Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJENDRA PRASAD JAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHEEL BHADRA YAJEE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/02/1967
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
WANCHOO, K.N.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1445 1967 SCR (3) 19
ACT:
Election Petition-Bribery and offer of bribery alleged-Facts
which court can take into consideration--offer of bribe
whether must be of specific amount to be corrupt practice.
Letters Patent-Difference among Judges constituting Division
Bench-Reference whether can be made to a single Judge-
’Bench’ whether includes single Judge.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 1 challenged the election of the appellant to
the Rajya Sabha on the alleged ground of corrupt practice
consisting of bribery as well as offer of bribery. The
Tribunal held that both the above mentioned types of corrupt
practices were proved against the appellant. The High Court
upheld the order of the Tribunal holding only that offer of
bribe in two cases was proved. The appellant came to this
Court with certificate. It was urged that (i) when the
Division Bench which originally heard the appeal,, on
difference arising among the Judges constituting it, asked
for a reference to another bench, the Chief Justice had no
power under Art. 28 of the Letters Patent to refer the
matter to a single Judge, (ii) this Court should examine the
evidence as to offer of bribe to certain persons for itself,
as the High Court had misread the evidence and bad relied on
certain irrelevant pieces of evidence, (iii) the facts
proved did not justify a finding that bribe was offered by
the appellant.
HELD : (i) Under Art. 28 of the Letters Patent the
reference of the case to a single Judge was competent. The
word ’Bench’ in the Article includes a single Judge. [21 H]
(ii) In considering the allegations of bribery against
the appellant the court was entitled to take into
consideration the fact that the appellant was a man of means
and that he had no political background in Bihar where he
did not have a permanent residential house. There was no
misreading of the evidence by the High Court and no case had
been made Out for a re-appraisal of the findings. [23 B-C,
H]
(iii) The proposition cannot be accepted that an offer
of bribery cannot be held to be such unless a specific
amount is mentioned in the offer. [27 D]
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Emperor v. Amiruddin Salebhoy Tyabjee, A.I.R.1923 Bom.
44,Emperor v. Choube Dinkar Rao & Ors. A.I.R. 1933 All. 513.
In the matter of Balls v. The Metropolitan Board of
Works,(1865-66) 1 Q.B. Cases 337. Mohan Singh v. Bhanwarlal
JUDGMENT:
Goel, A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 364, distinguished.
Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moreshwar Parashram & Ors.
[1954] S.C.R. 817, Case No. XII of Borough of Staleybridge,
(1869) 1 O’Malley and Hardcastle p. 66 and Case No. XV of
Borough of Coventry, (1869) 1 O’Malley and Hardcastle p. 97.
relied on.
20
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1454 of
1966.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 3, 1966 of
the Patna High Court in Election Appeal No. 3 of 1965.
Veda Vyasa, K. K. Jain and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the ap-
pellant.
K. P. Varma and D. Goburdhun, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by.
Bhargava, J. In 1964, there were eight vacancies in the
Rajya Sabha for which members had to be elected from the
constituency of the Legislative Assembly of Bihar. The
election was to be held on 26th March, 1964. it appears that
the Congress Party put up 6 candidates out of the total of
13 candidates who were nominated for these eight vacancies.
Two of the candidates withdrew after scrutiny of nomination
papers and, consequently, for the actual election there were
6 Congress candidates and 5 others. Amongst these 5 others
was the appellant Rajendra Prasad Jain who was standing as
an Independent candidate. One of the Congress candidates
was respondent Sheel Bhadra Yajee. At the election,
Rajendra Prasad Jain was declared as one of the elected
candidates, while respondent Sheel Bhadra Yajee was
unsuccessful. Respondent No. 1, Sheel Bhadra Yajee, then
filed an election petition challenging the election of the
appellant to the Rajya Sabha. The main ground for challenge
was that the, appellant had committed the corrupt practice
of bribery or offer of bribery in order to secure his
election. In the election petition as originally filed,
Schedule I contained the names of five persons to whom, it
was alleged, bribe had actually been paid by the appellant.
