Khaje Khanavar Khaderkhan Hussain
Khan& Ors Vs. Siddavanballi Nijalingappa & ANR [1969] INSC 24 (4
February 1969)
04/02/1969 BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BHARGAVA,
VISHISHTHA SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION: 1969 AIR 1034 1969 SCR (3) 524 1969
SCC (1) 631
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art.
173(a)-Making oath or affirmation-When should be made.
Practice and Procedure-Representation of the
People Act (43 of 1951), s. 116A-Appeal-Taking new points-Code of Civil
Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), O. 16, r. 14-Duty of Court to summon court
witnesses.
Notification by Election Commissioner under
Art. 173(a)Requirement of making oaths or affirmation before competent officer
'of that constituency'-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent, who was the Chief Minister
of the State, and the first appellant were candidates for election to the
Mysore Legislative Assembly from Shiggaon constituency. The notification fixing
the time schedule for the elections fixed 20th January 1967, as the last date
for filing nominations, 21st as the date of scrutiny, and 23rd as the last date
for withdrawal of candidature. The first respondent, had also filed his
nomination at two other places, Bagalkot and Hospet, and validly made the
affirmations required by Art. 173 (a) of the Constitution, at those places on
the 19th and 20th January. He also made the affirmation before the Returning
Officer of the Shiggaon constituency on the date of scrutiny, that is, 21st
January.
The first respondent was declared elected
unopposed on the date of scrutiny on the ground that all other candidates,
including the first appellant, had withdrawn their candidature. The first
appellant challenged the first respondent's election on the grounds that the
first respo ndent was disqualified for failure to make the affirmation under
Art. 173(a) before filing the nomination paper in Shiggaon constituency, that
the withdrawal from candidature of the first appellant was attempted to be
obtained by inducement, threats and undue in and was in fact procured with the
connivance of the Returning Officer, and that the first respondent committed
other irregularities in the filing of his nomination. It was alleged that one P
was responsible for the corrupt practices with the consent of the first
respondent. P was not examined as a witness by the respondents. The first
appellant filed an application to examine P as a court-witness, on the ground
that the appellant could not examine him as his own witness since he would be
hostile to the appellant. The High Court rejected the application.
The High Court, after rightly repelling the
contention that the affirmation should have been made prior to the filing of
the nomination, held that the affirmation made prior to scrutiny was sufficient
compliance with the requirements of Art. 173(a), and that the charges of
corrupt practice of undue influence and bribery against the first respondent,
and the connivance of the Returning Officer in relation to the corrupt
practices and irregularities, were not proved.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended
that : (1) This Court, in Pashupati Nath Singh v. Harihar Prasad Singh, A.I.R.
1968 S.C. 1064, held that the affirmation should be made before the date of
scrutiny, so that, in the present case, it should have been made at the latest by
the mid525 night between 20th and 21st January; and (2) On the failure of the
first respondent to examine P an adverse inference should have been drawn
against the first respondent, and that the High Court erred in not summoning P
as a courtwitness.
HELD:(1) (a) Since the first appellant was
permitted to raise the new ground based upon the decision in Pashupati Math
Singh's case, the first respondent should not be debarred from putting forward
his alternative plea that Art.
173(a) was satisfied on the basis of the
affirmations made at Bagalkot and Hospet. [532 E-F] (b)The notification issued
by the Election Commission in pursuance of Art. 173(a) stated that the
affirmation should be made before the Returning Officer or Assistant Returning
Officer for that constituency. In using the expression 'that constituency', the
intention of the Election Commission was that the affirmation must be made
before the Returning Officer or Assistant Returning Officer of that particular
constituency from which the candidate was seeking election to the Legislature
of the State, whether it be an Assembly Constituency or 'a Council
Constituency. [534 A-B] (c)When the first respondent made his affirmations on
the 19th and 20th before, the Returning Officer at Bagalkot and Hospet
respectively, he was a candidate nominated for election from those
constituencies. Once he made such an affirmation before one of the persons
authorised by the Election Commission he had fully complied with the
requirements of Art. 173(a), and thereupon, became qualified to be a candidate
for election to the Mysore Legislative Assembly. [534 C-E].
The purpose of Art. 173(a) is to ensure that
any person, who wants to be a member of a Legislature of a State, must bear
true faith and allegiance to the Constitution as by law established and
undertake to uphold the sovereignty and integrity of India, and, to ensure
this, he must make an oath or affirmation. The Article requires one oath or
affirmation in accordance with the form set out in the Third Schedule to the
Constitution so as to 'remove the disqualification from being a candidate for
election to the Legislature of the State. The Article does not mention that the
making of oath or affirmation is to be preliminary to the validity of
candidature in each constituency, and the Article does not require that the
qualification must be acquired separately in respect of each constituency from
which a candidate was seeking election. Once the oath or affirmation is made
before a competent authority in respect of one constituency, the candidate
becomes bound by that oath or affirmation even if he gets elected to the
Legislature from a different constituency [534 E-H; 535 A-B] (2)In the present
case, the circumstantial evidence indicated that the version put forward on
behalf of the appellants could not be true. therefore, the High Court was
justified in holding that the appellants' case was shown to be false by other
evidence, so that, there was no compelling reason for the High Court to examine
P as a court-witness or to draw an adverse inference against first respondent
for his failure to examine P as a witness. [540 G-H; 541 A] Dr. M. Chenna Reddy
v. V. Ramachandra Rao, C.A. No. 1449/68 dt. 17-12-1968, R. M. Seshadri v. G.
Vasantha Pai, [1969] 2 S.C.R. 1019 and Nani Gopal Swami v. Abdul Hamid
Chowdhury, A.I.R. 1959 Assam 200, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1621 of 1967.
8Sup. CI/69-15 526 Appeal under S. 116-A of
the Representation of the People Act, 1951 from the judgment and order dated
August 4, 7, 8, 1967 of the Mysore High Court in Election Petition No. 2 of
1967.
B. S. Patel, S. Paramila and R. B. Datar, for
the appellants.
A. K. Sen, S. S. Javali and M. Yeerappa, for
respondent No. 1 Shyamala Pappu and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J.This appeal under section 116A of the Representation ofthe People's
Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") has been filed by
two appellants whose election petition for setting aside the election of
respondent No. 1 has been ,dismissed by the High Court of Mysore. Appellant No.
1 was one of the candidates who filed his nomination for election to the Mysore
Legislative Assembly from Shiggaon Constituency in the District of Dharwar. Appellant
No. 2 was a voter in that constituency.
The notification fixing the time-schedule for
the elections was issued on the 13th January, 1967, fixing 20th January, 1967
as the last date for filing nominations, 21st January, 1967 as the date of
scrutiny, and 23rd January, 1967 as the last date for withdrawal of
candidature. According to the appellants, only eight candidates filed their
nominations within time up to 20th January, 1967. One of them was appellant No'
1. Respondent No. 1 was not included amongst the seven other candidates and his
nomination paper was subsequently introduced amongst the records of the
Returning Officer on behalf of respondent No. 1 with the aid of the Returning
Officer. The Returning Officer is respondent No.
