Jyoti Basu & Ors Vs. Debi Ghosal
& Ors [1982] INSC 26 (26 February 1982)
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA
(J) PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION: 1982 AIR 983 1982 SCR (3) 318 1982
SCC (1) 691 1982 SCALE (1)115
CITATOR INFO :
F 1983 SC1311 (7,16) R 1984 SC 135 (8) RF
1985 SC 150 (26) E 1985 SC1133 (20) F 1987 SC1577 (14)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act 1951, Ss. 82
and 86 (4) Election Petition-Parties to-Who are-Corrupt practice alleged
against person who is not a candidate-Such person whether can be impleaded as
respondent.
Election Law-Right to elect-Neither
fundamental right nor Common Law right-Statutory right subject to statutory
limitations.
Code of Civil Procedure 1908 Or.1 r.
10-Concept of 'proper parties'-Applicability of to election petitions.
HEADNOTE:
The Representation of the People Act 1951, by
Section 81 prescribes who may present an election petition. It may be by any
candidate at such election, by any elector of the constituency, and by none
else. Section 82 clause (a) provides that the petitioner in an election
petition shall join as respondents to the petition the returned candidates if
the relief claimed is confined to a declaration that the election of all or any
of the returned candidates is void and all the contesting candidates if a
further declaration is sought that he himself or any other candidate has been
duly elected. Clause (b) of the section requires the petitioner to join as
respondents any other candidate against whom allegations of any corrupt
practice are made in the petition. Section 86 (4) enables any candidate not
already a respondent to be joined as respondent.
The first appellant in the appeal is the
Chief Minister and appellants 2 and 3 State Ministers. They had been impleaded
by the first respondent as parties to an election petition filed by him in the
High Court questioning the election of the second respondent to the House of
the People. It was averred in the election petition that the Chief Ministers
and the State ministers who were impleaded as parties to the election petition
had colluded and conspired with the returned candidate to commit various
alleged corrupt practices. The Chief Minister and the other Ministers denied
the commission of the various alleged corrupt practices and claimed that the election
petitioner was not entitled to implead them as parties to the election
petition, as they were not candidates at the election. They filed an
application before the High Court to strike out their names from the array of
parties in the election petition. It was dismissed on the ground that the
appellants were proper parties to the election petition and therefore their
names could not be struck out of the array of parties, 319 In the appeal to
this Court, it was contended on behalf of the appellants that the concept of a
proper party was not relevant in election law and that only those persons could
be impleaded as parties who were expressly directed to be so impleaded by the
Representation of the People Act 1951, and that they were entitled to be struck
out from the array of parties. On behalf of the first respondent it was
submitted that the appellants were proper parties to the election petition and
their presence was necessary for a complete, final and expeditious decision on
the questions involved in the action.
Allowing the Appeal,
HELD: 1. No one can be joined as a party to
an election petition otherwise than as provide by Section 82 and 86 (4) of the
Representation of the people Act 1951. A person who is not a candidate may not
be joined as a respondent to the election petition [331 C-D] In the instant
case the names of the appellants and the 7th respondent in the appeal are
directed to be struck out from the array of parties in the election petition.
[331 D]
2. A right to elect, fundamental though it is
to democracy, is, anomalously neither a fundamental right nor a Common Law
Right. It is a statutory right. So is the right to be elected, and the right to
dispute an election. Outside of statute, there is no right to elect, no right
to be elected, and no right to dispute an election. Statutory creations they
are, and therefore, subject to statutory limitation. An Election petition is
not an action at Common Law, nor in equity. It is a statutory proceeding to
which neither the Common Law nor the principles of Equity apply but only those
rules which the statute makes and applies. It is a special jurisdiction, and a
special jurisdiction has always to be exercised in accordance with the statute
creating it. Concepts familiar to Common Law and Equity must remain strangers
to Election Law unless statutorily embodied. A Court has no right to resort to
them on considerations of alleged policy because policy in such matters, as
those, relating to the trial of election disputes, is what the statute lays
down. In the trial of election disputes, Court is put in a straight jacket.
