Babubhai Muljibhai Patel Vs. Nandlal
Khodidas Barot & Ors [1974] INSC 177 (17 September 1974)
KHANNA, HANS RAJ KHANNA, HANS RAJ BEG, M.
HAMEEDULLAH KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION: 1974 AIR 2105 1975 SCR (2) 71 1974
SCC (2) 706
CITATOR INFO:
RF 1988 SC2114 (1)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Art. 226-Nature
and scope of jurisdiction of the High Court-Whether the High Court could decide
writ petitions on affidavits-Whether the High Court should call all the
deponents for cross-examinationDifference between a motion of no confidence and
censure motion.
HEADNOTE:
A vote of no confidence was moved by
respondent no. 1 against the appellant who was the elected President of a
Municipality. The appellant's party claimed that the motion was lost while the
respondent no. 1 claimed that it was carried. Since the appellant did not
vacate his office respondent no. 1 filed a writ petition under article 226 of
the Constitution. Before the High Court a number of affidavits had been filed
on behalf of the appellant and the respondent. After cross-examining six
persons. for respondent and two for the appellant the High Court held that the
appellant had ceased to be the President.
On appeal to this Court it was contended (1)
that as the dispute between the parties involved questions of fact the High
Court should have referred the parties to a separate suit, (2) that the High
Court should have permitted cross examination of all deponents, (3) that as the
cross examination of only a few of the deponents had been permitted the affidavits
of others who were not cross examined could not be taken into consideration;
(4) that the High Court was wrong in relying upon the version of respondent no.
1 that one of the councilors who was a supporter of the appellant had supported
the motion of no confidence; (5) that the councilors had to stick to the ground
specified in the notice and could not depart from it in passing the motion of
no confidence.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (1) (a). The appellant could not be
heard to say that the Court should have relegated respondent no. 1 to the
remedy of a suit. Had the respondent no. 1 been directed to seek his remedy by
way of a suit the relief secured by him would have been wholly illusory because
by the time he would succeed in the litigation, the term of the office of the
President would have either already expired or be about to expire. The
appellant in that event would have continued as the President of the
Municipality even though he had ceased to enjoy the confidence of the requisite
number of councilors. The entire concept of a democratic institution would thus
have been set at naught. [79H; 8OB-C] (b)In a petition under Art. 226 the High
Court has jurisdiction to try issues, both of fact and law. The words "as
far as it can be made applicable" occurring in s. 141 of the Code of Civil
Procedure make it clear that in applying the various provisions of the Code to
proceedings other than those of a suit, the court must take into account the
nature of those proceedings and the relief sought. The object of article 226 is
to provide a quick and inexpensive remedy to aggrieved parties. Power has
consequently been vested in the High Courts to issue orders: or writs. If the
procedure of a suit had also to be adhered to in the case of writ petitions the
entire purpose of having a quick and inexpensive remedy would be defeated. A
writ petition under article 226 is essentially different from a suit and it
would be incorrect to assimilate and incorporate the procedure of a suit into
the proceedings of a petition under article 226. The High Court is not deprived
of this jurisdiction to entertain a petition under article 226 merely because
in considering the petitioner's right of relief, questions of fact may fall to
be determined. [80D-G] 72 Gunwant Kaur v. Bhatinda Municipality A.I.R. 1970 SC
802 relied on.
(2)It is difficult to accede to this
contention. Normally writ petitions, are decided on the basis of affidavits.
In some cases, however, where it is not
possible for a court to arrive at a definite conclusion on account of there
being affidavits of either side containing 'allegations and counter-allegations
it would not only be desirable but in the interest of justice, it is the duty
also of the court to summon a deponent for cross-examination in order to arrive
at the truth. The fact that the court permits cross examination of some of the
deponents in a petition does not warrant the proposition that the court is
bound to permit cross examination of each and every one of the deponents whom a
party wishes to cross examine. [81C-D] Barium Chemicals Ltd. & Anr v. The
Company Law Board & ors.
[1966] Supp. S.C.R. 311 on p. 353, referred
to.
In the present case the discretion exercised
by the High Court in selecting for cross-examination those deponents whom it
considered to be crucial was proper and judicious.
No prejudice was caused to any of the parties
by the procedure adopted by the High Court. [82A-B] (3)From the fact that the
High Court had permitted cross examination of only some deponents it did not follow
that the High Court was precluded from taking into consideration the affidavits
of other deponents. Order permitting cross examination of some of the deponents
did not have the effect of obliterating from record the affidavits of other
deponents. There is nothing wrong in the approach of the High Court in relying
upon the affidavits of deponents who were not cross-examined on a conspectus of
the entire circumstances of the case. 182H] (4)The submission must be rejected.
It may be a matter of mournful reflection but all the same it is the
acknowledgment of a stark reality that there has been in recent years in the
case of some elected representatives so much erosion of moral values that they
feel no compunction in repeatedly changing their loyalty and shifting their
allegiance from one party leader to the other. Such representatives have a
pliable conscience plainly because they succumb to III kinds of pressures and
yield to all kinds of temptations. They bring a touch of melodrama and the
kaleidoscopic nature of the local political scene is quite often a reflection
of the sombre activities of these representatives. Against the backdrop of such
activities there is nothing surprising or unusual in the conduct of the
Councillor, [83H] (5)There is no imperative requirement in the case of a motion
of no confidence that it should be passed on some particular ground. There is
nothing in the language of s.
36 of the Gujarat Municipalities Act which
makes it necessary to specify a ground when passing a motion of no confidence
against the President. Though according to the form prescribed the ground has
to be mentioned, it does not follow that the ground must also be specified when
a motion of no confidence is actually passed against a President.
[86A-B] There is a difference between a
motion of no confidence and a, censure motion. While it, is necessary in the
case of censure motion to set out the ground or charge on which it is based, a
motion of no confidence need not set out a ground or charge. A vote of censure
presupposes that the persons censured have been guilty of some impropriety or
lapse by act or omission. It may, therefore, become necessary to specify the
impropriety or lapse while moving a vote of censure. No such consideration
arises when a motion of no confidence is moved. [66C] Practice & Procedure
of Parliament 2nd Edition, by Kaul and Shakdher, p. 591 referred to.
