Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 296 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Ashok Pandey
RESPONDENT:
K. Mayawati and Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/06/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & P.P. NAOLEKAR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J
1. This petition is filed under Article 32 of the Constitution
of India, 1950 (in short the \021Constitution\022) seeking a writ of quo
warranto against respondent Nos.1 and 2. Essentially, the
grievance is that respondent Nos. 1 and 2 are not qualified to
be appointed as Chief Minister and Minister respectively as
they were members of the Rajya Sabha and thus disqualified
under Article 164(4) read with Article 164(1) of the
Constitution. The basic stand is that since they were members
of the Rajya Sabha the requirement of their being elected to
the State Legislative Assembly within a period of 6 months
does not apply to them as they are already legislators of the
Rajya Sabha.
2. While appreciating the stand we shall take note of the
provisions on which emphasis is laid by the petitioner who
appears in person.
3. Article 164 (1) and (4) read as follows:
\023(1) The Chief Minister shall be
appointed by the Governor and the other
Ministers shall be appointed by the Governor
on the advice of the Chief Minister, and the
Ministers shall hold office during the pleasure
of the Governor.
xx xx xx xx
4) A Minister who for any period of six
consecutive months is not a member of the
Legislature of the State shall at the expiration
of that period cease to be a Minister.\024
4. It is also necessary to take note of Article 163 which
reads as follows:
\023Council of Ministers to aid and advise
Governor-(1) There shall be a Council of
Ministers with the Chief Minister as the head
to aid and advise the Governor in the exercise
of his functions, except in so far as he is by or
under this Constitution required to exercise
his functions or any of them in his discretion.
(2) If any question arises whether any matter is
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or not a matter as respects which the Governor
is by or under this Constitution required to act
in his discretion, the decision of the Governor
in his discretion shall be final, and the validity
of anything done by the Governor shall not be
called in question on the ground that he ought
or ought not have acted in his discretion.
(3) The question whether any, and if so what,
advice was tendered by Ministers to the
Governor shall not be inquired into in any
court.\024
5. By virtue of Article 177 of the Constitution any Minister
even if he is not a member of either House of Legislature of the
State would be entitled to be present at the meeting of either
House of Legislature assembled together at the time of address
of the Governor as contemplated by Article 175. Article 164 (4)
provides that the Minister who for any period of six months is
not a member of Legislature of the State shall at the expiration
of the period cease to be a Minister. The plain words cannot be
cut down in any manner and confined to a case where a
Minister is a member of the Legislature of the State loses for
some reason his seat in the State Legislature. There is nothing
in the Constitution which would make the appointment of the
Chief Minister and Minister, none of whom are the members of
the State Legislature, illegal. (See Har Sharan Verma v. Shri
Tribhuvan Narain Singh (1971 (1) SCC 616). In the said case
it was held that appointment of a person as Chief Minister
cannot be challenged on the ground that he was not a member
of the Legislature of the State at the time of appointment.
6. An amendment was proposed to the Constituent
Assembly that the following should be incorporated:
\023A minister shall at the time of his being
chosen as such be a member of the
Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council of
the State, as the case may be\024, but the
amendment was not accepted. (See
Constituent Assembly Debates dated Ist
June, 1949 Vol. (VIII) page 521).\024
7. A brief reference to the proceedings of the Constituent
Assembly would throw enough light on the question. A
member of the Constituent Assembly proposed an amendment
to the following effect:
\023No person should be appointed a Minister
unless at the time of his appointment, he is
elected member of the House.\024
8. The petitioner has submitted that in a democratic set up
a person who is not a member of the Legislature will not be
appointed as the Minister.
9. Article 144(3) of the Draft Constitution which
corresponds to Article 164(4) of the Constitution reads:
\023144(3) A Minister who, for any period of six
consecutive months, is not a member of the
Legislature of the State shall at the expiration
of that period cease to be a Minister.\024
10. During the debate on this draft Article, Mr. Mohd. Tahir,
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MP, proposed the following amendment:
\023That for clause (3) of Article 144, the following
be substituted:
