Lila Krishan Vs. Mani Ram Godara
& Ors [1985] INSC 128 (8 May 1985)
MISRA RANGNATH MISRA RANGNATH FAZALALI, SYED
MURTAZA VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION: 1985 AIR 1073 1985 SCR Supl. (1)
592 1985 SCC Supl. 179 1985 SCALE (1)991
CITATOR INFO: F 1985 SC1079 (5)
ACT:
Representation of the People Act, 1951, ss.
33 (4) and 36(4)-Scrutiny of Nomination Papers-Scope of-Whether Returning
Officer is under an obligation to verify the entire Electoral Roll to establish
identity of proper.
HEADNOTE:
Respondents challenged in the High Court the
election of the appellant to Fatehbad Constituency of the Haryana Legislative
Assembly under s.100(1) (c) of the Representation of the People Act 1951 (Act,
for short) on the ground that the nomination papers of two candidates being
Mani Ram Chhapola and Raj Tilak had been improperly rejected by the Returning
Officer. The proposer of Mani Ram Chhapola was one Brij Bhushan while the
proposer of Raj Tilak was one Upender Kumar. Brij Bhushan's serial number in
the electoral roll was 26 while Upender Kumar's was 77. In Form 3A, these
numbers were correctly indicated. But in the nomination papers the numbers had
been shown as 126 and 177 respectively The Returning Officer rejected these
nomination papers as the serial number of the proposers as disclosed in the
nomination papers did not tally with reference to the electoral roll. The High
Court set aside the election of the appellant holding that the Returning
Officer acted mala fide and had either directly or indirectly been responsible
for the alteration in the nomination papers, since the nomination papers when
filed were in order and while they were in the custody of the Returning
Officer's Establishment, interpolations had been made and on the basis thereof
the nomination papers had been rejected.
Allowing the appeal to this Court by the
appellant, ^
HELD: 1. (i) When admittedly the nomination
papers have been handled by the staff in the establishment of the Returning
Officer and by the candidates and their agents before scrutiny began, it is
difficult to ascribe the insertion of figure '1' to the Returning Officer.
Therefore, the conclusion of the High Court that the Returning Officer either
by himself or through somebody caused the interpolation to be done is totally
unwarranted even if this Court accepts as a fact that the figure '1' appearing
before the rest of the number in the column for serial number in the electoral
roll was not there when the nomination papers had been filed. Strictly
speaking, the insertion in the instant case is a forgery and amounts to a
criminal etc. To put that responsibility on the Returning Officer without
cogent evidence is highly improper. [597H; 598A; C-D] 593
1. (ii) From the evidence it is clear that
the nomination papers were taken up for scrutiny one after the other and the
Returning Officer has stated that he used to pass orders either of acceptance
or rejection of each of the nomination papers after due scrutiny. That position
has also been accepted by witnesses on the sides of the election petitioners.
