Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. SHANNO DEVI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANGAL SAIN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/09/1960
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 58 1961 SCR (1) 576
CITATOR INFO :
F 1965 SC 810 (8)
O 1966 SC1614 (4,5,12)
RF 1971 SC 472 (2,7,8)
O 1974 SC 645 (4)
ACT:
Migration to India-Citizenship, claim for-Intention of resi-
ding permanently-Election dispute-" Migrated to the
territory of India ", " Ordinarily resident ", meaning of
Constitution of India, Art. 6.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was the successful candidate at the general
election held in March, 1957, for the Punjab Legislative
Assembly. The appellant who was one of the unsuccessful
candidates, filed an election petition and challenged the
validity of the respondent’s election on the grounds, inter
alia, that the latter was not a citizen of India and was,
therefore, not qualified to stand for election. It was
found that he was born of Indian parents sometime in 1927 in
India as defined in the Government of India Act, 1935, in a
village which since August 15, 1947, became part of
Pakistan, that in 1944 he had moved from his home district
to Jullunder in what is now the territory of India, and that
after August 15, 1947, he definitely made up his mind to
settle in India with the intention of residing there
permanently. There was some evidence to show that he went
to Burma in January, 1950, and made unsuccessful attempts to
secure permission from the Government of Burma to stay there
permanently. The question was whether the respondent could
be deemed to be a citizen of India within the meaning of
Art. 6 of the Constitution of India.
Held:(1) that the expression " migrated to the
territory of India " in Art. 6 of the Constitution means "
migrated at any time before the commencement of the
Constitution to a place now in the territory of India ".
(2)that in Art. 6 the words " migrated to the territory of
India " mean " come to the territory of India with the
intention of residing there permanently ".
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(3)that where a person moves from one country to another
and has, at the time of moving, a intention to remain in the
country where he moved only temporarily, but later on forms
the intention of residing there permanently, he should be
held in law to have migrated to that country at the later
point of time.
(4)that for applying the test of being " ordinarily resi-
dent in the territory of India since the date of his
migration " in Art. 6(b)(i), what is necessary to be shown
is that during the period beginning with the date on which
migration became
577
complete and ending with November 26, 1949, as a whole, the
person has been " ordinarily resident in the territory of
India ". Whether he was not in India on January 26, 1950, or
whether he formed an intention of taking up his permanent
residence in Burma when he left for that place in January,
1950, was not relevant.
(5)That the words " ordinarily resident " in the Consti-
tution mean " resident during this period without any
serious break ". It is not necessary that for every day of
this period the person should have resided in India.
(6)that the respondent satisfied the requirements of Art.
6 ofthe Constitution and that his claim to be deemed a
citizen of India must be upheld.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 247 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 3, 1958, of
the Punjab High Court in First Appeal from Order No. 131 of
1958.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri and Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
U.M. Trivedi and Ganpat Rai, for the respondent.
1960. September 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS GUPTA J.-What do the words " has migrated to the
territory of India " in Art. 6 of the Constitution mean ?
That is the main question in this appeal. The appellant,
Shanno Devi, was one of the unsuccessful candidates at the
general election held in March 1957 for the Punjab
Legislative Assembly. The respondent, Mangal Sain, was the
successful candidate. The nomination papers of these and
other candidates which were scrutinised on February 1, 1957,
were accepted on the same date. The voting took place on
March 12, and after counting of votes on March 14, 1957, the
respondent, Mangal Sain was declared duly elected. On March
27, 1957, the appellant filed an election petition and
challenged the respondent’s election on various grounds, the
principal ground being that the Returning Officer had
improperly accepted the nomination paper of the respondent
on the ground that he was not a citizen of India and was not
qualified to stand for election. With the other grounds
which
578
were taken in this petition we are no longer concerned as
after the Election Tribunal rejected these several grounds
they were not pressed before the High Court and have also
not been raised before us. The Election Tribunal however
held that Mangal Sain was not an Indian citizen at the time
he was enrolled as a voter or at the time his nomination
papers were accepted and even at the time when he was
elected. Accordingly the Tribunal allowed the election
petition and declared the respondent’s election to be void.
