in not deciding the application seeking
disqualification of the 13 members first and in proceeding to decide the
application for recognition of a split made by the 37 legislators before
him. Since the proceeding arose out of a petition seeking a
disqualification in terms of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule to the
Constitution, in terms of paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule, a decision on
the claim for disqualification could not be kept by, even while recognising
a split. They therefore quashed the order of the Speaker and directed the
Speaker to reconsider the question of defection raised by the writ
petitioner Maurya, in the light of the stand adopted by some of the
M.L.As. before the Speaker that there has been a split in terms of
paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule and so they have not incurred the
disqualification in terms of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule. This
majority view and the interference with the order of the Speaker is
challenged by the various respondents in the Writ Petition forming the
group of 37. The writ petitioner himself has challenged that part of the
order which purports to remand the proceeding to the Speaker by taking up
the position that on the materials, the High Court ought to have
straightaway held that the defence under paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule
to the Constitution has not been made out by the 37 members of B.S.P. and
that the 13 of them in the first instance and the balance 24 in the second
instance stood disqualified in terms of paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Tenth
Schedule to the Constitution.
Elaborate arguments have been raised before us on the interpretation of
the Tenth Schedule, the content of the various paragraphs and on the facts
of the present case. Based on the arguments it is first necessary to deal
with the scope and content of the Tenth Schedule in the light of the object
with which it was enacted.
The Constitution (Fifty-Second Amendment) Act, 1985 amended Articles
102 and 191 of the Constitution by introducing sub-articles to them and by
appending the Tenth Schedule introducing the provisions as to
disqualification on the ground of defection. They were introduced to meet
the threat-posed to democracy by defection. A ground of disqualification
from the membership of the Parliament or of the Assembly on the ground of
defection was introduced. The constitutional validity of the amendment and
the inclusion of the Tenth Schedule was upheld by this Court in Kihoto
Hollohan (supra) except as regards paragraph 7 thereof, which was held to
require ratification in terms of Article 368(2) of the Constitution. It is
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not in dispute that paragraph 7 of the Tenth Schedule is not operative in
the light of that decision. The constitution Bench held that the right to
decide has been conferred on a high dignitary, namely, the Speaker of the
Parliament or the Assembly and the conferment of such a Page 1007 power was
not anathema to the constitutional scheme. Similarly, the limited
protection given to the proceedings before the Speaker in terms of
paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution was also justified
even though the said protection did not preclude a judicial review of the
decision of the Speaker. But that judicial review was not a broad one in
the light of the finality attached to the decision of the Speaker under
paragraph 6(1) of the Tenth Schedule and the judicial review was available
on grounds like gross violation of natural justice, perversity, bias and
such like defects. It was following this that the Ravi S. Naik (supra)
decision was rendered by two of the judges who themselves constituted the
majority in Kihoto Hollohan (supra) and the observations above referred to
but which were explained subsequently, were made. Suffice it to say that
the decision of the Speaker rendered on 6.9.2003 was not immune from
challenge before the High Court under Articles 226 and 227 of the
Constitution of India.
Learned Counsel for the writ petitioner raised an interesting argument.
He submitted that the Speaker in terms of paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule
was called upon to decide the question of disqualification and only to a
decision by him on such a question, that the qualified finality in terms of
paragraph 6(1) got attached and not to a decision independently taken,
purporting to recognise a split. He pointed out that in this case, the
Speaker had not decided the petition for disqualification filed against the
13 M.L.As., and the Speaker had only proceeded to decide the application
made by 37 members subsequently for recognising them as a separate group on
the ground that they had split from the original B.S.P. in terms of
paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule. He submitted that no such separate
decision was contemplated in a proceeding under the Tenth Schedule since
the claim of split was only in the nature of a defence to a claim for
disqualification on the ground of defection and it was only while deciding
the question of defection that the Speaker could adjudicate on the question
whether a claim of split has been established. When an independent decision
is purported to be taken by the Speaker on the question of split alone, the
same was a decision outside the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution and
consequently, the decision of the Speaker was open to challenge before the
High Court just like the decision of any other authority within the
accepted parameters of Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution. In other
words, according to him, the qualified finality conferred by paragraph 6(1)
of the Tenth Schedule was not available to the order of the Speaker in this
case.
On behalf of the 37 M.L.As., it is contended that it is not correct to
describe paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Tenth Schedule merely as defences to
paragraph 2 and the allegation of defection, that paragraphs 3 and 4 confer
independent power on the speaker to decide a claim made under those
paragraphs. It is submitted that reliance placed on paragraph 6 and the
contention that a question of disqualification on the ground of defection
must arise, before the Speaker could decide as a defence or answer, the
claim of split or the claim of merger was not justified. Whatever be the
decisions that were taken by the Speaker in terms of paragraph 3, paragraph
4 or paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule, enjoyed the qualified immunity as
provided in paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule.