Krishma lyer, J It acts enormously to
inconvenience, expense and delay to insist on oral evidence for proof of every
little relevant fact in judicial proceedings by suit or writ. Faith in viva
voice examination tested by severe cross-examination has sometimes 73 been
reduced to a legal superstitious. While screening the veracity of glib versions
on vital matters of controversy by telling cross-examination in court is
necessary, many facts.
either formal, non-controversal or
well-established otherwise, may well be proved by affidavit evidence. In a
civil case reliance upon statements made before the police is not merely
irrelevant but throws up suspicion because the police had no business to record
any statement, as the High Court has it self pointed out. [819E-F; 90A]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 1707 of 1973.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
Order dated 9th October 1973 of the Gujarat High Court in Spl. C. Appl.
No. 808 of 1973.
M.P. Amin, Piyush Amin, P. H. Parekh, S.
Bhandare, Matinju Jaitley and Bhandare Parekh & Co. for the appellant.
Respondent No. 1 appeared in person.
Vimal Dave and Kailash Mehta for respondent
No. 2.
R. H. Dhebar and M. N. Shrofj for respondent
No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Khanna J. Krishna Iyer J. gave a separate Opinion.
KHANNA, J. On a petition under article 226 of
the Constitution of India filed by Nandlal Khodidas Barot respondent No. 1 the
Gujarat High Court issued a writ of certiorari and quashed order dated June 9,
1973 of the Collector Mehsana, respondent No. 3, whereby it had been held that
the no confidence motion against Babubhai Muljibhai Patel appellant as the
President of Kalol Municipality had not been validly passed. The High Court
further held that the appellant had ceased to be President of that municipality
since May 10, 1973 and that since that date he was usurper of that office. A
writ of mandamus was also issued directing the appellant to refrain from
functioning as the President of the Kalol Municipality.
Direction was further issued to the Collector
to hold fresh elections to the post of the President of Kalol Municipality. The
appellant has filed this appeal by special leave against the above judgment of
the Gujarat High Court.
Kalol Municipality in district Mehsana has 25
councillors.
The appellant was elected President of the
said municipality with effect from November 1, 1970. The term of the President
is for a period of five years. On November 1, 1972 respondent No. 1 moved a
motion of no confidence against the appellant. Sixteen councillors belonging to
the grout) of respondent No. 1 voted for the motion and two councillors
belonging to the grout) of the appellant voted against it. The Vice President
of the municipality who was in the chair declared that the no confidence motion
had failed for want of two thirds majority of the total number of councillors.
In this view 17 councillors out of 25 constituted the requisite two-thirds
majority 74 contemplated by section 36 of the Gujarat Municipalities Act, 1963
(Gujarat Act No. 34 of 1964) which reads as under :
"36. Motion of no confidence. (1) Any
councillor of a municipality who intends to move a motion of no confidence
against its president or vice)-.president may give a notice thereof, in such
form as may be, prescribed by the State Government, to the municipality. If the
notice is supported by not less than one third of the total number of the then
councillors of the municipality, the motion may be moved.
(2)If the motion is carried by a majority of
not less than two thirds of the total number of the then councillors of the
municipality, the president or, as the case may be, the vice-president shall
cease to hold office after a period of three days from the date on which the
motion is carried unless he has earlier resigned; and thereupon the office held
by him shall be declared to be vacant.
(3)Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act or the rules made there under, the president, or as the case may be, the
vice president shall not preside over a meeting in which a motion of no
confidence against him is discussed; but he shall have the right to speak in or
otherwise take part in the proceedings of such meeting (including the right to
vote)." A writ petition was then filed by respondent No. 1 in the Gujarat
High Court to challenge the above ruling. A Division Bench of the High Court
after referring to section 36 of the Act held as per judgment dated April 2,
1973 that a motion of no confidence could be said to have been carried in case
of a municipality consisting of 25 councillors if at least 17 councillors voted
for such a motion.
On April 21, 1973 a requisition signed by 16
councillors, including respondent No. 1, was sent to the. President Kalol
Municipality for convening a special general meeting of the municipality to
consider a motion of no confidence against the appellant as the President of
that municipality on the following ground :
"Your act of writing false and concocted
proceedings of the meeting dated 27-3,-73 amounts to the crime of forgery and
is highly unbefitting your status as President of the Municipality." In
accordance with the above requisition, a meeting of the Kalol Municipality was
convened for May 6, 1973 at 6 p.m.
There are conflicting versions (if what
transpired in that meeting. According to the appellant, 13 councillors were
present in that meeting. One of them was the appellant and the other was
Chandulal Chhotalal Barot, Vice President of the municipality, who also belongs
to the 75 group of the appellant. Eleven others belonging to the opposite group
were present in that meeting. As the meeting was to consider a motion of no
confidence against the President, Chandulal Chhotalal Barot Vice President
presided over the meeting. The Vice President in the course of his ruling
observed that the ground which had been given in support of the motion of to
confidence was fabricated, false and without truth. It was further observed in
that ruling :
"I, therefore, rule out the cause
contained in this motion and declare that they are not relevant to the present
motion. However, I place this for voting without there being existence of any
cause." After reading out the ruling, the Vice President recorded a note
in respect of the minutes of that meeting and the same reads as under :
"The aforesaid ruling was read over in
the meeting and in taking votes on the motion without the aforesaid point, no
body showed hand in favour of the motion and there were two votes against the
motion, viz., (1) Shri B. M. Patel and (2) C. C. Barot. As there were not
legally sufficient number of votes, i.e., 17 votes in favour of the motion, the
said no confidence motion is not passed and is declared to have been rejected.
Dated 6-5-1973 time 6.15 p.m.
On today's business of the meeting being over
as above, the meeting is dissolved and having declared accordingly in the
Board, the members dispersed.
Date : 6-5-1973 Time: 6.15 p.m.
Sd/Barot Chandulal Chhotalal, Vice-President,
Kalol Municipality.,, As against the above version, according to respondent No.
1, 19 councillors were present in that meeting. They included the appellant.