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On appeal by Mangal Sain to the High Court the only point
raised was whether the appellant was a citizen of India at
the commencement of the Constitution. If he was a citizen
of India at the date of such commencement, it was not
disputed, he continued to be a citizen of India on all
relevant dates, viz., the date of his enrollment as a voter,
the date of acceptance of his nomination and the date of his
election. If however he was not a citizen of India at the
commencement of the _Constitution he had not since acquired
citizenship and so his election would be void. The
respondent’s case all along was that he was a citizen of
India at the commencement of the Constitution under Art. 5
of the Constitution and apart from that he must be deemed to
be a citizen of India at such commencement under Art. 6 of
the Constitution. The Election Tribunal as already
indicated rejected both these contentions. The learned
judges of the High Court while indicating that they were
inclined to think that the respondent’s claim to citizenship
of India under Art. 5 could not be sustained did not
consider that matter in detail, but held that his claim to
be deemed to be a citizen of India at the commencement of
the Constitution under Art. 6 thereof must prevail. The
primary facts as found by the Tribunal on the evidence led
by the parties before it, have been correctly summarised in
the judgment of the High Court in these words:
"On the evidence led by the parties the
learned Tribunal held that it was proved that
Mangal Sain was born of Indian parents
sometime in 1927 in village Jhawarian,
District Sargodha, and that when he was only
two years old he was taken by his parents from
579
Jhawarian to Mandlay in Burma wherefrom the
entire family returned to Jullunder (Punjab)
in 1942 when Burma was occupied by the
Japanese forces during the Second World War.
After having stayed for a few days in
Jullunder, Mangal Sain, his parents and his
brother went to their home district Sargodha
where they stayed for about two or two and a
half years. During this period Mangal Sain
passed Matriculation examination from the
Punjab University and after having himself
matriculated he again returned to Jullunder,
where he was employed in the Field Military
Accounts Office from 8th December, 1944 to 7th
August, 1946, when his services were
terminated because of his continuous absence
from duty. Mangal Sain’s parents and his
brother according to the findings of the
learned Tribunal also returned from Sargodha
to Jullunder and lived there for about two and
a half years from some time in 1945 onwards
before they again went over to Burma which
country they had left in 1942 due to its
occupation by the Japanese forces. While
Mangal Sain was in service in the Field
Military Accounts Office, he joined Rastriya
Swayam Sewak Sangh movement and became its
active worker. Sometime after his services
were terminated, he shifted the scene of his
activities to Hissar and Rohtak districts
where be moved from place to place to organise
the Rastriya Swayam Sevak Sangb movement.
During this period apparently he had no fixed
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place of residence and he used to reside in
the offices of the Jan Sangh and took his
meals at various Dhabas. For about 4 months
from June to September in the year 1948 Mangal
Sain served as a teacher in Arya Lower Middle
School, Rohtak. In July 1948 Mangal Sain
submitted to the’ Punjab University his
admission form for the University Prabhakar
examination which form was duly attested by
Prof. Kanshi Ram Narang of the Government
College Rohtak. Sometime in January 1949 he
was arrested in connection with the Rastriya
Swayam Sevak Sangh movement and was detained i
n
Rohtak District Jail from 10th January, 1949,
till 30th May, 1949. In August 1949 he again
appeared in Prabhakar
580
examination and was placed in compartment, he
also appears to have organised Rastriya Swayam
Sevak Sangh in the districts of Rohtak and
Hissar during the years 1948-49 and he used to
move about from place to place without having
any fixed place of abode. The Tribunal
further found that it was sometime in the end
of 1949 or in January 1950 that Mangal Sain
left India and went to Burma where his parents
and other brothers were already residing. In
that country he tried to secure permission to
stay there permanently, but the Government of
Burma did not agree and directed him to leave
that country ; in this connection he applied
for a writ to the Supreme Court of Burma but
his petition was disallowed. On the 29th
October, 1951, Mangal Sain deposited with the
competent authority in Burma the registration
certificate granted to him under the
Registration of Foreigners Act, 1948, and a
few days later he came back to India and since
then he has been living in this country and
has been organising Rastriya Swayam Sevak
Sangh movement in the districts of Hissar and
Rohtak. In 1953 he was again arrested and
detained in Rohtak jail as a detenue from the
8th February to 8th May, 1953, when be was
transferred to Ambala jail ".