Page 1008
In the context of the introduction of sub-Article (2) of Article 102
and Article 191 of the Constitution, a proceeding under the Tenth Schedule
to the Constitution is one to decide whether a Member has become
disqualified to hold his position as a Member of the Parliament or of the
Assembly on the ground of defection. The Tenth Schedule cannot be read or
construed independent of Articles 102 and 191 of the Constitution and the
object of those Articles. A defection is added as a disqualification and
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the Tenth Schedule contains the provisions as to disqualification on the
ground of defection. A proceeding under the Tenth Schedule gets started
before the Speaker only on a complaint being made that certain persons
belonging to a political party had incurred disqualification on the ground
of defection. To meet the claim so raised, the Members of the Parliament or
Assembly against whom the proceedings are initiated have the right to show
that there has been a split in the original political party and they form
one-third of the Members of the legislature of that party, or that the
party has merged with another political party and hence paragraph 2 is not
attracted. On the scheme of Articles 102 and 191 and the Tenth Schedule,
the determination of the question of split or merger cannot be divorced
from the motion before the Speaker seeking a disqualification of a member
or members concerned. It is therefore not possible to accede to the
argument that under the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution, the Speaker has
an independent power to decide that there has been a split or merger of a
political party as contemplated by paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Tenth Schedule
to the Constitution. The power to recognise a separate group in Parliament
or Assembly may rest with the Speaker on the basis of the Rules of Business
of the House. But that is different from saying that the power is available
to him under the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution independent of a claim
being determined by him that a member or a number of members had incurred
disqualification by defection. To that extent, the decision of the Speaker
in the case on hand cannot be considered to be an order in terms of the
Tenth Schedule to the Constitution. The Speaker has failed to decide the
question, he was called upon to decide, by postponing a decision thereon.
There is therefore some merit in the contention of the learned Counsel for
the B.S.P. that the order of the Speaker may not enjoy the full immunity in
terms of paragraph 6(1) of the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution and that
even if it did, the power of judicial review recognised in the court in
Kihoto Hollohan (supra) is sufficient to warrant interference with the
order in question.
In a sense, this aspect may not be of a great importance in this case
since going by the stand adopted on behalf of the 37 M.L.As., the Speaker
was justified in keeping the petition seeking disqualification of 13
M.L.As. pending, even while he proceeded to accept a case of split in the
B.S.P. The question really is whether the Speaker was justified in doing
so. As we have indicated above, the whole proceeding under the Tenth
Schedule to the Constitution is initiated or gets initiated as a part of
disqualification of a member of the House. That disqualification is by way
of defection. The rules prescribed by various legislatures including the
U.P. legislature contemplate the making of an application to the Speaker
when there is a Page 1009 complaint that some member or members have
voluntarily given up his membership or their memberships in the party. It
is only then that in terms of the Tenth Schedule, the Speaker is called
upon to decide the question of disqualification raised before him in the
context of paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule. Independent of a claim that
someone has to be disqualified, the scheme of the Tenth Schedule or the
rules made thereunder, do not contemplate the Speaker embarking upon an
independent enquiry as to whether there has been a split in a political
party or there has been a merger. Therefore, in the context of Articles 102
and 191 and the scheme of the Tenth Schedule to the Constitution, we have
no hesitation in holding that the Speaker acts under the Tenth Schedule
only on a claim of disqualification being made before him in terms of
paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule.
The Speaker, as clarified in Kihoto Hollohan (supra), has necessarily
to decide that question of disqualification as a Tribunal. In the context
of such a claim against a member to disqualify him, that member, in
addition to a plea that he had not voluntarily given up his membership of
the Party or defied the whip issued to him, has also the right to show that
there was a split in the original political party that other legislators
have also come out of the legislature party as a consequence of that split,
that they together constituted one-third of the total number of legislators
elected on the tickets of that party. He has also the right to take up a
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plea that there has been a merger of his party with another party in terms
of paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule. Call it a defence or whatever, a
claim under paragraph 3 as it existed prior to its deletion or under
paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule, are really answers to a prayer for
disqualifying the member from the legislature on the ground of defection.
Therefore, in a case where a Speaker is moved by a legislature party or the
leader of a legislature party to declare certain persons disqualified on
the ground that they have defected, it is certainly open to them to plead
that they are not guilty of defection in view of the fact that there has
been a split in the original political party and they constitute the
requisite number of legislators or that there has been a merger. In that
context, the Speaker cannot say that he will first decide whether there has
been a split or merger as an authority and thereafter decide the question
whether disqualification has been incurred by the members, by way of a
judicial adjudication sitting as a Tribunal. It is part and parcel of his
jurisdiction as a Tribunal while considering a claim for disqualification
of a member or members to decide that question not only in the context of
the plea raised by the complainant but also in the context of the pleas
raised by those who are sought to be disqualified that they have not
incurred disqualification in view of a split in the party or in view of a
merger.