2 in the appeal, having been impleaded as
respondent No. 2 in the election petition also. It was further pleaded that,
even if any nomination paper was filed by respondent No. 1, it was not
accompanied by the relevant portion of the electoral roll in which the name of
respondent No. 1 appeared as a voter which was necessary, because respondent
No. 1 was not a voter in this constituency, but in a different constituency. No
deposit as required by s. 34 of the Act was made in time; and, further still,
respondent No. 1 was not qualified to be chosen to fill the seat in the
Legislature, because he had not made and subscribed before the person
authorised in that behalf by the Election Commission an oath or affirmation
according to the form set out for the purpose in the Third Schedule to the
Constitution as required by Article 173 (a). It was alleged that, despite all
these defects. respondent No. 1 was declared elected unopposed on the date of
scrutiny on the incorrect ground that all other candidates had withdrawn their
candidature. The appellants accepted the 527 genuineness and validity of the
withdrawals by the seven other candidates, leaving appellant No. 1 as the sole
contesting candidate. The further case was that, in order to have respondent
No. 1 returned unopposed, corrupt practices were committed to obtain a
withdrawal form signed by appellant No. 1 and it was filed illegally beforethe
Returning Officer.
The version relating to the commission of
corrupt practices and to the filing of the withdrawal forms of appellant No. 1
may now be stated. The appellants allege that the whole manoeuvring was done by
one Patil Puttappa, Member of Parliament, who was a staunch supporter of
respondent No. 1, and by Mahalinga Shetty, the son-in-law of respondent No. 1.
These two persons caught hold of two other
persons, Hotti Peerasabnavar Chamensab Ghudusab (hereinafter referred to as
"P. W. 3"), and Nadaf Mohamad Jafar Saheb (hereinafter referred to as
"P. W. 4"), and through them, attempted to induce appellant No. 1 to
withdraw his nomination by promising to get him a long-awaited huller licence
and also to get him better patronage for his book-selling business and for
receiving other aid and support for his material prosperity. The appellants
allege that this inducement was offered without disclosing that respondent No.
1's candidature was spurious. For this purpose, on 20th January, 1967, at about
8.30 p.m., while appellant No. 1 was sitting at-the shop of one Joshi, a car
arrived from which P.W. 4 got down, came to appellant No. 1 and told him that
Patil Puttappa was calling him and requesting him to go with him. Appellant No.
1 went with P. W. 4 towards the car in which Patil Puttappa was sitting. The
latter asked appellant No. 1 why he should further trouble himself with election
matters when he had enough work in connection with the shop, flour mill and his
garden lands. He added that it will be to the advantage of appellant No. 1 to
withdraw his nomination, promising that he would assist him in his trade,
assist him an agency for paper and would help him to secure a licence: for his
huller which, he said, he had heard he was trying to obtain without success.
Appellant No. 1 replied that he had filed his nomination with a view to contest
the elections as his candidature had been sponsored by many people and he was
not willing to withdraw his nomination. In spite of requests having been made
two or three times, appellant No. 1 refused. At a later stage, when he asked
why be should withdraw his nomination, Patil Puttappa told him that they
desired uncontested return of respondent No. 1, and that was the reason why
they were making that request. Appellant No. 1 then objected saying that
respondent No. 1 bad not filed his nomination, whereupon Patil Puttappa stated
that every necessary arrangement would be made to secure the uncontested return
of respondent No. 1. At the time, of this talk, Mahalinga Shetty was a so
sitting in the car. When appellant No. 1 continued to be hesitant, Patil
Puttappa asked him to go with him in the car and, in, this 52 8 suggestion, P.
Ws. 3 and 4 Supported him. Appellant No. 1 first declined to do so because he
was not prepared to accede to the request for Withdrawing his nomination, but,
on Patil Puttappa's persistence, he agreed to go along, provided appellant No.
2 also accompanied him. Appellant No. 1 then went to the shop of appellant No.
2 and, thereafter, both of them got into the car and were taken to the house of
one Hanumanthagouda Ayyangouda Patil (hereinafter referred to as "R. W.
3"). Patil Puttappa, Mahalinga Shetty and the two appellants all went
inside the house of R. W. 3 and sat there when Patil Puttappa once again made a
request to appellant No. 1 to withdraw his nomination. Appellant No'. 1
refused, while appellant No. 2 also supported him by stating that appellant No.
1 had full support of the Muslims of the locality and that there was every
chance of his success, so that there was no point in his withdrawing the
nomination. Thereafter, Patil Puttappa changed his tactics and told appellant No.
1 that it would neither be good nor safe for him to continue to refuse his
request and threatened him by asking whether he would like to go on with the,
election or prefer to live in safety. He added that he was a Member of
Parliament and, therefore, he could do anything to appellant No. 1He also
produced a blank printed form and two blank sheets ofwhite paper and asked
appellant No. 1 to sign them, giving the threat that he will not be allowed to
go, unless he affixed his signatures to them. When appellant No. 1 looked for
support to appellant No. 2, the latter was also similarly threatened, whereupon
he said that there was no escape and, consequently, appellant No. 1 should sign
the papers as desired by Patil Puttappa. Against his will and submitting to the
pressure of Puttappa, appellant No. 1 signed the papers which were taken away
by Puttappa who left asking R. W. 3 not to permit the two appellants to go
away, unless Puttappa himself told him' to let them go. The two appellants,
according to them, were kept confined in the house of R. W. 3 throughout the
night of 20th January and again throughout the day and night of 21st January,,
1967.
They were only allowed to leave the house at
about 4-30 a.m.
on 22nd January, 1967, when a servant of R.
W. 3 woke them up and told them that they could go away. The charge put forward
on the basis of these facts was that an attempt was made to bribe appellant No.
1 to withdraw his nomination by offering him help in obtaining the licence for
the huller and in getting him agency for paper, with the further charge that
signatures on the withdrawal form were obtained by undue influence. It was
further pleaded that that withdrawal form was filed before the Returning
Officer by someone other than appellant No. 1 or his election agent.
The case put forward in the election
petition, thus, was that the withdrawal from candidature of appellant No. 1 was
attempted to be obtained by offering inducements and by subjecting him to
threats and by exercise of undue influence in 529 which assistance of the
Returning Officer was procured. In the 'Commission of these corrupt practices,
there was consent of respondent No. 1, so that the election of respondent No. 1
was void. In order to prove the consent of respondent No. 1 to the commission
of the corrupt practices, the case put forward was that, subsequent, to the
alleged withdrawal of candidature by all the other candidates including
appellant No. 1, leaving respondent No. 1 as the sole candidate, respondent No.
1 met P. Ws. 3 and 4 and gave them an assurance that thepromises which had
already been made to assist appellant No. 1 will be honoured.
