Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHINDER SINGH GILL & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CHIIEF ELECTION COMMISSIONER, NEW DELHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/12/1977
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 851 1978 SCR (3) 272
1978 SCC (1) 405
CITATOR INFO :
R 1979 SC1725 (25)
R 1979 SC1803 (7)
R 1979 SC1918 (14)
R 1980 SC 882 (7)
R 1980 SC1362 (10A,50)
R 1981 SC 136 (7,10)
RF 1981 SC 547 (7)
R 1981 SC 818 (19,22,28,33,34,39)
RF 1981 SC 873 (65)
RF 1982 SC1413 (38)
E 1984 SC 921 (16,21)
R 1985 SC1233 (25)
RF 1985 SC1416 (100)
R 1986 SC 111 (16)
D 1987 SC1109 (26)
RF 1988 SC 61 (6)
RF 1988 SC 157 (8)
F 1989 SC1038 (4)
R 1990 SC1402 (23)
RF 1991 SC1216 (7)
RF 1992 SC2219 (139)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Arts. 324 and 329(b)-Scope of
Counting of votes in many segments of the constituency
completed-Before declaration of final result ballot papers
and ballot boxes of some segments destroyed in, mob
violence--Election Commission ordered repoll of the entire
constituency--Election Commission, if competent to order
repoll of entire constituency.
Article 226--Election Commission’s order for fresh poll in
entire constituency--If could be challenged in a writ
petition.
Representation of the People Act, 1950-Ss. 80 and
100(1)(d)(iv)--Scope of.
Natural justice--Issue of notice to affected parties and
opportunity to hear before passing an order under Art.
329(b)--If necessary--Notice, if should be given to the
whole constituency.
Words and phrases--"Civil consequence"--Election "called in
question" meaning of.
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HEADNOTE:
Article 329(b) of the Constitution provides that
notwithstanding anything in the Constitution no election
to either House of Parliament or to the House, or either
House of the Legislature of a State shall be called in
question except by an election petition presented to such
authority and in such manner as may be provided for by or
under any law made by the appropriate legislature.
Section 100(1)(d)(iv) of the Representation of the People
Act, 1951 provides that if the High Court is of the opinion
that the result of the election so far as it concerns a
returned candidate has been materially affected by any non-
compliance with the provisions of the Constitution or of
this Act or of any rules or orders made under this Act the
High Court shall declare the election of the returned
candidate to be void.
The appellant and the third respondent were candidates for
election in a Parliamentary constituency. The appellant
alleged that when at the last hour of counting it appeared
that he had all but won the election, at the instance of
respondent no. 3 mob violence broke out and postal ballot
papers and ballot boxes from certain Assembly segments,
while being brought for counting, were destroyed and the
Returning officer was forced to postpone the declaration of
the result. The Returning Officer reported the happening by
wireless to the Chief Election Commissioner. An officer of
the Election Commission who was deputed to be an observer at
the counting stage gave a written report to the Commission
in addition to an oral report about the incidents which
marred the last stages of the counting. The appellant met
the Chief Election Commissioner and requested him to declare
the result. Eventually, however, the Chief Election
Commissioner issued a notification stating that the counting
in the constituency was seriously disturbed by violence and
that ballot papers of some of the assembly segments had been
destroyed by violence, as a consequence of which it was not
possible to complete the counting of votes in the
constituency and declare the result with any degree of
certainty. The notification further stated that taking all
circumstances into account, the Commission was satisfied
that the poll had been vitiated to such an extent as to
affect the result of the election. In exercise of the
powers under Art. 324 of the Constitution it cancelled the
poll already held and ordered a re-poll in the entire
constituency.
In a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution the
appellant alleged that the action of the Chief Election
Commissioner in ordering repoll in the whole constituency
was arbitrary and violative of any vestige of fairness. The
respondents in reply urged that the High Court had no
Jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition in view of Art.
329(b) and that the Commission’s action was well within its
powers under Art. 324.
273
The High Court dismissed the writ petition holding that it
had no jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition. Yet on
merits it held that Art. 324 does not impose any limitation
on the function contemplated under that article; that
principles of natural justice were not specifically provided
for in that article but were totally excluded while passing
the impugned order and that even if the principles of
natural justice were impliedly to be observed before passing
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the impugned order the appellant was heard not only before
the issue of the notification but in any case after the
notification.
In the repoll the appellant did not participate though his
name appeared on the ballot and respondent no. 3 was
declared elected.
On the question of application of principles of natural
justice it was contended on behalf of the respondents that
the tardy process of notice and hearing would thwart the
conducting of elections with speed that unless civil
consequences ensued, hearing was not necessary and that the
right accrues to a candidate only when he is declared
elected and lastly the decision of the Election Commission
is only provisional and that it is he the election court
which is the final authority on the subject.
HELD: The catch-alljurisdiction under Art. 226 cannot
consider the correctness, legality or otherwiseof the
direction for cancellation integrated with repoll. [269 D]
1(a) Article 329(b) is a blanket ban on litigative challenge
to electoral steps taken by the Election Commission for
carrying forward the process of election to its culmination
in the formal declaration of the result. [322 D]
(b) The sole remedy for an aggrieved party, if he wants to
challenge any election, is an election petition. This
exclusion of all other remedies includes constitutional
remedies like Art. 226 because of the non-obstante clause in
Art. 329(b). If what is impugned is an election the ban
operates provided the proceeding "calls it in question" or
puts it ’m issue : not otherwise. [289 E-F]
(c)Part XV of the Constitution is a Code in itself,
providing the entire groundwork for enacting the appropriate
laws and setting up suitable machine for the conduct of
elections. Articles 327 and 328 take- care of the set of
laws and rules making provisions with respect to all matters
relating to or in connection with elections. Election
disputes are also to be provided for by laws made under Art.
327. ’Be Representation of the People Act, 1951 is a self-
contained enactment so far as elections are concerned.
Section 80 which speaks substantially the same language as
Art. 329(b) provides that no election shall be called in
question except by an election petition presented in
accordance with the provisions of Part IV of the Act. The
Act provides for only one remedy and that remedy being by an
election petition to be presented after the election is
over, there is no remedy provided at any of the intermediate
stages. [292 C-D; F-G 293 B-C]
Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj Narain [1976] 2 SCR 347, 504-505
referred to.
(d)The compendious expression "election" commences from
the initial notification and culminates in the declaration
of the return of a candidate. The paramount policy of the
Constitution-framers in declaring that no election shall be
called in question except the way it is provided for in Art.
329(b) and the Representation of the People Act, 1951
necessitates the reading of the Constitution and the Act
together as an integral scheme. The reason for postponment
of election litigation to the post-election stage is that
elections shall not unduly be protracted or obstructed. [294
D-E]
(e)No litigative enterprise in the High Court or other
court should be allowed to hold up the on-going electoral
process because the parliamentary representative for the
constituency should be chosen promptly. Article 329
therefore covers "electoral matters". [294 F]
(f)The plenary bar of Art. 329(b) rests on two principles
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: (1) the peremptory urgency of prompt engineering of the
whole election process without intermediate interruptions by
way of legal Proceedings challenging the
274
steps and stages in between the commencement and the
conclusion; and (2) the provision of a special jurisdiction
which can be invoked by an aggrieved party at the end of the
election excludes other forms, the right and remedy being
creatures of statutes and controlled by the Constitution.
[295 H, 296 ]
Durga Shankar Mehta [1955] 1 SCR 267 referred to.
(g)If the regular poll for some reasons has failed to
reach the goal of choosing by plurality the returned
candidates and to achieve this object a fresh poll (not a
new election) is needed, it may still be a step in the
election.[296 E-F]
(h)A writ petition challenging the cancellation coupled
with repoll amounts to calling in question a step in
’election’ and is, therefore, barred by Art. 329(b). [296 G]
(i)Knowing the supreme significance of speedy elections in
our system the framers of the Constitution have, by
implication, postponed all election disputes to election
petitions and tribunals. In harmony with this scheme s. 100
has been designedly drafted to embrace all conceivable
infirmities which may be urged. To make the project fool-
proof s. 100(1)(d)(iv) has been added to absolve everything
left over. Section 100 is exhaustive of all grievances
regarding an election. What is banned is not anything
whatsoever ,done or directed by the Election Commissioner
but everything he does or directs in furtherance of the
election, not contrarywise. [297 B, C, D]
(j)It is perfectly permissible for the Election Court to
decide the question as one falling under s. 100(1)(d)(iv).
The Election Court has all the powers necessary to grant all
or only any of the reliefs set out in s. 98 and to direct
the Commissioner to take such ancillary steps as will render
complete justice to the appellant. [319 C, E]
(k)It is within the powers of the Election Court to direct
a repoll of particular polling stations to be conducted by
the specialised agency under the Election Commission and
report the results and ballots to the Court. Even a repoll
of postal ballots can be ordered In view of the wide ranging
scope of implied powers of the Court, the appellant’s claims
are within the Courts powers to grant. [322 A-B]
2(a) Article 324 does not exalt the Election Commission into
a law unto itself. The Article is wide enough to supplement
the powers under the Act subject to the several conditions
on its exercise. [300 A-B]
(b)The Election Commissioner’s functions are subject to
the norms of fairness and he cannot act arbitrarily. The
Constitution has made comprehensive provision in Art. 324 to
take care of surprise situations. That power has to be
exercised in keeping with the guidelines of the rule of law
without stultifying the Presidential notification or
existing legislation. It operates in areas left unoccupied
by legislation and the words "Superintendence, direction and
control" as well as "conduct of all elections" are in the
broadest terms.[299 A, B-C]
(c)If imparting the right to be heard will paralyse the
process, the law will exclude it. In any case it is
untenable heresy to lockjaw the victim or act behind his
back by invoking urgency, unless the clearest case of public
injury flowing from the least delay is evident. The
Election Commission is an institution of central importance
and enjoys far-reaching powers and the greater the power to
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affect other’s rights or liabilities the more necessary is
the need to hear. [304 D, G-H, 305 B-C]
(d)It is well-established that when a high functionary
like the Commissioner is vested with wide powers, the law
expects him to act fairly and legally. Discretion vested in
a high functionary may be reasonably trusted to be used
properly, not perversely. If it is misused certainly the
Court has power to strike down the act. [299 D-E]
Virendra [1958] SCR 308 and Harishankar [1955] 1 1104 SCR
referred to.
(e)Article 324 vests vast functions which may be powers or
duties, essentially administrative and marginally even
judicative or legislative. _ [302 H]
275
(f)The dichotomy between administrative and quasi-judicial
functions vis a vis the doctrine of natural justice is
presumably obsolescent after Kraipak which marks the water-
shed in the application of natural justice to administrative
proceedings. The rules of natural justice are rooted in all
legal sys-tems, and are not any ’new theology. They are
manifested in the twin principles of nemo index in sua causa
and audi alteram partem. It has been pointed out that the
aim of natural justice is to secure justice, or, to put it
negatively to prevent miscarriage of justice. These rights
can operate only in areas not covered by any law validly
made; they do not supplant the law of the land but
supplement it. The rules of natural justice are not
embodied rules. What particular rule of natural justice
should apply to a given case must depend to a great extent
on the facts and circumstances of that case, the framework
of the law under which the inquiry is held and the
constitution of the tribunal or body of per-sons appointed
for that purpose. Whenever a complaint is made before a
court that some principle of natural justice has been
contravened, the court has to decide whether the observation
of that rule was necessary for a just decision on the facts
of that case. Further, even if a power is given to a body
without Specifying that rules of natural justice should be
observed in exercising it, the nature of the power would
call for its observance. [300 F-G, 301 B-D, 303-D]
Kraipak [1970] 1 SCR 457, In re: H.K. (an infant) [1967] 2
Q.B. 617 and Ridge v. Baldwin [1964] AC 40 referred to.
(g)Even where the decision has to be reached by a body
acting judicially, there must be a balance between the need
for expedition and the need to give full opportunity to the
defendant to see the material against him. There might be
exceptional cases where to decide a case exparte would be
unfair and it would be the duty of the Tribunal to take
appropriate steps to eliminate unfairness. Even so no
doctrinaire approach is desirable but the court must be
anxious to salvage the cardinal rule to the extent
permissible in a given case. [307 D, E]
3(a) Civil consequences cover infraction of not merely
property or personal rights but of civil liberties, material
deprivations and non-peciiniary damages. In its
comprehensive connotation, everything that affects a citizen
in his civil life inflicts a civil consequence. The
interest of a candidate at an election to Parliament
regulated by the Constitution and the laws comes within its
gravitational orbit. A democratic right, if denied inflicts
civil consequences. Every Indian has a right to elect and
he elected and this is a constitutional as distinguished
from a common law right, and is entitled to cognizance by
courts subject to statutory regulation. [308 F, 309 C, E]
(b)A vested interest in the prescribed process is a
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processual right, actionable if breached. The appellant has
a right to have the election conducted not according to
humour or hubris but according to law and justice. So
natural justice cannot be stumped out on the score. In the
region of public, law locus-standi and person aggrieved,
right and interest have a broader import. [309 G, H]
(c)In the instant case the Election Commission claims that
a hearing had. been given but the appellant retorts that all
that he had was vacuous meeting where nothing was disclosed.
But in law degrees of difference may at a, substantial stage
spell difference in kind or dimensions. [309 H, 310 A]
(d)The case of Subhash Chander in which this Court held
that it was not necessary to give an opportunity to the
candidates for an examination as to why the whole
examination should not be cancelled because the examination
was vitiated by adoption of unfair means on a mass scale.
But the ratio of that decision has no application to this
case. The candidates in an election who have acquired a
very vital stake in the polling going on properly stand on a
different footing from the electorate in general. The
interest of the electorate is too remote and recondite, too
feeble and attenuate to be taken note of in a cancellation
proceeding. What really marks the difference is the
diffusion and dilution. The candidates in an election are
really the spearheads, the combatants. They have set
themselves up as nominated candidates organised the campaign
and galvanised the electorate for the polling and counting.
Their interest and claim are not indifferent but immediate.
They are the 5-1114SCI 77
276
parties in the electoral dispute. In this sense they stand
on a better footing and cannot be deniedthe right to be
heard. In Ghanshyamdas Gupta in which the examinationresult
of three candidates was cancelled this Court imported
principles ofnatural justice. This case may have a
parallel in electoral situations. if the Election Commission
cancelled the poll it was because it was satsfied that the
procedure adopted had gone awry on a wholesale basis.
Therefore, it all depends on the circumstances and is
incapable of generalisation. In a situation like the
present it is a far cry from natural justice to argue that
the whole constituency must be given a hearing.
[310 F, H, 311 G-H, 312 A, D, E,]
Col. Singhi [1971] 1 SCR 791, Binapani [1967] 2 SCR 625,
Ram Gopal [1970] 1 SCR 472; Subhash Chander Singh [1970] 3
SCR 963 field inapplicable.
Ghanshyam Das Gupta [1962] Supp. 3 SCR 36 followed.
4(a) Whether the action of the Election Commission in
ordering repoll beyond certain segments of the constituency
where the ballot boxes were destroyed was really necessary
or not is for the Election Court to assess when judging
whether the impugned order was arbitrary, whimsical or was
arrived at by extraneous considerations. [316 H, 317 A-B]
(b) Independently of natural justice, judicial review
extends to an examination of the order as to its being
perverse, irrational, bereft of application of the mind or
without any evidentiary backing. If two views are possible,
the Court cannot interpose its view. If no view is possible
the Court must strike down. [317 B]
(c)The philosophy behind natural justice is participatory
justice in the process of democratic rule of law. In the
vital area of election where people’s faith in the,
democratic process is hypersensitive it is realism to keep
alive audi alteram even in emergencies. Hearing need not be
an elaborate ritual. In situations of quick despatch, it
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may be minimal, even formal. Fair hearing is a postulate of
decision making, although fair abridgement of that process
is permissible. It can be fair without the rules of
evidence or forms of trial. [316 D-F]
(d)The silence of a statute has no exclusionary effect
except where it flows from necessary implication. Article
324 vests a wide power and where some direct consequence on
candidates emanates from its exercise this functional
obligation must be read into it. [316 F]
Observations
(a)When a statutory functionary makes an order based on
certain grounds, its validity must be judged by the reasons
so mentioned and cannot be supplemented by fresh reasons in
the shape of affidavit or otherwise. Otherwise, an order
bad in the beginning may, by the time it comes to court on
account of a challenge, gets validated by additional grounds
later brought out. [283 B-C]
(b)An obiter binds none, not even the author and
obliteration of findings rendered in supererogation must
allay the appellant’s apprehensions. The High Court should
have abstained from its generosity. [284 C]
(Per Goswami and Shinghal, JJ. concurring)
(1) The appellants’ argument that since Art. 324(6) refers
to "functions" and not "powers", there can be no question of
the Election Commission exerrising any power under that
Article, is without force. The term "functions" includes
powers as well as duties. It is incomprehensible that
a person or body can discharge any functions without
exercising powers. Powers and duties are integrated with
functions. [330 D-E]
2(a) It is well-established that an express statutory grant
of power or the imposition of a definite duty carrie- with
it by implication, in the absence of a limitation, authority
to employ all the means that are usually employed and that
are necessary to the exercise of the power or the
performance of the duty. That which is clearly implied is
as much a part of a law as that which is expressed. [331 E-
F]
277
(b)In a democratic set up power has to be exercised in
accordance with law. Since the conduct of all elections is
vested under Art. 324(1) in the Election Commission, the
framers of the Constitution took care to leaving scope for
exercise of residuary power by the Election Commission, in
the infinite variety of situations that may emerge from time
to time. Yet, every contingency could not be foreseen and
provided for with precision. The Commission may be required
to cope with some situation, which may not be provided for
in the enacted laws and rules. The Election Commission,
which is a high-powered and independent body, cannot
exercise its functions or perform its duties unless it has
an amplitude of powers. Where a law is absent, the
Commission is not to look to any external authority for the
grant of powers to deal with the situation but must exercise
its power independently and see that the election process is
completed in a free and fair manner. Moreover, the power
has to be exercised with promptitude.[330 G, H, 331 A-B, C-
E, G]
N.P. Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer, Nanakkal Constituency
and Others, [1952] SCR 218 followed.
(c) Section 19A of the Act, in terms, refers to the
functions not only under the Representation of the People
Act, 1950 and representation of the People Act, 1951 or the
rules made thereunder, but also under the Constitution.
Apart from the several functions envisaged by the two Acts
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and the rules, the Commission is entitled to exercise
certain powers under Art. 324 itself on its own right in an
area not covered by the Acts and rules. [332 A-B]
(d)Whether an order passed is wrong, arbitrary or is
otherwise invalid, relates to the mode of exercising the
power and does not touch upon the existence of the power in
an authority if it is there either under the Act or the
rules or under Art. 324(1). [331 G]
3(a) The contention that the Election Commission had no
power to make the impugned order for a repoll in the entire
constituency. is without substance. [332 H]
(b) Both under s.58 and under s. 64A the poll that was taken
on a particular polling station can be voided and a fresh
poll can be ordered, by the Commission. These sections
cannot be said to be exhaustive. It cannot be said that
they rule out the making of an order to deal with a similar
situation if it arises in several polling stations or
sometimes as a general feature in a substantially large
area. Although these two sections mention "a polling
station" or "a place fixed for the poll" it may, where
necessary embrace multiple polling stations. [332 G-H]
(c)The Election Commission is competent, in an appropriate
case, to order repoll of an entire constituency. If it does
that it will be an exercise of power within the ambit of its
functions under Art. 324. Although in cxercise of powers
under Art. 324(1) the Election Commission cannot do some-
thing impinging upon the power of the President in making a
notification under s. 14 of the Act, after the notification
has been issued by the President, the entire electoral
process is in the charge of the Commission. The Commission
is exclusively responsible for the conduct of the election
without reference to any outside agency. There are no
limitations under Art. 324(1).