The evidence on the side of the election petitioners does indicate that the
nomination papers were first shown to the candidates and their agents and
scrutiny followed thereafter. The Returning Officer had denied, as already
pointed out, that he had made an open declaration that all the nomination
papers were in order. Mani Ram Chhapola has admitted in his deposition that by
2 P.M. on the date of scrutiny the fact that his nomination paper had been
rejected on the ground indicated had been notified to him by the Returning
Officer. If the Returning Officer wanted to play any mischief he could have
avoided intimating the fact of rejection or at any rate delayed the same. In
the absence of cogent evidence on the side of the election petitioners and
accepting the evidence of the Returning Officer that he had scrutinised the
nomination papers one after the other and contemporaneously accepted or
rejected the same by providing grounds of rejection, there is no doubt that
contemporaneous order rejecting the nomination papers had been made in the
instant cases. [598 F-H; 599A] 2(i) Indisputably the insistence on disclosure
of the serial number in the prescribed column against the proposer is for the
purpose of identifying the proposer and ascertaining that he is competent to
propose. The scope of scrutiny is obviously to verify the contents of the
nomination paper with a view to ascertaining whether the form is in order and
what is required to be complied with by the election law has been duly complied
with. This Court has repeatedly held that election proceedings are strict in
nature and what is required to be performed in a particular manner has to be
done as required and substantial compliance has ordinarily no place while
dealing with the Act or the Rules made thereunder. That is why an exception has
been made by inserting sub-s. (4) of s.36 of the Act. Therefore, to cast the
obligation of the Returning Officer to look through the entire electoral roll
of a particular part with a view to finding out the identity of the proposer is
not the requirement of the law. To read that as an obligation is likely to lead
to a unworkable position. [601 C-F] 2(ii) The contents of the proviso to S.33
sub-s. (4) and the provisions of sub-s. (4) of s. 36 of the Act when read
together make it clear that the mistake with reference to the serial number was
such an error in this case which could be corrected. Under section 36(1) of the
Act, on the date fixed for scrutiny of nominations, election agents, one
proposer of each candidate and one another person duly authorised in writing by
each candidate are entitled to appear before the Returning Officer, and such
persons are entitled to reasonable facilities for examining the nomination
papers The purpose of making such provision is to facilitate scrutiny. The
presence of candidate, his election agent and another person acquainted with
the Constituency would certainly facilitate the process of scrutiny. Defects
covered by the proviso to s. 33(4) could easily be resolved if people
authorised under s. 36(1) of the Act are present at the time of the scrutiny.
[603 B-D] 594 2(iii) In the instant case, no one was available, for instance,
when the Returning Officer took up the nomination paper of Mani Ram Chhapola,
to indicate to the Returning Officer that his serial number in the electoral
roll was 26 and not 126. If this had been pointed out and on summary enquiry
Returning Officer was satisfied that it was a mistake, clerical in nature, and
the identity of Brij Bhushan was not in dispute, there would have been end of
the matter. If the correlation has not been made and the Returning Officer has
no assistance to fix up the identification it cannot be said to be a defect not
of substantial character. Moreover, it could not be statutory obligation of the
Returning Officer to scrutinise the electoral roll for finding out the identity
of the proposer when the serial number turns out to be wrong. But if interested
and competent persons point out to the Returning Officer that it is a mistake,
it would certainly be his obligation to look into the matter to find out
whether the mistake, is inconsequential and has, therefore, either to be
permitted to be corrected or to be overlooked. When scrutiny was taken up Mani
Ram Chhapola and Raj Tilak on their own showing were not present before the
Returning Officer.
Similarly, the proposers, Brij Bhushan and
Upender Kumar were also absent. Though there is evidence on the side of the
election petitioners that the Assistant Returning Officer was present at the
time of scrutiny, he as PW.4 has categorically denied that fact. The Returning
Officer, RW.3, has stated that the Assistant Returning Officer was not present
when he took up scrutiny on the nomination papers.
There is also evidence from the side of the
appellant that the Assistant Returning Officer was not present. In the
circumstances, if the nomination papers have been rejected for mistake in the
nomination papers it is the candidates themselves who have to thank their lot
and no mistake can be found with the Returning Officer. Therefore, the
nomination papers were validly rejected. Brij Mohan v. Sat Pal, C.A. No.
2650/84 disposed of on 13.3.85 followed. [603 E-H; 599 B-D; 604 B-C]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 4123 of 1984.
From the Judgment and Order dated 28.8.84 of
the Punjab and Haryana High Court in E.P. No. 1 of 1984.
H.L. Sibal, O.C. Mathur, S. Sukumaran and
D.N. Misra for the Appellant.
S.N. Kacker, Mahabir Singh, L.K. Pandey, N.
