Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAIYALAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARIKISHAN SINGH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/02/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1557 1965 SCR (2) 877
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC 929 (3)
R 1969 SC 597 (6)
R 1971 SC2533 (33)
F 1972 SC 598 (12,13)
RF 1976 SC 490 (43)
RF 1981 SC 298 (41)
R 1990 SC 991 (10,13)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 341-President of India-
Specification of Scheduled caste in relation to parts of
State-Validity of-Chamar, if included In Dohar caste.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s election was challenged inter alia, on the
ground that he belonged to the Dohar caste which was not
recognised as a Scheduled Caste for the district in question
and so his declaration that he belonged to the Chamar caste
which was a Schedule Caste was improperly and illegally
accepted by the Returning Officer. The Election Tribunal
declared the election invalid. The finding was confirmed on
appeal by the High Court. In appeal to the Supreme Court.
HELD : (i) The plea that though the appellant is not a
Chamar as such, he can claim the same status by reason of
the fact that he belonged to Dohar Caste which is a sub-
caste of the Chamar caste cannot be accepted. An enquiry of
this kind would not be permissible having regard to the
provisions contained in Art. 341 of the Constitution. [881
F-G]
Basavalingappa v. D. Munichinnappa, [1965] 1 S.C.R. 316,
referred to.
(ii)In specifying castes, races or tribes under Art. 341 of
the Constitution, the President has been expressly
authorised to limit the notification to parts of or groups
within the castes, race or tribe, the President may well
come to the conclusion that not the whole caste, race or
tribe but parts of or groups within them should be
specified. Similarly the President can specify castes,
races or tribes or parts thereof in relation not only to the
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entire State, but in relation to the parts of the State
where he is satisfied that the examination of the social and
educational backwardness of the race, caste or tribe
justifies such specification. [882 H-883 C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 765 of1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order, dated
April 23, 1963, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in First
Appeal No. 24 of 1963.
N.C. Chatterjee, V. S. Sawhney, S. S. Kanjuja and Ganpat
Rai, for the appellant.
G.S. Pathak and Dipak Datta Chaudhry, for respondent No.
1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadkar, C.J. This appeal by special leave arises out
of an Election petition filed by respondent No. 1,
Harikishan
878
Singh, challenging the validity of the election of the
appellant, Bhaiyalal, in a reserved seat in the Berasia
Constituency in the district of Sehore in Madhya Pradesh.
The election in question was held in February, 1962; at this
election the appellant, respondent No. 1, and three others
offered themselves as candidates. The appellant was
declared duly elected on the 26th February, 1962 since he
had polled the highest number of votes. His next rival was
respondent No. 1. By this petition, respondent No. 1
challenged the validity of the appellant’s election on the
ground that the appellant belonged to the Dohar caste and
was not a Chamar. The appellant had filed his nomination
paper on the 19th January, 1962 before the Returning Officer
at Sehore and had declared that he was a member of the
Chamar scheduled caste of the State of Madhya Pradesh in
relation to Sehore district. This declaration was accepted
by the Returning Officer. Respondent No. 1 contended that
Dohar caste was not recognised as the scheduled caste for
the district of Sehore and Raisen, and so, the Returning
Officer bad improperly and illegally accepted the
declaration of the appellant as one belonging to the Chamar
scheduled caste. Since the appellant did not belong to the
scheduled caste in question, he was not entitled to stand
for election for the reserved seat in respect of the said
Constituency. This is the basis on which the validity of
the appellant’s election was challenged by respondent No. 1.
On the other hand, the appellant urged that the election
petition filed by respondent No. 1 was not maintainable
inasmuch as he had not deposited the security of Rs. 2,000
in the manner prescribed by the statutory rules.
On these pleadings, the Election Tribunal framed appropriate
issues. The first four issues covered the principal
contention raised by respondent No. 1 against the validity
of the appellant’s nomination as a member belonging to the
Chamar scheduled caste, whereas the fifth issue related to
the appellant’s contention about the incompetence of the
election petition filed by respondent No. 1. Both parties
led evidence in support of their pleas on the principal
point of dispute between them. The Election Tribunal con-
sidered the oral evidence adduced by the parties, examined
the documents on which they respectively relied, and found
in favour of respondent No. 1. In regard to the plea raised
by the appellant against the competence of the election
petition, the Tribunal found against him. In the result,-
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the election petition was allowed and the appellant’s
election declared invalid.
Against this decision of the Election Tribunal, the
appellant preferred an appeal to the Madhya Pradesh High
Court. Before
879
the High Court, the same two points were urged. The High
Court has confirmed the finding of the Election Tribunal on
both the points. It has held that the election petition
filed by respondent No. 1 was valid and the security deposit
was made by him in accordance with the statutory
requirements. On the merits of the, controversy as to
whether the appellant was a Chamar by caste and as such was
entitled to be elected for the reserved seat in the,
Constituency in question, the High Court, in substance, has
agreed with the conclusion of the Election Tribunal. In
consequence, the appeal preferred by the appellant was
dismissed on the 23rd April, 1963. It is against this
decision that the appellant has come to this Court by
special leave.