[326 F-H; 327 A-B]
3. The contest of the election petition is
designed to be confined to the the candidates at the election. All others are
excluded. The ring is closed to all except the petitioner and the candidates at
the election. Such is the design of the statute. [328 C]
4. While clause (b) of section 82 obliges the
petitioner in an election petition to join as a respondent any candidate
against whom allegations of any corrupt practice are made in the petition, it
does not oblige the petitioner to join as a respondent any other person against
whom allegations of any corrupt practice are made. While any candidate not
already a respondent may seek and, if he so seeks, is entitled to be joined as
a respondent under section 86 (4), any other person cannot, under that
provision seek to be joined as a respondent, even if allegations of any corrupt
practice are made against him.
[328 A-C] 320
5. The concept of `proper parties' is and
must remain alien to an election dispute under the Representation of the People
Act, 1951. Only those may be joined as respondents to an election petition who
are mentioned in section 82 and section 86 (4) and no others. However desirable
and expedient it may appear to be none else shall be joined as respondents.
[328 D]
6. The provisions of the Civil Procedure Code
cannot be invoked to permit that which the Representation of the People Act
1951 does not permit. The Civil Procedure Code applies subject to the provisions
of the Representation of the People Act 1951 and any rule made thereunder.
Section 87 (1) expressly says so . When the Act enjoins the penalty of
dismissal of the petition for non-joinder of a party the provisions of the
Civil Procedure Code cannot be used as a curative means to save the petition.
[328 F-H; 329 A-C] Mohan Raj v. Surendra Kumar Taparia & Ors. [1961] 1 SCR
and R. Venkateswara Rao & Anr. v. Bekkam Narasimha Reddi & Ors. [1969]1
SCR 679, referred to.
7. Parliament has expressly provided that an
opportunity should be given to a person who is not a candidate to show cause
against being 'named' as one guilty of a corrupt practice. Parliament, however,
has not thought fit to expressly provide for his being joined as a party to the
election petition either by the election-petitioner or at the instance of the
very person against whom the allegations of a corrupt practice are made. The
right given to the latter is limited to show cause against being 'named' and
that right opens up for exercise when, at the end of the election petition
notice is given to him to show cause why he should not be 'named'. The right
does not extend to participation at all stages and in all matters, a right
which he would have if he is joined as a 'party' at the commencement. [329 E-G]
8 (i) The election petitioner cannot by joining as a respondent a person who is
not a candidate at the election subject him to a prolonged trial of an election
petition with all its intricacies and ramifications. [329-G] (ii) Mischievous
minded persons may harass public personages like the Prime Minister of the
country, the Chief Minister of a State or a political leader of a national
dimension by impleading him as a party to election petitions. All that would be
necessary is a seemingly plausible allegation, casually or spitefully made,
with but a facade of truth. To permit such a public personage to be impleaded
as a party to an election petition on the basis of a mere allegation, without
even prima facie proof an allegation which may ultimately be found to be
unfounded, can cause needless vexation to sush personage and prevent him from
the effective discharge of his public duties. It would be against the public
interest to do so. The ultimate award of costs would be no panacea in such cases,
since the public mischief cannot be repaired. Public Policy and legislative
wisdom both point to an interpretation that the provisions of the
Representation of the People Act 1951 does not permit the joining, as parties
of persons other than those mentioned in sections 82 and 86 (4). [329 H; 330
A-D] 321 9 (i) The legislative provisions contained in section 99 enables the
Court, towards the end of the trial of an election petition, to issue a notice
to a person not a party to the proceedings to show cause why he should not be
'named' is a sufficient clarification of the legislative intent that such
person may not be permitted to be joined as a party to the election petition.