S. Bishnoi, P.K. Sandhir and D.K. Garg for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. This appeal under Section 116A(1) of the Representation of
the People Act, 1951 ('Act' for short) is directed against the judgment of the
Punjab & Haryana High Court 595 setting aside the election of the appellant
to Fatehabad Constituency of the Haryana Legislative Assembly. By Notification
dated November 23, 1983, the Constituency was called upon to elect a member at
the by-election. November 30, 1983, was appointed as the last date for receipt
of nomination papers. Scrutiny was scheduled for December 1, 1983. Poll was
held on December 23, 1983 and appellant was declared as the returned candidate
by securing 1339 votes in excess of votes polled by respondent 1 who had been
fielded as the common opposition candidate. On February 2, 1984, the
respondents filed an Election Petition asking the election of the appellant to
be set aside on the ground provided under s.100(1)(c) of the Act by the
pleading that the nomination papers of two candidates being Mani Ram Chapola
and Raj Tilak had been improperly rejected by the Returning Officer.
The appellant pleaded that the nomination
papers were defective and, therefore, liable to be rejected and the Returning
Officer had acted properly in rejecting them. It was further pleaded that
defective nomination papers had been intentionally filed with a view to
challenging the election in case it went in favour of the appellant.
Both sides led oral evidence. On the side of
the election petitioners, the Assistant Returning Officer among others was
examined as PW.4 while for the returned candidate (respondent before the High
Court), the Returning Officer was examined as R.W.3. The nomination papers as
also the orders of rejection were produced and duly exhibited. The High Court
came to hold that the nomination papers when filed were in order and while they
were in the custody of the Returning Officer's establishment, interpolations
had been made and on the basis thereof the nomination papers had been rejected.
Though the election petitioners failed to establish their plea contained in
paragraph 16 of the election petition that the Returning Officer acted mala
fide at the behest of the Chief Minister of the State, the Court took the view
that the Returning Officer acted mala fide and had either directly or
indirectly been responsible for the alteration in the nomination papers.
Accordingly the election has been set aside and the Returning Officer's conduct
has been criticised and he has been directed by the High Court to share the
liability of half the costs of the election petition. The Returning Officer had
filed a separate appeal which is being disposed of today by a separate
judgment.
There is no dispute before us that if the
nominations of the two candidates-Mani Ram Chapola and Raj Tilak are found to
596 have been improperly rejected the election of the appellant must be held to
have been rightly set aside. That is the effect of s.100(1) (c) of the Act. The
only question relevant for the disposal of this appeal is, therefore, to
examine and decide whether the High Court was right in its conclusion that the
two nomination papers had been improperly rejected. The relevant nomination
papers relating to Mani Ram Chapola and Raj Tilak have been produced and proved
as Exhibits P-1 and P-6 respectively. The orders made by the Returning Officers
rejecting the two nomination papers have also been produced and marked as
Exhibits.
Similarly, the notice in statutory form 3A as
required under rule 7 of the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, to be published
in the notice board of the Returning Officer has been produced and exhibited.
The Returning officer's order of rejection in
respect of both the nomination papers is almost in similar terms.
We, therefore, propose to extract one of them
for convenience. The order of rejection reads thus:
"S.No. of the vote of proposer does not
tally with S.No. mentioned in voter list. Hence rejected." The order is
cryptic and there is force in the submission of Mr. Kacker appearing for the
respondents that the order has to be interpreted; otherwise it makes no
meaning. All parties have agreed before us that the true import of the order is
that the serial number of the proposer disclosed in the nomination paper did
not tally with the serial number given in the electoral roll. On that ground
each of the nomination papers has been rejected.
It is the case of the election petitioners
and the High Court has accepted that stand that the nomination papers were
received by the Assistant Returning Officer, PW.4, and he caused the notice in
form 3A to be prepared for being put in the notice board. The proposer of Mani
Ram Chapola was one Brij Bhushan while the proposer of Raj Tilak was one
Upender Kumar. Brij Bhushan's serial in the electoral roll was 26 while Upender
Kumar's was 77. In form 3A these numbers have been correctly indicated. But in
the nomination papers the number have been shown as 126 and 177 respectively.