On behalf of the appellant Mr. Chatterjee has contended that
the High Court was in error in confirming the finding of the
Election Tribunal in regard to the caste to which the
appellant belonged. It appears that the appellant’s case
was that he was a Dohar Chamar which according to him is a
sub-caste of the Chamar scheduled caste. He urged that the
said sub-caste was also called ’Mochi’. In support of this
plea, the appellant examined witnesses and produced
documents, and a,- we have just indicated, respondent No. 1
also produced witnesses and examined documents to show that
the Dohar caste was distinct from and independent of the
Chamar caste and Dohars could not, therefore, claim to be
Chamars within the meaning of the Presidential Order. Thus,
the question which arose between the parties for decision in
the present proceedings is a question of fact and on this
question both the Tribunal and the High Court have made
concurrent findings against the appellant. It is true that
in reaching their conclusion on this point, the Tribunal as
well as the High Court had to consider oral as well as
documentary evidence; but in cases of this kind where the
Tribunal and the High Court make concurrent findings on
questions of fact, this Court does not usually interfere;
and after hearing Mr. Chatterjee we see no reason to depart
from our usual practice in this matter.
Respondent No. 1 examined 13 witnesses belonging to the
caste of the appellant. All of them asserted that they did
not belong to the Chamar caste. According to their
evidence, the Dohar caste was different from the Chamar
caste. There was no intercaste marriage nor even inter-
caste dinners between the members of the said two castes.
This evidence shows that Chamars and Mochis of Sehore
district lived in mohallas different from the mohallas in
which the Dohars lived. Amongst the witnesses examined by
respondent No. 1, the High Court has attached considerable
significance to the evidence of Kishanlal, P. W. 4.,
880
He was the Secretary of the Dohar Samaj started by the
appellant himself. The appellant was then the Sirpanch of
that Samaj. It is true that the Samaj did not function for
long; but the documents produced by respondent No. 1 to show
the constitution of the Samaj clearly indicate that the
appellant had taken a prominent part in that matter.
Kishanlal’s evidence is absolutely clear and unambiguous.
He has stated on oath that the Dohar and the Chamar castes
are entirely different. The Chamars, according to him, take
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off skins from dead animals, prepare shoes and do leather
work; the Dohar, said the witness, is not the sub-caste of
Chamar caste; there is no relationship of inter-dining and
intermarriage between the two. He denied that the Dohars
are called Mochis. Mr. Chatterjee has not been able to show
any reason why the evidence of this witness should not have
been believed by the High Court. The witness belongs to the
same caste as the appellant and there is no motive shown why
he should take a false oath in respect of a matter which to
persons of his status has great significance. It is not
likely that a person like Kishanlal would make false
statement about his own caste.
In support of his oral evidence, respondent No. 1 produced
certain documents, Exts. P. 2, P. 3, P. 4 and P. 5. These
are all signed by the appellant and they relate to the year
1956. In these documents, the appellant has described
himself as Dohar; in none of them has he mentioned his caste
as Chamar. Similar is the effect of other documents on
which respondent No. 1 relied; they are P. 8, P. 10, P.
11, P. 6, P. 7, P. 9, P. 14, P. 15, P. 17, P. 19, to P. 27.
In rebuttal the appellant examined himself and his
witnesses. This oral evidence was intended to show that the
Dohar caste is the same as Mochi caste and it is a sub-caste
of the Chamar caste. In addition to the oral evidence, the
appellant produced 22 documents. It is true that some of
these documents which had been discarded by the Election
Tribunal as unworthy of credence or as irrelevant, have been
accepted by the High Court as relevant and genuine. Even
so, the High Court has come to the conclusion that these
documents do not show satisfactorily that the Dohar caste is
a sub-caste of the Chamar caste. In that connection, the
High Court has pointed out that the documents relied upon by
the appellant do not support his case that the Dohar caste
is a sub-caste of the Chamar caste, and in that sense, they
are not consistent with the plea made by the appellant in
the present proceedings. We allowed Mr. Chatterjee to take
us through the material evidence; and on considering the
said evidence in the
881
light of the criticism made by Mr. Chatterjee, we are
satisfied that there is no reason to interfere with the
concurrent finding recorded by the Tribunal and the High
Court on the main question of fact. We must, accordingly,
hold that the appellant does not belong to the Chamar caste
and as such was not qualified to contest the reserved seat
for the scheduled caste of Chamars in the Constituency in
question.