The decision of a Full Bench of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in
Prakash Singh Badal v. Union of India and Ors. was relied upon to contend
that the Speaker gets jurisdiction to render a decision in terms of the
Tenth Schedule to the Constitution of India only when in terms Page 1010 of
paragraph 6 thereof a question of disqualification arose before him. The
Full Bench by a majority held:
Under, para. 6, the Speaker would have the jurisdiction in this matter only
if any question arises as to whether a member of the House has become
subject to disqualification under the said Schedule and the same has been
referred to him for decision. The purpose of requirement of a reference
obviously is that even when a question as to the disqualification of a
member arises, the Speaker is debarred from taking suo motu cognizance and
he would be seized of the matter only when the question is referred to him
by any interested person. The Speaker has not been clothed with a suo motu
power for the obvious reason that he is supposed to be a non-party man and
has been entrusted with the jurisdiction to act judicially and decide the
dispute between the conflicting groups. The other prerequisite for invoking
the jurisdiction of the Speaker under para. 6 is the existence of a
question of disqualification of the some member. Such a question can arise
only in one way, viz., that any member is alleged to have incurred the
disqualification enumerated in para 2(1) and some interested person
approaches the Speaker for declaring that the said member is disqualified
from being member of the House and the claim is refuted by the member
concerned.
It was argued on behalf of the 37 M.L.As. that this position adopted by the
Full Bench does not reflect the correct position in law since there is
nothing in the Tenth Schedule which precludes the Speaker from rendering an
adjudication either in respect of a claim under paragraph 3 of the Schedule
or paragraph 4 of the Schedule, independent of any question arising before
him in terms of paragraph 2 of the Schedule. Considering the scheme of the
Tenth Schedule in the context of Articles 102 and 191 of the Constitution
and the wording of paragraph 6 and the conferment of jurisdiction on the
Speaker thereunder, we are inclined to the view that the position adopted
by the majority of the High Court of Punjab & Haryana in the above decision
as to the scope of the Tenth Schedule, reflects the correct legal position.
Under the Tenth Schedule, the Speaker is not expected to simply entertain a
claim under paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Schedule without first acquiring
jurisdiction to decide a question of disqualification in terms of paragraph
6 of the Schedule. The power if any, he may otherwise exercise
independently to recognise a group or a merger, cannot be traced to the
Tenth Schedule to the Constitution. The power under the Tenth Schedule to
do so accrues only when he is called upon to decide the question referred
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to in paragraph 6 of that Schedule.
In the case on hand, the Speaker had a petition moved before him for
disqualification of 13 members of the B.S.P. When that application was
pending before him, certain members of B.S.P. had made a claim before him
that there has been a split in B.S.P. The Speaker, on the scheme of the
Tenth Schedule and the rules framed in that behalf, had to decide the
application for disqualification made and while deciding the same, had to
decide whether in view of paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule, the claim of
disqualification has to be rejected. We have no doubt that the Speaker had
totally misdirected himself in purporting to answer the claim of the 37
M.L.As. that there has Page 1011 been a split in the party even while
leaving open the question of disqualification raised before him by way of
an application that was already pending before him. This failure on the
part of the Speaker to decide the application seeking a disqualification
cannot be said to be merely in the realm of procedure. It goes against the
very constitutional scheme of adjudication contemplated by the Tenth
Schedule read in the context of Articles 102 and 191 of the Constitution.
It also goes against the rules framed in that behalf and the procedure that
he was expected to follow. It is therefore not possible to accept the
argument on behalf of the 37 M.L.As. that the failure of the Speaker to
decide the petition for disqualification at least simultaneously with the
petition for recognition of a split filed by them, is a mere procedural
irregularity. We have no hesitation in finding that the same is a
jurisdictional illegality, an illegality that goes to the root of the so
called decision by the Speaker on the question of split put forward before
him. Even within the parameters of judicial review laid down in Kihoto
Hollohan (supra) and in Jagjit Singh v. State of Haryana it has to be found
that the decision of the Speaker impugned is liable to be set aside in
exercise of the power of judicial review.
There is another aspect. The Speaker, after he kept the determination
of the question of disqualification pending, passed an order that the said
petition will be dealt with after the High Court had taken a decision on
the Writ Petition pending before it and directed that the said petition be
taken up after the Writ Petition was disposed of. Then, suddenly, without
any apparent reason, the Speaker took up that application even while the
Writ Petition was pending and dismissed the same on 7.9.2005 by purporting
to accept a so called preliminary objection raised by the 13 M.L.As. sought
to be disqualified, to the effect that his recognition of the split of the
37 M.L.As. including themselves, has put an end to that application. This
last order is clearly inconsistent with the Speaker’s earlier order dated
14.11.2003 and still leaves open the question whether the petition seeking
disqualification should not have been decided first or at least
simultaneously with the application claiming recognition of a split. If the
order recognising the split goes, obviously this last order also cannot
survive. It has perforce to go.
Considerable arguments were addressed on the scope of paragraph 2 and
paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule with particular reference to the point of
time that must be considered to be relevant. Whereas it was argued on
behalf of leader of B.S.P. that the liability or disability is incurred at
the point of voluntarily giving up the membership of the political party,
according to the 37 M.L.As. who left, the relevant point of time is the
time when the Speaker takes a decision on the plea for disqualification. As
a corollary to the above, the contention on the one side is that if on the
day the disqualification is incurred there has been no split in terms of
paragraph 3, those disqualified who had given up their membership of the
party must be declared disqualified, the argument on the other side is that
if by the time the Speaker takes the decision, the persons sought to be
disqualified are able to show that there has been a split in the original
party and by that time they have a strength of Page 1012 one third of the
Legislature party, the Speaker will have necessarily to accept the split
and reject the petition for disqualification. In other words, according to
this argument all developments until the point of decision by the Speaker
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are to be taken note of by him, while deciding the question of
disqualification. They canvas the acceptance of what the learned Chief
Justice of the High Court has called the snowballing effect of persons
severing their connections with the original party and joining the quitters
subsequently and not confining the decision to the point of their alleged
severing their connection with the original party.