The discrepancy has arisen on account of the appearance of the figure '1'
before the correct number in the electoral roll. The Assistant Returning
Officer P.W.4 has stated:
597 "I had received the nomination
papers from the candidates who wanted to contest election to the Fatehabad
constituency in the by-election between 26.11.1983 to 30.11.1983 in my capacity
as Assistant Returning Officer of that constituency. I have seen Ex P.I 1, the
nomination paper of Shri Mani Ram Chapola and Ex.P6, the nomination paper of
Shri Raj Tilak when I received these two nomination papers. I had compared the
vote number of the candidate and the proposer with the electoral roll of that
constituency." The witness further said:
"The correct position of these
nomination papers which I found regarding the vote numbers of the candidate and
the proposer is reflected in notice in form 3A,-the office copy of which is
Ext. P-3 and the original taken away from the notice board and produced by the
election petitioners has been marked as Ex.P- 10".
In view of the statement by PW.4, the High
Court was right in its conclusion that the respective nomination papers
contained the correct serial numbers in the electoral roll of the proposer in
each of them. These nomination papers were made over by the Assistant Returning
Officer between 9 and 9.30 A.M. to the Naib Tashsildar incharge of elections on
December 1,1983, under instructions from the Returning Officer. December 1,
1983, was the date appointed for scrutiny and as the evidence shows, the
Assistant Returning Officer was not available at the time of scrutiny as
deposed to by him as also by the Returning Officer. There is no evidence that
the nomination papers were handled by the Naib Tahsildar, Elections, and the
Kanungo, Elections, as also other members of the staff at the time when form 3A
was typed out. Even when the work of scrutiny began the nomination papers which
were 45 in number were taken by the candidates and their agents for inspection
and for some time they were handled by them. We have looked into the nomination
papers with great care but by merely looking at them it is difficult to say at
what point of time the figure '1' has been inserted in the prescribed column
against the proposer's serial number in both of them. When admittedly the
nomination papers have been handled by the staff in the establishment of the
Returning Officer and by the candidates and 598 their agents before scrutiny
began, it is difficult to ascribe the insertion of figure '1' to the Returning
Officer. We agree with the High Court that for the effective functioning of democracy
in a large polity as ours the election process has got to be free from blemish
and officers in whom trust has been reposed to conduct the electoral process in
a fair and decent way cannot be permitted to hobnob or interpolate with
valuable documents like nomination papers. At the same time it must be
remembered that the credibility of public officers assigned the sacred trust
should not be doubted on mere suspicion and without acceptable evidence. The
conclusion of the High Court that the Returning Officer either by himself or
through somebody caused the interpolation to be done is totally unwarranted
even if we accept as a fact that the figure '1' appearing before the rest of
the number of the column for serial number in the electoral roll was not there
when the nomination papers had been filed. Strictly speaking, the insertion in
the instant case is a forgery and amounts to a criminal act. To put that
responsibility on the Returning Officer without cogent evidence is highly
improper and the conclusion of the High Court does not commend itself to us.
The election petitioners had pleaded that
they were present before the Returning Officer when the process of the scrutiny
started. They alleged that the Returning Officer made an announcement that all
the nomination papers were in order and after hearing the same most of them and
in particular the two candidates whose nomination papers were rejected went
away. From the evidence it is clear that the nomination papers were taken up
for scrutiny one after the other and the Returning Officer has stated that he
used to pass orders either of acceptance or rejection of each of the nomination
papers after due scrutiny. That position has also been accepted by witnesses on
the election petitioners. The evidence on the side of the election petitioners
does indicate that the nomination papers were first shown to the candidates and
their agents and scrutiny followed thereafter. The Returning Officer has
denied, as already pointed out, that he had made an open declaration that all
the nomination papers were in order. Mani Ram Chhapola has admitted in his
deposition that by 2 P.M. on the date of scrutiny the fact that his nomination
paper had been rejected on the ground indicated has been notified to him by the
Returning Officer. If the Returning Officer wanted to play any mischief he
could have avoided intimating the fact of rejection or at any rate delayed the
same. In the absence of cogent evidence on the side of the election petitions
and accepting the evidence of the 599 Returning Officer that he had scrutinised
the nomination papers one after the other and contemporaneously accepted or
rejected the same by providing grounds of rejection, we hold that the orders of
rejection nomination papers in the two cases relevant for the appeal,
contemporaneous ordered had been made.