J333 C-E]
4.The writ petition is not maintainable. Since the
election covers the entireprocess from the issue of the
notification under s. 14 to the declaration of theresult
under s.66 of the Act, when a poll that has already taken
place has been cancelled and a fresh poll has been ordered,
the order is passed as an integral part of the electoral
process. The impugned order has been passed in exercise of
the power under Art. 324(1) and s. 153 of the Act. Such an
order cannot be questioned except by an election petition
under the Act. [333 G-H, 334 A]
5(a) There is no foundation for a grievance that the
appellants will be without any remedy, if their writ
application is dismissed. If during the process of election
at an intermediate or final stage. the entire poll has been
wrongly cancelled and a fresh poll has been wrongly ordered,
that is a matter which can be agitated after the declaration
of the result on the basis of the
278
fresh poll, by questioning the election in the appropriate,
forum. The appellants will not be without a remedy to
question every step in the electoral process and every order
that has been passed in the process of the election includ-
ing the countermanding of the earlier poll. The Court will
be able to entertain their objection with regard to the
order of the Election Commission countermanding the earlier
poll and the whole matter will be at large. [334 B-F]
(b)The Election Commission has passed the order
professedly under Art. 324 and s. 153 of the Act. If there
is any illegality in the exercise of the power under this
Article or under any provision of the Act, there is no
reason why s. 100(1)(d)(iv) should not be attracted. If
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exercise of power is competent either under the provisions
of the Constitution or under any other provision of law, any
infirmity in the exercise of that power is on account of
noncompliance with the provisions of law, since law demands
exercise, of power by its repository in a proper, regular,
fair and reasonable manner. [335 B-D]
Durga Shankar Mehra v. Thakur Raghuraj Singh and others,
[1955] 1 SCR 267 referred to.
(c)The writ petition is barred under Art. 329 (b) of the
Constitution and the High Court has rightly dismissed it on
that ground. Both Art. 329(b) and s. 80 of the Act provide
that no election shall be called in question except by an
election petition. All reliefs claimed by the appellant in
the writ petition can be claimed in the election petition
and the High Court is competent to give all appropriate
reliefs to do complete justice between the parties. It will
be open to the High Court to pass any ancillary or conse-
quential order to enable it to grant the necessary relief
provided under the Act. [335 D-G]
6.It will not be correct for this Court, in this appeal,
to pronounce its judgment finally on merits either on law or
on facts. The pre-eminent position conferred by the
Constitution on this Court under Article 141 of the
Constitution does not envisage that this Court should lay
down the law, in an appeal like this, on any matter which is
required to be decided by’ the election court on a full
trial of the election petition, without the benefit of the
opinion of the Punjab and Haryana High Court which has the
exclusive jurisdiction under s. 80A of the Act to try the
election petition. [335 H, 363 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1297 of 1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
25th of April 1977 of the Delhi High Court in Civil Writ
Petition No. 245 of 1977.
P. P. Rao, A. K. Ganguli and Ashwani Kumar for the
appellant.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Additional Solicitor General, E. C.
Agarwala, B. N. Kripal and Girish Chandra for Respondent
No. 1.
M.N. Phadke, S. S. Bindra, Hardev Singh & R. S. Sodhi for
Respondent No. 3.
The followiug Judgments of the Court were delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-What troubles us in this appeal, coming
before a Bench of 5 Judges on a reference under Article
145(3) of the Constitution, is not the profusion of
controversial facts nor the thorny bunch of lesser law, but
the possible confusion about a few constitutional
fundamentals, finer administrative normae and jurisdictional
limitations bearing upon elections. What are those
fundamentals and limitations? We will state them, after
mentioning briefly what the writ petition, from which this
appeal, by special leave, has arisen, is about,
279
The basics
Every significant case has an unwritten legend and indelible
lesson. This appeal is no exception, whatever its formal
result. The message, as we will see at the end of the
decision, relates to the pervasive philosophy of democratic
elections which Sir Winston ChurchiU vivified in matchless
words :
"At the bottom of all tributes paid to
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democracy is the little man, walking into a
little booth, with a little pencil, making a
little cross on a little bit of paper-no
amount of rhetoric or voluminous discussion
can possibly diminish the overwhelming
importance of the point."
If we may add, the little, large Indian shall
not be hijacked from the course of free and
fair elections by mob muscle methods, or
subtle perversion of discretion by men dressed
in little, brief authority. For ’be you ever
so high, the law is above you.
The moral may be stated with telling terseness in the words
of William Pitt: ’Where laws end, tyranny begins’.
Embracing both these mandates and emphasizing their combined
effect is the elemental law and politics of Power best
expressed by Benjamin Dizreeli:
"I repeat that all power is a trust-that we
are accountable for its exercise-that, from
the people and for the people, all springs,
and all must exist."
(Vivien Grey, BK. VI. Ch. 7)
Aside from these is yet another, bearings on the, play of
natural justice, its nuances, non-applications, contours,
colour and content. Natural Justice is no mystic testament
of judge-made juristics but the pragmatic, yet principled,
requirement of fairplay in action as the norm of a civilised
justice-system and minimum of good government-crystallised
clearly in our jurisprudence by a catena of cases here and
elsewhere.
The conspectus of facts
The historic elections to Parliament, recently held across
the ,country, included a constituency in Punjab called 13-
Ferozepore Parliamentary constituency. It consisted of nine
assembly segments and the polling took place on March 16,
1977. According to the calendar notified by the Election
Commission, the counting took place in respect of five
assembly segments on March 20, 1977 and the, remaining four
on the next day. The appellant and the third respondent
were the principal contestants. It is stated by the
appellant that when counting in all the assembly segments
was completed at the respective segment headquarters, copies
of the results were given to the candidates and the local
tally telephonically communicated to the returning officer
(respondent 2). According to the scheme the postal ballots
are to arrive at the returning officer’s headquarters at
Ferozepore where they are to be counted. The final tally is
made when the ballot boxes
280
and the returns duly reach the Ferozepore headquarters front
the various segment headquarters. The poll proceeded as
ordained, almost to the very last stages, but the completion
of the counting at the constituency headquarters in
Ferozepore was aborted at the final hour as the postal
ballots were being counted-thanks to mob violence allegedly
mobilised at the instance of the third respondent., The
appellant’s version is that he had all but won on the total
count by a margin of nearly 2000 votes when the panicked
opposite party havoced and halted the consummation by muscle
tactics. The postal ballot papers were destroyed. The,
ballot boxes from the Fazilka segment were also done away
with en route, and the returning officer was terrified into
postponing the declaration of the result. On account of an
earlier complaint that the returning officer was a relation
of the appellant, the Election Commission (hereinafter
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referred to as Commission) had: deputed an officer of the
Commission-Shri IKK Menon-as observer of the poll process in
the constituency. He was present as the returning officer
who under compulsion had postponed the concluding 3 p.m.
onwards. Thus the returning officer had the company of the
observer with him during the crucial stages and
controversial eruptions in the afternoon of March 21.
Shortly after sunset, presumably, the returning officer who
under compulsion had postponed the concluding part of the
election, reported the happenings by wireless massage to the
Election Commission. The observer also reached Delhi and
gave a written account and perhaps an oral narration of the
untoward events which marred what would otherwise have been
a smooth finish Lo, the election.
Disturbed by the disruption of the declaratory part of the
election, the appellant, along with a former Minister of the
State, met the Chief Election Commissioner (i.e. the
Commission) at about 10.30 A.M. on March 22nd, with the
request that he should direct the returning officer to
declare the result of the election. Later in the day, the
Commission issued an order which has been characterised by
the appellant as a law-less and precedentless cancellation,
of the whole poll, acting by hasty hunch and without
rational appraisal of facts. By the 22nd of_March, when the
Election Commission made the impugned order, the bulk of the
electoral results in the country bad beamed in. The
gravamen of the grievance of the appellant is that while he
had, in all probability, won the poll, he has been deprived
of this valuable and hard-won victory by the arbitrary
action of the Commission going contrary to fairplay and in
negation of the basic canons of natural justice. Of course
the Commission did not stop with the cancellation but
followed it up a few days later with a direction to hold a
fresh poll_for the whole constituency, involving all the
nine segments, although there were no complaints about the
polling in any of the constituencies and the ballot papers
of eight constituencies were available intact with the
returning officer and only Fazilka segment ballot papers
were destroyed or demanded on the way, (plus the postal
ballots). It must also, be mentioned here that a demand was
made, according to the version, of the third respondent, for
recount in one segment which was,,
281
unreasonably, turned down. The observer, in his report to
the Election Commission, also mentioned that in two polling
stations divergent practices were adopted in regard to
testing valid and invalid votes. To be more pracise, Shri
IKK Menon mentioned’ in his report that at polling station
no. 8, the presiding officer’s seal on the tag as well as
the paper seal of one box was broken. But the ballot papers
contained in that box were below 300 and would not have
affected the result in the normal course. In another case
in Jalalabad assembly segment, the assistant returning
officer had rejected a number of ballot papers of a polling
station on the score that they were not signed by the
presiding officer. In yet another case it was reported that
the ballot papers were neither signed nor stamped but were
accepted by the assistant returning officer as valid, al-
though the factum was not varified by Shri Menon with the
assistant returning officer. Shri Menon, in his report,
seems to have broadly authenticated the story of the mob
creating a tense situation leading to the military being
summoned. According to him only the ballot papers of
Fazilka assembly segment were destroyed, not of the. other
segments. Even regarding Fazilka, the result-sheet had
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arrived. So, far as Zira assembly segment was concerned,
some documents (not the, ballot papers) had been snatched
away by hooligans. The observer had asked the returning
officer to send a detailed report over and above the
wireless message. That report, dated March 21, reached the
Commission on March 23, but, without waiting for the,
report we need not probe the reasons for the hurry-the
Commission issued the order cancelling the poll. The Chief
Election Commissioner has filed a laconic affidavit leaving
to the Secretary of the Commission to go into the details of
the facts, although the Chief Election Commissioner must
himself have had them within his personal ken. This aspect
also need not be examined by us and indeed cannot be, for
reasons which we will presently set out.
Be that as it may, the Chief Election Commissioner admitted
in his affidavit that the appellant met him in his office on
the morning of March 22, 1977 with the request that the
returning officer be directed to declare the result. He
agreed to consider and told him him off,, and eventually
passed an order as mentioned above. The then Chief Election
Commissioner has mentioned in his affidavit that the
observer Shri Menon had apprised him of "the various
incidents and developments regarding the counting of votes
in the constituency" and also had submitted a written
report. He has also admitted the receipt of the wireless
message, of the returning officer. He concludes his
affidavits ’that after taking all these circumstances and
information including the oral representation of the 1st
petitioner into account on "2nd Much, 1977 itself I passed
the order cancelling the poll in the said Parliamentary
constituency. In my view this was the only proper course to
adopt in the circumstances of the case and with a view to
ensuring fair and free elections, particularly when even a
recount bad been rendered impossible by reason of the
destruction of ballot papers.’ The order of the Election
Commission, resulting in the demolition of the poll already
held, may be read at this stage.
282
"ELECTION COMMISSION OF INDIA
New Delhi
Dated 22 March, 1977
Chaitra 1, 1899 (SAKA)
NOTIFICATION
S.O.-Whereas the Election Commission has received reports
from the Returning Officer of 13-Ferozepore Parliamentary
Constituency that the counting on 21 March, 1977 was
seriously disturbed by violence; that the ballot papers of
some of the assembly segments of the Parliamentary
constituency have been destroyed by violence; that as a
consequence it is not possible to complete the counting of
the votes in the constituency and the declaration of the
result cannot be made with any degree of certainty:
And whereas the Commission is satisfied that taking all
circumstances into account, the poll in the constituency has
been vitiated to such an extent as to effect the result of
the election;
Now, therefore, the Commission, in exercise of the powers
vested in it under Article 324 of the Constitution, Section
153 of the, Representation of the People Act, 1951 and all
other powers enabling it so to do, cancels the poll already
taken in the constituency and extends the time for the
completion of the election up to 30 April, 1977 by amending
its notification No. 464/77, dated 25 February, 1977 in
respect of the above election as follows :-
In clause (d) of item (i) of the said notification, relating
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to the completion of election-
(a) in the existing item (i), after the
words "State of Jammu and Kashmir", the words
"and 13-Ferozepur Parliamentary constituency
in the State of Punjab" shall be inserted; and
(b) The existing item (ii) shall be
renumbered as item (iii), and before the item
(iii) as so renumbered, the following item
shall be inserted, namely :-
"(iii) 30 April 1977 (Saturday) as the date
before which the election shall be completed
in "13Ferozepur Parliamentary constituency in
the State of Punjab." [464/77]
By order
Sd/- A. N. Sen,
Secretary
The Commission declined to reconsider his decision when the
appellant pleaded for it. Shocked by the liquidation of the
entire poll, the latter moved the High Court under Article
226 and sought to void the order as without jurisdiction and
otherwise arbitrary and violative of any vestige of
fairness. He was met by the objection, successfully urged
by the respondents 1 and 3, that the High Court
283
-had no jurisdiction in view of Article 329(b) of the
Constitution and the Commission had acted within its wide
power under Article 324 and fairly. Holding that it had no
jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition. the High Court
never-the-less ]proceeded to enter verdicts on.the merits of
all the issues virtually exercising even the entire
,jurisdiction which exclusively belonged to the Election
Tribunal. The doubly damnified appellant has come up to
this Court in appeal by special leave.
Meanwhile, pursuant to the, Commission’s direction, a re-
poll was held. Although the appellant’s name lingered on
the ballot he did not participate in the re-poll and
respondent 3 won by an easy plurality although numerically
those who voted were less than half of the, previous poll.
Of course, if the Commission’s order for re-poll fails in
law, the second electoral exercise has to be dismissed as a
stultifying futility. Two things fall to be mentioned at
this stage, but, in passing, it may be stated that the third
respondent had complained to the Chief Election Commissioner
that the assistant returning officer of Fazilka segment had
declined the request for recount unreasonably and that an
order for re-poll of the Fazilka assembly part should be
made ’after giving personal hearing’. Meanwhile, runs the
request of the third respondents ’direct the returning
officer to withhold declaration of result of 13 Ferozepore
parliament constituency’. We do not stop to make inference
from this document but refer to it as a material factor
which may be considered by the tribunal which, eventually,
has to decide, the factual controversy.
The second equally relevant matter is that when a statutory
functionary makes an order based on certain grounds, its
validity must be judged by the reasons so mentioned and
cannot be supplemented by fresh reasons in the shape of
affidavit or otherwise. Otherwise, an order bad in the
beginning may, by the time it comes to court on account of a
challenge, get validated by additional grounds later brought
,out. We may here draw attention to the observations of
Bose J. in Gordhandas Bhanji (1)
"Public orders, publicly made, in exercise of
a statutory authority cannot be construed in
the light of explanations subsequently given
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by the officer making the order of what he
meant, or of what was in Ms mind, or what he
intended to, do. Public orders made by public
authorities are meant to have public effect
and are intended to effect the actings and
conduct of those to whom they are addressed
and must be construed objectively with
reference to the language used in the order
itself."
Orders are not like old wine becoming better as they grow
older:
A Caveat.
We must, in limine, state that-anticipating our decision on
the blanket ban on litigative interference during the
process of the election, clamped down by Article 329(b) of
the Constitution-we do not propose to enquire into or
pronounce upon the factual complex or the
(1) A.I.T. 1952 S.C. 16.
284
lesser legal tangles, but only narrate the necessary
circumstances of the case to get a hang of the major issues
which we intend adjudicating. Moreover, the scope of any
actual investigation in the event of controversion in any
petition under Article 226 is ordinarily limited and we have
before us an appeal from the High Court dismissing a
petition under Article 226 on the score that such a
proceeding is constitutionally out of bounds for any court,
having regard to the mandatory embargo. in Article329(b).
We should not,except in exceptional circumstances, breach
the recognised, though not inflexible, boundaries of Article
226 sitting in appeal, even assuming the maintainability of
such a petition. Indeed, we should have expected the High
Court to have considered the basic jurisdictional issue
first, and not last as it did, and avoided sallying forth
into a discussion and decision on the merits, self-contra-
dicting its own holding that it had no jurisdiction even to
entertain the petition. The learned Judges observed :
"It is true that the submission at serial No.
3 above in fact relates to the preliminary
objection urged on behalf of respondents 1 and
3 and should normally have been dealt with &
St but since the contentions of the parties on
submission No. 1 are inter-mixed with the
interpretation of Article 329(b) of the
Constitution, we thought it proper to deal
with them in the order in which they have been
made."
This is hardly a convincing alibi for the extensive per
incuriam examination of facts and law gratuitously made by
the Division Bench of the High Court, thereby generating
apprehensions in the appellant’s mind that not only is his
petition not maintainable but he has been damned by damaging
findings on the merits. We make it unmistakably plain that
the election court hearing the dispute on the same subject
under section 98 of the R.P. Act, 1951 (for short, the Act)
shall not be moved by expressions of opinion on the merits
made by the Delhi High Court while dismissing the writ
petition. An obiter binds none, not even the author, and
obliteration of findings rendered in supererogation must
alley the appellant’s apprehensions. This Court is in a
better position than the High Court, being competent, under
certain circumstances, to declare the law by virtue of its
position under Article 141. But, absent such authority or
duty, the High Court should have abstained from its
generosity. Lest there should be any confusion about
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possible slants inferred from our synoptic statements, we
clarify that nothing projected in this judgment is intended
to be an expression of our opinion even indirectly. The
facts have been set out only to serve as a peg to hang three
primary constitutional issues which we will formulate a
little later.
Operation Election
Before we proceed further, we had better have a full glimpse
of tie, constitutional scheme of elections in our system and
the legislative follow-up regulating the process of
election. Shri Justice Mathew in lndira Nehru Gandhi(1)
summarised skeletal fashion, this scheme
(1) [1976] 2 S.C.R. 347
285
following the pattern adopted by Fazal Ali, J. in
Ponnuswami. 1952 SCR 218. He explained :
"The concept of democracy as visualised by the
Constitution presupposes the representation of
the people in Parliament and state
legislatures by the method of election. And,
before an election machinery can be brought
into operation, there are three requisites
which require to be attended to, namely, (1)
there should be a set of laws and rules making
provisions with respect to all matters
relating to, or in connection with, elections,
and it should be decided as to how these laws
and rules are to be made; (2). there should be
an executive charged with the duty of securing
the due conduct of elections; and (3) there
should be a judicial tribunal to deal with
disputes arising out of or in connection with
elections. Articles 327 and 328 deal with the
first of these requisites, article 324 with
the second and article 329 with the third
requisite (see N. P. Ponnuswami v. Returning
Officer, Nanmakkal Constituency & Ors. 1952
SCR 218, 229). Article 329 (b) envisages the
challenge to an election by a petition to be
presented to such authority as the Parliament
may, by law, prescribe. A law relating to
election should contain the requisite
qualifications for candidates, the method of
voting, definition of corrupt practices by the
candidates and their election agents, the
forum for adjudication of election disputes
and other cognate matters. It is on the basis
of this law that the question determined by
the authority to which the petition is
presented. And, when a dispute is raised as
regards the validity of the election of a
particular candidate, the authority entrusted
with the task of resolving the dispute must
necessarily exercise, a judicial function,
for, the process consists of ascertaining the
facts relating to the election and applying
the law to the facts so ascertained."
A short description of the legislative project in some more
detail may be pertinent, especially touching on the polling
process in the booths and the transmission of ballot boxes
from the polling stations to the returning officer’s
ultimate counting station and the crucial prescriptions
regarding annuoncements and recounts and declarations. We
do not pronounce upon the issues regarding the stage for and
right of recount. the validity of votes or other factual or
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legal disputes since they fall for decision by the Election
Court where the appellant has filed an election petition by
way of abundant caution.
A free and fair election based on universal adult franchise
is the basic; the regulatory procedures vis-a-vis the
repositories of functions and the distribution of
legislative, executive and judicative roles in the total
scheme, directed towards the holding of free elections, are
the specifics. Part XV of the Constitution plus the
Representation of the People Act, 1950 (for short, the 1950
Act) and the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (for
short, the Act), Rules framed there under, instructions
issued and exercises prescribed, constitute the package of
286
electoral law governing the parliamentary and assembly
elections in the country. The super-authority is the
Election Commission, the kingpin is the returning officer,
the minions are the presiding officers in the polling
stations and the electoral engineering is in conformity with
the elaborate legislative provisions.
The scheme is this. The President of India (Under Section
14) ignites the general elections across the nation by
calling upon the People, divided into several constituencies
and registered in the electoral rolls, to choose their
representatives to the Lok Sabha. The constitutionally
appointed authority, the Election Commission, takes over the
whole conduct and supervision of the mammoth enterprise in-
volving a plethora of details and variety of activities, and
starts off with the notification of the time table for the,
several stages of the election (Section 30). The assembly
line operations then begin. An administrative machinery and
technology to execute these enormous and diverse jobs is
fabricated by the Act, creating officers, powers and duties,
delegation of functions and location of polling stations.