Vice President Barot and two councillors Kantilal Chhaganlal Shah and Vithalbhai
Somabhai Patel, to whom reference would be made hereafter. What transpired in
that meeting according to respondent No. 1 was given in the note of councillor
N.S. Parmar who was alleged to have presided over the meeting after the walk
out of the appellant and the Vice President. The note of N. S. Parmar reads as
under "Today a Special General Meeting was called to discuss a motion of
no confidence against the President Shri B. M. Patel. As the no confidence
motion was to be discussed against the President Shri B. M. Patel, the Vice
President, Shri C. C. Barot had presided over the meeting. He (the 76
Vice-President) directed the Chief Officer Shri R. D. Barot as well as the
Secretary Shri Thakkar not to write the proceedings of today's meeting in the
proceeding book.
I shall make a note in the rough sheet
myself'.
The member raised a protest against this and
the protest having become severe and there being circumstances enabling the
meeting to pass a motion of no confidence as per the required legal two-thirds
majority, by the Chairman, Shri C. C. Barot, and the President Shri B. M. Patel
have walked out of the Council Hall. The other remaining members are present.
The chairman of today's meeting Shri C. C. Barot has not taken on hand the
motion of no confidence for discussion in today's meeting. He has also not
taken votes of the members as per law on the motion. There being a position of
the motion of no confidence being carried by the required legal majority, I
propose the name of Shri Narayanbhai Sadabhai Parmar to preside over the
meeting and to go ahead with the business of the meeting.
Proposed,by Girish M. Bhatt and Seconded by
Shah Rameshchandra Ramanlal.
The above motion being supported by
unanimously 17 members I preside over today's meeting and 'Lake on hand the
business of the agenda.
Sd.
N.S. PARMAR, Presiding Authority, KALOL
MUNICIPALITY." Later on May 6, 1973 Vice President Barot sent a telegram
to the Collector giving his version of the meeting. Report was also sent on the
same day, i.e. May 6, 1973 by R. D. Barot, Chief Officer Kalol Municipality to
the Collector stating that a resolution had been passed against the appellant
as President of the municipality. It was stated that a vacancy in the office of
the President of the municipality had arisen and election to that office be
held.
The appellant as the President of Kalol
Municipality convened a meeting of the municipality for May 18, 1973. A day
before that on May 17, 1973 respondent No. 1 filed the present petition under
article 226 of the Constitution in the Gujarat High Court praying for the issue
of a writ of quo warrant for ousting the appellant from the office of the
President of the Kalol Municipality and for declaring that the said office had
fallen vacant in view of the motion of no confidence having been passed on May
6, 1973. Prayer was also made that the appellant be directed not to preside
over the meeting fixed for May 18, 1973.
77 During the pendency of the petition before
the High Court, the' Collector of Mehsana to whom conflicting versions of the
proceedings of the meeting of May 6, 1973 had been sent held an inquiry and, as
per order dated June 9, 1973, came to the conclusion that Councillor Vithalbhai
Somabhai Patel was net present in the meeting held on May 6, 1973. Reliance in
this connection was placed upon the affidavit filed by Patel that he was not
present in that meeting. The Collector also took into account the fact that the
signatures of the 17 councilors who were alleged to be present in that meeting
had not been obtained. It was further observed that after the meeting presided
over by the Vice President had terminated, no meeting could be lega lly held
under the chairmanship of N. S. Parmar. The concluding part of the order of the
Collector reads as under :
"ln view of what is discussed above I
come to the conclusion that the alleged no confidence motion against the
President Shri B. M. Patel has not been validly passed. The very validity of
the meeting held under the chairmanship of Shri N. S. Parmar is doubtful and it
is beyond doubt that Shri V. S. Patel did not attend and vote fear no
confidence motion and thus the alleged motion was not supported and voted by
more than 2/3rd of the total number of councillors of Kalcl Municipality, the
office of the President has not, therefore, fallen vacant and hence no action
requires to be taken on communication of Shri R. D. Barot." After the
Collector had made the above order, the writ petition filed by respondent No. 1
was amended so as to include also a prayer for he quashing of the above order.
The above writ petition was resisted by the
appellant.
During the pendency of the writ petition, a
number of affidavits were filed on behalf of respondent No. 1 as well as on
behalf of the appellant. The number of persons who filed affidavits on behalf
of the appellant has been stated to be 27 and of those who did so on behalf of
respondent No.
to be 40. The affidavits filed on behalf of
respondent No.
1 included those of 16 councillors of Kalol
Municipality, while those filed on behalf of the appellant included those of
nine councillors respondent No. 1 also filed the affidavit of Babubhai Dahyabha
Chamar, local correspondent of Gujarat Samachar, a daily of Ahmedabad. Khamar,
according to respondent No. 1, was also present in that meeting. On September
19, 1973 the learned Judges of the High Court passed an interlocutory order for
the production of six persons who had filed affidavits on behalf of respondent
No. 1 and two persons Who had filed affidavits on behalf of the appellant for
cross-examinaon. The material part of that order reads as under :
"We have heard this petition which runs
into about 700 pages. We have noticed from the affidavits, on record that there
are sharp divisions amongst the councillors of the Kalol Municipality, amongst
the citizens of Kalol, amongst the employees of the Kalol Municipality and even
amongst the 78 press reporters. In order therefore that the situation may be
cleared and more elucidation of the problem with which we are concerned may be had
on record it is necessary that some of the principal deponents. who have made
affidavits in this case on either side, should be cross-examined by the
opposite party. (1) Husseinmiya Hasammiya Sayed, (2) Revabhai Lalabhai Parmar,
(3) Babulal Somchand Shah, (4) Shantiben Ramachandra Barot, (5) Kantilal
Chhaganlal Shah and (6) Babubhai Dahyabhai Khamar have made affidavits in
favour of the petitioner. The first five, persons are the councillors of the
Kalol Municipality who, according to the petitioner, were present at the
meeting of the Municipality held on 6th May 1973 when motion of the
Municipality against the Chairman respondent No. 1 was moved. According to the
petitioner, they had voted for the no confidence motion. According to the
respondent No. 1, they were absent and, therefore, they could not vote for the
no confidence motion. It is, therefore, necessary to subject those five
witnesses to cross-examination by the respondent No. 1. The sixth person
Babubhai Dahyabhai Khamar, the local correspondent of 'Gujarat Samachar' daily
of Ahmedabad, claims in his affidavit to have entered the Council Hall of the
Kalol Municipality and to have watched the proceedings. He is an independent
man.