When scrutiny was taken up Mani Ram Chhapola
and Raj Tilak on their own showing were not present before the Returning
Officer. Similarly, the proposers, Brij Bhushan and Upender Kumar were also
absent. Though there is a evidence on the side of the election petitioners that
the Assistant Returning Officer was present at the time of scrutiny, he as
P.W.4 has categorically denied that fact The Returning Officer, RW.3 has stated
that the Assistant Returning Officer was not present when he took up scrutiny
of the nomination papers. There is also evidence from the side of the appellant
that the Assistant Returning Officer was not present. We accept as a fact that
the Assistant Returning Officer was not present at the time of scrutiny.
There were 45 nomination papers to be
scrutinised. It is the evidence of the Returning Officer that he scrutinised
all the nomination papers one by one. PW.5 who is a practising Advocate and was
a proposer of one of the election petitioners examined as PW.3 has stated:
"After the departure of some of the
people, the Returning Officer compared the entries in the nomination papers one
by one with the relevant electoral rolls." In view of such evidence there
was no justification to hold otherwise.
The evidence of RW.4, the Returning Officer
was placed before us once by Mr. Sibal for the appellant and over again by Mr.
Kacker for the respondents. The Returning Officer has deposed that he passed
the orders of rejection of nomination papers at the time of scrutiny and he
rejected those nomination papers as the serial number of the proposers as
disclosed in the nomination papers did not tally with reference to the
electoral roll.
In the two nomination papers the Returning
Officer put tick marks against the name of the candidate as also the name of
the proposer and specification of the part in the electoral roll of the
proposer. He has put cross marks as against the serial number. RW.3, stated in
Court: "At the time of scrutiny I had the nomination papers before me. The
election staff, including Election Naib- 600 Teshsildar, Quanungo, etc. were
helping me in tracing out the relevant entries from other records, like
electoral rolls etc. When after location they used to put before me, I used to
tick-mark on the nomination papers. At the time of scrutiny when I found the
entries in the nomination papers are correct, I used to tick-mark each entry.
In those nomination papers I found the entries not to be tallying with the
other records and on this basis I found those to be incorrect, I used to put
cross." Coming to the specific nomination papers, the witness stated:
"I have seen nomination paper Ex.P-1 of Shri Mani Ram Chhapola. In this
after reading the name of Brij Bhushan I tick-marked it because that was held
correct. I have crossed his vote number because it was not found to tally with
the electoral roll." The witness again said: "I had seen vote number
126 in the relevant voters list, which did not contain the name of Brij Bhushan:"
With reference to tick marks in Ext. P-1 which is the nomination paper of Mani
Ram Chhapola, we find that there has really been no tick mark against the name
of Brij Bhushan, the proposer. If the Returning Officer had really put a tick
mark against the name of Brij Bhushan there should have been four tick marks
with pencil. As a fact there are only three tick marks. Mr. Kacker strongly
contended that in view of the statement of the witness he had tick marked the
name of Brij Bhushan we must not entertain a different view by a look at the
document. Having seen the document with some amount of care and having looked
into other nomination papers for the pattern of tick marking by the Returning
Officer, we have no doubts in our mind that the statement by the witness has
been made out of confusion.
We cannot loss sight of the fact that the
Returning Officer had accusations to face and he was possibly puzzled and
bewildered when he was facing cross-examination. The tick mark appearing above
the name of Brij Bhushan related to the candidate's particulars. As we have
just pointed out, if Brij Bhushan's name had been tick marked, one more tick
mark should inevitably be found in the document. Similar comments are available
with reference to the nomination paper of Raj Tilak. The stand adopted by Mr.