The further version put forward on behalf of
the appellants, subsequent to their release from 'the house of R. W. 3, is
that, when they came out of the house towards the' Poona Bangalore Road, they
felt ashamed to show their faces in their own town of Shiggaon and,
consequently, decided to go to Hubli for a few days. A truck happened to pass
there.
carrying some goods and, since they had some
money, they took a lift in the truck and went to Hubli. They went to a canteen
for refreshments and on the table they found an issue of a newspaper 'Samyukta
Karnataka' in which appeared a news item stating that respondent No. 1 had been
returned uncontested at Shiggaon. Appellant No. 1 felt surprised, because be
had not withdrawn his nomination,, He consulted appellant No. 2 and the two of
them, after thinking over, realised that advantage must have been taken against
them of the papers which appellant No. 1 had been made to sign at the ,house of
R. W. 3. They, therefore, decided to see a lawyer and selected Sadashiv
Shankarappa Settar (hereinafter referred to as "P. W. 2") because,
besides being a lawyer, he was also a candidate in the election. They went to
his house twice at about 9 a.m. and again at about 12-30 or 100 p.m., but he
was not at home. They waited on, the second occasion until about 2-30 p.m. when
he returned and, after taking-his meals, he ultimately talked to them at 3 p.m.
As a result of the consultation P. W. 2 drafted a telegram which was despatched
by the appellants at about 4-35 p.m. to the Returning Officer. In the telegram,
it was mentioned by appellant No. 1 that he had read in a newspaper that he had
withdrawn which was false as he had not withdrawn and the withdrawal form was
not presented by him. He added that he did not know who had filled in the
contents of the withdrawal form and who had presented it and, consequently,
wanted the Returning Officer to treat it as invalid, adding that he was still
contesting the election from the Shiggaon constituency. The Returning Officer
received it on the same evening, i.e., on 22nd January, 1967, but noted on it
that, since it was a telegram, it could not be acted upon or considered. Thereafter,
appellant No. 1 addressed a meeting late at night in a locality called 'Durgada
Bailu' in Hubli where election propaganda was going on. After taking further
steps next day, the appellants continued to stay in 530 Hubli for 2 or 3 days
and they ultimately returned to Shiggaon on the 25th January, 1967. On these
pleadings, the case put forward was that appellant No. 1 had never withdrawn
his candidature and that, since respondent No. 1 had never filed his nomination
paper and all other candidates had withdrawn, appellant No. 1 was entitled to
be declared elected unopposed. In the election petition, therefore, in addition
to the relief for declaration of the election of respondent No. 1 as void,
appellant No. 1 also claimed a declaration that he was the duly elected
candidate from the Shiggaon constituency.
The point that was put in the fore-front by
Mr. B. S. Patil, learned counsel for the appellants, and was argued first.
relates to the challenge of the validity of
the election of respondent No. 1 on the ground that he was disqualified for
failure to make or subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the
provisions of Art. 173 (a) of the Constitution. In the election petition, it
was pleaded that the oath or affirmation should have preceded the filing of the
nomination paper, so that, even if any oath or affirmation was made subsequent
to the filing of the nomination paper, it would be invalid and would not avoid
the disqualification. On behalf of respondent No. 1, the reply in the written
statement was that respondent No. 1 did, in fact, make an affirmation before
the Returning Officer of this very constituency of Shiggaon on the date of the
scrutiny, viz., 21st January, 1967, before the Returning Officer scrutinised
the nomination paper of respondent No. 1. Evidence was also led to show that,
on 21st January, 1967, respondent No. 1 did arrive, at the office of the
Returning Officer just before the scrutiny of his nomination paper was being
taken up and he immediately proceeded to make the affirmation. Prior to his
arrival, his nomination paper for another constituency Kundagaol was rejected
by the Returning Officer on the ground that no affirmation had been made and
respondent No. 1 was disqualified under Art. 173 (a). It may be mentioned that
this Returning Officer was functioning as such for three different
constituencies, Shiggaon, Kundagol and Shirahatti, though his Headquarters were
temporarily located at Shiggaon. Since the affirmation was made before the
Returning Officer by respondent No. 1 prior to the scrutiny of his nomination
paper for Shiggaon Constituency, the Retuning Officer held that respondent No.
1 was not disqualified under Art.
173(a), and declared his nomination as valid.
These facts were accepted by the High Court in this case and the High Court
upheld the view of the Returning Officer that the affirmation made prior to the
scrutiny of his own nomination paper by respondent No. 1 was full compliance
with the requirements of Article 173(a). The High Court repelled the argument advanced
on behalf of the appellants that the affirmation should have been made before
the 531 filing of the nomination paper. In the course of arguments on this
point before us, however, neither party stuck to the position that was taken up
by it before the High Court. On behalf of the, appellants, the alternative
legal position relied upon was that, in any case, the affirmation should have
been made before the date of scrutiny, so that, in the present case, it should
have been latest by the midnight between 20th and 21st January, 1967. This plea
for challenging the validity of the election of respondent No. 1 was not taken
either in the pleadings or even at any later stage: in the High Court. In fact,
it was taken here for the first time on the basis of a decision of this Court
in Pashupati Nath Singh v. Harihar Prasad Singh.(1) In that case, this Court
has clearly held that the effect of the provision contained in s. 3 6 (2) (a)
of the Act is that the oath or affirmation must be before the date fixed for scrutiny,
so that the candidate possesses the qualification under Art. 173(a) of the
Constitution on the whole of the day on which the scrutiny of nomination has to
take place.
Even though this ground was not raised in the
High Court, we consider that we cannot.now ignore it and we have to hold that
the High Court was incorrect in rejecting the plea of the appellants on the
ground that a valid affirmation had been made by respondent No. 1 on 21st
January, 1967 just before the scrutiny of his nomination paper.
In view of this position taken up on behalf
of the appellants, Mr. A. K. Sen, learned counsel for respondent No. 1, put
forward the alternative plea that respondent No. 1 was not disqualified under
Art. 173(a) of the Constitution, because he had validly made affirmations at
two other places on the 19th and 20th January, 1967. For this purpose, reliance
was placed on the statements made by respondent No. 1 when he was
cross-examined on behalf of the appellants. Respondent No. 1 at one stage
stated that he filed his nomination at Bagalkot on the 19th January, 1967
between 2 and 3-00 p.m. in the afternoon. On further crossexamination came his
statement that, at Bagalkot he subscribed to the affirmation on the very day on
which he presented his nomination paper and he also confirmed that he was in a
position to affirm on personal knowledge that he had filed his nomination at
Bagalkot on the 19th January, 1967. Similarly, he also stated that he filed his
nomination for the Hoovinahadagali Constituency at Hospet and, though he could
not give the exact date on which he filed the nomination paper, he remembered
that he subscribed to the affirmation there on the night of 20th January, 1967.
It was urged by Mr. Sen that, having made
affirmation once either at Bagalkot or at Hospet in accordance with the
requirements of law, respondent No. 1 became qualified under Art. 173 (a) of
the Constitution to be a candidate for the Legislative (1)A.I.R. 1968 S.C.
1064.
532 Assembly and, therefore, it was
immaterial that he did not again make an affirmation in time before the
Returning Officer of Shiggaon Constituency.
This claim was resisted by. Mr. Patil on two
grounds. The first point urged 'was that this was a new case being set up on
behalf of respondent No. 1 for the first time in this Court and it should not,
therefore, be taken into account.