Affidavits have been made on behalf of the
respondent No. 1 to show that he was not allowed by the police to enter the
Municipal Hall and to watch the proceedings. If he had really watched the
proceedings of the meeting of the Kalol Municipality on 6th May 1973, his
evidence would go a long way in helping us to decide the issue before us. It
is, therefore, necessary that he should be subjected to cross-examination by
the respondent No. 1. We, therefore, direct that the petitioner shall produce
the aforesaid six persons before this Court at 11 O'clock on 20-9-1973 for cross
examination by the respondent No. 1.
It is the case of the petitioner that
Vithalbhai Somabhai Patel, a councillor of Kalol Municipality, was present at
the said meeting of the Kalol Municipality and had voted for the no confidence
motion.
Vithalbhai Somabhai Patel denies that fact
and also denies his presence at that meeting altogether.
Candulal Chhotalal Barot, Vice-Chairman of
the Kalol Municipality had presided over the aforesaid meeting of the Kalol
Municipality and, according to him, no confidence motion was not carried
because two votes were cast against it and none had voted in its favour.
He is a material witness. He has made
affidavit in favour of the respondent No. 1.
Interests of justice require that Vithalbhai
Smabhai Patel and Chandulal Chhotalal Barot who have made affidavits in favour
of the respondent No. 1 should be offered by 79 the respondent No. 1 for
cross-examination by the petitioner. We, therefore, direct that the respondent
No. 1 shall produce these witnesses at 11 O'clock on 20th September, 1973, for
being cross-examined by the petitioner." As mentioned earlier, the
petition filed by respondent No. 1 was ultimately accepted by the High Court.
The High Court in the course of its judgment first went into the question
whether the Collector had jurisdiction to hold the inquiry to find out whether
the no confidence motion had been carried against the appellant and whether
vacancy in the post of the President of the Kalol Municipality had arisen.
It was held that the Collector had no jurisdiction
to make such inquiry and record the impugned order. Order dated June 9, 1973
was, therefore, held to be void and liable to be quashed. The High Court then
went into the question whether the order of the Collector was void on the
ground that it had been made in violation of the principles of natural justice.
The finding of the High Court in this respect was that there was not even a
semblance of natural justice in the inquiry which had been conducted by the
Collector and the same was vitiated by flagrant breach of all principles of
natural justice as the interested persons had not been heard. The High Court
then considered the material which had been brought on the file, including the
evidence of deponents who had been cross-examined, and came to the conclusion
that 17 councillors had voted for the no confidence motion against the
appellant in the meeting held on May 6, 1973. In the result the writ petition
was accepted and directions were given as mentioned above.
It may be mentioned that this Court initially
stayed the operation of the order of the High Court pending notice of motion.
Subsequently, as per order dated November 19, 1973 the interim stay order was
vacated. It was, however, made clear that fresh election to 'the office of the
President of the municipality would be held subject to the result of this
appeal. A meeting was thereafter held and respondent No. 1 was elected
President of the municipality. At present respondent No. 1 is acting as the
President of the municipality subject to the result of this appeal.
On behalf of the appellant his learned
counsel, Mr. Amin, has at the outset contended that as the dispute between the
parties in this case involved questions of fact, the High Court should not have
entertained the writ petition filed by respondent No. 1 but should have
referred the parties to a separate suit. This contention, in our opinion, is
not well founded. No plea was admittedly taken in the return filed on behalf
oft the appellant in reply to the writ petition that respondent No. 1 should be
directed to seek his remedy by means of a suit because of disputed questions of
fact.
In the absence of such a plea, the appellant,
in our opinion, cannot be heard to say that the High Court should have
relegated respondent No. 1 to the remedy of a suit.
Apart from that we find that the term of the
appellant as the President of the municipality would have expired in 1975. The
trial of a suit, in the very nature of things, would have taken considerable
time. Appeal and second appeal would have also been filed by the 80
unsuccessful party in the case. Had respondent No. 1 been directed to seek his
remedy by way of a suit, the relief secured by respondent No. 1 even if he had
succeeded in the suit would have been wholly illusory because by the time
respondent No. 1 would succeed in the litigation, the term of the office of the
President would have either already expired or be about to expire. The
appellant in that event would have continued as the President of the
municipality even though he had ceased to enjoy the confidence of the requisite
number of councillors and they had passed a motion of no confidence against
him. The entire concept of a democratic institution would thus have been set at
naught.
We agree with the observations of the High Court
that the purpose underlying the petition would have been completely defeated in
case respondent No. 1 had been relegated to the ordinary remedy of a suit and
that such remedy was neither adequate nor efficacious.
It is not necessary for this case to express
an opinion on the point as whether the various provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure apply to petitions under article 226 of the Constitution. Section 141
of the Code, to which reference has been made, makes it clear that the
provisions of the Code in regard to suits shall be followed in all preceding in
any court of civil jurisdiction as far as it can be made applicable. The words
"as far as it can be made applicable" make it clear that, in applying
the various provisions of the Code to proceedings other than those of a suit,
the court must take into account the nature of those proceedings and the relief
sought. The object of article 226 is to provide a quick and inexpensive remedy
to aggrieved parties. Power has consequently been vested in the High Courts to
issue to any person or authority, including in appropriate cases any
government, within the jurisdiction of the High Court, orders or writs,
including writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo
warrant and certiorari. It is plain that if the procedure of a suit had also to
be adhered to in the case of writ petitions, the entire purpose of having a
quick and inexpensive remedy would be defeated. A writ petition under article
226, it needs to be emphasised, is essentially different from a suit and it
would be incorrect to assimilate and incorporate the procedure of a suit into
the proceedings of a petition under article 226. The High Court is not deprived
of its jurisdiction to entertain a petition under article 226 merely because in
considering the petitioner's right of relief, questions of fact may fall to be
determined. In a petition under article 226 the High Court has jurisdiction to
try issues both of fact and law.
Exercise of the jurisdiction is no doubt
discretionary, but the discretion must be exercised on sound judicial
principles. When the petition raises complex questions of fact, which may for
their determination require oral evidence to be taken, and on that account the
High Court is of the view that the dispute should not appropriately be tried in
a writ petition, the High Court may decline to try a petition see Gunwant Kaur
v. Bhatinda Municipality(1).
If, however, on consideration of the nature
of the controversy, the High Court decides, as in the present case, that it (1)
A.I.R. 1970 S. C. 802.