On these facts the Tribunal further held that it cannot be
said " that the respondent had an intention to settle in
India permanently and that he had no intention of ever
leaving it ". Taking along with these facts the respondent’s
declaration in the affidavit (Ex. 5) to which we shall
presently refer the Tribunal further held that " his own
declaration in the affidavit (Ex. 5) and his conduct in
going over to Burma and trying to settle there permanently
furnish convincing proof that all along he had the intention
to follow his parents and other relations to Burma and to
settle there permanently ". The Tribunal finally concluded
by saying that ,it is also quite clear that in the case of
this respondent it cannot be said that he had no other idea
than to continue to be in India without looking forward to
any event certain or uncertain which might induce him to
change his residence
581
On these findings of fact the Tribunal held that the
respondent could not be deemed to be a citizen of India
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under Art. 6 of the Constitution.
On these same primary facts mentioned above, Mr. Justice Dua
who delivered the leading judgment of the High Court
recorded his conclusion thus:-
"I can draw but only one conclusion from the
evidence on the record, that the appellant who
had moved from his home district to Jullunder
had, after the 15th August, 1947, no other
intention than of making the Dominion of India
as his place of abode. On the 15th August,
1947, therefore the appellant’s migration from
Jhawarian to the territory of India was
clearly complete, whatever doubts there may
have been before that date, though I would be
prepared even to hold that he had moved away
from his village in 1944 and had migrated to
the eastern districts of the Punjab"
Mr. Justice Falshaw agreed with this conclusion.
On these conclusions the learned Judges held that the
respondent’s claim to be deemed a citizen of India at the
commencement of the Constitution must succeed.
The main contention on behalf of the appellant is that the
conclusion of the High Court, that when the respondent moved
away from his village in 1944 and that at any rate after the
15th August, 1947, he had no other intention than of- making
the Dominion of India his place of abode, was arbitrary. It
was also contended that in any case the migration under Art.
6 of the Constitution has to take place after "the territory
of India " as contemplated in the Constitution had come into
existence. Lastly it was contended, though faintly, that
the respondent had not in any case complied with the
requirements of being ordinarily a resident in the territory
of India since the date of his migration. The respondent’s
counsel besides challenging the correctness of the above
contention further urged that the words " migrated to the
territory of India " in Art. 6 only means come to the
territory of India " and does not mean come to the
582
territory of India with the intention of permanently
residing there ".
The extreme contention raised by Mr. Sastri on behalf of the
appellant that migration under Art. 6 must take place after
the territory of India came into existence under the
Constitution cannot be accepted. It has to be noticed that
Art. 6 deals with the question as to who shall be deemed to
be a citizen of India at the commencement of the
Constitution. That itself suggests, in the absence of
anything to indicate a contrary intention, that the
migration which is made an essential requirement for this
purpose must have taken place before such commencement. It
is also worth noticing that cl. (b) of Art. 6 which mentions
two conditions, one of which must be satisfied in addition
to birth as mentioned in el. (a) and " migration " as
mentioned in the main portion of the Article being proved,
speaks in its first sub-cl. of migration " before the 19th
day of July 1948 " and in sub-cl. (ii) migration " after the
19th day of July 1948 ". The second sub-cl requires that the
person must be registered as a citizen of India by an
officer appointed in that behalf by the Government of the
Dominion of India on an application made by him therefore to
such officer before the commencement of the Constitution.
The proviso to that Article says that no person shall be so
registered unless he has been resident in the territory of
India for at least six months immediately preceding the date
of his application. It is clear from this that the act of
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migration in Art. 6 must take place before the commencement
of the Constitution. It is clear therefore that " migrated
to the territory of India " means " migrated " at any time
before the commencement of the Constitution to a place now
in the territory of India.
This brings us to the important question whether migrated to
the territory of India " means merely come to the territory
of India " or it means " come to the territory of India to
remain here " or in other words, " come to the territory of
India with the intention of residing here permanently".
There can be no doubt that the word migrate " taken by
itself is
583
capable of the wider construction " come from one place to
another " whether or not with any intention of permanent
residence in the latter place. It is beyond controversy
that the word " migrate " is often used also in the narrower
connotation of " coming from one place to another with the
intention of residing permanently in the latter place".
Webster’s Dictionary (Second Edition, 1937) gives the
following meaning of the word " migrate ":-" To go from one
place to another; especially, to move from one country,
region, or place of abode or sojourn to another, with a view
to residence; to move; as the Moors who migrated from Africa
to Spain ". The Corpus Juris Secundum published in 1948
gives the same meaning except that it also gives " to change
one’s place of residence " as one of the meanings. The word
" Immigrate " which means " migrate into a country " and its
derivatives " Immigrant " and " Immigration " have received
judicial consideration in several Australian and American
cases, in connection with prosecutions for contravention of
Immigration laws.