The second was that, in any case,. the
affirmation at Bagalkot or Hospet could not enure to the benefit of respondent
No. 1 for holding him to be qualified under Art.
173 (a) of the Constitution to stand as a
candidate from Shiggaon Constituency. On the first Point, we consider that, in
view, of the position noticed by us earlier, respondent No. 1 is fully
justified on relying on this alternative case in this Court, even though it was
not put forward during the trial in the High Court. While the case was being
tried in the High Court, the plea put forward by the appellants themselves was
different from the plea on the basis of which the affirmation made by
respondent No. 1 at Shiggaon on 21st January, 1967 is being held to be
insufficient for compliance with the requirements of Art.
173(a). In the High Court, that affirmation
was challenged solely on the ground that it should have been made prior to the
filing of the nomination paper; and that ground, of course, had no force,
because the form of affirmation given in the Third Schedule to the Constitution
itself makes it manifest that the affirmation must be made after the nomination
paper has been filed. Now that we have permitted the appellants to raise a new
ground and rely on the decision given by this Court in Pashupati Nath Singh's
case(1), there is no justification for debarring respondent No. 1 from putting
forward the alternative case on the basis of the affirmations made at Bagalkot
and Hospet. The fact of affirmations having been made by respondent No., 1 at
those two places before the Returning Officers of those Constituencies was
elicited by the counsel for the appellants themselves in the cross-examination.
The facts, having come on record, cannot be ignored, so that reliance has
rightly been placed on those facts on behalf of respondent No. 1.
On the second point, the argument has
proceeded primarily on the language of the notification issued by the Election,
Commission in pursuance of clause (a) of Art. 173 of the Constitution. Article
173(a) is as follows "173. A person shall not be qualified to be chosen to
fill a seat. in the Legislature of a State unless he(a)is a citizen of India,
and makes and subscribes before some person authorized in that behalf by the
Election Commission an oath or affirmation according (1) A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1064.
533 to the form set out for the purpose in
the Third Schedule." The notification issued by the Election Commission,
which is No. 3/130/65(2), dated 2nd January, 1965, is to the following effect :
"In pursuance of clause (a) of Article
173 of the Constitution, and in supersession of its notification No. 3/130/63
(2), dated the 15th November, 1963, the Election Commission hereby directs (a)
that candidate for election to the Legislature of a State by an assembly I
constituency, or a council constituency, shall make and subscribe the oath or
affirmation according to the form set out for the purpose in the Third Schedule
to the Constitution, before the Returning Officer or an Assistant Returning
Officer for that constituency; and (b)that a candidate for election to fill a
seat or seats in the Legislative Council of a State by the members of the
Legislative Assembly of the State, shall make and subscribe the said oath or
affirmation before the Returning Officer or the Assistant Returning Officer for
that election Provided that if any such candidate is at the time confined in a
prison or under preventive detention, he may make and subscribe the said oath
or affirmation before the Superintendent of the prison or Commandant of them
detention camp in which he is so confined or under such detention." The
controversy between the parties has arisen because of the language used by the
Election Commission, in this notification. The notification requires that a
candidate for election to a Legislature, of a State by an Assembly Constituency
or a Council Constituency must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation
before the Returning Officer or an Assistant Returning Officer for that
Constituency. Mr. Sen urged that this notification can be interpreted in two
ways. The first interpretation sought to be put on it was that, according to
this notification, if a person is a candidate for election to the Legislature
of a State by an Assembly Constituency, all that it requires is that the
affirmation must be made before the Returning Officer of an Assembly
Constituency, while, if he is seeking election to a Council Constituency, then
the affirmation must be made before the Returning Officer of a Council
Constituency. In putting this interpretation, learned counsel wants us to hold
that the expression "Returning Officer for that Constituency" refers
to any Returning Officer of a Legislative Assembly or a Legislative Council, as
the 1 case may be. We do not think that this interpretation can be accepted by
us.
534 In using the expression "that
Constituency", it is clear that the intention of the Election Commission
was that, the affirmation must be made before the Returning Officer of that
particular constituency from which the candidate is seeking election to the
Legislature of the State, whether it be an Assembly Constituency or a Council
Constituency. This was the second interpretation which Mr. Sen himself accepted
as a possible one. This is also the interpretation which was sought to be put
on this notification by Mr. B. S. Patil on behalf of the appellants. We think
that this interpretation is correct, so that, in order to get over the
disqualification laid down in Art. 173 (a), a candidate must make an
affirmation before the Returning Officer or an Assistant Returning Officer of
that particular constituency from which he is a candidate.
Mr. Sen's case is that, even on this
interpretation, respondent NO. 1 had qualified to be a candidate, because, when
he made the affirmation before the Returning Officer at Bagalkot, he was
already a candidate nominated for election from that constituency. Similarly,
when he made the affirmation before the Returning Officer at Hospet, he had
already been nominated as a candidate for the Hoovinahadagali Constituency. The
argument was that, once respondent No. 1 had made an affirmation, as required
by Art. 173(a) of the Constitution, before one of the persons authorised by the
Election Commission, he had fully complied with the requirements of Art. 173(a)
and, thereupon, he became qualified to be a candidate for election to the
Mysore Legislative Assembly. There was no requirement that that qualification'
must be acquired separately in respect of each constituency from which
respondent No. 1 was seeking election. We are of the view that this submission
must be accepted. The purpose of Art. 173(a) is to ensure that any person,, who
wants to be a member of a Legislature of a State, must bear true faith and
allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law established and undertake to
uphold the sovereignty and integrity of India, and, to ensure this, he must
make an oath or affirmation.
Once such an oath or affirmation is made
before a competent authority in respect of one constituency, he becomes bound
by that oath or affirmation even if he gets elected to the Legislature from a
different constituency, so that there is no necessity that he must make oath or
affirmation repeatedly on his being nominated from more than one constituency.
The language of Art. 173(a) also makes this very clear, because all that it
requires is one oath or affirmation in accordance with the form set out in the
Third Schedule to the Constitution so as to remove the disqualification from
being a candidate for election to the Legislature of the State. The Article
does not mention that the making of oath or affirmation is to be preliminary to
the validity. of candidature in each constituency, and 535 recognises the fact
that, once the necessary qualification is obtained, that qualification removes
the bar laid down by that Article. In these circumstances, this ground of
disqualification. for challenging the validity of the election of respondent
No. 1 fails and must be rejected.
We may next take up the question of the
charges of corrupt practices alleged to have been committed with the consent of
respondent No. 1 relating to bribery, undue influence and obtaining of
assistance, from a Government servant, viz., the Returning Officer. In support
of these charges, only six witnesses were examined on behalf of the appellants.
Two of them, P. W. 5 and P. W. 6, are
appellant No. 2 and appellant No. 1 respectively. Two other witnesses are
Chaman Sab, P. W. 3, and Mohammad Jaffar Saheb, P. W. 4; and the fifth witness
is Sadashiv Shankarappa Settar, P. W. 2.