It is argued on behalf of 37 MLAs that the disqualification on the
ground of defection should not be held as a sword of Damocles against
honest political dissent and the prevention of honest political dissent is
not the object sought to be achieved by the Tenth Schedule. This submission
is sought to be supported by the argument that at the relevant time
paragraph 3 provided that if on the basis of a split in the original party
one third of the members of the Legislature party have voluntarily give up
their membership of the original political party, they could not be
disqualified. The relevant observations in Kihoto Hollohan (supra) are
referred to. It is also pointed out that paragraph 4 which is still
retained, also contemplates leaving of one’s own party by merging of that
party with another political party though by definition, that may also
amount to defection in terms of paragraph 2.
It may be true that collective dissent is not intended to be stifled by
the enactment of sub-article (2) of Articles 102 and 191 of the Tenth
Schedule. But at the same time, it is clear that the object is to
discourage defection which has assumed menacing proportions undermining the
very basis of democracy. Therefore, a purposive interpretation of paragraph
2 in juxtaposition with paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Tenth Schedule is called
for. One thing is clear that defection is a ground for disqualifying a
member from the House. He incurs that disqualification if he has
voluntarily given up his membership of his original political party,
meaning the party on whose ticket he had got elected himself to the House.
In the case of defiance of a whip, the party concerned is given an option
either of condoning the defiance or seeking disqualification of the member
concerned. But, the decision to condone must be taken within 15 days of the
defiance of the whip. This aspect is also relied on for the contention that
the relevant point of time to determine the question is when the Speaker
actually takes a decision on the plea for disqualification.
As we see it, the act of disqualification occurs on a member
voluntarily giving up his membership of a political party or at the point
of defiance of the whip issued to him. Therefore, the act that constitutes
disqualification in terms of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule is the act
of giving up or defiance of the whip. The fact that a decision in that
regard may be taken in the case of voluntary giving up by the Speaker at a
subsequent point of time cannot and does not postpone the incurring of
disqualification by the act of the Legislator. Similarly, the fact that the
party could condone the defiance of a whip within 15 days or that the
Speaker takes the decision only thereafter in those cases, cannot also
pitch the time of disqualification as anything other than the point at
which the whip is defied. Therefore in the background of Page 1013 the
object sought to be achieved by the Fifty Second Amendment of the
Constitution and on a true understanding of paragraph 2 of the Tenth
Schedule, with reference to the other paragraphs of the Tenth Schedule, the
position that emerges is that the Speaker has to decide the question of
disqualification with reference to the date on which the member voluntarily
gives up his membership or defies the whip. It is really a decision ex post
facto. The fact that in terms of paragraph 6 a decision on the question has
to be taken by the Speaker or the Chairman, cannot lead to a conclusion
that the question has to be determined only with reference to the date of
the decision of the Speaker. An interpretation of that nature would leave
the disqualification to an indeterminate point of time and to the whims of
the decision making authority. The same would defeat the very object of
enacting the law. Such an interpretation should be avoided to the extent
possible. We are, therefore, of the view that the contention that only on a
decision of the Speaker that the disqualification is incurred, cannot be
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accepted. This would mean that what the learned Chief Justice has called
the snowballing effect, will also have to be ignored and the question will
have to be decided with reference to the date on which the membership of
the Legislature party is alleged to have been voluntarily given up.
In the case on hand, the question would, therefore be whether on
27.3.2003 the 13 members who met the Governor with the request to invite
the leader of the Samajwadi Party to form the Government had defected, on
27.8.2003 and whether they have established their claim that on 26.8.2003
there had been a split in the Bahujan Samaj Party and one third of the
members of the Legislature of that party had come out of that party. It may
be noted that the clear and repeated plea in the counter affidavit to the
writ petition is that a split had occurred on 26.8.2003. This was also the
stand of the petitioner before the Speaker for recognition of a split. The
position as on 6.9.2003 when the 37 MLAs presented themselves before the
Speaker would not have relevance on the question of disqualification which
had allegedly been incurred on 27.8.2003.
The question whether for satisfying the requirements of paragraph 3, it
was enough to make a claim of split in the original political party or it
was necessary to at least prima facie establish it, fell to be considered
in the decision in Jagjit Singh v. State of Haryana (supra) rendered by a
Bench of three Judges to which one of us, (Balasubramanyan, J.) was a
party. Dealing with an argument that a claim of split in the original
political party alone is sufficient in addition to showing that one-third
of the members of the legislature Party had formed a separate group, the
learned Chief Justice has explained the position as follows:
Learned Counsel for the petitioner, however, relies upon paragraph 37 in
Ravi S. Naik’s case in support of the submission that only a claim as to
split has to be made and it is not necessary to prove the split. The said
observations are:
In the present case the first requirement was satisfied because Naik has
made such a claim. The only question is whether the second requirement was
fulfilled.