Schedule II contained the names of five persons to whom
bribe had been offered by the appellant. By a subsequent
amendment, three fresh names were added in Schedule I and
five in Schedule 11. The amendment having been allowed by
the Election Tribunal, the petition, at the stage of the
trial, contained allegations of payment of bribe to eight
persons and of offer of bribe to ten persons. In the actual
trial, however, evidence was not tendered in respect of some
of these allegations. The Election Tribunal, after full
trial of the petition, held that respondent No. 1 had
succeeded in proving that the appellant had given bribes to
three of the persons mentioned in Schedule II and had
offered bribe to four persons mentioned in Schedule II. The
appellant appealed to the High Court at Patna. In the High
Court, when the appeal was heard by a Division Bench, one
member Mahapatra, J., held that none of the allegations of
payment of bribe or of offer of bribe had been proved and
was of the view that the appeal should be allowed and the
election petition dismissed. The other member, Ramratna
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Singh, J., agreed with
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Mahapatra, J. with regard to the three instances of giving
bribe to the three persons mentioned in Schedule I and also
with regard to the offer of bribe to two of the persons
mentioned in Schedule II. With regard to two instances of
offer of bribe in Schedule 11, he disagreed with Mahapatra,
J. and upheld the decision of the Election Tribunal. The
two persons in whose cases the offer of bribe was held
proved by Ramratna Singh, J. were Shah Mustaq Ahmad and Ram
Narain Choudhary who were both members of the Bihar
Legislative Assembly and belonged to the Congress Party.
Owing to this difference of opinion, the two learned Judges
directed that the case may be placed before the Hon’ble the
Chief Justice for reference of the point of difference to
another Bench under Art. 28 of the Letters Patent. Under
the directions of the Chief Justice, the appeal came up
before U. N. Sinha, J., who, in both cases, agreed with the
view taken by Ramratna Singh, J. and, consequently, in
accordance with the view of the majority, the Court
ultimately dismissed the appeal holding that the offer of
bribe by the appellant to Shah Mustaq Ahmad and Ram Narain
Choudhary had been proved. The appellant has now come up in
appeal to this Court under certificate granted by ,the High
Court at Patna against this judgment of that Court.
In his appeal, three points were urged by Mr. Veda Vyas,
learned counsel for the appellant. The first question of
law raised was that the Division Bench of the Patna High
Court, which first heard the appeal, made a direction that
the case is to be placed before the Chief Justice for
reference of the point of difference to another "Bench"
under Art. 28 of the Letters Patent and, consequently, the
reference made subsequently by the Chief Justice to a single
Judge was not competent. It was urged that the use of the
expression "another Bench" in the referring order meant that
the case had to be laid by the Chief Justice before a Bench
of two or more Judges and not before a -single Judge. There
are two reasons why, in our opinion, this submission has no
force. The first is that the word "Bench" used in the
referring order cannot be interpreted as necessarily
indicating that the case must be laid before two or more
Judges. In this connection, the language of Rule I (xi) and
r. 3 of Chapter 11 of the Rules of the High Court at Patna
is significant. Under r. 1(xi), a case under the Indian
Companies Act is to be heard by a single Judge; and r. 3
indicates the nature of one of the orders which can be
passed by a Bench hearing the case under r. 1 (xi). Thus,
in r. 3 of the Rules of the High Court at Patna itself a
single Judge is referred to as a Bench. In fact, it is
well-known that, when referring to Judges of the High Court
sitting to decide a case, the expressions frequently used
are Single Bench and Division Bench. The word "Bench" used
in the referring order, even in its ordinary connotation,
would, therefore, include a single Judge. The second aspect
is that the order of reference mentions that the case
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is to be placed for reference under Art. 28 of the Letters
Patent. Article 28 of the Letters Patent lays down that, in
such circumstances, the case is to be referred to one or
more of the other Judges of the High Court. This reference
to Art. 28 of the Letters Patent also thus clarifies that
under the order of reference made by the Division Bench
which first heard the appeal, the case was intended to be
placed before the Chief Justice for reference to one or more
of the other Judges of the Court. Further, under the Rules
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of the. High Court at Patna, the Chief Justice had the
discretion to decide whether a case placed before him under
Art. 28 of the Letters Patent should be heard by one Judge
or more Judges than one, and this power of the Chief Justice
was actually -exercised when, in this case, he directed that
the case be laid before U. N. Sinha, J. The reference to U.
N. Sinha, J. and his decision were, therefore, not
incompetent.
