Ram Singh & Ors Vs. Col. Ram Slngh
[1985] INSC 170 (7 August 1985)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J) MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION: 1986 AIR 3 1985 SCR Supl. (2) 399
1985 SCC Supl. 611 1985 SCALE (2)1142
ACT:
Representation of the People Act 1951:
Corrupt Practice how should be Proved.
Evidence Act - Tape recorded statements -
When could be used as evidence - Safeguards to be taken in using tape recorded
evidence.
HEADNOTE:
In the general election to the State Assembly
held in 1982 the appellants and the respondents were the candidates.
The respondent was declared elected to the
Assembly. In their election petition, the appellants alleged that the
respondent was guilty of corrupt practice and booth capturing in that he went
to two polling booths along with 50 to 60 persons, armed with guns, sticks and
swords, threatened and pressurized the voters and as a result of the serious
threats held out by the respondent and his men the voters ran away without
exercising their franchise; that the respondent and his companions entered the
polling booths and terrorized the Polling Officer and polling agents, assaulted
the polling agents at gun point, snatched away the ballot papers and marking
them in the respondent's favour, cast the votes in the ballot boxes and thumb
marked the counter foil of ballot papers. They sought a declaration that the
respondents election was void under section 100 of the Representation of the
People Act 1951. A large number of witnesses were examined by both sides. The
Deputy Commissioner who was the Returning Officer of the constituency recorded
on a tape recorder the statements of same persons including the polling agents,
the Polling Officer and the respondent and of himself.
The High Court held that the evidence of the
witnesses and the petitioners on these points was not corroborated, no effort
was made by the petitioners to connect the respondent with the ownership of
vehicles purported to have been used by him, that the witnesses were drawing more
upon their imagination to make out stories about the detention of the persons
and forcible polling at that polling station by the respondent and that the 400
petitioners failed to prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt. A The court
also held that the role assigned to the respondent by the petitioners has not
been proved.
Dismissing the appeal ^
HELD: [Per Fazal Ali J, Sabyasachi Mukharji J
concurring and Varadarajan J dissenting] The appellants have failed to prove
their case that the respondent was guilty of indulging in corrupt practices.
[446 F] Clear and specific allegations with facts and figures regarding the
corrupt practices indulged in by the respondent have not been alleged in the
first part of the election petition. The petitioners should have given
definitive and specific allegations regarding the nature of fraud or the
corrupt practices committed by the respondent as briefly as possible in the
main part of the petition.
[407 E-F] The appellants have not established
that the respondent was present at the time of the incidents at the two booths.
Once this is not proved, the appellants have
failed. It is settled law that corrupt practices must be committed by the
candidate or his polling agent or by others with the implicit or explicit
consent of the candidate or his polling agent. Where the supporters of the
candidate indulged in corrupt practices on their own, without the authority
from the candidate the election cannot be voided, and this factor is
conspicuously absent in this case. It is also settled law that the charge of
corrupt practice has to be proved by convincing evidence and not merely by
preponderance of probabilities. As the charge of corrupt practice is in the
nature of a criminal charge, it is for the party who sets up the plea of undue
influence to prove it, to the hilt and the manner of proof should be the same
as in a criminal case.
[445 F-H] As regards the evidence recorded on
a tape Recorder or other mechanical process the preponderance of authorities is
in favour of the admissibility of the statements subject to certain safeguards
viz., (1) the voice of the speaker must be identified by the maker of the
record or by others who recognise his voice. Where the voice is denied by the
maker it will require very strict proof to determine whether or not it was
really the voice of the speaker. [414 E] (2) The voice of the speaker should be
audible and not distorted by other sounds or disturbances. [414 E] 401 (3) The
accuracy of the tape recorded statement has to be proved by the maker of the
record by satisfactory evidence.[414 F] (4) Every possibility of tampering with
or erasure of a part of the tape recorded statement must be ruled out; [414 G]
(5) The statement must be relevant according to the rules of evidence and [414
H] (6) The recorded cassette must be carefully sealed and kept in safe custody.
[415 A] R. v. Maqsud Ali [1975] 2 All E.R. 464 and B. v. Robson [1972] 2 All
E.R. 699, referred to.
In the instant case, the voices recorded at a
number of places are not very clear and there is noise while the statements
were being recorded by the Deputy Commissioner. A good part of the statement
recorded on the cassette has been denied not only by the respondent but also
the respondent's witnesses. No other witness has come forward to depose
identification of the voice of the respondent or of witnesses. [444 E] There
are erasures here and there in the tape and besides the voices recorded being
not very clear, lt is hazardous to base a decision on such evidence. The Deputy
Commissioner recorded the statements in violation of the instructions or the
Government and erred in not placing the recorded cassette in proper custody. He
kept it with himself without authority and therefore the possibility of
tampering with the statements cannot be ruled out. The transcript was prepared
in his office by his stenographer and when the transcript was being prepared
the Deputy Commissioner himself was absent from his office. The possibility of
its being tampered with by his stenographer or somebody else cannot be ruled
out. Respondents witnesses have denied the identity of their voices. The
recording was done in a haphazard and unsystematic manner. A conspectus of the
evidence of the witnesses shows that the evidence adduced by the respondent in
the court is much superior in quality than that adduced by the appellants. The
High Court was right in holding that the petitioners had failed to prove the
allegations of corrupt practice or booth capturing beyond reasonable doubt.
[441 E, 442 H-443 E] Sabyasachi Mukharji,J. concurring: While accepting the
tape recorded statements the court should proceed cautiously. The 402 evidence
should be examined on the analogy of mutilated documents. If the tape recording
is not coherent or distinct or clear it should not be relied upon. [502 B,D-E]
R. V. Maqsud Ali [1975] 2 All E.R. 464 and R. v. Robson [1972] 2 All E.R. 699,
referred to.
In the instant case, the tape recording was
misleading and could not be relied on because in most places it was
unintelligible and of poor quality. Therefore, its potential prejudicial effect
outweighs the evidentiary value of the recording. [504 C] Shri N. Sri Rama
Reddy etc. v. Shri V.V. Giri [1971]1 S.C.R. 399 and R.M. Malkani v. State of
Maharashtra [1973] 2 S.C.R. 417 M.Chenna Reddy v. V. Ramachandra Rao & Anr.
[1972] E.L.R. Vol. 40, 390; Ram Sharan Yadav v. Thakur Muneshwar Nath Singh
& Ors. [1984] 4 S.C.C. 649; C.A.No. 3419/81 decided on 29.11.84, referred
to.
It is settled law that the charge of corrupt
practice is in the nature of a criminal charge which if proved entails a heavy
penalty in the form of disqualification and that a more cautious approach must
be made in order to prove the charge of undue influence levelled by the
defeated candidate. In the instant case, it cannot be said that the appellants
had proved their case to the extent required to succeed. [506 D] Where the
question is whether the oral testimony should be believed or not the views of
the trial judge should not be lightly brushed aside, because the trial judge
has the advantage of judging the manner and demeanour of the witness which
advantage the Appellate Court does not enjoy. In view of the nature of the
evidence on record there is no reason to disagree with the appraisal of the
evidence by the trial judge. [506 G] Moti Lal v. Chandra Pratap Tiwari &
Ors. A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 1178 and Raghuvir Singh v. Raghuvir Singh Kushwaha A.I.R.
1970 S.C. 442, referred to.
Varadarajan J. dissenting : It is clear from
decided cases that tape recorded evidence is admissible provided the
originality and the authenticity of the tape are free from doubt. In the
instant case, there is no valid reason to doubt them. It is not reasonable to
reject the tape merely because some portions thereof 403 could not be made out
on account of noise and interference not only outside but also inside the
Polling Station. On the contrary under the circumstances of this case great
relevance has to be placed on the tape and its contents not only for
corroborating the evidence of the District Commissioner and the Presiding
Officer to the extent they go but also as resgestae evidence of the first part
of the incident. The Trial Judge was not justified in rejecting the tape record
and transcription. The appellants have proved satisfactorily and beyond reasonable
doubt the first part of the incident in one of the Polling Stations, that the
respondent went armed with a rifle with 25 or 30 companions and entered the
Polling Station with 4 or 5 armed companions and threatened the Presiding
Officer and others who were present there with the use of force and got some
ballot papers marked in favour of the respondent polled forcibly by his
companions in the ballot box and that they left the Polling Station on seeing
the villagers and the police coming towards the Polling Station. The
discrepancy in evidence regarding the time of the incident is not material.
[478 A-C, 483 E-484 A] Secondly, the Deputy
Commissioner recorded the conversation which he had with the presiding Officer
but some portion thereof was erased by his own voice by inadvertence. After
recording, his stenographer prepared the transcript in his office most of it
under his supervision and though he was temporarily absent to attend to some
other work he compared it with the original tape and found it to be correct.
The tape, the tape recorder and the transcript remained with him throughout and
were not deposited by him in the record room and there was not possibility of
tampering. [496 F-497 A] The respondent had managed to keep away from the court
material evidence by way of the original report of the Presiding Officer. He
had cited a person as his witness to depose about his case but did not examine
him for that purpose and had called him only for the purpose of production of
some record, without any oath being administered to him. He had denied to the
appellants the opportunity to cross-examine that witness. The respondent had
come forward with a new case of alleged booth capturing and forcible polling of
bogus votes after the appellants had completed the examination of their
witnesses to whom not such suggestion was made in the cross-examination. From
the evidence on record two views are not possible. The appellants have proved
beyond reasonable doubt that the respondent had committed the corrupt practices
alleged against him. No lenient view can be taken in this case merely because
the election petition is directed against the returned candidate. [499 G-500 B]
404
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
6623 of 1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 3.6.1983 of
the Punjab & Haryana High Court in E.P. 13/82.
Kapil Sibal, Gopi Chand, K.C. Sharma, R.
Karanjawala, Mrs. M. Karanjawala, Miss Neethu & Mrs. Madhu Tewatia for the
Appellants.
K.G. Bhagat, Additional Solicitor General,
R.Venkataramani, Ranbir Singh Yadav, P.S. Pradhan, Chandra Shekhar Panda and A.
Mariaroutham for the Respondent.
The following Judgments were delivered:
FAZAL ALI, J. The election process in our
country has become an extremely complex and complicated system and indeed a
very difficult and delicate affair. Sometimes, the election petitioner, who has
lost the election from a particular constituency, makes out on the surface such
a probable feature and presents falsehood dextrously dressed in such a fashion
as the truth being buried somewhere deep into the roots of the case so as to be
invisible, looks like falsehood which is depicted in the grab of an attractive
imposing and charming dress as a result of which some courts are prone to fall
into the trap and hold as true what is downright false. If, however, the lid is
carefully opened, and the veil is lifted, the face of Falsehood disappears and
truth comes out victorious.
In such cases the judicial process and the
judicial approach has to be both pragmatic and progressive sc that the deepest
possible probe is made to get at the real truth out of a heap of dust and
cloud. This is indeed a herculean task and unless the court is extremely
careful and vigilant, the truth may be so completely camouflaged that falsehood
may look like real truth.
Of course, the advocacy of the counsel for
the parties does play a very important role in unveiling the truth and in
borderline cases the courts have to undertake the onerous task of
"disengaging the truth from falsehood, to separate the chaff from the
grain". In our opinion, all said and done, if two views are reasonably
possible one in favour of the elected candidate and the other against him
Courts should not interfere with the expensive electoral process and instead of
setting at naught the 405 election of the winning candidate should uphold his
election giving him benefit of the doubt. This is more so where allegations of
fraud or undue influence are made.
There observations have been made by us in
order to decide election cases with the greatest amount of care and caution,
consideration and circumspection because if one false step is taken, it ay
cause havoc to the person who loses.
It is not necessary for us to dwell on or
narrate the facts of the case of the parties which have detailed by the High
Court in very clear and unambiguous terms. To repeat the same all over again
might frustrate the very object of deciding election petitions with utmost
expedition. Even so, it may be necessary for us to give a bird's eye view and a
grotesque picture of the important and dominant elements of the controversy
between the parties in order to understand which of the two cases presented
before us is true.
The evidence in the present case consists of
- a. Oral evidence of the witnesses of the parties b. the documentary evidence
c. the evidence consisting of the tape recorded statements of the conversation
between the Deputy Commissioner and the respondent, Col. Ram Singh,
corroborated by the respondent himself who was examined as a court witness by
us in this Court and both sides were given full opportunity to cross-examine
him.
d. important points of law arising out of the
arguments presented before us, and e. authorities of this Court or other courts
cited before us.
For the purpose of understanding the truth
and the spirit of the matter a scientific dichotomy of the case has to be made
which may include the following factor:
a. Time and manner of voting, 406 b.
allegation of both capturing, c. role played by the electoral authorities who
ma have acted honestly yet the possibility of their falling an easy prey to the
machinations of one side or the other cannot be safely eliminated which may
lead to an error of Judgment on their part. This should be fully guarded
against as also the possibility of their being attracted by any False
temptation, d. Where the proof of a corrupt practice is he very cornerstone and
the bedrock of the case set against the successful candidate, the court should
be doubly sure that it is not lured to fall in the labyrinth of chaos and
confusion by easily holding that the corrupt practice alleged has been proved.
With this short prelude, we would now proceed
to give an exhaustive glimpse of the contentions raised before us by the
parties. Before, however, we do that we must record our appreciation and
gratefulness to the counsel for both the parties who in a big case like this
had been fair enough to confine their arguments only to two polling stations,
viz., Kalaka and Burthal Jat, which has rendered our task much easier besides
saving a lot of time, labour and expense. We also feel indebted to the learned
counsel for the parties for having argued the case with dexterity and brevity
which, as it is said, is the 'soul of wit'.
The present appeal arises out of an election held
on May 19,1982 to the Haryana Vidhan Sabha from Rewari constituency No.86. In
view of the concession made by the counsel for the parties, we are concerned in
this appeal only with two polling booths, viz., Kalaka and Burthal Jat.
It appears that there were as many as five
candidates and Col. Ram Singh [respondent] seems to have been pitted against
the aforesaid candidates.
The bedrock of the allegations made by the
appellants against the respondent was that he has been painted to be a most
undependable and unreliable person from the moral point of view as having
changed sides with one party or the other to suit his needs and divided his
loyalties by playing a dirty game of politics in that he changed sides without
any fixed ideology and the only principle which, according to the appellants,
the respondent had, was lust for power. It may be pertinent to note 407 here
that the respondent had also alleged that Rao Birendra Singh, who, according to
him, was the evil genius of the whole show, had set up his sister, Sumitra Bai,
to contest the election in order to get the respondent out of the way.
However, we are not at all concerned with any
of these matters or allegations which appear to be foreign to the scope of the
present appeals nor are these matters of which any serious notice can be taken
because as Shakespeare has said "everything is fair in war and love"
and the respondent could not be presumed to be as virtuous as Ceasar's wife so
as to be completely above board. So, we cannot blame the respondent if he
changed sides to suit the temper of the times. At any rate, this allegation has
no relevance to the setting aside of the election of the successful candidate.
The law does not recognise either political
morality or personal loyalties so long as the candidate allows a fair game to
be played without destroying the sanctity of the electoral process by indulging
in undue influence or corrupt practices which must be proved satisfactorily
beyond reasonable doubt.
So far so good. A conspicuous fact may however
be noticed here, viz., that clear and specific allegations with facts and
figures regarding the corrupt practices indulged in by the respondent have not
been alleged in the first part of the election petition itself. The allegation
however, have been detailed in the statement of particular submitted by the
appellants, who were certainly entitled to do so but we should have expected
some definitive and specific allegations regarding the nature of the fraud or
the corrupt practices committed by the respondent as briefly as possible in the
main part of the petition itself. Therefore, this is doubtless a relevant
factor in Judging the truth of the particulars mentioned in the statement more
particularly when the onus of proving the corrupt practice lies entirely on the
election petitioner who must demonstrably prove the same.
And now a pointed peep into the salient
features of the facts of the case. To begin with, the arguments of the
appellants are confined only to the Kalaka and Burthal Jat polling booths.
Therefore we proceed further we might at this stage briefly indicate, shorn of
details, the nature, character and the extent of the allegations regarding the
corrupt practices and booth capturing alleged to have been indulged in by the
respondent on the basis of which the appellants seek to set aside the election
of the respondent.
408 As regards Kalaka, (1) it was alleged
that the respondent appeared at the scene at about 10.30 a.m. with 50-60
persons and was himself armed with a gun while his companions had guns, sticks
and swords. By sheer show of force, the voters were threatened and pressurised
as a result of which they ran away without exercising their votes. In other
words, the allegation is that as a result of the serious threat held out by the
respondent, the voters were deprived of their valuable right of fraenchise.
(2) The respondent alongwith his companions
enter the booth and terrorised the polling officer as also the polling agents
(Basti Ram & Ishwar) of the Congress I candidate who were assaulted by The
respondent by the but end of the barrel of his gun.
(3) The respondent and others at gun point
snatched away about 50 ballot papers from the polling staff and after marking
them in his (respondent) favour put them into the ballot box.
(4) The respondent and his companions at his
(respondent) instance thumb-marked the counterfoils of the ballot papers also.
As regards Burthal booth, (1) the appellants
alleged that almost the same modus operandi was adopted by the respondent and
he directed his supporters to prevent the voters from entering the booth,
thereby depriving them of the opportunity of exercising their right to vote.
(2) Not content with this, the respondent
left behind his relations Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh to carry on the aforesaid
activities and gave further instructions that the maximum number of votes
should be polled in his favour.
Thus, so far as Kalaka and Burthal polling
booths are concerned, two important corrupt practices have been alleged by the
appellants:- (1) forcible polling of votes and (2) preventing the genuine
voters from exercising their right to vote.
It manifestly follows that once it is proved
that the respondent was not present at the time of the incidents at Kalaka 409
and Burthal, the case of the appellants falls like a pack of cards because it
is well settled by several authorities of this Court that the corrupt practice
must be committed by the candidate or his polling agent or by others with the
implicit or explicit consent of the candidate or his polling agent. Where,
however, the supporters or a candidate indulge in a corrupt practice on their
own without having been authorised by the candidate or his polling agent, the
election of the returned candidate cannot be voided. We might mention here that
the last factor indicated by us is conspicuously absent in this case taking ex
facie the entire facts narrated by the appellants in their pleadings or in the
evidence.
Before, however, analysing and marshalling
the evidence we would like to refer to the authorities of this Court and other
courts regarding the necessary precautions to be Taken in approaching evidence
in election cases and she principles laid down by us. We would also deal with
the extent of the admissibility of the evidence of the tape recorded statements
alleged to have been made by some of the witnesses in the tape-recorder
recorded by P.W. 7, the Deputy Commissioner.
As regards the principles enunciated by this
Court regarding the nature and the standard of proof of corrupt practice alleged
by an election petitioner against the successful candidate, though it is not
necessary for us to burden our judgment with multiplicity of authorities yet
the ratio of some of the important decisions which are directly in point may be
briefly stated.
To begin with, as far back as 1959 in Ram
Dial v. Sant Lal Ors., [1959] 2 supp. S.C.R. 748, the Court observed thus:
"What is material under the Indian law,
is not the actual effect produced, but the doing of such acts as are calculated
to interfere with the free exercise of any electoral right. Decisions of the
English Courts, based on the words of the English Statute, which are not
strictly in pari materia with the words of the Indian statute, cannot,
therefore, be used as precedents in this country." In Samant N.
Balakrishna, etc. v. George Fernandez & Ors. etc.., [1969] 3 S.C.R. 603,
this Court while dwelling on the principles to be followed in election cases
pithily point out thus:
410 "The principle of law is settled
that consent may be inferred from circumstantial evidence but the circumstances
must point unerringly to the conclusion and must not admit of any other
explanation. Although the trial of an election petition is made in accordance
with the Code of Civil Procedure it has been laid down that a corrupt practice
must be proved in the same way as a criminal charge is proved. In other words,
the election petitioner must exclude every hypothesis except that of guilt on
the part of the returned candidate or his election agent." In Ch. Razik
Ram v. Ch. Jaswant Singh Chouhan & Ors.
[1975] 4 S.C.C. 769, this Court laid down the
following principles:
"Before considering as to whether the
charges of corrupt practice were established, it is important to remember the
standard of proof required in such cases. It is well settled that a charge of
corrupt practice is substantially akin to a criminal charge. The commission of
a corrupt practice entails serious penal consequences. It not only vitiates the
election of the candidate concerned but also disqualifies him from taking, part
in elections for a considerably long time. Thus, the trial of an election
petition being in the nature of an accusation, bearing the indelible stamp of
quasi-criminal action, the standard of proof is the same as in a criminal trial.
Secondly, even if the nature of the trial of
an election petition is not the same in all respects as that of a criminal
trial, the burden of proving each and every ingredient of the charge in an
election petition remains on the petitioner. If a fact constituting or relevant
to such an ingredient is pre-eminently within the knowledge of the respondent,
it may affect the quantum of its proof but does not relieve the petitioner of
his primary burden." In Balwan Singh v. Prakash Chand & Ors. [1976] 3
S.C.R. 335, Shinghal,J. made the following observations:
"Another argument of Mr. Bindra was that
the corrupt practice in question should not have been found to 411 have been
committed as the election petitioners did not examine themselves during the
course of the trial in the High Court. There was however no such obligation on
them, and the evidence which the election petitioners were able to produce at
the trial could not have been rejected for any such fanciful reason when there
was nothing to show that the election petitioners were able to give useful
evidence to their personal knowledge but stayed away purposely." In the
case of Sultan Salahuddin Owasi v. Mohd. Osman Shaheed & Ors.[1980] 3
S.C.C. 281 to which one of us (Fazal Ali, J.) was a party, this Court observed
thus:- "It is now well settled by a large catena of the authorities of
this Court that a charge of corrupt practice must be proved to the hilt, the
standard of proof of such allegation s the same as a charge of fraud in a
criminal case.
In Ram Sharan Yadav v. Thakur Muneshwar Nath
Singh & Ora. [1984] 4 S.C.C. 649, to which two of us were parties, this
Court observed thus:
"The sum and substance of these
decisions is that a charge of corrupt practice has to be proved by convincing
evidence and not merely by preponderance of E probabilities. As the charge of a
corrupt practice is in the nature of a criminal charge, it is for the party who
sets up the plea of ' undue influence' to prove it to the hilt beyond
reasonable doubt and the manner of proof should be the same as for an offence
in a criminal case. This is more so because once it is proved to the
satisfaction of a court that a candidate has been guilty of 'undue influence'
then he is likely to be disqualified for a period of six years or such other
period as the authority concerned under Section 8-A of the Act may think fit.
By and large, the Court in such cases while
appreciating or analysing the evidence must be guided by the following
considerations:
(1) the nature, character, respectability and
credibility of the evidence, 412 (2) the surrounding circumstances and the
improbability appearing in the case, (3) the slowness of the appellate court to
disturb a finding of fact arrived at by the trial court who had the initial
advantage of observing the behaviour, character and demeanour of the witnesses
appearing before it, and (4) the totality of the effect of the entire evidence
which leaves a lasting impression regarding the corrupt practices
alleged." This, therefore, concludes the question regarding the standard
of proof.
As heavy reliance was placed by the
appellants on Ex.P- 1 (the tape-recorded statements of RWs 1 to 3) as also the
statements recorded in the same tape-recorder by PW 7 which included the
statement of the respondent, in order to allay all doubts and satisfy ourselves
regarding the genuineness of the statements made in the tape-recorder we have
examined the respondent as a court witness in this Court and allowed him to be
cross-examined by both sides. We would deal with the nature and the relevancy
of the statements made at a later part of our judgment. But before that we
would like to settle the controversy between counsel for the parties as to the
extent of admissibility of evidence recorded on tape- recorder or other mechanical
process.
It seems to us that the matter have is not
free from difficulty but the preponderance of authorities - Indian and foreign
- are in favour of admissibility of the statement provided certain conditions
and safeguard are proved to the satisfaction of the court. We now proceed to
discuss the various ramifications and the repercussions of this part of the
case.
This Court had the occasion to go into this
question in a few cases and it will be useful to cite some of the decisions. In
Yusufalli Esmail Nagree v. State of Maharashtra [1967] 3 S.C.R. 720, this
Court, speaking through Bachawat, J. Observed thus:
"If a statement 'is relevant, an
accurate tape record of the statement is also relevant and admissible. The time
and place and accuracy of the recording must be proved by a competent witness
and the voices must be 413 properly identified. One of the features of magnetic
tape RECORDING is the ability to erase and re-use the recording medium. Because
of this facility of erasure and re-use, the evidence must be received with
caution. The court must be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the record
has not been tampered with.
The tape was not sealed and was kept in the
custody of Mahajan The absence of sealing naturally gives rise to the argument
that the recording medium might have been tempered with before it was
replayed." (Emphasis ours) In the case of N. Sri Rama Reddy, etc. v.
V.V.Giri [1971] 1 S.C.R. 399, the following observations were made:
"Having due regard to the decisions
referred to above, it is clear that a previous statement, made by a person and
recorded on tape, can be used not only to corroborate the evidence given by the
witness in Court but also to contradict the evidence given before the Court, as
well as to test the veracity of the witness and also to impeach his
impartiality.
In R.M. Malkani v. State of Maharashtra
[1973] 2 S.C.R.
417, this Court laid down the essential
conditions which, if fulfilled or satisfied, would make a tape-recorded
statement admissible otherwise not; and observed thus:
"Tape recorded conversation is
admissible provided first the conversation is relevant to the matters in issue
secondly, there is identification of the voice; and, thirdly, the accuracy of
the tape recorded conversation is proved by eliminating the possibility of
erasing the tape record.
(Emphasis supplied) In Ziyauddin Burhanuddin
Bukhari v. Brijmohan Ramdass Mehra & Ors., [19751 Supp. S.C.R. 281, Beg,J.
(as he then was, made the following observations:
"We think that the High Court was quite
right in holding that the tape records of speeches were 414
"documents" , as defined by Section 3 of the Evidence Act, which
stood on no different footing than photographs, and that they were admissible
in evidence on satisfying the following conditions:
(a) The voice of the person alleged to be
speaking must be duly identified by the maker of the record or by others who
knew it.
(b) Accuracy of what was actually recorded
had to be proved by the maker of the record and satisfactory evidence, DIRECT
or circumstances, had to be there 80 as to rule out possibilities of tampering
with the record.
(c) The subject matter recorded had to be
shown to be relevant according to rules of relevancy found in the evidence
Act." (Ephes ours) Thus, so far as this Court is concerned the conditions
for admissibility of a tape recorded statement may be stated as follows:
(1) The voice of the speaker must be duly
identified by the maker of the record or by others who recognise his voice. In
other words, it manifestly follows as a logical corollary that the first
condition for the admissibility of such a statement is to identify the voice of
the speaker.
Where the voice has been denied by the maker
it will require very strick proof to determine whether or not it was really the
voice of the speaker.