Page 1014
The observations relied upon are required to be appreciated in the light of
what is stated in the next paragraph, i.e., paragraph 38, namely:
As to whether there was a split or not has to be determined by the Speaker
on the basis of the material placed before him.
Apart from the above, the acceptance of the contention that only claim is
to be made to satisfy the requirements of paragraph 3 can lead to absurd
consequences besides the elementary principle that whoever makes a claim
has to establish it. It will also mean that when a claim as to split is
made by a member before the speaker so as to take benefit of paragraph 3,
the Speaker, without being satisfied even prima facie about the genuineness
and bonafides of the claim, has to accept it. It will also mean that even
by raising a frivolous claim of split of original political party, a member
can be said to have satisfied this stipulation of paragraph 3. The
acceptance of such broad proposition would defeat the object of defection
law, namely, to deal with the evil of political defection sternly. We are
of the view that for the purposes of paragraph 3, mere making of claim is
not sufficient. The prima facie proof of such a split is necessary to be
produced before the Speaker so as to satisfy him that such a split has
taken place.
Thus, in the above decision, it has been clarified that it is not
enough that a claim is made of a split in the original party, in addition
to showing that one third of the members of the Legislature Party have come
out of the party, but it is necessary to prove it at least prima facie.
Those who have left the party, will have, prima facie, to show by relevant
materials that there has been a split in the original party. The argument,
therefore, that all that the 37 MLAs were required to do was to make a
claim before the Speaker that there has been a split in the original party
and to show that one third of the members of the Legislature party have
come out and that they need not produce any material in support of the
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split in the original political party, cannot be accepted. The argument
that the ratio of the decision in Jagjit Singh (supra) requires to be
reconsidered does not appeal to us. Even going by Ravi S. Naik (supra) it
could not be said that the learned Judges have held that a mere claim in
that behalf is enough. As pointed out in Jagjit Singh (supra) the sentence
in paragraph 37 in Ravi S. Naik’s case (supra) cannot be read in isolation
and it has to be read along with the relevant sentence in paragraph 38
quoted in Jagjit Singh (supra).
Acceptance of the argument that the legislators are wearing two hats,
one as members of the original political party and the other as members of
the legislature and it would be sufficient to show that one third of the
legislators have formed a separate group to infer a split or to postulate a
split in the original party, would militate against the specific terms of
paragraph 3. That paragraph speaks of two requirements, one, a split in the
original party and two, a group comprising of one third of the legislators
separating from the legislature party. By acceding to the two hat theory
one of the limbs of paragraph 3 would be made redundant or otios. An
interpretation of that Page 1015 nature has to be avoided to the extent
possible. Such an interpretation is not warranted by the context. It is
also not permissible to assume that the Parliament has used words that are
redundant or meaningless. We, therefore, overrule the plea that a split in
the original political party need not separately be established if a split
in the legislature party is shown.
On the side of the 37 M.L.As., the scope of judicial review being
limited was repeatedly stressed to contend that the majority of the High
Court had exceeded its jurisdiction. Dealing with the ambit of judicial
review of an order of the Speaker under the Tenth Schedule, it was held in
Kihoto Hollohan (supra):
In the present case, the power to decide disputed disqualification under
Paragraph 6(1) is preeminently of a judicial complexion.
The fiction in Paragraph 6(2), indeed, places it in the first clause of
Article 122 or 212, as the case may be. The words "proceedings in
Parliament" or "proceedings in the legislature of a State" in Paragraph
6(2) have their corresponding expression in Articles 122(1) and 212(1)
respectively. This attracts an immunity from mere irregularities of
procedures.
That apart, even after 1986 when the Tenth Schedule was introduced, the
Constitution did not evince any intention to invoke Article 122 or 212 in
the conduct of resolution of disputes as to the disqualification of members
under Articles 191(1) and 102(1). The very deeming provision implies that
the proceedings of disqualification are, in fact, not before the House; but
only before the Speaker as a specially designated authority. The decision
under paragraph 6(1) is not the decision of the House, nor is it subject to
the approval by the House. The decision operates independently of the
House. A deeming provision cannot by its creation transcend its own power.
There is, therefore, ho immunity under Articles 122 and 212 from judicial
scrutiny of the decision of the Speaker or Chairman exercising power under
Paragraph 6(1) of the Tenth Schedule.
After referring to the relevant aspects, it was held:
By these well-known and accepted tests of what constitute a Tribunal, the
Speaker or the Chairman, acting under paragraph 6(1) of the Tenth Schedule
is a Tribunal.
It was concluded:
In the light of the decisions referred to above and the nature of function
that is exercised by the Speaker/Chairman under paragraph 6, the scope of
judicial review under Articles 136, and 226 and 227 of the Constitution in
respect of an order passed by the Speaker/Chairman under paragraph 6 would
be confined to jurisdictional errors only viz., infirmities based on
violation of constitutional mandate, mala fides, non-compliance with rules
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of natural justice and perversity.