The second point urged by learned counsel was that the find-
ing recorded by the High Court of Patna that the two
instances of offer of bribe by the appellant to Shah Mustaq
Ahmad a.-id Ram Narain Choudhary were proved was incorrect.
lie urged that we should go into the merits of this finding
on the ground that at leas’ one of the Judges who recorded
that finding, viz., Ramratna Singh, J., had misread evidence
and had taken into consideration irrelevant matters. He
pointed out to us that Ramratna Singh, J., had held at p.
454 of the Paper-book that "it is true that P.W. 2 did not
disclose the names of P.Ws. 9 and 14 to Yajee before
September or October, 1964, but the non-dis.closure of the
names of persons to whom he had spoken about the incident
when the first talk with Yajee took place is not material."
P.W. 2 was Ram Narain Choudhary who was one of the persons
to whom bribe was alleged to have been offered by the
appellant, and P.Ws. 9 and 14 were two persons examined to
corroborate him. Respondent Yajee, in the trial of the
election petition, did not disclose the names of P.Ws. 9 and
14 to the Court when he gave the first list of his witnesses
in October, 1964, and it was from this circumstance that the
learned Judge drew the inference that the names of these two
persons had not been disclosed by P.W. 2 to respondent Yajee
before September or October, 1964. Learned counsel pointed
out that Yajee had admitted that the names of these two
witnesses had been disclosed to him in September, 1964. It,
however, appears that it cannot be held that the learned
Judge committed an error of misreading evidence if he chose
not to rely on this admission of Yajee and preferred the
evidence which showed that the names of these two witnesses
had not been disclosed to him before September or October,
1964. This may be at best a question as to the weight to be
attached to different pieces of evidence and cannot be held
to be art instance of misreading of evidence.
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As regards the second aspect of reliance on irrelevant
evidence by Ramratna Singh, J., it was urged that in his
judgment at p. 444 of the Paper-book lie referred to the
fact that the appellant is a man of means and that he had no
political background in Bihar where he did not have a
permanent residential house. It was urged that these facts
were totally irrelevant to the charge of giving or offering
of bribe in order to secure his election. We fail to see
how it can be held that the fact that the appellant had no
political background in Bihar and was a man of means is
irrelevant. These considerations could certainly be
relevant for holding whether it was probable that the
appellant would offer bribes or give bribes to secure his
election. Obviously, a person who had no means at all could
not possibly offer bribes or give bribes inducing voters to
vote for him, and the fact that he had no political
background could easily be the reason why the appellant
might have resorted to this corrupt practice for securing
votes. Reference was also made to a part of the judgment at
p. 451 of the Paper-book where the learned Judge held that a
candidate who wanted to bribe a voter would at first send
some feeler before making the offer; but there was not much
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time left, as the allotments to different Congress
candidates were made by the leader of the party only on the
24th or 25th March and election was to take place on the
26th March. It was urged on behalf of the appellant that
this reference to the allotment to different Congress
candidates was irrelevant. We are unable to find any force
in this submission. It appears that the system was that the
members of the Congress Party in the Bihar Legislative
Assembly were divided into six groups and each group was
asked to vote for a particular candidate. This was the
allotment referred to by the learned Judge. This
circumstance is quite relevant, because it is obvious that
another candidate seeking to bribe a voter of the Congress
Party would only approach that voter who may have been
allotted for voting to a candidate whom he did not like or
whom, for some other reason, he would not be keen to
support, while it would be futile to approach a voter who
had been asked to vote for a candidate with whom he was on
friendly terms or whom he was himself keen to support. It
cannot be said in these circumstances that any irrelevant
material was taken into account by the learned Judge at this
stage. We cannot, therefore, hold that there was any such
misreading of evidence or admission of irrelevant evidence
which would justify our reopening findings of fact which
have been concurrently recorded by the Election Tribunal at
the stage of trial and by the High Court at the stage of
appeal. Consequently, we reject the suggestion of learned
counsel that we should for ourselves go through the evidence
and re-examine on merits, after weighing evidence, the
concurrent finding of fact that the appellant was proved to
have offered bribes to Shah Mustaq Ahmad and Ram Narain
Choudhary.