(2) The accuracy of the tape recorded
statement has to be proved by the maker of the record by satisfactory evidence
- direct or circumstantial.
(3) Every possibility of tampering with or
erasure of a part of a tape recorded statement must be ruled out otherwise it
may render the said statement out of con text and, therefore, inadmissible.
(4) The statement must be relevant according
to the rules of Evidence Act.
415 (5) The recorded cassette must be
carefully sealed and kept in safe or official custody.
(6) The voice of the speaker should be
clearly audible and not lost or distorted by other sounds or disturbances.
The view taken by this Court on the question
of admissibility of tape recorded evidence finds full support from both English
and American authorities. In R. v. Maqsud Ali, [1965] All. E.R. 464., Marshall,
J., observed thus:- C "We can see no difference in principle between a
tape recording and a photograph. In saying this we must not be taken as saying
that such recordings are admissible whatever the circumstances, but it does
appear to this court wrong to deny to the law of evidence advantages to be
gained by new techniques and new devices, provided the accuracy of the
recording can be proved and the voices recorded properly identified; provided
also that the evidence is relevant and otherwise admissible, we are satisfied
that a tape recording is admissible in evidence. Such evidence should always be
regarded with some caution and assessed in the light of all the circumstances
of each case. There can be no question of laying down any exhaustive set of
rules by which the admissibility of such evidence should be judged.
We find ourselves in complete agreement with
the view taken by Marshall, J., who was one of the celebrate Judges of the
Court of Criminal Appeal. To the same effect is another decision of the same
court in R. v. Robson [1972] 2 All E.R. 699, where Shaw, J., delivering a
judgment of the Central Criminal Court observed thus:
"The determination of the question is
rendered more difficult because tape recordings may be altered by the
transposition, excision and insertion of words or phrases and such alterations
may escape detection and even elude it on examination by technical experts.
416 During the course of the evidence and
argument on the issue of admissibility the recordings were played back many
times. In the end I came to the view that in continuity, clarity and coherence
their quality was, at the least, adequate to enable the jury to form a fair and
reliable assessment of the conversation which were recorded and that with an
appropriate warning the jury would not be led into and interpretation
unjustifiably adverse to the accused. Accordingly, so far as the matter was one
of discretion, I was satisfied that / injustice could arise from admitting the
tapes in evidence and that they ought not to be excluded on this basis."
In Amercian Jurisprudence 2nd (Vo1.29) the learned author on a conspectus of
the authorities referred to in the footnote in regard to the admissibility of
tape recorded statements at page 494 observes thus:
"The cases are in general agreement as
to what constitutes a proper foundation for the admission of a sound recording,
and indicate a reasonably strict adherence to the rules prescribed for testing
the admissibility of recordings, which have been outlined as follows:
(1) a showing that the recording device was
capable of taking testimony;
(2) a showing that the operator of the device
was competent;
(3) establishment of the authenticity and
correctness of the recording;
(4) a showing that changes, additions, or
deletions have not been made;
(5) a showing of the manner of the
preservation of the recording;
(6) identification of the speakers; and (7) a
showing that the testimony elicited was voluntarily made without any kind of
inducement.
417 ..However, the recording may be rejected
if it is so inaudible and indistinct that the jury must - (Emphasis ours) We
would, therefore, have to test the admissibility of the tape recorded
statements of the respondent, given in the High Court as also in this Court, in
the light of the various tests and safeguards laid down by this Court and other
Courts, referred to above. We shall give a detailed survey of the nature and
the character of the statement of the respondent in a separate paragraph which
we intend to devote to this part of the case, which is really an important
feature and, if accepted, may clinch the issue and the controversy between the
parties on the point of corrupt practice.
This now brings us to a summary of the nature
of the evidence produced by the parties. As already stated counsel for the
parties confined their arguments only to the validity of the election relating
to Kalaka and Burthal Jat polling booths.
By virtue of a notification dated 17.4.82 the
Governor of Haryana called upon the voters to elect Members to the Vidhan
Sabha. The last date for filing the nomination papers was 24.4.82, the date for
scrutiny was 26.4.82 and 28.4.82 was the last date for withdrawal of
candidature. The polling was held on 19.5.82 and the counting of votes took
place on 20.5.82. It is the last date with which we are mainly concerned. To
begin with, it appears that 24 persons had filed their nomination papers out of
which three were rejected by the Returning Officer and 16 persons withdrew
their candidature, leaving five persons in the field. Smt.
Sumitra Devi was a nominee of the Congress
(I) party and the respondent filed his nomination papers initially as an
Independent candidate but later on joined Congress (J) party. The respondent
was first in the army but he resigned soon after the Indo Pakistan war in 1971
and started doing business as a diesel dealer in partnership with others. On
being elected to the Vidhan Sabha he become its Speaker as he enjoyed the
confidence of the then Chief Minister, Ch.
Devi Lal. As it happened, in the 1980
Parliamentary elections the Congress (I) party swept the polls and Shri Bhajan
Lal, having left the Janata Party, joined the Congress (I) party along with
many of his supporters, including the respondent. But, we are concerned only
with the 1982 Assembly elections to the Haryana Vidhan Sabha in which the main
candidates were Smt. Sumitra Devi and the respondent.
418 KALKA POLLING BOOTH We would first take
up the allegations levelled by the appellants against the respondent regarding
the corrupt practices relating to the Kalaka polling booth. According to the
evidence of R.W.1, the polling started at 7.30 a.m. and went off peace fully
without any untoward incident till 10.30 a.m. Near About this time, according
to the allegations of the appellants, the respondent arrived with a posse of
60-70 persons, including Des Raj, Ram Kishan and others, to create disturbance
in the polling and to prevent the votes from being polled in favour of other
parties. It is also alleged that a mob of 40-50 persons was variously armed
with guns, lathis and swords, and the respondent himself was armed with a gun.
As a result of the activities of the respondent, some of the voters like Shiv
Charan, Gurdial and others were forced to run away without exercising their
right to vote. It was further alleged that not to speak of the voters even the
polling staff was not allowed to do its duty which resulted in the voting
coming to a stand still. At this, one Mangal Singh raised serious protest and
on the orders of the respondent he was assaulted. Ishwar (Lambardar) was also
hit by the buttend of the gun and despite the objections of Basti Ram he was
also assaulted. The policemen were heavily outnumbered and had to stand as
silent spectator to the whole show. Further details of the acts of omission and
commission committed by the respondent have been given in the judgment of the
High Court as also on pages 10-12 of Vol. III of the Paperbooks.
It is also alleged that the respondent with
the aid of his companions snatched as many as 50 ballot papers from the polling
staff and after marking them in his favour put them into the ballot box.
Ultimately, on the arrival of the high officers the Presiding Officer lodged a
detailed report giving his own version of the incident on the basis of which
FIR was registered on 19.5.82 itself. P.W. 7, Mr. N.
Balabhaskar, the Deputy Commissioner of
Mohindergarh District, who was the Returning Officer of the entire constituency
also reached the spot and made enquiries in the matter. As a result of the
trouble created at the instance of the respondent, the polling had to be
postponed as it was disrupted for more than an hour.
These in short, are the allegations of the
appellants against the respondent in respect of Kalaka polling booth.
We shall now refer`to the evidence led by
both the parties on there particular points to show how far the allegation have
been proved. To begin with, P.Ws. 7, 8, 12 to 18 deposed in favour of the
appellants in respect of this polling booth. In order to 419 rebut the evidence
led on behalf of the appellants, the respondent produced Roop Chand (R.W.1),
Deen Dayal (R.W.2), constable Mohinder Singh (R.W.3), Dhani Ram (R.W.4), Ram
Kishan (R.W.5) and Suresh (R.W.6) besides respondent himself (R.W. 22).
Having gone through the evidence led on
behalf of both the appellants and the respondent, we are clearly of the opinion
that despite the quantity of the appellants' witnesses, the quality of the
respondent's witnesses appears to be much superior to that of the P.Ws. ln
regard to the respective facts stated by them.
We would like to discuss the evidence of the
Respondent witnesses by way of a comparative assessment ln relation to the
evidence led by the appellants 80 that a true picture of the cases of the
parties may come out conspicuously which would throw a flood of light on the
credibility of the witnesses concerned.
We shall now show that the statement of R.W.
1 seems to find intrinsic support from the star witness of the appellants,
viz., P.W. 7, the Deputy Commissioner. P.W. 7 is a high officer and, therefore,
a respectable witness though, with due respect, we might say that his
performance in this case has not been very satisfactory and his conduct leaves
much to be desired. Without going into further details we might mention that
his action in recording the statement of the witnesses on a tape recorder
without taking the necessary precautions and safeguards cannot be fully justified.
We are not able to understand as to why should he have taken the risk of
recording the statements on a tape recorder knowing full well that the
evidentiary value of such a tape recorded statement depends on various factors.
Since P.W. was accompanied by his
stenographer, there could have been no difficulty in recording the statement of
the persons concerned by dictating their statements to him and after being
typed, signed the same and taken the signatures of the deponent a certificate
"Read over and accepted correct." If this was done nobody could doubt
the authenticity of such statements. P.W. 7 admits his statement that he was
not authorised or asked by any higher officer than him to record the statement
at the spot in a tape recorder which obviously he did at his own risk.
Furthermore, even if he had recorded the
statements on a tape-recorder he ought not to have kept the cassette in his own
custody but should have deposited it in the Record Room according to rules. By
keeping the recorded cassette in his own custody, the possibility of tampering
with or erasure of the recorded speech cannot be ruled out. Another serious
defect in recording the statement on a tape 420 recorder was that he had to
take further care and precaution to see that the voice of the person whose
statement was recorded should be fully identified. Here again, he seems to have
fallen into an error resulting in a very anomalous position as some of the
witnesses particularly those appearing for the respondent, have clearly denied
their voices in the cassette and refused to identify the same.
Others have partly admitted and partly denied
their voices alleged to be those of the witnesses for the respondent.
Finally, he himself admits that there were a
number of voices which led to some disturbance and difficulties in putting Two
and two together. All these manifest defects could have been avoided if in the
usual course he would have administered oath to the witnesses, recorded their
statements and got the same signed by them as also by himself. In a
sanctimonious matter like this, it is extremely perilous to take a risk of this
kind. Perhaps it any be said that by recording the statements on a tape
recorder he save time as he had to go to the other polling booths also. That,
however, does not solve the problem because even if the statements were
recorded on a tape recorder they had to be transcribed and by the time the
statements were ready the witnesses would not be available to append their
signatures. Moreover, the direct method of recording the statement by dictating
the same to the stenographer would have been as expeditious as recording on a
tape recorder and transcribing the same thereafter. We might mention here that
the recorded cassette was replayed in this Court and then transcribed and only
the relevant statements of the respondent took quite a few hours. Thus, by his
negligence he allowed the recorded statements to suffer from a manifest defect.
That there were some erasures and lot of
other voices has been admitted by P.W. 7 himself in his statement where he
stated Thus:- "Some gaps in Ex. P. 1 have been left out, where the voice
was not clear and audible.
Many people were standing at the polling
booth whose voices have been recorded in the tape.
I cannot now identify the person whose voices
I had recorded in the tape. I also cannot distinguish the name of person whose
voice I had recorded after hearing the tape ..... My Stenographer had 421
prepared the transcript Ex.P1. It was prepared in my office. Most of it was done
under my supervision. I might have been temporarily absent to attend to certain
other work." Thus, even accepting the statement of P.W. 7 at its face
value it appears that the various safeguards and precautions which the law
requires to be taken while recording the statement On a tape recorder were not
observed by him. That by itself is sufficient to discard the statement of the
respondent recorded on the tape recorder without going into the merits of the
said statement. Even so, we shall deal with this matter in detail when we take
up the recorded statements in the cassette in the light of the evidence of the
respondent who had been examined by us as a court witness to throw light on the
subject.
Another serious infirmity from which the
evidence of this witness suffers is that while he himself admits that he was
not in a position to identify the voices of the persons whose statements he had
recorded, R.W. 1, who was an alternative Presiding Officer at the Kalaka
polling booth, has completely denied to have made any statement as recorded in
the cassette and asserts that he had absolutely no talk with P.W. 7. Similarly,
R.W. 3 (constable) stated that P.W.
7 had talked only to the Presiding Officer
and to no other member of the polling staff. No evidence has been produced by
the appellants to rebut this part of the evidence of R.W.
3. R.W. 3 says in unconditional terms as
follows:
"I did not make any such statement which
is recorded in the tape. The voice recorded in the tape is not my voice.
The statement of the witness which is
transcribed in Exhibit P-l was also put to the witness. After hearing the same,
the witness stated:
I did not make any such statement to the
Deputy Commissioner, nor he interrogated me.' It Would thus appear that the two
witnesses for the respondent, who were government servants and therefore
official witnesses, clearly and categorically d denied having made any such
statement in The cassette. P.W.. 7 HIMSELF has very fairly and frankly stated
that he was not in a Position to identify the 422 voices either of the
respondent or of the witnesses for the respondent (R.Ws. 1 and 3) at the time
of giving his evidence. This, therefore, throws a considerable doubt on the
truth of the statement made by these witnesses in the cassette recorder. The
law which has been analysed and examined by us is very clear that
identification of the voices is very essential. In this view of the matter, the
tape recorded statements lose their authenticity apart from other infirmities
which we shall give later while appreciating the evidence of the respondent in
this court.
Another circumstance that goes a long way off
to demolish the edifice and the structure of the appellants case regarding the
Kalaka polling booth is the statement of P.W. 7 himself. According to the
consistent evidence of K.Ws. 1-6, no incident had happened nor was any trouble
created by the respondent but instead the musclemen of the appellants led by
Ajit Singh tried to create all sorts of trouble, information of which was sent
to the Deputy Commissioner. Here, we might notice the admission of P.W. 7 where
he states as follows:
"At about 10.30 a.m., when I was between
Mandola and Zainabad villages in Jatsuana constituency, I received a message on
the wireless, the apparatus of which I was having in my motor car, that Col.
Ram Singh had complained against the workers
of Congress (I). The COMPLAINT was that about 40 to 50 Congress (I) workers had
attacked the Congress (J) workers at village Kalaka.
If the wireless message was sent to the d.C.
at about 10.30 a.m. there could be no question of the respondent or his people
to have visited Kalaka polling booth in order to create disturbance. This,
therefore, INTRINSICALLY supports the case of the respondent and demolishes the
case of the appellants about the arrival of Col.. Ram Sing and his relations,
Satbir Sing and Anil Kumar.
It was also in evidence that after the first
incident of the morning (wireless message received by P W. 7) two motor cycles
are said to nave been left behind. lt is manifest that if the persons who had
committed the disturbances alongwith their companions did not belong to the
party of the respondent, as the wireless message shows, then the only other
irresistible conclusion, by the process of elimination, would be that the motor
cycles must have belonged to Ajit Singh and his companions who were supporters
of the Congress (I) candidate.
423 Thus, this being the posit on and the
real state of affairs at the spot, in a case like the present one involving
high stakes and serious handicaps, we should have expected the conduct of the
senior officers to have been completely above board.
Another reason which throws a considerable
doubt on the testimony of the witnesses of the appellants is that P.W. 7
himself deposed that he did not receive any written complaint from the polling
officer or the Presiding Officer or from any other person at the time when he
visited the Kalaka polling booth. The appellants tried to bring on file certain
complaints made to P.W. 7 by Suraj Bhan and others but as the original
complaint had not been filed the complaint produced by the appellants apart
from being clearly inadmissible cannot be relied on particularly in face of the
clear admission of the Deputy Commissioner (P.W. 7) that he did not receive any
written complaint from the officers concerned.
Another intrinsic circumstance which
demolishes the case of the appellants about the presence of a mob headed by
Satbir Singh and Anil Kumar (said to be relatives of respondent) is that P.W.
10 (A.S.I.) who was accompanying the D.C. said that he received the information
that one of the candidates, viz., Col. Ram Singh, alongwith some persons had
reached Kalaka polling booth and started intimidating the polling staff and the
public. Here this witness is sadly contradicted by the statement of the Deputy
Commissioner that the wireless message received by him was not in respect of
Col. Ram Singh and his men but the message which the D.C.
actually received was that the disturbance
was created by one Ajit Singh at the instance of the Congress (I) candidate. It
is, therefore, impossible to accept the case of the appellants that the
respondent and his companions on the one hand and Ajit Singh with a posse of
his own men on the other had reached the Kalaka polling booth at almost the
same time. Indeed, if this had been so there should have been a huge riot and a
pitched battle between the two parties but no witness says so. The evidence
merely shows that Col. Ram Singh had reached the place just after Anil Kumar
and Satbir Singh alongwith their men left and after the Presiding Officer had
set the matters right. me A.S.I.
(P.W.10) also says that 3-4 persons had made
a complaint in writing to him but he had not seen those reports on the date
when they were made to him but it must be on the file. The witness was shown
the file of complaints and he admits thus:- "I have seen the file of
complaints which has been shown to me now. That complaint is not in this
complaint file." 424 What happened to the complaint received by the
witness (P.W. 10) is not known or can be anybody's guess-perhaps the same
vanished into thin air or may be was non-existent.
The matter does not rest here but there is
one more inherent circumstance which completely falsifies the case of the appellants.
The Presiding Officer was shown Ex. P-5 and he stated that he had not mentioned
anything in the said document about intimidation of the voters and other
persons.
He (P.W. 8) categorically states thus :- I
have seen Ex. P-5. Column No. 20 (a) is to furnish information about
"Intimidation of voters and other persons . I have not mentioned anything-
in this column but have crossed it." Indeed, if there was any such
intimidation, being the Presiding Officer he would not have crossed the column
regarding the same. He admits that he had served in the Ahir High school which
appears to have been patronized by Rao Birendra Singh and the possibility that
this witness concealed the truth (as appears from his evidence) and made a
statement regarding intimidation to oblige Rao Birendra Singh cannot be ruled
out. This is because he merely denies knowledge that the Ahir School belonged
to Rao Birendra Singh but he does not say affirmatively that Rao Birendra Singh
had absolutely no connection with the said School. .
Coming now to the rest of the evidence of
R.W. 1, he says that after the departure of Ajit Singh, Col. Ram Singh came to
the Kalaka polling booth and he was alone at that time.
The respondent in the presence of R.W. 1 told
the Presiding Officer that he should not be partial to any party and complained
to him about the beating up of his polling agent.
Hari Singh (P.W. 8), the Presiding Officer
assured the respondent that he would not permit anything further to happen.
Thereafter, a number of people came there and stoned the polling booth and
despite the protests of the witness and the Presiding Officer they tried to
snatch the ballot box which was, however, protected by the Presiding Officer.
In the meantime, the police party arrived and
the people who had gathered there sped away. Much was made by the counsel for
the appellants regarding omission of the witness to make any report to the
police. But not much turns upon this because the witness clearly admits that as
the Presiding Officer was in charge of the whole show, he had reported the
matter to him who had assured him that he would set things right. A number of
425 questions were put to him which are of not much significance because the
answer of the witness was that whatever he had to say he had told his immediate
superior, the Presiding Officer. It is obvious that K.W. 1 was neither a police
officer nor a person holding any important job but was only a teacher in a
school. Perhaps he thought that it was enough if he informed his superior
(Presiding Officer) who would do the needful. The witness also admits that he
had told the Presiding Officer about the visit of Ajit Singh and his companions
and the trouble created by them but he was told by the Presiding Officer that
he had recorded the same in the Diary; though in the presence of the witness he
did not write any report nor did he handover any report to the police in his
presence. The witness then goes on to state that after a few days of the
elections, the police had obtained an affidavit from his but no attempt was
made by the appellants to get that affidavit summoned, produced and exhibited
in the case and in the absence of that the court is entitled to presume that
whatever the witness may have said to the Presiding Officer was contained in affidavit
also.
R.W. 2, Deen Dayal, who was a member of the
polling staff, fully corroborates the evidence of R.W. 1 regarding the arrival
of Ajit Singh armed with pistol and accompanied by a number of persons. He
further corroborates that some of the companions of Ajit Singh removed the
polling agent of Col. Ram Singh and then asked the witness and others to
handover the ballot papers but as the witness resisted he was beaten up by Ajit
Singh and others but on the intervention of the Presiding Officer the matter
rested there. Thereafter, Col. Ram Singh came who was also assured by the
Presiding Officer that needful would be done. A capital was made by the
appellants before the court below as also here regarding the veracity of this
witness because he did not make any report to the D.C. Or the S.D.O. about his
being beaten up. As already mentioned, the witness was merely a teacher and he
appears to have been satisfied by the assurance given to him by the Presiding
Officer that necessary action would be taken. He further states that the D.C.
Only talked to the Presiding Officer and not to any other member of the polling
staff. This shows that the evidence of this witness is true.
The next witness on the point is RW 3
(Mohinder Singh) who was a police constable deputed to the spot to maintain law
and order. The sequence of events that happened at the polling booth and which
have been deposed to by the witness may be summarised thus:
426 (1) while the polling was going on,
between 7.30 and 8.00 a.m., Ajit Singh arrived with his companions and tried to
create all sorts of trouble.
(2) After the departure of Ajit Singh, Col.
Ram Singh came alone and was assured by the Presiding Officer that he would not
R allow any further trouble to take place.
(3) After Col. Ram Singh had left the place a
number of people from the village came and wanted to poll forcibly, and 2-3
persons came out of the polling booth with a ballot box.
(4) He (RW 3) snatched the ballot box from
the people and returned the same to Dhani Ram (RW 4).
The witness states that after some time the
S.D.O. came there and after having a talk with the Polling Officer he went
away. After about half-an-hour or 45 minutes of the departure of the S.D.O.,
the D.C. arrived and on his intervention the polling again started at about 12
mid-day.
The witness vehemently denied that his
statement was recorded by the D.C. in a tape-recorder and said that the voice
recorded in the tape-recorder (which was played to him in court) was not his.
He even goes to the extent of saying that he did not see any tape-recorder with
the D.C. nor did he have any talk with him.
The following important points may be noted
from his testimony - 1) The sequences of events narrated by him gives
sufficient strength to the case of the respondent.
2) his positive evidence that the voice in
the cassette was not his.
The witness was afterall a police constable
(a government official) and would not have the course make a false statement
before the D.C. Moreover, evey the D.C. in his statement has frankly admitted
that he was not in a position to identify the voice of this witness or for that
matter of others at the time of his deposition. Thus, in the eye of law, there
is no legal evidence at all to prove that the voice Recorded in. the tape-recorder
was the voice of this particular witness.
The next witness is RW 4 (Dhani Ram) who was
also one of the members of tile polling staff and a teacher in a Government 427
Primary School. He fully corroborates the story given by RWs 1 and 3 and also
gives the sequence of events referred to above while dealing with the evidence
of RW 3. His evidence does not appear to be of much consequence. At any rate
the learned High Court has fully discussed his evidence and we agree with the
conclusions arrived at by the High Court in this respect.
RW 5 appears to be a voter of the Kalaka
polling booth.
He has been examined to prove the fact that
when Ajit Singh and his party came to the booth, one Tula Ram who was a polling
agent of Col. Ram Singh and real brother of RW 5, was beaten up by Ajit Singh
and his party and when he tried to rescue him he was also beaten up and their
clothes were torn and it was with great difficulty that Mohinder Singh (RW 3)
who was on duty rescued him and his brother from the clutches of Ajit Singh and
his party. He further states that he, alongwith his brother Tula Ram, went to
Rewari to meet Col. Ram Singh and narrated the whole incident to him. In
cross-examination, the witness says that he and his brother had received fists
and slaps as a result of which they bled because of injuries on their bodies.
He further says that as there was no visible mark of injury they did not get
themselves medically examined. He is an unsophisticated villager and once
having reported the matter to Col. Ram Singh he did not think it necessary to
file any complaint with the police.
RW 6 (Suresh) was also a voter waiting in a
queue to cast his vote when at about 8.30 a.m. AJit Singh aimed with a
revolver, appeared on the scene and entered the booth. He heard hue and cry
from inside the booth. He corroborates the evidence of RW 5 about the beating
up of Tula Ram and Ram Kishan (RW 5). He goes on to state that after about
half-an- hour of the departure of Ajit Singh and his party, Col. Ram Singh came
and after spend about 5-6 minutes inside the booth he drove away. The witness
further says in cross- examination that the polling did not start after the
departure of AJit Singh in view of the commotion that took place there. After
the departure of Col. Ram Singh the S.D.O. and the D.C. also came and
ultimately the polling was continued. The witness finally says that he did not
inform Col. Ram Singh about the incident nor did anybody enquire from him
anything about the same. In these circumstances, we do not think that the
evidence of this witness is creditworthy.
The other witnesses examined by the
respondent not in respect of the Kalaka polling booth.
428 The picture would not be complete unless
we give the other version of the story put forward by the appellants who have
also examined many witnesses.
PW 8 is the only witness who has identified
his voice recorded in the tape recorder by the D.C. when other witnesses,
including the D.C., could not do so. That itself shows that he has leanings
towards the appellants.
Another important aspect which emerges from
the evidence of PW 8 is that, according to him, the total votes polled in the
Kalaka polling booth were 573, the break-up of which is as follows:- between
7.30 to 8.45 a.m. 58 " 12 Noon- 2.00 p.m. 205 " 2.00 p.m.- 4.30 p.m.
109 ------- 372 ------- This means that if there was any disturbance it would
have taken a very short time in view of the calculation given by this witness.
If, however, it is a fact that both parties - one led by Ajit Singh and the
other led by respondent - had a sort of a direct confrontation, it would have
been extremely difficult for the polling to start only after an interval of an
hour and a half. Moreover, no explanation has been given by this witness of the
votes polled in between 8.45 to 10.30 a.m. The tally of votes is not consistent
with his evidence and is ar. intrinsic proof of the fact that his evidence is
not true. The general impression which we gather after perusing his evidence Is
that he does not appear to be a witness of truth and, therefore, we find it
difficult to rely on the evidence of this wiriness. Moreover, we shall have to
say something more regarding the credibility of this witness when we deal with
the documentary evidence.
PW 10 (Sri Krishan) was the S.D.O. and Returning
Officer tor the Rewari constituency. According to him, he remained in his
office upto 10.00 a.m. and after that he started touring the various polling
booths. He goes on to say that on 19.5.82 he reached Kalaka at about
11.00-11.30 a.m. on receipt of a complaint to the effect that Col. Ram Singh,
alongwith his companions, had tried to intimidate the polling staff and the
voters. When he arrived at the spot he found the polling at a standstill. This
actually supports the case of the respondent that the polling went on smoothly
from 8.00 a.m. to 11.00 a.m.
429 and the trouble must have been started
either by Ajit Singh or by his men. The poll could not have restarted before
1.00 to 1.30 p.m. because, according to the evidence of the D.C., the polling staff
had been interrogated and their statements were tape-recorded which would have
taken quite a lot of time. This fact intrinsically knocks the bottom out of the
case made out by PW 8 regarding timing of the voting.