\023(3) A Minister shall, at the time of
his being chosen as such be a member of
the Legislative Assembly or Legislative
Council of the State, as the case may be.\024
11. Speaking in support of the proposed amendment, Mr.
Tahir said in the Constituent Assembly:
\023This provision appears that it does not fit with
the spirit of democracy. This is a provision
which was also provided in the Government of
India Act of 1935 and of course those days
were the days of imperialism and fortunately
those days have gone. This was then provided
because if a Governor finds his choice in
someone to appoint as Minister and
fortunately or unfortunately if that man is not
elected by the people of the country, then that
man used to be appointed as Minister through
the back door as has been provided in the
Constitution and in the 1935 Act. But now the
people of the States will elect members of the
Legislative Assembly and certainly we should
think they will send the best men of the States
to be their representatives in the Council or
Legislative Assembly. Therefore, I do not find
any reason why a man who till then was not
elected by the people of the States and which
means that, that man was not liked by the
people of the States to be their representative
in the Legislative Assembly or the Council,
then Sir, why that man is to be appointed as
the Minister.\024
Dr. Ambedkar opposing the amendment replied:
\023Now with regard to the first point, namely,
that no person shall be entitled to be
appointed a Minister unless he is at the time of
his appointment an elected member of the
House, I think it forgets to take into
consideration certain important matters which
cannot be overlooked. First is this and it is
perfectly possible to imagine that a person who
is otherwise competent to hold the post of a
Minister has been defeated in a constituency
for some reason and which, although it may be
perfectly good, might have annoyed the
constituency and he might have incurred the
displeasure of that particular constituency. It
is not a reason why a member so competent as
that should not be permitted to be appointed a
member of the Cabinet on the assumption that
he shall be able to get himself elected from the
same constituency or from another
constituency. After all the privileges that he is
permitted is a privilege that extends only to six
months. It does not confer a right on that
individual to sit in the House being elected at
all. My second submission is this that the fact
that a nominated Minister is a member of the
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Cabinet does not either violate the principle of
collective responsibility nor does it violate the
principle of confidence because he is a member
of the cabinet if he is prepared to accept the
policy of the Cabinet stands part of the
Cabinet and resigns with the Cabinet, when he
ceases to have the confidence of the House,
his membership of the Cabinet does not in any
way cause any inconvenience or breach of the
fundamental principles on which
parliamentary government is based.\024
12. After the debate the proposed amendment was negatived
and Article 144(3) was adopted.
13. The absence of the expression \023from amongst members of
the Legislature\024 in Article 164(1) is indicative of the position
that whereas under that provision a non-legislator can be
appointed as a Chief Minister or a Minister but that
appointment would be governed by Article 164(4), which
places a restriction on such a non-member to continue as a
Minister or the Chief Minister, as the case may be, unless he
can get himself elected to the Legislature within the period of
six consecutive months from the date of his appointment.
Article 164(4) is therefore not a source of power or an enabling
provision for appointment of a non-legislator as a Minister
even for a short duration. It is actually in the nature of a
disqualification or restriction for a non-member, who has been
appointed as a Chief Minister or a Minister, as the case may
be, to continue in office without getting himself elected within
a period of six consecutive months. [(See S.R. Chaudhuri v.
State of Punjab and Ors. (2001 (7) SCC 126)]
14. In Dr. Janak Raj Jai v. H.D. Deve Gowda (1997 (10) SCC
462) it was held that a member of the Legislative Assembly
could be appointed as Prime Minister. The position in law was
highlighted in paragraphs 4 and 5 noted as follows:
\0244. The petitioner, however, applied before
the High Court of Delhi for a review of its
impugned judgment on the ground that he had
subsequently discovered that after being
appointed as the Prime Minister of India, Shri
Deve Gowda had retained his membership of
the Karnataka Legislative Assembly. He
resigned from his membership of the
Karnataka Legislative Assembly on becoming a
Member of the Rajya Sabha. The High Court of
Delhi rightly rejected the review petition since
in a review petition, such new grounds could
not be urged. The petitioner has challenged the
rejection of this ground before us.
5. In order not to leave any grievance, we
briefly deal with this additional submission
also. Under Article 75(5), a person who is not a
Member of either House of Parliament can be
appointed a Minister for a period of six
consecutive months. If during this period he is
not elected to either House of Parliament he
will cease to be a Minister. We have not been
shown any Article of the Constitution under
which a person who is elected to a State
Legislature is prohibited from being appointed
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as a Minister under Article 75(5). In fact,
Article 75(5) is widely worded. It covers every
person who is not a Member of either House of
Parliament. Such a person can be appointed
as a Minister and can remain as a Minister
only for a period of six consecutive months
unless he is elected to either House of
Parliament within that period. If he is not so
elected, he shall cease to be a Minister on the
expiry of six consecutive months. The
same provision is applicable to the Prime
Minister for reasons which we have set out in
our judgment in the case of S.P. Anand v.
H.D. Deve Gowda (1996 (6) SCC 734). There is
no disqualification which can be spelled out
under Article 75(5) in respect of a member of a
State Legislative Assembly who is appointed
under Article 75(5)\024.
15. It would be necessary to take note of The Prohibition of
Simultaneous Membership Rules, 1950 (in short the \021Rules\022).
The said rules were promulgated in exercise of powers
conferred by Clause (2) of Article 101 and Clause (2) of Article
190 of the Constitution which read as follows:
\0241. These Rules may be called the Prohibition
of Simultaneous Membership Rules, 1950.
2. The period at the expiration of which the
seat in Parliament of a person who is chosen a
member both of Parliament and of a House of
Legislature of a State specified in the First
Schedule to the Constitution of India
(hereinafter referred to as \023the Constitution\024)
shall become vacant, unless he has previously
resigned his seat in the Legislature of such
State, shall be fourteen days from the date of
publication in the Gazette of India or in the
Official Gazette of the State, whichever is later,
of the declaration that he has been so chosen.
3. The period at the expiration of which the
seat of a person who is chosen a member of
the Legislatures of two or more States specified
in the First Schedule to the Constitution in the
Legislatures of all such States shall become
vacant, unless he has previously resigned his
seat in the Legislature of all but one of the
States, shall be ten days from the later or, as
the case may be, the latest of the dates of
publication in the Official Gazettes of such
States of the declarations that he has been so
chosen. \023
16. In view of what has been stated by this Court in the
aforesaid decisions, the inevitable conclusion is that this
petition is sans merit and deserves to be dismissed which we
direct.