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The last and the third point urged by learned counsel was
that, even on findings of fact recorded by the High Court,
we must hold as a question of law that there was in fact no
offer of bribe by the appellant. This argument was urged on
the basis that the finding recorded did not show that any
specific amount was offered as bribe to either Shah Mustaq
Ahmad or Ram Narain Choudhary. In the case of Shah Mustaq
Ahmad, the finding is that the appellant had said to him :
"In your election a lot of money is spent and, therefore,
take some money from me and cast your first preference vote
in my favour." In the other case of Ram Narain Choudhary,
-the significance of the offer is very clear when the actual
words in Hindi used by the appellant are considered. They
were as follows :-
"Is Par Jain Saheb Ne Kaha Ki Apko Bhi To
Election Men Kharch Burch Hua Hoga. Isliye Ham
Upko Kuchh Seva Karna Chahete Hain. Ap Hamare
Madad Kijiye."
It is true that in these words there was no direct offer of
giving money, but the language used clearly indicated that
the appellant was offering his services in the form of
contribution towards the expenditure which Ram Narain
Choudhary had incurred in his own election to the Bihar
Legislative Assembly. In both cases, therefore, it is clear
that an offer of payment of money was made by the appellant
to these voters to induce them to cast votes for him in the
election to the Rajya Sabha.
Learned counsel, however, urged that as long as no specific
amount was offered by the appellant, there was, in fact, no
offer of bribery. According to him, it was still a stage
when an intention of offering bribery was expressed, but no
offer of bribery was actually made. An offer, it was urged,
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must be held to be made only when a specific sum is
mentioned as the amount of bribe to be given and there is to
be no negotiation about the amount. In this connection,
learned counsel drew our attention to the meaning given to
the word "offer" as explained in Halsbury’s Laws of England,
3rd Edn., Vol. 8, at p. 69. Halsbury, at that stage, deals
with the meaning of the word "offer" as used in connection
with the law of contract; and we do not think any assistance
can be taken from the principle laid down therein. He also
made a reference to some Indian cases dealing with the
meaning of the word "offer" in connection with the offer of
bribery under the Criminal Law. The case mainly relied upon
was Emperor v. Aminuddin Salebhoy Tyabjee(1), where the
accused was alleged to have used the words : "my cousin
wishes to give you Rs. 5,000" to a government servant. It
was held that these words did not constitute an offer of
bribery. We do not think that that case is
(1) A.I.R. 1923 Bom. 44.
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at all parallel with the case before us. In that case, the
accused himself did not offer any bribe and all that he did
was to indicate to the government servant that his cousin
wanted to give to the government servant the sum of Rs.
5,000. There was, thus, no direct offer by the accused of
bribery to the government servant.
In Emperor v. Choube Dinkar Rao and Others(1), Dinkar Rao
accused admitted that he went to a Judge and told him that
the plaintiff would pay Rs. 10,000 if the suit were decreed,
but denied. that he had gone on behalf of the plaintiff Once
again, that was a case where there was no offer of payment
of any motley by the accused to the Judge. In the instant
case, the words used by the appellant clearly amounted to an
offer to give money himself to the two voters.
Similarly, we do not think that any assistance can be taken
from the decision of Blackburn, J. in In the Matter of Balls
v. The Metropolitan Board of Works(2), where it was held in
connection with compensation for land that "the offer of
compensation is to be an offer which the claimant can either
accept or reject; if it is of one sum for compensation and
costs, the claimant cannot know how much he is to have for
the injury to his land and how much for his costs. ’He
might, therefore, be misled by it,-.", That was again a case
where -the point which came up for consideration before the
learned Judge related to offer of compensation for land
which would be in the nature of an offer in connection with
a contract and not an offer of bribe under the election law.
Reliance was also placed on the view expressed by this Court
in Mohan Singh v. Bhanwarlal and Others(8), in which,
dealing with gratification under the Election Law, it was
held : "Gratification in its ordinary connotation means
satisfaction. In the context in which the expression is
used, and its delimitation by the Explanation, it must mean
something valuable which is calculated to satisfy a person’s
aim, object or desire, whether or not that thing is
estimable in terms of money; but a mere offer to help in
securing employment to a person with a named or unnamed
employer would not amount to such gratification." We again
fail to see how that decision affects the point before Rs.
In that case,. all that was held was that a mere offer of
help in securing employment with another person does not
amount to gratification., In the case before us, the offer
was clearly in respect of money and, if accepted, it would
naturally satisfy the voter’s desire to acquiremoney.
(1) A.I.R. 1933 All. 513. (2) (1865-66) 1 Q.B. Cases
337.
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(3) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 1366.