PW 14 (Puran) is the next witness who does
not appear to be of any importance because it is only a case of oath against
oath. Moreover, a perusal of his evidence shows that this witness ran away
after Col. Ram Singh is alleged to have threatened him. tie then returned and
cast his vote at about 3.00 P.M. Not much turns upon to evidence. Rather his
evidence shows that he reached the spot nearabout 3.00 p.m.
when peace had been restored and the polling
had restarted smoothly.
More or less, to the same effect is the
evidence of PW 16 (Ishwar Singh) with the difference that this witness says
that he was assaulted but then except informing the S.l.
about the injury he took no further steps. If
he was actually injured he would have made it a point to report the fact of his
assault to the D.C. Or the S.D.O. Or other officers who had assembled after the
miscreants had gone away. This obviously he did not do. Lastly he admits that
his family was supporting the Congress (I) candidate (Sumitra Bai) and,
therefore, h could not be said to be an independent witness.
PW 17 (Amar Singh) was admittedly a polling
agent of Sumitra Bai. The witness says that when the D.C. and S.D.O.
came he made a complaint to them in writing
which was also signed by Suraj Bhan, Mangal Singh, Basti Ram and others. He
Further says that he had verbally complained to Deep Chand, the ASI but he took
no action. He states that the D.C. had however made an enquiry from him but the
D.C. does not say anything about this witness and being a most interested
witness it is difficult for us to rely on this witness when the High Court
which had the opportunity of watching the demeanour and behavior of this
witness Placed no reliance on him.
The evidence of PW 18 is almost in the same
terms. Like others, he also seems to made a written report to the police
station which has not been produced and no action seems to have been taken
thereon. It is rather strange that a number of witnesses say that they had made
an oral or written complaint yet no action was taken thereon which shows that
the statement of the witness is a purely cooked up story.
430 This closes the evidence so far as the
prosecution witnesses are concerned. The learned Judge of the High Court has
taken great pains in very carefully marshalling and analysing the evidence and
so far as Kalaka polling booth is concerned, the findings of the High Court may
be extracted thus:
"The evidence of the PWs on this point
is not corroborated. The ownership of the motor cycles abandoned by the party
of the respondent was not traced. The ownership could be established from their
Registration Books. No effort was made to connect those with the respondent or
his supporters. This shows that the PWs were drawing upon their imagination to
make out stories about the detention of the persons and the forcible polling at
that polling station by the res pondent .
When the evidence on the file of the case is
given a close look it leads to an inference that the petitioners have failed to
prove this part of the charge beyond reasonable doubt.
Shri Sri Krishan SDO (Civil) stated that 3/4
persons gave him a complaint at Kalaka about the incident. It was a signed
complaint. That complaint is not traceable. It was not found in the complaint
file. Nor was it entered in the complaint register. That com plaint could throw
light on the incident if at all lt had been produced. The oral evidence has
failed to convincingly make out this allegation that the voters were threatened
at Kalaka.
From the overall assessment of the
petitioners' evidence and the detailed discussion in the previous paragraphs
concerning this polling station it has left an impression in my mind that the
role assigned to the respondent has not been proved beyond reasonable doubt.
Lot of suspicions which are indicated in the previous paragraphs attach to his
evidence and it is difficult to say that the inference in favour of the 431
petitioners' case is irresistible. The evidence of the A petitioners is not of
the type, which could persuade me to take a decision in their favour."
After going through the evidence very carefully, we find ourselves in complete
agreement with the conclusions arrived at by the learned Judge of the High
Court so far as Kalaka polling booth is concerned.
BURTHAL JAT POLLING BOOTH This now brings us
to the second and the last limb of the arguments advanced by counsel for the
appellants - the evidence regarding the corrupt practice in respect of Burthal
Jat polling booth (for short, referred to as 'Burthal booth'). To prove the
allegations, the appellants produced PWs 6,7,10, 26 to 33 and in order to rebut
the case the respondent examined RWs ll, 12, 13, 14, 20 and 22. D We would
first take up the evidence led by the appellants. PW 6, Krishan Bihari, is
merely a formal witness who has been examined with the complaint register of No.86
- Rewari constituency in which both Kalaka and Burthal polling booths fell. His
evidence. therefore, does not appear to be of any significance.
The next important witness is PW 7, the
Deputy Commissioner of Mohindergarh District ( N. Balabhaskar), a major part of
whose evidence has already been discussed by us while dealing with his evidence
relating to Kalaka polling booth. So far as Burthal polling booth is concerned,
he states that he had received a complaint that a worker of Congress (J) candidate
was attacked by villagers of Burthal Jat and his main purpose to visit the
villages was to verify the truth or falsity of the complaint. But, when he went
to the Burthal booth, the polling officer expressly told him that nothing had
happened inside the booth. Some of the polling officials who were there,
however, told him that there was some incident outside the polling booth but
the identity of the persons responsible for the same had not been established.
PW 7 further goes on to say that some villagers at that place told him that the
workers of Congress (J) had come there in a jeep and tried to create trouble
and they were able to detain two person and the third one had run away. The
D.C. interrogated those two persons who told him that they had no connection
with the jeep. He further admits that he did not interrogate them as to which
432 political party they belonged - whether Congress (I) or Congress (J). he
further testifies to the fact that a jeep was found at the spot with some
sticks lying inside it but he did not see any motor-cycle near the polling
booth. The persons who were attacked at Burthal by the villagers and whom he
did not interrogate, for reasons best known to him, were Satbir Singh and Anil
Kumar. This part of the evidence, therefore, corroborates the case of the
respondent that assuming Satbir Singh and Anil Kumar were companions of Col.
Ram Singh but they had undoubtedly been
attack at the village and the D.C. also admits that the Sarpanch to the village
Burthal had complaint to him regarding this matter when he reached Burthal
Booth. PW 7 then says that at Burthal he recorded the conversation of the
Presiding Officer in detail though he admits that some portion of the recorded
conversation was erased inadvertently due to his own voice being recorded
there.
This is all that witness says in respect of
Burthal booth. Accepting the entire testimonial as it is without any further
comment, it is not proved or established as to who was the person ) or persons
at whose instance the corrupt practice was committed. There WAS, however, a
clear admission by the D.C. that it was the respondent's party which had been
aggrieved. It is rather surprising and intriguing that although the D.C. had
gone to hold a regular inquiry into the irregularity committed at Burthal booth
he did not care to interrogate Satbir Singh and Anil Kumar who were present
there particularly when, as he himself says, the Sarpanch of the village had
complained to him regarding some trouble. lt seems that PW 7 contended himself
merely by recording the statement of the Presiding officer in the tape recorder
which was really a dictaphone, as told by the witness himself. t' A very
important admission has been made by the witness which completely nullifies the
statements recorded in the tape recorder. In this connection, he states thus:
"I cannot now identify the person whose
voices I had recorded in the tape. I also cannot distinguish the name of person
whose voice I had recorded after hearing the tape.
The witness was cross-examined regarding the
cassette recorder and he has made the following admissions:
433 a) that there was no instructions from
the Government for recording such conversations as he had done, b) that even if
he was supplied a dictaphone, it had to be mainly used by him for recording his
own observations in his own voice.
c) that the cassette and the dictaphone
remained all the tine with him and were not deposited by him in the record
room.
d) even a copy of the transcript of the
recorded statements prepared by his stenographer was not deposited in the
official record room, and e) that there were some gaps in the recorded tape
(Ex.P-1) which had been left out and at some places the voice was not clear and
audible.
PW 7 in his statement says that the
statements of the witnesses recorded by him were transcribed by his
stenographer under his supervision in his office but he may have temporarily
gone out to attend to some other work. This is rather important because if the
statements were typed out in his absence it would have been very difficult for
his stenographer to find out whose statement he was transcribing which throws a
considerable doubt on the credibility of the recorded statement. To a direct
question by the court - "Can you rule out the possibility of tampering
with the transcript" - his answer was - "I do not think if it was
possible". The answer is self-evident and frightfully vague so as not to
exclude the possibility of tampering.
Ordinarily, the admissions made by PW 7 would
have been sufficient to discard the statements recorded in the tape- recorder.
We shall, however, develop this aspect of the [matter when we deal with the
statements recorded on the tape-recorder.
The next witness is Shri Krishan, S.D.O., PW
l(). We have already discussed a major part of his evidence while dealing with
the Kalaka polling booth and pointed out the serious infirmities from which his
evidence suffers. Same comments would naturally apply to his evidence relating
to Burthal booth to show that his evidence is not creditworthy.
However, we shall briefly summarise what he
had said about Burthal booth. In the first place, he states that when he
reached Burthal, alongwith D.C., he saw Satbir and Anil Kumar surrounded by the
people of that village.
434 He also saw a jeep containing some
sticked parked there, which was, on the instructions of the D.C., taken into
custody by the police. Satbir and Anil Kumar were also taken into custody under
the orders of the D.C. In support of his evidence he relies on Ex.P-9, the
complaint which was handed over to him by one Mam Chand. The manner in which
the complaint was handed over to PW 10 and as to the author of the complaint
are rather dubicious particularly in view of the evidence of Mam Chand (PW 35).
PW 35 was shown Ex.P-9 and after seeing the same he stated that the same did
not bear his signatures. He also deposed that there are two other persons by
the name Mam Chand, e.g., there is one Mam Chand who is the son of Kehar Singh
and the name of the father of the other Mam Chand was not known to him. It is,
therefore, manifest from the admission of PW 35 that the complaint EX.P-9 was
merely handed over to PW 10 by Mam Chand but neither the contents were proved
nor the maker thereof had been examined. Therefore, the complaint is clearly inadmissible,
as the persons who hands over a complaint cannot be said to be the author of
the same. We would, therefore, have to exclude Ex.P-9 from the array of the
documentary evidence. There is nothing further which this witness proves.
PW 26, Shri Mahabir Singh, is another witness
who has been examined to prove the active participation of Anil Kumar and
Satbir Singh. Far from supporting the case of the appellants he supports the
case of the respondent. He states that he was a voter and had cast his vote.
The learned counsel for the appellants, however, did not choose to rely on this
witness and made a prayer for cross-examining him.
In cross-examination all that PW 26 said was
that he was on duty as an election agent of the respondent inside the booth and
that he knew Satbir Singh previously but did not know to which place he
belonged. Thus, the evidence of this witness is of no assistance to the
appellants.
PW 27 (Dharam Vir) was a voter and, according
to his evidence, he had gone to cast his vote at about 8.00 a.m.
when near about that time Col. Ram Singh
accompanied by 50- 60 persons came there and summoned Mahabir and Udai Bhan who
were his election agents and told them that he was leaving some persons behind
and that they should see to it that no- one should be permitted to vote for the
Congress (I) candidate. The witness further states that Satbir Singh was
amongst the 15-20 persons left behind by Col. Ram Singh. In cross-examination
he admits that he cannot identify Satbir Singh. It is, therefore, difficult lo
believe as to how he named Satbir Singh as one of the persons left behind by
435 Col. Ram Singh. His evidence on this point appears to be clearly A false.
The sequence of events mentioned by other witnesses shows that Col. Ram Singh
had reached there near about 9.30 a.m. and he had come alone which fact has
been supported by an overwhelming majority of witnesses for the respondent.
Therefore, we find it difficult to place any reliance on this witness and his
evidence does not inspire any confidence and must be rejected.
The next witness is Thaver Singh, PW 28 who
also speaks in the same terms as PW 27. We are unable to place any reliance on
this witness because he was the most interested witness being a polling agent
of the Congress (I) candidate.
During cross-examination he stated that he
verbally complained to the Presiding Officer about the conduct o Col. Ram Singh
but he did not make any compliance to any officer in writing. His evidence,
therefore, carried no weight unless corroborated by some unimpeachable
documentary evidence.
PW 29, Amir Chand, also repeats the same
story as PW 28 but there is no evidence to corroborate him. Reading in between
the lines of his evidence it appears that he was a strong supporter of Rao
Birendera Singh though he does not commit himself in so many words.
PW 30 (Surjit Singh) and PW 31 (Raghubir
Singh) have repeated the same parrot like story as the preceding witnesses. In
the absence of any documentary evidence to corroborate their testimony, we find
it unsafe to rely on their evidence.
PW 32, Shamsher Singh, is rather an important
witness and according to his evidence he went to the Burthal Booth at about
7.30 a.m. and returned to his house at about 8.30 a.m. He then again went to
the polling booth at about 2.30 p.m. He admits that he was a polling agent of
Smt. Sumitra Bai, the Congress (I) candidates, and states that while he was on
his way to the booth in the afternoon he met Satbir Singh and Anil Kumar who
asked him to support Col. Ram Singh and when he told them that it was one's own
choice to support any candidate an altercation took place which was, however,
stopped with the arrival of Mam Chand, Ram Singh, Kishori and some other
people. Thereafter, an ASI of police came there in a jeep who intervened in the
matter and in his presence also Satbir Singh started uttering abuses. He
further says that he found a jeep parked there and people told him that it
belonged to Col. Ram Singh, a statement which is clearly inadmissible. He
finally says that when the D.C. and the 436 S.D.O. came there he informed them
of the incident. In cross examination he admits that he made no report in
writing to the police that he was beaten up nor did he get himself medically
examined. He also did not file any complaint in any court against Satbir and
Anil Kumar. In these circumstances, we find it difficult to rely on his
evidence.
Kishori Lal, PW 33 says that he was a
Chowkidar of the village Burthal Jat. He says that when he had gone to the
polling booth at about 2.30/3.00 p.m. to cast his vote he found Satbir Singh
and Anil Kumar having an altercation with Shamsher Singh, PW 32. He rescued
Shamsher Singh with the help of some other per sons. The witness, being a
chowkidar of the village, should have immediately reported the matter to the
D.C. Or the S.D.O. Or the ASI, all of whom had come to the spot but he did not
do so and kept quiet which speaks volumes against the credibility of his
evidence.
More or less to the same effect is the
evidence of PW 34 (Ram Narain) who is also a Lambardar of village Kakoria.
He says that on the day of the polling at
about 2.30/3.00 p.m. he had gone to the Village Burthal Jat where he saw an
altercation going on between Satbir Singh. Anil Kumar on the one hand and
Shamsher Singh on the other. An ASI had also arrived there followed by the D.C.
and the S.D.O. He admits that he had never met Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh nor
did he know them before. Although he was an eye-witness to the incident of
altercation yet he does not say that he had told anything to the various
officers who were present at the spot. His evidence, therefore, does not
inspire much confidence.
The learned Judge of the High Court who had
fully considered the evidence of these witnesses observed thus:
"The time of their arrest as noticed
makes the evidence of the petitioners' witnesses in regard to the incident at
Burthal Jat very doubtful. The analysis of the evidence led by the petitioners
reveals that they have failed to prove this part of the charge of corrupt
practice against the respondent." A bare perusal of the evidence of the
witnesses for the appellant clearly reveals that they are not telling the truth
and hence no implicit faith can be reposed on their testimony.
437 This now brings us to the evidence led on
behalf of the respondent. To begin with, RW 11, Ravi Datt Sharma, who was d
Lecturer in Govt. Higher Secondary School Rewari, was a polling Officer at
Burthal Booth. According to him, the polling went on smoothly from 7.30 a.m. to
4.30 p.m. Without any untoward incident. He categorically states that he knew
Col. Ram Singh and he (respondent) did not visit the polling booth on the
polling day. He further goes on to state that at about 1.00 p.m., the D.C. and
S.D.M. visited the polling booth. On their enquiry, the witness told them that
everything was going on smoothly. He clearly denies that the D.C. had recorded
any conversation which he had with him in the taperecorder. His evidence,
however, is confined only to the incident that had happened inside the booth and
not outside. We do not see any infirmity in his statement as he appears to be
an independent and truthful witness.
RW 12, Parbhati, was a voter of Burthal booth
and he testifies to the fact that he had cast his vote at 8.00 a.m.
though he had reached the booth at 7.30 a.m.
After casting his vote he came out and stayed with his co-villagers and
remained there will 1.30 or 2.00 p.m. He further states that during this period
Col. Ram Singh or anybody on his behalf did not come to the booth nor did any
quarrel or dispute take place inside or nearabout the polling booth. He further
states that Shamsher Singh (PW 32), Sarpanch of the village was standing at a
small distance with some people and he (PW 12) heard some altercation between
them. During the course of the said altercation the police arrived at the spot
and removed two persons (meaning perhaps Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh) whom he
did not know. Thereafter, Shamsher Singh and other villagers returned to the
polling booth. In cross examination the only fact which he admits is that
Mahabir and Udai Bhan were the polling agents of Col. Ram Singh and Shamsher
Singh and Thaver Singh were the polling agents of Smt. Sumitra Bai. He
categorically states that he did not know Satbir Singh or Anil Kumar and therefore
he was not in a position to say whether they were there or not. He also states
that at a distance of about 2 killas from the booth a jeep was standing and he
did not see any sticks in that jeep, and that villagers were saying that B.D.O.
and S.D.O.
have come there. Since he did not know the
D.C. was also there. He stoutly denied the allegation that Col. Ram Singh had
come to the polling booth in the morning soon after the start of the polling
and that he (respondent) had left 15-20 persons who had to be removed by the
police. It may be noticed at this stage that the suggestion in cross-
examination itself presupposes 438 and does not dispute the fact that Col. Ram
Singh had come to the booth only in the morning, that is to say, long before
the arrival of the deceased. This is an important and intrinsic circumstance to
show that so far as Burthal booth is concerned, the statement recorded on the
tape-recorder by PW 7 could not have included the respondent and that was
perhaps the initial case of the appellants themselves.
RW 13, Ami Lal, was also a voter of Burthal
booth and he says that so long as he was there he did not see Col. Ram Singh
nor did any dispute take place either within the polling station or outside. He
admits that he saw Shamsher Singh, who as the polling agent of Congress (I)
candidate, altercating with two unknown persons at a distance of about 100-120
karms. He categorically states in cross-examination that he did not see any
candidate at the booth on that day.
He also testifies that he knew Col. Ram Singh
since the last election. He further denies the suggestion that Anil and Satbir
were threatening the voters. Nothing further of any importance seems to have
been elicited from this witness.
RW 14, Sheo Chand, who as also a voter, fully
supports the evidence of RW 13 and says that he knew Col. Ram Singh whom he did
not see passing through the approach-road to Burthal Jat. A number of
suggestions were made to him which were denied by him and which are hardly of
any importance.
RW 20, T.C. Singla, is more or less a formal
witness who produced certain letters (dated 25.4.82 and 30.4.82) written by
Col. Ram Singh to the Chief Election Commissioner of India containing certain
complaints made by Col. Ram Singh about the irregularities in the election
which are not relevant for our purpose.
RW 22, Col. Ram Singh, is the respondent
himself. We shall deal with his evidence relating to both Kalaka and Burthal
booths. To begin with, he clearly states that the D.C. (PW 7) was not impartial
and was working against his interests. Perhaps we may not go to the extent
of-accepting the apprehensions of the respondent but there is no doubt that the
conduct of the D.C., as revealed in this case, leaves much to be desired.
According to the evidence of RW 22, at about 8.45 or 9.00 A.M. two of his
persons from Kalaka polling booth came to him in a dishevelled condition:
there clothes were torn and they appeared to
have been badly beaten up. They informed him (RW 22) that Ajit Singh S/o 439
Rao Birender Singh, accompanied by 50-60 persons had entered the polling booth
and beaten them up and that they were indulging in forcible polling. The two
persons who came to him in an injured condition were Ram Kishan and Tula Ram
(both brothers) and Tula Ram was his polling agent. On receiving this
information, the witness rushed to Kalaka and reached there at about 9.15/9.30
a.m. and after leaving his car at some distance from the polling booth he
walked to the booth. He went inside the booth and protested to the Presiding Officer
(PW 8) and drew his attention to the complaint which he had received from Tula
Ram and Ram Kishan. The Presiding Officer verbally assured him that nothing
untoward would be allowed to happen. The witness stayed there only for 7-8
minutes and returned to his house and telephoned the police and also sent a
written report to the police about the incident. He received a message from the
police station at about 10.30 a.m. that his complaint had been flashed to the
D.C. to take appropriate action in the matter. This important part of his
evidence is fully corroborated by the statement of DC (PW 7) that he had
received a wireless message from the police authorities to the effect that Ajit
Singh and his party were creating trouble at Kalaka booth. The witness
categorically states that he did not go the village Burthal Jat / r did he send
any of his workers there. This fact is fully corroborated by the intrinsic
evidence of the witness recorded by the D.C.
at Burthal where the respondent does not
appear to figure or, at any rate, his statement was not recorded at Burthal
which is clear from the tape-recorded statement.
The rest of his evidence is regarding a
number of other factors which are not relevant for the purpose of this case.
Reliance was, however, placed by the
appellants that Satbir Singh, who was a leading figure at Burthal, was an
adopted son of Jagmal Singh, who was father-in-law of Col. Ram Singh. The
witness further clarifies that he had divorced his wife as far back as 1962.
Thus, when the witness says that he had no relations with Satbir Singh, we dare
say he is right. A number of questions regarding his domestic matters were put
in cross-examination but they are not very relevant.
As, however, this witness, who appeared
before us, was examined by us at our instance and was subjected to cross-
examination by both the parties, we shall discuss that part of his evidence a
little later when we come to the statement of this witness recorded by PW 7 in
his tape-recorder at Kalaka polling 440 Thus, leaving the tape-recorded
statement for the time being, we adhere to our view expressed in the earlier
part of this judgment that the evidence adduced by the respondent seems to be
much superior in quality than that adduced by the appellants. The learned Judge
of the High Court was also of the same view and had rightly held that the
allegations of corrupt practice or of capturing of booth had not been
established by the appellants beyond reasonable doubt or, to be very accurate,
by the Standard of proof required to set aside the election of a successful
candidate.
We might now rush through the relevant
documentary evidence produced in this case which has been fully dealt with by
the learned Trial Judge and we agree with his conclusions. To begin with, Ex.
P-5 is the diary of the Presiding Officer of the Kalaka booth. We have already
discussed the effect of this document and found that while in column on No. 21
relating to interruption or obstruction of poll, he (PW 8) mentioned Col. Ram
Singh putting pressure on polling party and getting bogus votes polled in his
favour yet in column. No. 20(e), relating to intimidation, etc., he made no
mention of any such incident and crossed the same, meaning thereby that there
was no intimidation of voters. m e document, Ex. P-5, is therefore, self-
contradictory and does not inspire any confidence. The explanation given by PW
8 in his evidence is that while he was filling up column 20 (e) he did not
mention anything as he was greatly perturbed at that time. This is a most implausible
and fantastic explanation which apart from being inherently improbable appears
to be absolutely absurd. The witness wants us to believe that at the time of
filling up column 20 (e) he was perturbed but in a split second while filling
up the very next column, i.e., column 21(4) he suddenly gathered strength to
compose himself and made the observations contained in the said column. As the
two entries were supposed to be filled up simultaneously it is impossible to
believe that while filling up one entry he was perturbed and while filling up
the next entry he was in a composed state of mind. In other words, the
explanation comes to this: his mental state of mind by a miraculous process
cooled down and led him to make the observations which he did in column No.
21(4). It seems to us that what had really happened was that the plea of
intimidation, as alleged by the appellants, is a cock and bull story and when
the witness was confronted with a contradictory situation and found himself in
a tight corner he invented this ridiculous explanation which has to be stated
only to be rejected. This affords an intrinsic proof of the fact that no threat
or intimidation was given by the 441 respondent or his men during his presence
and in order to save his skin the witness may have made the entry in column No.
21(4) subsequently as an afterthought. Thus, no reliance can be placed on a
witness like PW 8 for any purpose whatsoever.
Ex.P-16 is a certified copy of the FIR
(No.103) lodged by the Presiding Officer implicating Col. Ram Singh and making
some allegations. This document also appears to us to be a spurious one as
discussed by the High Court.
So far as the documents produced on behalf of
the respondent are concerned, they are R-1 to R-9 consisting of letters written
by Col. Ram Singh to various authorities including the Chief Election
Commissioner of India complaining about the misuse of powers by the polling
officials in the conduct of election.
This is all the documentary evidence that
matter- and, in our opinion, nothing turns upon these documents.
This now brings us to the last and inevitable
step of the drama starting with P.W. 1 and ending with R.W.22. In order to
understand the admissibility, credibility and the truth of the statements
contained in the cassette, we might give a brief summary of the manifest
defects and incurable infirmities from which the statements recorded on tape
recorder suffer. Our conclusion on this question is arrived at not only after
going through the tape recorded statements but also hearing the cassette
ourselves in this Court on big amplified speakers. The defects/infirmities may
be pointed out thus:
1. The voices recorded at number of places
are not very clear ant there is tremendous noise while the statements were
being recorded by the D.C. (P.W. 7)
2. A good part of the statements recorded on
the cassette has been denied not only by the respondent but also by R.Ws.
1 and 3. No other witness has come forward to
depose to the identification of the voice of the respondent or those of R.Ws. 1
and 3.
3. There are erasures here and there in the
tape and besides the voice recorded being / t very clear, it is extremely
hazardous to base our decision on such an evidence.
4. One of the important infirmities from
which the tape recorded statements suffer 18 the question of custody. P.W.
7, 442 the D.C. has clearly admitted in his
evidence that though he was supplied a tape recorder or a dictaphone but he was
not asked by the Government to record the statements on the tape-recorder which
was really meant for recording his own impressions and not those of the
witnesses. However, even though P.W. 7 violated the instructions of the
Government he gravely erred in not placing the recorded cassette in proper
custody, that is to say, in the official record room after duly sealing the
same, and instead keeping the same with himself without any authority.
Thus, the possibility of tampering with the
tape recorded statements cannot be ruled out and this is almost a fatal defect
which renders the tape recorded statements wholly inadmissible.
5. P.W. 7 himself admits that the transcript
of the tape recorded statements was prepared in his office under his
supervision by his stenographer. He further admits that when the transcript was
being prepared he was temporarily absent from his office to attend to certain
other works. This appears to us to be a very serious matter because he had no
legal authority to leave the recorded cassette with his stenographer, who was
transcribing the same, even for a single moment as the possibility of its being
tampered with by his stenographer or by anybody else cannot be safely ruled
out. He further admits that even a copy of the trans- cript was not deposited
in the official record room.
6. One important aspect as part of the
manifest defects may now be mentioned. R.Ws. 1 and 3 have denied the identity
of their voice in the cassette and, therefore, that part of the evidence
becomes clearly inadmissible. The respondent, Col.
Ram Singh, however, appears to us to be a
truthful, upright and straight forward person because while he chose to admit
some parts of the tape recorded statement to be in his voice and as being
correct but denied the rest: he could have, if he wanted, denied the whole of
it. It seems to us that as the respondent was a trained and disciplined soldier
he told the truth as far as appeared to him. In fact, if he had failed to
identify his voice, then nothing could have been done and his statement would
have been per se inadmissible.