The precise exercise following upon the calendar for the
poll, commencing from presentation of nomination papers,
polling drill and telling of votes,, culminating in the
declaration and report of results are covered by specific
prescriptions in the Act and the rules. The secrecy of the
ballot, the authenticity of the voting paper and its later
identifiability with reference to particular polling
stations, have been thoughtfully provided for. Myriad other
matters necessary for smooth elections have been taken care
of by several provisions of the Act.
The wide canvas so spread need not engage us sensitively,
since such diffusion may weaken concentration on the few
essential points concerned in this case. One such aspect
relates to repoll. Adjournment of the poll at any polling
station in certain emergencies is sanctioned by section 57
and fresh poll in specified vitiating contingencies is
authorised by section 58. The rules run into more
particulars. After the votes are cast comes their counting.
Since the simple plurality of votes clinches the verdict, as
the critical moment approaches, the situation is apt to hot
up, disturbances erupt and destruction of ballots disrupt.
If disturbance or destruction demolishes the prospect of
counting the total votes, the number secured by each
candidate and the ascertainment of the will of the majority,
a re-poll confined to disrupted polling stations is provided
for. Section 64A chalks out the conditions for and course
of such repoll, spells out the power, and repository thereof
and provides for kindred matters. At this stage we may make
a closer study of the provisions regarding repoll
systematically and stagewise arranged in the Act. It is not
the case of either side that a total repoll of an entire
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constituency is specificated in the sections or the rules.
Reliance is placed for this wider power upon Article 324 of
the Constitution-by the Commission in its order, by the
first respondent in his affidavit, by the learned Additional
Solicitor General in his argument and by the third
respondent through his counsel. We may therefore have to
study the scheme of. article 324 and the provisions of the,
Act together since they are integral to each other. Indeed,
if we may mix metaphors for emphasis, the legislation made
pursuant to Article 327 and that part of the Constitution
specially devoted to elections must be
287
viewed as one whole picture, must be heard as an
orchestrated piece and must be interpreted as one package of
provisions regulating perhaps the most stressful and
strategic aspect of democracy-in-action so dear to the
nation and so essential for its survival.
The lis and the issues
Two prefatory points need to be mentioned as some reference
was made to them at the bar. Firstly, an election dispute
is not like an ordinary lis between private parties. The
entire electorate is vicariously, not inertly, before the
court. (See 1959 SCR 611, 616, 622). We may, perhaps, call
this species of cases collective litigation where judicial
activism assures justice to the constituency, guardians the
purity of the system and decides the rights of the
candidates. In this class of cases, where the common law
tradition is partly departed from, the danger that the
active judge may become, to some extent, the prisoner of his
own prejudices exists; and so, notwithstanding his powers of
initiative, the parties’ role in the formulation of the
issues and in the presentation of evidence and argument
should be substantially maintained and- care has to be taken
that the circle does not become a vicious one, as pointed
out by J.A. Jolowicz in. ’Public Interest Parties and the
Active Role of the Judge in Civil Litigation’ (ss. p. 276).
Therefore, it is essential that courts, adjudicating upon
election controversies, must play a verily active role,
conscious all the time that every decision rendered by the
Judge transcends private rights and defends the constituency
and the democracy of the country.
Secondly, the pregnant problem of power and its responsible
exercise is one of the perennial riddles of many a modern
constitutional order. Similarly, the periodical process of
free and fair elections. uninfluenced by the caprice,
cowardices or partisanship of hierarchical authority holding
it and unintimidated by the threat, tantrum or vandalism of
strong-arm tactics, exacts the embarrassing price of
vigilant monitoring. Democracy digs its grave where
passions, tensions and violence, on an overpowering spree,
upset results of peaceful polls, and the law of elections is
guilty of sharp practice if it hastens to legitimate the
fruits of lawlessness. The judicial branch has a sensitive
responsibility her to call to order lawless behaviour.
Forensic non-action may boomerang, for the court and the law
are functionally the bodyguards of the People against
bumptious power, official or other.
We now enter the constitutional zone relating to the
controversy in this case. Although both sides have
formulated the plural problems with some divergence, we may
compress them into three cardinal questions :
1.Is Art. 329(b) a blanket ban on all
manner of questions which may have impact on
the ultimate result of the election, arising
between two temporal termini viz., the notifi-
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cation by the President calling for the
election and the declaration of the result by
the returning officer ? Is Art. 226 also
covered by this embargo and. if so, is s. 100
broad enough to accommodate every kind of
objection, constitutional, legal or factual,
which may have the result of invalidation of
an
288
election and the declaration of the petitioner
as the returned candidate and direct the
organisation of any steps necessary to give
full relief ?
2.Can the Election Commission, clothed
with the comprehensive functions under Article
324 of the Constitution, cancel the whole poll
of a constituency after it has been held, but
before the formal declaration of the result
has been made, and direct a fresh poll without
reference to the guidelines under ss. 58 and
64(a) of the Act, or other legal prescription
or legislative backing. If such plenary power
exists, is it exercisable on the basis of his
inscrutable ’subjective satisfaction’ or only
on a reviewable objective assessment reached
on the basis of circumstances vitiating a free
and fair election and warranting the stoppage
of declaration of the result and directions of
a fresh poll not merely of particular polling
stations but of the total constituency ?
3.Assuming a constitutionally vested
capacity tinder Art. 324 to direct re-poll, is
it exercisable only in conformity with natural
justice and geared to the sole goal of a free,
popular verdict if frustrated on the first
occasion ? Or, is the Election Commission
immune to the observance of the doctrine of
natural justice on account of any recognised
exceptions to the application of the said
principle and unaccountable for his action
even before the Election Court ?
The juridical aspect of these triple questions alone can
attract judicial jurisdiction. However. even if we confine
ourselves to legal problematics, eschewing the political
overtones, the words of Justice Holmes will haunt the Court
: "We are quiet here, but it is the quiet of a storm
centre." The judicature must, however. be illumined in its
approach by a legal sociological guidelines and a princi-
pled-pragmatic insight in resolving, with jural tool and
techniques s ,ind techniques. ’the various crises of human
affairs’ as they reach the forensic stage and seek dispute-
resolution in terms of the rule of law. Justice Cordozo
felicitously set the perspective
"The great generalities of the Constitution
have at content and significance that vary
from age to age."
Chief Justice Hidayatullah perceptively
articulated the insight
"One must, of course, take note of the
synthesized authoritative content or the moral
meaning of the underlying’ principle of the,
prescriptions of law, but not ignored the
historic revolution of the, law itself or how
it was connected in its changing moods with
social requirements of a particular age.
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(Judicial Methods, B. N. Rau Memorial Lecture)
The old articles of the supreme lex meet new challenges of
life, the old legal pillars suffer new stresses. So we have
to adopt the law and develop its latent capabilities if
novel situations, as here, are encountered. That is why in
the reasoning we have adopted and the
289
perspective we have projected, not literal nor lexical but
liberal and visional is our interpretation of the Articles
of the Constitution and the provisions of the Act. Lord
Denning’s words are instructive
"Law does not stand still. It moves
continually. Once; this is recongnised, then
the task of the Judge is put on a higher
plane. He must consciously seek to mould the
law so as to serve the needs of the time. He
must not be a mere, mechanic, a mere working
mason, laying brick on brick, without thought
to the overall design. He must be an archi-
tect-thinking of the structure as a whole
building for society a system of law which is
strong, durable and just. It is on his work
that civilised society itself depends."
The invulnerable barrier of Art.329 (b).
Right at the forefront stands in the way of the appellant’s
progress the broad-spectrum ban of Article 329(b) which, it
is claimed for the respondents, is imperative and goal-
oriented. Is this Great Wall of China, set up as a
preliminary bar, so impregnable that it cannot be by passed
even by Art. 226 ? That, in a sense, is the key question
that governs the fate of this appeal. Shri P. P. Rao for
the appellant contended that, however, wide Art. 329(b) may
be, it does not debar proceedings challenging, not the steps
promoting election but dismantling it, taken by the
Commission without the backing of legality. He also urged
that his client, who had been nearly successful in the poll
and had been deprived of it by an illegal cancellation by
the Commission, would be left in the cold without any remedy
since the challenge to cancellation of the completed poll in
the entire constituency was not covered by s. 1 00 of the
Act. Many subsidiary pleas also were put forward but we
will focus on the two inter-related submissions bearing on
Art. 329(b) and s. 100 and search for a solution. The
problem may seem prickly but an imaginative application of
principles and liberal interpretation of the constitution
and the Act will avoid anomalies and assure justice. if we
may anticipate our view which will presently be explained,
section 100 (1 ) (d) (iv) of the Act will take care of the,
situation present here, being broad enough, as a residual
provision, to accommodate, in expression ’non-compliance’,
every excess, transgression, breach or omission. And the
spen of the, ban under Art. 329(b) is measured by the sweep
of s. 100 of the Act.
We have to proceed heuristically now. Article 329(b) reads
Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution
"(b) no election to either House of Parliament
or to the House or either House of the
Legislature of a State shall be called in
question except by an election petition
presented to such authority and in such manner
as may be Provided for by or under any law
made by the appropriate Legislature."
Let us break down the prohibitory provision into its
components. The sole remedy for an aggrieved party, if he
wants to challenge any election, is an election petition.
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And this exclusion of all other remedies
290
includes constitutional remedies like Art. 226 because of
the nonobstante clause. If what is impugned is an election
the ban operates provided the proceeding ’calls it in
question’ or puts it in issue: not otherwise. What is the
high policy animating this inhibition’? Is there any
interpretative alternative which will obviate irreparable
injury and permit legal contests in between? How does S.
100 (1) (d) (iv) of the Act integrate into the scheme? Let
us read s. 100 here :
"Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2)
if the High Court is of opinion-
x x x
(d)that the result of the election, in so
far as it concerns a returned candidate, has
been materially affected-
x x x
(iv) by any non-compliance with the
provisions of the Constitution or of the Act
or of any rules or orders made under this Act
the High Court shall declare the election of
the returned candidate to be void.
The companion provision, viz., s. 98 also may
be extracted at this,star, :
"At the conclusion of the trial of an election
petition the
High Court shall make an order-
(a) dismissing the election petition; or
(b) declaring the election all or any of the
returned candidates to be void; or
(e) declaring the election of all or any of
the returned candidates to be void and the
petitioner or any other candidate to have been
duly elected."
Now arises the need to sketch the scheme of s. 1 00 in the
setting of Art.329(b). The troublesome word ’non-
compliance’ holds in its fold a teleologic signification
which resolves the riddle of this case in, a way. So we
will address, ourselves to the meaning of meanings the
values within the words and the ’project unfolded’. This
will be taken up one after the other.
At the first blush we get the comprehensive impression that
every calling in question of an election save, at the end,
by an election petition, is forbidden. What, then, is an
election ? What is ’calling in question ? Every step from
start to finish of the total process constitutes ’election’,
not merely the conclusion or culmination. Can the cancella-
tion of the entire poll be called a step in the process and
for the progress of an election, or is it a reverse step of
undoing what has been done in the progress of the election,
non-step or anti-step setting at nought the process and,
therefore, not a step towards the goal and hence liberated
from the coils of Art. 329(b) ? And, if this act or step
were to be shielded by the constitutional provision, what is
an aggrieved party to do 9 This takes us to the enquiry
about the ambit of S. 100 of the Act and the object of Art.
329 (b) read with Art. 324. Such is the outline of the
complex issue projected before us.
291
’The election philosophy and the principle in Ponnuswami
Democracy is government by the people. It is a continual
participative operation, not a cataclysmic, periodic
exercise. The little man, in his multitude, marking his
vote at the poll does a social audit of his Parliament plus
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political choice of his proxy. Although the full flower of
participative Government rarely blossoms, the minimum
credential of popular government is appeal to the people
after every term for a renewal of confidence. So. we have
adult franchise and general elections as constitutional
compulsions. ’The right of election is the very essence of
the constitution’ (Junius). It needs little argument to
hold that the heart of the Parliamentary system is free, and
fair elections periodically held, based on adult franchise,
although social and economic democracy may demand much more.
Ponnuswami is a landmark case in election laws and deals
with the scope, amplitude, rationale and limitations of Art.
329(b). its ratio has been consistently followed by this
Court in several rulings through Durga Shankar Mehta (1) and
Hari Vishnu Kamath and Khare (2) down to Indira Gandhi(3).
The factual setting in that case may throw some light on the
decision itself. The appellant’s nomination for election to
the Madras Legislative Assembly was rejected by the
Returning Officer and so he hurried to the High Court
praying for a writ of certiorari to quash the order of
rejection, without waiting for the entire elective process
to run its full course and, at the end of it, when the
results also were declared, to move the election tribunal
for setting aside the result of the election conducted
without his participation. He thought that if the election
proceeded without him irreparable damage, would have been
caused and therefore sought to intercept the progress of the
election by filing a writ petition. The High Court
dismissed it as unsustainable, thanks to Art. 329(b) and
this court in appeal, affirmed that holding. Fazal Ali, J.
virtually spoke for the Court and explained the principle
underlying Art. 329(b). The ambit and spirit of the bar
imposed by the Article was elucidated with reference to the
principle that ’it does not require much argument to show
that in a country with a democratic constitution in which
the legislatures have to play a very important role, it will
lead to serious consequences if the elections are unduly
protracted or obstructed.’ In the view of the, learned
Judge, immediate individual relief at an intermediate stage
when the process of election is under way has to be
sacrificed for the paramount public good of promoting the
completion of elections. Fazal Ali, J. ratiocinated on the
ineptness of. interlocutory legal bold-ups. He posed the
issue and answered it thus :
"The question now arises whether the law of
elections in this country contemplates that
there should be two attacks on matters
connected with election proceedings, one while
they are going on by invoking the
extraordinary jurisdiction of the High Court
under article 226 of-the Constitution (the
ordinary
(1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 267
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104.
(3) [1976] 2 S.C.R. 347.
6-1114SCI/77
292
jurisdiction of the courts having been
expressly excluded), and another after they
have been completed by means of an election
petition. In my opinion, to affirm such a
position would be contrary to the scheme of
Part XV of the Constitution and the
Representation of the People Act, which, as I
shall point out later, seems to. be that any
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matter which has the effect of vitiating an
election should be brought up only at the
appropriate stage in an appropriate manner
before a special tribunal and should not be
brought up at an ’intermediate stage before
any court. It seems to me that under the
election law, the only significance which the
rejection of a nomination paper has consists
in the fact that it can be used as a ground to
Call the election in question. Article 329(b)
was apparently enacted to describe the manner
in which end the stage at which this ground,
and other grounds which may be raised under
the law to call the election in question,
could be urged. I think it follows by
necessary implication from the language of
this provision that those grounds cannot be
urged in any other manner, at any other stage
and before any other court. If the grounds on
which an election can be called in question
could be raised at an earlier stage and
errors, if any are rectified, there will be no
meaning in enacting a provision like Article
329(b) and in setting up a special tribunal.
Any other meaning ascribed to the words used
in the article would lead to anomalies, which
the Constitution could not have contemplated,
one of them being that conflicting views may
be expressed by the High Court at the pre-
polling stage and by the election tribunal,
which is to be an, independent body, at the
stage when the matter is brought before it.
Having thus explained the raison d’etre of the provision,
the Court proceeded to interpret the concept of election in
the scheme of Part XV of the Constitution and the
Representation of the People Act, 1951. Articles 327 and
328 take care of the act of laws and rules making provisions
with respect to all matters relating to or in connection
with, elections.’ Election disputes were also to be provided
for by laws made under Article 327. The Court emphasised
that Part XV of the Constitution was really a code in
itself, providing the entire ground work for enacting the
appropriate laws and setting up suitable machinery for the
conduct of elections. The scheme of the Act enacted- by
Parliament was also set out by Fazal Ali, J.’
"Part VI deals with disputes regarding
elections and provides for the manner of
presentation of election petitions, the
constitution of election tribunals and the
trial of election petitions part VII outlines
the various corrupt and illegal practises
which may affect the elections, and electoral
offences. Obviously, the Act is self-
contained enactment so far as elections are
concerned, which means that whenever we have
to ascertain the true position in regard to
any matter connected made thereunder. The
provisions of the Act which are material to
the present discussion are sections 60, 100,
105 and with elections, we have only to look
at the Act and the rules
293
170, and the provisions of Chapter 11 of Part
IV dealing with the form of election petitions
, their contents and the reliefs which may be
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sought in them. Section 80, which is
drafted in almost the same language as article
329(b) provides that ,no election shall be
called in question except by an election
petition presented in accordance with the
provisions of this Part’. Section 1 00, as we
have already seen, provides for the grounds on
which an election may be called in question,
one of which is the improper rejection of a
nomination paper, Section 105 says that ’every
order of the Tribunal made under this Act
shall be final and conclusive. Section 170
provides that ’no civil court shall have
jurisdiction to question the legality of any
action taken or of any decision given by the
Returning Officer or by any other person
appointed under this Act in connection with an
election. "
There have been amendments to these provisions but the
profile remains substantially the same. After pointing out
that the Act,- in section 80, and the Constitution, in
article 329(b), speak substantially the same language and
inhibit other remedies for election grievances except
through the election tribunal, the Court observed
"That being so, I think it will be a fair
inference from the provisions of the
Representation of the People Act to state that
the Act provides for only one remedy, that
remedy being by an election petition to be
presented after the election is over, and
there is no remedy provided at any
intermediate stage."
There is a non-obstante clause in Article 329 and,
therefore, Article 22.6 stands pushed out where the dispute
takes the form of calling in question an election, except in
special situations pointed out but left unexplored in
Ponnuswami.
The heart of the matter is contained in the conclusions
summarised by the Court thus :
"(1) Having regard to the important functions
which the legislatures have to perform in
democratic countries, it has always been
recognised to be a matter of first importance
that elections should be concluded as early as
possible according to time schedule and all
controversial matters and all disputes arising
out of elections should be postponed till
after the elections are over, so that the
election proceedings may not be unduly
retarded or protracted.
(2)In conformity with this principle, the
scheme of the election law in this country as
well as in England is that no significance
should be attached to anything which does not
affect the "election"; and if any
irregularities are committed while it is in
progress and they belong to the category or
class which, under the law by which elections
are governed, would have the effect of
vitiating the "election" and enable the person
effected to call it in question, they should
be brought so before a special tribunal by
means of an election petition
294
and not be made the subject of a dispute
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before any court while the election is in
progress."
After elaborately setting out the history in
England and in India election legislation vis-
a-vis dispute-resolution, Fazal Ali J. stated
"If the language used in article 329(b) is
considered against this historical background,
it should not be difficult to see why the
framers of the Constitution framed that provi-
sion in its present form and chose the
language which had been consistently used in
certain earlier legislative provisions and
which bad stood the test of time."
Likewise the Court discussed the, connotation , of the
expression election’ in Article 329 and observed :
"That word has by long usage in connection
with the process of selection of proper
representatives in democratic institutions,
acquired both a wide and a narrow meaning. In
the narrow sense, it is used to mean the final
selection of a candidate which may embrace the
result of the poll when there is polling or a
particular candidate being returned unopposed
when there is no poll. In the wide, sense,
the word is used to connote the entire process
culminating in a candidate being declared
elected. it seems to me that the word
"election " has been used in Part XV of the
Constitution in the wide sense, that to say to
connote the entire procedure, to be gone
through to return a candidate to the
legislature. That the word "election" bears
this wide meaning wheneverwe talk of
elections in a democratic country, is borne
out bythe fact that in most of the books
on the subject and in several cases dealing
with the matter, one of the questions mooted
is, when the election begins
The rainbow of operations, covered by the compendious
expression election, thus commences from the initial
notification and culminates in the declaration of the
return of a candidate,. The paramount policy of the
Constitution-framers in declaring that no election shall be
called in question except the way it is provided for in
Article 329 (b) and the Representation of the People Act,
1951, compels us to read, as Fazal Ali, J. did in
Pannuswami, the Constitution and the Act together as an
integral scheme. The reason for postponement of election
litigation to. the post-election stage is that elections
poll not unduly be protracted or obstructed. The speed and
promptitude in getting due representation for the electors
in the- legislative bodies is the real reason suggested in
the course of judgment.
Thus for everything is clear. No litigative enterprise in
the High Court or other court should be allowed to hold up
the on-going electoral process because the parliamentary
representative for the constituence should be chosen
promptly. Article 329 therefore covers "electoral matters".