The Courts in Australia, were of opinion, on a consideration
of the scheme and subject-matter of their laws in question
that the word " Immigrant " in the Immigrant Registration
Act, 1901, and in s. 51 of the Australian Constitution means
a person who enters Australia whether or not with the
intention of settling and residing there (Vide Chia Gee v.
Martin (1)). The American courts however took the view in
United States v. Burke (2), Moffitt v. United States (3) and
United States v. Atlantic Fruit Co. (4) on a consideration
of the purpose and scheme of the legislation, that
"Immigrant" means a person who comes to the United States
with a view to reside there permanently.
We have referred to these cases on the meaning of the word "
Immigration to show that there can be no doubt that the word
migrate" may have in some contexts the wider meaning " come
or remove to a
(1) (1905) 3 C.L.R. 649.
(2) (1899) 99 Federal Reports 895.
(3) (1904) 128 Federal Reports 375.
(4) (1914) 212 Federal Reports 711.
75
584
place without an intention to reside permanently" and in
some, context the narrower meaning " come or remove to a
place with the intention of residing there permanently".
The fact that the Constitution-makers did not use the words
" with the intention to reside permanently " in Art. 6 is
however no reason to think that the wider meaning was
intended. In deciding whether the word " migrate " was used
in the wider or the narrower sense, it is necessary to
consider carefully the purpose and scheme of this
constitutional legislation. The Constitution after defining
the territory of India and making provisions as to how it
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can be added to or altered, in the four articles contained
in its first Chapter proceeds in the second Chapter to deal
with the subject of citizenship. of the seven articles in
this chapter the last Article, Art. 11, only saves expressly
the right of Parliament to make provisions as regards
acquisition and termination of citizenship and all other
matters relating to citizenship. Of the other six articles,
the first, Art. 5, says who shall be citizens of India at
the commencement of the Constitution; while Arts. 6 and 8
lay down who though not citizens under Art. 5 shall be
deemed to be citizens of India. Art. 10 provides that
once a person is a citizen of India or is deemed to be a
citizen of India he shall continue to be a citizen of India,
subject of course to the provisions of any law that may be
made by Parliament. Art. 9 provides that if a person has
voluntarily acquired citizenship of any foreign State he
shall not be a citizen of India or deemed to be a citizen of
India. Art. 7 also denies the right of citizenship to some
persons who would have otherwise been citizens of India
under Art. 5 or would be deemed to be citizens of India
under Art. 6.
The primary provision for citizenship of India, in this
scheme is in Art. 5. That follows the usual practice of
insisting on birth or domicile which shortly stated means "
residence with the intention of living and dying in the
country " as an essential requirement for citizenship; and
confers citizenship on a person fulfilling this requirement
if he also satisfied another requirement as regards his
birth within what
585
is now the territory of India or birth of any of his parents
within this area or ordinary residence in this area for a
continuous period of five years immediately preceding the
commencement of the Constitution’. If there had been no
division of India and no portion of the old India had been
lost this would have been sufficient, as regards conferment
of citizenship apart from the special provision for giving
such rights to persons of Indian origin residing outside
India. But part of what was India as defined in the
Government of India Act, 1935, had ceased to be India and
had become Pakistan. This gave rise to the serious problem
whether or not to treat as citizens of India the hundreds of
thousands of persons who were of Indian origin-in the sense
that they or any of their parents or any of their grand-
parents had been born in India -but who, would not become
citizens under Art. 5. The Constitution-makers by the
provisions of Art. 6 decided to treat as citizens some of
these but not all. Those who had not come to the new India
before the date of the commencement of the Constitution were
excluded; those who had so come were divided into two
categories--those who had come before the 19th July, 1948,
and those who had come on or after the 19th July, 1948.