We have already referred to all these
witnesses when giving the version put forward on behalf of the appellants. The
only other witness who remains to be mentioned is Hanumanthasa Pawar, P. W. 1,
a photographer, who came forward to state that he took a photograph in the
office of the Returning Officer at about 5 p.m. on the 21st January 1967, when
respondent No. 1 and the Returning Officer were sitting close to each other
after the scrutiny of the nomination papers. He was examined primarily to show
the close connection between respondent No. 1 and the Returning Officer,
respondent No. 2. As against these witnesses examined on behalf of the
appellants, respondent No. '1 examined five witnesses. R. W. 1 is respondent
No. 1 himself, and R. W. 5 is Hanumanthappa Shivabasappa Hosamani, respondent
No. 2, who was the Returning Officer. A third witness for the respondents is
Gadigeppagouda Channabasanagouda Patil, R. W. 2, who wag first put forward as
the official candidate by the Congress from this Shiggaon Constituency, but who
himself took active part in persuading respondent No. 1 to PO be a candidate on
behalf of the Congress from this Constituency. The next witness examined is
Hanumanthagouda Ayyangouda Patil, R. W. 3, who was the proposer of respondent
No. 1 in the nomination paper filed in this Constituency and in whose house,
the appellants alleged, they were kept confined from the night of 20th January
up to the early hours of the morning of 22nd January, 1967. The fifth witness
is Gurupadappa Basappa Mahalinga Shetty, R. W. 4, the son-in-law of respondent
No.
1. The High Court, in assessing the value of
the evidence given on behalf of the two parties, has expressed the opinion that
all the witnesses examined by either side are persons interested in the two
rival candidates, except the Returning Officer, R. W. 5, in whose case the High
Court has not accepted the charge of partiality brought by the appellants in
the election petition. The High Court, therefore, preferred to rely on the
evidence of R.W. 5, and 536 attached very little value to the evidence. of the
other witnesses examined by the two sides.
We are inclined to agree with the High Court
with regard to the assessment of the value of the evidence of the witnesses
examined by both sides and, even with regard to the evidence of the Returning
Officer, R. W. 5, we have the feeling that his evidence must also be accepted
with great caution, because 'it cannot be said that he was totally
disinterested and independent. So far as the witnesses examined on behalf of
the appellants are concerned, the two appellants themselves are the election
petitioners and, very clearly, their testimony has only the value that can be
attached to evidence of contesting parties themselves who 'are bound to speak
in support of their case. Mr. Patil particularly relied on the evidence of P.
Ws 3 and 4 who, according to the part played by them envisaged in the version
put forward on behalf of the appellants, were in a position to state to facts
showing that there was offer of bribery to appellant No. 1 and undue influence
was also exercised against them.
These witnesses are also admittedly highly
interested.
Appellant No. 1 in his statement has come
forward with the plea that P. W. 4, Mohammad Jaffar, was one of the persons who
was sponsoring his candidature for this election, so that there was a close
bond between them. In fact, the appellants' further case itself was that
appellant No. 1 was approached by Patil Puttappa through P. W. 4 because of the
close relations between them. P. W. 3 also, according to appellant No. 1, was
brought in by Patil Puttappa because he was a great friend of P. W. 4 and was
expected to influence him in his attempts to persuade appellant No. 1 to
withdraw.
Thus, in putting forward their own case, the
appellants have shown that P.Ws. 3 and 4 are not independent persons. P. W.
2 was the lawyer engaged by the appellants
for the purpose of putting forward their case that the withdrawal of his
candidature by appellant No. 1 was not genuine and had been manoeuvred by
persons acting on behalf of respondent No. 1.
Being their lawyer,he cannot be held to be
beyond the influence of the appellants. So far as P.W. 1, the Photographer, is
concerned, the High Court has found that there is material in his own evidence
indicating that he is not a very reliable person and we find no reason at all
to differ from the view taken by the High Court on this point.
Similarly, amongst the witnesses examined on
behalf of respondent No. 1, R. W. I is respondent No. 1 himself and,
consequently. the view we have expressed with regard to appellants 1 and 2 will
equally apply to him. R. W. 2 was the official Congress candidate. He withdrew
his candidature and took an active part in persuading respondent No. 1 to be a
candidate in his place. He was, therefore, clearly a person interested in the
candidature of respondent No. 1. R. W. 3 was the proposer 53 7 who nominated
respondent No. 1 as the candidate in this Shiggaon Constituency and this
manifests his interest in the candidature of respondent No. 1. R.W. 4 is the
son-in-law of respondent No. 1 who also took active part in arranging that the
official candidate R.W. 2 withdrew from candidature and respondent No. 1 was
made the candidate on behalf of the Congress in this, Constituency in his
place. None of these four witnesses can,. therefore, be said to be independent.
So far as the Returning Officer, R. W. 5, is
concerned, he was a Government servant and was acting in his official capacity
as Returning, Officer in this Constituency. In assessing, the value of his
evidence, however, one fact prominently brought out is. that he was in the
service of the Government of the State of Mysore, while respondent No. 1 was
the Chief Minister of the State. R. W.' 5 himself admitted that, earlier, when
he was posted at Bagalkot as Assistant Commissioner in July, 1963, he, had
collected gold for the National Defence Fund and on the occasion of a visit,
Smt. Indira Gandhi and the Chief Minister respondent No. 1, were weighed
against gold collected for the" purpose of National Defence Fund. The
weighment of the Chief Minister against gold indicates the attempt made by this
witness to please the Chief Minister. Then, there seems to be Some force the
suggestion made that, on the day of scrutiny, then Returning Officer delayed
the scrutiny of the nomination paper of respondent No. 1 for the Shiggaon
Constituency probably at the suggestion of the workers of respondent No. 1 in
order to, give as much time as possible to respondent No. 1 to come and make an
affirmation as required by Art. 173(a), under the, impression that such an
affirmation made even on that day would' be valid and would remove the disqualification
under that Article. On that day, scrutiny of nomination papers of all the three
Constituencies, for which R. W. 5 was the Returning Officer, was top take
place. The scrutiny was begun not at the time fixed for it, but at a later hour
and, even in that scrutiny, the nomination papers for Shiggaon Constituency
were taken up last of all. It is true that he rejected the nomination paper of
respondent No. 1 for the Kundago Constituency, because respondent No. 1 did not
arrive be fore the scrutiny of his nomination paper for that Constituency in
Order to make the affirmation; but even that does not show that the Returning
Officer was not trying to assist respondent No. 1 as far as possible. Then,
there is the circumstance that respondent No. 1 and this witness were
photographed' together by P. W. 1. of course, the photographs produced by P. W.
I are not of a very reliable character, because the negatives or the
original-sized Photographs have not been Produced by the Photographer. The
suggestion by Mr. Sen on behalf of respondent No. 1 was that the photographs
were actually taken of a numb& of people who happened to be in the office
of the Returning Officer by this photographer, but, for the purpose of urging
the argument of close contact between R. W. 5 and respondent No. 1, only a
small part of that photograph was enlarged and has been put forward as Exhibit
in this case.