81 It should go into a disputed question of
fact and the discretion exercised by the High Court appears to be sound and in
conformity with judicial principles, this Court would not interfere in appeal
with the order made by the High Court in this respect.
It has next been argued by Mr. Amin that as
an order was made by the High Court permitting cross-examination of scene of
the persons who had filed affidavits in the proceedings before it, the High
Court should not have restricted the right of cross-examination to only eight
of the persons mentioned in its order dated September 19, 1973 but should have
permitted cross-examination of all such deponents whom any party wanted to
cross-examine. We are unable to accede to this contention. Normally Writ
petitions are decided on the basis of affidavits. In some cases, however, where
it is not possible for the court to arrive at a definite conclusion on account
of there being affidavits of either side containing allegations and counter-allegations,
it would not only be desirable but in the interest of justice the duty also of
the court to summon a deponent for cross.examination in order to arrive at the
truth (see observations of Shelat J. in Barium Chemical'sLtd. & Anr.
v. The Company Law Board & Ors.(1). The
fact that the court permits cross-examination of some of the deponents in a
writ petition does not warrant the proposition that the court is bound to
permit cross-examination of each and every one of the deponents whom a party
wishes to cross-examine. In a case like the present where as many as 40 persons
filed affidavits in support of one party and 27 persons filed affidavits in
support of the opposite party, the High Court, in our opinion, was well
justified in the exercise of its discretion in selecting such persons whom it
considered to be really important and crucial for the purpose of cross examination.
The effect of permitting cross-examination was not that the High Court was
divested of all direction and control in the matter and was bound to call for
cross examination each and every deponent who was named by citlher party. We
have reproduced above the material part of carder dated September 19, 1973 and
it would appear there from that the High Court selected for cross-examination
five of those councillors who, according to respondent No. 1, were present in
the meeting wherein the motion of no confidence was alleged to have been passed
but who, according to the appellant were not present in that meeting. These
five councillors had filed affidavits in support of the case of respondent No.
1. In addition to these five councillors, the High Court selected Babubbai
Dahyabhai Khamar, local correspondent of Gujarat Samachar, who claimed to have
been present in the Council Hall at the time of the above meeting and where
sent a report about the proceedings of that meeting to the Gujarat Samachar.
From amongst the deponents who had filed affidavits in support of the case of
the appellant. the High Court selected for cross-examination Chandulal
Chhotalal Barot, Vice President of the municipality who, according to the
appellant, presided over that meeting as well as Councillor V. S. Patel, who
claimed that he was not present in the above meeting but who, (1) [1966] Sun.
S. C. R. 311 on p. 353.
L7-251 Sup. Cl/75 82 according to respondent
No. 1, was present in that meeting and had supported the motion of no
confidence. Looking to all the facts of the case, we are of the opinion that
the discretion exercised by the High Court in selecting for cross-examination
these deponents whom it considered to be crucial was proper and judicious. No
prejudice, in our opinion, was caused to any of the parties by the procedure
adopted by the High Court. We would therefore, hold that order dated September
19, 1973 made by the High Court does not suffer from any infirmity.
Mr. Amin then submits that the deponents
called for cross examination should have been examined-in-chief and thereafter
cross examined. The production of those witnesses simply for cross-examination
was not warranted by law. In this respect we, find that prayer which was made
by the appellant in application dated September 17, 1973 was as under :
"to order the opponent No. 1 to offer
for cross-examination Kantilal Chhaganlal Shah, Lilavatiben Kantilal Shah,
Mahmadbhai Badarbhai Chauhan and Naranbhai Sadabhai Parmar and Nusenmiya
Hasanmiya Saiyad who have sworn affidavits in support of the petitioner or in
the alternative to issue summons to them to attend this Hon'ble Court for being
cross examined on behalf of the petitioner;" It would appear from the
above that all that the appellant himself prayed in his application was that
the deponents mentioned by him should be offered for cross-examination and not
that those witnesses should be examined-in-chief and thereafter cross-examined.
No grievance could, therefore, have been made by the appellant if the deponents
had not been examined-in-chief but had been simply cross-examined.
As things however are we find that when the
deponents concerned were produced in court, they were examined-in chief and
thereafter there was cross-examination. In the course of their
examination-in-chief the deponents stated about their having sworn their
affidavits and about the correctness of the contents of those affidavits. It
might in the circumstances have appeared to 'be unnecessary duplication to ask
those deponents to repeat what had been stated by them in their affidavits.
We are also not impressed by the argument of
Mr. Amin that as cross-examination of only 8 deponents had been permitted, the
affidavits of others who were not cross-examined could not be taken into
consideration. The High Court permitted cross-examination of such of the
deponents in respect of whom it came to the conclusion that their
cross-examination was essential for arriving at the truth of the matter. It did
not, however, follow from that the High Court was precluded from taking into
consideration the affidavits of other deponents. Order permitting
cross--examination of some of thedeponents did not have the effect of
obliterating from record the affidavits of other deponents and wefind nothing
wrong in the approach 83 of the High Court in relying upon the affidavits of
deponents who were not cross-examined it on conspectus of the entire
circumstances of the case it found the averments in those affidavits to be
true.
Mr. Amin has next challenged the correctness
of the finding of the High Court that 17 councillors hid supported the motion
of no confidence. It is submitted that the version of he appellant regarding
what transpired in the meeting of May 6, 1973 is correct. The High Court,
according to the learned counsel, was in error in relying upon the version of
respondent No. 1. In particular, Mr. Amin submits that V. S. Patel councillor
was not present in that meeting. The presence of Councillor Kantilal Chhaganlal
Shah in the 'meeting has also been questioned. In this respect we find that the
High Court has relied upon the affidavits of 16 councillors who in the course
of their affidavits stated that 17 councillors including those councillors
themselves had voted in the meeting held on May 6, 1973 in support of the
motion of no confidence. Out of those 16 councillors, 15 were admittedly in
Kalol on that day. They having signed the. motion of no confidence, there was,
in the opinion of the High Court, no reason why they should not be present in
that meeting. As regards the presence of Councillor Kantilal Chhaganlal Shah,
the High Court relied upon his affidavit wherein he stated that he was present
in the meeting and had voted in support of the motion of no confidence and
found that his deposition had not been shaken in cross-examination. Regarding
Councillor V. S. Patel about whom the case of respondent No. 1 was that he had
supported the motion of no confidence while that of the appellant was that he
was not present in the meeting, the High Court observed that the material on
record pointed to the conclusion that he had supported the motion of no
confidence. The High Court in this context relied upon the version given by
Chief Officer R.D. Barot, who was admittedly present in that meeting, as well
as the statement of Babulal Dahyabhai Khamar, press correspondent. After having
heard Mr. Amin at considerable length, we find no sufficient ground to
interfere with the appraisement of the depositions and other material on record
by the High Court.