Persons in the first category had in order to be treated as
citizens to satisfy the further requirement of " migration "
whatever that meant, and of ordinary residence in the
territory of India since they " migrated " to India; while
those in the second category had, in addition to having
migrated, to be residents for not less than six months
preceding the date of the application for registration as
citizens which application had to be filed before the date
of the commencement of the Constitution. But while the
primary provisions in the Constitution as regards the
citizenship for people born at a place now included in India
and people whose parents were born at a place now in India
insist on the requirement of intention to reside here
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permanently by using the word " domicile ", Art. 6 which
under the scheme of the Constitution deals with what may be
called " secondary citizenship " and says about some persons
that
586
they will be deemed to be citizens of India, does not
mention " domicile " as a requirement. Can it be that the
Constitution-makers thought that though in the case of
persons born in what has now become India or those any of
whose parents was born in what is now India as also in the
case of person who had been residing here for not less than
five years in what is now India, it was necessary to insist
on domicile before conferring citizenship, that was not
necessary in the case of persons whose parents or any of
Whose grand-parents had been born in what was formerly India
but is not now India ? In our opinion the Constitution-
makers could not have thought so. They were aware that the
general rule in almost all the countries of the world was to
insist on birth or domicile as an essential prerequisite for
citizenship. They knew that in dealing with a somewhat
similar problem as regards citizenship of persons born out
of what was then the territory of Irish Free State, the
Constitution of the Irish Free State had also insisted on
domicile in the Irish Free State as a requirement for
citizenship. There can be no conceivable reason for their
not making a similar insistence here as regards the persons
who were born outside what is now India, or persons any of
whose parents or grand-parents were born there. Mention
must also be made of the curious consequences that would
follow from a view that an intention to reside permanently
in the territory of India and is not necessarily in Art. 6.
Take the case of two persons, one of whom was born in what
is now India and has all along lived there and another
person who though born in what is now India went to live in
areas now Pakistan and then moved back to areas in what is
now India. The first named person would have to satisfy the
requirement of domicile at the commencement of the
Constitution before he is a citizen; but the second person
would not have to satisfy this condition. It would be
unreasonable to think that such a curious result could have
been intended by the Constitution-makers.
For all these reasons it appears clear that when the framers
of the Constitution used the words " migrated
587
to the territory of India " they meant " come to the
territory of India with the intention of residing there
permanently ". The only explanation of ’their not expressly
mentioning " domicile " or the " intention to reside
permanently " in Art. 6 seems to be that they were confident
that in the scheme of this Constitution the word "I
migration " could only be interpreted to mean " come to the
country with the intention of residing there permanently ".
It is of interest to notice in this connection the proviso
to Art. 7. That article provides in its first part that a
person who would be a citizen of India or would have been
deemed to be a citizen of India in Arts. 5 and 6 would not
be deemed to be a citizen if he has migrated from the
territory to Pakistan after March 1, 1947. The proviso
deals with some of these persons who after such migration to
Pakistan have returned to India. It appears that when this
return is under a permit for resettlement or permanent
return-that is, resettlement in India or return to India
with the intention to reside here permanently-the main
provisions of Article 7 will not apply and for this under
Art. 6 of the Constitution such a person would be deemed to
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have migrated to India after the 19th July, 1948. That the
return to India of such migrant has to be under a permit for
resettlement or permanent return in order that he might
escape the loss of citizenship is a strong reason for
thinking that in Art. 6 the intention to reside in India
permanently is implicit in the use of the phrase "I
migrated to the territory of India".
It may sometimes happen that when a person moves from one
place to another or from one country to another he has, at
the point of time of moving, an intention to remain in the
country where he moved only temporarily, but later on forms
the intention of residing there permanently. There can be
no doubt that when this happens, the person should at this
later point of time be held to have " come to the country
with the intention of residing there permanently ". In other
words, though at the point of time he moved into the new
place or new country he cannot be said to have migrated to
this place or country
588
he should be held in law to have migrated to this later
place or country at the later point of time when he forms
the intention of residing there permanently. This view of
law was taken both by the Election Tribunal and the High
Court and was not seriously disputed before us.