[330 E-F] 9 (ii) If a person who is not a candidate but against whom allegations
of any corrupt practice are made is joined as a party he would also be entitled
to 'recriminate' under section 97. Such a construction of the statute would
throw the doors of an election wide open and convert the petition into a 'free
for all' fight. The necessary consequence would be an unending, disorderly
election dispute with no hope of achieving the goal contemplated by sec. 86 (6)
of the Act that the trial of the election petition should be concluded in six
months.
[330 H; 331 A-B]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 1553 of 1980.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated the 3rd July, 1980 of the Calcutta High Court in Election Petition
Case No. 1 of 1980.
Somnath Chatterjee, Rathin Das and Aninda
Mitter for the Appellants.
Sidhartha Shankar Ray, R.K. Lala and T.V.S.N.
Chari for Respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. The first appellant, Jyoti Basu, is the Chief Minister and
appellants two and three Budhadeb Bhattacharya and Hashim Abdul Halim, are two
Ministers of the Government of West Bengal. They have been impleaded by the
first respondent as parties to an election petition filed by him questioning
the election of the second respondent to the House of the People from the 19-
Barrackpore Parliamentary Constituency in the mid-term Parliamentary election
held in January, 1980. There were five candidates who sought election from the
Constituency.
Mod. Ismail, the first respondent, whose
candidature was sponsored by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) was,
elected securing 2,66,698 votes as against Debi Ghosal, a candidate sponsored
by the Indian National Congress led by Smt. Indira Gandhi who secured 1,62,770
votes. The other candidates Ramjit Ram, Robi Shankar Pandey and Bejoy Narayan
Mishra secured 25,734, 12,271 and 2,763 votes respectively.
The first respondent filed an election
petition in the High Court of 322 Calcutta questioning the election of the
second respondent Mohd. Ismail on various grounds. He impleaded the returned
candidate as the first respondent, and the other three unsuccessful candidates
respondents 2, 3 and 4 to the election petition. Besides the candidates at the
election, he impleaded several others as respondents. The District Magistrate
and Returning Officer was impleaded as the fifth respondent, Buddhadeb
Bhattacharya, the Minister for Information and Publicity, Government of West
Bengal as the sixth respondent. Jyoti Basu, the Chief Minister as the seventh
respondent, Md. Amin, the Minister of the Transport Branch of the Home
Department as the eighth respondent, Hashim Abdul Halim, the Minister of the
Legislative and the Judicial Department as the ninth respondent and the
Electoral Registration Officer as the tenth respondent. It was averred in the
election petition that the Chief Minister and the other Ministers of the
Government of West Bengal who were impleaded as parties to the election
petition had colluded and conspired with the returned candidate to commit
various alleged corrupt practices. Apart from denying the commission of the
various alleged corrupt practices, the Chief Minister and the other Ministers
claimed in their written statements that the election petitioner was not
entitled to implead them as parties to the election petition. They claimed that
as they were not candidates at the election they could not be impleaded as
parties to the election petition. The Chief Minister and two of the other
Ministers, Hashim Abdul Halim and and Buddhadeb Bhattacharya filed an
application before the High Court of Calcutta to strike out their names from
the array of parties in the election petition. The application was dismissed by
the Calcutta High Court on the ground that the applicants (appellants) were
proper parties to the election petition and, therefore, their names should not
be struck out of the array of parties. The appellants have preferred this
appeal after obtaining special leave of this Court under Art. 136 of the
Constitution.
Shri Somnath Chatterjee, learned counsel for
the appellant submitted that the concept of a proper party was not relevant in
election law and that only those persons could be impleaded as parties who were
expressly directed to be so impleaded by the Representation of the People Act,
1951. He claimed that in any case such persons were entitled to be struck out
from the array of parties. On the other hand Shri Sidhartha Shankar Ray, and
Shri R.K. Lala, learned counsel for the first respondent submitted that the
appellants were proper parties to the election petition and their presence was
323 necessary for a complete, final and expeditious decision on the questions
involved in the action.