Mr. Amin, however, submits that Councillor V.
S. Patel had been supporting the appellant in the past. Patel also filed on May
8, 1973 an affidavit in support of the appellant in the course of which he
denied that he was present in the above meeting or that he had supported the
motion of no confidence. It is urged that as V. S. Patel was a supporter of the
appellant it is most unlikely that he would vote in favour of the motion of no
confidence against the appellant.
We are unable to accede to this submission.
It may be a matter of mournful reflection but all the same it is the
acknowledgement of a stark reality that there has been in recent years in the
case of some elected representatives so much erosion of moral values that they
feel no compunction in repeatedly changing their loyalty and shifting their
allegiance from one party leader to the other. Such representatives have a
pliable conscience plainly because they succumb to all kinds of pressures and
yield to all kinds of temptations. They bring a 84 touch of melodrama and the
kaleidoscopic nature of the local Political scene is quite often a reflection
of the sombre activities of these representatives. Against the backdrop of such
activities we find nothing surprising or unusual in the conduct of Councillor
Patel.
It may be mentioned that respondent No. 1 has
brought on record material as would indicate the circumstances under which V.
S. Patel chose to support the motion of no confidence. Soon after the. decision
of the Gujarat High Court on April 2, 1973 that a motion of no confidence' to
succeed against the President should be supported by at least 17 councillors,
the residents of ward No. 7 in Kalol held a meeting. V. S. Patel, who along
with two others had been elected to the municipality from that ward, was
admittedly present in that meeting. Some of the persons present in that
meeting, according to Patel, asked him to work in unison with the majority
group which was led by respondent No. 1. It seems that it was as a result of
the pressure which was brought to bear upon Patel in that meeting that he
supported the motion of no confidence.
After the meeting of May 6, 1973 Patel again
seems to have changed his mind and joined the group of the appellant.
There is one important circumstance which
tends to show that the version of respondent No. 1 with regard to what
transpired in the above meeting is nearer the truth. In the earlier meeting
which was held on November 1, 1972, a motion of no confidence against the
appellant had been supported by 16 councillors. The Gujarat High Court by its
judgment dated April 2, 1973, held that the motion of no confidence against the
appellant could succeed only if it was supported by at least 17 councillors. In
view of that decision, it is most unlikely that 16 councillors would have sent
notice of motion of no confidence on April 21, 1973 unless they had been
assured of the support of a seventeenth councillor.
Otherwise it would have been a sheer exercise
in futility for the 16 councillors to repeat the performance of what had taken
place in the meeting of November 1, 1972. We therefore find nothing improbable
in the stand taken on behalf of respondent No. 1 that V. S. Patel had pledged
his support to the motion of no confidence and that he actually supported that
motion in the meeting held on May 6, 1973.
Argument has also been advanced that no
signature of the councillors present were taken in the meeting held on May 6,
1973. It is stated that respondent No. 1 had been insisting on taking such
signatures in the past and that in two or three meetings signatures of the
councillors were, in fact obtained. The omission to take the signatures in the
meeting of May 6, 1973, according to Mr. Amin, was deliberate so that the
correct number of councillors present in the meeting might not be known. We are
unable to accept this argument. There is no statutory provision in the Gujarat
Municipalities Act which requires that the signatures of the members attending
a meeting must be obtained. It is true that respondent No. 1 had been insisting
85 on obtaining signatures of the councillors present in a meeting but his plea
in this respect was generally not accepted. No signatures were admittedly taken
in the meeting held on November 1, 1972 when 16 councillors supported the
motion of no confidence against the appellant.
It is conceded by Mr. Amin that on two or
three occasions when signatures of councillors attending the meeting were
taken, this was done at the commencement of the meeting. As it was Vice
President Barot, who initially presided over the meeting held on May 6, 1973,
the responsibility to take the signatures at the commencement of the meeting
could at the, best be that of Vice President Bar to and not that of respondent
No. 1. Respondent No. 1 in our opinion, cannot be penalised for the omission of
Vice President Barot who admittedly belongs to the group of the appellant.
It has next been argued on behalf of the
appellant that aground had been specified in notice dated April 21, 1973 which
was sent by 16 councillors for convening the meeting to consider the motion of
no confidence. The councillors in that meeting, according to the submission,
had to stick to that ground and could not depart from it in passing the motion
of no confidence. With a view to show that a different ground was set up in
passing the motion of no confidence, our attention has been invited to the
minutes of that meeting which when translated into English read as under :
"Shri B. M. Patel, the President of the
Kalol Municipality has been put to a minority since 12th October 1972. Since
then he has not been allowing the Municipal Administration to run in keeping
with the provisions of law.
Moreover, in the special General Meeting of
the 1st November, 1972, a motion of no confidence was passed against Shri B. N.
Patel by 16 votes against 2 votes, but according to law a motion of no
confidence can be passed by two-third votes of the total number i.e., 17 votes
and at present 17 members declare their no confidence against the President on
the present motion of no confidence against the President of the Kalol
Municipality." The above contention has been controverted by respondent
No.1 who has argued the appeal personally. It is no doubt true, submits
respondent No. 1, that in the earlier part of the minutes there is a recital
that the appellant had not been allowing the municipal administration to
function in accordance with the provision* of law, the concluding part of the
minutes shows that "17 members declare their no confidence against the
President on the present motion of no confidence". Respondent No. 1
accordingly submits that the, ground which had been specified in the notice for
the meeting was adhered to when passing the motion of no confidence. Although
the stand taken on behalf of respondent No. 1 in this respect does not appear
to be bereft of force, we need not express an opinion on this aspect of the
matter because the contention advanced by the appellant can be repelled on
another ground, namely, that there is no imperative requirement in the case of
a motion of no confidence that it should 86 be passed on some particular
ground. There is nothing in the language of section 36 of the Gujarat Municipalities
Act reproduced earlier which makes it necessary to specify a ground when
passing a motion of no confidence against the President. It is no doubt true
that according to the form prescribed the ground for the, motion of no
confidence has to be mentioned in the notice of intention to move a motion of
no confidence. It does not, however, follow therefrom that the ground must also
be specified when a motion of no confidence is actually passed against a
President. It is pertinent in this context to observe that there is a
difference between a motion of no confidence and a censure motion. While it is
necessary in the case of a censure motion to set out the ground or charge on
which it is based, a motion of no confidence need not set out a ground or charge.