Incidentally, we may point out that the plea that the Dohar
caste is a sub-caste of the Chamar caste cannot be
entertained in the present proceedings in view of the
Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950. This Order has
been issued by the President under Article 341 of the
Constitution. Article 341 (1) provides that the President
may with respect to any State or Union territory, and where
it is a State, after consultation with the Governor thereof,
by public notification, specify the castes, races or tribes
or parts of or groups within castes, races, or tribes which
shall for the purposes of this Constitution be deemed to be
Scheduled Castes in relation to that State or Union
territory, as the case may be. Sub-Article (2) lays down
that Parliament may by law include in or exclude from the
list of Scheduled Castes specified in a notification issued
under clause (1) any caste, race or tribe or part of or
group within any caste, race or tribe, but save as aforesaid
a notification issued under the said clause shall not be
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varied by any subsequent notification. It is thus clear
that in order to determine whether or not a particular caste
is a scheduled caste within the meaning of Art. 341, one has
to look at the public notification issued by the President
in that behalf. In the present case, the notification
refers to Chamar, Jatav or Mochi, and so, in dealing with
the question in dispute between the parties, the enquiry
which the Election Tribunal can hold is whether or not the
appellant is a Chamar, Jatav or Mochi. The plea that though
the appellant is not a Chamar as such, he can claim the same
status by reason of the fact that he belongs to the Dobar
caste which is a sub-caste of the Chamar caste, cannot be
accepted. It appears to us that an enquiry of this kind
would not be permissible having regard to the provisions
contained in Art. 341. In the case of B. Basavalingappa v.
D. Munichinnappa & Others,(1) this Court had occasion to
consider a similar question. The question which arose for
decision in that case was whether respondent No. 1, though
Voddar by caste, belonged to the scheduled caste of Bhovi
mentioned in the Order, and while holding that an enquiry
into the said question was permissible, the Court has
elaborately referred to the special and unusual
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 316.
882
circumstances which justified the High Court in holding that
Voddar caste was the same as the Bhovi caste within the
meaning of the Order; otherwise the normal rule would be :
"it may be accepted that it is not open to make any
modification in the Order by producing evidence to show, for
example, that though caste A alone is mentioned in the
Order, caste B is also a part of caste A and, therefore,
must be deemed to be included in caste A." That is another
reason why the plea made by the appellant that the Dohar
caste is a sub-caste of the Chamar caste and as such must be
deemed to be included in the Order, cannot be accepted.
Whilst we are referring to this aspect of the matter, we may
point out that the Order has taken good care to specify
different castes under the same heading where enquiry showed
that the same caste bore different names, or it had sub-
castes which were entitled to be treated as scheduled castes
for the purposes of the Order. In the district of Datia,
for instance, entry 3 refers to Chamar, Ahirwar, Chamar
Mangan, Mochi or Raidas. Similarly, in respect of
Maharashtra, Item 1, entries 3 and 4 refer to the same
castes by different names which shows either that the said
castes are known differently or consist of different sub-
castes. Likewise, item 2, entry 4 in the said list refers
to Chamar, Chamari, Mochi, Nona, Rohidas, Ramnami, Satnami,
Surjyabanshi or Surjyaramnami. It is also remarkable that
in Maharashtra in certain districts Chambhar and Dhor are
included in the list separately. Therefore, we do not think
that Mr. Chatterjee can seriously quarrel with the
conclusion of the High Court that the appellant has not
shown that he belongs to the Chamar caste which has been
shown in the Order as a scheduled caste in respect of the
Constituency in question.
Mr. Chattejee attempted to argue that it was not competent
to the President to specify the lists of Scheduled Castes by
reference to different districts or sub-areas of the States.
His argument was that what the President can do under Art.
341(1) is to specify the castes, races or tribes or parts
thereof, but that must be done in relation to the entire
State or the Union territory, as the case may be. In other
words, says Mr. Chatterjee, the President cannot divide the
State into different districts or subareas and specify the
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castes, races or tribes for the purpose of Art. 341(1). In
our opinion, there is no substance in this argument. The
object of Art. 341(1) plainly is to provide additional
protection to the members of the Scheduled Castes having
regard to the economic and educational backwardness from
which they suffer. It is obvious that in specifying castes,
races or tribes,
883
the President has been expressly authorised to limit the
notification to parts of or groups within the castes, races
or tribes, and that must mean that after examining the
educational and social backwardness of a caste, race or
tribe, the President may well come to the conclusion that
not the whole caste, race or tribe but parts of or groups
within them should be specified. Similarly, the President
can specify castes, races or tribes or parts thereof in
relation not only to the entire State, but in relation to
parts of the State where he is satisfied that the
examination of the social and education are backwardness of
the race, caste or tribe justifies such specification. In
fact, it is well-known that before a notification is issued
under Art. 341(1), an elaborate enquiry is made and it is as
a result of this enquiry that social justice is sought to be
done to the castes, races or tribes as may appear to be
necessary, and in doing justice, it would obviously be
expedient not only to specify parts or groups of castes,
races or tribes, but to make the said specification by
reference to different areas in the State. Educational and
social backwardness in regard to these castes, races or
tribes may not be uniform or of the same intensity in the
whole of the State; it may vary in degree or in kind in
different areas and that may justify the division of the
State into convenient and suitable areas for the purpose of
issuing the public notification in question. Therefore, Mr.
Chatterjee is in error when he contends that the
notification issued by the President by reference to the
different areas is outside his authority under Art. 341 (1).
The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
884