The part of the photograph brought before the
Court is confined to that in which respondent No. 1 and the Returning Officer
appeared, while ,others on both sides of them were excluded. The photographer,
in order to justify his evidence that his photographs included only these two
persons, had per force to give an explanation for :nonproduction' of the
negatives and the original-sized positives which might have been prepared by
him, because the negatives and those prints would have clearly shown other
persons also in the photographs. Despite these facts, we still think that the
photographs do give some indication that the Returning Officer was showing
special consideration to respondent No. 1 because he was, the Chief Minister
and at least gave him a seat close to himself inside his office.
In all these circumstances, it is not
possible to hold that the Returning Officer is a totally independent witness;
but, in our opinion, these few circumstances 'not justify our rejecting the
evidence of this witness in to The evidence will have to be scrutinised
carefully and must be accepted at least to the extent to which it may be
supported by circumstantial evidence.
In connection with the examination of
witnesses, great emphasis was laid by Mr. Patil on the fact that Patil
Puttappa, who, according to the appellants, was the chief architect in
manoeuvring the unopposed return of respondent, No. 1 from 'the Shiggaon
Constituency, was not examined as a witness. It appears that the appellants
themselves first summoned Patil Puttappa to produce certain documents for the
purpose of showing that he was under great obligation to respondent No. 1
making it likely that he might have resorted to all kinds of practices in order
to ensure uncontested return of respondent No. 1 to the Legislature.
Patil Puttappa produced a statement showing
the income that he received from advertisements given on behalf of the State
Government during the period from 1962-63 to 1966-67. Patil Puttappa was
running two papers Viswavani' and 'Prapancha' during this period. For the
newspaper 'Viswavani', the total advertisement charges paid to him 'by the
Government in the first year 1962-63 were in the region of Rs. 27,000.
The 'amount progressively increased in the
next four years;
and in the last year 1966-67, it rose to
about Rs. 8 1,000.
It was urged that this shows that he' had
been receiving patronage from the Government of Mysore of which, during this
period, respondent' No. 1 was the Chief Minister.
Further , he was elected as a Member of the
Rajya Sabha and was an active worker of the Congress. The argument was that,
539 in these circumstances, when the charge in the. election petition was that
Patil Puttappa was the main instrument in the commission of corrupt practices,
he should have been examined as a witness. The appellants themselves, no doubt,
summoned him to produce the statement of accounts, as mentioned above, but they
could not examine him as a witness, because he would have. been clearly hostile
and, by examining him as their witness, the appellants would have conceded to
the counsel for respondent No. 1 the advantage of being legally entitled to cross-examine
him. Respondent No. 1 also cited Patil Puttappa as one of the witnesses in the
list of witnesses filed, but, later, gave him up and ,did not examine him as a
witness. After this failure on the part of respondent No. 1 to examine him, the
appellants moved an application to the Court to take his evidence-under 0.16,
r. 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure as a Court witness. This application was
not accepted by the High Court and, after a long discussion as to the motives
which had impelled the appellants to move this application, the High Court
rejected it. Mr. Patil, in this connection, relied on a decision of the Assam
High Court in Nani Gopal Swami v. Abdul Hamid-'Choudhury and Another(1) to urge
that, though the burden, of proof in the present case in respect of the corrupt
practices was initially on the appellants, respondent No. 1 was not altogether
absolved from his responsibility to assist the Court by producing the best
evidence available after the appellants had tendered their own evidence. It was
urged that, on the failure of respondent No. 1 to examine Patil Puttappa, an
adverse inference should be drawn against him. Reference was also made to a
recent decision of this Court in Dr. M. Chenna Reddy v. V. Ramachandra Rao and
Another(2) where the nonexamination of the best person who could have come and
given evidence in favour of the candidate who was charged with corrupt practice
was taken as one of the circumstances justifying the belief of witnesses
examined to prove the corrupt practice on behalf of the opposite party. This
inference was, however, drawn by this Court on the basis that the, Court first
found the testimony of witnesses examined against the successful candidate as
acceptable, so that the , initial burden which lay on, the election petitioner
was discharged to the satisfaction of the Court.
The third case, to which reference was made,
is also a recent decision of this Court in R. M. Seshadri v. G. Vasantha
Pai(3), where this Court dealt with the question of the exercise of power by
the Court trying the election petition to examine a witness as court witness.
It was held that the Court has the power to summon a court witness if it thinks
that the, ends of justice require or that the case before it needs that kind
,of evidence. It was explained that the policy of election law (1) A.I.R. 1959
Assam 200. (3) [1969] S.C.R. 1019.
(2) (1969) S.C.R.
540 to be that, for the establishment of
purity of elections, all allegations of malpractice, including corrupt
practices at elections, should be thoroughly. investigated. On these
principles, the Court held that the trial Judge of the High Court had Properly
exercised the power of summoning and examining some persons as court witnesses.
On the basis of these cases, it was argued
that it was the duty of respondent No. 1 to examine Patil Puttappa in this case
because he was in the best Position to deny the allegations which had been
made, in respect of the corrupt practices, by the appellants and that, in any
case, the Court should have summoned him as a witness, when an application was
presented in that behalf by the appellants invoking the power of the Court
under O.16, r. 44, C.P.C. It appears that, in this case, respondent No. 1
considered it unnecessary to produce Patil Puttappa as a witness because of the
view that the evidence, which had been given on behalf of the appellants to
prove the corrupt practices, was of a very unsatisfactory nature and that even
circumstantial evidence' was available to show that the version put forward could
not be true. The High Court also considered it unnecessary to summon Patil
Puttappa as a court witness for similar reasons. In this connection, we may
cite further remarks made by this Court in the case of R. M. Seshadri(1) to the
following effect:"Although we would say that the trial should be at arms
length and the Court should not really enter into the dispute as a third party,
but it is not to be understood that the Court never has the power to summon a
witness or to call for a document which would throw light upon the matter,
particularly of corrupt practice which is alleged and is being sought to be
proved. If the Court was satisfied that a corrupt practice had in fact been
perpetrated, may be by. one side or the other, it was absolutely necessary to
find out who was the author of that corrupt practice." It was on this
principle that this Court upheld the course adopted by the High Court by
summoning court witnesses in order to satisfy itself that the corrupt practice
had in fact been committed. In the present case, as we shall presently show,
there was plenty of circumstantial evidence indicating that the version put
forward on behalf of the appellants could not be true and the High Court could
justifiably take the view that it had not been proved to its satisfaction so
that there was no compelling reason for the High Court to examine Patil
Puttappa as a court (1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 1019.
541 witness or even to draw any inference
against respondent No. 1 for his failure to examine Patil Puttappa as a witness.