To properly appreciate the rival contentions
it is necessary to refer to the relevant provisions of the Constitution of
India and the two Representation of the People Acts of 1950 and 1951.
First the Constitution. Part XV deals with
elections.
Art. 324 vests in the Election Commission the
superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of the Electoral
rolls and the conduct of all elections to Parliament and to the Legislatures of
the States. Art. 325 provides that there shall be one general electoral roll
for every territorial constituency and that no person shall be ineligible for
inclusion in such rolls on grounds only of religion, caste, sex or any of them.
Art. 326 provides that election to the House of the People and to the
Legislative Assemblies of States shall be on the basis of adult franchise. Art.
327 enables Parliament to make laws with respect to all matters relating to
elections to either House of Parliament or to the Houses of the Legislature of
a State. Art. 328 enables the Legislature of a State, if Parliament has not
made such legislation, to make laws with respect to all matters relating to
elections to the Houses of the Legislature of the State. Art. 329 bars
interference by Courts in electoral matters and clause (b), in particular,
provides that no election to either House of Parliament or to the House or
either House of the Legislature of a State shall be called in question except
by an election petition presented to such authority and in such manner as may
be provided for by or under any law made by the appropriate legislature.
Next, the Representation of People Act, 1950.
This Act provides for the delimitation of the Constituencies for the purpose of
elections to the House of the people and the legislatures of States, the
qualification of voters at such elections, the preparation of electoral rolls
and other matters connected therewith.
Last, the Representation of the People Act of
1951, Part VI of the Act deals with "Disputes regarding elections".
Sec. 79 defines various terms and expressions used in the Parts VI and VII.
Clause (b) defines a 'candidate' as meaning "a person who has been or
claims to have been duly nominated as a candidate at any election, and any such
person shall be deemed to have been a candidate as from the time when, with the
election in prospect, he began to 324 hold himself out as a prospective
candidate". Sec. 80 imposes a statutory ban on an election being called in
question except by an election petition presented in accordance with the
provisions of Part VI of the Act. Sec. 80-A vests in the High Court, the
jurisdiction to try an election petition. Sec. 81 provides for the presentation
of an election petition on one or more of the grounds specified in Sec. 100 (1)
and Sec. 101 by any candidate at such election or any elector who was entitled
to vote at the election. Sec. 82 is entitled "Parties to the
petition" and is as follows:
"82. Parties to the petition-A
petitioner shall join as respondents to his petition- (a) Where the petitioner,
in addition to claiming a declaration that the election of all or any of the
returned candidate is void claims a further declaration that he himself or any
other candidate has been duly elected, all the contesting candidates other than
the petitioner, and where no such further declaration is claimed, all the
returned candidates; and (b) any other candidate against whom allegations of
any corrupt practice are made in the petition".
Sec. 83 prescribes the contents of the
petition. Sec. 84 provides that a petitioner may, in addition to claiming a
declaration that the election of the returned candidate is void, claim a
further declaration that he himself or any other candidate has been duly
elected. Sec. 86 deals with trial of election petitions. Sub-Sec. (4) provides
for an application by a candidate who is not already a respondent to be joined
as a respondent. It is in these terms:
"(4) Any candidate not already a
respondent shall, upon application made by him to the High Court within
fourteen days from the date of commencement of the trial and subject to any
order as to security for costs which may be made by the High Court, be entitled
to be joined as a respondent".
Sec. 87 is concerned with the procedure
before the High Court and it is as follows:
325 "87 (1) Subject to the provisions of
this Act and of any rules made there under, every election petition shall be
tried by the High Court, as nearly as may be, in accor with the procedure
applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 to the trial of suits;
Provided that the High Court shall have the
discretion to refuse, for reasons to be recorded in writing, to examine any
witness or witnesses if it is of the opinion that the evidence of such witness
or witnesses is not material for the decision of the petition or that the party
tendering such witness or witnesses is doing so on frivolous grounds or with a
view to delay the proceedings.