One interesting argument, urged without success in
Ponnuswami elicited a reasoning from the Court which has
some bearing on the question in the present appeal. That
argument was that if nomina-
295
tion was part of election a dispute as to the validity of
the nomination was a dispute relating to election and could
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be called in question, only after the whole election was
over, before the election tribunal. This meant that the
Returning Officer could have no jurisdiction to decide the
validity of a nomination, although section 36 of the Act
conferred on him that jurisdiction. The learned Judge
dismissed this argument as without merit, despite the great
dailectical ingenuity in the submission. In this connection
the learned Judge observed
"Under section 36 of the Representation of the
People Act, 1951, it is the duty of the
Returning Officer to scrutinize the nomination
papers to ensure that they comply with the
requirements of, the Act and decide all
objections which be made to any nomination.
It is clear that unless this duty is
discharged properly, any number of candidates
may stand for election without complying with
the provisions of the Act and a great deal of
confusion may ensue. In discharging the
statutory duty imposed on him, the Returning
Officer does not call in question any
election. Scrutiny of nomination papers is
only a stage, though an important stage, in
the election process. It is one of the
essential duties to be performed before the
election can be completed, and anything done
towards the completion of the election
proceeding can by no stretch of reasoning be
described as questioning the election. The
fallacy of the argument lies in treating a
single step taken in furtherance of an
election as equivalent to election. The
decision of this appeal however turns not on
the construction of the single word
"election", but on the construction of the
compendious expression-no election shall be
called in question" in this context and
setting with due regard to the scheme of Part
XV of the Constitution and the Representation
of the People Act, 1951. Evidently, the
argument has no, bearing on this method of
approach to the question posed in this appeal,
which appears to me the only correct method."
What emerges from this perspicacious reasoning, if we may
say so with great respect, is that any decision sought and
rendered will not amount to ’calling in question’ an
election if it subserves the progress of the election and
facilitates the completion of the election. ’Ale should not
slur over the quite essential observation "-Anything done
towards the completion of the election proceeding can by no
stretch of reasoning be described as questioning the
election. Likewise, it is fallacious to treat ’a single
step taken in furtherance of an election as equivalent to
election’.
Thus, there are two types of decisions, two types of
challenges. The first relates to proceedings which
interfere with the progress of the election. The second
accelerates the completion of the election and acts in
furtherance of an election. So, the short question before
us, in the light of the illumination derived from
Ponnuswami, is as to whether the order for re-poll of the
Chief Election Commissioner is "anything done towards the
completion of the election proceeding’ and whether the
proceedings before the High Court facilitated the election
process or halted its progress. The question immediately
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arises as to whether
296
the relief sought in, the writ petition by the present
appellant amounted to calling in question the election.
This, in turn, revolves round the point as to whether the
cancellation of the poll and the reordering of fresh poll is
’part of election’ and challenging it is ’calling it in
question.
The plenary bar of Art. 329 (b) rests on two principles :
(1) The peremptory urgency of prompt engineering of the
whole election process without intermediate interruptions by
way of legal proceedings challenging the steps and stages in
between the commencement and the conclusion. (2) The
provision of a special jurisdiction which can be invoked by
an aggrieved party at the end of the election excludes other
form, the right and remedy being creatures of statutes and
controlled by the Constitution. Durga Shankar Mehta(1) has
affirmed this position and supplemented it by holding that,
once the Election Tribunal has decided, the prohibition is
extinguished and the Supreme Court’s over-all power to
interfere under Art. 136 springs into, action. In Hari
Vishnu(2) this Court upheld the rule in Ponnuswami excluding
any proceeding, including one under Art. 226, during the on-
going process of election, understood in the comprehensive
sense of notification down to declaration. Beyond the
declaration comes the election petition, but beyond the
decision of the Tribunal the ban of Art. 329(b) does not
bind.
If ’election’ bears the larger connotation, if ’callinng in
question’ possesses a semantic sweep in plain English, if
policy and principle are tools for interpretation of
statutes, language permitting the conclusion is
irresistible’ even though the argument contra may have
emotional impact and ingenious appeal, that the catch-all
jurisdiction under Art. 226 cannot consider the correctness,
legality or otherwise of the direction for cancellation
integrated with re-poll. For, the prima facie purpose of
such a re-poll was to restore a detailed Poll process and
to, complete it through the salvationary effort of a repoll.
Whether in fact or law, the order is validly made within his
powers or violative of natural justice can be examined later
by the appointed instrumentality, viz., the Election
Tribunal. That aspect will be explained presently. We
proceed on the footing that re-poll in one polling station
or it many polling stations for good reasons, is lawful.
This shows that re-poll in many or all segments, all-
pervasive or isolated, can be lawful. We are not
considering whether the act was bad for other reasons. We
are concerned only to say that if the regular poll, for some
reasons, has failed to reach the goal of choosing by
plurality the returned candidate and to achieve this object
a fresh poll (not a new election) is needed, it may still be
a step in the election.- The deliverance of Dunkirk is part
of the strategy of counter-attack. Wise or valid, is
another matter.
On the assumption, but leaving the question of the validity
of the direction for re-poll soon for determination by the
Election Tribunal, we hold that a writ petition challenging
the cancellation coupled with re-poll amounts to calling in
question a step in ’election! and is there, fore barred by
Art. 329(b). If no re-poll had been directed the legal
perspective would have been very different. The mere
cancel-
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 267.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104.
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297
lation would have then thwarted the course of the election
and different considerations would have come into play. We
need not chase a hypothetical case.
Our conclusion is not a matter of textual interpretation
only but a substantial assurance of justice by reading s.
100 of the Act as covering the whole basket of grievances of
the candidates. Sri P. P. Rao contended that the Court
should not deny relief to a party in the area of elections
which are the life-breath of democracy and people’s power.
We agree.
This dilemma does not arise in the wider view we take of s.
100 (1) (d) (iv) of the Act. Sri Rao’s attack on the order
impugned is in substance based on alleged non-compliance
with a provision of the Constitution viz., Art. 324 but is
neatly covered by the widely-worded, residual catch-all
clause of s. 100. knowing the supreme significance of speedy
elections in our system the framers of the Constitution
have, by implication, postponed all election disputes to
election petitions and tribunals. In harmony with this
scheme s. 100 of the Act has been designedly drafted to
embrace all conceivable infirmities which may be urged. To
make the project fool-proof s. 100(1) (d) (iv) has been
added to absolve everything left over. The Court has in
earlier rulings pointed out that s. 100 is exhaustive of all
grievances regarding an election. But what is banned is not
anything whatsoever done or directed by the Commissioner but
everything he does or directs in furtherance of the
election, not contrariwise. For example, after the
President notifies the nation on the holding of elections
under s. 15 and the Commissioner publishes the calendar for
the poll under s. 30, if the latter orders returning
officers to accept only one nomination or only those which
come from one party as distinguished from other parties or
independents, is that order immune from immediate attack.
We think not. Because the Commissioner is preventing an
election, not promoting it and the courts review of that
order will facilitate the flow, not stop the stream.
Election, Wide or narrow be its connotation, means choice
from a possible plurality monolithic politics not being our
genius or reality, and if that concept is crippled by the
Commissioner’s act, he holds no election at all.
A poll is part-a vital part-of the election but with the end
of the poll the whole election IS not over. Ballots have to
be assembled, scrutinised, counted recount claims considered
and result declared. The declaration determines the
election. The conduct of the election thus ripens into the
elector’s choice only when processed, screened and
sanctified, every escalatory step upto the formalised finish
being unified in purpose, forward in movement, fair and free
in its temper. Article 329(b) halts judicial intervention
during this period, provided the act possesses the pre-
requisites of ’election’ in its semantic sweep. That is to
say, immunity is conferred only if the act impeached is done
for the apparent object of furthering a free and fair
election and the protective armour drops down if the act
challenged is either unrelated to. or thwarts or taints the
course of the election.
Having held against the maintainability of the writ
petition, we should have parted with the case finally. But
counsel for both the
298
candidates and, more particularly, the learned Additional
Solicitor General, appearing for the Election Commission,
submitted that the breadth, applitude and implications, the
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direction and depth of Article 324 and, equally important,
the question of natural justice raised under Article 324 are
of such public importance and largely fallow field going by
prior pronouncements, and so strategic for our democracy and
itspower process that this Court must decide the issue here
and now. Article 141 empowers and obligates this Court to
declare the law forthe country when the occasion asks for
it. Counsel, otherwise opposing one another, insistently
concurred in their request that for the working of the
electoral machinery and understanding of the powers and
duties vested in the functionaries constituting the infra-
structure, it is essential to sketch the ambit and import of
Art. 324. This point undoubtedly arises before us even in
considering the prohibition under Art. 329 and has been
argued fully. In any view, the Election Triburial will be
faced with this issue and the law must be laid down so that
there may be no future error while disposing of the,
election petition or when the Commission is called upon to
act on later occasion. This is the particular reason for
our proceeding to decide what the content and parameters of
Art. 324 are, contextually limited to situations analogous
to the present.
We decide two questions under the relevant article, not
argued, but as substantive pronouncements on the subject.
They are :
(a) What in its comprehensive connotation does
the conduct’ of elections mean or, for that
matter, the superintendence, direction and
control’ of elections ?
(b) Since the text of the provision is
silent about hearing
before acting, is it permissible to import
into Art. 324(1) an obligation to act in
accord with natural justice ?
Article 324, which we have set out earlier, is a plenary
provision vesting the whole responsibility for national and
State elections and, therefore, the necessary powers to
discharge that function. It is true that Art. 324 has to be
read in the light of the constitutional scheme and the 1950
Act and the 1951 Act. Sri Rao is right to the ex-tent be
insists that if competent legislative is enacted as
visualized in Article 327 the Commission cannot shake
himself free from the enacted prescriptions. After all, as
Mathew, J. has observed in Indira Gandhi : (supra)
"In the opinion of some of the judges
constituting the majority in Bharati’s case
(supra), Rule of Law is a basic structure of
the Constitution apart from democracy.
The rule of law postulates the pervasiveness
of the spirit of law throughout the whole
range of government in the sense of excluding
arbitrary official action in any sphere."
(p. 523)
299
And the supremacy of valid law over the Commission argues
itself. No one is an imperium in imperio in our
constitutional order. It is reasonable to hold that the
Commissioner cannot defy the law armed by Art. 324.
Likewise, his functions are subject to the norms of fairness
and he cannot act arbitrarily. Unchecked power is alien to
our system.
Even so, situations may arise which enacted law has not
provided for. Legislators are not prophets but pragmatists.
So it is that the Constitution has made comprehensive
provision in Art. 324 to take care of surprise situations.
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That power itself has to be exercised, not mindlessly nor
mala fide, nor arbitrarily nor with partiality but in
keeping with the guidelines of the rule of law and not
stultifying the Presidential notification nor existing
legislation. More is not necessary to specify; less is
insufficient to leave unsaid. Article 324, in our view,
operates in areas left unoccupied by legislation and the
words ’superintendence, direction and control’ as well as
’conduct of all elections’ are the broadest terms. Myriad
maybes, too mystic to be precisely presaged, may call for
prompt action to reach the goal of free and fair election.
It has been argued that this will create a constitutional
despot beyond the pale of accountability; a Frankenstein’s
monster who may manipulate the system into elected
despotism--instances of such phenomena are the tears of
history. To that the retort may be that the judicial
branch, at the appropriate stage, with the potency of its
benignant power and within the leading strings of legal
guidelines, can call the bluff, quash the, action and bring
order into the process. Whether we make a triumph or
travesty of democracy depends on the man as much as on the
Great National Parchment. Secondly, When a high functionary
like the Commissioner is vested with wide powers the law
expects him to act fairly and legally. Article 324 is
geared to the accomplishment of free and fair elections
expeditiously. Moreover, as held in Virendra(1) and
Harishankar(2) discretion vested in a high functionary may
be reasonably trusted to be used properly, not. perversely.
If it is misused, certainly the Court has power to strike
down the act. This is well-established and does not it is
useful to remem-
"But the electorate lives in the hope that a
sacred power will not so flagrantly be abused
and the moving finger of history warns of the
consequences that inevitably flow when
absolute power has corrupted absolutely. The
fear of perversion is no test of power."
lndira Nehru Gandhi v. Raj Narain(3).
The learned Additional Solicitor General brought to our
notice rulings of this Court and of the High Courts which
have held that Art. 324 was a plenary power which enabled
the Commission to act even in the absence of specific
legislation though not contrary to valid legislation.
Ordering a re-poll for a whole constituency under compulsion
of circumstances may be directed for the conduct of
elections
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 308.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 380.
(3) [1976] 2 S.C.R. 347 at 657.
300
and can be saved by Aft. 324-provided it is bona fide
necessary for the vindication of the free verdict of the
electorate and the abandonment of the previous poll was
because it failed to achieve that goal. While we repel Sri
Rao’s broadside attack on Art. 324 as confined to what the
Act has conferred, we concede that even Art. 324 does not
exalt the Commission into a law unto itself. Broad
authority 3 does not bar scrutiny into specific validity
of the particular order.
Our conclusion on this limb of the contention is that Art,
324 is wide enough to supplement the powers under the Act,
as here, but subject to the several conditions on its
exercise we have set out.
Now we move on to a close-up of the last submission bearing
on the Commission’s duty to function within the leading
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strings of natural justice.
Indeed, natural justice is a pervasive facet of secular law
where a spiritual touch enlivens legislation, administration
and adjudication, to make fairness a creed of life. It has
many colours and shades, many forms and shapes and, save
where valid law excludes, it applies when people are
affected by acts of Authority. It is the bone of healthy
government, recognised from earliest times and not a mystic
testament of judge-made law. Indeed, from the legendary
days of Adam-and of Kautilya’s Arthasastra-the rule of law
has had this stamp of natural justice which makes it social
justice. We need not go into these deeps for the present
except to indicate that the, roots of natural justice and
its foliage are noble and not newfangled. Today its
application must be sustained by current legislation, case-
law or other extant principle, not the hoary chords of
legend and history. Our jurisprudence has sanctioned its
prevalence even like the Anglo-American system.
The dichotomy between administrative and quasi-judicial
functions vis a vis the doctrine of natural justice is
presumably obsolescent after Kraipak(1) in India and
Schmit(2) in England.
Kraipak marks the watershed, if we may say so, in the
application of natural justice to administrative
proceedings. Hegde, J., speaking for a bench of five judges
observed, quoting for support Lord Parker in In re : H.K.
(an infant) (3)
"It is not necessary to examine these decisions as there is
a great deal of fresh thinking on the subject. The horizon
of natural justice is constantly expanding."
(p. 467)
"The aim of the rules of natural justice is to secure jus-
tice or to put it negatively to prevent miscarriage of
justice.
(1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 457.
(2) [1969] 2 Ch. 149.
(3) [1967] 2 Q.B. 617, 630.
301
These rules can operate only in areas not covered by any law
validly made. In other words they do not supplant the law
of the land but supplement it."
(p. 468)
"The validity of that limitation is not questioned. If the
purpose of the rules of natural justice is to prevent
miscarriage of justice one fails to see why those rules
should be made inapplicable to administrative inquiries.
Often times it is not easy to draw the line that demarcates
administrative enquiries from quasi-judicial enquiries.
Enquiries which were considered administrative at one time
are now being considered as quasi-judicial in character.
Arriving at a just decision is the aim of both quasi-
judicial enquiries as well as administrative enquiries. An
unjust decision in an administrative enquiry
may have more far reaching effect than a de-
cision in a quasi-judicial enquiry. As
observed by this Court in Suresh Koshy George
v. The University of Kerala(") the rules of
natural justice are not embodied rules. What
particular rule of natural justice should
apply to a given case must depend to a great
extent on the facts and circumstances of that
case, the framework of the law under which the
enquiry is held and the constitution of the
Tribunal or body of persons appointed for that
purpose. Whenever,. a complaint is made
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before a court that some principle of natural
justice had been contravened the court has to
decide whether the observance of that rule was
necessary for a just decision on the facts of
that case."
(p. 469)
It is an interesting sidelight that in America it has been
held to be ’but fundamental fairness that the tight to an
administrative hearing is given. (See Boston University Law
Review Vol. 53 p. 899).
Natural justice is being given access to the United Nations
(See American Journal of International Law Vol. 67 p. 479).
It-is no-table that Mathew, J. observed in Indira Gandhi
(supra)
"If the amending body really exercised
judicial power that power was exercised in
violation of the principles of natural justice
of audi alteram partem. Even if a power is
given to a body without specifying that the
rules of natural justice should be, observed
in exercising it, the nature of the, power
would call for its observance."
(p. 513)
Lord Morris of Borthy-Gest in his address
before the Bentham :club concluded :
"We can, I think, take pride in what has been
done in recent periods and particularly in the
field of administrative
(1) 11969] 1 S.C.R. 317.
302
law by invoking and by applying those
principles which we broadly classify under the
designation of natural justice. Many testing
problems as to their application yet remain to
be solved. But affirm that the area of
administrative action is but one area in which
the principles are to be deployed. Nor are
they to be invoked only when procedural
failures are shown. Does natural justice
qualify to be described as a "majestic"
conception? I believe it does. Is it
just a rhetorical but vague phrase which can I
be employed, when needed, to give a gloss of
assurance ? I believe that it is very much
more. If it can be summarised as being fair
play in action-who could wish that it would
ever be out of action ? It denotes that the
law is not only to be guided by reason and by
logic but that its purpose will not be
fulfilled if it lacks more exalted
inspiration."
(Current Legal Problems 1973, Vol. 26 p. 16)
It is fair to hold that subject to certain necessary
limitations natural justice is now a brooding omnipresence
although varying in its play.
Once we understand the soul of the rule as fairplay in
action-and it is so’-We must hold that it extends to both
the fields. After all, administrative power in a democratic
set-up is not allergic to fairness in action and
discretionary executive justice cannot degenerate into
unilateral injustice. Nor is there ground to be frightened
of delay, inconvenience and expense, if natural justice
gains access. For fairness itself is a flexible: pragmatic
and relative concept, not a rigid, ritualistic or
sophisticated abstraction. It is not a bull in a china shop
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nor a bee in one’s bonnet. Its essence is good conscience
in a given situation: nothing more- but nothing less. The
’exceptions’ to the rules of natural justice are a misnomer
or rather are but a shorthand form of expressing the idea
that in those exclusionary cases nothing unfair can be
inferred by not affording an opportunity to present or meet
a case. Text-book excerpts and ratios from rulings can be
heaped, but they all converge to the same point that audi
alteram partem is the justice of the law without, of course,
making law lifeless, absurd, stultifying, self-defeating or
plainly contrary to the commonsense of the situation.
Let us look at the jurisprudential aspects of natural
justice, limited to the needs of the present case, as the
doctrine has developed in the Indo-Anglian systems. We may
state that the question of nullity does not arise here
because we are on the construction of a constitutional
clause. Even otherwise, the rule of natural justice bears
upon construction where a statute is silent save in that
category where a legislation is charged with the vice of
unreasonableness and consequential voidness.
Article 324, on the face of it, vests vast functions which
may be powers or duties, essentially administrative and
marginally even judicative or legislative. All Party Hill
Leaders Conference, Shillong v. Capt. W. A. Satigma
Ors.(1). We are not fascinated by the logo-
(1) [1978] 1 S.C.R. 393.
303
machic exercise suggested by Sri P. P. Rao, reading
’functions’ in contradistinction to ’powers’ nor by the
trichotomy of diversion of powers, fundamentally sound but
flawsome in several situations if rigidly applied. These
submissions merely serve to draw the red-herring across the
trial. We will now zero-in on the crucial issue of natural
justice vis a vis Article 324 where the function is so
exercised that a candidate is substantially prejudiced even
if be has not acquired a legal right nor suffered ’civil
consequence’, whatever that may mean.
We proceed on the assumption that even if the cancellation
of the poll in this case were an administrative act, that
per se does not repel the application of the natural justice
principle. Kraipak nails the contrary argument. Nor did the
learned Additional Solicitor General contend that way,
taking his stand all through, not on technicalities, easy
victories or pleas for reconsideration of the good and
progressive rules gained through this Court’s rulings in
administrative law but on the foundational thesis that any
construction that we may adopt must promote and be geared to
the great goal of expeditious, unobstructed, despatch of
free and fair elections and leaving grievances to Ice fully
sorted out and solved later before the election tribunal set
out by the Act. To use a telling word familiar in
officialese; ’Election Immediate’.