Kacker, learned counsel for the election petitioners-respondents is that if
Brij Bhushan name had been tick-marked, even if the serial number was wrong by
the time the nomination paper came before the Returning Officer, finding out
the correct serial number was not a problem and the Returning Officer who was
being assisted by other public officers would have easily found it out.
Connected with this stand and the submission, reliance is placed on s.36(4) of
the Act which provides 601 that the Returning Officer shall not reject any
nomination paper on the ground of any defect which is not of a substantial
character.
We have already come to the conclusion that
the Returning Officer had not ticked the names of Brij Bhushan and Upender
Kumar. Mr. Kacker not being satisfied with that conclusion which we had
indicated during hearing, relied upon the position that the Returning Officer
personally knew both Brij Bhushan and Upender Kumar and there could be no
difficulty in the Returning Officer fixing them up properly with reference to
the electoral roll. This aspect requires closer examination.
Indisputably the insistence on disclosure of
the serial number in the prescribed column against the proposer is for the
purpose of identifying the proposer and ascertaining that he is competent to
propose. The scope of scrutiny is obviously to verify the contents of the
nomination paper with a view to ascertaining whether the form is in order and
what is required to be complied with by the election law has been duly complied
with. This Court has repeatedly held that election proceedings are strict in
nature and what is required to be performed in a particular manner has to be
done as required and substantial compliance has ordinarily no place while dealing
with the Act or the Rules made thereunder. That is why an exception has been
made by inserting sub-s.(4) of s.36 of the Act.
The Returning Officer made reference to the
electoral roll and did not find the name of the proposer against the disclosed
serial number in either case. The High Court has taken the view that it was the
obligation of the Returning Officer to verify the electoral roll and find out
the serial number, the mistake, if any, was not of substantial character so as
to expose the nomination papers to rejection and the rejection on such a ground
was improper. To cast the obligation on the Returning Officer to look through
the entire electoral roll of a particular part with a view to finding out the
identity of the proposer is not the requirement of the law. To read that as an
obligation is likely to lead to a unworkable position. The prescribed form of
nomination (form 2-B) does not require to specify the name of the father of the
proposer. That actually does not become necessary because once the name and the
serial number in the voters' list are given, the cross-verification become easy
and the father's name is available in the electoral roll. In one part of the
electoral roll on the average names of about a thousand voters 602 appear. Out
of one thousand name it is quite possible that there would be more than one
voter by the same names.
Identification of any particular voter out of
such list even when there are more voters with the same name is possible only
with further reference to the father's name. To cast the obligation of
verifying the entire electoral roll of a particular part is actually requiring
the Returning Officer to do almost an impossible fact. It may not be so if
there be a few candidates and it be a case of a by-election but when general
election takes place and every Returning Officer is supposed to handle about
seven or eight Assembly Constituencies and there may be instances of even 300
candidate contesting from one seat as it happened in the 1985 elections in the
Belgaum Constituency of Karantaka State, the Returning Officer would find it
physically impossible to grapple with such a situation. The election schedule
is a very tight one. Under the law the day following the last day fixed for
receipt of nomination papers is the date of scrutiny and soon thereafter
follows the date fixed for withdrawal. If nomination papers are not scrutinised
with due haste and promptness the election schedule may not be operative in the
strict manner and dislocation are bound to follow.
It is not the submission of Mr. Kacker, and
rightly so, that even if the Returning Officer has not been in a position to
the proposer with reference to his serial number in the electoral roll, he can
accept the nomination paper to be valid. If that to be so, it is the obligation
of the Returning Officer to comply with the requirements of the law by
satisfying himself that the name of the candidate has been proposed by a voter
entitled to propose. The proviso to s.33, sub-s.(4), run thus:
"Provided that no misnomer or inaccurate
description or clerical, technical or printing error in regard to the name of
the candidate or his proposer or any other person, or in regard to any place,
mentioned in the electoral roll or the nomination paper and no electoral technical
or printing error in regard to the electoral roll numbers of any such person in
the electoral roll or the nomination paper, shall affect the full operation of
the electoral roll or the nomination paper with respect to such person or place
in any case where the description in regard to the name of the person or place
in such as to be commonly understood and the returning officers all permit 603
any such misnomer or inaccurate description, clerical, technical or printing
error in the electoral roll or in the nomination paper shall be
overlooked." The contents of the aforesaid proviso and the provisions of
sub-s.(4) of s.36 when read together make it clear that the mistake with
reference to the serial number was such an error in this case which could be corrected.