L4SupGI/67-3
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Reference was also made to the decision of this Court in
Union of India v. H. C. Goel(1), where it was held that the
respondent had taken out a hundred rupee note from his
wallet in the presence of a government servant whom he had
approached in connection with his work, and the government
servant showed his stem disapproval of this conduct,
whereupon the respondent said ’No" and put the wallet with
the note in his pocket. The facts in that case were also
clearly different, because all that was held by this Court
was that the mere taking out of the note from the wallet did
not amount to an offer, while, in the case before us, the
finding was that there was a clear offer to give money.
In this connection, we may refer to the decision of this
Court in Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moreshwar Parashram
and Others where the Court had to consider existence of a
contract _for supply of goods in connection with deciding
the disqualification of a candidate as set out in S. 7 (d)
of the Representation of the People Act, 1951. The Court,
in dealing with this aspect, distinguished between a
contract for purposes of the Contract Act and a contract for
purposes of the Election Law. In our opinion, when
considering the scope of the words "offer ,of bribery" in
the Election Law, we should not place a narrow construction
on that expression. In fact, the scope of that expression
should be extended in order to ensure, that elections are
held in an atmosphere of absolute purity, and a wide meaning
should be given to the expression "offer of bribery".
In Case No. XII of Borough of Staleybridge(3), Blackburn, J.
had to deal with the question of interpreting the giving of
bribery under the election law then prevalent in England.
At that time, the offer of a bribe was not a corrupt
practice under the law there, and yet Justice Blackburn said
that: "There can be no doubt that a promise or offer to
cause a workman or other person to be no loser by his coming
to vote comes within the meaning of the Act, and is an act
of bribery and corruption.Thornley and Vaughan distinctly
offered and promised two voters that they should have their
day’s wages paid them if they would come and vote. That
amounted to an act of bribery on the part of those who
accepted it, and on the part of those who offered it."
In Case No. XV of Borough of Coventry(4), it was said "With
respect to bribery, as well as with respect to treating, I
shall ever hold it to be a wise and beneficial rule of
constitutional law, quite apart from the 17 & 18 Viet. c.
102, that for the purpose of securing purity and freedom of
election, candidates should be answerable for the acts of
their agents, as well as for their own
(1) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 364.
(3) (1869) I O’ Malley and Hardcastle p. 66.
(4) (1869) 1 O’Malley & Hardcastle p. 97.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 817.
27
acts", and proceeding further, with regard to mere offers of
bribe, it was said : "Although these cases have been classed
below those of bribery by both the learned counsel, it
cannot be supposed that an offer to bribe is not as bad as
the actual payment of money. It is a legal offence,
although these cases have been spoken of as being an
inferior class by reason of the difficulty of proof from the
possibility of people being mistaken in their accounts of
conversations in which offers were made; whereas there can
be no mistake as to the actual payment of money." In
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England, thus, the law relating to corrupt practice of
giving bribery was extended to include offers of bribery,
though it was held that stricter proof of offer of bribery
should be insisted upon on the ground that there was a
possibility of misunderstanding. In the case before us, the
offer was in such clear terms that there could be no
misunderstanding. In both cases, and particularly in the
case of Shah Mustaq Ahmad, the offer was of money to be paid
in order to secure the votes. We are unable to accept the
proposition suggested by learned counsel that an offer of
bribery cannot be held to be such unless a specific amount
is mentioned in the offer. No such requirement is laid down
by law, and if we were to accept this proposition, it would
lay the field open for corruption in such a manner as to
make the provision totally ineffective.A candidate wanting
to secure a vote by bribery can always go and first ask
the voter whether he is prepared to accept money as a bribe
and need offer a specific sum only after the voter has sign-
ified his assent. Once the voter actually accepts the
offer, it is not likely that evidence of that instance of
bribery will be available. The mere fact that a candidate
goes and offers some money is enough to show that he has
already made his offer to corrupt the voter and secure his
vote, though there may still be a possibility that, if
subsequently the negotiations as to the precise amount to be
paid as bribe fail, he may not actually succeed in his
objective. The offer of bribery in the manner proved in
this case, in our opinion, clearly satisfies the
requirements of section 123 of the Representation of the
People Act. The decision of the High Court upholding that
of the Election Tribunal setting aside the election of the
appellant to the Rajya Sabha was, therefore, right and must
be upheld. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G. C.
Appeal disimissed.
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