7. As it is, the statements on the tape
recorder seem to have been recorded in a most haphazard and unsystematic manner
without following any logical or scientific method.
This will be clear from the fact that the
tape recorded statements do not indicate 443 the polling booth where it was
recorded, the name of the person whose statement was recorded, the time of
recording, etc.
A proper methodology which the D.C. should
have followed was to first indicate the place, time and name of the person by
himself speaking and then recorded the statement. No such scheme was followed
and the court is left to chance and conjecture to find out as to when and where
and whose statement was recorded. As it is, we can only say that the statement
of the respondent was recorded only at Kalaka and this fact seems to be
admitted by the appellants in their written submissions (Vol. III, p.59) thus
:- "It is not the petitioners' case that Col. Ram Singh came to the
polling station or polling booth. The petitioners' witnesses (P.W. 27, P.W.
28 and P.W. 29) have only stated that Col.
Ram Singh came to Burthal Jat at 8.00 a.m., instructed his supporters not to
allow any voters to vote for Congress (I) candidate and thereafter left the
place.
" It is, therefore, clear that if at all
Col. Ram Singh visited Burthal booth, he did it only at 8.00 a.m. when the D.C.
had not even reached there and, therefore, the question of recording his
statement at Burthal Jat does not arise.
In our opinion, the best course of action for
the D.C.
should have been to record 'the statements of
the respondent and other persons himself in writing instead of recording the
same on a taperecorder which has led to 80 many complications. And, if he
wanted to use a taperecorder he should have taken the necessary precautions to
see that too many voices, interruptions, disturbances are completely excluded.
He ought not to have allowed any person to speak while he was recording the
statements. Unfortunately, this confusion has resulted from his conduct in
flouting the instructions of the Government by not using the dictaphone only
for recording his own impressions but instead recording the statements of the
persons concerned.
Thus, in short, the manner and method of
recording the statements in the taperecorder by the D.C. has resulted in a
total mess making confusion worse confounded. P.W. 7 has not given the details
to complete the picture as to what the respondent had done. Therefore, the
evidence of D.C. On this 444 point is conspicuous by the absence of any such
description or comments. Indeed, the D.C. has just acted as a silent machine to
whatever was recorded instead of applying his mind as to at what stage the
respondent denied his voice and where he admitted the same. We should have at
least expected the D.C. to give better details in a case like the present one
which, as already mentioned, entails serious consequences for the respondent if
his election were to be set aside.
Having regard to the reasons mentioned above,
we are absolutely satisfied that the tape recorded statements of the witnesses
are wholly inadmissible in evidence and, at any rate, they do not have any
probative value so as to inspire any confidence. Hence, it is extremely unsafe
to rely on such tape recorded statements apart from the legal infirmities pointed
out above.
That should have closed the whole chapter as
far as the tape recorded statement of the respondent is concerned. We shall,
however, mention below a few glaring defects, omissions and imperfections:
1. some statements said to have been recorded
by P.W. 7 have been flatly denied by R.Ws. 1 and 3, one of whom was a polling
officer and the other a constable.
2. A good part of the tape recorded statement
has been vehemently and persistently denied by him (respondent) rightly or
wrongly.
3. It is true that the searching and
gruelling cross- examination of the respondent in this court by Mr. Sibbal,
counsel for the appellants, seems to have forced the respondent to admit
certain innocuous facts though he might just as well admitted those facts which
caused no harm to him.
We might mention here that our object in
examining the respondent as a court witness in this court and subjecting him to
cross examination by both the parties was not to fish out technicalities by
putting all sorts of querries and questions, relevant or irrelevant. In such a
complex state of affairs, the statement of the respondent, torn from the
context, cannot form the basis of a judicial decision. Take for instance, one
statement of the respondent which was repeated to him by Mr.
445 Sibbal several times in different forms.
The occasion was if the respondent had sent Ram Kishan and Tula Ram or other
persons to the police station or he himself had gone there along with them. The
respondent admitted that these persons alongwith others had come to his house
and complained that they had been beaten up and harassed by the members of the
Congress (I) candidate and also showed in pries on their persons. He repeatedly
said that he himself did not go to the police station but sent them there.
Perhaps in view of the serious situation arising from the severe altercation
that took place between the supporters of Col. Ram Singh and those of the other
party, it is quite possible that on humanitarian grounds he may have personally
gone to the police station with the injured persons but as at the time of his
deposition he happened to be the Speaker of the Vidhan Sabha he may have felt
that his vanity would be injured if he admitted that he himself had gone to the
police station. Even if he had given this reply, lt would not have improved the
case of the appellants. This is just a sample of the questions put by the
counsel to him.
Another important feature of his evidence is
that he tacitly admits at various places that while his statement was being
recorded, a number of gaps were there, a number of other people were speaking
together, leading to great confusion which must have made him lose his wits. On
hearing the entire conversation ourselves, we are of the opinion that the
statement of the respondent is not coherent particularly because of gaps,
noises, sounds, and that the statements was recorded in an atmosphere
surcharged with emotions.
In this view of the matter, we do not
consider it necessary to delve deeper into the various statements made by the
respondent. It is sufficient to indicate that on the appellants' own case he
had not gone to Burthal Booth after 8.00 a.m. and, therefore, the D.C. who
reached there at 12 Noon could not have recorded his statement. We are,
therefore, not in a position to hold that implicit reliance should be placed on
the evidence led by the appellants. Even if the respondent made some admissions
in his unguarded moments that would not strengthen the case of the appellants
in view of the standard of proof required in an election matter where the
allegations of corrupt practice have to be proved beyond reasonable doubt
almost just like a criminal case.
It was s urged by Mr. Sibbal that in view of
our recent decision in Ram Sharan Yadav's (supra) the impact of the 446
evidence on the court would show that the respondent was lying and that was
sufficient to prove the appellants' case.
We are unable to agree with the broad
interpretation put by the learned counsel on our decision.
In fact, if we apply the principles laid Ram
Sharan Yadav' case, the appellants' case must fail at the threshhold.
Lastly, we might consider the argument
advanced before us by the learned counsel for the respondent who submitted that
even if the case of capturing of booths as alleged by the appellants against
the respondent is made out that would at best be an electoral offence and not a
corrupt practice within the meaning of the provisions of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951. We are, however, not called upon to go into this question
as no clear case of capturing of booths has been made out. The learned Judge of
the High Court has dealt with the case of capturing of booths very extensively
and has written a very well reasoned judgment annotated with convincing reasons
and conclusions. It would indeed be extremely difficult to displace the
judgment of the High Court on the ground sought by the appellants. The High
Court has considered even the minutest details so as not to invite any comment
that the Judge has not applied his mind. Even as regards the tape recorded
statements the learned Judge has pointed out several infirmities and defects
which despite the ingenious and charming arguments of Mr. Sibbal have not been
rebutted.
On a careful consideration, therefore, of the
evidence, circumstances, documents and probabilities of the case, we are fully
satisfied that the appellants have failed to prove their case that the
respondent was guilty of indulging in corrupt practices. We, therefore, affirm
the judgment of the High Court and dismiss the appeal but in the circumstances
without any order as to costs.
VARADARAJAN J. : This appeal under section
116A of the Representation of People Act, 1951, hereinafter referred to as 'the
Act', is directed against the dismissal of Election Petition No. 13 of 1982 on
the file of the Punjab & Haryana High Court.
The appellants are registered electors of
Rewari Constituency No. 86 of the Haryana Legislative Assembly. In the election
held for that Constituency on 19.5.82 Col. Ram Singh, 447 hereinafter referred
to as 'the respondent' who contested as the Congress (J) candidate was declared
elected on 21.5.1982 after the counting was, over on 20.5.82, defeating has
nearest rival, Sumitra Devi who is said to be the sister of Rao Birendra Singh
and had contested in that 'Constituency as the 'Congress (I) candidate. Sumitra
Devi lost by a margin of 8,760 votes. The appellants sought in the election
petition a declaration that the respondent's election is void under section 100
of the Act. They alleged that there was direct and indirect interference and
attempt to interfere on the part of the respondent and his agents and other
persons with his consent with the free exercise of the electoral right of the
electors. The respondent stoutly opposed the election petition. Alter
considering the evidence and hearing the counsel of both the parties the
learned Judge who fried the election petition found that the appellants tailed
to prove their case beyond all reasonable doubt and dismissed the petition with
costs of Rs. 2,000.
Mr. Kapil Sibal, learned counsel for the
appellants 1) confined his arguments in this Court to the instances of corrupt
practice alleged in respect of only two polling stations Kalaka and Burthal
Jat. It is, therefore, necessary to confine our attention to the case of the
parties in regard to only those instances.
The appellants' case in regard to the Kalaka
polling, station started and continued smoothly until 10.30 a.m. on 19.5.1982.
But at about 10.30 a.m. the respondent came there along With 60 or 70 persons
including Desh Raj, Ram Krishan and Krishan Lal of Kalaka and Sheo Lal Gujar,
Rishi Dakot, Umrao Singh, Raghubir Singh, Balbir Singh Gujar, Abhey Singh Gujar
and Suresh of Rewari. The respondent was carrying a gun while some of those who
accompanied him were armed with guns, lathis and swords. The respondent and his
companions threatened With arms and terrorised the electors Who were waiting
outside the polling station to exercise their right to vote as a result of
Which Sheo Chand, Gurdial, Puran, Mangal, Basti Ram, Ishwar and Amar Singh ran
away without exercising their right to vote. The restpondent and some other
armed persons amongst his companions entered the polling station and brandished
their guns towards the Presiding Officer and other members of the polling staff
as well as the polling agents of the various candidates and ordered everyone to
stand still. They threatened the voters who were in the polling station when
they raised objections to their conduct and made them to quit as also.
448 the polling agents Amar Singh and Suraj
Bhan. The respondent directed a Sikh amongst one of his companions carrying a
sword to hit Mangal Singh who strongly objected to the respondent's behaviour
and he was accordingly assaulted and injured. One Basti Ram who too objected to
the respondent's behaviour was hit by one of the companions of the respondent
with the butt of a rifle. Ishwar, a Lambardar was also hit by the barrel of a
gun. The respondent and his companions snatched about 50 ballot papers from the
polling staff at gun point and they were marked in favour of the respondent and
put into the ballot boxes after one of the respondent's companions thumb-marked
the counter foils of the ballot papers as directed by the respondent. Tula Ram,
Desh Raj, Ram Krishan and Krishan Lal and others helped the respondent in
marking the ballot papers. The police at the polling station was out numbered
and remained as silent spectators.
But when a number of people of the village
came and additional police arrived the respondent and his companions made good
their escape leaving behind two motor cycles bearing registration Nos. A.S.W.
5785 and H.R.P. 534. Two of the respondent's companions were caught by the
public and handed over to the police. Suraj Bhan, Amar Singh, Ishwar Singh and
Basti Ram made a report about the incident to the Returning Officer, Rewari
Constituency at about 12 noon on the same day. On the arrival of the police the
Presiding Officer of the polling station lodged a detailed report, giving his
version of the incident and thereupon F.I.R. No.
103 of 1982 was registered by the police. The
Deputy Commissioner of the District and the Returning Officer of the
Constituency also came to the polling station and made enquiries and tape
recorded the statements of some of the concerned persons. The process of
polling got disrupted for over one hour and a number of voters had to refrain
from voting. It is clear from these facts that the respondent and his
companions with his consent attempted to interfere with the free exercise of
the electoral right of a large number of electors and the respondent succeeded
in his plan to scare away and compel some of the electors to refrain from
voting at the election.
As regards the incident at Burthal Jat
polling station the appellants' case is this :- As per his pre-planned strategy
the respondent visited Burthal Jat village at about 8 a.m. on 19.5.1982,
accompanied by 50 or 60 persons including Anil Kumar, Satbir Singh, Raghubir,
Sheo Lal Gujar, Rishi Dakot, Umrao Singh, and Balbir Singh Gujar.
Many persons including Mahabir Singh, Hira
Singh, Mam Chand, Dharam Vir, Thavar Singh and Amar Chand gathered there. The
respondent told his suporters to ensure that 449 electors who were likely to
vote for the Congress (I) candidate A are not allowed to go into the polling
station and that he was leaving behind Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh with 10 or
15 musclemen to help them in preventing electors of the Congress (I) candidate.
A jeep containing lathis and other weapons was left at the disposal of those
persons.
While leaving the place the respondent told
Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh who were on their motor cycle that he was depending
upon them and they should ensure that no votes are cast in favour of the
Congress (I) candidate and maximum votes are polled in his favour. Those
persons kept on obstructing and threatening the voters who were coming to the
polling station to exercise their electoral right. Some of the persons who were
thus terrorised were Surjit, Raghubir Singh and Lal Singh. When the Sarpanch
Shamsheer Singh who came to vote was about to reach the polling station, Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh came by the motor cycle and told him that he must vote
for the respondent and otherwise he will not be allowed to proceed further.
When Shamsheer Singh said that he would vote freely according to his choice
Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh assaulted him with sticks and gave him slaps and
fish blows. Some respectable persons of the village including Kishori, Ram
Narian and Lambardar Mam Chand who were present nearby rescued Shamsheer Singh.
The Assistant Sub Inspector Kalayan Singh who was on election duty came there
by a jeep and seen the fight arrested Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh. The Deputy
Commissioner of the District and the Returning Officer [Sub Divisional
Magistrate] also came there and took the jeep along with lathis and other
weapons into their custody. Thus it is clear that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh
who are related to the respondent committed the aforesaid corrupt practice at
the instance of and with the consent of the respondent.
The defence of the respondent as regards the
incident in and at the Kalaka polling station is one of complete denial and he
contended that if there is any report lodged by Suraj Bhan, Amar Singh, Ishwar
Singh and Basti Ram it must be a manoeuvered affair to create evidence in the
election petition and that the report of the Presiding Officer is not his own
version but a false document prepared at the instance of the respondent's
political opponent Rao Birendra Singh and other state agencies on whom he
exercised powerful influence. The FIR No. 103 of 1982 dated 19.5.1982 does not
support the appellant's case of any interference or attempt to interfere with
the free exercise of the electoral right of any elector on the part of the
respondent or any one else with his consent and does not directly disclose 450
the commission of any corrupt practice of undue influence.
On the other hand, the truth is that the men
of Rao Birendra Singh captured the booth at Kalaka and the supporters and
voters of the respondent were badly out-manoeuvered which could be gathered
from the fact that whereas Sumitra Devi obtained 484 votes the respondent
obtained only 53 votes in that polling station.
The allegation that the respondent and some
of his companions entered the polling station and brandished their guns at the
Presiding Officer and ordered the other polling staff and polling agents of the
various candidates to stand still does not attract any provision of the Act
regarding the commission of corrupt practice. The allegation that the polling
agents Suraj Bhan and Amar Singh were threatened and turned out of the polling
station does not constitute corrupt practice as they are not alleged in the
election petition to be electors. Mangal Singh, Balbir Singh and Ishwar who are
alleged to have been assaulted and injured are not alleged in the election
petition to be electors of the Constituency and therefore that allegation does
not constitute corrupt practice. The allegation that 50 ballot papers were
snatched from the polling staff and polled in favour of the respondent does not
constitute corrupt practice.
The respondent's defence regarding the
incident at Burthal Jat is one of complete denial of the allegations in the
election petition in regard to that incident but there is no denial of the
allegation that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh are related to him. He has
contended that it is wholly incorrect to allege that any jeep with which he had
any connection was carrying lathis and other weapons and that it was taken into
custody by the officials. The allegation that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh
committed any corrupt practice with or without the consent of the respondent is
False, malicious and mischivious. Those two persons were falsely implicated in
the case under sections 107 and 151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and a
clumsy attempt was made to implicated them By tile subordinate police officials
who were under the powerful influence of Rao Birendra Singh whose sister
Sumitra Devi was losing and ultimately been defeated by the respondent u Two
independent alleged corrupt practices, one by the respondent and the other by
the others, have been clubbed together in the election petition.
It is necessary to note all the issues framed
by the Tribunal. They are:
451 (1) Whether the allegations of corrupt
practice alleged in the election petition have not been supported by an
affidavit? If so, what is its effect? (2) Whether petitioners Nos. 2 to 5 have
not deposited the security under section 117 of the Representation of People
Act, 1951? If so, what is its effect? (3) Whether petitioners Nos. 2 to 5 have
not complied with section 81 (3) of the Representation of People Act by not
attesting the copy of the election petition to be true copy under their own
signatures? If so, what is its effect? (4) Whether petitioners Nos. 2 to 5 have
not verified the election petition? If so, what is its effect? (5) Whether
allegations of corrupt practice alleged in the petition lack material facts/legal
ingredients and do not disclose complete cause of action? If so, what is its
effect? (6) Whether the allegations of corrupt practice alleged in the election
petition are vague and lack full particulars? If so, what is its effect? (7)
Whether the averments in paragraph 7 of the petition are unnecessary,
scandalous, frivolous or vexatious and calculated to prejudice a fair trial? If
so, whether the same are liable to be struck out under rule 6, order 16 Civil
Procedure Code? (8) Whether the respondent himself and/or through his agents
and other persons with his consent, committed corrupt practice of undue
influence, as alleged in paras 9 to 13 of the election petition or not? II so
what is its effect? The learned Judge of the High Court took up for trial
issues 1 to 7 as preliminary issues. By order dated 10.12.1982 he found issues
2 to 6 in favour of the appellants and issue 1 against them but permitted them
to carry out certain amendment and remove the defects pointed in his order. He
declined to consider issue 7 as a preliminary issue on the ground that evidence
is necessary to record any finding on that issue. On the question 452 whether
the allegations in paras 9 to 12 of the election petition constitute corrupt
practice he held that prima facie they do not disclose any defect in form or
substance but they contain material facts and allegations of corrupt practice.
It may be noticed that the allegations relating to the incidents at Kalaka and
Burthal Jat polling stations are contained in paragraphs 9 to 11 of the
election petition.
On the issue regarding the corrupt practice
alleged in relation to Kalaka polling station the learned Judge held that the
Presiding Officer's diary Ex.P-5 appears to have been prepared by the Presiding
Officer, Hari Singh (PW 8) later under the pressure and influence of the
defeated candidate, Sumitra Devi through her brother Rao Birendra Singh and
that FIR No. 103 of 1982 dated 19.5.1982 contained in Ex.P-6 is inadmissible in
evidence to corroborate the evidence of PW 8 about the incident of Kalka
polling station on the ground that the original report of PW 8 to the police
had not been summoned by the appellants. He found that the tape-record Ex.P.W
7/1 prepared by the Deputy Commissioner of Mohindergarh District, (PW 7) has
been tempered with later, disbelieving the evidence of PW 7 that a portion of
what he had recorded at the Burthal Jat polling station was erased by his own
voice inadvertently on the same day. He also found that the authenticity of the
transcription of the tape record in Ex.P-1 is not proved with definiteness. He
relied upon the evidence addued on the side of the respondent in preference to
that of the other side and held that the appellants have failed to prove this
item of corrupt practice beyond reasonable doubt.
Regarding the incident at the Burthal Jat
polling station the learned Judge found that the appellants have failed to
prove that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh are related to the respondent. For
coming to this conclusion he relied upon Ex.P-9 which purports to be a report
of Man Chand (PW 35) who has, however, disowned it while holding the Anil Kumar
and Satbir Singh were canvassing for their candidate at Burthal Jat as stated
by Mahabir Singh (PW 26) but it is not made out who their candidate was. He
found that the appellants have failed to prove this item of corrupt practice.
On the findings recorded by him in regard to these and the other items of
corrupt practice alleged by the appellants he dismissed the election petition
with costs as stated above.
The points arising for consideration in this
appeal are:
453 (1) Whether the incident in and at the
Kalaka polling station alleged by the appellants is true and has been proved
beyond reasonable doubt? (2) Whether the incident alleged in and at the KaLaka
polling station does not constitute corrupt practice within the meaning of the
Act? and (3) Whether the incident at Burthal Jat polling station alleged by the
appellant is true and had been proved beyond reasonable doubt? Before
considering the evidence on record in regard to the incidents at Kalaka and
Burthal Jat polling stations it is desirable to note certain provisions in the
Act and certain decisions to which the Court's attention was drawn by Mr. Kapil
Sibal, learned counsel appearing for the appellants and Mr. P.P.Rao, learned
counsel appearing for the respondent.
Section 87 of the Act relates to the
procedure before the High Court and clause (1) thereof reads thus:
"Subject to the provisions of this Act
and of any rules made thereunder, every election petition shall be ruled by the
High Court, as nearly as may be in accordance with the procedure applicable
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) to the trial of suits.
Order 8 rule 1 to 3 and 5 of the Code of
civil Procedure relating to written statement read thus:
"1.(1) The defendant shall, at or before
the first hearing or within such time as the Court may permit, present a
written statement of his defence.
2. The defendant must raise by his pleading
all matters which show the suit not to be maintainable, or that the transaction
is either void or voidable in point of law, and all such grounds of defence as,
if not opposite party by surprise, or would raise issues of fact not arising
out of the plaint, as, for instance, fraud, limitation, release, payment,
performance, or facts showing illegality- 454
3. It shall not be sufficient for a defendant
in his written statement to deny generally the grounds alleged by the
plaintiff, but the defendant must deal specifically with each allegation of
fact of which he does not admit the truth, except damages.
5. (1) Every allegation of fact in the
plaint, if not denied specifically or by necessary implication, or stated to be
not admitted in the pleading of the defendant, shall be taken to be admitted
except as against a person under a disability, but the Court, may, in its
discretion, require any such fact to be proved." Section 116 A of the Act
relating to appeal against certain orders of the High Court lays down inter
alia that an appeal shall lie to the Supreme Court against the dismissal of an
election petition under section 98 of the Act. In the present case the election
petition has been dismissed by the High Court under that section.
Section 116 of the Act relates to procedure in
the appeal. Sub-section (1) of that section reads thus:- "116C. (1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act and of the rules, if any, made
thereunder, every appeal shall be heard and determined by the Supreme Court as
nearly as may be in accordance with the procedure applicable to the hearing and
determination of an appeal from any final order passed by a High Court in the
exercise of its original civil jurisdiction; and all the provisions of the Code
of Civil procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) and the Rules of the Court (including
provisions at to the furnishing of security and the execution of any order of
the Court) shall, so tar db may be, apply in relation to such appeal.
Section 100 of the Act mention the grounds
for declaring an relation to be void- Section 100(1) (b) reads thus:
"Subject to the provisions of
sub-section (2) if the High Court 18 of opinion - that any corrupt practice has
been committed by a returned candidate or his election agent or by any other
person with the consent of a returned candidate or his election agent the High
Court shall declare the election of the returned candidate to be void."
455 Section 123 of the Act lays down what are corrupt practices A and
sub-section 2 thereof reads thus:- "123(2) Undue influence, that is to
say, any direct indirect interference or attempt to interfere on the part of
the candidate or his agent, or of any other person with the consent of the
candidate or his election agent, with the free exercise of any electoral right.
Instruction 74 of the Instructions to Presiding Officers issued by the Election
Commission of India reads thus:
"74. Preparation of the diary - You
should draw up the proceedings connected with the taking of the poll in the
polling station in the diary to be maintained for the purpose. You should go on
recording the relevant events as and when they occur and should not postpone
the completion and filing of all entries in the diary till the completion of
the poll. You should mention therein all important events particularly........."
in the form given which is the same as the one in which Ex.P-5 in this case has
been recorded.
Mr. Kapil Sibal learned counsel for the
appellants relied upon certain decisions of the English Courts and of this
Court in regard to the admissibility of tape-recorded evidence. I shall refer
to them.
In R. v. Maqsud Ali [1965] (2) All E.R. 464,
the following observation has been made:
"The position on the evidence was that a
very important part of that evidence was made up by a tape recording taken in
circumstances that I must now indicate........... On April 29, 1964 the two
appellants were at the Town Hall at Bradford and they were taken there into a
room................... There is a reason to suppose that both of the
appellants were not there on this occasion voluntarily................... In
that room there had been set up a microphone behind a waste paper basket which
was connected to a recorder in another room......... it is almost unnecessary
to say that none but the police knew of the presence of the microphone in
position................ so it ran for just 456 one minute over the hour.......
The tape, after it had been recorded, remained in the custody of the police and
there is a suggestion that it was in any way interfered with. The conversation
that took place between the two appellants was of course in their native
tongue........
and................. the tape, it should now
be stated, had a number of imperfections............
If the jury could come to the conclusion that
here was something which amounted to a confession that they were both involved
in the murder, it can be seen that this tape recording was a matter of the
utmost importance. It was, indeed, highly important evidence and the defence
sought strenuously to keep it out This is not the first time that the question
of admissibility of tape recordings as evidence has come before the courts of
this country. In 1956, in a trial at Wiltshire Assizes Hilbery, J., admitted as
evidence a tape-recording of a conversation in Salisbury Police Station and
further admitted a transcript of the recording to assist the jury.
We can see no difference in principle between
a tape recording and a photograph. In saying that we must not be taken as
saying that such recordings are admissible whatever the circumstances, but it
does appear to this court wrong to deny to the law of evidence advantages to be
gained by new techniques and new devices, provided the accuracy of recording
can be proved and the voices recorded properly indentified; provided also that
the evidence is relevant and otherwise admissible, we are satisfied that a tape
recording is admissible in evidence. Such evidence should always be regarded
with some caution and assessed in the light of all the circumstances of each
case.
In R. v. Robson [1972] (2) All E.R. 699,
which arose out of a case where the accused was charged with corruption the
prosecution sought to put in evidence certain tape- recordings. The defence
contended that they were inadmissible in evidence as inter alia they were in
many places unintelligible. It was however not contended that the tape
recordings was inadmissible evidence of what are recorded in them. The
originality and authenticity of the tape were left to the jury in that case.
In Yusufalli Esmail Nagree v. State of Maharashtra
[1961] (3) S.C.R. 720 this Court has observed:
457 "Like a photograph of a relevant
incident a contemporaneous dialogue of a relevant conversation is a relevant
fact and is admissible under section 7 of the Indian Evidence Act.
Reference has been made in that case to Roop
Chand v. Mahabir Parshad and Anr. A.I.R. 1956 Punj. 173; Mahindra Nath v.
Biswanath Kundu 67 C.W.N. 191; Pratap Singh v. The State of Punjab [1964] 4
S.C.R. 733 and B. v. Maqsud Ali [1965] 2 All E.R. 464.
In Shri U. Sri Rama Reddy Etc. v. Shri V.V.
Giri [1971] 1 S.C.R. 399, a decision of five learned Judges of this Court the
following observation made in Yusufalli's case (supra) has been quoted with
approval:
"The contemporaneous dialogue between
them formed part of the res gestae and is relevant and admissible under s.8 of
the Indian Evidence Act.