(2) The provisions of the Indian Evidence
Act, 1872, shall, subject to the provisions of this Act, be deemed to apply in
all respects to the trial of an election petition".
Sec. 90 enables the returned candidate or any
other party to 'recriminate' in cases where in the election petition a
declaration that a candidate other than the returned candidate has been elected
is claimed. Sec. 98 prescribes the orders that may be made by the High Court at
the conclusion of the trial of an election petition. It provides that the High
Court shall make an order dismissing the election petition or declaring the
election of all or any of the returned candidates to be void and the petitioner
or any other candidate to have been duly elected. Sec. 99, enables the High
Court to make, at the time of making order under Sec.98, an order recording a
finding whether any corrupt practice has or has not been proved to have been
committed at the election, and the nature of corrupt practice; and the names of
all persons, if any, who have been proved at the trial to have been guilty of
corrupt practice and the nature of that practice. The proviso to Sec. 99 (1),
however, prescribes that no person who is not a party to the petition shall be
named in the order unless he had been given notice to appear before the High
Court to show cause why he should not be so named and he had also been given an
opportunity to cross examine any witness who had already been examined by the High
Court and had given evidence against him and an opportunity of calling evidence
in his 326 defence and of being heard. Sec. 100 enumerates the grounds on which
an election may be declared void. The High Court, it is said, among other
grounds, shall declare the election of a returned candidate void in cases where
corrupt practices are proved, where such corrupt practice has been committed by
a returned candidate or his election agent or by any other person with the
consent of the returned candidate or his election agent. Where the corrupt
practice has been committed in the interests of the returned candidate by an
agent other than his election agent, the result of the election in so far as it
concerns the returned candidate must also be shown to have been materially
affected. Sec. 101 prescribes the grounds for which a candidate, other than the
returned candidate may be declared to have been elected. Sec. 110 provides for
the procedure when an application for withdrawal of an election petition is
made to the Court. Sec. 110 (3) (c) says that a person who might himself have
been a petitioner may apply to the Court to be substituted as a petitioner in
place of the party withdrawing. Sec. 112 (3) provides for the continuance of
the election petition on the death of the sole petitioner in an election
petition or of the survivor of several petitioners, by any person who might
himself have been a petitioner and who applies for substitution within the
stipulated period.
The nature of the right to elect, the right
to be elected and the right to dispute an election and the scheme of the
Constitutional and statutory provisions in relation to these rights have been
explained by the Court in N.P.
Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer, Namakkal
Constituency & Ors.,(1) and Jagan Nath v. Jaswant Singh.(2) We proceed to
state what we have gleaned from what has been said, so much as necessary for
this case.
A right to elect, fundamental though it is to
democracy, is, anomalously enough, neither a fundamental right nor a Common Law
Right. It is pure and simple, a statutory right. So is the right to be elected.
So is the right to dispute an election. Outside of statute, there is no right
to elect, no right to be elected and no right to dispute an election. Statutory
creations they are, and therefore, subject to statutory limitation. An Election
petition is not an action at Common Law, nor in equity. It is a statutory
proceeding to which neither the Common Law nor the principles of Equity apply
but 327 only those rules which the statute makes and applies. It is a special
jurisdiction, and a special jurisdiction has always to be exercised in
accordance with the statutory creating it. Concepts familiar to Common Law and
Equity must remain strangers to Election Law unless statutorily embodied. A
Court has no right to resort to them on considerations of alleged policy
because policy in such matters as those, relating to the trial of election
disputes, is what the statute lays down. In the trial of election disputes,
Court is put in a straight jacket. Thus the entire election process commencing
from the issuance of the notification calling upon a constitutuency to elect a
member or members right up to the final resolution of the dispute, if any,
concerning the election is regulated by the Representation of the People Act,
1951, different stages of the process being dealt with by different provisions
of the Act. There can be no election to Parliament or the State Legislature
except as provided by the Representation of the People Act 1951 and again, no
such election may be questioned except in the manner provided by the
Representation of the People Act. So the Representation of the People Act has
been held to be a complete and self contained code within which must be found
any rights claimed in relation to an election or an election dispute. We are
concerned with an election dispute. The question is who are parties to an
election dispute and who may be impleaded as parties to an election petition.