The position was reiterated by the Constitution Bench in Raja Ram Pal v.
The Hon’ble Speaker, Lok Sabha and Ors. We are of the view Page 1016 that
contours of interference have been well drawn by Kihoto Hollohan (supra)
and what is involved here is only its application.
Coming to the case on hand, it is clear that the Speaker, in the
original order, left the question of disqualification undecided. Thereby he
has failed to exercise the jurisdiction conferred on him by paragraph 6 of
the Tenth Schedule. Such a failure to exercise jurisdiction cannot be held
to be covered by the shield of paragraph 6 of the Schedule. He has also
proceeded to accept the case of a split based merely on a claim in that
behalf. He has entered no finding whether a split in the original political
party was prima facie proved or not. This action of his, is apparently
based on his understanding of the ratio of the decision in Ravi S. Naik’s
case (supra). He has misunderstood the ratio therein. Now that we have
approved the reasoning and the approach in Jagjit Singh’s case and the
ratio therein is clear, it has to be held that the Speaker has committed an
error that goes to the root of the matter or an error that is so
fundamental, that even under a limited judicial review the order of the
Speaker has to be interfered with. We have, therefore, no hesitation in
agreeing with the majority of the High Court in quashing the decisions of
the Speaker.
In view of our conclusions as above, nothing turns on the arguments
urged on what were described as significant facts and on the alleged
belatedness of the amendment to the Writ Petition. It is undisputable that
in the order that was originally subjected to challenge in the Writ
Petition, the Speaker specifically refrained from deciding the petition
seeking disqualification of the 13 M.L.As. On our reasoning as above,
clearly, there was an error which attracted the jurisdiction of the High
Court in exercise of its power of judicial review.
The question then is whether it was necessary for the majority of the
Division Bench of the High Court to remand the proceeding to the Speaker or
a decision could have been taken whether the 13 members stand disqualified
or not and if they are found to be disqualified, the balance 24 of the 37
would also stand disqualified, since in that case, there will be no one
third of the Legislature party forming a separate group as claimed by them.
It is contended on behalf of the Bahujan Samaj Party that there is
absolutely no material to show that there was any meeting of the party on
26.8.2003 as claimed by the 37 members and it has not been shown that there
was any convention of the original political party or any decision taken
therein to split the party or to leave the party by some of the members of
that party. It is also pointed out that no agenda of the alleged meeting or
minutes of the alleged meeting is produced. No other material is also
produced. Even prior to 6.9.2003, when the claim of split before the
Speaker was made and 26.8.2003, when the split is claimed to have occurred,
the 24 members of the 37, had sat with the Bahujan Samaj Party in the
Legislative Assembly and that itself would show that there had been no
split on 27.8.2003 as now claimed. It is also pointed out that on 2.9.2003,
the day of the convening of the Assembly, the 13 members of the B.S.P. who
had met the Governor on 27.8.2003, had sat with members of the Samajwadi
Party in the Assembly and an objection was raised to it. The Speaker got
over the situation by saying that the only business on the agenda that day
was obituary Page 1017 references and the question need not be raised that
day. It is, therefore, contended that on the facts, it is crystal clear
that the 13 members sought to be disqualified had defected and the
defection is manifest by their meeting the Governor on 27.8.2003 requesting
him to call upon the leader of the Samajwadi Party to form the Government.
As against these submissions, it is contended that it was for the
Speaker to take a decision in the first instance and this Court should not
substitute its decision for that of the Speaker. It is submitted that the
High Court was therefore justified in remitting the matter to the Speaker,
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in case this Court did not agree with the 37 MLAs that the decision of the
Speaker did not call for interference.
Normally, this Court might not proceed to take a decision for the first
time when the authority concerned has not taken a decision in the eyes of
law and this Court would normally remit the matter to the authority for
taking a proper decision in accordance with law and the decision this Court
itself takes on the relevant aspects. What is urged on behalf of the
Bahujan Samaj Party is that these 37 MLAs except a few have all been made
ministers and if they are guilty of defection with reference to the date of
defection, they have been holding office without authority, in defiance of
democratic principles and in such a situation, this Court must take a
decision on the question of disqualification immediately. It is also
submitted that the term of the Assembly is coming to an end and an
expeditious decision by this Court is warranted for protection of the
constitutional scheme and constitutional values. We find considerable force
in this submission.