So now we are face to face with the naked issue of natural
justice and its pro tem exclusion on grounds of necessity
and non-stultification of the on-going election. The
Commission claims that a direction for re-poll is an
’emergency’ exception. The rules of natural justice are
rooted in all legal systems, not any ’new theology’, and are
manifested in the twin principles of nemo judes in sua caues
and audi alteram partem. We are not concerned here with the
former since no case of bias has been urged. The grievance
ventilated is that being condemned unheard. Sporadic
applications or catalogue of instances cannot make for a
scientific statement of the law and so we have to weave
consistent criteria for application and principles for
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carving out exceptions. If the rule is sound and not
negatived by statute, we should not devalue it nor hesitate
to hold every functionary who effects others’ right to it.
The audi alteram partem rule has a few facets two of which
are (a) notice of the case to be met; and (b) opportunity to
explain. Let us study how far the situation on hand can co-
exist with canons of natural justice. When natural justice
is universally respected, the standards vary with
situations, contracting into a brief, even post-decisional
opportunity, or expanding into trial-type trappings.
Ridge v. Baldwin(1) is a leading case which restored light
to an area ’benighted by the narrow conceptualism of the
previous decade to borrow Professor Clark’s expression.
(Natural Justice; Substance and Shadow-’Public Law’ Joumal-
Spring 1975). Good administration demands fairplay in
action and this simple desideratum is the fount of natural
justice. We have already said that the classification of
functions as judicial’ or ’administrative’ is a stultifying
shibboleth, discarded in India as in England. Today, in our
jurisprudence, the
(1) [1964] A.C. 40.
304
advances made by natural justice far exceed old frontiers
and if judicial creativity belights penumbral areas it is
only for improving the quality of government by injecting
fairplay into its wheels.
The learned Additional Solicitor General welcomed the
dramatic pace of enlargement in the application of natural
justice. But he argued for inhibiting its spread into
forbidden spaces lost the basic values of Art. 329 be
nullified. In short, his point is that where utmost promp-
titude is needed-and that is the raison d’etre of exclusion
of intermediate legal proceedings in election matters-
natural justice may be impractical and may paralyse, thus
balking the object of expeditious completion. He drew
further inspiration from another factor to validate the
exclusion of natural justice from the Commission’s actions,
except where specifically stipulated by statutes. He
pointed out what we have earlier mentioned-that an election
litigation is one in which the whole constituency of several
lakhs of people is involved and, if the Election Commission
were under an obligation to hear affected parties it may,
logically, have to give notice to lakhs of people and not
merely to candidates. This will make an ass of the law and,
therefore, that is not the law. This reductio ad absurdum
also has to be examined.
Law cannot be divorced from life and so it is that the life
of the law is not logic but experience. If, by the
experiential test, importing the right to be heard will
paralyse the process, law will exclude it. It has been said
that no army can be commanded by a debating society, but it
is also true that the House of Commons did debate, during
the days of debacle and disaster, agony and crisis of the
Second World War, the life-and-death aspects of the supreme
command by the then British Prime Minister ’to the distress
of all our friends and to the delight of all our foes’-too
historic to be lost on jurisprudence. Law lives not in a
world of abstractions but in a cosmos of concreteness and to
give up something good must be limited to extreme cases. If
to condemn unheard is wrong, it is wrong except where it is
overbome by dire social or haphazardsolutions should be
eschewed.
Normally, natural justice involves the irritating
inconvenience for men in authority, of having to hear both
sides since notice and opportunity are its very marrow. And
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this principle is so integral to good government, the onus
is on him who urges exclusion to make out why. Lord Denning
expressed the paramout policy consideratlon behind this rule
of public law (while dealing with the nemo judex aspect)
with expressiveness. "Justice must be rooted in confidence:
and confidence is destroyed when right-minded people go away
thinking ’the judge was biased’."We may adapt it to the audi
alteram situation by the altered statement : "Justice must
be felt to be just by the community if democratic legality
is to animate the rule of law. And if the invisible
audience sees a man’s case disposed of unheard, a chorus of
’noconfidence’ will be heard to say, ’that man had no chance
to defend his stance’." That is why Tuckor LJ in Russol v.
Duke of Norfolk(1)
(1) (1949) 1 All E.R. 109,118.
305
emphasised that ’whatever standard of natural justice is
adopted, one A, essential is that the person concerned
should have a reasonable opportunity of presenting his
case’. What is reasonable in given circumstances is ’in the
domain of practicability; not formalised rigidity. Lord
Upjohn in Fernando(1) observed that ’while great urgency may
rightly limit such opportunity timeously : perhaps severely
there can never be a denial of that opportunity if the
principles of natural justice are applicable’. It is
untenable heresy, in our view, to look jaw the victim or act
behind his back by tempting invocation of urgency, unless
the clearest case of public injury flowing from the least
delay is selfevident. Even in such cases a remedial hearing
as soon as urgent action has been taken is the next best.
Our objection is not to circumscription dictated by
circumstances, but to annihilation as an easy escape from a
benignant, albeit inconvenient obligation. The procedural
pre-condition of fair hearing, however minimal, even post-
decisional, has relevance to administrative and judicial
gentlemanliness. The Election Commission is an institution
of central importance and enjoys far-reaching powers and the
greater the power to affect others’ right or liabilities the
more necessary the need to hear.
We may not be taken to say that situational modifications to
notice and hearing are altogether impermissible. They are,
as the learned Additional Solicitor General rightly
stressed. The glory of the law is not that sweeping rules
are laid down but that it tailors principles to practical
needs, doctors remedies to suit the patient promotes, not
freezes. Life’s processes, if we may mix metaphors. Tucker
L.J. drove home this point when he observed in the Duke of
Norfolk case (supra)
"There are no words which are of universal
application to very kind of inquiry...... The
requirements of natural justice must depend on
the circumstances of the case, the nature of
the inquiry, the rules under which the
tribunal is acting the subject-matter that is
being dealth with, and so forth".
This circumstantial flexibility of fair bearing has been
underscored in Wiseman v. Borneman(1) by Lord Reid when he
said he would be "sorry to see this fundamental general
principle degenerate into a series of hard-and-fast rules."
Lord Denning, with lovely realism and principled pragmatism,
set out the rule in Selvaraien(3)
"The fundamental rule is that, if a person may
be subjected to pains or penalties, or be
exposed to prosecution or proceedings. or
deprived of remedies or redress, or in some
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such way adversely affected by the
investigation and report, when he should be
told the case made against him and be afforded
a fair opportunity of answering it. The
investigation body is, however, the master of
its own procedure. It need not
(2) [1971] A.C. 297.
(3) [1976] 1 All E.R. 12,19.
306
hold a hearing. It can do everything in
writing. It need not allow lawyers.,It need
not put every detail of the case against a
man. Suffice it if the broad grounds are
given. It neednot name its informants. It can
give the substance only. Moreover it need not
do everything itself. It can employ secretaries
and assistants to do all the preliminary work
and leave much to them. But, in the end, the
investigating body itself must come to its own
decision and make its own report."
Courts must be tempered by the thought while compromise on
principle is unprincipled, applied administrative law in
modern complexities of government must realistic, not
academic. The myriad maybes and the diverse urgencies are
live factors. Natural justice should not destroy
administrative order by insisting on the impossible.
This general discussion takes its to four specific
submissions made by the learned Additional Solicitor
General. He argued that the Election Commission, a high
constitutional functionary, was charged with conducting
elections with celerity to bring the new House into being
and the tardy process of notice and hearing would thwart
this imperative. So no natural justice. Secondly, be
submitted that there was no final determination to the
prejudice of any party by directing a re-poll since the
Election Court had the last word on every objectionable
order and so the Commission’s order was more or less provi-
sional. So no natural justice. Thirdly, he took up the
position that no candidate could claim anything more than an
expectation or apes and no right having crystallised till
official declaration of the result, there was no room for
complaint of civil consequence. WI-tat was condemned was
the poll, not any candidate. So no natural justice.
Finally, he reminded us of the far-flung futility of giving
a hearing to a numerous constituency which too was
interested in proper elections like the candidates. So no
natural justice.
Schmidt was relied on and Wisemen(1) as well as Pearlberg(2)
were cited in support of these propositions. We may add to
these weighty rulings the decision of the House of Lords in
Pearlberg. The decision of this Court in the ruling in
Bihar School Examination Board v. Subhas Chandra Sinha &
Ors. (3), where a whole university examinations was
cancelled without hearing any of the candidates but was up-
held against the alleged vice of non-hearing, was relied on.
We must admit that the law, in certain amber areas of
natural justice., has been unclear. Vagueness haunts this
zone but that is no argument to shut down. If it is twilit,
we must delight. So we will play down the guidelines but
guard ourselves against any decision on the facts of this
case. That is left for the Election Court in the light of
the law applicable.
(1) [1967] 3 All E.R. 1945.
(2) [1971] 1 W.L.R. 728.
307
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Nobody will deny that the Election Commission in our
democratic scheme is a central figure and a high
functionary. Discretion vested in him will ordinarily be
used wisely, not rashly, although to echo Lord Camden wide
discretion is fraught with tyrannical potential even in high
personages, absent legal norms and institutional checks, and
relaxation of legal canalisation on generous ’VIP’
assumptions may boomrang. Natural justice is one such check
on exercise of power. But the chemistry of natural justice
is confused in certain aspects., especially in relation to
the fourfold exceptions put forward by the respondents.
So let us examine them each. Speed in action versus
soundness of judgment is the first dilemma. Ponnuswamy has
emphasised what is implicit in Article 329(b) that once the
process of election has started, it should not be
interrupted since the tempo may slow down and the early
constitution of an elected parliament may be halted.
Therefore, think twice before obligating a hearing at a
critical stage when a quick repoll is the call. The point is
well taken. A fair hearing with fun notice to both or
others may surely protract; and notice does mean
communication of materials since no one can meet an unknown
ground. Otherwise hearing becomes hollow, the right becomes
a ritual. Should the cardinal principle of ’hearing’ as
condition for decision-making be martyred for the cause of
administrative, immediacy ? We think not. The full panoply
may not be there but a manageable minimum may make-do.
In Wiseman v. Bornenwn(1) there was a hint of the
competitive claims of hurry and hearing. Lord Reid said :
’Even where the decision has to be reached by a body acting
judicially, there must be a balance between the need for
expedition and the need to give fall opportunity to the
defendant to see material against him (emphasis added). We
agree that the elaborate and sophisticated methodology of a
formalised hearing may be injurious to promptitude no
essential in ,in election under way. Even so, natural
justice is pragmatically flexible and is amenable to
capsulation under the compulsive pressure of circumstances.
To burke it altogether may not be a stroke of fairness
except in very exceptional circumstances. Even in Wiseman
where all that was sought to be done was to see if there was
a prima facie case to proceed with a tax case where,
inevitably, a fuller bearing would be extended at a later
stage of the proceedings, Lord Reid. Lord Morris of Borthy-
Gest and Lord Wilborforce suggested "that there might he
exceptional cases where to decide upon it ex-parte would be
unfair, and it would be the duty of the tribunal to take
appropriate steps to eliminate unfairness "(Lord Denning M.
R., in Manward v. Bornenam(2) summarised the observations of
the law Lords in this form). No doctrinaire approach is
desirable but the Court must be anxious to salvage the
cardinal rule to the extent permissible in a given case.
After all, it is not obligatory that counsel should be
allowed to appear nor is it compulsory that oral evidence
should be adduced. Indeed, it is not even imperative that
written statements should be called for Disclosure of the,
prominent circumstances and asking for an immediate
(1) [1967] 3 All F.R. 1945.
(2) [1974] 3 W.L.R. 660.
7 -1114 SCI/77
308
explanation orally or otherwise may, in many cases be
sufficient compliance. It is even conceivable that an
urgent meeting with the concerned parties summoned at an
hours notice, or in a crisis even a telephone call, may
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suffice. If all that is not possible as in the cue of a
fleeing person whose passport has to be impounded lest he,
should evades the course of justice or a dangerous nuisance
needs immediate abatement, the action may be taken followed
immediately by a hearing for the purpose of sustaining or
setting aside the action to the extent feasible. It is
quite on the cards that the Election Commission if pressed
by circumstances, may give a short hearing. In any view, it
is not easy to appreciate whether before further steps got
under may he could not have afforded an opportunity of
hearing the parties,and revoke the earlier directions. We
do not wish to disclose our mind on what, in the critical
circumstances, should have been done, for a fair-play of
fair hearing. This is a matter pre-eminently for the elec-
tion tribunal to judge, having before him the vivified
totality of all the factors. All that we need emphasize is
that the content of natural justice is a dependent variable,
not an easy casualty.
The learned Additional Solicitor General urged that even
assuming that under ordinary circumstances hearing should be
granted, in the scheme of Art. 324 and in the situation of
urgency confronting the Election Commission it was not
necessary.
Here we must demur. Reasons follow. It was argued, based
on rulings relating to natural justice, that unless civil
consequences ensued, hearing was not necessary. A civil
right being adversely affected is a sine qua non for the
invocation of the audi alteram partem rule. This submission
was supported by observations in Rain Gopal(1) and Col.
Sinha (2). Of course, we agree that if only spiritual
censure is the penalty, temporal laws may not take
cognisance of such consequences since human law operates in
the material field although its vitality vicariously depends
on its morality. But what is a civil consequence, let us
ask ourselves,; by passing verbal boobytraps ? ’Civil
consequence’ undoubtedly cover infraction of not merely
property or personal rights but of civil liberties, material
deprivations and non-pecuniary damages. In its
comprehensive connotation, everything that affects a citizen
in his civil life inflicts a civil consequence.
Civil is defined by Black (Law Dictionary 4th Edn.)at p.311.
"Ordinally, pertaining or appropriate to a
member of a civitas of free political
community; natural or proper to a citizen.
Also, relating to the community, or to the
policy and government of the citizens and
subjects of a state.
The word is derived from the Latin civilie, a
citizen. In law, it has various
significations."
(1) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 472.
(2) [1971] 1 S.C.R. 791.
309
’Civil Rights’ are such as belong to every
citizen of the State or country, or, in a
wider senes, to all its inhabitants, and are
not connected with the organisation or
administration of government. They include
the rights of property, marriage protection by
the laws, freedom of contract, trial by jury,
etc. Or, as otherwise defined, civil rights
are rights appertaining to a person in virtue
of his citizenship in a state or community.
Rights capable or being enforced or redressed
in a civil action. Also a term applied to
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certain rights secured to citizens of the
United States by the thirteenth and fourteenth
amendments to the constitution, and by various
act,-, of congress made in pursuance thereof.
(p. 1487-Blacks Legal Dictionary)
The interest of a candidate at an election to Parliament
regulated by the Constitution and the laws comes within this
gravitational orbit. The most valuable right in a
democratic policy is the ’little man’s’ little pencil-
marking, assenting or dissenting, called his vote. A
democratic right, if denied, inflicts civil consequences.
Likewise, the little man’s right, in a representative,
system of government, to rise to Prime, Ministersbip or
Presidentship by use of the right to be candidate, cannot be
wished away by calling it of no civil moment. If civics
mean anything to a self-governing citizenry, if
participatory democracy is not to be scuttled by the law, we
shall not be, captivated by catchwords. The straightforward
conclusion is that every Indian has a right to elect and be
elected and this is a constitutional as distinguished from a
common law right and is entitled to cognizance by courts
subject to statutory regulation. We may also notice the
further refinement urged that a right accrues to a candidate
only when he is declared returned and until then it is
incipient inchoate and intangible for legal assertion-in the
twilight zone of expectancy, as it were.. This too, in our
view, is legicidal sophistry. Our system of ’ordered’
rights cannot disclaim cognizance of orderly processes as
the right means to a right end. Our jurisprudence is not so
jejune as to ignore the concern with the means as with the
end with the journey as with the destination. Every candi-
date, to put it cryptically, has an interest or right to
fair and free and legally run election. To draw lots and
decide who wins, if announced as the electoral methodology,
affects his right, apart from his luckless rejection at the
end. A vested interest in the prescribed process is a pro-
cessual right actionable if breached, the Constitution
permitting. What is inchoate, viewed from the end, may be
complete, viewed midstream. It is a subtle fallacy to
confuse between the two. Victory is still an expectation
qua mwde is a right to the statutory procedure. The appel-
lant has a right to have the election conducted nor
according to humour or hubris but according to lay and
justice. And so natural justice cannot be stumped out on
this score. In the region of public law locus standi and
person aggrieved, right and interest have a broader import.
But. in the present case, the Election Commission contends
that a hearing has been given although the appellant retorts
that a vacuous mecting where nothing was disclosed and he
was summarily told off would be strange electoral justice.
We express no opinion on the factum or
310
adequacy of the hearing but hold that where a candidate has
reached the end of the battle and the whole poll is upset,
he has a right to notice and to be heard, the quantum and
quality being conditioned by the concatenation of
circumstances.
The rulings cited, bearing on the touchstone of civil
consequences, do not contradict the view we have propounded.
Col. Sinha merely holds-and we respectfully agree-that the
lowering of retirement age does not deprive a government
servant’s rights, it being clear that every servant has to
quit on the prescribed age being attained. Even Binapani(1)
concedes that the State has the authority to retire a
servant on superannuation. The situation here is different.
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We are not in the province of substantive rights but
procedural rights statutorily regulated. Sometimes
processual protections are too precious to be negotiable,
temporised with or whittled down.
Ram Gopal for the same reason is inapplicable. A tempoary
servant has only a temporary tenure terminable legally
without injury. Even he, if punished, has procedural rights
in the zone of natural justice, but not when the contract of
employment is legally extinguished. Interest and right are
generous conceptions in this, jurisdiction, not narrow
orthodoxies as in traditional systems.
We move on to a consideration of the argument prolix
plurality making hearing impracticable and therefore
expendable. Attractively ingenious and seemingly
precedented, but, argumentum ab inconvenienti has its
limitations and cannot override established procedure.
Maybe, argumentum ab impossibili has greater force,. But
here neither applies for it is a misconception to equate
candidates who have fought to the bitter finish,with the
hundreds of thousands of voters who are interested in
electoral proprieties. In law and life,, degrees of
difference may, at a substantial stage, spell difference in
kind or dimensions. Is there an. impossible plurality which
frustrates the feasibility of notice and hearing if
candidates alone need be notified ?
In Subhash Chander Sinha(2) Hidayatullah, CJ, speaking for
the Court repelled the plea of natural justice when a whole
examination was cancelled by the concerned university
authorities. The reasons given are instructive. The
learned Judge said that "the mention of fairplay does not
come very well from the respondents who were grossly guilty
of breach of fairplay themselves at the examinations."
The court examined the grounds for cancellation of
examinations and satisfied itself that there was undoubted
abundance of evidence that students generally bad outside
assistance in answering questions. The teamed Judge went on
further to say :
"This is not a case of any particular
individual who is being charged with, adoption
of unfair means but of the conduct of all the
examinees or at least a vast majority of them
at a particular centre. If it is not a
question of charging anyone individually with
unfair means but to condemn the examination as
ineffective for the purpose it was hold, must
(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 625.
(2) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 963.
311
the Board give an opportunity to all the
candidates to represent their cases? We think
not. It was not necessary for the Board to
give an opportunity to the candidates if the
examinations as a whole were being cancelled.
The Board had not charged any one with unfair
means so that he could claim to defend
himself. The examination was vitiated by
adoption of unfair means on a mass scale. In
these circumstances it would be wrong to
insist that the Board must hold a detailed
inquiry into the matter and examine each
individual case to satisfy itself which of the
candidates had not adopted unfair means. The
examination as a whole had to, go. " (967-968)
x x x x
x
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If at a centre the whole body of students
receive assistance and manage to secure
success in the neighbourhood of 100% when
others at other centres are successful only at
an average of 50%, it is obvious that the
university or the Board must do something in
the matter. It cannot hold a detailed quasi-
judicial inquiry with, a right to its alumni
to plead and lead evidence etc. before the
results are withheld or the examinations
cancelled. If there is sufficient material on
which it can be demonstrated that the
university was right in its conclusion that
the examinations ought to be cancelled than
academic standards require that the
university’s appreciation of the problem must
be respected. It would not do for the Court
to say that he should have examined all the
candidates or even their representatives with
a view to ascertaining whether they had
received assistance or not. To do this would
encourage, indiscipline if not also perjury."