We have already referred to the Scheme of the Act. We have noticed the
necessity to rid ourselves of notions based on Common Law or Equity. We see
that we must seek an answer to the question within the four corners of the
statute. What does the Act say? Sec. 81 prescribes who may present an election
petition. It may be any candidate at such election; it may be any elector of
the constituency; it may be none else.
Sec. 82 is headed "Parties to the
petition" and clause (a) provides that the petitioner shall join as
respondents to the petition the returned candidates if the relief claimed is
confined to a declaration that the election of all or any of the returned
candidates is void and all the contesting candidates if a further declaration
is sought that he himself or any other candidate has been duly elected. Clause
(b) of Sec. 82 requires the petitioner to join as respondent any other
candidate against whom allegations of any corrupt practice are made in the
petition. Sec. 86 (4) enables any candidate not already a respondent to be
joined as a respondent. There is no other provision dealing with 328 question
as to who may be joined as respondents. It is significant that while clause (b)
of Sec. 82 obliges the petitioner to join as a respondent any candidate against
whom allegations of any corrupt practice are made in the petition, it does not
oblige the petitioner to join as a respondent any other person against whom
allegations of any corrupt practice are made. It is equally significant that
while any candidate not already a respondent may seek and, if he so seeks, is
entitled to be joined as a respondent under Sec. 86 (4), any other person
cannot, under that provision seek to be joined as respondent, even if
allegations of any corrupt practice are made against him. It is clear that the
contest of the election petition is designed to be confined to the candidates
at the election.
All others are excluded. The ring is closed
to all except the petitioner and the candidates at the election. If such is the
design of the statute, how can the notion of 'proper parties' enter the picture
at all ? We think that the concept of 'proper parties' is and must remain alien
to an election dispute under the Representation of the People Act, 1951. Only
those may be joined as respondents to an election petition who are mentioned in
Sec. 82 and Sec. 86 (4) and no others. However desirable and expedient it may
appear to be, none else shall be joined as respondents.
It is said, the Civil Procedure Code applies
to the trial of election petitions and so proper parties whose presence may be
necessary in order to enable the Court 'effectually and completely to
adjudicate upon and settle all questions involved' may be joined as respondents
to the petitions. The questions is not whether the Civil Procedure Code applies
because it undoubtedly does, but only 'as far as may be' and subject to the
provisions of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and the rules made
there under. Sec. 87 (1) expressly says so. The question is whether the
provisions of the Civil Procedure Code can be invoked to permit that which the
Representation of the People Act does not. Quite obviously the provisions of
the Code cannot be so invoked. In Mohan Raj v. Surendra Kumar Taparia &
Ors.,(1) this Court held that the undoubted power of the Court (i.e. the Election
Court) to permit an amendment of the petition cannot be used to strike out
allegations against a candidate not joined as a respondent so as to save the
election petition from dismissal for non- joinder of necessary 329 parties. It
was said, "The Court can order an amendment and even strike out a party
who is not necessary. But where the Act makes a person a necessary party and
provides that the petition shall be dismissed if such a party is not joined,
the power of amendment or to strike out parties cannot be used at all. The
Civil Procedure Code applies subject to the provisions of the Representation of
the People Act and any rules made thereunder. When the Act enjoins the penalty
of dismissal of the petition for non-joinder of a party the provisions of the
Civil Procedure Code cannot be used as a curative means to save the
petition." Again, in K. Venkateswara Rao & Anr. v. Bekkam Narasimha
Reddi and Ors.,(1) it was observed:
"With regard to the addition of parties
which is possible in the case of a suit under the provisions of O.l r. 10
subject to the added party right to contend that the suit as against him was
barred by limitation when he was added, no addition of parties is possible in
the case of an election petition except under the provisions of Sub-sec. (4) of
Section 86".