Here, the alleged act of disqualification of the 13 MLAs took place on
27.8.2003 when they met the Governor and requested him to call the leader
of the opposition to form the Government. The petition seeking
disqualification of these 13 members based on that action of theirs has
been allowed to drag on till now. It is not necessary for us to consider or
comment on who was responsible for such delay. But the fact remains that
the term of the Legislative Assembly that was constituted after the
elections in February 2002, is coming to an end on the expiry of five
years. A remand of the proceeding to the Speaker or our affirming the order
of remand passed by the High Court, would mean that the proceeding itself
may become infructuous. We may notice that the question of interpretation
of the Tenth Schedule and the question of disqualification earlier raised
in regard to members of the prior assembly of this very State, which led to
the difference of opinion between two of the learned Judges of this Court
and which stood referred to a Constitution Bench, was, disposed of on the
ground that it had become infructuous in view of the expiry of the term of
the Assembly. Paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule has also been deleted by
the Parliament, though for the purpose of this case, the scope of that
paragraph is involved. Considering that if the 13 members are found to be
disqualified, their continuance in the Assembly even for a day would be
illegal and unconstitutional and their holding office as ministers would
also be illegal at least after the expiry of six months from the date of
their taking charge of the offices of Ministers, we think that as a Court
bound to protect the Constitution and its values and the principles of
democracy which is a basic feature of the Constitution, this Page 1018
Court has to take a decision one way or the other on the question of
disqualification of the 13 MLAs based on their action on 27.8.2003 and on
the materials available.
The main thrust of the argument on the side of the 13 MLAs included in
the 37 MLAs, has been that it was enough if a claim of a split in the
original political party had been made and it was not necessary to
establish any such split and it was enough for them to show that 37 of them
had signed the petition filed before the Speaker on 6.9.2003. We have held
on an interpretation of paragraph 3 and in approval of the ratio in Jagjit
Singh (supra) that the 37 MLAs which includes the 13 MLAs in question had
to establish a split in the original political party, here BSP, before they
can get the protection offered by paragraph 3. The question is whether they
have proved at least prima facie any such split.
The first act on the part of the 13 MLAs which is relevant is the
giving of letters by them to the Governor, the contents of which we have
quoted earlier in paragraph 16. Therein, there is no claim that there was a
split in the Legislature Party on 26.8.2003 as was put forward in the
representation on 6.9.2003 by 37 members. It is interesting to note that in
the counter-affidavit to the writ petition filed by Rajendra Singh Rana who
can be described as the leader of the 13 (for that matter of the 37), it
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has been repeatedly asserted that on 26.8.2003 a new party called Lok
Tantrik Bahujan Dal was formed. Therefore, this was a case in which the
theory of snow balling adverted to by the learned Chief Justice in the
Judgment under appeal had no relevance. The issue was, whether on 26.8.2003
there had been a split in the original political party, the BSP and whether
by that split, 37 of the MLAs of that Legislature Party had come out of
that party. As rightly pointed out by learned Counsel for BSP, no material
is produced either to show that a meeting of the members of BSP was
convened on 26.8.2003 or that a meeting took place at Darulshafa in which a
split in the original political party occurred. On the other hand, the
letters given to the Governor on 27.8.2003 by the 13 members sought to be
disqualified, is totally silent on any such split in the original political
party or on a new party being formed by certain members of the original
political party. This is followed by the fact that on 2.9.2003 only the
members who had met the Governor, sat with the members of the Samajwadi
Party abandoning their seats with BSP in the Assembly and the other 24,
which made up the 37, remained in their seats along with the BSP. More
over, no notice of a proposed meeting of the party on 26.8.2003, or
evidence of any announcement of such a proposed meeting is produced. No
agenda of any such meeting is also produced. No minutes evidencing any
decision to split the party taken at such a meeting, is also produced.
These relevant aspects clearly demonstrate that the story of a split in the
original political party put forward in the letter dated 6.9.2003 was only
an afterthought. Even before us, no material was referred to, to suggest or
establish that there was a split on 26.8.2003 and the formation of a Lok
Tantril Dal as claimed in the counter affidavit to the writ petition. The
attempt was only to argue that we must leave the decision to the Speaker in
the first instance and that the challenge to the meeting on 26.8.2003 Page
1019 was only raised belatedly in the writ petition. On a scrutiny of the
pleadings in the original writ petition, we cannot also agree with that
latter submission.
The act of giving a letter requesting the Governor to call upon the
leader of the other side to form a Government, itself would amount to an
act of voluntarily giving up the membership of the party on whose ticket
the said members had got elected. Be it noted that on 26.8.2003, the leader
of their party had recommended to the Governor, a dissolution of the
Assembly. The first eight were accompanied by Shivpal Singh Yadav, the
General Secretary of the Samajwadi Party. In Ravi Naik (supra) this Court
observed:
A person may voluntarily give up his membership of an original political
party even though he has not tendered his resignation from the membership
of that party. Even in the absence of a formal resignation from the
membership, an inference can be drawn from the conduct of a member that he
has voluntarily given up his membership of the political party to which he
belongs.
Clearly, from the conduct of meeting the Governor accompanied by the
General Secretary of the Samajwadi Party, the party in opposition and the
submission of letters requesting the Governor to invite the leader of that
opposition party to form a Government as against the advise of the Chief
Minister belonging to their original party to dissolve the assembly, an
irresistible inference arises that the 13 members have clearly given up
their membership of the BSP. No further evidence or enquiry is needed to
find that their action comes within paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Tenth
Schedule. Then the only question is whether they had shown at least prima
facie that a split had occurred in the original political party on
26.8.2003 and they had separated from it along with at least 24 others, so
as to make up one-third of the legislature party.