Under section 36(1) of the Act, on the date fixed for scrutiny of nominations
election agents, one proposer of each candidate and one other person dully
authorised in writing by each candidate are entitled to appear before the
Returning Officer, and such persons are entitled to reasonable facilities for
examining the nomination papers. The purpose of making such provision is to
facilitate scrutiny. The presence of candidate, his election agent and another
person acquainted with the Constituency would certainly facilitate the process
of scrutiny. Defects covered by the proviso to s.33(4) could easily be resolved
if people authorised under s. 36(1) of the Act are present at the time of the
scrutiny.
What could be resolved or overlooked in case
proper stops were taken in due time has become a major issue leading to
rejection of nomination papers in the instant case mainly on account of the
absence of the candidate, their election agents of persons interested in them
at the time of scrutiny. No one was available, for instance, when the Returning
Officer took up the nomination paper of Mani Ram Chhapola, to indicate to the
Returning Officer that his serial number in the electoral roll was 26 and not
126. If this had been pointed out and on summary enquiry the Returning Officer
was satisfied that it was a mistake, clerical in natural, and the identity of
Brij Bhushan was not in dispute, there would have been end of the matter. If
the correlation has not been made and the Returning Officer has no assistance to
fix up the identification it cannot be said to be a defect not of substantial
character. We reiterate that it could not be a statutory obligation of the
Returning Officer to scrutinise the electoral roll for finding out the identity
of the proposer when the serial number turns out to be wrong. But if interested
and competent persons point out to the Returning Officer that it is a mistake,
it would certainly be his obligation to look into the matter to find out
whether the mistake is inconsequential and has, therefore, either to be
permitted to be corrected or to be overlooked.
As a result of scrutiny nomination papers are
either accepted or rejected. Once a nomination paper is rejected, the candidate
604 loses his opportunity to contest and is kept out from the electoral fray.
Every genuine candidate is expected to be very much interested in ensuring
clearance of his nomination paper at the stage of scrutiny. It is indeed
surprising that before scrutiny was done and the nomination papers were
accepted by the Returning Officer, the two candidates and people interested in
them went away from the place of scrutiny and did not remain available to the
Returning Officer. In the circumstances, if the nomination papers have been
rejected for mistakes in the nomination papers it is the candidates themselves
who have to thank their lot and no mistake can be found with the Returning
Officer. We may not be understood to say that a mistake of the type if properly
clarified would not be unsubstantial in character. But if the Returning Officer
is not in a position to correlate and identify the proposer, the mistake would
indeed be not one which can be covered by sub-s.(4) of s 36 of the Act. That
view has been taken recently by this Court in Brij Mohan v. Sat Pal, to which
two of us are parties. We endorse the ratio of the decision and applying the
same, we agree with Mr. Sibal that the nomination papers were validly rejected
in this case. Mr. Sibal thereafter contended that Mani Ram Chhapola and Raj
Tilak had designedly entered wrong references to the electoral roll in respect
of their proposers with a view to challenging the election of the returned
candidate if necessary. The evidence on record is not impressive as apart from
bare suggestions there is no material worth the name to accept it as a fact. We
are also of the view that once we have reached the conclusion in the manner
indicated above, it is totally unnecessary to go into such an aspect. On the
analysis indicated, the view taken by the High Court cannot be sustained. We
allow the appeal, vacate the judgment of the High Court and uphold the election
of the appellant as the returned candidate from the Constituency in question.
The appellant shall be entitled to his costs before the High Court as also
before this Court.
Hearing fee in this Court is assessed at. Rs.
3,000 M.L.A. Appeal allowed.
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