The dialogue is proved by Shaikh. The tape
record of the dialogue corroborates his testimony. The process of
tape-recording offers an accurate method of storing and later reproducing sounds.
The imprint on the magnetic tape is the
direct effect of the relevant sounds. Like a photograph of a relevant incident,
a contemporaneous tape- record of a relevant conversation is a relevant fact
and is admissible under s.7 of the Indian Evidence Act. " In R.M. Malkani
V. State of Maharashtra [1973] 3 S.C.R. 417, this Court observed:
"Tape recorded conversation is
admissible, provided first that the conversation is relevant to the matters in
issue; secondly, there is identification of the voice, and thirdly, the
accuracy of the tape-recorded conversation is proved by eliminating the
possibility of erasing the tape-record. A contemporaneous tape record of a
relevant conversation is a relevant fact and is admissible under section 8 of
the Evidence Act. It is res gestae. It is also comparable to a photo graph of a
relevant incident. The tape recorded conversation is therefore a relevant fact
and is admissible under section 7 of the Evidence Act.
458 In Ziyauddin Burhanduuain Bukhari v.
Brijmohan Ramdas Mehra Ors. [197] Suppl. S.C.R. 281, this Court approved the
High Court relying upon the tape recorded reproduction of the successful
candidates' speeches to voters for holding that he had appealed to them in the
name of religion.
Mr. Rao learned counsel for the respondent
relied upon the following four decisions in regard to the proof required in
cases where election or returned Candidates is alleged to be void on the ground
of corrupt practice.
In Chenna Reddy v. R.C.Rao E.L.R. 1972 Vol.
40 396, this Court observed:
This Court has held in a number of cases that
the trial of an election petition on the charge of the commission of a corrupt
practice partakes of the nature of a criminal trial in that the finding must be
based not on the balance of probabilities but on direct and cogent evidence to
support it.
In this connection, the inherent difference
between the trial of an election petition and a criminal trial may also be
noted. At a criminal trial the accused need not lead any evidence and
ordinarily he does not do 80 unless his case is to be established by positive
evidence on his side, namely, his insanity or his acting in half-defence to
protect himself or a plea of alibi to show that he could not have committed the
crime with which he was charged. The trial of an election petition on the
charge of commission of corrupt practice is somewhat
different..................... the procedure before the High Court is to be in
accordance with that applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure to the trial
of suits with the aid of the provisions of the Indian Evidence Act.
Inferences can therefore be drawn against a
party who does not call evidence which should be available in support of his
version." In Balakrishna v. Fernandez [1969] 3 S.C.R. 603, this Court
observed:
"Although the trial of an election
petition is made in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure, it has been
laid down that a corrupt practice must be proved 459 in the same way as a
criminal charge is proved. In other words, the election petitioner must exclude
every hypothesis except that of guilt on the part of the returned candidate or
his election agent.
In Sultan Salhuddin Owasi v. Mohd. Osman
Shaheed and Others. [1980] 3) S.C.C. 281, this Court observed:
It is now well settled by a large catena of
the authorities of this Court that a charge of corrupt practice must be proved
to the hilt, the standard of proof of such allegation is the same as a charge
of fraud in a criminal case. C In Ram Sharan Yadav v. Thakur Muneshwar Nath
Singh and Others., [1984] (4) S.C.C. 649, this Court observed:
"As the charge of a corrupt practice is
in the nature of a criminal charge, it is for the party who sets up the plea of
'undue influence' to prove it to the hilt beyond reasonable doubt and the
manner of proof should be the same as for an offence in a criminal case. This
is more so because once it is proved to the satisfaction of a court that a
candidate has been guilty of 'undue influence' then he is likely to be
disqualified for a period of six years or such other period as the authority
concerned under Section 8-A of the Act may think fit........... while insisting
on standard of strict proof, the Court should not extend or stretch this
doctrine to such an extreme extent as to make it well-nigh impossible to prove
an allegation of corrupt practice. Such an approach would defeat and frustrate
the very laudable and sacrosanct object of the Act in maintaining purity of the
electoral process." In regard to what constitute election offences Mr. Rao
invited attention to the decision of Ramaswami, J. in Nagendra Mahto v. The
State A.I.R. 1954 Patna, where it was stated in the complaint that the criminal
revision petitioner before the High Court insisted upon going into the room
where the ballot papers were kept though the Presiding Officer had warned him
to go out of the room and also the petitioner himself attempted to put the
ballot papers to the box of one Nitai Singh Sardar and it has been held that
there was proper evidence to record a finding of guilt and sufficient to
sustain the conviction under section 131 (1) (b) and section 136 (1) (f) of the
Act.
460 On the other hand, Mr. Sibal invited
attention to this Court's decision in Ram Dial v. Sant Lal & Ors. [1949]
Suppl. (2) S.C.R. 739, in support of his contention about what is required to
be proved in regard to an alleged corrupt practice. After quoting the
provisions of section 2 of 46 and 47, Victoria. c 51 three learned Judges of
this Court have observed:
The words of the English statute, quoted above,
laid emphasis upon the individual aspect of the exercise of undue influence. It
was with reference to the words of that Statute that Bramwell, B., made the
following observations in North Dursham [1874] 2 O'M & H. 152 "When
the language of the Act is examined it will be found that intimidation to be
within the statute must be intimidation practised upon an individual. The
Indian Law on the other hand, does not emphasise the individual aspect of the
exercise of such influence, but pays regard to the use of such influence as has
the tendency to bring about the result contemplated in the clause. What is
material under the Indian Law, is not the actual effect produced, but the doing
of such acts as are calculated to interfere with the free exercise of any electoral
right. Decisions of the English Courts, based on the words of the English
statute, which are not strictly in pari materia with the words of the Indian
statute, cannot, therefore, be used as precedents in this country.
In the present case, we are not concerned
with the threat of temporal injury, damage or harm. On the pleadings and on the
findings of the Tribunal and of the High Court, we are concerned with the undue
exercise of spiritual influence which has been found by the High Court to have
been such a potent influence as to induce in the electors the belief that they
will be rendered objects of divine displeasure or spiritual censure if they did
not carry out the command of their spiritual head.
I shall now consider the evidence relating to
the incidents at Kalaka and Burthal Jat Polling stations one after the another.
The incident in and at the Kalaka and Burthal Jat polling station consists of
two parts, namely, (1) alleged booth-capturing by the respondent and his
companions, all of them armed with deadly weapons like pistol 461 and sword or
kirpan and the polling of bogus votes marked in favour of the respondent after
threatening the polling officers and polling agents who were in the polling
station with violence and making them to Stand still, and (2) the respondent
scaring away electors who were standing in the queue outside the polling
station awaiting their turn for casting their votes. Regarding the first part
of the incident at Kalaka there is the evidence of P.Ws. 7 to 10, 12, 14, 17 and
18 on the side of the appellants and of R.W..
1 to 6 and 22 on the side of the respondent.
P.Ws. 7 to 10 are official witnesses while P.Ws. 12, 14, 17 and 18 are private
individuals. Similarly, R.W.. l to 4 are official witnesses while R.W.. 5, 6
and 22 are private individuals.
Tara Chand (P.W.12) is one of the appellants.
He was the polling agent of the Congress (I) candidate, Sumitra Devi who has
been referred to at some places in the evidence as Sumitra Bia, along with Amar
Singh (P.W.17). His evidence is that he retired as polling agent after one hour
and P.W.
17 took over as polling agent and thereafter
he was arranging the voters in the queue. He has stated that the respondent and
5 or 7 of his companions, all of them armed, entered the polling station when
he was standing at the gate and they threatened the polling staff at gun point
and asked them to stand aside. Thereafter the respondent asked his companions
to do their work and they tore off the ballot papers from the bundle and
affixed the seal in favour of the respondent and put those ballot papers into
the ballot box.
The respondent's companions, Tula Ram who was
his polling agent, Ram Krishan (R.W.5), Desh Raj and Krishan Lal put the seals
on the counterfoils and the thumb impressions on the counterfoils of the ballot
papers. Amar Singh (P.W.17), appellants' polling agent, Mangal Singh (P.W.18)
and Basti Ram were present. When Mangal Singh (P.W.18) protested, the
respondent's Sikh companion caused injury to him with his sword at the respondent's
instance. When Basti Ram raised objection to the behaviour of the respondent
and his companions he was injured with the butt of a gun. The police-Men who
were present in the polling station did not intervene but some time later the
people of Kalaka village and some other police personnel arrived. Then the
respondent and his companions fled away, abandoning two motor-vehicles at the
spot. The Deputy Commissioner (P.W.7) and the Returning Officer (P.W.10) came
there one hour later. P.W.7 interrogated the polling staff and tape-recorded
their conversation. The polling was stopped for over one hour and many people
got frightened and went away from the polling station without casting their
votes. P.W. 12 has admitted in his cross-examination that he had 462 canvassed
for the Congress(I) candidate for five to ten days prior to the date of poll
and had worked as polling agent of Congress (I) candidates even earlier. He
claims to have reported to the police after the completion of the poll and has
stated that the police did not send for anybody. He has also stated that he did
not see Ajit Singh son of Rao Birendra Singh at Kalaka during the poll. He has
denied the suggestion that the Congress (I) workers beat the respondents
polling agent, Tula Ram and drove him out of the polling station about one hour
of the commencement of the poll.
Amar Singh (P.W.17) of Kalaka was the polling
agent of Sumitra Devi alongwith P.W.12. He claims to have taken over as polling
agent from Tara Chand (P.W.12) one hour after the commencement of the poll. He
has stated that at about 10.30 a.m. the respondent came inside the polling
station accompanied by 3 or 4 persons. The respondent was armed with a rifle
while one of his companions had a sword and the other had a pistol and the rest
sticks. The respondent asked P.W.17 and the polling staff to stand aside and
directed his companions to poll votes. Thereupon the respondent's companions
took the ballot papers and affixed thumb impressions and marked the ballot
papers and put them into the ballot box. When P.W.18 objected to the high
handed behavior of the respondent his Sikh companion thrust the sword at Mangal
Singh (P.W.18). When Basti Ram also raised objection the respondent gave him a
thrust with the butt of a rifle. P.W.17 and others who were in the polling
station were pushed outside. m e police-men who were inside the polling station
did not interfere. Some time later the people from Kalaka village and some
police personnel arrived and thereupon the respondent and his companions left
the place. P.W.17 and others detained two motor-cycles of the respondent's
party and T caught hold of two of the fleeing persons and produced the motor
cycles before P.W.7 who came there alongwith P.W.10. P.W.17 has denied in his
cross- examination that Ajit Singh son of Rao Birendra Singh visited the Kalaka
Polling station. He has denied the suggestion that he and other Congress (I)
supporters beat Tula Ram and drove him out of the polling station and that he
has given false evidence being a sympathiser of the Congress (I) party. Mangal
Singh (P.W.18) of Kalaka has stated in his evidence that when he was in the
polling station and his particulars were being checked before he could cast his
vote the respondent armed w with a gun and accompanied by 3 or 4 persons, one
of them armed with a pistol and the other with a sword and the rest with lathis
came inside the polling station. The 463 respondent asked P.W. 18 and others
who were in the polling station to stand aside under threat of being killed
otherwise. When P.W. 18 objected to the respondents behavior the respondent
asked his men to beat him and turn him out of the polling station. Thereupon
the respondent's Sikh companion thrust the tip of his sword near his right
foot.
When Basti Ram who was behind R.W. 18
protested against the behavior of the respondent and his companions the
respondent caused an injury to him with the butt of a rifle. Later the people
of Kalaka village and some police personnel arrived and the respondent and him
companions ran away. P.W. 18 and others informed P.W. 10 and the police about
what happened.
P.W. 18 has admitted in his cross-examination
that he had canvassed for the Congress (L) candidate but he has denied the
suggestion that he has always been helping the Congress (I) Party and has
therefore given false evidence.
Hari Singh (P.W.8) who was a teacher in one
of the Ahir Educational Institutions was the Presiding Officer at the Kalaka
polling station. He has stated that at about 10.30 a.m. until which time the
polling went on smoothly, the respondent accompanied by some other persons
reached the polling station and came into the polling station along with four
or five persons, carrying a small gun with him while one of his companions was
carrying a pistol and another a sword and the others sticks. The E respondent
who appeared to be in a rage pointed the gun towards P.W.8 and others saying
that the remaining votes should be polled. The respondent's companions snatched
ballot papers from the officials in the polling station and tore off about 25
or 26 ballot papers and marked them in favour of the respondent and put them
into the ballot box. They put their thumb- impressions on the counter-foils of
the ballot papers. There was noise outside when the respondent and his companions
were inside the polling station. The respondent and his companions went out the
polling station after 25 or 26 ballot papers had been put into the ballot box
as stated above. Soon after the respondent and his companions left the place a
Sub-Inspector of Police came there. P.W. 8 was writing the report when P.Ws.7
and 10 accompanied by the Superintendent of Police arrived. After completing
his report P.W. 8 got it signed by all the polling staff and handed it over to
P.W. 7 and he recorded his statement.
Ex.P-5 is the diary prepared by P.W. 8 in
accordance with Instruction-74 of the Instructions to Polling Officers given by
the Election Commission of India. P.W. 8 had deposited Ex.P-5 along with the
other records in the Election Office.
He has stated the Ex.P-5 was prepared by him
464 and that it is correct. In his cross-examination he has stated that nee
dose not know if the High School run by the Ahir Education Board where he was
employed since 1972 does or does not belong to Rao Birendra Singh. He has
denied that he and the members of his family had been supporting Rao Birendra
Singh in the elections. he has admitted that he has not mentioned anything in
column 20-E of Ex.P-5 relating to intimidation of voters and other persons
except crossing it and has stated that it is because he was very much perturbed
at that time. Reference will be made in detail later to the contents of the
Presiding Officer's diary Ex.P-5 and the report of P.W. 8 to the police
contained in Ex.P-6 on the basis of which FIR No. 103 of 1982 dated 19.5.1982
had been registered by Dharam Pal (P.W.9) Assistant Sub-Inspector of police on
19.5.1982. Suffice it to say at present that reference has been made in Ex.P-5
to the respondent putting pressure on the polling staff and getting 25 or 26
bogus votes polled in his favour when there was a lot of noise and commotion in
the polling station from 10.30 to 11.30 a.m. as a result of which the polling
had stopped. In his report the police also P.W. 8 has stated that the
respondent armed with a pistol came inside the polling station along with four
or five his companions named, one of them with a sword and the others with
sticks and hurled abuses and forcibly polled about 25 or 26 ballot papers at
gun point on account of which he could not stop them from doing so. The
Assistant Sub-Inspector of police (P.W.9) who had been posted at Sadar Rewari
police station on 19.5.1982 has deposed about the registration of FIR No. 103
of 1982 on that day on the receipt of a rukka from Sub-Inspector, Deep Chand.
He has stated that the FIR Ex.P-6 is in his hand-writing and that it is correct
according to the material on the basis of which it has been registered. He has
not been cross-examined about the registration of FIR No. 103 of 1982 dated
19.5.1982.
Bala Bhaskar (P.W.7), the Deputy Commissioner
of Mohindergarh was District Election Officer for the election to the Haryana
Legislative Assembly held in May, 1982. He has stated that when he was
travelling by car at about 10.30 a.m. between Monoddola and Zainabad villages
in the course of his visits to some of the polling stations in the Rewari
Constituency on 19.5.1982 he received a wireless message to the effect that the
respondent had complained against Congress (I) workers saying that 40 or 50 of
them had attacked Congress (J) workers at Kalaka. P.W. 7 reached Kalaka polling
station at 12.30 p.m. after instructing the police over the wireless to take
action on 465 that complaint of the respondent. When he reached Kalaka polling
station he received oral complaints about the detention of a motor-cycle
belonging to the workers of the Congress (J) party. He went inside the polling
station and tape-recorded the conversations with the officers in Ex.P.W.
7/1 of which Ex.P-1 is the transcript
prepared under his supervision. He has stated that he compared the transcript
Ex.P-1 with the original tape-record and found it to be correct and that it
bears his signature by way of authentication. He has admitted that there are
some gaps in Ex.P-1 as the voices in the tape were not clear and audible.
He has stated that the tape record remained
in his custody throughout and was not tampered with either himself or by anyone
else and that it contains the voices of the Presiding Officer (P.W.8), the
polling officer Roop Chand (R.W.7) and the Police Constable, Mohinder Singh
(R.W.3) whose number is 498. Reference will be made later to the contents of
the tape-record and to the report Ex.P-2 submitted by P.W. 7 to the Government
about the incident which took place on 19.5.1982 during the elections as it had
come to his notice.
In his cross-examination P.W. 7 has admitted
that he could not now identify the persons whose voices were recorded in the
tape and that the tape is Government property which had been issued to him by
the Government and that the tape- recorder remained with him all the time and
the tape- recorder and tape-record and the transcript Ex.P-1 had not been
placed in the record room. It has to be noticed that the respondent (R.W. 22)
has admitted in his evidence that though he had made several reports to the
Election Commission and other Election Authorities before and after the
election with which we are concerned in this-appeal he had not made any report
against P.W. 7.
Shri Krishan (P.W. 10) was the Sub-Divisional
Officer, Rewari and Returning Officer for the Rewari Constituency in the
election held to the Haryana Legislative Assembly in May, 1982. In the course
of his tour of the Constituency after 10 a.m. On 19.5.1982 he reached Chalky
polling station at about 11 or 11.30 a.m. On receipt of a complaint from the
polling station to the effect that the respondent alongwith some other persons
intimidated the polling staff and the public at that polling station. He was
with P.W. 7 when he reached Chalky polling station and he found the polling at
a stand-still at that time. When he reached Chalky polling station the Station
House Officer of Sadar Rewari was present there alongwith a Head-Constable and
some other police personnel. The Deputy Commissioner (P.W.7) conducted an
enquiry and interrogated the polling staff and the 466 police personnel and
tape-recorded their conversation. One of the polling officers told P.W. 10 that
the polling agents were turned out by the respondent and his companions and
that a bundle of ballot papers was taken away and the ballot papers were marked
and put into the ballot boxes and that the voters who were in the polling booth
were turned out. He found two motor-cycles stranded near the polling station.
It is seen from his evidence that he was
transferred from the Rewari Sub-Division on 1.6.1982 and that a file had been
handled in a way different from the one in which it had been handled until he
handed over charge of his office. He has denied the suggestion that the file
was created in a particular manner by insertion of some papers for fabricating
evidence in favour of the appellants. It has to be noticed in this connection
that the respondent had complained Ex.R.7 dated 4.5.1982 that P.W. 10 is
married in the locality and was interfering with the election.
On the other hand, it is the evidence of Roop
Chand (R.W.1) who was Steno-Typist in the office of the Project Officer,
Agricultural Department in Haryana and the alternate Presiding Officer in
Kalaka polling station on 19.5.182 that after the polling started at 7.30 a.m.
Ajit Singh son of Rao Birendra Singh came to the polling station at about 8.30
a.m armed with a rifle and accompanied by 15 or 20 persons and asked for the
respondent's polling agent Tula Ram and that Ajit Singh's companions pushed
Tula Ram out of the polling station. Ajit Singh remarked that the polling at
the Kalaka polling station had always been one- sided and directed his
companions to poll votes. When the polling staff resisted, Ajit Singh abused
R.W.1 and others and asked his companions to beat them and they slapped the
polling staff. Ajit Singh's companions picked up some ballot papers and tore
them off from their counter-foils and put them into the ballot box for about on
hour and left the polling station thereafter. The respondent came to the
polling station about one hour later and told the Presiding Officer (P.W.8)
that he should not be partial to any party and he came to know that his polling
agent had been beaten and that bogus votes had been polled in the polling
station.
Thereupon P.W. 8 assured the resondent that
he would not permit anything of that sort to be repeated. About half an hour
after the departure of the respondent from the polling station many people of
Kalaka village gathered at the polling station and proclaimed that they would
poll votes forcibly. When R.W. 1 and others resisted and collected the voting
material those persons beat the polling staff and snatched the voting material
and in the struggle which ensued P.W. 8 was 467 dragged upto the door of the
polling station and was rescued by the police-men on duty. Since the police
present in the polling station could not pursuade the crowd to disperse polling
was stopped at about 10.15 a.m. and P.Ws. 7 and 10 arrived there subsequently
and arranged for the polling to restart after making the electors to stand in a
queue. He has denied that P.W. 7 asked for his name and profession and that he
told him that he was Roop Chand and a Stenographer.
He has stated that he asked P.W. 8 to record
the visit of Ajit Singh and his companions into the polling station and that
P.W. 8 told him that he has recorded it in his diary.
The appellants' case regarding forcible
polling by the respondent's companions at his instance and the tape-record was
put to R.W. 1 and has been denied by him. He has admitted that a few days after
the election the police obtained an affidavit from him on judicial stamp paper
but he has denied that it was done under pressure of the respondent.
Deen Dayal (R.W.2), a teacher was the polling
officer along with Dhani Ram (R.W.4) who is also a teacher. He has stated that
after the polling at the Kalaka polling station went on peacefully for about an
hour Ajit Singh, armed with a pistol, came with 15 or 20 persons at about 8.30
a.m. and entered Kalaka polling station forcibly and asked for the polling
agent of the respondent and told his companions to remove him from there. Ajit
Singh asked his companions to beat R.W. 2 and others and they were accordingly
beaten, and P.W. 8 told them to allow Ajit Singh's companions to do whatever
they liked and thus avoid being beaten saying that he would make a complaint
about the Latter. Ajit Singh and his companions polled bogus votes for about
half an hour and left the polling station. The respondent came there half an
hour later and told P.W. 8 that he had been informed that his polling agent had
been beaten and that bogus votes had been polled and protested against it to
P.W.8. P.W.8 told the respondent that whatever had happened and that he would
conduct the poll in a proper manner thereafter. About half an hour after the
respondent left the place the people of Kalaka village came in a crowd and
entered the polling station and told the polling staff that they would poll
votes forcibly in favour of Sumitra Devi. When the polling staff refused to act
according to their desire they beat them and try to snatch the ballot box from
R.W. 4.
Meanwhile, Constable Mohinder Singh, (R.W. 3)
came inside the polling station wrested the ballot box from the crowd and placed
it at its original place. Soon thereafter a Sub- Inspector of Police and some
other constables came and tried tc remove the crowd from the polling station.
About half an hour later P.W. 10 468 came there and left the place after
talking with P.W. 8.
P.W. 7 came there about half an hour
thereafter and directed P.W. 8 and the polling staff to conduct the polling
properly and polling started again at about 12 noon. He had stated in his
cross-examination that he did not make any report either to the police or to
P.Ws. 7 and 10 though slaps and fist blows had been given to him by the
miscreants but he asked P.W. 8 after PWs. 7 and 10 left the place as to whether
he had reported about the maltreatment meted out to polling officers and he
answered in the affirmative. He has stated that P.W.7 talked only to P.W. 8 and
to no other polling staff and did not tape-record any conversation in his
presence and that he does not know if P.W. 7 had talked with the police
constable who was posted at the polling station.
He has denied that Ajit Singh had not come to
the polling station at all and that no incident of the kind stated by him took
place in the polling station.
Mohinder Singh (R.W. 3) who was on duty as a
police constable at Kalaka polling station on 19.5.1982 has stated that about
half an hour after the polling started at 7.30 a.m. he heard shouts that Ajit
Singh had come and saw Ajit Singh, armed with a pistol, coming in to the
polling station along with 15 or 20 persons and that inspite of the fact that
he obstructed 2 or 3 companions of Ajit Singh pushed the respondent's polling
agent out of the polling station and stated beating him and he rescued him. He
also stated that he does not know what Ajit Singh and his companions did inside
the polling station where they remained for about 30 to 45 minutes and that the
respondent come there by a motor-oar with 2 or 3 persons about half an hour
after Ajit Singh and his companions left the place and left the place 2 or 3
minutes later after go mg inside the polling station.
He has further stated that about half an hour
thereafter about 50 to 60 persons came from Kalaka village and entered the
polling station forcibly and snatched the ballot boxes after beating the
polling staff and they were turned out of the polling station by Sub-Inspector,
Deep Chand and some police constables who arrived there some time later. He has
stated that P.W. 10 come there about 30 or 45 minutes thereafter and left the
place after talking with P.W. 8 and that P.W. 7 arrived there about 30 to 45
minutes after P.W.
10 left the place and talked to the polling
staff and arranged for the polling starting again at about 12 noon. He has
denied in his cross-examination that P.W. 7 had any talk with him in the
polling station and has stated that he did not make any report about the
incident or the treatment meted out to him by Ajit Singh and his companions
though the respondent's 469 polling agent was bleeding and his clothes were
torn. He has denied that the voice recorded in the tape (Ex.P.W. 7/1) put to
him is his voice and also that P.W. 7 interrogated him and he made a statement.
The appellants's case of forcible polling by the respondent's men was put to
R.W. 3 and has been denied by him.
The evidence of R.W. 4 is more or less the
same as that of R.Ws. 1 to 3 as regards the alleged forcible polling of bogus
votes by Ajit Singh and his companions. He too has stated that at the instance
of P.W. 7 who arrived there about half an hour after P.W. 10 left the place
after talking to P.W.8 the polling started again. He has admitted in his
cross-examination that P.W. 8 had some conversation with P.Ws. 7 and 10 but he
has denied that the respondent came to the polling station armed with a
revolver and accompanied by 15 to 20 persons and got some votes polled at gun
point and ran away along with his companions on the arrival of the police and
the villagers.
Ram Krishan (R.W. 5), the brother of the
respondent's polling agent Tula Ram who has not been called as a witness
admittedly supported the respondent in the election held in May, 1982. He has
stated that t he went to the polling station for casting his vote at about 7.30
a.m. when the polling started and that Ajit Singh, armed with a pistol, came to
the polling station at about 8.30 a.m. accompanied by 40 or 50 persons and
entered the polling station with 15 or 20 persons. Some persons who entered the
polling station along with Ajit Singh dragged Tula Ram out of the polling
station and beat him and when he intervened they started beating him also as a
result of which his clothes got torn and he was rescued by the police constable
(R.W. 3). He went with his brother by his scooter to Rewari and reported to the
respondent about the incident and leaving Tula Ram at Rewari he came along with
the respondent and 2 or 3 other persons by a motor-car to Kalaka village where
the respondent went into the polling station and left the place 5 or 7 minutes
later for Rewari. He has stated in his cross- examination that both himself and
his brother Tula Ram bled from different parts of the bodies because of the
injuries sustained by them and that they did not however get themselves
medically examined or make any complaint to any authority because there were
only abrasions from which there was some bleeding. It is seen from his evidence
that Tula Ram who has not been examined is alive and is in service as a Clerk
in some department at Chandigarh where the election petition was tried.