The learned Chief Justice who declined to interfere with the decision
of the Speaker on his interpretation of paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Tenth
Schedule to the Constitution with which we have disagreed, himself stated:
As per the dicta in the case of Naik reported 1994 (Suppl.)2 SCC 641, the
going of the 13 MLAs to the Governor on 27.8.2003 is a conduct which leads
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to the inference that they had voluntarily given up their membership of the
Bahujan Dal. They asked the governor to call the leader of the main
opposing party, to be requested to demonstrate his strength. In paragraph
11 in Naik’s case, it is said that an inference can be drawn from the
conduct of a member that he was voluntarily given up his membership. That
inference has to be drawn in regard to the conduct of 27.08.2003 most
certainly.
He has also observed while considering whether the Speaker had to consider
paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule first or he is to consider paragraph 3
first.
The order of consideration will yield diametrically opposite results. Even,
in this case, if he had considered paragraph 2 first, he might well have
had to disqualify all 37, as they did not walk away at one and the same
time. But because he considered paragraph 3 first, because he though as a
matter of law that the requirements of paragraph 3 being satisfied, Page
1020 it obviated the necessity of considering paragraph 2 separately for
any part of the whole group, he gave a decision for the respondents.
The learned Chief Justice has further held:
Even if 37 out of 109 Bahujan MLAs have walked out, only the legislature
party is split. This is defined in paragraph 1(b), which has been set out
earlier; but in this case of ours, where is the proof before the Speaker of
the split in the original party? Were any minutes tendered before the
Speaker showing that so many lacs or millions of the original Bahujan Dal
decided to split? A claim that on 26.08.2003, there were some party members
along with the MLAs at the Darulshafa in Lucknow is not enough; it is too
inadequate. The Bahujan Dal is too big; its party membership is too
numerous for it to suffer a split in such a comparatively minor meeting,
even if it took place on 26.8.2003. There was no intimation that one group
was going to split; even the name Loktantrik Bahujan Dal found its place
for the first time on paper on 6.9.2003; there were no Newspaper reports;
there were no statements of dissatisfied party members; the core of the
Bahujan Dal was not asked to "rectify" its behavior or else. The threat of
a split was not even made imminent; nothing like this happened; only one
evening, it is claimed, the Bahujan Dal had split and a faction had arisen.
This is so cursory as not to class as a split in the original party at all.
Look at the split in Congress-O, which resulted in Congress-I coming into
being; Looking at the split in Congress-I in West Bengal and the resulting
Trinamul Congress coming into being, was there anything like that here? The
answer is a big no.
One of the learned Judges who constitutes the majority has held:
...but the court cannot certainly close its eyes to the fact that had the
application for disqualification dated 4.9.2003 been treated with the same
promptitude and constitutionally required urgency, the 13 MLAs whose
Membership in question was hanging in the balance could not have been
counted along with 24 others, who joined hands to conjure up the minimum
required member....
As we have indicated, nothing is produced to show that there was a
split in the original political party on 26.8.2003 as belatedly put forward
or put forward at a later point of time. But still, the plea was of a split
on 26.8.2003. On the materials, the only possible inference in the
circumstances of the case, is that it has not been proved, even prima
facie, by the MLAs sought to be disqualified that there was any split in
the original political party on 26.8.2003 as claimed by them. The necessary
consequence would be that the 24 members, who later joined the 13, could
not also establish a split in the original political party as having taken
place on 26.8.2003. In fact even a split involving 37 MLAs on 26.8.2003 is
not established. That was also the inference rightly drawn by the learned
Chief Justice in the judgment appealed against.
In view of our conclusion that it is necessary not only to show that 37
MLAs had separated but it is also necessary to show that there was a split
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in the original political party, the above finding necessarily leads to the
Page 1021 conclusion that the 13 MLAs sought to be disqualified had not
established a defence or answer to the charge of defection under paragraph
2 on the basis of paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule. The 13 MLAs,
therefore, stand disqualified with effect from 27.8.2003. The very giving
of a letter to the Governor requesting him to call the leader of the
opposition party to form a Government by them itself would amount to their
voluntarily giving up the membership of their original political party
within the meaning of paragraph 2 of the Tenth Schedule. If so, the
conclusion is irresistible that the 13 members of BSP who met the Governor
on 27.8.2003 who are respondent Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 14, 16, 19, 20,
21 and 37, in the writ petition filed by Maurya, stand disqualified in
terms of Article 191(2) of the Constitution read with paragraph 2 of the
Tenth Schedule thereof, with effect from 27.8.2003. If so, the appeal filed
by the writ petitioner has to be allowed even while dismissing the appeals
filed by the 37 MLAs, by modifying the decision of the majority of the
Division Bench. Hence the writ petition filed in the High Court, will stand
allowed with a declaration that the 13 members who met the Governor on
27.8.2003, being respondent Numbers 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 14, 16, 19, 20,
21 and 37 in the writ petition, stand disqualified from the Uttar Pradesh
Legislative Assembly with effect from 27.8.2003.
The appeals filed by the 37 MLAs are dismissed and the appeal filed by
the writ petitioner is allowed in the above manner. The disqualified
members will pay the costs of the writ petitioner, here and in the High
Court.