The Election Tribunal and the High Court therefore rightly
addressed themselves to the question whether in 1944 when
Mangal Sain first came to Jullunder in what is now the
territory of India from his home in Jhawarian now in
Pakistan he had the intention of residing in India
permanently and even if he at that point of time had no such
intention, whether after he had come in 1944 to what is now
the territory of India, he had at some later-point of time
formed the intention of residing here permanently. On this
question, as already indicated, the Election Tribunal and
the High Court came to different conclusions. While the
Election Tribunal held that Mangal Sain had at no point of
time the intention of residing in India permanently, the
High Court was prepared to hold that even when he moved from
his home in 1944 to the eastern districts of Punjab he had
the intention of residing there permanently, and held that
at least after August 15, 1947, he had no other intention
than of making the Dominion of India his place of abode, and
residing here permanently. It has been strenuously
contended before us that in coming to this conclusion the
High Court has acted arbitrarily and has ignored important
evidence which, it is said, showed clearly that the
respondent had no intention of residing permanently in
India. In considering such an argument, it is proper for us
to bear in mind the provisions of s. 116B of the
Representation of the People Act which lays down that the
decision of the High Court on appeal from an order of the
Election Tribunal in an election petition shall be " final
and conclusive ". It has been pointed out in more than one
case by this Court, that while these provisions do Dot stand
in the way of this Court’s interfering with the High Court’s
decision in a
589
fit case, it would be proper for us to bear these provisions
of the Representation of the People Act in mind when the
correctness of such a decision is challenged before this
Court. It is unnecessary for us to consider whether the
view of the High Court that even in 1944 Mangal Sain could
be said to have been migrated to the eastern districts of
Punjab can be successfully challenged or not. Even assuming
that conclusion is out of the way, the further conclusion
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of the High Court that having moved from his home district
to Jullunder in 1944 Mangal Sain had after August 15, 1947,
no other intention than of making the territory of India his
place of abode would be sufficient to prove his migration to
the territory of India from what is now Pakistan. We have
been taken through the materials on the record relevant to
this question and we can see nothing that would justify our
interference with the High Court’s conclusion on this point.
Much stress was laid by the appellant’s counsel on the fact
that Mangal Sain left Indian shores for Burma in January,
1950, and after his arrival there made an application under
s. 7(1) of the Union Citizenship Act, 1948, (of Burma)
giving notice of his intention to apply for a certificate of
naturalization and his statement therein that he intended to
reside permanently within the Union of Burma. Assuming
however, that in October, 1950, or even in January’ 1950,
when he left for Burma, Mangal Sain had formed the intention
of taking up his permanent residence in Burma, that is
wholly irrelevant to the question whether in 1947 he had the
intention of residing permanently in India. Learned counsel
for the appellant also drew our attention to a statement
made in this very application that Mangal Sain had returned
to Burma with his mother in 1947. The High Court has after’
considering this statement held that he had not so returned
in 1947. We see no reason to differ with this finding of
the High Court. In our opinion, there is nothing on the
record to justify any doubt as regards the correctness of
the High Court’s decision that after August 15, 1947, Mangal
Sain who had earlier moved from a place now in Pakistan to
Jullunder in India definitely, made up
590
his mind to make India his permanent home. Whether or not
in January, 1950, he changed that intention is irrelevant
for our purpose.
Our conclusion therefore is that the High Court is right in
holding that Mangal Sain satisfies the first requirement of
Art. 6 of the Constitution of " migration to the territory
of India from the territory now included in Pakistan ". It
is not disputed and does not ever appear to have been
disputed that Mangal Sain was born in India as defined in
the Government of India Act, 1935, and thus satisfies the
requirement of cl. (a) of Art. 6.
There can be no doubt also that since the date of his
migration which has for the present purpose to be taken as
August 15, 1947, Mangal Spain has been St ordinarily
residing in the territory of India ". Mr. Sastri contended
that to satisfy the test of being " ordinarily resident in
the territory of India since the date of his migration " it
had to be shown that Mangal Sain was in India on January 26,
1950. We do not think that is required. It is first to be noticed that
Art. 6 of the Constitution is one of the
Articles which came into force on November 26, 1949. For
applying. the test of being "ordinarily resident in the
territory of India since the date of his migration ", it is
necessary therefore to consider the period up to the 26th
day of November, 1949, from the date of migration. It is
not however even necessary that on the 26th day of November,
1949, or immediately before that date he must have been
residing in the territory of India. What is necessary is
that taking the period beginning with the date on which
migration became complete and ending with the date November
26, 1949, as a whole, the person has been " ordinarily
resident in the territory of India ". It is not necessary
that for every day of this period he should have resided in
India. In the absence of the definition of the words "
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ordinarily resident " in the Constitution it is reasonable
to take the words to mean " resident during this period
without any serious break ". The materials on the record
leave no doubt that there was no break worth the. name in
Mangal Sain’s residence in the
591
territory of India from at least August 15, 1947, till the
26th November, 1949.
We have therefore come to the conclusion that the High Court
was right in sustaining Mangal Sain’s claim to be deemed a
citizen of India under Art. 6 of the Constitution and, in
that view was also right in allowing his appeal and ordering
the dismissal of the Election Petition.
In the view we have taken as regards Mangal Sain’s claim to
citizenship under Art. 6 of the Constitution it is not
necessary to consider whether his claim to citizenship under
Art. 5 of the Constitution was also good.
We therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.