(968-969)
These propositions are relied on by the learned Additional
SolicitorGeneral who seeks to approximate the present
situation of cancellation of the poll to the cancellation of
an examination. His argument is that one has to launch on a
public enquiry allowing a large number of people to
participate in the hearing if the cancellation of the poll
itself is to be subjected to natural justice. He further
said that no candidate was condemned but the poll process
was condemned. He continued to find a parallel by stating
that like the university being responsible for the good
conduct of examinations, the Election Commission was
responsible for the proper holding of the poll. We do not
consider the ratio in Subhash Chander (supra) as applicable.
In fact, the candidates concerned stand on a different
footing from the electorate in general. They have acquired
a very vital stake in polling going on properly to a prompt
conclusion. And when that is upset there may be a vicarious
concern for the constituency, why, for that matter, for the
entire country, since the success of democracy depends on
country-wide elections being held periodically and properly.
Such interest is too remote and recondite, too feeble and
attenuated. to be taken note of in a cancellation proceed-
ing. What really marks the difference is the diffusion and
dilution. The
312
candidates. on the other hand, are the spearheads, the
combatants, the claimants to victory. They have set
themselves up as nominated candidate organised the campaign
and galvanised the electorate for the crown in- event of
polling and counting. Their interest and claim are not
indifferent but immediate, not weak but vital. They are
more than the members of the public. They are parties to
the electoral dispute. In this sense, they stand on a
better footing and cannot be denied the right to be heard or
noticed. Even in the case of university examinations it is
not a universal rule that notice need not be given.
Ghanshyam Das Gupta’s(1) case illustrates this aspect. Even
there, when an examination result of three candidates was
cancelled the, Court imported natural justice. It was said
that even if the enquiry involved a large number of persons,
the committee should frame proper regulations for the
conduct of such enquiries but not deny the opportunity.
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That case was distinguished in Subhash Chander the
differentia being that in one case the right exercised was
of the examining body to cancel its own examinations since
it was satisfied that the examination was not properly
conducted. It may be a parallel in electoral situations if
the Election Commission cancels a poll because it is
satisfied that the procedure adopted has gone away on a
wholesale basis. Supposing wrong ballot papers in large
numbers have been supplied or it has come to the notice of
the Commission that in the constituency counterfeit ballots
had been copiously current and used on a large scale, then
without reference to who among the candidates was more
prejudiced, the poll might have been set aside. It all
depends on the circumstances and is incapable of natural
justice to argue that the whole constituency must be given a
hearing. That is an ineffectual over-kill.
Lastly, it was contended by the learned Additional Solicitor
General, taking his cue from Wiseman that the Election
Commission’s direction for a re-poll has only a provisional
consequence since the election court was the ultimate matter
of the destiny of the poll, having power to review the
decision of the Commission. It is true that Wiseman deals
with the assessment of the evidence at a preliminary state
merely to ascertain whether there is a prima facie case.
The proceeding bad still later stages where the effected
party would enjoy a full opportunity. Lord Reid said plainly
that there was a difference :
"It is very unusual for there to be a judicial
determination of the question whether there is
a prima facie case there is nothing inherently
unjust in reaching such a decision (i.e., a
prima facie decision) in the absence of the
other party."
Lord Wilberforce however took the view that there was ’a
residual duty of fairness’. Lord Denning in Pealberg v.
Party,(2) added in parenthesis
"Although the tribunal. in determining whether
there is a prima facie case, is itself the
custodian of fairness, nevertheless its
discretion is open to review." (PP.-737-738)
(1) [1962] Supp 3 S.C.R. 236.
(2) [1971] 1 W.L.R. 720,737.
313
Buckley, L.J. made the point about natural
justice and administrative action.
"I do not forget the fact that it has been
said, that the rules of natural justice may
apply to cases where the act in question is
more properly described as administrative than
or quasi-judicial : See Ridge v. Baldwin(1)
and t v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs."
(p. 747)
The Indian parallel would be an argument for notice and
hearing from a police officer when he investigated and
proceeded to lay a chargesheet because he thought that a
case to be tried by the court had been made out. The
present case stands on a totally different footing. What
the Election Commission does is not the ascertain whether a
prima facie case exists or an ex parte order, subject to
modification by him is to be made. If that were so
Pearlberg would have been an effective answer. For, Lord
Denning luminously illustrates the effect
"I would go so far with him as to say that in
reaching a prima facie decision, there is a
duty on any tribunal to act fairly; but
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fairness depends on the task in hand. Take an
application to a court by statute, or by the
rules, or, as a matter of practice, is made ex
parte. The Court itself is a custodian of
fairness. If the matter is so urgent that an
order should be made forthwith, before hearing
the other side, as in the case of an interim
injunction or a stay of execution the court
will make the order straight away. We do it
every day, we are always ready, of course, to
hear the other side if they apply to discharge
the order. But still the order is made ex-
parte without bearing them. It is a prima
facie decision. I agree that before some
other tribunal a prima facie decision may be a
little different. The party affected by it
may not be able to apply to set it aside,.
The case must go forward to a final decision.
Here, again, I think the tribunal itself is
under what Lord Wilberforce described as a
residual duty of fairness."
(1971 A-C. 297, 320)
When Pearlberg(3) reached the House of Lords the Law Lords
considered the question again. Lord Hailsham of St.
Marylebone L.C. observed :
"The third factor which affects mind is the
consideration that the decision, once made,
does not make any final determination of the
rights of the taxpayer. It simply enables the
inspector to, raise an assessment, by
satisfying the commissioner that there are
reasonable grounds for suspecting loss of tax
resulting from neglect, fraud, or wilful
default, that is
(1) (1964) A.C. 40.
(2) (1969) 2 Ch. 149
(3) (1972) 1 W.L.R. 534.
314
that there is a prima facie probability that
there has been neglect, etc., and that the
Crown may have lost by it. When the
assessment is made,, the taxpayer can appeal
against it, and, on the appeal, may raise any
question (inter alia) which would have been
relevant on the application for leave, except
that the leave given should be discharged."
(p.539) x x x x x
"The doctrine of natural justice has come in
for increasing consideration in recent years,
and the courts generally, and your Lordships’
House in particular, have, I think rightly,
advanced its frontiers considerably. But at
the same time they have taken an increasingly
sophisticated view of what it requires in
individual cases."
(p. 540)
Viscount Dilhorne observed in that case
"I agree with Lord Donovan’s view (Wiseman v.
Borneman (1971) A.C. 297, 316) that it cannot
be said that the rules of natural justice do
not apply to a judicial determination of
the question whether there is a prima facie
case, but I do not think they apply with the
same force or as much force as they do to
decide decisions which determine the rights of
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persons."
(p. 546)
Lord Pearson’s comment ran thus
"A tribunal to whom judicial or quasi-judicial
functions are entrusted is held to be
required, to apply those principles in
performing those functions unless there is a
provision to the contrary. But where some
person or body is entrusted by Parliament with
administrative or executive functions there is
no presumption that compliance with the
principles of natural justice is required,
although, as ’Parliament’ not to be presumed
to act unfairly’, the courts, may be able in
suitable cases (perhaps always) to imply an
obligation to act with fairness. Fairness,
however, does not necessarily require a
plurality of bearings or representations and
counter-representations. If there were too
much elaboration of procedural safeguards,
nothing could be done simply and quickly and
cheaply. Administrative or executive
efficiency and economy should not be too
readily sacrificed. The disadvantage of a
plurality of hearings even in the judicial
sphere was cogently pointed out in the
majority judgment in Cozens v. North Doven
Hospital Management Committee(1). (p. 547)
(1) (1966) 2 Q.B. 330, 343, 346-347.
315
Lord Salmon put the matter pithily
"No one suggests that it is unfair to launch a
criminal prosecution without first hearing the
accused."
(p. 550)
Indeed, in Malloch(1) E. Lord Wilberforce
observed :
"A limited right of appeal on the merits
affords no argument against the existence of a
right to a precedent hearing, and, if that is
denied, to have the. decision declared void."
(Foot note 30, Public Law Spring 1975 Stevens
p. 50 from Natural Justice Substance and
Shadow by D. H. Clark).
After all, the Election Court can exercise only a limited
power of review and must give regard to the Commission’s
discretion. And the trouble and cost of instituting such
proceedings would deter all but the most determined of
parties aggrieved, and even the latter could derive no help
from legal principle in predicting whether at the end of the
day the court would not condone their summary treatment on a
subjective appraisal of the demerits of the case they had
been denied the opportunity to present. The public interest
would be ill-served by judicially fostered uncertainty as to
the value to be set upon procedural fair play as a canon of
good administration. And further the Wiseman law Lords
regarded the cutting out of ’hearing’ as quite unpalatable
but in the circumstances harmless since most of the
assessees know the grounds and their-declaration was one
mode of explanation.
We consider it a valid point to insist on observance of
natural justice in the area of administrative decision-
making so as to avoid devaluation of this principle by
’administrators already alarmingly insensitive to the
rationale of audi alteram partem’:
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"In his lecture on "The Mission of the Law’
Professor H. W. R. Wade takes the principle
that no man should suffer ’without being given
a hearing as a cardinal example of a principle
’recognised as being indispensable to
justice,, but which (has) not yet won complete
recognition in the world of
administration......... The goal of
administrative justice can never be attained
by necessarily sporadic and ex post facto
judicial review. The essential mission of the
law in this field is to win acceptance by
administrators of the principle that to hear a
men before he is penalised is an integral part
of the decision-making process. A measure of
the importance of resisting the incipient
abnegation by the courts of the firm rule that
branch of audi alteram partem invalidates, is
that if it gains ground the mission of the law
is doomed to fail to the detriment of all."
(P. 60 : Public Law Spring 1975
Stevens--Natural Justice : Substance and
shadow)
Our constitutional order pays more than lip-service to the
rule of reasonable administrative process. Our people-are
not yet conscious of
(1) (1971) 1 W.L.R. 1570, 1598.
316
their rights; our administrative apparatus has a hard of-
hearing heritage. Therefore a creative play of fairplay,
irksome to some but good in the long run, must be accepted
as part of our administrative law. Lord Hailsham L.C. in
Pearlbeg presaged :
"The doctrine of natural justice has come in
for increasing consideration in recent years,
and the courts generally, and (the House of
Lords) in particular, have advanced its
frontiers considerably. But at the same time
they have taken an increasingly sophisticated
view of what is required in individual cases.
(P. 63, Public Law Spring 1975 supra)
And in India this case is neither the inaugural nor the
valedictory of natural justice.
Moreover, Sri Rao’s plea that when the Commission cancels,
viz., declares the poll void it is performing more than an
administrative function merits, attention, although we do
not pause to decide it. We consider that in the vital area
of elections where the people’s faith in the democratic
process is hypersensitive it is republican realism to keep
alive audi alteram even in emergencies, ’even amidst the
clash of arms’. Its protsan shades apart we recognise that
’hearing’ need not be an elaborate ritual and may, in
situations of quick despatch, be minimal, even formal,
nevertheless real. In this light, the Election Court will
approach the problem. To scuttle the ship is not to save
the cargo; to jettison may be.
Fair hearing is thus a postulate of decision-making
cancelling a poll, although fair abridgement of that process
is permissible. It can be fair without the rules of
evidence or forms of trial. It cannot be fair if apprising
the affected and appraising the representations is absent.
The philosophy behind natural justice is, in one sense,
participatory justice in the process of democratic rule of
law.
We have been told that wherever the Parliament has intended
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a hearing it has said so in the Act and the rules and
inferentially where it has not specificated it is otiose.
There is no such sequitur. The silence of a statute has no
exclusionary effect except where it flows from necessary
implication. Art. 324 vests a wide power and where some
direct consequence on candidates emanates from its exercise,
we must read this functional obligation.
There was much argument about the; guidelines in S. 58 and
64A being applicable to an order for constituency-wide
repoll. It may be wholesome to be guided; but it is not
illegal not to do so, provided homage to natural justice is
otherwise paid. Likewise, Shri P. P. Rao pressed that the
Chief Election Commissioner’ was arbitrary in ordering a re-
poll beyond Fazilka segment or postal ballots. Even the 3rd
respondent had not asked for it; not was there any material
to warrant it since all the ballots of all the other
segments were still available to be sorted out and
recounted. A whole re-poll is not a joke. It is almost an
irreparable punishment to the constituency and the
candidates. The sound and fury, the mammoth campaigns and
rallies, the whistle-story,
317
speeches and frenzy of slogans, the white-heat of tantrums,
the expensiveness of the human resources and a hundred other
traumatic consequences must be remembered before an easy re-
poll is directed, urges Shri Rao. We note the point but
leave its impact open for the Election Court to assess when
judging whether the, impugned orders was scary, arbitrary,
whimsical or arrived at by omitting material considerations.
Independently of natural justice, judicial review extends to
an examination of the order as to its being perverse,
irrational, bereft of application of the mind or without any
evidentiary backing. If two views are possible, the Court
cannot interpose its view. If no view is possible the Court
must strike down.
We have projected the panorama of administrative law at this
length so that the area may not be befogged at the trial
before the Election Court and for action in future by the
Election Commission. We have held that Art. 329(b) is a bar
for intermediate legal proceedings calling in question the
steps in the election outside the machinery for deciding
election disputes. We have further held that Art. 226 also
suffers such eclipse. Before the notification under s. 14
and beyond the declaration under r. 64 of Conduct of
Election Rules, 1961 are not forbidden ground. In between
is, provided, the step challenged is taken in furtherance of
not to halt or hamper the progress of the election.
We have clarified that what may seem to be counter to the
match of the election process may in fact be one to clear
the way to a free, and fair verdict of the electorate. It
depends. Taking the Election Commission at his word (the
Election Court has the power to examine the validity of his
word), we proceed on the prima facie view that writ petition
is not sustainable. If it turned out that the, Election
Commission acted bizarre fashion or in indiscreet haste, it
forebodes ill for the Republic. For if the salt lose their
savour, wherewith shall they be salted ? Alan Barth in his
’Prophets with Honor’, quotes Justice Felix Frankfurter
regarding the standard for a judicial decision thus :
"Mr. Doolay’s the Supreme Court follows the
iliction returns’, expressed the wit of
cynicism, not the demand of principle. A
Court which yields to the popular will thereby
licensee itself to practice despotism, for
there can be no assurance that it will not on
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another occasion indulge its own will. Courts
can fulfil their responsibility in a
democratic society only to the extent that
they succeed in shaping their judgments by
rational standards, and rational standards are
both impersonal and communicable."
(Quotation from American Federation of Labour
v. American Sash and Door Co.’335 U.S. 538
(1949) P. 15 of Alan Berth’s book published by
Light & Life Publishers, New Delhi)
The above observation would equally apply to the Election
Commission.
Many incidental points were debated but we have ignored
those micro-questions and confined ourselves to macro-
determinations. It is for the Election Court, not for us,
to rule on those variegated matters.
318
Certain obvious questions will claim the Election Court’s
attention. Did the Commission violate the election, rules
or canons of fairness ? Was the play, in short, according
to the script or did the dramatis personae act defiantly,
contrary to the text ? After all, democratic elections may
be likened to a drama, with a solemn script and responsible
actors, officials and popular, each playing his part, with
roles for heroes but not for villains, save where the text
is travestied and unscheduled anti-heroes intervene turning
the promising project for the smooth registration of the
collective will of the people into a tragic plot against it.
Every corrupt practice, partisan official action, basic
breach of rules or deviance from the fundamental of
electoral fairplay is a danger signal for the nation’s
democratic destiny. We view this case with the seriousness
of John Adams’ warning :
"’Remember’, said John Adams, ’remember’,
democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes,
exhausts and murders itself. There never was
a democracy that did not commit suicide."
(Quoted from M. Hidayatullah in "Democracy in
India and the Judicial Process" Lajpat Rai
Memorial Lectures : P. 16)
Only one issue remains. Is, the provision in S. 100 read
with s. 90 sufficient to afford full relief to the appellant
if the finding is in violation or mat-exercise of, powers
under Art. 324 ? Sri Rao says ’NO’ while the opposition says
’YES’.
Lot us follow the appellant’s apprehension for a while to
test its tenability. He says that the Commissioner has no
power to cancel the election to a whole constituency.
Therefore, the impugned order is beyond his authority and in
excess of his functions under Art. 324. Moreover, even if
such power exists it has been exercised illegally,
arbitrarily and in violation of the implied obligation of
audi alteran partem. In substance, his complaint is that
under guise of Art. 324 the Commissioner has acted beyond
its boundaries, in breach of its content and oblivious of
its underlying duties. Such a mal-exercise clearly
tantamounts to non-adherence to the norms and limitations of
Art. 324 and, if true, it is a noncompliance with that
provision of the Constitution. It falls within s. 100(1)
(d) (iv). A generous, purposeoriented, literally informed
statutory interpretation spreads the wings of ’non-
compliance’ wide enough to bring in all contraventions,
excesses, breaches and subversions.
We derive support for this approach from Durga Mehta. The
Court there considered the same words, in the same sections,
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in the same statute. Section 100(2) (c) interpreted in that
case re-incamates as s,. 100(1) (d) (iv) later. Everything
is identical. And Mukherjee, J. explained.
"It is argued on behalf of the respondent that
the expression "non-compliance’ as used in
sub-section (2)(c) would suggest the idea of
not acting according to any rule or command
and that the expression is not quite
appropriate in describing a mere lack of
qualification. This, we think, would
319
be a narrow way of looking at the thing. When
a person is incapable of being chosen as a
member of a State Assembly under the
provisions of the Constitution itself but has
nevertheless been returned as such at an
election, it can be said without impropriety
that there has been non-compliance with the
provisions of the Constitution materially
affecting the result of the election. There
is no material difference between "non-
compliance" and "non-observance" or "breach"
and this item in clause (c) of sub-section (2)
may be taken as a residuary provision
contemplating cases where there has been
infraction of the provisions of the
Constitution or of the Act but which have not
been specifically enumerated in the other
portions of the clause."
Lexical significations are not the last work
in statutory construction. We hold that it is
perfectly permissible for the Election Court
to decide the question as one falling under s.
1 00 ( 1 ) (d) (iv) A presumatic view of the
Act and Art. 324 helps discern an organic
synthesis. Law sustains, not fails.
A kindred matter viz., the scope of sec. 100
and sec. 98 has to be examined, parties having
expressed anxious difference on the implied
powers of the Election Court. Indeed, it is a
necessary part of our decision but we may deal
with it even here. Sri Rao’s consternation is
that, if his writ petition is dismissed as not
maintainable and his election petition is
dismissed on the ground that the Election
Court had no power to examine the cancellation
of poll now that a fresh poll has taken place,
he will be in the unhappy position of having
to forfeit a nearvictory because a gross
illegality triumphs irremediably. If this
were true the hopes of the rule of law turn
into dupes of the people. We have given
careful thought to this tragic possibility and
are convincedindeed, the learned Solicitor
General has argued for upholding, not
subverting the rule of law and agrees-that the
Election Court has all the powers necessary to
grant all or any of the reliefs set out in
sec. 98 and to direct the Commissioner to take
such ancillary steps as will render complete
justice to the appellant.
Section 98, which we have read earlier,
contemplates three possibilities when an
election petition is tried. Part VI of the
Act deals with the complex of provisions
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calculated to resolve election disputes. A
match past this Part discloses the need to
file an election petition (S. 60) the
jurisdiction to try which is vested in the
High Court (80A). Regulatory of the further
processes on presentation of a petition are sees. 81 to 96.
If a candidate whose return is challenged has a case
invalidating the challenger’s election he may set it up
subject to the provision in sec. 97. Then comes the finale
in sec. 98. The High Court has three options by way of
conclusive determinations. It may (a) dismiss the petition
(b) declare the election void; and (c) go further to declare
the petitioner duly elected. Side-stepping certain species
of orders that may be passed under s. 99 we have to explore
the gamut of implied powers when the grant of power is wide
and needs incidental exercises to execute the substantive
power.
320
A few more sections exist which we may omit as
being not germane to the present controversy.
What is that controversy ? Let us project it
with special reference to the present case,.