A vote of censure presupposes that the persons censured have been guilty of
some impropriety or lapse by act or omission. It may, therefore, become
necessary to specify the impropriety or lapse while moving a vote of censure.
No such consideration arises when a motion of no confidence is moved. Although
aground may be mentioned when passing a motion of no confidence, the existence
of a ground is not a prerequisite of a motion of no confidence. There is no
legal bar to the passing of a motion of no confidence against an authority in
the absence of any charge of impropriety or lapse on the part of that
authority. The essential connotation of a no confidence motion is that the
party against whom such motion is passed has ceased to enjoy the confidence of
the requisite majority of members. We may in the above context refer to page
591 of Practice & Procedure of Parliament, Second Ed. by Kaul and Shakdher.
wherein it is observed as under :
"A no-confidence motion in the Council
of Ministers is distinct from acensure motion.
Whereas, a censure motion must set out the
grounds or charge on which it is based and is moved for the specific purpose of
censuring the Government for certain policies and actions, a motion of
no-confidence need not set out any grounds on which it is based.
Even when grounds are mentioned in the notice
and read out in the House, they do not form part of the no-confidence
motion." Mr. Amin has next assailed the finding of the High Court that the
Collector had no jurisdiction to make an inquiry and pass order dated June 9,
1973. It is, in our view, not necessary to express an opinion on this aspect of
the matter as Mr. Amin has not during the course of arguments assailed the
other finding of the High Court that the procedure adopted by the Collector was
violative of the principles of natural justice. In view of this latter finding,
the order of the Collector dated June9,. 1973 was in any event liable to be
quashed.
Mr. Dhebar, who has appeared on behalf of the
Collector, has submitted that the Collector was not actuated by any oblique
motive in passing order dated June 9, 1973. We agree with Mr. Dhebar that there
is no cogent material on record to show that the Collector 87 A was actuated by
any oblique motive when he passed that order. The fact that the procedure
adopted by him was violative of the principles of natural justice might show an
error of judgment, but from that it cannot be inferred that the Collector was
motivated by ulterior consideration.
There is, in our opinion, no force in the appeal
which fails and is dismissed with costs.
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The social lesions on the
political tissues of our body politic are of as much pathological significance,
in this case, as the legal issues and the weaknesses of the court system,
thrown up by the mini-crisis in a small municipal council which forms the
subject-matter of this case. My learned brother Khanna, J. has discussed the
points of law and questions of fact directly arising from the case and I am
privileged to agree wholly with his observations, reasoning and result.
Nevertheless, I append this hesitant addendum, turning the focus on certain
aspects fundamental to our system which this appeal reveals.
We were told at the Bar that the case
consumed eighteen long days of a Division Bench of the High Court (the Judges
observe that counsel addressed them on the background of the case for about
nine hours) and we see before us a few hundred pages of judgment, although the
facts are relatively few, being confined to the passage of a non-confidence
motion, with the requisite majority, and the law limited to a few sections of
the relevant municipal statute.
This systemic prolixity highlights the need,
in this country, where litigation is notoriously dilatory and the docket
backlog in courts explosive, for developing better business management methods
in the forensic area, more modern court methodology and streamlining of
procedure, lest the people should get disenchanted with that noble institution,
the Judicature, whose credibility is the corner-stone of the rule of law and of
organised Government.
Indeed, it is trite, law that disputed
questions of fact are not usually decided under Art. 226, but it is a common
phenomenon that litigation spiraling up to the highest court from below gets
stalled so much that victor and vanquished are stultified in the end. The
present case is an instance in point of the unhealthy but imblamable 88
tendency of parties to rush directly to the High Court for speedy redress where
the normal remedy is a suit in a lower civil court.
The learned Judges note, that having regard
to the controversy and quantum of evidence, the petitioner (the respondent
before us) should have been relegated to a suit, but desist from that course on
the express ground that the trial of the suit would consume consider,,, able
time and "then there will be an appeal to the District Court against the
decision of the civil court. The appeal to the District Court will be followed
by a second appeal to the High Court.
The trial of the suit and the appeals to the
District Court and the High Court will certainly take a very long time".
Cynically, the High Court adds : "The
courts of law, while upholding the rule of law, cannot defeat it by the
procrastination of litigations". I agree that, in the present case, had
the aggrieved party been driven to the hierarchy of courts, he would have lost,
not on the merits, but by the sands of time running out before ultimate victory
was in sight. Time and tide do not wait for the tardy course of Indian justice
and. if the appellant had really forfeited the confidence of the councillors
(as we have held), he should not be allowed to cling on to the President's
office in the confidence that our slow-motion Court system would take a few
years for processing final legal justice, hopefully helping him through his
unmerited full term. The High Court has observed about this aspect of the case
: "The anti-democratic situation in a democratic institution will, under
these circumstances, be fostered and perpetuated by litigations in
courts." These words of robed experience are a reflection on the mechanics
and dynamics of our forensic system and suggest radical, not peripheral,
technological reforms and scientific re-organisation of court-management.
Largely this is the responsibility of the legislature and partly of the courts.
Counsel for the appellant expressed shock
about reliance on affidavits by the High Court without the affiants being
tested by cross-examination. Reasons for this course have been adduced by the
High Court and we have found no legal flaw therein. On the contrary, I wish to
emphasise that it adds enormously to inconvenience, expense and delay to insist
on oral evidence for proof of every little relevant fact in judicial
proceedings by suit or writ. Faith in viva voice examination tested by severe
cross-examination has sometimes been reduced to a legal super situation. While
screening the veracity of glib versions on vital matters of controversy by
telling cross-examination in court is necessary, many facts, either formal,
non-controversial or well89 established otherwise, may well be Proved by
affidavit evidence. Breaking tradition and introducing the system of
affidavits, verified statements and certificates in many areas of judicial
enquiry, leaving a discretion to the court to call the author into count is an
experiment well worth making, by reform of our law of evidence and procedure as
is being attempted in other countries. Written hearsay has ceased to be
anathema in Anglo-American or Socialist countries and in our country of
distance, poverty and delay, procession changes in this direction may lessen
cost and add speed. Not only is the grievance of the appellant on this score
chimerical, the length of time taken n this case before the High Court is
sufficient to warrant my observations for serious legislative consideration.