470 Suresh (R.W. 6) has stated that when he
reached Kalaka polling station at 8.30 a.m. in May, 1982 Ajit Singh, armed with
a revolver, came there with 40 to 50 persons and went inside the polling
station with about 15 to 20 persons. The respondent's polling agent Tula Ram
was dragged out of the polling station and beaten. When R.W. 5 rushed for his
help he too was beaten and was rescued by a police constable who may on duty at
the polling station. The respondent came there by a car about half an hour
after Ajit Singh and his companions left the place and went away after
remaining in the polling station for about 5 or 6 minutes. The appellants' case
of forcible polling by the respondent's men had been put to R.W. 6 and denied
by him. He too has stated in his cross-examination that P.W.. 7 and 10 came to
the polling station after the respondent left the place and that on their
intervention polling restarted and the people started forming a queue and he
himself cast his vote thereafter.
The respondent R.W. 22 has stated that when
he was in his house at Rewari on 19.5.1982 after deciding not to go out of the
house on that day R.W. 5 and his polling agent Tula Ram came there at 8.45 a.m.
from Kalaka polling station with their clothes torn and appearing to have been
beaten badly and told him that Ajit Singh accompanied by 50 or 60 persons
entered the polling station and beat them and indulged in forcible polling and
that he thereupon went by a car to Kalaka village alongwith R.W. 5 at about
9.15 or 9.30 a.m. On that day. Leaving his car at some k distance he walked to
the polling station and found 50 or 60 villagers collected there and he entered
the polling station protested to P.W. 8 and brought the complaint given to him
by R.W. 5 and Tula Ram to his notice. After P:W. 8 assured him that nothing of
that sort will be allowed to happen in the remaining part of the day he
returned from Kalaka 7 or 8 minutes later and sent a written report to the
police about the incident with copies to P.W. 7 and the election authorities
and received a message from the police station at 10.30 a.m. that his complaint
had been flashed to P.W.. 7 by wireless message and that appropriate action was
expected to be taken soon. He has further stated that in his letter Ex. R. 7
dated 4.5.1982 he requested for the appointment of an observer because of
official interference and had stated that P.W. 10 was married in that area and
was interferring in the election. He has stated in his cross-examination that
FIR No. 103 of 1982 was connected at a later stage at the instance of Rao
Birendra Singh. He was the Speaker of Haryana Legislative Assembly until the
first meeting of the newly constituted Legislative Assembly was held after the
election held on 471 19.5.1982 and after having succeeded in the election as a
Congress (J) candidate he joined the Congress (I) Party and is now the Transport
Minister. He has admitted that he is not made any mention in any of his
complaints sent to the Chief Election Commissioner and other election
authorities prior to 19.5.1982 that P.W. 7 was acting in any way against him in
a prejudicial manner. He has admitted that he has not stated in his written
statement that he complained to the police in writing about the incident in
Kalaka polling station and had sent copies thereof to the Election Commissioner
and P.W. 7. He has stated that he did not make any complaint naming Ajit Singh
specifically about the incident at Kalaka because the picture was not clear to
him at that time and not because such an incident never happened. The
appellants' case of booth-capturing and bogus polling by the respondent in
Kalaka polling station had been put to R.W. 22 and denied by him. The
tape-record (Ex. P.W.
7/1) was played before him and he has stated
that it does not contain his voice and that it is rather the voice of Rao
Birendra Singh.
The oral evidence of R.Ws. 1 to 6 that Ajit
Singh came along with some of his companions and dragged out Tula Ram from
Kalaka polling station and beat him and that they snatched ballot papers and
ballot boxes and got bogus votes polled in that polling station and the
evidence of R.W. 22 that R.W. 5 and Tula Ram came and told him that Ajit Singh
accompanied by 50 or 60 persons entered the polling station and beat them and
indulged in forcible polling cannot be accepted for two important reasons,
namely, that no such plea had been put forward in the written statement of the
respondent where no doubt he has stated vaguely that the men of Rao Birendra
Singh captured the booth at Kalaka and the supporters and voters of the
respondent were badly out- manouevered and it could be gathered from the fact
that whereas Sumitra Devi had obtained 484 votes he had obtained only 53 votes
in that polling station and not that Ajit Singh and his companions came to
Kalaka polling station and indulged in forcible voting or that they beat R.W. 5
and his brother Tula Ram. The respondent has denied in his written statement
that the process of polling got disrupted for over an hour at Kalaka polling
station and that a number of voters had to refrain from casting their votes;
but, as mentioned above it has been admitted by R.Ws. 1 to 4 that the polling
was suspencial at Kalaka polling station on 19.5.1982 and that it re-started
after the arrival of P.Ws.
7 and 10 at the polling station some time
after the departure of the respondent and his companions. though the case 472
of the respondent that there was forcible polling at the Kalaka polling station
by Ajit Singh and his men cannot be accepted for want of any such plea in the
written statement Mr. Sibal was justified in requesting the Court to accept the
admission on the part of the respondent's witnesses that there was forcible
polling at the Kalaka polling station in the morning of 19.5.1982 and that the
polling got disrupted as a consequence thereof and that it was recommended
after the arrival of P.Ws. 7 and 10 and to reject their evidence that Ajit
Singh and his men were the cause.
Under instruction 74 of Instructions to
Presiding Officers issued by the Election Commission of India, extracted above,
the Presiding Officer is bound to draw up the proceedings connected with the
taking of the poll in the polling station in the diary to be maintained for the
purpose in the form in which Ex.P.-5 had been filled up by the Presiding
Officer (P.W. 8). The Presiding Officer is directed by the instruction to go on
recording the relevant events as and when they occur and not to postpone the
completion and filling of all the entries in the diary to the completion of the
poll and he has to mention therein all the important events. Even the alternate
Presiding Officer (R.W. 1) has stated in his evidence that the Presiding
Officer (P.W. 8) told him that it was his duty to report about the incident and
he would do so. It is seen from Column 18 of Ex.P-5 relating to the number of
votes polled that 195 votes were polled from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., 205 from 12
noon to 2 p.m., 106+3 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and to on upto 4.30 p.m. and that
in the disputed period from 10 a.m.
to 12 noon only 51 votes were polled. In
column 21 it is stated that the polling was interrupted and disrupted by
rioting and open violence and that from 10.30 a.m. to 11.30 a.m. the respondent
put pressure on the polling party and got 25/26 bogus votes polled in his
favour and there was a lot of noise and commotion outside. In column 22
relating to the question whether the poll was vitiated by any ballot paper
being unlawfully marked by any person and deposited in the ballot box it is
stated that 4 or 5 persons who came with the respondent snatched ballot papers
and forcibly put them into the ballot boxes. The Presiding Officer (P.W. 8) who
has deposed about the incident has stated in his evidence that Ex.P.-5 is the
diary which he submitted after the poll, that it was prepared and signed by him
and is correct and that he deposited it along with the other records in the
election office. As stated earlier, what has been elicited in his
cross-examination is that apart from crossing column 20(E) relating to
intimidation of voters and other persons he has not 473 mentioned anything in
that column and that he failed to fill up that column in full because he was
very much perturbed at that time. It has not been suggested to P.W. 8 that he
had prepared Ex.P-5 later under the pressure and influence of the defeated
candidate Sumitra Devi through her brother Rao Birendra Singh. Nor is there any
positive evidence to that effect on the side of the respondent. Therefore, it
is not known on what basis the learned trial Judge has observed in his judgment
that Ex.P-5 appears to have been made up by P.W. 8 under the pressure and
influence of the defeated candidate Sumitra devi through her brother Rao
Birendra Singh. In the absence of any material on record or even a suggestion
to that effect to the Presiding Officer (P.W. 8) who has stated that he filled
it up correctly and deposited it alongwith the other records in the election
office it is not possible to agree with the view of the learned trial Judge
that Ex.P-5 has been got up later by P.W. 8 under the pressure and influence of
the defeated candidate Sumitra Devi through her brother Rao Birendra Singh.
Ex.P-5, a contemporaneous document prepared by the Presiding Officer (P.W. 8)
as required by Instruction 74 (supra) and deposited by him in the election
office after the poll was over alongwith the other records is a very valuable
piece of documentary evidence corroborating the oral evidence of the Presiding
Officer (P.W. 8) and other witnesses examined on the side of the appellants who
have deposed about the first part of the incident in the Kalaka polling
station.
The next contemporaneous document
corroborating the oral evidence of P.W. 8 is the copy of the report of P.W. 8
to the police appended to FIR No. 103 of 1982, Ex.P-6 dated 19.5.1982, prepared
by the Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police, P.W. 9 on receipt of a rukka from the
Sub-Inspector of police, Deep Chand. P.W. 9 has stated that it is in his
hand-writing and correct according to the material on the basis of which it was
registered. Ag stated earlier, PSHAW.
9 has not been cross-examined as regards the
FIR contained in Ex.P-6. The learned trial Judge has rejected Ex.P-6 as being
inadmissible in evidence for corroborating the evidence of P.W. 8 about the
incident in Kalaka polling station on the ground that the original report of
P.W. 8 to the police had not been summoned by the appellants. It is no doubt
true that the original had not been summoned by the appellants before P.Ws. 8
and 9 deposed about Ex.P-6 in their evidence. P.W. 8 has stated in his evidence
that when he was writing the report soon after the Sub-Inspector of police came
to the polling station after the respondent and his companions had 474 left the
place, P.Ws. 7 and 10 accompanied by Superintendent of police came there and
that after completing that report he got it signed by the polling officials and
handed it over to the police officer and he recorded his statement. It is
stated in the copy of P.M. in complaint to the police appended to Ex.P-6 that
at about 10.30 a.m. when the polling was going on smoothly the respondent came
into the polling station, armed with a small pistol and accompanied by 4 or 5
persons, one of the armed with a sword and the others with sticks, and hurled
abuses and forcibly polled about 25/26 ballot papers at gun point on account of
which P.W. 8 could not stop them from doing 80. He also stated that the polling
staff was threatened with danger to their lives and, therefore, they kept
standing there for some time and that the companions of the respondent dragged
the polling agent (P.W. 17) of Sumitra Devi and appropriate action may be taken
by the police. It is seen from the record that the appellants had taken steps
to summon FIR No. 103 of 1982 dated 19.5.1982 and the Head Constable of Sadar
Rewari Police station to prove the incident at Kalaka. The record further shows
that the respondent also had applied for summoning the orders of Court
disposing of FIR No. 103 of 1982 as also FIR No. 104 of 1982 to which reference
will be made in the course of the discussion relating to the incident at
Burthal Jat polling station. The respondent had also applied for summoning the
Inspector of Police, Kedar Singh to appear with the relevant records showing
the disposal of the above two FIR. But subsequently he filed CMP 31 (E) of 1983
for substituting and their person in the place of Inspector Kadar Singh and though
that petition was opposed by the appellants the trial Court allowed the
petition on the same day i.e. 21.2.1983 itself. The appellants also had filed
CMP 41(E) of 1983 for summoning the file relating to those two FIRs from Sadar
Rewari Police station. That application was dismissed by the learned Trial
Judge on 25.2.1983. Thus it is seen that the appellants who had doubt not taken
steps for summoning the original complaint given by P.W. 8 to the police at the
Kalaka polling station in the first instance probably because the respondent
himself had originally sought the production of the relative records from the
police station had later taken necessary steps to summon the original complaint
as also to recall P.W. 8 for deposing about that fact. In these circumstances,
I find that the necessary foundation must be held to have been laid for
adducing secondary evidence by way of the copy appended to FIR No. 103 of 1982
(Ex.P-6) and that the appellants are therefore entitled to adduce secondary
evidence of the contents of that complaint. The complaint of P.W. 8 to the
police given immediately after the incident was over and soon 475 after the
arrival of the police personnel and the officials P.Ws. 7 and 10 and the
Superintendent of Police is another contemporaneous document and a valuable
piece of documentary evidence corroborating the evidence of P.W.8 and other
witnesses examined on the side of the appellants to prove the first part of the
incident in the Kalaka polling station.
The third piece of documentary evidence let
in by the appellants for proving the first part of the incident in the Kalaka
polling station is the tape-record (Ex.P.W. 7/1) of which Ex. P`l is a
transcript prepared under the instructions and mostly in the presence of P.W. 7
by his Stenographer. P.W. 7 has stated in his evidence that inside the polling
station at Kalaka he tape-recorded the version given by the officers about the
incident in that polling station in Ex.P.W. 711, and he compared the transcript
(Ex.P-1) prepared by his Stenographer with the original and found it to be a
correct reproduction of the original, and he has authenticated it by signing it
and that there are some gaps in Ex.P-1 as the voices in the tape were not clear
and audible. He has also stated that the tape-recorder which had been supplied
to him by the Government, the tape Ex.P.W.
7/1 and the transcript Ex.P-1 remained in his
custody throughout and had not been deposited by him in the election office. He
has not been questioned as to why he retained the tape, the tape-recorder and
the transcript in his custody without depositing them in the election office.
Therefore, no adverse inference can be drawn against P.W. 7 or the appellants
from the fact that the tape, the tape-recorder and the transcript had not been
deposited by P.W.7 in the election office. No suggestion has been made to P.W.
7 in cross-examination that he had in any way tampered with the tape-record
(Ex.P.W. 7/1) and he has stated in his examination in chief that a portion of
the tape relating to the incident at Burthal Jat polling station has been
erased inadvertently by his own voice. The learned trial Judge has rejected the
tape-record (Ex.P.W. 7/1) holding (1) that it is tampered with later,
disbelieving the evidence of the P.W. 7 that a portion of what he had recorded
at the Burthal Jat polling station was erased by his own voice inadvertently on
the some day and (2) that the authenticity of the transcript (Ex.P.1) has not
been proved with definiteness. It is not reasonable to reject the tape merely
because some portions thereof could not be made out on account of noise and
interference not only outside but also inside the polling station when what was
being elicited by P.W. 7 from the polling officers and the police-man (R.W. 3)
was being H recorded. In R. v. Maqusud Ali (supra) tape recorded conversation
of the two accused in a murder case has been held to be 476 admissible in
evidence for the purpose of proving the guilt of the accused and it has been
observed that the tape- recording was a matter of the utmost importance and
that it is indeed the highly important piece of evidence which the defence
strenuously sought to keep out. In R. v. Robson (supra) in which reference has
been made to K. v. Maqusud Ali (supra) tape-recording had been held to be
admissible in the case in which the accused was charged with corruption,
rejecting the plea of the defence that it was inadmissible inter alia because
in many places it was un- intelligibIe though it was however not contended that
the tape-recording was as such inadmissible in evidence of what was recorded on
it .
It is clear from these and the other
decisions of this Court referred to supra that tape-recorded evidence is
admissible provided that the originality and the authenticity of the tape are
free from doubt. In the present case there is no valid reason to doubt them. In
Shri N. Sri Kara Reddy etc. v. Shri V.V. Giri (supra) referred to above a bench
of five learned Judges of this Court has held that the contemporaneous dialogue
tape-recorded in that case formed part of res gestae and that it is relevant
and admissible under sections 7 and 8 of the Evidence Act. If it is res gestae
it is admissible in evidence even under section 6 of the Evidence Act
illustration 1 where of reads thus:
"A is accused of the murder of by
beating him.
What ever was said or done by A or B or the
by- standers at the beating, or so shortly before or after it as to form part
of the transaction, is a relevant fact.
The following passage in regard to incidents
forming part of the res gestae is found in para 509 of Halsbury's Laws of
England (Vol. 15) Third Edition:
"There are many incidents, however
which, though not strictly constituting a fact in issue may yet be regarded as
forming a part of it, in the sence that they closely accompany and explain that
fact.
In testifying to the matter in issue,
therefore, witnesses must state them not in their barest possible form, but
with a reasonable fullness of detail and circumstance (g). These constituent or
accompanying incidents are said to be admissible as forming part of the res
gestae (h). When they consist of declarations 477 accompanying an act they are
subject to three qualifi- cations; (1) they must be contemporaneous or almost
contemporaneous with the fact in issue and must not be made at such an interval
as to allow of fabrication or to reduce them to the mere narrative of a past
event (i) though this is subject to apparent exceptions in the case of
continuing facts (k); (2) they must relate to and explain the act they accompany,
and not independent facts prior or subsequent where to (i); and (3) though
admissible to explain, they are not always taken as proof of the truth of the
matters stated, that is, as hearsay (m).
P.W. 7 has stated in his evidence that the
voice of P.W. 8 who was the Presiding Officer at kalaka polling station is
recorded in the tape, that the tape contains also he conversation of the
alternate Presiding Officer, Roop Chand (R.W. 1) and that the voice of the
Constable Mohinder Singh (R.W. 3) who was on duty at the polling station and
had made a complaint to him is also recorded in the tape. It is true that he
has admitted in his cross-examination that he cannot identify the voice with
any of the persons mentioned by him. The transcript of the tape (P.W. 7/1)
after it had been recorded in a larger tape with the help of a re sophisticated
instrument in this Court was prepared by this Court and some portions thereof
has been admitted by R.W. 22 to be in his voice and he has recognised in the
larger tape the voice of even P.W. 7 in some portions of the conversation which
admittedly took place between him and P.W. 7 in the office of R.W. 10 at about
7.30 p.m. On 19.5.1982. It is seen from the transcript that some one had
answered the question about what his name and number were and that one Mohinder
Singh had answered saying that his name and number were Mohinder Singh and 498
which tally with those of R.W. 3. In the answer to question as to how many
persons came inside the polling station Mohinder Singh had stated that four
persons case inside and 20 or 30 persons were remaining outside and there were
also 5 or 6 vehicles.
In answer to the question whether he had seen
arms or ammunitions in the hands of those persons who stood outside and of
those four persons who entered the polling station Mohinder Singh had stated
that perhaps Colonel Sahib, referring to the respondent, was armed with a gun
while some persons were armed with swords and some 2 or 3 persons were armed
with lathis. It is further seen that in answer to the question as to what he
was and what was his name one Roop Chand informed the question that he was Roop
Chand and a Stenographer in the Project Office of the Agricultural Department
in Haryana. These particulars tally with those 478 of R.W. 1. It is seen from
the tape that P.W. 17 had also answered certain questions saying inter alia
that he was Amar Singh, polling agent of the Congress (I) candidate and that
there were 5 or o vehicles with a number of persons in them. It is also seen
from the tape that during the course of conversation between the respondent and
P.W. 7 at the office of P.W. 10 the fact that P.W. 7 had gone to Kalaka polling
station immediately after the respondent and others left the place and that he
got the statements tape-recorded there was mentioned by P.W. 7 to the
respondent. In these circumstances great reliance has to be placed on the tape
(Ex.P.W. 7/1) and is contents not only for corroborating the evidence of P.Ws.
7 and 8 to the extent they go but also as res gestae evidence of the first part
of the incident. The learned trial Judge was not justified in rejecting the
tape- record (Ex.P.W. 7/1) and the transcript (Ex.P-1). It must be remembered
that the respondent who had openly disowned any art of the tape as containing
his voice and had, on the other hand, gone to the extent of saying in the trial
Court that it rather contained the voice of Rao Birendra Singh has admitted in
this Court portions of that tape as being in his voice and that he has stated
that he cannot identify any voice other than those of himself and P.W. 7.
Coming now to Ex. P-2, P.W. 7 has stated in
that report that around 10.30 a.m. when he was proceeding by his car between
Manodola and Zainabad villages he received a message on the 4 police wireless
that in Rewari Constituency the Congress (J) candidate had complained that
about 50 to 60 Congress (I) workers had attacked his workers in Kalaka village.
He immediately directed the Station House 'Officer of Sadar Rewari to rush to
the village. At 11.35 a.m. he received a message on the police wire less that
villagers had refused to vote in Kalaka alleging that Congress (J) workers had
polled some bogus votes in Kalaka polling station. Therefore he proceeded to
Kalaka polling station and interrogated the Presiding Officer and the polling
officers of the polling station and recorded the conversation in his
tape-recorder. When he was told that Congress (J) workers came into the polling
station and snatched ballot papers from the polling staff and polled them in
favour of the respondent, he advised the polling officer to accept tendered
votes from the electors if they came to the polling station for voting and he
thereafter went to Burthal Jat. This report submitted by P.W. 7 some time after
the results of the poll were announced corroborates the evidence of P.W. 7
about what he did at the polling h station soon after he went there on receipt
of a wireless message about the polling of bogus votes in favour of the
respondent.
479 With respect to the office which he
holds, the respondent, as a party and his own witness, is wholly unreliable. In
his written statement he had vaguely alleged that the men of Rao birendra Singh
captured the booth at Kalaka aud the supporters and voters of the respondent
were badly out-manoeuvred and that the said fact could be gathered from the
fact that whereas Sumitra Devi had obtained 484 votes he had obtained only 53
votes in that polling station. The only suggestion made to P.Ws. 12 and 17 who
have denied it is that Ajit Singh visited the Kalaka polling station. No
suggestion was made to any of the witnesses examined on the side of the
appellants in the cross-examination that Ajit Singh came armed with some armed
companions and beat R.W. 5 and Tula Ram and dragged them out and that they
forcibly polled bogus votes. Such a case was projected by the respondent only
after the respondent started to let in oral evidence on his side after the
appellants had closed their evidence. In these circumstances, when questioned
as to why he had not made any complaint naming Ajit Singh specifically for the
incident at Kalaka R.W. 22 has stated in his evidence that it is not because
such an incident never happened but because the picture was not clear at that
time. It is impossible to accept this explanation of R.W. 22, for the polling
took place on 19.5.1982 and the respondent filed his written statement in the
election petition long thereafter on 14.9.1982. If, as the respondent would
have it, Tula Ram and R.W. 5 came to his residence at Rewari in the morning of
19.5.1982 and informed him about the incident at the Kalaka polling station and
there after he went there and complained to P.W. 8 about it, he should have
come to know about the details of the incident before he filed his written
statement long thereafter on 1.9.1982. If by 14.9.1982 the picture of what
happened at the Kalaka polling station 19.5.1982 was not clear it is not known
how it would have become clear only after appellants had closed their evidence
and just before the respondent began to let in oral evidence on his side.
Therefore, the explanation of R.W.22 that he had not named Ajit Singh
specifically in relation to the incident at the Kalaka polling station not
because it never happened in the manner stated by his witnesses but because the
picture was not clear at that time cannot be accepted at all.
R.W. 22 had stoutly denied in the trial Court
that the tape record (Ex. P.W. 7/1) contained his voice but added that it is
rather the voice of Rao Birendra Singh. But after the tape was recorded with
the aid of a more sophisticated instrument by playing it in this Court in the
presence of the respondent in the 480 office and also in the open Court, R.W.
22 has admitted some portions of his conversation with R.W. 7 in the office of
P.W. 10 at about 7 or 7.30 a.m. On 19.5.1982. In the cross examination made in
this Court after R.W. 22 had heard the re-recorded larger tape being played in
the Court R.W. 22 has stated that he could not recognise the voice of any
person in the tape other than those of himself and P.W. 7.
If the tape used by P.W. 7 for recording the
conversation could not be followed and understood clearly when it was played in
the trial court with the very same instrument by which it was recorded what
R.W. 22 could have said was that he cannot say whether it contains his voice
but he could not have gone to the extent of saying that it does not contain his
voice but it rather contains the voice of Rao Birendra Singh. This also shows
that the evidence of R.W. 22 is not reliable.
In his cross examination in this Court R.W.
22 has stated that he was the Speaker of the Haryana Legislative Assembly until
the new Legislative Assembly met after the elections in May, 1982 and could
therefore have summoned any officer to his office and he did not go to the
police station on 19.5.1982 and he is quite positive about it. But in the later
portion of his evidence in this Court he has stated that not only his admission
of the transcript of the tape (Ex. P-l) to the effect that he went to the police
station but also his written statement that he did not go to the police station
on 19.5.1982 are both correct and that he would emphasize that he did not go to
the police station at all on that day. He has also stated that although the
voice in the tape says that he went to the police station and that voice
appears to be his own voice he did not go to the police station because he was
the Speaker of the Haryana Legislative Assembly on that day and could have
summoned any police officer to his office. However, it is his own evidence that
he did go to the office of P.W. 10 to meet P.W. 7 at about 7 or 7.30 p.m. On
19.5.1982. This also shows that the evidence of R.W. 22 is not reliable.
R.W. 22 has admitted the voice in the tape
that when P.W. 7 asked him about when he received the message about the
incident at the Kalaka polling station he answered by saying that it was about
11.30 a.m. and that it is correctly recorded in the tape. It is seen from the
transcript that the respondent had stated in that conversation that he
thereafter went to the Kalaka polling station and questioned his men as to
whether they were not ashamed that two or three 'chaps' belonging to the same
village had been beaten. However, he would say in his evidence that he 481 went
to Kalaka only once on 19.5.1982 and that it was about 9 or 9.30 a.m. There is
abundant unimpeachable evidence on the side of the appellants to show that the
respondent, armed with a rifle, visited Kalaka polling station accompanied by
some armed persons at about 11.30 a.m. or 12 noon, and indulged in the polling
of bogus votes. P.W. 7 had stated in the course of his tape recorded
conversation with the respondent in the office of P.W 10 at about 7 or 7.30
p.m. on 19.5.1982 that he visited Kalaka polling station soon after the
respondent had left that place. R.W. 22 has admitted in his cross examination
in this Court that the statement of P.W. 7 that he was there at about 12 noon
or 12.05 p.m. refers to Kalaka polling station and that P.W. 7 told him that
the Presiding Officer told him a different story about the incident which took
place in that polling station. It is, therefore, clear that the respondent has
attempted to make a futile effort to show that he visited the Kalaka polling
station with R.W. 5 and others only at about 9 or 9.30 a.m. On 19.5.1982 and
not at the time of the first part of the incident alleged by the appellants.
The written statement is silent on the
question whether the respondent visited Kalaka polling station on 19.5.1982
except a mere denial. The respondent unsuccessfully attempted to file an
additional or amended written statement to the effect inter alia that he had
decided not to move out of his house and had not gone out of his house on
19.5.1982.
This portion of the additional or amended
written statement which had not been received by the Court was put to him in
cross examination by Mr. Sibbal. R.W. 22 has stated that there appears to be a
typing error in that statement that he did not move out of his house on that
day and that what he meant to say was that as a consequence of the assurance of
his supporters that he was going to succeed he acceded to their wish and had
decided not to move out of his house on that day. He would say that he did not
read that amended written statement and had no sufficient time to read it
properly but that he did not give specific instructions to his counsel on that
matter and was told by his supporters not to move out of his house on 19.5.1982
and that the fact that he went to Kalaka village on 19.5.1982 is not mentioned
in that amended written statement though inspite of deciding not to move out of
his house on that day he did go to Kalaka village on that day. This also shows
that the evidence of R.W. 22 is not reliable.
In the election petition it is alleged in
relation to the incident at the Burthal Jat polling station that Anil Kumar and
Satbir Singh are the relatives of the respondent.