Hero the, poll proceeded peacefully, the
counting was almost complete, the, ballots of
most stations are available and postal votes
plus the votes of one, or two polling stations
may alone be missing. Sri P. P. Rao asks and
whenever counsel in court or speaker on a
podium asks rhetorical questions be sure he is
ready with an answer in his favour : If the
court holds that the cancellation by the
Commissioner of the whole poll is illegal what
relief can it give me since a fresh election
based on that demolition has been already
held’? If the court holds that since most of
the ballots are intact, repoll at one or two
places is enough how can even the court hold
such limited repoll. If the Court wants to
grant the appellant the relief that lie is
duly elected how can the intervening processes
lying within the competence of the Commissioner be
commandered by the Court ? The solution to this disturbing
string of interrogations is simple given a creative reading
of implied powers writ invisibly yet viably into the larger
jurisdiction under sec. 98. Law transcends legalism when
life is baffled by surprise situations. In this larger view
end in accordance with the well-established doctrine of
implied powers we think the Court contend if justified,
shall-do, by its command, all that is necessary to repair
the injury and make the remedy realisable. Courts are not
luminous angels beating by their golden wings in the void
but operational authority sanctioning everything to fulfil
the trust of the rule of law. That the less is the
inarticulate part of the larger is the jurisprudence of
power. Both Sri Sorabjee and Sri Phadke agree to this
proposition and Sri Rao, in the light of the election
petition filed and is pending, cannot but assent to it. By
way of abundant caution or otherwise, the appellant has
challenged, in his election petition, the declaration of the
3rd respondent as the returned candidate. He has also rayed
for his being declared the duly elected candidate. There is
no dispute- there cannot be.--that the cornerstone of the
second constituency-wide poll High Court for any good reason
then the second poll falls and the 3rd respondent too with
it. This question of the soundness of the cancellation of
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the entire poll is within the court,s power under s. 98 of
the Act. All are agreed on this.In that eventuality, what
are the follow-up steps? Everything necessary to resurrect
reconstruct and lead on to a consummation of the
originalprocess. Maybe, to give effective relief by-way of
completion of the broken election the Commissioner may have
to be directed to hold fresh poll and report back together
with the ballots. A recount of all or some may perhaps be
required. Other steps suggested by other developments may
be desired. If anything integrally linked up with and
necessitated by the obligation to grant full relief has to
be undertaken or ordered to be done by the election
machinery, all that is within the orbit of the Election
Court’s power.
Black’s Law Dictionary explains the proposition thus
"Implied powers are such as are necessary to
make available and carry into effect those
powers which are expressly
321
granted or conferred, and which must therefore
be presumed to have been within the intention
of the constitutional or legislative grant.
(p. 1334 Black’s Legal Dictionary 4th Edn.)
This understanding accords with justice and reason and has
the support of Sutherland. The learned Additional Solicitor
General also cited the case in Metajog Dobey v. H. C. Bhari
[1955] 2 SCR 925 at p. 937 and Commissioner of Commercial
taxes,& Ors v. R. S. Jhaver & ors. etc. [1968] 1 SCR 148 at
p. 154/155 to substantiate his thesis that the doctrine of
implied powers clothes the Commissioner with vast incidental
powers. Hi illustrated his point by quoting from Sutherland
(Frank E. Horack Jr., Vol. 3)
"Necessary implications.
Where a statute confers powers or duties in
general terms, all powers and duties
incidental and necessary to make such
legislation effective are included by
implication. Thus it has been stated, "An
express statutory grant of power or the
imposition of a definite duty carries with it
by implication, in the absence of a
limitation, authority to employ all the means
that are usually employed and that are
necessary to the exercise of the power or the
performance of the duty..... That which is
clearly implied is as much a part of a law as
that which is expressed." The reason behind
the rule is to be found in the fact that
legislation is enacted to establish broad or
general standards. Matters of minor detail
are frequently omitted from legislative
enactments, and "if these could not be
supplied by implication the drafting of
legislation would be an interminable process
and the true intent of the legislature likely
to be defeated.
The rule whereby a statute,, is by necessary
implication extended has been most frequently
applied in the construction of laws relegating
powers to public officers and administrative
agencies. The powers thus granted involve a
multitude of functions that are discoverable
only through practical experience.
x x x
A municipality, empowered, by statute to
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construct sewers for the preservation of the
public health, interest and convenience, was
permitted to construct a protecting wall and
pumping plant which were necessary for the
proper working of the sewer. but were
essential to public health. A country school
superintendent, who was by statute given
general supervisory power over a special
election, was permitted to issue absentee,
ballots. The power to arrest has been held to
include the power to take finger prints, and
take into custody non-residents who were
exempted from the provisions of a licensing
statute."
322
Having regard to statutory setting and comprehensive
jurisdiction of the Election Court we are satisfied that it
is within its powers to, direct a re-poll of particular
polling stations to be conducted by the specialised agency
under the Election Commission and report the results and
ballots to the Court. Even a re-poll of postal ballots,
since those names are known, can be ordered taking care to
preserve the secrecy of the vote. The Court may, if
necessary, after setting aside the election of R. 3 (if
there are good grounds therefore keep the case pending,
issue directions for getting available votes, order recount
and or partial re-poll, keep the election petition pending
and pass final orders holding the appellant elected if-only
if-valid grounds are established. Such being the wide
ranging scope of implied powers we are in agreement with the
learned Additional Solicitor General that all the reliefs
the appellant claims are within the Court’s powers to grant
and Sri Rao’s alarm is unfounded.
Diffusion, even more elaborate discussion, tends to blur the
precision of the conclusion in a judgment and so it is meet
that we, synopsize the formulations. Of course, the
condensed statement we make is for convenience, not for
exclusion of the relevance or attenuation of the binding
impact of the detailed argumentation. For this limited
purpose, we set down our holdings
1 (a) Art. 329(b) is a blanket ban on
litigative challenges to electoral steps taken
by the Election Commission and its officers
for carrying forward the process of election
to its culmination in the formal declaration
of the result.
(b) Election, in this context, has a very
wide connotation commencing from the
Presidential notification calling upon the
electorate to elect and culminating in the
final declaration of the returned candidate..
(a) The Constitution, contemplates a free and
fair election and vests comprehensive
responsibilities of
superintendence, direction and control of the
conduct of elections in the Election
Commission. This responsibility may cover
powers, duties and functions of many sorts,
administrative or other, depending on the
circumstances.
(b) Two limitations at least are laid on its
plenary character in the exercise thereof.
Firstly, when Parliament or any State
Legislature has made valid law, relating to or
in connection with elections, the Commission
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shall act in conformity with, not in violation
of such provisions but where such law is
silent Art. 324 is a reservoir of power to,
act for the avowed purpose of, not divorced
from pushing forward a free and fair election
with expedition. Secondly, the Commission
shall be responsible to the rule of law, act
bona fide and be amenable to the norms of
natural justice in so- far as conformance to
such canons can reasonably and realistically
be required of it as fairplay-in-action in a
most important area of the constitutional
order, viz., elections. Fairness does import
an obligation to see that no
323
wrongdoer candidate benefits by his own-
wrong. To put the matter beyond doubt,
natural justice enlivens and applies to the
specific case of order for total repoll,
although. not in full penoply but in full
penoply but in flexible practicability.
Whether it has been compiled with is left open
for the Tribunal’s adjudication.
3. The conspectus of provisions bearing on
the subject of elections clearly expresses the
rule that there is a remedy for every wrong
done during the election in progress although
it is postponed to the post election stage and
procedure as predicated in Art. 329(b) and the
1951 Act. The Election Tribunal has, under
the various provisions of the Act, large
enough powers to give relief to an injured
candidates if he makes out a case and such
processual amplitude of power extends to
directions to the Election Commission or other
appropriate agency to hold a poll, to bring up
the ballots or do other thing necessary for
fulfilment of the jurisdiction to undo
illegality and injustice and do complete
justice within the parameters set by the
"existing law.
In sum, a pragmatic modus vivendi between the Commission’s
paramount constitutional responsibility vis-a-vis elections
and the rule of law vibrant with fair acting by every
authority and remedy for every right breached, is reached.
We conclude stating that the bar of Art. 329(b) is as wide
as the door of. s. 100 read with s. 98. The writ petition
is dismissible but every relief (given factual proof) now
prayed for in the pending election petition is within reach.
On this view of the law ubi jus ibi remeditum is vindicated,
election injustice is avoided, and the constituency is
allowed to speak effectively. In the light of and
conditioned by the law we have laid down, we dismiss the
appeal. Where the dispute which spirals to this Court is
calculated to get a clarification of tile legal calculus in
an area of national moment, the parties are the occasion but
the people are the beneficiaries, and so costs must not be
visited on t particular person. Each party Will bear his
own costs.
A word of mood for counsel. Shri Soli Sorabjee, did, with
imaginative, yet emphatic, clarity and pragmatic, yet
persuasive, advocacy, belight the twilit yet sensitive,
zones of the electoral law; Shri P. P. Rao did, with feeling
for justice and wrestling with law, drive home the
calamities of our system if right did not speak to remedy;
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and Shri Phadke did, without overlapping argument, but with
unsparing vigour, bringing out the, legal dynamics of quick
elections and comprehensive corrections. We record our
appreciation to the bar whose help goes a long way for the
bench to do justice,
GOSWAMI, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of the Delhi High Court dismissing the writ
application of the appellant under Article 226 of the
Constitution.
8-1114SCI/77
324
By a notification of February 10, 1977, made under section
14 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, (briefly
the Act), the President called upon the Parliamentary
Constituencies to elect members to the House of the People,
in accordance with the provisions of the Act and the rules
and orders made thereunder. Simultaneously, a notification
was issued by the Chief Election Commissioner with a
calendar of dates for different Parliamentary Constituencies
in the country. In this appeal we are concerned with No.
13-Ferozepore Parliamentary Constituency in the State of
Punjab where the poll was scheduled to be held on March 16,
1977, and March 23 was fixed as the date before which the
election shall be completed. Counting, according to the
schedule, was to commence on March , 20, 1977 and it
actually continued on March 21, 1977. This Parliamentary
Constituency consisted of nine Assembly Constituencies
including the Fazilka and Zira Assembly segments.
We may now briefly state the appellants’ case so far as it
is material :
The poll in the entire Parliamentary Constituency was
peacefully over on March 16, 1977. Counting in five
Assembly segments was completed on March 20, 1977, and in
the remaining four it was completed on March 21. The
Assistant Returning Officers made entries in the result
sheets in form 20 and announced the number of votes received
by each candidate in the Assembly segments. No recounting
was asked for by any candidate or his polling agent in any
segment. Copies of the result sheets in Form 20 were handed
over to the candidates or to their polling agents. The
ballot papers and the result sheets of all the nine Assembly
segments were transmitted by the Assistant Returning
Officers concerned to the Returning Officer at the
Headquarters. According to the result sheets the appellant,
who was the Congress candidate, secured 1,96,016 votes,
excluding postal ballots, as ’against his nearest rival
candidate respondent No. 3, belonging to the Akali Party,
who secured 1,94,095 votes, excluding postal ballots. The
margin of votes between the appellant and respondent No. 3
at that stage was 1921. There were 769 postal ballots,. As
per programme, counting of postal ballot papers was started
by the Returning Officer (respondent No. 2) at 3.00 P.M. on
March 21. 248 ballot papers out of 769 were rejected in the
counting. At this stage, it is said, respondent No. 3 and
his son incited an unruly mob of his supporters to raid the
office of the Returning Officer as a result of which a grave
situation was created in which many officers received
injuries. ’The Returning Officer was abused and was
threatened that his son and other members of his family
would be murdered. All the postal ballot papers, except
those which had been rejected, were destroyed by the mob.
Some ballot papers of Fazilka Assembly segment are also said
to have been destroyed by the mob in the course of their
transit to the office of the Returning Officer. The
Assistant Returning Officer of the Zira Assembly segment, on
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his way to the office of the Returning Officer, was attacked
by the mob and some of the envelopes containing ballot
papers, paper seal accounts and presiding Officers’ diaries
were snatched away from him. However the result sheets in
Form 20 of all the Assembly segments in which the
325
counting had been completed by March 21, 1977, could be
preserved and were deposited in Gorvernment Treasury,
Ferozepore. In view of the violent situation created in the
office of the Returning Officer, be was prevented from
ascertaining the result of the postal ballot papers and
declaring the result of the election. He was made to sign a
written report about the happenings to the Chief Election
Commissioner (respondent No. 1). The above, briefly, is the
version of the appellant.
Deputy Commissioners are usually appointed’as Returning
Officers and originally Shri G. B. S. Gosal, who was the
Deputy Commissioner, was nominated as the Returning Officer
of the aforesaid constituency, as per notification dated
January 29, 1977. It appear s on February 8, 1977, Shri
Gosal was transferred and Shri Gurbachan Singh, a close
relation of the appellant, was appointed as the Deputy
Commissioner in place of Shri Gosal. Shri Gurbachan Singh
(respondent No. 2) thus became the Returning Officer. There
were complaints and allegations against him and after being
apprised of the same the Chief Election Commissioner of
(respondent No. 1) appointed Shri I. K. K. Menon, Under
Secretary, Election Commission, as an Observer to be present
at Ferozepore from March 16 till March 21 on which date the
result was expected to be declared.
On March 22, 1977, the Chief Election Commissioner received
a wireless message from the Returning Officer which may be
quoted
"Mob about sixteen thousand by over powering
the police attacked the counting hall where
postal ballot papers were being counted.
Police could not control the mob being out
numbered. Part of postal ballot papers
excepting partly rejected ballot papers and
other election material destroyed by the mob.
Lot of damage to property done. ’The
undersigned was forced under duress to give in
writing the following : ’The counting of 13
Parliamentary Ferozepore Constituency has been
adjourned due to certain circumstances which
have been mentioned in the application
presented by Shri Mohinder Singh Sayanwala
regarding repoll of the constituency and on
the polling station in which the ballot
boxes have been r to be tampered with. This
will be finally decided on receipt of
instructions from the Election Commission ’and
the result will be announced thereafter’.
Counting adjourned and result postponed till
receipt of further instructions from Election
Commission. Incident happened in the presence
of Observer at Ferozepore. Mob also destroyed
the ballot papers and other election material
and steel trunks of Fazilka Assembly segment
at Ferozepore after the counting part of
election material of Zira Assembly segment was
also snatched and destroyed by the mob at
Ferozepore".
On the same day the Chief Election Commissioner received a
written report from the Observer. The Observer also "orally
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apprised the Chief Election Commissioner of the various
incidents at the time of
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poll and counting in various Assembly segments". No other
report from the Returning Officer was, however, received on
that day.
On the materials mentioned above which he could gather on
March 22, 1977, the Chief Election Commissioner passed the
impugned order on the same day. It may even be appropriate
to quote the same :
"Election Commission of India
New Delhi
Dated 22 March, 1977
Chaitra, 1, 1899 (SAKA)
NOTIFICATION
S.O. Whereas the Election Commission has received reports
from the Returning Officer of 13-Ferozepur Parliamentary
Constituency that the counting on 21 March, 1977 was
seriously disturbed by violence; that the ballot papers of
some of the assembly segments of the parliamentary
constituency have been destroyed by violence, that as a
consequence it is not possible to complete the counting of
the votes in the constituency and the declaration of the
result cannot be made with any degree of certainty;
And whereas the Commission is satisfied that taking all
circum’stances into account, the poll in the constituency
has been vitiated to such an extent as to effect the result
of the election;
Now, therefore, the Commission, in exercise of the powers
vested in it under article 324 of the Constitution, Section
153 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and all
other powers enabling it so. to do, cancels poll already
taken in the constituency and extends the time for the
completion of the election upto 30 April, 1977......
x x x x x
The appellant approached the Chief Election Commissioner to
revoke the impugned order and to declare the result of the
election, but without success. That led to the writ
application in the High Court with prayer to issue-
(1) a writ of certiorari calling forth the
records for the purpose of quashing the
impugned order; and
(2) ’a writ of mandamus directing the Chief
Election Commissioner and the Returning
Officer to declare the result of the election;
(3) alternatively, a writ of mandamus
directing the Chief Election Commissioner to
act strictly in accordance with the provision
of section 64A(2) thus confining its
directions in regard to postal ballot papers
only.
The appellant made three contentions before the High Court.
Firstly, that the Election Commission had no jurisdiction to
order
327
re-poll of the entire Parliamentary Constituency. Secondly,
the impugned order was violative of the principles of
natural justice as no opportunity of a hearing was afforded
to the appellant before passing the order. Thirdly,’that
the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution was
competent to go into the matter notwithstanding the
provisions of Article 329(b) of the Constitution.
The application was resisted by the Chief Election
Commissioner (respondent No. 1) and respondent No 3, the
rival candidate.
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A preliminary objection was raised by respondents 1 to 3
with regard to the maintainability of the writ ’application
on the ground that Article 329(b) of the Constitution was a
bar to the High Courts entertaining it. Another objection
was taken that the writ petition was not maintainable in
view of the amended provisions of Article 226 of the
Constitution. The High Court dismissed the writ
application. The High Court held that Article 324 confers
"plenary executive powers" on the Election Commission and
there were no limitations on the functions contemplated in
Article 324. The High Court observed that the law framed
under Article 327 or Article 328 was in aid of the plenary
powers already conferred on the Election Commission under
Article 324, and where the law so made under Article 327 or
Article 328 omitted to provide for a contingency or a
situation, the said plenary executive power relating to
conduct of elections conferred upon the Election Commission
by Article 324(1) of the Constitution would become available
to it and the, Election Commission would be entitled to pass
necessary orders in the interest of free and fair elections.
The High Court also held that the Returning Officer could
not deprive the candidates of the rights of recount
available to them tinder rule 63 of the Conduct of Election
Rules, 1961, and after going into the facts observed that
"it became impossible for the Returning Officer to comply
with the provisions of rules 63(2) to 63(6)". Repelling the
contention of the appellant that the Commission could not
travel beyond the Act and the rules by simply relying on its
powers under the Constitution, the High Court observed "that
calling upon of the parliamentary constituencies to elect
members has to be in accordance with the provisions of the
Act and the Rules but it does not mean that the conduct of
elections by the Commission has to be held only under the
Act or the Rules. The Election Commission who is vested
with the power of conducting the elections has still to hold
the elections in accordance with the Act and the Rules as
well as under the Constitution". The High Court further
held that the principles of natural justice were not
specifically provided for in Article 324 but were "totally
excluded while passing the impugned order". The High Court
further observed that even if the principles of natural
justice were impliedly to be observed before passing the
impugned order the appellant was "heard not only before the
issue of the notification but in any case after the
notification". The High Court also ’held that it bad no
jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition in view. of the
bar contained in Article 329(b) of the Constitution.
This appeal has come up for hearing before this’
Constitution Bench on a reference by a Two-Judge Bench as
substantial questions of
328
law have arisen as to the, interpretation of the
Constitution, in particular Article 324 and Article 329(b)
of the Constitution. We should,. therefore, immediately
address ourselves to that aspect of the matter.
What is the scope and ambit of Article 324 of the
Constitution ? The Constitution of our country ushered in a
Democratic Republic for the free people of India. The
founders of the Constitution took solemn care to devote a
special chapter to Elections niched safely in Part XV of the
Constitution. Originally there were only six articles in
this Part opening with Article 324. The penultimate Article
in the chapter, as it stands, is Article 329 which puts a
ban on interference by courts in electoral matters. We are
not concerned in this appeal with the newly added Article
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329A which is the last Article to close the’ chapter.
Elections supply the visa viva to a democracy. It was,
therefore, deliberately and advisedly thought to be of
paramount importance that the high ’and independent office
of the Election Commission should be created under the
Constitution to be in complete charge of the entire
electoral process commencing with the issue of the
notification, by the ’President to the final declaration of
the result. We are not concerned with the other duties of
the Election Commission in this appeal.
Article 324 came to the notice of this Court for the first
time in N. P. Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer, Namakkal
Constituency and Others(1). This Court observed
"Broadly speaking, before an election
machinery can be brought into operation, there
are three requisites which require to be
attended to, namely, (1) there should be ’a
set of laws and rules making provisions with
respect to all matters relating to, or in
connection with,, elections, and it should be
decided as to how these laws and rules are to
be made; (2) there should be an executive
charged with the duty of securing the due
conduct of elections; and (3) there should be
a judical tribunal to deal with disputes
arising out of or in connection with
elections. Articles 327 and 328 deal with the
first of these requisites, article 324 with
the second and article 329 with the third
requisite".
Further below this Court observed as follows
"Obviously, the Act is a self-contained
enactment so far as elections are concerned,
which means that whenever we have to ascertain
the true position in regard to any-matter
connected with elections, we have only to look
at the Act and the rules made thereunder".