We proceed to indicate our reasons for the
view that the version relating to the commission of corrupt practices has been
rightly rejected by the High Court. The story that has been put forward on
behalf of die. appellants has already been described by us in detail when
giving the facts of the case. The appellants alleged that they were taken to
the house of R.W. 3 in the early hours of the night of 20th January, 1967 and
were kept 'in confinement till the morning of 22nd January, 1967. According to
the appellants, though they were kept at the house of R. W. 3 and were told
that they would not be allowed to leave, there was actually no use of force at
all against them. In fact, the version given by the two appellants of their
confinement in the house of, R. W. 3 is that they remained there throughout the
night of 20th January and throughout the day hours of 21st January, 1967,
without making any attempt to leave the house of R. W. 3. They expect the Court
to believe that no such' attempt was made by them simply because, at one stage,
Patil Puttappa had said , that appellant No. 1 had the option of either
remaining a candidate for election, or of continuing to live. Apart from this
verbal threat, there is no suggestion that any act was committed by any one
there which could put the appellants in fear of their life or of being hurt if
they tried to leave the-house of R. W. 3. According to their version, they
quietly stayed in the house without even making a presence of leaving it simple
because Patil Puttappa, when going away, had told R. W. 3 not to let them go
until he gave permission. The first attempt, according to them, was made some
time late in the night of 21-st January and that attempt was foiled because of
the-barking of a dog. Even, when relating this part of their story., the
appellants did not say that the dog was ferocious or tried to bite them, or
that any of the servants woke up and came to stop them from going away. In
fact, the initial story that like simpletons these two persons, one of whom was
a candidate for membership of a legislature, entered the car of Patil Puttappa
and quietly went with him to the residence of R.W. 3 appears to be highly
improbable. Their conduct, after their release from the alleged confinement,
also seems to be highly improbable. According to them, they did not go back to
their village because they were feeling ashamed. Why there should have been any
feeling of shame is incomprehensible. If they were kept in confinement under
threats of injury, there would have been no shame in going home and disclosing
this circumstance. In fact, according to appellant No. 1, his candidature had
been sponsored by quite a large number of influential persons of Shiggaon and,
consequently, it would have been quite natural for him to go to Shiggaon, as
soon as he was 8SupCI/69-16 542 released from confinement, and seek their
assistance against whatever course might have been adopted in order to defeat
his candidature. Having been absent from their houses from the night of 20th
January until the early-hours of 22nd January, it would have been natural for
them to go back to their homes and relieve the anxiety of the members of their
families who must have been wondering where they had gone away. According to
the appellants, they did not return to their village until the 24th of January
and sent no message to their houses that they were safe And were in Hubli. The
whole conduct appears to be very improbable.
Apart from this, there are admissions made by
the witnesses of the appellants themselves and some documentary evidence which
show that the appellants could not have been in confinement in the house of R.
W. 3 from the night of 20th January up to the morning of 22nd January, 1967. P.
W. 3 in his examination-in-chief itself, when relating the incident of 21st
January, 1967, stated that on that day respondent No. 1 sent for him and P. W.
4 and told them that whatever promises had been made by Patil Puttappa would be
fulfilled and they could give that information to appellant No. 1.
Thereafter, they went to the house of
appellant No. 1 and passed on this information to him. Thus, P. W. 3 admitted
that appellant No. 1 was at' his house on the evening of 21st January which
completely negatives the case that he and appellant to. 2 were both in
confinement at the house of R.
W. 3. When this statement was made by this
witness, counsel for the appellants intervened and put a question whether
appellant No. 1 was at home and what happened after they went to his house.
When answering these questions, the witness realised that he had given a
statement negativing the appellants' case and, therefore, he changed his
statement and said that the mother of appellant No. 1 told him that appellant
No. 1 was not in the house. We are inclined to agree with the High Court that
this witness, in fact, gave away the truth inadvertently disproving the
appellants' case when he stated that he and P. W. 4 had gone to the house of
appellant No. 1 on the 21st January, 1967 and informed him of what respondent
No. 1 had told them.
In this connection, there is the circumstance
that another witness examined by the appellants themselves also supports the
version that appellant No. 1 must have been at his house on the evening of 21st
January. That witness is P. W. 1, the photographer. He was asked in his
cross-examination as to when appellant No. 1 had taken the photos from him, and
his answer was that it was on the same day when the photograph was taken. He
had earlier stated that the photograph was taken in the office of the Returning
Officer at about 5 p.m. on 21st January, 1967.
543 This answer given by this witness also
belied the case put forward on behalf of the appellants about their confinement
in the house of R. W. 3. At the stage of this answer given by the witness, the
counsel for the appellants had also intervened and suggested that the witness
had been pointing to the Returning Officer who was sitting in Court and not to
appellant No.1. The Court thereupon repeated the question to the witness and
the note by the Court shows that the witness was quite clear that the copies
which were retained by him in his Studio were taken by appellant No. 1 whom he
identified by sight in Court. It appears that he also got a hint at this stage
and, therefore, added that he was not sure of the exact date on which appellant
No. 1 took the copies from him. This attempt of the witness to get out of the
admission made by him contradicting the case put forward by the appellants has
rightly been disregarded by the High Court, and the conclusion follows that P.
W. 1 has also given evidence which shows the falsity of the story of
confinement put forward by the appellants.
Another circumstance that points in the same
direction is that the appellants, if they were in fact kept in illegal confinement,
made no attempt at all to file any complaints either with the Police or before
a Magistrate so as to seek redress against this criminal offence committed
against them. Even on 22nd January, 1967, when appellant No. 1 addressed the
meeting at 'Durgada Bailu' in Hubli, he did not tell the people, about his
illegal confinement and the corrupt practice committed by the workers of
respondent No. 1 in order to obtain his withdrawal. The most telling
circumstance, however, which leaves no room for doubt that the version of the
appellants about their confinement in the house of R. W. 3 until the early
hours of 22nd January, 1967, is false, is that an item appeared in the
newspaper 'Vishal Karnataka' in the morning issue of 22nd January, 1967, saying
that one only out of the five candidates who had withdrawn their candidature
had been made to withdraw his nomination paper by use of force and great
threat; and it was learnt that, as against this, 'a notice had been caused to
be given through a Pleader. Appellant No. 1 himself admitted. that this
newspaper is a daily morning paper so that this particular issue came out on
the morning of 22nd January, 1967. According to the version given by appellants
1 and 2, they were kept in confinement at the residence of R. W. 3 until
released at about 4-30 a.m. on 22nd January where after they proceeded to Hubli
and, for the first time, gave their version of confinement to 'their lawyer, P.