There is no 482 denial much less any spefic
denial of this allegation in the written statement of the respondent though it
is a material fact which ought to have been denied specifically if it was not
admitted. Therefore, under 0.8 r. 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure which
applies to proceedings in election petitions it must be deemed to have been
admitted by the respondent.
Order 8 rule 5 reads:
Every allegation of fact in the plaint, if
not denied specifically or by necessary implication, or stated to be not
admitted in the pleading of the defendant, shall be taken to be admitted except
as against a person under disability.
Provided that the Court may in its discretion
require any fact so admitted to be proved otherwise than by such admission.
But during the trial R.W. 22 had repeatedly
denied that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were in any way related to him though
in a portion of his evidence he would say that satbir Singh is the adopted son
of Jagmal Singh, father of his wife who was divorced in 1962 and that he does
not known if Anil Kumar is the brother of his brother-in-law, Surinder Kumar
and he could not deny or admit that he is the brother of his brother-in-law,
Surinder Kumar as Surinder Kumar has 6 or 7 brothers. He has stated that he
does not know whether Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh are the two persons who were
arrested in Burthal Jat village on 19.5.1982 for offences under section 107 and
151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and that he had not exhibited grave
concern about Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh in the course of his conversation
with P.W. 7 in the office of P.W. 10 at 7 or 7.30 p.m. On 19.5.1982 or told
P.W. 7 that they were his relatives. But in his cross examination in this Court
he has admitted that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh had been arrested by the
police at the instance of P.W. 7 at the burthal Jat polling station on
19.5.1982 and that he had referred to them as his relations only because P.W. 7
had not taken any steps inspite of his repeated representation in regard to the
arrest of those two persons. It is not possible to accept the evidence of R.W.
22 that because no steps were taken by P.W. 7
on his repeated requests for the release of Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh he told
P.W. 7 that they were his close relatives, for he had admitted in his evidence
in this Court that he would have left no stone unturned if his partymen and
workers were harassed even though they may not be his relatives. It appears
from this portion of the evidence of R.W. 22 that it would have been
unnecessary for him to claim Anil Kumar and 483 Satbir Singh to be his close
relatives merely to prevent them from being harassed by the police after their
arrest on A 19.5.1982. He has stated in his evidence in this Court that because
he was told by his workers that two of his relatives had been arrested and
their identity was not clear to him when he had the Conversation with P.W. 7 in
the office of P.W. 10 on 19.5.1982. he referred to them in the course of his
conversation as his relatives. He has also stated that it is only after P.W. 7
mentioned their names and identity that he new that they were Anil kumar and
Satbir Singh and that they were not his relatives. In the subsequent portion of
his evidence he has stated that he had never deposed in this Court that P.W. 7
mentioned the name of Anil Kumar to him. In an other portion of his evidence in
cross examination in his Court he has admitted that the statement in that
conversation that he told P.W. 7 that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were his
relatives is correct. Thus, it is seen that R.W.. 22 has given varying versions
on the question whether Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were his relatives or not
though he has admittedly informed P.W. 7 in the course of his conversation with
him in the office of P.W. 10 on 19.5.1982 that they were his close relatives.
This also shows that the evidence of R.W. 22
is not reliable.
The evidence of the private witnesses
examined by the appellants to depose about the first part of the incident in
the Kalaka polling station is fully corroborated by the evidence of the
Presiding Officer (P.W.8) and received ample corroboration from the evidence of
P.Ws. 7 and 10. Their evidence is corroborated by the reliable and
contemporaneous documentary evidence by way of Exs. P-5, P-6 and the tape
record Ex. P.W.7/1 which are unimpeachable and also by what has been stated by
P.W. 7 in his report (Ex. P-2) submitted by him to the Government some time
after the results of the election held in May 1982 were announced. Therefore, I
reject the evidence of the respondent and the other witnesses who have deposed
on his side in regard to this part of the incident in the Kalaka polling
station and accept the evidence of P.W. 8 and the other witnesses who have
deposed about the same on the side of the appellants election petitioners and
hold that the appellants have proved satisfactorily and beyond reasonable doubt
the first part of the incident in Kalaka polling station, namely that the
respondent went armed with a rifle with 25 or 30 companions and entered the
polling station with 4 or 5 armed companions and threatened the Presiding
Officer (P.W. 8) and others including the polling agents who were present in
the polling station with the use of force and got some ballot papers marked in
favour of the respondent polled forcibly by his 484 companions in the ballot
box and that they left the polling station on seeing the villagers of Kalaka
and police personnel coming towards the Kalaka polling station. There is no
doubt that there is some discrepancy in the evidence regarding the time of the
incident. But it is not a material discrepancy.
I shall now consider the evidence relating to
the second part of the incident at the Kalaka polling station.
Mr. Sibbal did not press the case of the
appellants regarding the second part of the incident at the Kalaka polling
station in his principal argument but he pressed that portion of the appellants'
case after Mr. Rao contended in the course of his argument that what is alleged
to have happened inside the polling station, even if true, will not constitute
any corrupt practice but would amount only to an electoral offence. Regarding
this part of the case there is the evidence of Tara Chand (P.W. 12), Sheo Chand
(P.W. 13), Puran (P.W. 14), Inder Singh (P.W. 16) and Mangal Singh (P.W. 18),
on the side of the appellants. Gur Dial who has been referred to in the
election petition in this connection was tendered as P.W. 15 for
cross-examination but he has not been cross-examined by the learned counsel for
the respondent. P.W. 12 who was one of the electors and the polling agent of
Sumitra Bai in the election with which we are concerned at the Kalaka polling
station has stated that when he was arranging the electors to stand in a queue
for the purpose of voting, the respondent came there with 60 or 70 persons at
about 10.30 a.m., The respondent armed with a gun while some of his companions
were armed with swords, pistols and sticks. The respondent and his companions
threatened PWs. 14,15,17 and others including Kesar Lal who had come to the
polling station for the purpose of casting their votes and asked them to go
away from there and they consequently ran away from the polling station.
Amongst the respondent's companions who did so P.W. 12 knows only Desh Raj
Krishan Lal and Ram Krishan (R.W. 5) of Kalaka and Balbir Singh, Raghubir Singh
and Umrao Singh. P.W. 12 has not been seriously examined on this portion of his
evidence.
What has been elicited in his
cross-examination is that he was the polling agent of Congress (I) candidates
even in the earlier elections and he had convassed for the Congress (I)
candidate in the election with which we are concerned for 5 or 10 days and that
he reported to the police after the completion of the poll but the police did
not send for anybody on that complaint.
P.W. 13 has stated that when he was standing
in the queue awaiting his turn for casting his vote after reaching Kalaka 485
polling station at about 10 a.m. the respondent came there at about 10 a.m.
alongwith 50 or 60 persons in two or three vehicles namely, a truck and two
motor cycles. The respondent was armed with a gun while his companions
including Desh Raj, Krishan Lal and Ram Krishan (R.W. 5) were armed with
swords, rifles and lathis. Lambardar Ishwar (P.W. 16), Puran (P.W. 14), Ram
Singh and others were standing in the queue at that time. The respondent
threatened P.W. 13 and others saying that they cannot cast their votes and he
asked them to go away under threat of being beaten and shot, and out of fear
P.W. 13 and others who were standing in the queue ran away. It has been
elicited in his cross-examination that he came back and cast his vote at 2 p.m.
and that he cannot say whether the others who were in the queue and had run
away had come again or not for casting their votes.
P.W. 14 has stated that he had gone to the
polling station at about 10 or 11 a.m. for casting his vote and was standing in
the queue alongwith others. The respondent came there armed with a gun,
accompanied by 50 or 60 persons including Desh Raj, Krishan Lal, Balbir Singh,
Ram Krishan (R.W. 5) and a Sikharmed with a kirpan.. The respondent's
companions created a commotion and the respondent threatened P.W. 17 and others
who were in the queue to run away on pain of being killed otherwise and out of
fear all the persons who were in the queue ran away. In his cross-examination
he has stated that about 15 or 20 persons were standing in the queue when the
respondent and his companions arrived at the polling station and that he cast
his vote later at about 3 p.m. after calm prevailed all around. He has denied
the suggestion that he had given false evidence being a Congress (I) worker.
Ishwar Singh (P.W. 16) the Lambardar of
Kalaka village has stated that when he was standing in the queue along with 14
or 15 persons at about 10 or 10.30 a.m. awaiting his turn for casting his vote
the respondent came there, accompanied by 3 or 4 persons including Desh Raj and
Krishan Lal (R.W.
6) of his village and threatened to kill him
and he was hit with the butt of a gun by one of the companions of the
respondent and he ran away. He has also stated that P.Ws.
13,14,15 and 17 were also standing in the queue
alongwith him and that after he informed the people of the village that the
respondent had come and threatened him the people of the village collected and
came towards the polling station whereupon respondent and his companions ran
away leaving behind two motor-cycles by which respondent's companions had come
there. There is abundant evidence on the side of the appellants, 486 referred
to above, to show that when P.W. 7 and other officials arrived after the
incident in and at the Kalaka polling station they found two motor-cycles
abandoned at that place. P.W. 16 has denied the suggestion that he has deposed
falsely being the supporter of the Congress (I) party.
P.W. 18 has stated that when he was inside
Kalaka polling station and his particulars were being checked before he could
be allowed to vote the respondent came there and that 20 or 25 persons were
standing in the queue ran away. He has admitted in his cross-examination that
he had canvassed for the Congress (I) party but has denied the suggestion that
he has always been helping the Congress (I) candidates and has given false
evidence on account of that reason.
This is all the oral evidence on the side of
the appellants regarding tho respondent threatening electors who were standing
in the queue at the Kalaka polling station awaiting their turn for casting
their votes in the morning on 19.5.1982 and scaring them away under threat of
violence against their person and thereby preventing them from exercising their
electoral right. The evidence on the side of the respondent has been referred
to above in the discussion relating to the first part of the incident at the
Kalaka polling station and has been found to be not reliable. It has been found
earlier that the evidence of R.W. 22 and his witnesses that R.W. 22 went to
Kalaka polling station by a car with some of his men only at about 9 or 9.30
a.m. On 19.5.1982 could not be accepted and that the respondent had received
information at about 10.30 a.m.
about some Congress (J) workers having been
beaten by Congress (I) workers in Kalaka, which message had been flashed by the
police wireless and received by P.W. 7 and he went there only thereafter. There
is unimpeachable evidence on the side of the appellants to show that when the
respondent went inside Kalaka polling station he was in a rage. In these
circumstances, it is probable that while in such a mood after receipt of some
report that his workers were beaten by Congress (I) workers he went there and
asked his men whether they were not ashamed about 2 or 3 of their men of the
same village having been beaten and that he thereafter indulged in the acts
alleged in the election petition both outside and inside the polling station at
Kalaka. P.W. 7 who reached Kalaka polling station soon thereafter received oral
report about the detention of a motor cycle belonging to Congress (J) workers.
In these circumstances, 1 accept the evidence of PWs. 12, 13, 16 and 18
referred to above and find that the respondent came to the 487 Kalaka polling
station at about 10.30 a.m. on 19.5.1982, armed with a rifle and accompanied by
his companions some of whom were armed with deadly weapons and that he
threatened the electors who were standing in the queue awaiting their turn for
casting their votes on account of which they ran away and he had thus
interfered with the exercise of the electoral right of those persons. There is
some discrepancy in the evidence about the time of arrival of the respondent
and his men. It is not a material discrepancy.
About the incident at Burthal Jat polling
station there is the evidence of P.Ws. 7, 9 and 10 who are official witnesses
and of Mahabir Singh (P.W. 26), Dharam Vir (P.W.
27), Thavar Singh S (P.W. 28), Amir Chand
(P.W. 29), Surjit Singh (P.W. 30), Raghubir Singh (P.W. 31), Shamsher Singh
(P.W. 32), Kishori Lal (P.W. 33), Ram Narain (P.W. 34) and Mam Chand (P.W. 35)
on the side of the appellants. There is evidence of Ravi Datt Sharma (R.W. 11),
Parbhati (R.W. 12), Ami Lal (R.W. 13), Sheo Chand (R.W. 14) and the respondent
(R.W. 22) on the side of the respondent.
P.W. 26 of Burthal Jat village was the
polling agent of the respondent himself and he had filed the form (Ex. P-16)
dated 18.5.1982 for the same. He has stated in his evidence that he had gone to
the polling station at 7 a.m. and had not seen any incident at that place. It
is clear that P.W.
26 was not prepared to go the whole hog to
support the case of the appellants as regards the incident at the Burthal Jat
polling station but he has stated in his cross-examination that when he went to
the polling station he saw Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were canvassing votes
for their candidate and that he also saw a jeep with sticks. The learned trial
Judge has stated in his judgment that though the evidence establishes that Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh were canvassing votes for their candidate lt is not
known from the evidence as to who their candidate was. But lt is clear from the
evidence referred to already showing the concern of the respondent for Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh who had been arrested by the police at the Burthal Jat
polling station that the candidate for whom they were canvassing could not have
been any other than the respondent. P.W. 26 has admitted in his
cross-examination that Satbir Singh was known to him previously and that he
(P.W. 26) was on duty inside the polling station.
P.W. 27 of Burthal Jat village has stated in
his evidence that he had gone to Burthal Jat polling station at 8 a.m. for
casting his vote in the election held in May, 1982. The 488 respondent came there
at about 8 a.m. accompanied by 50 or 60 persons and told his polling agents,
Mahabir and Udhey Bhan that he was leaving some persons behind and he asked
them to see that no one is permitted to vote for the Congress (I) candidate and
that they should ensure to have maximum votes polled in his favour in that
polling station.
The respondent left behind 15 or 16 persons
including Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh, one of them a Sikh armed with a sword
and the others with pistol and sticks and the other persons who came with the
respondent went away with him. In his cross-examination he has stated that the
respondent came to Burthal Jat polling station in a car while his companions
came by a motor-cycle, a jeep and a truck. No doubt he is unable to mention the
numbers or colour of the vehicles or the colour of the turban of the
respondent's Sikh companion and he has stated that he cannot identity Satbir
Singh. He has denied the suggestion that he is a supporter of Rao Birendra
Singh and his sister and that the respondent did not come to Burthal Jat
polling station at all on that day.
P.W. 28 who belongs to Burthal Jat village
has stated in his evidence that after he went to the polling station the
respondent came there accompanied 50 or 60 persons at about 8 a.m. The
respondent was armed with a small gun while his companions were armed with
rifles, ballas and sticks.
The respondent called his polling agents
Mahabir and Udhey Bhan and told them that they should not permit even a single
vote to be cast in favour of the Congress (I) candidate and he was leaving
behind Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh alongwith 15 or 20 persons for their help.
The other people left behind by the respondent were armed with lathis. He has
admitted in his cross-examination that he was the polling agent of Sumitra Devi
but he has denied the suggestion that the respondent did not go to the polling
station at all on that day and that he has given false evidence.
P.W. 29 who belongs to Burthal Jat village
has stated in his evidence that he went to the polling station at about 8 a.m.
for casting his vote in the election with which we are concerned. The
respondent accompanied by 50 or 60 persons came there at about 8 a.m. and sent
for his polling agents Mahabir and Udhey Bhan and told them they should not
permit anyone to vote in favour of the Congress (I) candidate. PWs. 27 and 28
and many other persons were present when the respondent said so. The respondent
told Mahabir and Udhey Bhan that he was leaving behind Anil Kumar and Satbir
Singh for their help alongwith 15 or 20 persons who were found by P.W. 29 to be
armed with sticks. P.W.
489 29 was not permitted to cast his vote
earlier and he therefore, came again and cast his vote at 3 p.m. He has stated
in his cross-examination that he returned to his house after 8 a.m. Out of fear
and went back to the polling station at 3 p.m. for casting his vote and stayed
there till the afternoon. He has denied the suggestion that the respondent did
not visit Burthal Jat polling station on that day.
P.W. 30 who belongs to Burthal Jat village
has stated in his evidence that he started to go to the polling station at
about 10.30 a.m. for casting his vote in the election with which we are
concerned. When he emerged from his village to proceed to the polling station for
casting his vote Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh met him and asked him as to whom
he was going to cast his vote and they insisted that he should vote for the
respondent. On his refusal to do so Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh threatened P.W.
30 when 2 or 3 persons armed with sticks were present with those two persons
and he therefore returned to his house. He went to the polling station at about
3.30 p.m. for casting his vote and learnt that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh had
been arrested by the police. He has stated in his cross- examination that he
does not know to which place Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh belong and that when
he came to the polling station later at about 3 p.m. he was told that those two
persons were Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh. He has denied the suggestion that he
had been a supporter of Rao Birendra Singh in all the elections and that he has
given false evidence.
P.W. 31 who belongs to Burthal Jat village
has stated in his evidence that when he went to the polling station at 11 a.m.
for casting his vote in the election with which we are concerned he was
accosted by Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh who were present there alongwith 20 or
30 persons armed with sticks about 25 yards away from the boundary of the
polling station and they asked him as to the person for whom he was going to
cast his vote and they insisted that he should vote for the respondent and
threatened him when he replied that he would vote for the candidate of his own
choice. In view of the threat he went back to the village and came later for
casting his vote a, about 3. p.m. and learnt that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh
had been taken into custody by the police.
He has admitted in his cross-examination that
he did not complain to anybody about the threat but he has denied the suggestion
that he has given false evidence.
P.W. 32 is the Sarpanch of Burhtal Jat
village. He was admittedly the polling agent of Sumitra Devi. He has stated in
490 his evidence that he went to Burthal Jat polling station for the second
time at 2.30 p.m. When he approached the main gate of the polling station he
met Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh and they asked him to support the respondent
and when he told them that it was open to him to vote for the candidate of his
own choice there was an altercation and they started beating him and he was
rescued by P.Ws. 33, 35 and others of his village. Meanwhile, an Assistant Sub-
Inspector of police came there by jeep and they hurled abuses at him even in
the presence of the Assistant Sub- Inspector of police and thereupon that
police officer arrested Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh. He saw a jeep containing
sticks parked there, and the people who were in the jeep ran away when the
police arrived. He brought these facts to the notice of P.Ws. 7 and 10 when
they came there and they took the jeep and the sticks into their custody.
Anil Kumar was sitting on the motor-cycle
while Satbir Singh was standing on the road-side when they confronted him as
stated above and their motor-cycle was taken into custody by the police. In his
cross-examination lt has been elicited that he did not report in writing to
P.Ws. 7 and 10 or get himself medically examined or file any complaint in any
Court against Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh. He has denied the suggestion that he
had strained relations with Satbir Singh because of his election to a
cooperative society and that he has given false evidence because he was the
polling agent of Sumitra Devi.
P.W. 33 who is the chowkidar of Burthal Jat
village has stated in his evidence that when he went to the polling station at
about 2.30 or 3 p.m., during the last election to the Haryana Legislative
Assembly he saw Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh abusing and beating P.W. 32. P.W.
33 and Lambardar Mam Chand (P.W. 35) and another Lambardar Ram Singh and others
of Burthal Jat village separated P.W. 32 from Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh.
Meanwhile, an Assistant Sub-Inspector of police came there, and about 10 or 15
other persons who were with Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh ran away on seeing the
police after leaving behind a jeep and a motorcycle which were taken into
custody by the police. P.W. 32 informed P.Ws. 7 and 10 about what happened when
they came there some time later. In his cross- examination he has denied that
P.W. 32 was not present at all at the Burthal Jat polling station but was in
his village at the time of the poll. He has denied that he was appointed as
Chowkidar by P.W. 32 and has stated that he is Chowkidar of the village since
1982 and that P.W. 32 became Sarpanch of Burthal Jat village only recently. He has
denied the suggestion that no incident at all took place in the village and
that he had given false evidence under the influence of P.W. 32.
491 P.W.34, the Lambardar of Kakoria village
situate close to Burthal Jat village, has stated in his evidence that he went
to Burthal Jat polling station at about 2.30 or 3 p.m.
for casting his vote in the last election to
The Haryana Legislative Assembly and saw Anil Kumar and & Satbir Singh
slapping and fisting P.W. 32. He and P.W. 35 and others intervened and separated
them. Some time thereafter a Sub- Inspector of police came and saw Anil Kumar
and Satbir Singh exchanging abuses with P.W. 32 and he arrested those two
persons. P.Ws. 7 and 10 who came there later talked with Anil Kumar and Satbir
Singh. The police took a motor-cycle and a jeep which was with Anil Kumar and
Satbir Singh into their custody. In his cross-examination he has stated that he
had not meet Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh previously and that he does not know
the numbers of the jeep and the motor cycle. He has denied the suggestion that
he had supported Rao Birendra Singh in the election to Parliament in 1980 and
did not go to Burthal Jat village at all during the election in question and
has deposed falsely under the influence of the appellants.
PW 35 son of Umrao Singh and Lambardar of
Burthal Jat village was the polling agent of the Bhartiya Janata Party
candidate in the last election of the Haryana Legislative Assembly. He has
stated that after he reached Burthal Jat polling station at 7 a.m. the
respondent came there at about 8 a.m. accompanied by 50 or 60 persons and
called his polling agents and told them that they should see to it that the
Congress (I) candidate does not get votes and he added that he was leaving Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh and 15 other persons for their help. At about 2.30 p.m.
PW 35 saw Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh beating PW 32 of his village and
thereupon he and PWs. 33 and 34 separated them. Meanwhile, an Assistant
sub-Inspector of police took Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh into custody, and 10
or 15 persons who were left behind by the respondent fled on seeing the police
leaving behind a motorcycle and a jeep containing sticks and other weapons.
PWs. 7 and 10 came there some time later and the motor-cycle and the jeep were
taken into custody by the police. In his cross-examination he has denied that
Ex.P-9 to which reference would be made a little later contains his signature
and he has stated that there are two other persons of his name and one of them
is the son of Umrao Singh. He has further stated in his cross-examination that
the respondent told Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh that they should see to it that
no other candidate except himself gets votes in that polling station. He has
denied that he had made a false statement before PWs 7 and 10 and that he has
given false evidence being a member of the opposite faction.
492 The Deputy Commissioner and District
Election Officer (PW.7) has stated in his evidence that on the. day of poll he
proceeded from Kalaka polling station to Burhtal Jat polling station pursuant
to the receipt of` a complaint that a Congress(J) worker was attacked by the
villagers of Burthal Jat. The polling officer of Burthal Jat polling station
told him when he visited that place that nothing had happened inside the
polling station but some of the officers in the polling station told him that
there was some incidents outside the polling station though they were not sure
about the identity of the persons responsible for the same. Some villages told
PW 7 that Congress (J) workers had come in a jeep and tried to create trouble
and that one of them ran away while the police had detained two of those
persons. PW 7 interrogated those two persons and they then told him that they
had nothing to do with the jeep whose number he has recorded in the tape Ex.PW
7/1. PW 7 found some sticks in the jeep and he asked the police to take the
jeep and the sticks into their custody. Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh who had
been attacked by the villagers were found detained by the police. The Sarpanch
of Burthal Jat village (PW 32) made a complaint to him outside the Burthal Jat
polling station. PW 7 recorded the conversation which he had with the Presiding
Officer at the Burthal Jat polling station but some portion thereof was erased
by his own voice by inadvertence. The respondent met PW 7 at about 7 p.m. in
the office of PW 10 and informed PW 7 about some incidents which had taken
place during the day and complained to him about them. The conversation which
he had with the respondent at that time was recorded simultaneously in the tape
(Ex. PW 7/1) and he later reported to the Secretary to the Government about the
complaint which the respondent made to him against the Superintendent of
Police. His stenographer prepared the transcript Ex.P-1 in his office, most of
it under his supervision and he was temporarily absent to attend to some other
work, and he compared it with the original tape and found it to be correct. The
tape, tape-recorder and transcript remained with him throughout and were not
deposited by him in the record room and there was no possibility of tampering.
He had not created evidence in the form of the tape at the instance of Rao
Birendra Singh to harm the respondent. Ex.P-2 is the copy of the report which
he submitted about the incidents which took place on 19.5.1982 as had come to
his notice. In his report Ex.P-2 sent to the Secretary to the Government, PW 7
has stated inter alia that when he went to Burthal Jat polling station from
Kalaka polling station he was told that a few workers of the Congress (J)
candidate had been detained by the villagers and he had conversation with the
Presiding Officer and 493 the villagers and found a jeep with about 15 or 20
lathis in it and directed the police to take the jeep with the lathis as also
the two workers of the Congress (J) candidate who were standing near the jeep
into custody.
The Returning Officer and Sub-Divisional
Officer, Rewari (PW 10) who went to Burthal Jat polling station along with PW 7
has stated in his evidence that he saw Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh surrounded
by the people of that village and a jeep containing some sticks parked there
and that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh and the jeep were taken into custody by
the police under the orders of PW 7. He has further stated that Ex.P-9 was
handed over to him by one Mam Chand of Burthal Jat village on that day. As
stated earlier PW 35 who is Mam Chand son of Umrao Singh of Burthal Jat village
has disowned Ex.P-9. In his cross-examination PW 10 has denied that he had discriminated
between the candidates while disposing of the complaints about Kalaka and
Burthal Jat polling stations. Ex.P-9 addressed by Mam Chand to PW 10 is to the
effect that the respondent pointed out his gun at the Presiding Officer and
other persons in Burthal Jat polling station after he came there at about 1.30
p.m. along with 65 or 70 persons and he ordered for the ballot papers being
marked with the symbol of scales and put into ballot boxes and to finish off
anybody who interferes and that the whole village was terrorised and they were
thereby prevented from exercising their electoral right. There is no specific
reference in this report to Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh or to their arrest by
the police at the instance of PW 7. Ex.P- 9 which was found in the file
summoned from the office of the Sub-Divisional Officer, Rewari had been marked
only through PW 10 and has been disowned by PW 35 who is no doubt Mam Chand son
of Umrao Singh. For want of proof Ex.P-9 could not be taken into consideration,
but the learned Trial Judge has relied very heavily upon that document for
disbelieving the appellants' case regarding the incident at Burthal Jat polling
station. He was not justified in doing so.