The learned Judges of the High Court have
frankly stated that they have, inter alia, relied on 'statements made before
the police (vide p. 99 of Vol. III of the appeal record). It is surprising that
a court should, in a civil case, rely upon statements made before the police.
It is not merely irrelevant, but throws up suspicious because the police had no
business to record any statement as the High Court itself has, in another
place, pointed out. The learned Judges, for instance, have stated :
"Though there was no complaint or information at that time either from
respondent No. 1 or from any member of his group about what respondent No. 1
alleges to have happened on May 5, 1973, the police had taken interest in the
matter and started an enquiry on their own." Some inscrutable purpose has
animated the police officers to investigate into what was altogether beyond
their pale. If such unwarranted police intrusions into municipal doings were left
uncriticised, the peril to the citizen and to public institutions is obvious.
It strikes me that the State Government will enquire into bow such officious
police interference occurred and whether there was any sinister savor about it.
Our elected local bodies are expected to be
self-governing unit (Art. 40 of the Constitution). If these, grass-roots
institutions pervert themselves, small wonder that Power at higher levels,
betrays popular trust. In the present case, certain incontrovertible facts need
mention to appreciate my apprehensions about this tiny municipal administration
having become a play thing of factious politics with undercurrents of personal
conflicts and overtones of economic interests.
The Kalol Municipality is a small town and
the wheels of its politics are alleged to be linked with the economics of an
industrial 90 unit-the Navjivan Mills. While rival versions are asserted before
us (neither, if true, being complimentary), it is pertinent that, out of a
strength of 25 one of the councillors is a peon of the Mill, three of them
other employees and a fifth, connected with it. Both sides allege, although
with conflicting projections, that between the Presidential election in 1970
and the toppling tremors within two years, the estrangement between the Mill
management and the appellant had developed. While the Mill group voted with the
appellant to elect him President, they swung to oust him from office in May
1972. Without examining the veracity of either party's version, one may express
the hunch that the economic interests of that industry must have had some sort
of influence over the working of the Kalol Council.
From the inception, the appellant and the 1st
respondent, have been fighting for power end, in the first round, the former
won, on November 1, 1970. Nevertheless, some councillors appear to have
concentrated on power-grab and, as part of this political circus, created
confusion at municipal meetings. It is equally clear, from the judgment of the
High Court "that in respect of quite a good number of meetings of the
municipality held since October 12, 1972 different sets of minutes have been
maintained by respondent no. 1 on the one hand and by the petitioner's group,
on the other hand". The Court has further stated that the appellant,
apprehensive of his eroding majority had ruled out many motions. "He has
converted them rule-couts) into an instrument to negative, the will of the
majority and to cajole them into submitting to him. We are constrained to say
that there cannot be an uglier, more distasteful, more disagreeable and more
distorted form of democracy than one we have seen on evidence in the civic
affairs of Kalol. The town has been helplessly witnessing unseemly duels city
fathers which have brought all progress and norm-,if administration to a
standstill. It also appears from the record of the case 'that no meeting of the
municipality could be held except under police protection." The
fluctuating fortunes and the fluid loyalties emerging from the diary of events
makes disturbing reading. The learned Judges of the High Court notice that
while the petitioner-appellant defeated respondent no. 1 on November
1. 1970 that event sparked off, not
collective functioning for the common good, but combats for group cornering of
positions. "On December 10, 1970 Kalol Municipality adopted a motion for
disqualifying the petitioner (respondent no. 1 here) from the councillor-ship
and passed it". However, "on June 1972, a resolution was passed by 23
councillors of Kalol Municipality voting against 91 the petitioner (1st
respondent herein) being disqualified by the State Government". We have it
further from the judgment of the court below that "on October 12, 1972
respondent no.
1 (appellant before us') admittedly lost his
majority. On December 4, 1972 a resolution came up for consideration before the
Municipality to reduce the term, of respondent No. 1 (appellant herein), as
President of the Municipality, from 5 years to 2 years." The chaos in that
tiny cosmos is:
self-evident. Presumably some citizens were
exasperated at these happenings and "on February 18 a public meeting was
held in the Kalol Town Hall". A leaflet issued in connection with that
meeting mentions that "a tug-of-war has been going on in the Kalol
Municipality between two groups and that the meeting of the citizens was called
for the purpose of considering the situation arising out of it." From the
materials on record, it is legitimate to draw the inference that the citizens'
meeting gave a mandate to some councillors to act with the majority, in the
interests of civic welfare. We have one more fact of grave import. An earlier
no-confidence motion passed by 16 councillors was held by the High Court to be
numerically deficient by one, to make up the 2/3rds majority. And at the second
no confidence motion, as we have already held, one who otherwise had supported
the appellant, switched loyalties.
These are distressing testimony to pollution
in public life.
Kalol is not alone nor is the politics of
jockeying a local syndrome. If the municipal microcosm has put self above
service, wearing the mask of public office, the national macrocosm will
eventually magnify the vice; and once popular mistrust of democracy spreads,
voices in the whispering gallery will be heard "Mischief. thou art afoot,
take what course thou wilt." If this small municipality needs policemen to
hold its meetings, periodically exercise its, If in the fine art of defection
and false minutes perhaps allows the interests of a Mill to sway its affairs
and compels the holding of public meetings to command its elected
representatives to behave themselves, political democracy is moving towards the
evening of long shadows.
Laws and Courts are not the remedy for this
malady, but better men and basic mortality when ballots are sought.
"Remember," said John Adams,
remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts and.
92 murders itself. There never was a
democracy that did not commit suicide."(1) The appeal we are dismissing is
sociolegally sympathematic.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
(1) Quoted by Hidayatullah, J. (as he then
was) in "Democracy in India and the Judicial Process-Lajpatrai Memorial
Lecture Series 1965 Asia Publishing House p. 16.
Back