Lower down this Court further observed
"It is now well-recognised that there a right
or liability is created by a statute which
gives a special remedy for
(1)[1952] S.C.R. 218.
329
enforcing it, the remedy provided by that
statute only must be availed of".
x x x
x
the Representation of the People Act to state
that the Act provides for only one remedy,
that remedy being by an election petition to
be presented after the election is over, and
there is no remedy provided at any
intermediate stage".
Ponnuswami’s case (supra) had to deal with a matter arising
out of rejection of a nomination paper which was the subject
matter of a writ application under Article 226 of the
Constitution which the High Court bad dismissed.
With regard to the construction of Article 329(b) it was
held that "the more reasonable view seems to be that article
329 covers all electoral matters"’. This Court put forth
its conclusions in that decision as follows :-
"(1) Having regard to the important functions
which the legislatures have to perform in
democratic countries, it has always been
recognised to be a matter of first importance
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that elections should be concluded as early as
possible according to time schedule and all
controversial matters and all disputes arising
out of elections should be postponed till
after the elections are over, so that the
election proceedings may not be unduly
retarded or protracted.
(2) In conformity with this principle, the
scheme of the election law in this country as
well as in England is that no significance
should be attached to anything which does not
affect the ’election’; and if any irregu-
larities are committed while it is in progress
and they belong to the category or class
which, under the law by which elections are
governed, would have the effect of vitiating
the ’election’ and enable the person affected
to call it in question, they should be brought
up before a special tribunal by means of an
election petition and not be made the subject
of a dispute before any court while the
election is in progress".
This Court also explained the connotation of
the word "election" in very wide terms as
follows:-
" It seems to me that the word ’election’ has
been used in Part XV of the Constitution in
the wide sense, that is to say, to connote the
entire procedure to be gone through to return
a candidate to the legislature. The use of
the expression ’conduct of election’ in
article 324 specifically points to the wide
meaning, and that meaning can also be read
consistently into the other provisions which
occur in Part XV including article 328(b)".
330
This Court further observed that-
been appropriately used with reference to the
entire process which consists of several
stages and embraces many steps. some of which
may have an important bearing on the result of
the process.
x x x x
x
If the grounds on which an election can be
called in question could be raised at an
earlier stage and efforts, if any, are
rectified, there will be no meaning in
enacting a provision like article 329 (b) and
in setting up a special tribunal. Any other
meaning ascribed to the words used in the
article would lead to anomalies, which the
Constitution could not have contemplated, one
of them being that conflicting views may be
expressed by the High Court at the pre-polling
stage and by the election tribunal, which is
to be an independent body, at the stage when
the matter is brought up before it."
The above decision in locus-classicus on the subject and the
parties before us seek to derives support from it for their
contentions.
The important question that arises for consideration is as
to the amplitude of powers and the width of the functions
which the Election Commission may exercise under Article 324
of the Constitution. According to Mr. Rao, appearing on
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behalf of the appellants, there is no question of exercising
any powers under Article 324 of the Constitution which, in
terms, refers to "functions’ under sub--Article (6),. We
are however, unable to accept this submission since
functions include powers as well as duties (see Stroud’s
Judicial Dictionary, p. 1196). It is incomprehensible, that
a person or body can discharge any functions without
exercising powers. Powers and duties are integrated with
function.
Article 324(1) vests in the Election Commission the
superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of
the electoral rolls for, and the conduct of, all elections
to Parliament and to the Legislature of every State and of
elections to the offices of the President and Vice-President
held under the Constitution. Article 324(1) is thus pattern
of our polity, isto be exercised in accordance with law.
That is why Articles 327 and328 provide for making of
provisions with respect to all matters relating to or in
connected with elections for the Union Legislatures and for
the State Legislatures respectively. When appropriate laws
are made under Article 327 by Parliament as well as under
Article 328 by the State Legislatures, the Commission has to
act in conformity with those laws and the other legal
provisions made thereunder. Even so, both Articles 327 and
328 are " subject to the provisions" of the Constitution
which include Article 324 and Article 329. Since the
conduct of all elections to the various legislative bodies
and to the offices of the President and the Vice-President
is vestedunder Article 324(1) in the Election Commission,
the framers
331
of the Constitution took care to leaving scope for exercise
of residuary power by the Commission, in its own right, as a
creature of the Constitution, in the infinite variety of
situations that may emerge from time to time in such a large
democracy as ours. Every contingency could not be foreseen,
or anticipated with precision. That is why there is no
hedging in Article 324. The Commission may be required to
cope with some situation which may not be provided for in
the enacted laws and the rules. That to be the raison
d’etre for the opening clause in Articles 327 and 328 which
leaves the exercise of powers under Article 324 operative
and effective when it is reasonably called for in a vacuous
area. There is, however, no doubt whatsoever that the
Election Commission will have to conform to the existing
laws and rules in exercising its powers and performing its
manifold-duties for the conduct of free and fair elections.
The Election Commission is a high-powered and independent
body which is irremovable from office except in accordance
with the provisions of the Constitution relating to the
removal of Judges of the Supreme Court and is intended by
the framers of the Constitution to be kept completely free
from any pulls and pressures that may be brought through
political influence in a democracy run on party system.
Once the appointment is made by the President. the Election
Commission remains insulated from extraneous influences, and
that cannot be achieved unless it has an amplitude of powers
in the conduct of elections-of course in accordance with the
exising laws. But where these are absent, and yet a
situation has to be tackled, the Chief Election Commissioner
has not to fold his hands and pray to God for divine
inspiration to enable him to exercise his functions and to
perform his duties or to look to any external authority for
the grant of powers to deal with the situation. He must
lawfully exercise his power independently, in all matters
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relating to the conduct of elections, and see, that the
election process is completed properly, in a free and fair
manner. "An express statutory grant of power or the
imposition of a definite duty carries with it by implica-
tion, in the absence of a limitation, authority to employ
all the means that are usually employed and that are
necessary to the exercise of the power or the performance of
the duty. That which is clearly implied is as much a part
of a law as that which is expressed."(1)
The Chief Election commissioner has thus to pass appropriate
orders on receipt of reports from the returning officer with
regard to any situation arising in the course of an election
and power cannot be denied to him to pass appropriate
orders. Moreover, the power has to be exercised with
promptitude. Whether an order passed is wrong. arbitrary or
is otherwise invalid, relates to the mode of exercising the
power and does not touch upon the existence of the power in
him if it is there either under the Act or the rules made in
that behalf, or under Article 324(1).
Apart from the several functions envisaged by the two Acts
and the rules made thereunder, where the Election Commission
is required to make necessary orders or directions, are
there any other functions or the Commission ? Even if the
answer to the question may be found
332
elsewhere, reference may be, made to section 19A of the Act
which, in terms, refers to functions not only under the
Representation of the People Act, 1950 and the
Representation of the People Act, 1951, or under the rules
made thereunder, but also under the Constitution. The
Commission is, therefore, entitled to exercise certain
powers under Article 324 itself, on its own right, in an
area not covered by the Acts and the rules. Whether the
power is exercised in an arbitrary or capricious manner is
a completely different question. Mr. Rao submits,
referring to sections 58 and 64A of the Act, that the Chief
Election Commissioner has no power to cancel the poll in the
entire constituency. He submits that this is a case of
complete lack of power and not merely illegal or irregular
exercise of power. He points out that there is a clear
provision under section 58 of the Act for reordering of poll
at a polling station. Similarly under section 64A there is
provision for declaring the poll at a polling station void
when the Election Commission is satisfied that there is
destruction or loss etc. of ballet papers before counting.
Counsel submits that while law has provided for situations
specified in section 58 with regard to loss or destruction
of ballot boxes and under section 64A with regard to loss
and destruction of ballot papers before counting of votes,
no provision has been made for such an unusual exercise of
power as the cancellation of the poll in the entire
constituency after it has already been completed peacefully.
It is therefore has argued that this is a case of complete
lack of power of the Commission to pass the impugned order.
It is clear even from section 58 and section 64A that the
legislature envisaged the necessity for the cancellation of
poll and ordering of repoll in particular polling stations
where situation may warrant such a course. When provision
is made in the Act to deal with situations arising in a
particular polling stage it cannot be said that if a general
situation arises whereby numerous polling stations may wit-
ness serious mal-practices affecting the purity of the
electoral process, that power can be denied to the Election
Commission to take an appropriate decision. The fact that a
particular Chief Election Commissioner may take certain
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decisions unlawfully, arbitrarily or with ulterior motive or
in mala fide exercise of power, is not the test in such a
case. The question always relates to the existence of power
and not the mode of exercise of power. Although section 58
and section 64A mention "a polling station" or "a place
fixed for the poll" it may, where necessary, embrace
multiple polling stations.
Both under section 58 and under section 64A the poll that
was taken at a particular polling station can be voided and
fresh poll can be ordered by the Commission. These two
sections naturally envisage a particular situation in a
polling station or a place fixed for the poll and cannot be
said to be exhaustive. The provisions in sections 5 8 and
64A cannot therefore be said to rule out the making of an
order to deal with a similar situation if it arises in
several polling stations or even sometimes as a general
feature in a substantially large area. It is, therefore,
not possible to accept the contention that the Election
Commission has no power to make the impugned order for a
repoll in the entire constituency.
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Mr. Rao submits that once the Presidential notification has
been made, it is left to the President alone to amend or
alter the notification and power, in an appropriate case,
may be exercised by the President in which case the action
of the President wilt be on the advice of the Cabinet which
will be responsible to the Legislature. He submits that it
was not the intention of the Constitution makers in the
entire scheme of the electoral provisions to entrust such an
extraordinary power to the Election Commission. He, further
submits that in an appropriate case the President may also
promulgate an ordinance under Article 123(i) of the
Constitution cancelling the poll in the entire constituency.
The contention that the President can revoke, alter or amend
the notification under section 14 of the Act or that he can
promulgate an ordinance in an appropriate case does not
however answer the question. The question will have to be
decided on the scope and ambit of power under Article 324(1)
of the Constitution which vests the conduct of elections in
the Election Commission. It is true that in exercise of
powers under Article 324(1) the Election Commission cannot
do something impinging upon the power of the President in
making the notification under section 14 of the Act. But
after the notification has been issued by the President, the
entire electoral process is in the charge of the Election
Commission and the Commission is exclusively responsible for
the conduct of the, election without reference to any
outside agency. We do not find any limitation in Article
324(1) from which it can be held that where the law made
under Article 32 / or the relevant rules made thereunder do
not provide for the mechanism of dealing with a certain
extraordinary situation, the hands of the Election
Commission are tied and it cannot independently decide for
itself what to do in a matter relating to an election. We
are clearly of opinion that the Election Commission is
competent in an appropriate case to order repoll of an
entire constituency where necessary. it will be an exercise
of power within the ambit of its functions tinder Article
324, The submission that there is complete lack of power to
make the impugned order under Article 324 is devoid of
substance.
The ancillary question which arises for consideration is
that when the Election Commission amended its notification
and extended the time for completion of the election by
ordering a fresh poll, is it an order during the course of
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the process of ’election’ as that term is understood ?
As already pointed out, it is well-settled that election
covers the entire process from the issue of the notification
under section 14 to the declaration of the result under
section 66 of the Act. When a Poll that has already taken
place has been cancelled and a fresh poll has been ordered,
the order therefor, with the amended date is passed as an
integral part of the electoral process. We are not
concerned with the question whether the impugned order is
right or wrong or invalid on any account. Even if it is a
wrong order it does not cease to be an order passed by a
competent authority charged with the conduct of elections
with the aim and object of completing the elections.
Although that is not always decisive, the impugned order
itself shows that it has been passed in the exercise of
power under Article 324 (1) and
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section 153 of the Act. That is also the correct position.
Such an order, relating, as it does, to election within the
width of the expression as interpreted by this Court,
cannot be questioned except by an election petition under
the Act.
What do the appellants seek in the writ application ?
Oneof their prayers is for declaration of the result on
the basis of thePoll which has been cancelled. This is
nothing short of seeking to establish the validity of a very
important stage in the election process, namely, the poll
which has taken place, and which was countermanded by the
impugned order. If the appellants succeed, the result may,
if possible, be declared on the basis-of that poll, or some
other suitable orders may be passed. If they fail, a fresh
poll will take place and the election will be declared on
the basis of the fresh poll. This is, in effect, a vital
issue which relates to questioning of the election since the
election will be complete only after the fresh poll on the
basis of which the declaration of the result will be made.
In other words, there are no two elections as there is only
one continuing process of election. If, therefore, during
the process of election, at an intermediate or final stage,
the entire poll has been wrongly cancelled and a fresh poll
has been wrongly ordered, that is a matter which may be
agitated after declaration of the result on the basis of the
fresh poll, by questioning the election in the appropriate
forum by means of an election petition in accordance with
law. The appellants, then, will not be without a remedy to
question every step in the electoral process and every order
that has been passed in the process of the election includ-
ing the countermanding of the earlier poll. In other words,
when the appellants question the election after declaration
of the result on the basis of the fresh poll, the election
court will be able to entertain their objection with regard
to the order of the Election Commission countermanding the
earlier poll, and the whole matter will be at large. If,
for example, the election court comes to the conclusion that
the earlier poll has been wrongly cancelled, or the impugned
order of the Election Commission is otherwise invalid, it
will be entitled to set aside the election on the basis of
the fresh Poll and will have power to breathe life into the
countermanded poll and to make appropriate directions and
orders in accordance with law. There is, therefore, no
foundation for a grievance that the appellants will be
without any remedy if their writ application is dismissed.
It has in fact been fairly conceded by counsel for the other
side that the election court will be able to grant all
appropriate reliefs and that the dismissal of the writ
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petition will not prejudice the appellants.
Indeed it has been brought to our notice that an election
petition has been filed by the appellants, ex abundanti
cautela, in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana,
challenging the election which has since been completed on
the basis of a fresh poll ordered by the Election Commis-
sion. The High Court of Punjab and Haryana will therefore
be free to decide that petition in accordance with law.
It is submitted by Mr. Rao that in Ponnuswami (supra) the
question was of improper rejection of nomination paper which
is clearly covered by section 100(1)(c) of the Act. Counsel
submits’ that
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the only ground which can be said to be raised in the
election petition, in the, present case, is section 100(1)
(d) (iv), namely, non-compliance with the provisions of the
Constitution or of the Representation of the People Act,
1951, or of any rules or orders made under that Act. Ac-
cording to counsel, there is no non-compliance with Article
324 of the Constitution as the Election Commission has no
power whatsoever to pass the impugned order under Article
324 of the Constitution. That, according to him, is not
"non-compliance with the provisions of the Constitution"
within the meaning of section 100(1)(d)(iv). We are unable
to accept this submission for the reasons already given. We
Election Commission has passed the order professedly under
Article 324 and section 153 of the Act. We have already
held that the order is within the scope and ambit of Article
324 of the Constitution. It, therefore. necessarily follows
that if there is any illegality intile exercise of the
power under Article 324 or under any provision ofthe Act,
there is no reason why section 100(1)(d)(iv) should not be
attracted to it. If exercise of a power is competent either
underthe provisions of’ the Constitution or under any
other provision of law, any infirmity in the exercise of
that power is, in truth and substance, on account of
noncompliance with the provisions of law, since law demands
of exercise of power by its repository, as in a faithful
trust, in a proper. regular, fair reasonable manner. (See
also Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghueraj Singh and
Others) (1).
The above being the legal position, Article 329(b) rules out
the maintainability of the writ application. Article 329(b)
provides that ,.notwithstanding anything in this
Constitution...... no election to either house of
Parliament...... shall be called in question except by an
election petition presented to such authority and in such
manner as may be provided for by or under any law made by
the appropriate Legislature." It is undisputed that an
election can be challenged only under the provisions of the
Act. Indeed section 80 of the Act provides that "no
election shall be called in question except by an election
petition presented in accordance with the provisions of"
Part VI of the Act. We find that all the substantial
reliefs which the appellants seek in the writ application,
including the declaration of the election to be void and the
declaration of appellant No. 1 to be duly elected, can be
claimed in the election petition. It will be within the
power of the High Court. as the election court, to give all
appropriate reliefs to do complete justice between the
parties. In doing so it will be open to the High Court to
pass any ancillary or consequential order to enable it to
grant the necessary relief provided under the Act. The writ
application is therefore barred under Article 329(b) of the
Constitution and the High Court rightly dismissed it on that
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ground.
In view of our conclusion that the High Court had no
jurisdiction to entertain the writ application under Article
226 of the Constitution’ it will not be correct for us, in
an appeal against the order of the High Court in that
proceeding, to enter into any other controversy, on the
merits, either on law or on facts, and to pronounce finally
on the same. The pre-eminent position conferred by the
Constitution on
336
this Court under Article 141 of the Constitution does not
envisage that this Court should lay down the law, in an
appeal like this, on any matter which is required to be
decided by the election court on a full trial of the
election petition, without the benefit of the opinion of the
Punjab and Haryana, High Court which has the exclusive
jurisdiction under section 80A of the Act to try the
election petition. Moreover, a statutory right to appeal to
this Court has been provided under section 1 1 6A, on any
question, whether of law or fact, from every order made by
the High Court in the dispute.
So, in view of the scheme, of Part VI of the Act, the Delhi
High Court could not haveembarked upon an enquiry on
any part of the merits of the dispute. Thus it could
not have examined the question whether the impugnedorder
was made by the Election Commission in breach of a rule of
natural justice. That is a matter relating to the merits of
the controversy and it is appropriately for the election
court to try and decide it after recording any evidence that
may be led at the trial. It may be that if we pronounce on
the question of the applicability of the rule of natural
justice, the High Court will be relieved of its duty to that
extent. But it has to be remembered that even for the
purpose of deciding that question, the parties may choose to
produce evidence, oral or documentary, in the, trial court.
We therefore refrain from expressing any opinion in this
appeal on the question of the violation of any rule of
natural justice by the Election Commission in passing the
impugned order.
At the same time we would like to make it quite clear that
any observation, on a question of law or fact made ’in the
impugned judgment of the Delhi High Court, bearing on the
trial of the election petition pending in the Punjab and
Haryana High Court, will stand vacatted and will not come in
the way of that trial. That High Court will thus be free to
decide the petition according to the law. We would also
like to make it quite clear, with all respect to the learned
Judges who have delivered a separate judgment, that we may
not be taken to have agreed with the views expressed therein
about the applicability of audi alteram partem or on the
applicability of the guidelines in sections 58 and 64A to
the facts and circumstances of this case, or the desirabi-
lity of ordering a repoll in the whole constituency, or the
ordering of a repoll of postal ballots etc. Election, is a
long, elaborate and complicated process and, as far as we
can see, the rule of audi alteram partem, which is in itself
a fluid rule, cannot be placed in a strait-jacket for
purposes of the instant case. It has also to be remembered
that the impugned order of the Election Commission could not
be said to be a final pronouncement on the rights of the
parties as it was in the nature of an order covering an
unforeseen eventuality which bad arisen at one stage of the
election. The aggrieved party had all along a statutory
right to call the entire election in question, including the
Commission’s order, by an election petition under section 80
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of the Act, for the trial of which an elaborate procedure
has been laid down in the Act. Then, as has been stated,
there is also a right of appeal under the scales in
considering at the trial of the election petition whether
there may not be sufficient justification to negative the
existence of
337
any implied duty on the part of the Commission, at that
stage, to hear any party before taking its decision to order
or not to order a report. We do not therefore think it
necessary or desirable to foreclose a controversy like this
by any general observations and will leave any issue that
may arise from it for trial and adjudication by the election
court.
Being not altogether certain of all the facts and
circumstances that may be made available, in the appropriate
forum, it may be a premature exercise by this Court even to
lay down guidelines when there is no hide-boand formula of
rules of natural justice to operate in all cases and at all
times when a decision has to be made. Justice and fair play
have often to be harmonised with exigencies of situations in
the light of accumulated totality of circumstances in a
given case having regard to the question of prejudice not to
the mere combatants in an electoral contest but to the real
and larger issue of completion of free and fair election
with rigorous promptitude. Not being adequately informed of
all the facts and circumstances, this Court will not make
the task of the election court difficult and embarrassing by
suggesting guidelines in a rather twilight zone.
As we find no merit in this appeal, it is dismissed but, in
the circumstances of the case, there will be no order as to
the costs in this Court.
P.B. R. Appeal dismissed.
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