The Assistant Sub-Inspector of police (PW 9)
who had been posted at Sadar Rewari police station has stated in his evidence
that at the instance of Assistant Sub-Inspector Jagan Nath who returned to the
police station at 3.30 p.m.
on 19.5.1982 he recorded a Daily Diary Report
of which Ex.P- 8 is a copy and that Ex.P-8 is a correct copy of the original
report. It is mentioned in Ex.P-8 that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh of Kutubpur
and Dulana respectively were abusing and beating Sarpanch Shamsher Singh (PW
32) whereupon an Assistant Sub-Inspector of police 494 along with other
intervened and separated them, that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were creating a
situation of breach of peace ant were therefore taken into police custody and
that the jeep bearing registration number DED-3203 was also taken into police
custody. PW 9 has not been cross-examined regarding Ex.P-8. Ex.P-28 is a copy
of the judgment in the case registered in the concerned FIR No.104 of 1982
dated 19.5.1982 under sections 107 and 151 of Code of Criminal Procedure
against Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh. It is seen from that judgment that the
Magistrate after considering the circumstances of the case and hearing Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh had come to the conclusion that the fight took place
between those two accused and the Sarpanch Shamsher Singh in connection with
polling of votes and that the incident pursuant to which the fight took place
was over and the accused persons belonged to different villages and there is no
likelihood of breach of the peace and therefore there is no necessity to take
any further action against them and he accordingly discharged them. Ex.P-27 is
a certified copy of the calender dated 19.5.1982 relation to that criminal case
registered by the police. Exs.P-27 and P-28 were tendered by the learned
counsel who appeared for the respondent in the trial court. That calender
contains allegations to the effect that the Assistant Sub-Inspector of police
with the help of Kalyan Singh separated PW 32 from Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh
and stopped the fighting, that the complaint of PW 32 was that when he was
going to cast his vote two persons riding on a motor-cycle came there and asked
him to vote in favour of the respondent, that when he told them that he would
cast his vote for the candidate of his own choice they assaulted him with danda
and gave him slaps, and that during the investigation the Assistant
Sub-Inspector of police found that those two persons were present there for
procuring votes for the respondent. It was not disputed by Mr. Rao in this
Court that though the complaint on the basis of which FIR No. 104 of 1982 had
been registered may not be admissible in evidence in the absence of any
foundation for letting in secondary evidence FIR No. 104 of 1982 registered by
PW 9 would be admissible in evidence. It shows that on the complaint to the
effect that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were abusing and beating PW 32 and they
were separated from PW 32 by and Assistant Sub-Inspector of police and others a
case under sections 107 and 151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was
registered against them and a jeep bearing number DED-3203 was also taken into
custody by the police on 19.5.1982, and it is admissible in evidence. The FIR
corroborates the evidence of PW 32 and of some of the other witnesses referred
to above who have deposed about this incident.
495 On the other hand, RW 11 a lecturer in a
Higher Secondary School at Rewari who was a polling office at Burthal Jat
polling station during the election with which we are concerned has stated in
his evidence that no untoward incident of any type took place and that the
respondent did not visit that polling station on that day. In view of the
documentary evidence and the other oral evidence referred to above which show
that on incident did take place outside Burthal Jat polling station and that a
jeep containing some lathis as also Anil Kumar and & Satbir Singh were
taken into custody and those two persons were prosecuted in a case registered
against them under section 107 and 151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure it is
not possible to accept the evidence of RW 11 that no incident took place and
that the respondent did not go to Burthal Jat polling station at all on
19.5.1982. It must also be noted that KW 11 has admitted in his
cross-examination that he could not have known that happened outside the
polling station because he was inside.
RW 12 who cast his vote in Burthal Jat
polling station at 8 a.m. claims to have remained at the polling station till
about 1.30 or 2 p.m. and he has stated that neither the respondent nor anyone
on his behalf came to the polling station and there was no quarrel inside or
near the polling station so long as he remained there. But in his
examination-in-chief itself he has admitted that PW 32 was standing about 80
kadams away from the polling station with some people and he heard some
altercation between them and that while the altercation was going on some
police personnel arrived at the spot and removed two persons who were not known
to him. He has further stated in his cross- examination that there was a jeep
a, some distance away from where the Sarpanch (PW 32) and the other persons had
altercation. He has no doubt denied the suggestion that 10 or 15 other persons
were with those two unknown persons and they were armed with sticks, that the
respondent came there and left those 15 or 20 persons along with those two
unknown persons and that those two unknown persons threatened many people as a
result of which they could not cast their votes.
RW 13 who went to Burthal Jat polling station
at about 10.45 a.m. for casting his vote and cast his vote at that time claims
to have stayed there along with some villagers until about 4 p.m. Though he has
stated in a portion of his examination-in-chief that no incident took place
with in or outside the polling station 80 long as he remained where he had
admitted in his examination-in-chief itself that he saw PW 32 having a dispute
with two unknown persons about 120 kadams away as also a jeep parked 80 kadams
away from the polling station and that he heard people saying that the Superintend
of Police removed these two 496 unknown persons. No doubt, he has denied that
Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were threatening the electors in the village and
that he has given false evidence on account of pressure from the respondent. RW
14 who cast his vote at Burthal Jat polling station at 7.30 a.m. claims to have
thereafter set under a tree by the road-side about half a furlong away from the
polling station. He has stated that he did not see the respondent passing by
that road in the direction of Burthal Jat village. His evidence is not helpful
to either of the parties as he has merely stated that he had not seen the
respondent passing by that road in the direction of Burthal Jat village. It is
not possible that he would have closely looked into each and every vehicle
which passed by that road to notice the respondent who appears to have been
moving on that day by his car. RW 22 has stated that he did not go to Burthal
Jat village or send anyone of his workers to that village on 19.5.1982 but he
remained in his house throughout after he returned from kalaka on that day. It
is not possible to accept his evidence that he had not sent any of his workers
to Burthal Jat village on the date of poll as it is unlikely that the candidate
contesting in the election would not have sent any of his workers to that
polling station. It is seen from the aforesaid tape-recorded conversation
between PW 7 and RW 22 in the office of PW 10 at about 7 or 7.30 p.m. On
19.5.1982 that the respondent expressed his anxiety to get his relatives Anil
Kumar and Satbir Singh who had been arrested on that day by the police released
and that his evidence that Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh were not his relatives
at all is totally unreliable for reasons mentioned above in the discussion of
the evidence relating to the incident at Kalaka polling station.
The evidence of R.W. 22 as a whole is
unreliable for the reasons already mentioned above.
Mr. Sibbal did not reply upon any portion of
the tape relating to the conversation in Burthal Jat polling station but he has
relied for the purpose of the appellants' case in relation to Burthal Jat
polling station upon that portion of the tape which relates to the conversation
between P.W. 7 and K.W. 22 in the office of P.W. 10 at about 7 or 7.30 p.m.
On 19.5.1982. The fact that a portion of the
tape-recorded conversation in Burthal Jat polling station got erased by P.W.7's
own voice due to inadvertence is no reason for rejecting the remaining portion
of the tape. It was demonstrated in this Court that the tape-recorded has only
one knob for operating the recorder for three purposes, namely, recording,
playing and rewinding. If by mistake the knob is pushed for rewinding and
thereafter for recording at a particular point it is probable that what had been
497 recorded earlier gets erased by the time the mistake in operating A the
knob is noticed. Therefore, there is no reason to reject the evidence of P.W.7
that a portion of the tape-recorded conversation in Burthal Jat polling station
got erased by his own voice due to inadvertence.
The oral and documentary evidence regarding
the incident at Burthal Jat polling station let in by the appellants receives
corroboration to a certain extent from the evidence of some of the respondent's
own witnesses. As stated earlier, R.W. 12 has admitted that P.W. 32 who was
standing about 80 kadams away from the polling station was having an
altercation with some people and that even when the altercation was going on
some police personnel arrived there and they took into custody two persons and
there was also a jeep at some distance away from the place where P.W.
32 and others were having an altercation.
Even R.W. 13 has stated that P.W. 32 was having a dispute with two unknown
persons about 120 kadams away from the polling station and soon thereafter he
heard people saying that the Superintendent of Police took away those two
unknown persons. The names of Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh had been specifically
and clearly mentioned in the election petition in regard to the incident at the
Burthal Jat polling station and they have been alleged to be the relatives of
the respondent. The respondent has not specifically denied the said allegation
in his written statement but during the trial he attempted to make it appear
that they were not related to him. However, it has been found above that they
are related to him. Still the respondent who had shown his serious concern to
get them released from police custody on 19.5.1982 has not called those two
persons as his witnesses to rebut the case of the appellants. Therefore, as
observed in Chenna Reddy v. B.C. Rao (supra) in these circumstances an adverse
inference has to be drawn against the respondent who has not called those two
persons as his witnesses though their evidence should be available to him in
support of his contention regarding the incident at Burthal Jat polling
station. Therefore, I accept the oral and documentary evidence let in by the
appellants as referred to above as being reliable and reject the evidence of
the respondent and his witnesses in regard to the incident at Burthal Jat
polling station and find that at the instance of the respondent his relatives
Anil Kumar and Satbir Singh who were left behind by him along with 15 or 20
persons with a jeep containing sticks interfered with the exercise of the
electoral right of P.W. 32 and others as alleged in the election petition as a
result of which they had to go away from the queue in which 498 they were
standing awaiting their turn for casting their votes though they had
subsequently come to the polling station and cast their votes.
Now I shall consider the respondent's
contention raised in the written statement that the allegation that the
respondent and some of his armed companions entered the polling station and
brandished their guns at the Presiding Officer and ordered the other polling
staff and polling agents of various candidates to stand still does not
constitute any corrupt practice and that the allegation that the polling agents
Amar Singh and Suraj Bhan were threatened and turned out of the polling station
does not constitute corrupt practice as they are not alleged to be electors of
Kalaka village. Mr. Rao submitted that these acts, even if proved, would amount
to only electoral offences under section 136 (b) (f) and (g) read with section
8 and would not constitute corrupt practice under section 123(2) read with
section 79(d) of the Act. In support of his contention Mr. Rao invited this
Court's attention to the decision in Nagendra Mahto v. The State (supra) where
it has been held, as stated earlier, that the L) criminal revision petitioner
before the High Court who had insisted upon going into the room where the
ballot papers were kept though the Presiding Officer had warned him to go out
of the room and also attempted to put some ballot papers into the box of one
Nitai Singh Sardar was rightly convicted under section 131 (1) (b) and section
136 (L) (f) of the Act. On the other hand, Mr. Sibbal submitted that casting
bogus votes forcibly would amount to corn pt practice as it would indirectly
interfere with the electoral right of the voters whose ballot papers have been
so polled, whether they had intended to come to the polling station and
exercise their right to vote or had intended otherwise. In this connection, he
invited this Court's attention the decision in Ram Dial v. Sant Lal and Others
(supra) where, as extracted above, this Court has held that while the law in
England laid emphasis on the usual aspect of the exercise of undue influence,
under the Indian law what is material was not the actual effect produced but
the doing of such acts as were calculated to interfere with the free exercise
of any electoral right. According to section 79(d) of the Act 'electoral right'
means the right of a person to stand or not to stand as, or to withdraw or not
to withdraw from being a candidate, or to vote or refrain from voting at an
election. Section 123 (2) of the Act lays down that "undue influence, that
is to say, any direct or indirect interference or attempt to interfere on the
part of the candidate or 499 his agent, or of any other person with the consent
of the candidate or his election agent, with the free exercise of any electoral
right .......... shall be deemed to be corrupt practice for the purpose of the
Act.
What constitute electoral offences are
detailed in sections 125 to 136 which fall under Chapter III of the Act.
S.125 relates to promoting enmity between
classes in connection with election. S.126 relates to prohibition of public
meetings on the day preceding the election day and on the election day. S.127
relates to disturbances at election meetings. S.127A relates to restrictions on
the printing of pamphlets, posters etc. S.128 relates to maintenance of secrecy
of voting. S.129 relates to prohibition of Officers etc., at elections acting
for candidates or to influence voting. S.130 relates to prohibition of
conversing in or near polling stations. S.131 provides for penalty for
disorderly conduct in or near polling stations. S.132 provides for penalty for
misconduct at the polling station.
S.133 provides for penalty for illegal hiring
or procuring of conveyances at elections. S.134 relates to breaches of official
duty in connection with elections. S.134A prohibits Government servants from
acting as election agent, polling agent or counting agent. S.135 relates to
removal of ballot papers from polling station. S.135 relates to other offence
and penalties therefore, namely, fraudulent defacement or fraudulent
destruction of any nomination paper; fraudulent defacement, destruction or
removal of any list, notice or other document affixed by or under the authority
of the returning officer; fraudulent defacements fraudulent destruction of any
ballot paper or the official mark of any ballot paper or any declaration of
identity or official envelope used in connection with voting by postal ballot;
supply of any ballot paper to any person or
being in possession of any ballot paper without due authority, fraudulently
putting into any ballot box anything other than the ballot paper which the
person putting the same is authorised to put in; destroying, opening or
otherwise interfering with any ballot paper; and fradulently or without due
authority attempting to do any of the foregoing acts or wilfully aiding and
abetting the doing of any such acts. It would appear that forcible marking of
ballot papers removed from polling officers in the polling station, marking the
same in favour of any candidate and putting the them in the ballot box is not
one of the offences mentioned in them. Therefore, as rightly submitted by Mr.
Sibbal it cannot be contended that in this country forcible polling of bogus
votes, as mentioned above, is neither a corrupt practice nor an electoral
offence. I agree with Mr.
500 Sibbal and hold that forcible polling of
bogus votes in the circumstances and manner found in this case would constitute
indirect interference with the electoral right of the concerned electors
whether they be persons who had decided to cast their votes in that election or
those who had decided not to do so. It is significant, in this connection, to
note that after having been informed about the forcible polling of bogus votes
by the respondent's men at the Kalaka polling station P.W. 7 had instructed the
polling staff to issue tendered ballot papers to any elector whose ballot paper
had already been forcibly polled who might come for the purpose of exercising
his right.
I have referred to and discussed the evidence
somewhat in detail in view of the fact that I have disagreed not only with the
learned Trial Judge but also with respect with my learned brother Fazal Ali, J.
with whom my learned brother Mukharji, J. has agree. The respondent in this
case had managed to keep away from the Court material evidence by way of the
original report of the Presiding Officer, a copy of which is contained in
Ex.P-6, by filing C.M.P.31 (E) of 1983 in the trial Court. He had cited the
Observer (R.W. 20) as his witness to depose about his case regarding the
allegations made by the appellants in paras 9 to 12 of the election petition
regarding the corrupt practices. But he did not examine R.W. 20 for that
purpose and had called him only for the purpose of production of some record
without any oath being administered to him though in his tape- recorded
conversation with P.W. 7 in the office of P.W. 10 on 19.5.1982 referred to
above, he had admittedly asked P.W.
7 to get ever thing noted by P.W. 20 who was
present there at that time. He had thus denied to the appellants the
opportunity to cross examine R.W. 20. The respondent had come forward with a
new case of alleged booth-capturing and forcible polling of bogus votes by Ajit
Singh in the Kalaka polling station after the appellants had completed the
examination of their witnesses to whom no such suggestion was made in the
cross-examination. He had repeatedly denied in his evidence that Anil Kumar and
Satbir Singh who had been arrested by the police at the Burthal Jat polling
station on 19.5.1982 were his relatives though in his tape- recorded conversation
referred to above he had informed P.W.
7 that they were his close relatives and he
had shown his anxiety to get them released from police custody forthwith.
He had neither cited them nor called them as
his witnesses though they would have been material witnesses in regard to the
incident at the Burthal Jat polling station. The respondent's evidence as R.W.
22 has been found to be wholly unreliable for reasons already mentioned. In 501
these circumstances what my learned brother Fazal Ali, J.
has mentioned in the first para of his
judgment barring the first sentence in that para would apply to the respondent
alone. An election petition seeking a declaration that the election of the
returned candidate is void under section 100 (1)(b) on account of corrupt
practice as per section 132(2) of the Act, as in the present case, is a civil
proceeding though the standard or degree of proof required is as in a criminal
case. In any case, two views are not possible in the present case where the
appellants have proved beyond all reasonable doubt that the respondent has
committed the corrupt practices alleged in at the Kalaka and Burthal Jat
polling stations. No lenient view can be taken in this case merely because the
election petition is directed against the returned candidate for, only in the
case of a returned candidate Parliament has provided, in the interest of purity
in elections, for serious consequences of not only (1) declaring the election
void under section 100 (1) (b) but also (2) disqualification under section 8A
of the Act by the President for a period not exceeding six years when a finding
of corrupt practice is recorded against a returned candidate. For all the
reasons mentioned above I hold that the appellants have succeeded in proving
the two instances of corrupt practice pressed in this Court and are entitled to
succeed in this appeal. The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs of Rs.
5,000 payable by the respondent-returned candidate.
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Having had the
advantage of reading the judgment of my learned brother Fazal Ali,J., I agree
with the reasoning and the conclusions arrived at by my learned brother. I
would, however, like to express my views on following four points involved in
the appeal:
firstly, this being appeal under section 116A
of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 which is in the nature of first
appeal to this Court, how should the appraisement of evidence by the trial
Court be reviewed by this Court in this appeal, secondly, subject to what
safeguards the tape-recorded evidence should be accepted, thirdly, this being
election petition involving corrupt practice, the nature of evidence required
to proved by a contesting party in order to succeed, and fourthly, whether
bogus votes or booth capturing itself is a corrupt practice because it deprives
other genuine voters in general of the right to vote or the right to abstain
from voting.
In this case, evidence of tape-recording made
by the Deputy Commissioner, Shri Bhaskaran was produced before the High Court.
In this tape-recorded evidence the Deputy Commissioner has 502 recorded the
incidents on the date of polling at several booths but reliance was placed only
on the evidence relating to two booths namely Kalaka and Burthal Jat. For the
reasons recorded in his judgment, the learned trial judge has not accepted the
tape-recorded evidence. The tape-record purports to record statements made by
some persons including polling agent, polling officer Col. Ram Singh and Deputy
commissioner him elf. About the acceptance and reliability of evidence on
tape-recording, one should proceed very cautiously. In this connection on the
analogy of mutilated document if the tape-recording is not coherent or distinct
or clear, this should not be relied upon. See in this connection the
observations in American Jurisprudence Vol.
30 page 939.
In the case of R. v. Maqsud Ali, [1965] 2 All
E.R. page 464 in respect of criminal trial the question was considered by the
Court of Appeal in England. A tape-recording, it was held, was admissible in
evidence provided the accuracy of the recording car, be proved and the voices
recorded can be properly identified and that the evidence is relevant and
otherwise admissible. The Court, however, observed that such evidence should
always be regarded with some caution and assessed in the light of all the
circumstances of each case.
There cannot, however, be any question of
laying down any exhaustive set of rules by which the admissibility of such
evidence should be judged. It was further observed that provided the jury was
guided by what they hear themselves from the tape recording and on that they
base their ultimate decision, there is no objection to a copy of the transcript
of a tape recording, properly proved, being put before them.
lt is not necessary to set out the particular
facts of that case. It may be noted, however, that Marshall, J. had observed at
pages 469-70 of the report as follows:
"It is next said that the recording was
a bad one, overlaid in places by street and other noises.
This obviously was so and as a result, much
of the conversation was inaudible or undecipherable. In so far as that was so,
much of the conversation was never transcribed, but there still remained much
that was transcribed, and the learned judge after full argument ruled that what
was deciphered should be left for the jury to assess. We think that he was
right. Lastly, it was said that the difficulties of language were such as to
make any transcription unreliable and misleading. This argument the learned
judge treated 503 with great care and circumspection. Th: recorded conversation
was in Punjabi dialect confined to a particular area of Pakistan. He was told
that there were many such dialects in which similar words differed in or had
more than one meaning, that the meaning of sentences often depended on the
order of the words, that pronouns were matters of inference and R not
represented by actual words. Often only parts of sentences were decipherable
owing to the other extraneous noises.
He decided, before admitting the evidence to
have a trial within a trial in which translators were called by both aids
which, I think I am right in saying, lasted 2-1/2 days. All matters were
canvassed tn very great detail. He discovered that there were certain passages
common to translations and in the end, he decided that it was a question which
should be left to the jury but he did not think this evidence was so
unsatisfactory that I should withdraw it from the jury." It has to be
borne in mind that in England and in America, the mechanism of tape recording
is well-advanced.
In this country, it is not so as yet.
Furthermore the infirmities, some of which have been noted by Marshall, J.
of tape recording, are more evident in the
instant case before us.
In R. v. Robson. [1972] 2 All E.R. page 699
the accused was charged inter alia, with corruption. The prosecution ought to
put in evidence certain tape recordings. The defence contended that these were
not admissible because (i) lt had not been shown that these were the originals
or in the absence of the originals true copies of them, and (11) they were
misleading and should not be relied on because in many places these were
unintelligible and of poor quality and their potential prejudicial effect would
therefore outweigh the evidentiary value claimed for these. It was held by the
Court as follows:- "The recordings were admissible for the following
reasons- (1) the Court was required to do no more than satisfy itself that a
prima facie case of originality had been made out by evidence which defined and
described the provenance and history of the recordings up to the moment of
production in Court and had not been 504 disturbed on cross-examination; in the
circumstances that requirement had been fulfilled (see p 701 f and p 702 a,
post).
(ii) the Court was satisfied, on the balance
of probabilities, that the recordings were original and authentic and their
quality was adequate to enable the Jury to form a fair assessment of the
conversations recorded in them and should not be excluded on that account (see
p 703 f and 8, post)." In the instant case, the tape recordings, as we
have heard, were misleading and could not be relied on because in most places
they were unintelligible and of poor quality and of no use therefore their
potential prejudicial effect outweighs the evidentiary value of these
recordings.
This Court had also considered this question
in Shri N.Sri Rama Reddy Etc v. Shri V.V. Giri. [1971] 1 SCR page 399. There in
case of an election trial it was held by this Court that the previous statement
made by a person and recorded on tape, could be used not only to corroborate
the evidence given by the witness in Court but also to contradict his evidence
given before the court, as well as to test the veracity of the witness ant also
to impeach his impartiality. Apart from being used for corroboration, the
evidence was admissible in respect of the other three matters under sections
146 (1), 153, Exception (2) and section 155 (3) of the Evidence Act. This Court
observed after referring to some cases that two propositions are clear that (1)
tape recorded conversation is admissible in evidence (2) if it contains the
previous statement mate by a witness, it may be used to contradict his evidence
given before the Court. But the Court cautioned itself at page 411 that though
tape recording may be admissible what weight it has to be put to such evidence
depended upon the facts and circumstances and other relevant factors.
In the case of R.M. Malkani v. State of
Maharashtra [1973] 2 S.C.R. page 417. This Court observed that tape recorded
conversation was admissible provided firstly that the conversation was relevant
to the matters in issue secondly, there was identification of the voice and
thirdly, the accuracy to tape recorded conversation has to be proved by
eliminating the possibility of erasing the tape.
505 In the facts of the present case,
however, the dangers noted A by this Court were present. So therefore though in
an appropriate case it may be possible to rely upon tape- recorded conversation,
in the facts of this case and for the infirmities in the tape-recorded evidence
as pointed out before, this cannot be relied in the instant case.
On the aspect of the nature of evidence, the
question here is not who is a saint or who is a sinner. It has to be borne in
mind that this is a quasi-criminal proceeding. It has been so held in numerous
decisions. "Quasi means `asif', 'similar to'. The question of nature of
evidence was rather exhaustively examined by a decision of this Court in M.
Chenna Reddy v. V. Ramachandra Rao and Anr.,
[1972] E.L.R. Vol. 40 page 390. mere after discussing the evidence, G.K. Mitter,
J. speaking for this Court reiterated the nature of evidence at pages 414-415
thus:
"This court has held in a number of
cases that the trial of an election petition on the charge of the commission of
a corrupt practice partakes of the nature of a criminal trial in that the
finding must be based not on the balance of probabilities but on direct and
cogent evidence to support it.
In this connection, the inherent difference
between the trial of an election petition and a criminal trial may also be
noted. At a criminal trial the accused need not lead any evidence and
ordinarily he does not do so unless his case is to be established by positive
evidence on his side, namely, his insanity or his acting in self-defence to
protect himself or a plea of alibi to show that he could not have committed the
crime with which he was charged. m e trial of an election petition on the
charge of commission of corrupt practice is somewhat different. More often than
not proof of such corrupt practices depends on the oral testimony of witnesses-
The candidate charged with such corrupt practice invariably leads evidence to
prove his denial; it becomes the duty of the Court to weigh the two versions
and come to a conclusion as to whether notwithstanding the denial and the
evidence in rebuttal, a reasonable person can form the opinion that on the
evidence the charge is satisfactorily established. We cannot also lose sight of
the fact that quite apart from the nature of the charge the trial itself goes
on as if the issues in a civil suit 506 were being investigated into. The
petitioner has to give particulars of the corrupt practice with details in
default whereof the allegations may be ignored; the petitioner has to ask for
certain declarations and the procedure before the High Court is to be in
accordance with that applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure to the trial
of suits with the aid of the provisions of the Indian evidence Act. Inferences
can therefore be drawn against a party who does not call evidence which should
be available in support of his version.
In the case of Ram Sharan Yadav v. Thakur
Muneshwar Nath Singh and Others [1984] S.C.C. page 649 this Court observed that
the charge of a corrupt practice is in the nature of a criminal charge which if
proved, entails a very heavy penalty in the form of disqualification.
Therefore, a very cautious approach must be made in order to prove the charge
of undue influence levelled by the defeated candidate. It is for the party who
sets up the plea of 'undue influence' to prove it to the hilt beyond reasonable
doubt and the manner of proof should be the same as for an offence in a
criminal case. However, while insisting on standard of strict proof, the Court
should not extend or stretch this doctrine to such an extreme extent as to make
it well-nigh impossible to prove an allegation of corrupt practice. See also in
this connection the observations in the case of Sardar Harcharan Singh v.
Sardar Sajjan Singh & Ors. Civil Appeal No. 3419 (NCE) of 1981-Judgment
delivered on 29th November, 1984.
Judged by the aforesaid standard, for the
infirmities mentioned in the judgment of my learned brother, it cannot be said
that the appellants have proved their case to the extent required to succeed.
While in a first appeal, the entire evidence
can be reviewed by the appellate Court, and this being the first appeal under
Section 116A of the Representation of the People Act, one must, however, always
bear in mind that where the question is whether the oral testimony should be
believed or not, the views of the trial judge should not be lightly brushed
aside where the trial judge has to advantage of judging the manner and demeanour
of the witness which advantage the appellate Court does not enjoy, This is a
limitation on all appellate Courts whether be it the first appeal or second
appeal. In believing the oral testimony of a witness, the view of the judge who
hag the advantage of watching the demeanour and the conduct of the witness
cannot be lost sight 507 of. See the observations of this Court in Moti Lal v. Chandra
Pratap Tiwari & Ora. AIR 1975 SC page 1178 see also the observations of
this Court in Raghuvir Singh v. Raghubir Singh Kushwaha. AIR 1970 S.C. page
442. In view of the nature of the evidence on record, we find no reason to
disagree with the appraisement of the evidence by the learned trial judge.
Last point indicated above is interesting as
was sought to be raised by Mr. Sibbal, because preventing a person from casting
his vote or causing a bogus vote purpoting to be a vote of some one other than
the genuine voter would be a serious interference with the electoral process,
as grave as preventing a person from voting. Right to abstain from voting is
recognised in our system of election. But in view of the evidence in this case,
the point need not be pursued further.
For the reasons mentioned before, I agree
that the appeal be dismissed.
ORDER In accordance with the decision of the
majority, the appeal is dismissed without any order as to costs.
P.B.R.
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