The matter may be looked at from another
angle. The Parliament has expressly provided that an opportunity should be
given to a person who is not a candidate to show cause against being 'named' as
one guilty of a corrupt practice.
Parliament however, has not thought fit to
expressly provide for his being joined as a party to the election petition
either by the election-petitioner or at the instance of the very person against
whom the allegations of a corrupt practice are made. The right given to the
latter is limited to show cause against 'named' and that right opens up for
exercise when, at the end of the trial of the election petition notice is given
to him to show cause why he should not be 'named'. The right does not extend to
participation at all stages and in all matters, a right which he would have if
he is joined as a party at the commencement.
Conversely the election petitioner cannot by
joining as a respondent a person who is not a candidate at the election subject
him to a prolonged trial of an election petition with all its intricacies and
ramifications. One may well imagine how mischievous minded persons may harass
public personages like the Prime Minister of 330 the country, the Chief
Minister of a State or a political leader of a national dimension by impleading
him as a party to election petitions, all the country over. All that would be
necessary is a seemingly plausible allegation, casually or spitefully made,
with but a facade of truth. Everyone is familiar with such allegations. To
permit such a public personage to be impleaded as a party to an election
petition on the basis of a mere allegation, without even prime facie proof, an
allegation which may ultimately be found to be unfounded, can cause needless
vexation to such personage and prevent him from the effective discharge of his
public duties. It would be against the public interest to do so.
The ultimate award of costs would be no
panacea in such cases, since the public mischief cannot be repaired. That is
why public Policy and legislative wisdom both seem to point to an
interpretation of the provisions of the Representation of the People Act which
does not permit the joining, as parties, of persons other than those mentioned
in Sections 82 and 86 (4). It is not as if a person guilty of a corrupt
practice can get away with it. Where at the concluding stage of the trial of an
election petition, after evidence has been given, the Court finds that there is
sufficient material to hold a person guilty of a corrupt practice, the Court
may then issue a notice to him to show cause under Sec. 99 and proceed with
further action. In our view the legislative provision contained in Sec. 99
which enables the Court, towards the end of the trial of an election petition,
to issue a notice to a person not a party to the proceeding to show cause why
he should not be 'named' is sufficient clarification of the legislative intent
that such person may not be permitted to be joined as a party to the election
petition.
There is yet another view-point. When in an
election petition in addition to the declaration that the election of the
returned candate is void a further declaration is sought that any candidate
other than the returned candidate has been duly elected, sec. 97 enables the returned
candidate or any other party to 'recriminate' i.e. to give evidence to prove
that the election of such candidate would have been void if he had been a
returned candidate and a petition had been presented to question his election.
If a person who is not a candidate but against whom allegations of any corrupt
practice are made is joined as a party to the petition then, by virtue of his
position as a party, he would also be entitled to 'recriminate' under sec. 97.
Surely such a construction of the statute would throw the doors of an election
petition wide open and convert the petition into 331 a 'free for all' fight. A
necessary consequence would be an unending, disorderly election dispute with no
hope of achieving the goal contemplated by Sec. 86(6) of the Act that the trial
of the election petition should be concluded in six months. It is just as well
to remember that 'corrupt practice' as at present defined by Sec. 123 of the
Act is not confined to the giving of a bribe but extends to the taking of a bribe
too and, therefore, the number of persons who may be alleged to be guilty of a
corrupt practice may indeed be very large, with the consequence that all of
them may possibly be joined as respondents.
In view of the foregoing discussion we are of
the opinion that no one may be joined as a party to an election petition
otherwise than as provided by Sections 82 and 86(4) of the Act. It follows that
a person who is not a candidate may not be joined as a respondent to the
election petition.
Back