W. 2, at about 3 p.m. According to them, they did not mention their confinement
and use of force or of threats against them to anyone else until they were able
to consult P, W. 2 At about 3 p.m. If this evidence, was true, it is 544
incomprehensible how the news of obtaining withdrawal of a nomination paper by
use of force and great threat could appear in the morning issue of 22nd
January, 1967 which came out several hours earlier. Mr. Patil, learned counsel
for the appellants, tried to explain away this news by comparing it with
another item of news appearing in an issue of the newspaper 'Prajavani'
published from Bangalore on the morning of 22nd January, 1967. The news item in
it purports to be dated 20th January, 1967 and is to the effect that the Chief
Minister is about to bring about the first and the most important success to
the Mysore Pradesh Congress by his uncontested election from the Shiggaon
Assembly Constituency. It mentions that, as the other contestants had withdrawn
their candidature, only the candidature of respondent No. 1 was remaining in
Shiggaon Constituency and he was going to be declared elected uncontested on
the 23rd January, 1967, which was the last date fixed for withdrawal of
candidature. From the fact that this news item was published as an item of 20th
January, it was argued that there must have been a pre-arranged plan to
manoeuvre the withdrawal of all candidates from the Shiggaon Constituency for
the purpose of achieving uncontested return of respondent No. 1, because there
could not be and there were no withdrawals on 20th January which was the date
for filing nominations, and the evidence also proves clearly that the
withdrawals, in fact, took place on 21st January, 1967, which was the date of
scrutiny. It, however, appears to us that, in this newspaper, the date January
20 as the date of the news item is incorrect. If, in Bangalore, this news item
had been received by the newspaper on 20th January, it would surely have been
published in the issue of 21st January. The very fact that it was published in
the issue of 22nd January shows that this news must have been received by the
newspaper on 21st January and the date January 20 printed in it is an error in
printing. No newspaper would unnecessarily delay such a news item by full 24
hours. On the 21st January, according to the evidence given by the Returning
Officer and other witnesses examined on behalf of respondent No. 1, all the
withdrawals had taken place by about 3 to 4 p.m. of course, thereafter, this
news about withdrawals could have been flashed to Bangalore and received there
later in the evening of 21st January, so that it could be published in the
morning issue of 'Prajavani' of 22nd January, 1967. The publication of this
news is, therefore, not at all comparable with the publication in Vishal
Karnataka, to which we referred earlier. It is significant that the newspaper
Vishal Karnataka, which is published at Hubli, was interested in appellant No.
1. This is clear from the circumstance that, after printing this news item
about use of force and great threat to induce a candidate to withdraw his
nomination, this very newspaper published a number of 54 5 appeals to raise
funds in order to support the case of appellant No. 1 for challenging the
uncontested election of respondent No. 1. The publication of these appeals in
subsequent issues of Vishal Karnataka has been admitted by appellant No. 1. The
subscriptions were to be sent to Vishal Karnataka Office. In these
circumstances, an inference clearly follows that, in fact, appellants No. 1 and
2 were not kept in confinement at the residence of R. W. 3 and they deliberately
made out this story to challenge the uncontested election of respondent No. 1,
some time on the evening of 21st January, 1967. Having decided that the
election 'should be challenged on such a ground, they gave out this news item
to Vishal Karnataka; but they did not realise that the publication of this news
item would itself betray them and make it clear that they could not have been
kept in confinement up to the early hours of 22nd January, 1967, which was the
version they decided to put forward against respondent No. 1. Mr. Patil,
learned counsel for the appellants, also tried to suggest that this news item
might refer to the withdrawal of candidature of some candidate other than
appellant No. 1, but we can see no basis for such a suggestion. No witness has
made any statement indicating that any candidate other than appellant No. 1 had
the grievance that the withdrawal of his nomination had been obtained by use of
force or threats. None of the witnesses of the appellants, including P.W. 2,
S.S. Sattar, their legal adviser, have stated that any other candidate was made
to withdraw in that manner. On the other hand, in the election petition itself,
the appellants have come forward with the case that the withdrawals of all
other candidates, except his own, were voluntary and valid. This plea was put
forward in order to claim the seat for appellant No. 1 himself on the election
of respondent No. 1 being declared void; but this pleading clearly negatives
any possible suggestion that there was some other candidate who was also
subjected to threats and use of force to induce him to withdraw his
candidature. Obviously, this news item could refer to no one else, except
appellant No. 1 and it could only appear in the morning issue of 22nd January,
because the appellants were not under confinement on die 21st January, 1967.
This piece of evidence, thus leaves no room for doubt that the entire story of
use of inducements, threats and illegal confinement has been concocted by the
appellant so that the witnesses examined in support of it cannot be at all
relied upon. In these circumstances, we hold, as we have indicated earlier,
that the High Court was justified in not insisting on the production of Patil
Puttappa as a witness on behalf of respondent No. 1 or in not examining him as
a court witness. The version put forward by the appellants was I controverted
in his evidence by R. W. 4, Mahalinga Shetty who, according to the appellants,
was in the company of Patil Puttappa at both stages 546 when bribe was offered to
appellant No. 1 and, later, when he was induced by threats and illegal
confinement to withdraw his candidature. Further, R. W. 3, was examined to
controvert the version of the incident alleged to have taken place at his
residence during the illegal confinement of the appellants. Such evidence being
available and the version put forward on behalf of the appellants having been
shown to be false by various circumstances indicated by us above, there could
be no need for the Court to take the step of examining Patil Puttappa as a
court witness. The High Court was fully justified in holding that the charges
of corrupt practices of undue influence and bribery had not been proved against
respondent No. 1.
The additional charge of obtaining assistance
from a Government servant, viz., the Returning Officer, respondent No. 2, is
also linked up with the same version of the appellants which we have above held
to be false. Respondent No. 2 was said to have assisted in illegally obtaining
the withdrawal of the candidature of appellant No. 1 by being a party to a
faked withdrawal form being accepted by him. The case was that the withdrawal
form of appellant No. 1 was not presented either by appellant No. 1 himself or
by his election agent having been obtained in the circumstances indicated by
the appellants in their version. Respondent No. 2 has, however, clearly stated
that this withdrawal form of appellant No. 1 was presented by appellant No. 1
himself, and we find no reason to disbelieve his evidence in view of our finding
about the falsity of the version of the appellant. It is also significant that
no witness was.
sought to be examined on behalf of the
appellants to prove who in fact presented the withdrawal form on his behalf if
appellant No. 1 did not do so. In view of the circumstantial evidence being in
favour of the version put forward by the respondents, we consider that the High
Court was right in accepting the evidence of respondent No. 2 on this point and
rejecting the plea of the appellants that the withdrawal form of appellant No.
1 had been wrongly manoeuvred and had not been presented by him.
Lastly, we may take notice of the three
further allegations that the nomination paper of respondent No. 1 was, in fact,
'not presented, on 20th January, 1967; secondly, that, if at all it was
presented, it was not accompanied by a copy of the electoral roll showing that
respondent No. 1 was entered as an elector in another constituency; and,
thirdly, that it was not accompanied by a receipt showing the deposit of the
security money as required by law. On all these points, there is the clear
evidence of the Returning Officer as well as that of R.W. 3 who proposed the
name of respondent No. 1 and who presented the nomination paper to the
Returning Officer. There is no reason at all to disbelieve their evidence on
these points, particularly when their 547 evidence is also supported by the
documents maintained in the office of the Returning Officer as well as in the
Sub treasury. There is further the fact that no direct evidence has been led on
behalf of the appellants to show that the nomination paper of respondent No. 1
was presented at some other time after the expiry of the date fixed for
nomination and that, when so presented at the later stage, it was not accompanied
by the two necessary documents. These pleas taken for challenging the validity
of the election of respondent No. 1 have also, therefore, I been rightly
rejected by the, High Court.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
There will be one set of costs for hearing.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
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